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(12/17/25 7:57am)
Nearly 3,000 undergraduate students voted “Yes” on two referendum questions that sought to make Cornell’s disciplinary system independent from the University administration and to reinstate a campus-wide code of conduct, according to results released by the Office of the Assemblies on Monday.
(12/16/25 7:09pm)
Cornell announced the creation of the Ashley School of Global Development and the Environment, a new school within the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, in an article published by the Cornell Chronicle on Tuesday.
(12/16/25 3:35am)
On Sunday, Ithaca College Athletics announced that the Bombers head coach Michael Toerper will depart from the program to accept The John B. and Ann M. Rogers '45 Defensive Coordinator of Cornell Football.
(12/15/25 5:29am)
Hockey was a part of freshman forward Gio DiGiulian’s life before he even knew it.
(12/14/25 5:27pm)
Cornell students are about to vote on the most important governance question since 1969: Who should control our judicial system: the Cornell community or the central administration?
(12/12/25 3:15am)
When former respondents’ codes counselor Calder Lewis J.D. ’25 joined the Office of the Respondents Code Counselors in 2023, he said that he quickly came to realize that the sharp increase in the number of students being disciplined with temporary suspensions was out of the ordinary.
(12/11/25 8:50pm)
On March 10, 2025, I was arrested for walking out of a panel of Israeli and American war criminals. On March 19, I was notified of “interim action” and “temporary restrictions” against me under the Student Code of Conduct.
(12/10/25 9:52pm)
On Dec. 4, both the men and women of swim and dive traveled to the Ocasek Natatorium in Akron, Ohio, to compete in the Zippy Invitational. The meet earns its name on account of the University of Akron’s mascot, “Zippy.”
(12/10/25 7:34pm)
Men’s basketball has lived on the edge all season, and Sunday night in Birmingham, Alabama delivered another heart-pounding chapter, this time ending just a possession short.
(12/10/25 12:00am)
Deep within the brainstem is a structure no bigger than a grain of rice, the locus coeruleus. The LC is often referred to as the “blue spot” because of a distinct blue pigment produced from its inner synthesis reactions.
(12/09/25 11:22pm)
We live in a “Consumers’ Republic,” where one’s ability to engage in commercial consumption may even be a more defining feature of citizenship than voting. Culturally, we view everything in terms of money and goods. Often, the goal of our education is to train us in the best ways to acquire wealth in our jobs rather than being conscious and active citizens. And what should we do with that money? Buy things, of course!
(12/09/25 10:07pm)
A petition on behalf of student dining workers at Cornell was launched on Nov. 3, demanding that the University halt austerity measures that the petition says have affected student dining jobs.
(12/09/25 10:17pm)
Over the course of a 30-minute interview with The Sun, Wendy Wolford, vice provost of international affairs, spoke about Cornell’s Nov. 7 settlement deal with the Trump Administration and why Foreign Gift and Contract reporting was emphasized in the agreement. In 2019, the University fell under Department of Education investigation for failing to disclose gifts and contracts from Qatar and China, though Wolford said the University is not currently facing any federal inquiries over the matter.
(12/09/25 6:38pm)
The Student Assembly passed three resolutions on Thursday, calling for the University to divest from fossil fuel companies, condemning Cornell’s settlement with the Trump administration and recommending an increase in the Student Activity Fee — a fee charged to all students to financially support student organizations and programming.
(12/09/25 1:00pm)
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program provides food security for millions of Americans, with roughly 42 million people per month in 2024. During the 2025 government shutdown, SNAP lost its funding and those 42 million lost their SNAP benefits. As the government recovers from the shutdown, SNAP benefits are returning, but with major delays and only for half the normal number of recipients.
(12/09/25 2:14am)
On April 24, The Sun’s Editorial Board endorsed Saad Razzak for executive vice president of the Student Assembly and chose to endorse nobody for president. Every spring, as campaign platforms circulate, elections for Cornell’s Student Assembly take center stage on campus. This process can be chaotic, at times dramatic, and truly significant. It provides a rare opportunity for students to learn about communication, organization, negotiation and leadership.
(12/08/25 10:47pm)
Women’s hockey keeps losing. It’s difficult to figure out why.
(12/08/25 9:37am)
Following a freeze of over $250 million from the federal government, the University announced its settlement — a legally binding agreement that ended the freeze and resulted in the dismissal of any pending civil rights investigations — with the Trump administration on Nov. 7.
(12/08/25 9:27am)
New York City Mayoral elect Zohran Mamdani previously called for the boycott of Cornell Tech over its public-private partnership with Technion — Israel Institute of Technology not long after he won a seat in the New York State Assembly in 2020, according to reporting in The New York Post.
(12/08/25 9:04am)
Tompkins County’s emergency medical services system has been struggling to fill gaps in care due to rising response times, limited ambulance capacity and staffing shortages, according to Prof. Dan Lamb, public policy, who is also the Deputy Supervisor of the Town of Dryden.