A Cornellian family poses for a group photo at Ruth Bader Ginsburg Hall during Move-In 2024 on North Campus

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With the annual caravan of vehicles and a parade of fresh faces, another school year gets underway

By Joe Wilensky

In mid-August, thousands of first-year and transfer students and their families converged on the Hill for the start of the fall semester. And while rain was forecast—and made several unwanted appearances early in the week—the energy and excitement of the annual rite of passage shone through.

A volunteer welcomes new students at the check-in center at the Shops at Ithaca Mall during Move-In 2024
Staffers offered Big Red welcomes and a celebratory atmosphere at the mall check-in center.

A former department store space at the nearby Ithaca Mall was once again transformed into a colorful welcome and-check-in center.

There, new Cornellians received their ID cards and room keys, and ecstatic families posed for photos amid festive balloons, decorative backdrops, and large video screens displaying Cornell student stories.

This year, there was also an additional family lounge space, housed in another nearby storefront.

From the mall, streams of cars, SUVs, and minivans—as well as Ubers ferrying solo students and their belongings—headed to the North and West campus residence halls, program houses, and co-ops. 

Students chat with Ryan Lombardi, vice president for student and campus life, during the Big Red Welcome Party for new Cornell families at Willard Straight Hall during Move-In 2024
New students chat with Ryan Lombardi, VP for Student and Campus Life, at a welcome event.

En route to the residences, an army of volunteers—plus professional movers wielding wheeled bins—helped direct students and their families in unloading their cars and moving into rooms.

The newest Cornellians include 520 transfer students as well as the 3,574 members of the Class of 2028.

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Those first-years come from every U.S. state and 57 countries, and 16.3% of them are first-generation college students.

Among the new arrivals: 20 veterans of the U.S. military.

For a number of first-years, the official Move-In and New Student Orientation activities weren’t their first taste of Cornell, since they’d attended summer programs, pre-Orientation outdoor adventures, or service trips.

A parent poses for a selfie with Interim President Michael Kotlikoff during the Big Red Welcome Party for new Cornell families at Willard Straight Hall during Move-In 2024
Interim President Mike Kotlikoff poses for a selfie with a parent in Willard Straight.

The week’s festivities also included a Big Red Welcome Party for new Cornell families in the Straight—where they were greeted by Interim President Mike Kotlikoff—and a bevy of receptions, socials, and more.

Top: A family photo in Ruth Bader Ginsburg Hall on North Campus. All images by Cornell University photographers Alex Bayer, Lindsay France, Noël Heaney, Sreang Hok, and Jason Koski.

Published August 22, 2024


What do you remember about your arrival at Cornell?

Comments

  1. Elizabeth Hoare Cowles, Class of 1982

    Clara Dickson Hall had a floor called the Living Learning Center. We had great times together and made lifelong friends.

    As my father (class of 1956, MBA ’57) said when he left “These will be the best four years of your life.”

  2. Leslie Starr, Class of 1976

    I’ll never forget beginning to meet other incoming freshmen who lived in North Campus 7. I asked people where they were from, and I got answers “the city” and “the island.” I innocently asked “which city” and “what island”? They looked at me like I had green antenna.

    When they asked me where I was from, and I said “Chicago,” to which they replied “oh, you are from our WEST!” (I’d always thought of California being “out west,” but I guess it’s all in your perspective.) It seemed so odd to me that these folks were so NYC-centric that they must have thought everyone was from there. But I quickly learned which city and which island people meant.

    • Karen Viglione Lauterwasser, Class of 1976

      Yep. I found the same responses, having come to Cornell from Cleveland, OH. I eventually met folks from Montana and Idaho, and we reveled in being thought of as being from the same “out west”.

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