The Observer, Volume L, Issue 15, 1/18/19

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Case Western Reserve University volume L, issue 15 friday, 1/18/2019

Observer CWRU takes CES

Campus representatives attend consumer tech conference

Eddie Kerekes Executive Editor

While most students returned home for winter break, over three dozen Case Western Reserve University students, faculty and alumni traveled to Las Vegas at the beginning of January. It wasn’t all casinos, buffets and large productions. The CWRU representatives attended CES 2019 from Jan. 8-11. CWRU reserved 12 booths in the Eureka Park section of the showcase, displaying everything from a new type of bandage that comes off easily when exposed to ultraviolet light to an augmented reality (AR) company aimed at overlaying AR on products to engage and educate consumers. According to Bob Sopko, director of CWRU LaunchNet, CWRU had the largest presence of any university at the event in which over 170,000 people attended.

Courtesy of Andrew Dupuis Members of the CWRU-affiliated Beauty and the Bolt team speak with visitors to their table at CES.

Xyla Foxlin, a fourth-year mechanical and aerospace engineering major, attended CES for the fourth time in her undergraduate career. She tweeted, “Although the shine of attending has worn off a bit over the years, I can’t ignore how incredible of an opportunity this show is.” Foxlin co-founded Beauty and the Bolt with Andrew Dupuis, an alumnus and current doctoral student in biomedical engineering. It is a YouTube teaching site focused on engineering that “aims to make learning engineering easy, inexpensive, and accessible for anyone,” according to the company’s website. Other CWRU-affiliated people who are on the Beauty and the Bolt team include fourth-year students Graciela Marez, Jahlyn Reyes-McKinley and Avery Zhou, second-year student AJ Jackson and alumnae Hannah Evans. Much of the innovation CWRU brought to CES 2019 was related to the health industry. Lumen Polymer, a startup created

by materials science and engineering doctoral students students Donghui Li and Zhe Ren, created a switchable adhesive bandage. The bandage can be removed easier with an application of ultraviolet light and can be used by the elderly and people with very sensitive skin. The startup also presented at the Innovation ShowCASE during the fall semester. Another group of students, two MBA candidates from the Weatherhead School of Management and two students from the Cleveland Institute of Art, represented Inspirit. Inspirit is currently developing a “real-time, hydration-monitoring device” that would also help the elderly by improving their quality of life and reducing nursing home negligence. Another booth was run by Enabled Robotics, a company and product aimed at helping people with physical limitations created in 2017 by second-year mechanical engineering student Robert Steward.

Prince Ghosh, a fourth-year mechanical and aerospace engineering student, presented Boundary Labs, a digital platform for industrial manufacturing. Ghosh also serves as the Undergraduate Student Government Speaker. CWRU also sent a contingent of people focused on robotics. In addition to Enabled Robotics, RoadPrintz, a company started by CWRU electrical engineering and computer science professor Wyatt Newman, and a visual AI platform called Path-Robotics were featured along with the Case Robotics Team. Notably absent was Matt Campagna, a former CES attendee for CWRU who is the CEO of Reflexion. The company, based in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, created Edge, which measures and trains cognitive performance. Mary McPheeters contributed reporting.

Government shutdown hits CWRU

The partial government shutdown, now in its fourth week, is affecting research universities across the United

States, including Case Western Reserve University. Now, professors and students who receive funding from national agencies like the National Science Foundation (NSF), the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA),

the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) or NASA are having to halt their research until the new budget is approved. Organizations like the NEH, the NSF, the USDA and NASA are hit the hardest by the government shutdown because they have not yet been funded for this year. As a result, around 800,000 federal employees are currently either working without pay or on leave, and are operating without funding for this year. The partial government shutdown began on Dec. 21 after President Donald Trump vetoed the federal spending bill and stated that he would not approve the budget until it included provisions for a wall along the U.S.-Mexican border. Trump insisted that the budget include $5.7 billion for this wall—significantly more than the $1.6 billion allocated to border security already included in the budget. According to a recent article pub-

lished in The Daily, the National Institutes of Health took almost four months to recover from the effects of the 16 day government shutdown in 2013. The repercussions of the 2013 shutdown lead researchers and administration to worry about the long-term effects of the current shutdown, now the longest in history. But second-year political science major Chloe Mieras worries more about the direct impact of the shutdown upon CWRU students. “More than anything else, I worry about the students whose parents were affected by the shutdown,” Mieras said. “Students who are worried about how they’re going to afford their textbooks or their sorority or fraternity dues without help from their parents. That’s not even considering the fact that tuition is due in just a few weeks.” As of press time, no deal had been reached to pass the federal spending bill and fund the government.

News

A&E

Opinion

Sports

pg. 3 Think Big initiative begins

pg. 6 Five years “Home Alone”

pg. 7 Keeping up with Uptown

pg. 12 Bouncing into 2019

Courtesy of AFGE/Flickr Furloughed federal workers protest the government shutdown. Among the agencies not currenlty funded are NASA and the National Science Foundation.

Katharine Toldeo Staff Reporter


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