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 Students on the river in New York City at night

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Alumni offer advice to A&S students at summer networking events

Students in the College of Arts & Sciences will have the opportunity to meet and network with alumni in a diverse array of career fields at a series of networking events this summer.The college’s Career Development Center and the Arts & Sciences Career Connections Committee have planned five events in New York City and Washington D.C. beginning June 19.“I wanted to see the paths that…

 Interns for CSI

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Measure of America summer research interns explore human well-being

This summer, two interns from the College of Arts & Sciences, Lala Xu ‘18 and Emily Bramhall ‘19, will assist in researching, writing and producing papers and reports on human well-being, freedom and opportunity for the Measure of America project.  They will benefit from an Engaged Cornell grant, which will provide them with stipends to assist with the costs of living in Brooklyn over the…

 Movie

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"Cinema under the stars": Cornell Cinema's summer series returns

Now in its 18th year, Cornell Cinema’s “Cinema Under the Stars” returns this summer with another great audience-selected line up.“Cornell Cinema's Summer Terrace Screenings are community events that bring everyone in Ithaca together,” said Yuji Yang ‘19, president of the Cornell Cinema Student Advisory Board. “It's wonderful to see students and residents gather under a beautiful night sky and…

 Hand drawing asian characters in a notebook

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“Any language, any person:” New literary magazine set to prioritize diverse voices

“Death in the Afternoon,” a literary magazine launched this month, aims to feature the voices of students and non-students from across the globe and in any language. The magazine has an international, intercollegiate and interdisciplinary focus that will represent the intersection between different cultures, genres and mediums featuring diverse talents.“As comparative literature students, we all…

 Student from film looking up from under a table

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Student-made films to screen at Schwartz Center

From stories of budding romances to a vampire huntress out for revenge, the Department of Performing and Media Arts will screen films written and directed by students from Advanced Filmmaking (PMA 4585) and photographed by students from Cinematography (PMA 4420).The free screenings will take place at 7 p.m. May 15 in the Kiplinger Theatre, Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts.Students…

 Liana Brent

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Doctoral student receives prize for archaeological research

Liana Brent, a PhD candidate in Classics, has been honored with the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Samuel H. Kress Foundation Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize at the American Academy in Rome for her project, “Corporeal Connections: Tomb Disturbance, Reuse, and Violation in Roman Italy.”The American Academy in Rome, founded in 1894, is the oldest American overseas center for independent study and…

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Historian to unpack 400 years of class-based injustices in America

Historian Nancy Isenberg will take on the topic of class and privilege in America at the Krieger Lecture in American Political Culture.The lecture, “White Trash: Class Politics, American Style,” will take place at 4:30 p.m., May 4, in the Lewis Auditorium, Goldwin Smith Hall. Isenberg’s previous lectures have addressed and challenged long-held beliefs about a “land of opportunity” and the …

 David Mermin

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Physics professor to receive prestigious award in Prague

David Mermin, the Horace White professor of physics emeritus, has been named the recipient of this year’s Dagmar and Václav Havel Foundation VIZE 97 Prize. Mermin learned that he is the 2017 recipient in a letter from the former Czech first lady, Dagmar Havlová. He is the 19th recipient of the award. Mermin, whose research interests and work lay in theoretical condensed-matter physics and the…

 Rachel Mitnick

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A&S senior wins Carnegie Endowment fellowship

Rachel Mitnick ‘17, has been named a junior fellow by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, DC. She will work in the endowment’s Executive Office, supporting William Burns, endowment president.The James C. Gaither Junior Fellows Program provides a year of paid research experience to qualified graduating seniors and individuals who have graduated during the past academic…

 books

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Comparative literature department celebrates 50 years

Note: This event will now be held in the German Studies Lounge, 177 Goldwin Smith Hall The Department of Comparative Literature is celebrating its 50th anniversary this semester with an event, “Comparative Lit at 50: Early Modern Studies,” from 3-7 p.m., April 13 in Klarman Hall featuring speakers from other universities, a roundtable discussion and reception.Professors Geoffrey Hartman and Paul…

 Students

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Undergraduate poetry review eschews literary exclusivity

In the two years since its founding in the summer of 2015, Marginalia, an undergraduate poetry review society, has produced four issues and drawn together undergraduates from all majors and colleges with a shared passion for poetry.“Marginalia was founded on building community and bridging some of the exclusivity that sometimes can be latent in publishing a magazine of this kind,” said Jesse…

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Phi Beta Kappa celebrates 135th induction

At a ceremony including family and friends, Cornell inducted its 2017 class of Phi Beta Kappa students March 1, juniors and seniors whose grades are at the top of their class.The ceremony was hosted by Barbara Baird, senior associate dean for math and science in the College of Arts & Sciences, and Daniel R. Schwarz, the Frederic J. Whiton Professor of English, Stephen H. Weiss Presidential…

 David Orr

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Literary critic’s new book explores the nuances of penning a poem  

“The history of American poetry, like the history of America itself, is a story of ingenuity, sacrifice, hard work, and sticking it to people when they least expect it,” writes David Orr in his new book, “You, Too, Could Write a Poem.”Orr, professor of the practice in the English Department, gives a literary critic’s perspective on the craft that is behind penning some of the best works in poetry…

 Aoise Stratford

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PMA professor honored with playwriting fellowship

Aoise Stratford, a visiting assistant professor in Performing and Media Arts, was named the 2017 Blaine Quarnstrom Guest Playwright at the University of Southern Mississippi in January. Stratford spent five days on the Southern Mississippi campus at the beginning of the year giving public talks, having her work read and teaching a series of intense hands-on playwriting workshops for students…

 Kathryn Ling '11, upper left, a Teach for America corps member and founder of Light in the Attic, with her fourth-grade class and their current "reads" at Hazlehurst Pre-K-8 School in Mississippi.

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Alumna founds Light in the Attic for Mississippi's kids

Nine-year-old Valencyah walks down the hallways of Hazlehurst Pre-K-8 School in Mississippi toting a Ziploc bag filled to the seam with six books. She has three more in her backpack, all checked out from her classroom library. Valencyah is a straight-A student of Kathryn Ling '11 and hopes one day to become a doctor.But at the rate she's going, Valencyah will have exhausted all the grade-level…