11 08 18 entire issue HI res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 35

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2018

n

ITHACA, NEW YORK

20 Pages – Free

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

30 Under 30

Movie Resurrection

Early-Season Trek

Partly Cloudy

The Chinese restaurant and food truck that alumna Irene Li ‘15 owns helped her earn a spot on the Forbes 30 Under 30 list. | Page 3

Ruby Que ’20 and Varun Belur ’19 debate one of this year’s new Halloween horror movies. | Page 12

Men’s hockey makes a long road trip to the Upper Peninsula. | Page 20

HIGH: 46º LOW: 31º

‘Desirable’ C-Town Leases Going Increasingly Early By JOSH GIRSKY and MATTHEW McGOWEN Sun Senior Editors

In the 12-bedroom house at 410 Elmwood, there was a broken door for each resident. The sprinkler line also was broken, and there were massive amounts of trash to be removed, including two heavy beer pong tables. There was a wall covered in eggs from residents throwing them at each other and the remnants of a pool built out of tarp and hay bales in the backyard. Although there was a massive “I know friends who cleanup, longtime landlord struggled later down Collegetown Nick Lambrou didn’t the line trying to find have to worry about renting it out the next housing.” year. It is one of the fastest properties to Ian Chu ’19 leave the market in Collegetown, and this year’s residents signed for it in April 2017, 16 months before they moved in. While several new apartment buildings have been constructed in Collegetown in the last several years, the number of large houses where eight, 10 or even 14 people can live together has declined, making the hunt to get those properties even more cutthroat. Jonny Levenfeld ’19, one of the current residents of 410 Elmwood, signed the lease in the spring of his sophomore year. He said that although it might seem “slightly ridiculous” to sign that early, he remembers that there was another group interested in the property at the time, and that if they had waited even a week or two longer, he thinks it would have been off the market.

JING JIANG / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Early birds | Fall leaves cover the front yard of 410 Elmwood Rd., one of Lambrou Real Estate’s properties. The company said leases for larger properties are leaving the market around 16 months before residents would actually be moving in.

“I believe from what I’ve been told from [Lambrou] and from past tenants and whatnot that that is often one of the houses that is quickest to go off the market,” Levenfeld said. Levenfeld said he and several friends knew they wanted to live together, that they wanted to be near campus, and since “there just aren’t that many houses on the market,” they wanted to get the process over with. It was tense at the time, he said, between dealing with roommates that were either non-committal or on the edge and parents who couldn’t see the house for themselves and COURTESY OF ©RACHEL PHILIPSON

Sports speakers | Summit speakers will include many Cornell alumni professionals in the sports industry.

may have thought that it was “slightly ludicrous” to sign a lease that far in advance. “We’re just a bunch of 19-year-olds figuring out where to live. We’ve never dealt with any process like this,” Levenfeld said. They may have been doing it for the first time, but Levenfeld and his group were not doing it alone. Ian Chu ’19 signed to live in his 10-bedroom house on North Quarry

University Earns Award For Sustainability Efforts By AMANDA CRONIN Sun Staff Writer

ILR to Host Second Sports Summit

Fifteen professionals in industry are slated to speak By KATHERINE HEANEY Sun Staff Writer

The second annual Cornell ILR Sports Leadership Summit in New York City will bring together 15 sports industry professionals to discuss the opportunities and future of the industry. The speakers, most of them Cornell alumni, range from league commissioners, journalists, network executives and other leaders in the field. Cornellians have had a long history of leadership in sports,

as the current commissioner of the National Hockey League and ESPN’s president are both Cornell alumni. Many courses in the School of Industrial and Labor Relations allow students to explore components of careers in sports, such as negotiations, ethics, labor economics, labor law, sports statistics and conflict resolution. Several ILR courses are directly related to sports, including ILROB 3760: Sport Psychology and ILRLR 4030: Economics of Collective

Bargaining in Sports. The ILR School is also home to the ILR Sports Business Society, a student club that aims to provide members with access to the world of sports. The club hosts guest speakers and special events and runs a radio show, magazine and blog. According to the Summit’s website, it will celebrate trailblazers and leaders in sports, who will discuss the opportunities and chalSee ILR page 4

See COLLEGETOWN page 4

With roots in its Ithaca campus’ natural setting and its Climate Action Plan, Cornell University has been named one of the top 20 “Coolest Schools,” or, greenest colleges of 2018 in the Sierra Club’s annual list. The Sierra Club is one of the most prominent environmental advocacy organizations in the

country and has been running the “Coolest Schools” awards since 2006. Cornell scored a 74.7 out of 100 on the Sustainability Tracking, Assessment and Rating System — an annual survey sent by the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education to schools for their community members See SUSTAINABLE page 5

REBECCA NORTH / SUN GRAPHIC DESIGNER

Coolest school | The University has earned a score of 74.47 on the Sierra Club’s STAR system, putting it in the 20th spot on the “Coolest Schools” list.


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