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Fatema Gunja Sumar ’01

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Founded by undergrads, service groups are still going strong

Meet some alums whose good works—from youth outreach to food drives—are being continued by a new generation
Black and white historical photo of a person wearing spectacles set over a black and white mountain landscape

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Juliana Hu Pegues to speak on Indigenous Feminist Activism

In this year’s Invitational Lecture hosted by the Society for the Humanities, Hu Pegues will examine the story of Tillie Paul, a Tlingit woman in Alaska
Jacob Anbinder

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How did our housing get so expensive? Klarman Fellow dives into the history

Jacob Anbinder is finding political as well as economic reasons for the current housing crisis.
Several people in army fatigues surround a man, the leader, with a beard

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Zaluzhny firing ‘sign of desperation more than calculation’

In Ukraine, fired general Zaluzhny appears to be taking the fall for recent failures and circumstances outside of President Zelensky’s control, says David Silbey.
Person stands with microphone, speaking intently while three others listen

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Students debate free speech in the workplace

Students from ILR and the College of Arts and Sciences debated “Speechless: Should Union Organizers Have Free Speech Rights in the Workplace?” on Jan. 31 in Ives Hall, supporting the Freedom of Expression Theme Year.
trees with pink blossoms in front of a clock tower and a library building

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Engaged Conversations Series to focus on community partnerships

The Einhorn Center for Community Engagement has launched a set of speaker events and workshops designed for anyone incorporating CEL into curricula, research and other programs.
metal puck levitates above a slightly pitted white surface

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'Flawed' material resolves superconductor conundrum

Researchers developed a more controlled way of making nickelates, a material that could potentially help pinpoint the key qualities that enable high-temperature superconductivity.
Long, low stone building in front of a plaza under a blue sky. A few people walk about

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Cornell Latin American politics expert on El Salvador election

President of El Salvador Nayib Bukele is on track to handedly win reelection on Sunday.
Overhead view of Cornell's campus buildings under a light sky, with a lake in the distance

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Twelve new Klarman Fellows to pursue innovative, timely research in A&S

… in the social sciences, sciences and humanities as the 2024 cohort of Klarman Postdoctoral Fellows . This fifth … plans as projects develop and opportunities arise. The 2024 cohort of Klarman Fellows are: Lili Alderson , a …
Person standing at a podium, smiling and gesturing

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‘Cosmos’ screening features ice cream and live Q&A with Ann Druyan

As part of their “Voyager Spacecraft Week,” the Cornell Astronomical Society joins Cornell Cinema to present “Cosmos” Episode 6: “Traveler’s Tales” on Feb. 13.
Illustration of leaves

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Speaker series to examine antisemitism, Islamophobia

Leading academics from around the country will join Cornell experts in a semester-long series, “Antisemitism and Islamophobia Examined."
Outline of a brain in colorful lines against a black background

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Mouse social calls and distress calls linked to different neurons

“Vocal communication is central to our experience as humans and fundamental to social success for animals generally,” said Prof. Katherine Tschida.
Illustration consisting of several orange slashes forming an upward V shape

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Researchers develop new model to predict surface atom scattering

Helium beams are potentially very useful for understanding the surface characteristics of materials on the molecular level.
Person wearing hockey gloves and a Cornell t-shirt, carrying a hockey stick and smiling

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Rising stars: Harrison Award honors recent alumni leaders

… community in their first ten years from graduation . The 2024 cohort of Harrison Award winners include two A&S alumni: …
An x-ray image of a worm, curved up like a smile, all red.

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Tiny worm offers window into important protein modifications

“The more we understand protein modification and function, the better we understand its central role for human health and disease.”
White and blue flag of Israel seen at a distance between two buildings

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Cornell scholar: Biden should bypass Bibi, appeal directly to Israelis

Israeli prime minister Bibi Netanyahu is an impasse to Biden's "dream deal" approach to the Gaza crisis, says government scholar Uriel Abulof.
Large aircraft without a cockpit parked on a runway at sunset

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Iran has little incentive to dissuade proxy attacks against US troops

"Mounting an attack with clearly identifiable Iranian forces is probably off the table," says David Silbey, associate professor of history, "but further proxy attacks are likely to continue.”
Looking down on a stage with a large orchestra arranged on it

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Ukraine’s National Symphony Orchestra featured in Cornell Concert Series 

The Cornell Concert Series event, featuring conductor Volodymyr Sirenko and cellist Natalia Khoma, takes place Feb. 10 in Bailey Hall. 
Image of a computer screen showing code on the left and twelve squares containing faces in the center and right

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‘Another Body’ documentary exposes harm of deepfake technology

The film focuses on the gendered implications of deepfake technology; a free screening Feb. 7 will be presented by the Milstein Program in the College of Arts and Sciences, partnering with Cornell Cinema.
Piece of scientific equipment the size of a room, shaped in a circle

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Cornell takes role in advancing software at CERN

Cornell and other U.S. universities have been awarded $25 million from the National Science Foundation for research at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Switzerland.
Rhoda Feng, wearing big black glasses, long hair and a serious expression

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Freelance writer Rhoda Feng wins 2022-23 Nathan Award

The committee praised the verve, precision, and wry wit of Feng’s criticism, observing that she also brings historically and culturally informed sensibilities to all her reviewing.
Eight people stand shoulder to shoulder

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Student grant board funds social justice community projects

Thirteen student-community projects received grants through the Community Partnership Funding Board’s latest round of funding. Their shared goal: to bring social justice to the community.
Gold "Oscar" statuette in front of a film take board

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Oscar nominations: Cornell expert on racial representation in performing arts

Kristen Warner, who studies the impact of racial representation in the performing arts, highlights the shutout of Ava Duvernay’s “Origin” across the board, as well as racial politics of the Oscars.
Illustration of a cell showing a purple oval containing a pink circle and five blue oblongs

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New insights into metabolites that control aging and disease

The study presents an unexpected connection between spermidine, a long-known compound present in all living cells, and sirtuins, an enzyme family that regulates many life-essential functions.
Armita holding cramp-bites

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Cornell student creates alternative remedy to relieve period pain

Armita Jamshidi ‘25, a computer science major and Harrison College Scholar, founded Aunt Flo’s Kitchen and is a new member of eLab.
Illustration of a DNA double helix in blue and purple dots

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‘Shredding’ cancer cells: Study of CRISPR-Cas3 brings us a step closer

Cornell researchers have taken an important step toward harnessing CRISPR gene editing in “targeted, safe and potent” cancer treatment.
Black and white historic photo of a half dozen young men, relaxing togther around a table

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For 75+ years, students have made Watermargin a home

The pioneering co-op led the way in creating an interracial, interfaith house as a nondiscriminatory ideal.
Sign showing Populism going one way and democracy the other

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Democratic decline a global phenomenon, even in wealthy nations

Democratic backsliding is occurring in an unprecedented number of wealthy countries once thought immune to such forces – the United States among them, finds a new analysis led by Cornell political scientists.
three men on stage

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With 'Succession,' another Emmy for producer Scott Ferguson '82, BA '83

The veteran Hollywood exec boasts a resume including Oscar winners, ratings toppers and critical favorites.
Person touching papers coming out of an old box

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Campus time capsules are blasts from the past

From contemporary ephemera to a missive from Ezra himself, the historic containers are relics of an earlier Cornell.
Cornell Cinema

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Now showing: Spring 2024 at Cornell Cinema

Cornell Cinema's spring semester film slate features a mix of contemporary and classic films selected to spark curiosity, inspire understanding, and advance teaching across disciplines.
White plate on a pink background, with a fork and a knife. There is a sad face drawn on the plate

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Opinion: What Oprah gets right about diet culture

Some Americans felt betrayed when Oprah Winfrey recently revealed that she had taken weight-loss medication, writes Adrienne Bitar, lecturer in the American Studies Program, in a CNN op-ed.
Michell Chresfield

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Breaking silence: Speak up to honor MLK Jr., historian says

A Cornell historian says one of the most important aspects of Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy was his insistence on speaking up against social and economic injustice.
Researchers in striped orange hazard vests kneel next to a cloudy lake holding long poles in the water.

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New research on microbes expands the known limits for life

The research shows how changes in salinity may affect life in aquatic habitats on Earth and widens the possibilities for where life may be found throughout our solar system.
Kate Manne

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‘Fatphobia’ a form of oppression, says philosopher Kate Manne

In her new book, “Unshrinking: How to Face Fatphobia,” Prof. Kate Manne draws on personal experience as well as scientific research.
A dense forest; trees covered with gree leaves

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Pinkham wins British Journalism Award for feature on migrants

… stunt. The same story has been shortlisted for the 2024 True Story Award . “Belarus itself has no desire to …
man standing with arms crossed

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A&S grad wins Marshall Scholarship

… in the College of Arts & Sciences, is the winner of a 2024 Marshall Scholarship , which provides funds for U.S. …
Elaborate, painted building (St. Basil's Cathedral, Moscow)

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The west would harm itself with rash seizures of frozen Russian assets

A watertight legal basis for confiscations is lacking because the US and its allies are not openly at war with Moscow, argues historian Nicholas Mulder in an op-ed.
Two dark brown fish, seen from above

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In chatty midshipman fish, the midbrain awakens a gift of gab

The midbrain in these fish may serve as a useful model for how mammals and other vertebrates, including humans, control vocal expressions.
Satellite of the middle east region, seen from space: brown land, dark blue sea, highlights of snow, unusual for the region

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Maps have political power, sociologist says

A new paper examines the politics at play in the maps published in 2020 as part of a peace plan proposed by the Trump Administration.
Black and white historic image of Filipino family traveling on carabao from an American concentration camp, circa 1900

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Digitized images illuminate U.S. colonial period in the Philippines

Idyllic images of the Philippines taken by a Cornell alumnus in 1902 illuminate the tumultuous U.S. annexation of the archipelago in the aftermath of the Philippine-American War, according to a Ph.D. student in history.
Environment & Sustainability Program

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Student opinion pieces encourage action on climate change

Students in Prof. Caroline Levine’s Communicating Climate Change class wrote opinion pieces spurring readers to take action related to climate.
Four donuts in a stack: frosted pink, covered with sprinkles

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What if ‘food noise’ is just…hunger?

Kate Manne writes that “food noise,” ubiquitous on social media, is a rebrand of some of the most basic human drives: hunger, appetite, craving – and she argues that we should resist this reframing.
Two people stand together in a studio with paints and paintings

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For two Cornellian pals, art meets life — now in book form

… , to be published by a small Latvian art press in January 2024. “Back at Cornell I envisioned writing a book about JJ …
college campus buildings under a partly cloudy sky, with a lake beyond

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Cornell historian testifies in landmark Indigenous rights case

Jon Parmenter helped the defense successfully assert an Aboriginal right to trade based on 18th century treaties.
 Goldwin Smith Hall

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NY Times op-ed by philosopher Kate Manne wins award

The award honors “standout pieces that successfully blend philosophical argumentation with an op-ed writing style.”
 Math equations

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Math professors honored as AMS fellows

Two professors in the Department of Mathematics were recently named fellows in the American Mathematical Society.
college campus buildings under a partly cloudy sky, with a lake beyond

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Cornell’s ’24-25 Schwarzman Scholars named

A&S young alumni are among this year’s group of 150 scholars, who are from 43 countries and 114 universities. Schwarzman Scholars, an international program, nurtures a network of future global leaders.
Hand-lettered sign "No Justice, No PEACE" held by a person in a crowd

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Reparations commission ‘step in right direction,’ but education is key to understanding

Olúfẹ́mi Táíwò, an expert in Africana studies, wrote about how America should respond to its history of racism in an opinion piece in The Washington Post.
Two arms with hands joined. A tree is in the background

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LGBTQ Catholics in a state of ‘conditional belonging’

Sociologist Landon Schnabel says the blessing of same-sex couples is an important and complex step for the Catholic Church.