4-29-19 full issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 83

MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2019

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12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

50 Years Later...

LOVE + FEAR

Women’s Lacrosse

Mostly Cloudy

Tom Jones ’69, a prominent figure in the 1969 Willard Straight Takeover, returned on Wednesday to share his lessons from the event. | Page 3

MARINA’s new album is perfect for fans who grew up with her music and are ready for something new. | Page 6

The Red loses to Princeton on senior day, but will have another chance against the Tigers next weekend. | Page 12

Olympic Figure Skater Karen Chen Joins Cornell Class of 2023

MICHAELA BREW / SUN FILE PHOTO

HIGH: 57º LOW: 43º

The Science Guy | Bill Nye ’77 will honor the graduating class of 2019 during convocation on May 25.

Plans to balance pre-med course load and skating practice By ROCHELLE LI Sun Staff Writer

At the age of 19, Karen Chen ’23 has already won the 2017 U.S. Figure Skating Championships, competed at the 2018 PyeongChang Olympics and published a book. Now, she’s joining Cornell’s Class of 2023. Like most incoming freshmen, Chen is nervous about adjusting to college life. But compared with most of her peers, Chen’s struggle is somewhat unique. Scoring the 11th place in PyeongChang, her eyes are now set on the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, and being a full-time professional skater and full-time student at the same time won’t be easy. Originally from California, Chen moved to Colorado in August of 2018 to train with her coach, Tammy Gambill. On Thursday, she visited Cornell for the first time to see the campus and attend events at the College of Human Ecology, where she’ll be majoring in Human Biology, Health, and Society. Cornell was among her top college choices, Chen said in an interview with The Sun at the Cornell Athletic Hall of Fame — after she tried the ice of Lynah Rink. She has paid her enrollment deposit, added “Cornell ’23” to her Instagram bio, and has even followed The Cornell Daily

Sun and Cornell Sports on social media. “The campus is beautiful, [but I’m] not sure how I’m going to be able to deal with the weather in the winter,” Chen told The Sun. “I know that’s going to be challenging for me since I’m from Cali and it’s all sunny there, all the time, all year round.” Chen has been homeschooled since 6th grade so that she can work her schedule around training. In college, it is going to be the other way around. The fact that Chen wants to pursue a pre-med path might make things even harder. “In my head it’s doable. I’m gonna make this work. I’m not willing to give up skating and it’s still a priority for me. I dedicated so much of my life to it,” she said. “So I’m gonna see if I can try and maintain and do both very well.” When Chen is over 1,500 miles away from her coach, training will have to be through hours of FaceTime and videos instead of in-person coaching. While Chen and Gambill have yet to work out the details, the long distance trainSee CHEN page 5

BORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Olympian Cornellian | Karen Chen ’23, an Olympian and a victor at the 2017 U.S. Figure Skating Championships, is coming to Cornell.

‘Take Back the Night’ Inspires Sexual Assault Survivors By KATHRYN STAMM Sun Staff Writer

With chants, artwork and colored armbands, hundreds of community members gathered at the Greater Ithaca Activities Center for the 40th annual Take Back the Night to raise awareness of sexual violence. Take Back the Night is a march, rally and vigil hosted by the Advocacy Center of Tompkins County, which provides domestic and sexual violence services. The event was a call for an end to intimate partner and sexual violence in the community and world. Its theme of “Light Out of Darkness” invited the survivors to take back their voices and move toward healing.

The gymnasium, where the rally was moved due to thunderstorms, was lined with handmade posters and an art installment made by sexual violence survivors in Tompkins County

“We are going to march and bear witness regardless of the weather, and we’re going to be loud.” Naomi Barry as a part of The Clothesline Project, which provides awareness and a space of healing. Attendees wore armbands

— purple to identify as survivors and blue for allies. The crowded space was charged with resilience and empathy as speakers and performances alternated throughout the night. Representing the City of Ithaca, Leslyn McBean-Clairborne, the deputy director of GIAC and Tompkins County Legislator, started the night by sharing her own story of growing up in a culture of domestic violence, an act which she called a demonstration of “love.” After her own reflections on her experiences, McBean-Clairborne asked the audience to do the same, to See RALLY page 5

Bill Nye ’77 Selected To Speak at 2019 Cornell Convocation By NICOLE ZHU and SEAN O’CONNELL Sun Assistant News Editor and Sun Staff Writer

The Convocation Committee announced that Bill Nye ’77 will be the 2019 convocation speaker after the Student Assembly meeting on Thursday afternoon. Nye, or “Bill Nye the Science Guy,” is best known as the host of the 19-Emmywinning PBS children’s science show, Bill Nye The Science Guy. Nye also stars in a Netflix original series called Bill Nye Saves the World, and was the focus of a 2017 biographical documentary film called Bill Nye: The Science Guy. Nye graduated from Cornell in 1977 with a B.S. degree in mechanical engineering. He was first involved with comedy in 1986 after a stint working for Boeing finally receiving his own show, Bill Nye the Science Guy in 1993. Nye has been heavily involved with Cornell. In 2011, he gave a speech to a crowded Statler Auditorium dedicating the sundial embedded in the façade of

Frank T. Rhodes Hall. More recently, during 2017’s reunion weekend, he gave a speech titled: ‘Everything All At Once – How Cornellians Will Save the World.’ Nye’s reveal comes two weeks after the Convocation

Nye graduated from Cornell in 1977 with a B.S. degree in mechanical engineering. Committee’s original pick, comedian and Patriot Act host Hasan Minhaj, dropped out hours before the committee’s planned announcement on April 11. This year’s selection has been marked by contention. The speaker announcement was delayed twice, the second time ascribed to S.A.’s decision to reject Resolution 36, which “urged” Cornell to divest from Israel, according to an article published in The Sun earlier this month. The cause of the original delay was unspecified. According to another article published days later, representaSee NYE page 5


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