Student Assembly
From Transfer Rep. to S.A. President: Cat Huang ’21 Takes the Reins
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From transfer representative to S.A. president, Cat Huang ’21 talks everything from Student Assembly reform to her McGraw Tower Instagram account.
The Cornell Daily Sun (https://cornellsun.com/?s=cat+huang)
From transfer representative to S.A. president, Cat Huang ’21 talks everything from Student Assembly reform to her McGraw Tower Instagram account.
With 1,286 votes, Cat Huang ’21 won the election for Student Assembly President Monday night, ending an election season that faced a six-month delay and last-minute questions about its legitimacy.
After three days of voting, Cornell’s undergraduates elected Joe Anderson ’20 as the next Student Assembly president. Voters also elected Cat Huang ’21, current S.A. transfer representative, as Executive Vice President, the position currently held by Anderson.
When first coming to Cornell, Cat Huang ’21, executive vice president of the Student Assembly, had not initially considered higher education policy to be a particularly gripping field. But shaped by her experience serving on the S.A. — regularly working with administrators and discussing campus policy — Huang is now working to create The Cornell Higher Ed. Review, Cornell’s first student-run publication focused on higher education.
Collaborating closely with S.A. President Joe Anderson ’20, Huang said she hopes to register the journal as a new student organization in February and publish it digitally throughout the semester. She plans to release the first print edition by April or May.
All Cornell students may contribute to the journal, and there is no application to join.
“We want it to be pretty accessible to all students,” Huang said. “It is an opportunity for them to get published by a journal that is peer reviewed — as in student reviewed.”
Huang hopes the journal will encourage Cornell students to “think more critically about the institutions we inhabit” and become more informed about the day-to-day logistics of university operations.
Anuli Ononye ’22 is a familiar face around campus, part of the Office of the Student Advocate, the Institute of Politics and Global Affairs and more. Soon, she will be known for the position she was elected into: Student Assembly President.
Fewer budgets were submitted in fall 2020 than in the previous year. For those that did, SAFC allocated, on average, about $300 less per organization.
The Office of the Student Advocate, created by the Student Assembly last September, is gearing up to help students find the right office to deal with their issues, as well as follow up with those students to ensure that the issue has been resolved.
The Student Assembly appointed Liel Sterling ’21, founder of Cornell’s ACLU chapter and a candidate for Student-Elected Trustee last semester, to spearhead the new Office of the Student Advocate on Thursday.
Students, staff and community members gathered yesterday for Hope Fest, a festival of Chinese culture organized by Cornell’s Project Hope to raise funds to sponsor educational costs for poor children in rural China.
“China has a very large population, and, because of that, it’s much harder to enforce education laws,” explained Leslie Huang ’06, founder and president of Cornell’s Project Hope. “We need more people to help out and money is needed for that as well.”
About 200 Hope Fest guests trickled in and out of Willard Straight’s Memorial Room during the afternoon, filling the room decorated with Chinese lanterns during the scheduled fashion show and dance performances and clustering around the calligraphy, food and information tables during the lulls between presentations.
Using the money donated at the free event and other fundraisers, the organization hopes to sponsor school fees for 20 Chinese students, doubling the number of sponsorships they were able to provide last spring when Project Hope began at Cornell.
To entertain Hope Fest guests, fashion show models dressed in brightly colored embroidered silks walked to the beat of music, earning laughs with Charlie’s Angels references and smiles as children joined the adults onstage. Both children and adults modeled the traditional quipao (women’s dresses), magua (men’s shirts) with a few more modern designs mixed in.
After the show people returned to eating, browsing and watching artist Jim Hardesty’s calligraphy brushes at work. As two great blue herons took shape under Hardesty’s fingertips he talked with visitors about his interest in calligraphy and East Asian studies.
When he first saw calligraphy as a four – year – old in a Chinese laundromat, Hardesty’s interest was piqued. The painter now teaches at the Johnson museum where some of his pieces are a part of the permanent collection and volunteers for events like Hope Fest.
“I do this for them so people donate a little money for the program,” Hardesty said.
Visitors paid to have messages written in calligraphy with the proceeds donated to the project. Other ways to contribute included a raffle, Asian souvenirs and donations.
142 million Chinese are illiterate, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), almost equal to half the population of the United States. In addition to sponsoring students’ school fees, the China – based parent organization Project Hope also works to build schools and create libraries to combat illiteracy and promote education.
“Many people think of China as a glamorous developing economy, but the rural areas are really very behind,” said Frances Yufen Lee Mehta, Senior Lecturer Asian Studies and faculty advisor for Project Hope. “With all the good living here people tend to forget, tend to take it for granted and never know that in other parts of the world there are people who are in need. We let students know for as little as $60 you can put children through school for a whole year. That is not something very far – fetched. It is easily do – able and in the meantime students learn how fortunate, how blessed they are here.”
A video at last year’s China night sparked Xi Wang’s ’06 involvement in Project Hope. Wang grew up in China and the charity appealed to her desire to help people in her native country.
“I went back to China this summer, and I went to a lot of the rural areas, and there’s a huge contrast [with the cities],” Wang said. “The urban areas are developing, and people are getting richer, but there’s always the poor class left behind in the countryside. I think everyone in the world should have some standard of living, and I think it’s the responsibility of people that are in better situations to try to help out as much as they can.”
A little later in the program five dancers from the Illuminations Dance Troupe took the stage; their music and quietly graceful movements were punctuated by the snapping open of fans in the Iron Fan Dance, a traditional Chinese dance meant to mimic warriors according to Sophia Luu ’07, president Illuminations Dance Troupe.
Other student groups such as the Chinese Folk Dance Troupe and Tzu Chi, a Buddhist based charity organization, contributed to the event by providing entertainment and volunteers. At the end of the day the organization earned about $800. “I’m really very happy,” Huang said. “It was a big success.”
Archived article by Katy Bishop
Sun Staff Writer
S.A. presidential candidates Cat Huang ’21 and Uche Chukwukere ’21 have confirmed that they are suspending their campaigns.