01-28-19 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 48

MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 2019

n

12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Martha Pollack

In Defense Of Filmed Theatre

On a Roll

Sunny And Cold

Starting Februrary 1st, President Pollack will serve on the IBM board. | Page 3

No. 6 women's hockey earned two 4-2 wins over No. 8 Colgate.

Andrea Yang '20 talks about the inaccessibility of theatre. | Page 6

HIGH: 26º LOW: 20º

| Page 12

15 Alumni Featured in Forbes’ 30 Under 30 Cornellians to be interviewed in online event

By ROCHELLE LI Sun Staff Writer

A savvy idea and a Cornell education helped 15 alumni make it onto the Forbes' annual 30 Under 30 list this year. Crafting concepts ranging from sports drinks to insect-sized robots, young Cornell alumni are “putting a new twist on the old tools of the trade," according to Forbes. The annually released list compiles the 30 top “trailblazers” in 20 different industries for a total of 600 people. The Cornellians featured include entrepreneurs creating new ways to manage healthcare,

scientists developing “artificial photosynthesis” and startup founders that have raised millions of dollars. Other similar universities also have their fair share of alumni on the list: Columbia has 11 alumni, Yale has 19 and Stanford tops the list with 54 alumni. Kristen McClellan ’12 started her company, SnappyScreen, a sunscreen application system, while she was at Cornell. During her freshman year, McClellan competed in an elevator pitch competition. Over the next three years at Cornell, she built three prototypes and conducted her first trial period. After she grad-

TSE ’13

TAM ’13

ROGER ’13

uated, McClellan continued growing SnappyScreen into a company that now expects to make almost $3 million in sales this year. Another startup founder, David Roger ’13, former dining writer for The Sun, is the CEO of Felix Gray, which sells specialized eyewear that filters out blue light. Roger’s eyewear is designed for people who

McCLELLAN ’12

spend a lot of time looking at their screens and helps to minimize eye strain. Felix Gray has more than 100,000 customers and is expected to earn $14 million this year. Along with McClellan and Roger, 10 of the 15 alumni will be interviewed in See ALUMNI page 5

Downtown Collegetown Bagels Cornell Chimes To Recruit New Will Relocate to New City Centre Owner calls new location the ‘center of the universe for Ithaca’

By MEGHAN FLANIGEN Sun Staff Writer

Ithaca’s Collegetown Bagels will be moving their downtown location this summer and will be making additions to its menu offerings. Currently located at 203 N. Aurora St., the popular bagel place will move to the new City Centre building at 301 E. State St. Gregar Brous, owner of Collegetown Bagels, said that the eatery has “been looking for space in the downtown area that would be a bit larger in BOTH IMAGES COURTESY OF CITY OF ITHACA

See BAGELS page 5

New heights | The aerial architectural rendering below shows City Centre from above the east end of the Ithaca Commons; the inset drawing depicts a detail of the project’s east corner above E. State Street.

Chimesmasters By JOHNATHAN STIMPSON Sun Assistant Sports Editor

For well over a hundred years, McGraw Tower’s 21 bells have set the mood for an entire campus and town, performing everything from the iconic “Alma Mater” on fall evenings to elaborate renditions of the Grateful Dead. But 161 steps above Ho Plaza, it is easy to take the source of the thrice daily, boisterous melody for granted. According to Sonya Chyu ’19, a current member of Cornell C h i m e s , some students believe that the quintessential clock tower concerts are automated. “A lot of people don’t realize that the chimes are MICHAEL LINHORST / SUN FILE PHOTO played by actual, fellow students,” she said. “Some people think the chimes are just played by a computer.” Not only are the chimes not automated, but earning the right to serenade a campus of almost 15,000 people is not easy. Students who are tasked with playing the chimes, called “chimesmasters,” are chosen in an annual competition that runs from February to April. While the competition is open to all students with at least two years remaining on campus, the tryout process is designed to select the very best of Cornell’s musicians, according to Chyu. Over the course of 10 weeks, a pool of about 40 candidates is gradually winnowed down to an elite See CHIMES page 3


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