News : page 66

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 Enrique Morones

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Border Angels leader to visit campus, speak downtown

Enrique Morones, president and founder of Border Angels, will offer a public talk, “Border Angels, Border Realities and Immigration Today,” at 6 p.m. Sept. 25 at the First Unitarian Church, 306 N. Aurora St., Ithaca. He will also visit Cornell classes and meet with students during his two-day visit to Ithaca.

 Vida Maralani

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Women who breastfeed more than five months have more kids

In new research, sociologists explore how breastfeeding duration is associated with how many children women go on to have.
 Arts & Sciences students attending the Wednesday Lunch Series on Aug. 29, sponsored by the Asian American Studies Program (AASP)

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Lunch series features informal discussions

So many students attended the semester’s first Wednesday Lunch Series on Aug. 29, sponsored by the Asian American Studies Program (AASP) and the Asian and Asian American Center, that some of them ended up standing.
 Jordan Turkewitz

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Managing partner at Zelnick Media Capital visits campus

Jordan Turkewitz ‘92, managing partner at Zelnick Media Capital, will visit campus Sept. 21 as part of a Career Conversation event offered by the Arts & Sciences Career Development Center.
 Statler Auditorium

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Panel of recruiters answer student questions at Recruiting Confidential event

What are the main qualities recruiters look for in resumes and how do they determine who to select? Do cover letters actually matter? How important is GPA? These questions and more were answered Sept. 5 by a panel of campus recruiters at “Recruiting Confidential: Questions You Always Wanted to Ask,” a panel hosted by the Arts & Sciences Career Development Center.

 Glenn C. Altschuler and Gretchen Ritter profile pictures

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A&S profs to offer take on midterm elections during CAU seminar

Arts & Sciences professors Gretchen Ritter and Glenn Altschuler will offer their insight on this historic time during a Cornell Adult University re-election seminar Nov. 2-4 at the Mohonk Mountain House in New Paltz, N.Y. Cornell Adult University (CAU) offers acclaimed education vacations designed and led by Cornell faculty.
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A Q&A with A&S Dean Ray Jayawardhana

Ray Jayawardhana became the 22nd dean of Cornell’s College of Arts & Sciences on September 1. Learn more about him as he begins his term.
 Call to ‘action’

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Call to ‘action’

Arts & Sciences alum Nilo Otero '76 has had a decades long career as the number-two person on sets of major motion pictures as a first assistant director. He is featured in this Cornell Alumni Magazine story chronicling his career and most recent work on the set of Oscar-nominated drama Dunkirk

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Top music industry expert speaks Sept. 27

Numerous artists have been launched into chart-topping, award-winning careers by Mathew Knowles, including both his daughters, Beyoncé and Solange. On Thursday, Sept. 27, Knowles will discuss his first two books, “The DNA of Achievers” and “Racism From the Eyes of a Child,” in a panel at 4:30 p.m. in the Africana Studies and Research Center. A reception will follow. The event is free, and the public is invited.
 Jacques Bailly in 1980

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Man of Letters

Former National Spelling Bee champ Jacques Bailly, PhD ’97, is the competition’s longtime ‘pronouncer’
 All That Jazz

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All That Jazz

More than 50 years after the first ever purely jazz program headlined by Dizzy Gillespie and his 18-piece orchestra made an impression on Vincent Rogers '49 and fellow jazz enthusiasts at Cornell, the visit by Wynton Marsalis to Cornell last spring had a similar impact on this generation of young musicians.

A Cornell Alumni Magazine story discusses the history of jazz at Cornell, and the musicians who've passed through. 

 Anna Haskins teaching an introductory sociology course

Article

From Martha Pollack: Active Learning Initiative goes university-wide

Cornell University's expands Active Learning Initiative (ALI) initiative with generous support from Alex Hanson ’87 and his wife, Laura Finlay Hanson ’87.
 Professor A.R. Ammons at the Temple of Zeus

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Temple of Zeus keeping students, faculty healthy for more than 50 years

Zeus menu board in Goldwin Smith HallThese days, nearly 900 customers pass through the lines every day at the Temple of Zeus café in the atrium of Klarman Hall. That’s a far cry from its humble origins in 1964 as a coffee and donut operation run by one of the building maintenance staff.

 Andrew Bass

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New lecture series features transformative life scientists

A new lecture series will feature eminent life scientists whose research transcends traditional boundaries.

With the inaugural lecture Sept. 21, Cornell’s Life Sciences Lecture Series will include four talks over the course of the academic year. The speakers are all interdisciplinary, internationally renowned and are excellent communicators.

 A.D. White Professor-at-Large to speak on race, class, speech

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A.D. White Professor-at-Large to speak on race, class, speech

Linguist and A.D. White Professor-at-Large John Rickford will address race, class and speech in a series of campus events Sept. 17-21 that include public talks and a screening of his 2017 film, “Talking Black in America.”

 Library stacks in the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research (RCPOR). Credit: Robert Barker (UREL)

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Roper Center expands access to America’s Voice Project

The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at Cornell University has partnered with Tompkins County Public Library (TCPL) to provide TCPL card-holders access to America’s Voice Project, a database of polling research dating back to the 1930s
 Student researches social movements in higher education

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Student researches social movements in higher education

Noticing a plethora of recent cases where university officials resigned amid pressure from students and others, Naomi Li ’20 wanted to know more.

Li, an economics and sociology major, conducted research over the summer on the role of resignation in social narratives and social change to find out more about cases like Lou Anna Simon at Michigan State University or Tim Wolfe and R. Bowen Loftin at Missouri State University and the kind of justice activists hoped to achieve.

 A photo from “A Meditation on Tongues,” conceived and directed by guest artist Ni’Ja Whitson

Article

Dance, multimedia performance to open 2018 CCA Biennial

The 2018 Cornell Council for the Arts (CCA) Biennial kicks off Sept. 14-15 at 8 p.m. at the Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts with “A Meditation on Tongues,” conceived and directed by guest artist Ni’Ja Whitson and performed by The NWA Project.

Whitson’s dance and multimedia adaptation of Marlon T. Riggs’ 1989 video portrait of black gay identity, “Tongues Untied,” opens a series of fall performances on the Biennial theme, “Duration: Passage, Persistence, Survival.”

 Seven projects awarded 2018 digitization grants

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Seven projects awarded 2018 digitization grants

Seasoned documents and artifacts are starting fresh digital lives through the Grants Program for Digital Collections in Arts and Sciences, which is funding seven projects this year. Launched in 2010, the program supports faculty members and graduate students in creating online collections vital for their own and for general scholarship.

 Hatfield Award recipient spends summer learning about ethics in government

Article

Hatfield Award recipient spends summer learning about ethics in government

From attending a lecture by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to seeing the process of creating a bill, Simone Smith '20 was exposed to many different aspects of government while interning in Washington D.C this summer. 

"Some of the issues I got to work on related to education, agriculture, labor and finance," said Smith, who interned with Senator Mark Warner (D-Va). 

 Milstein students welcomed to campus with BBQ, adventures

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Milstein students welcomed to campus with BBQ, adventures

Milstein students are offered a unique multidisciplinary curriculum, access to a variety of special classes and speakers and two summers of study at Cornell Tech.
 IVF image

Article

Device to corral viable sperm may speed IVF process

For couples hoping for a baby via in vitro fertilization, chances have improved. A process that once took hours now takes minutes: Cornell scientists have created a microfluidic device that quickly corrals strong and speedy sperm viable for fertilization.

 Wynton Marsais

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Video captures impact of week-long visit from jazz musician Wynton Marsalis

“Improvisation, swing, and the blues. If those three elements are present, you have Jazz.” A new video highlights the profound impact of jazz musician Wynton Marsalis on students, faculty, and the public during his weeklong visit to campus last spring.

 social network graphic of lines and dots

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Influential researcher to reflect on 20 years of network science

A pioneering network-science scholar whose work reshaped the scientific understanding of the dynamics of social influence will give a talk Sept. 13, sharing insights gained over 20 years of research into the field he helped create.

 Jeffrey Sachs

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Economist, UN adviser Jeffrey Sachs to speak on democracy Sept. 12

Renowned economist Jeffrey Sachs, who serves as a special adviser to United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres on sustainable development goals, will present a lecture, “Reclaiming America’s Democracy,” on Sept. 12 at 7 p.m. in Statler Auditorium, Statler Hall. The event is free and open to the public.

The lecture will focus on the importance of civic engagement in the American context and its implications for sustainable global development.

Isaac Kramnick and R. Laurence Moore

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Moore, Kramnick explore atheism in America in new book

Did America’s founders intend it as “one nation under God?” Does the First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of religion extend to freedom from religion?
 Cover of "Under Fire" book, with April Ryan holding her arm up to ask a question

Article

White House reporter to speak about reporting ‘under fire’

When White House reporter April Ryan openly asked President Trump about his racism in 2017, she abruptly became the story. Ryan will discuss her experiences in the White House and her new book, “Under Fire: Reporting from the Front Lines of the Trump White House,” at the Daniel W. Kops Freedom of the Press Lecture on Thurs., Sept. 20.
 Julia Thom-Levy

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Thom-Levy channels innovation to benefit faculty and students

Julia Thom-Levy, professor in physics and vice provost for academic innovation, oversees Cornell’s Center for Teaching Innovation (CTI) and the Office of Undergraduate Research. Her position was created a year ago, and CTI was formed by merging the former Center for Teaching Excellence with the Academic Technologies unit in Cornell Information Technologies.

 Niankai Fu

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Niankai Fu a finalist for 2018 Blavatnik Regional Awards for Young Scientists

Niankai Fu, a postdoctoral researcher in organic chemistry, has been recognized for his “transformative” work by the New York Academy of Sciences and the Blavatnik Family Foundation as a finalist for the 2018 Blavatnik Regional Awards.
 A&S student spends summer studying perception and memory at UCLA

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A&S student spends summer studying perception and memory at UCLA

After taking a philosophy of mind seminar last year, Marlene Berke ‘19 began thinking about connecting her research to the philosophy of perception and epistemology. 

“This course familiarized me with the current philosophical discussion about cognitive influences on perception, providing philosophical motivation for my studies about whether what we remember and expect might ‘leak’ into perception.”

 Event recorded with the CMS detector in 2012 at a proton-proton centre of mass energy of 8 TeV. 3D perspective. Courtesy of CERN.

Article

Cornell part of $25M NSF effort to untangle future physics data

Particle accelerators such as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) produce massive amounts of data that help answer long-held questions regarding Earth and the far reaches of the universe. The Higgs boson, which had been the missing link in the Standard Model of Particle Physics, was discovered there in 2012 and earned researchers the 2013 Nobel Prize in physics.

 A&S student creates platform for female empowerment

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A&S student creates platform for female empowerment

“Let’s Hear It” is also an online space for women to share advice, insights and valuable career guidance.
 Senior studies impact of nanoparticles in everyday products

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Senior studies impact of nanoparticles in everyday products

Manufacturers often use silver nanoparticles in product packaging to keep out bacteria and insects, but there is little research so far about whether the particles are completely neutral in the context of our bodies.                                           

 image of paper cutouts of people still connected to each other

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Professor Timothy Campbell receives AAIS book prize

Timothy Campbell, professor of Romance studies, has been awarded the 2017 American Association for Italian Studies (AAIS) prize in film and other media studies for his recent book, “Technē of Giving: Cinema and the Generous Form of Life.”

 Crowds at a march in Washington DC. Photo credit: @royaannmiller/Unsplash

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Physics theory used to predict crowd behavior

Electrons whizzing around each other and humans crammed together at a political rally don’t seem to have much in common, but researchers at Cornell are connecting the dots.
 Ni'Ja Whitson, photo by Scott Shaw

Article

Multimedia performance invites exploration of Black/Queer identities

Cornell Council for the Arts’ (CCA) 2018 Biennial kicks off Sept. 14–15 at the Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts with “A Meditation on Tongues,” conceived and directed by Ni’Ja Whitson, and performed by The NWA Project. The piece is a live-dance and multimedia adaptation of Marlon T. Riggs’ iconic film “Tongues Untied” (1989). 

 social science and tech word cloud

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Tech companies favor CU social science grads

The tech world is realizing the importance of a new definition of diversity – that of fields of study.
 Ruth Bader Ginsburg photo from her Cornell days

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Cornell Cinema hosts 'RBG' screening with discussion

Cornell  Cinema will host a special screening of “RBG,” a multidimensional portrait of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg ’54, at 7 p.m. Sept. 17 in Willard Straight Theatre, which will include an introduction by Government Professor Gretchen Ritter, who will also lead a post-screening discussion.

Graphic of cassette tape

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New exhibit finds art in unusual places

Marbled plastic, strange fluorescent colors, irregular forms: Large-format photographs on display in the John Hartell Gallery scale images of tiny plastic toys up 30 times.
 German map showing the Gulf of Aden around 1860. Credit: By August Heinrich Petermann (Somaliland and Aden: Images from the Past) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

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Field research leads to surprising results for historian

Some research just has to be done on-site, said historian Mostafa Minawi, and he should know.

Thanks to an ANAMED fellowship, he spent seven months in Sudan, Turkey, the United Kingdom, Somalia and Djibouti, tracking down details for his new book on Ottoman/European/Ethiopian competition over the coast of Somalia. The most surprising thing he found, he said, was how alive that history still is in some areas.

 A&S student combines CS, government interests in White House internship

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A&S student combines CS, government interests in White House internship

Graham Cohen '20 built an app for the Executive Office of the President of the United States.
 Premed students explore diverse medical interests in summer program

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Premed students explore diverse medical interests in summer program

“Students become participant observers, carrying out an ethnographic inquiry of the culture and practice of medicine."
 Ferris wheel with Coca-Cola logo in the center

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Product Love

This is an episode from the “What Makes Us Human?” podcast's third season, "What Do We Know about Love?" from Cornell University’s College of Arts & Sciences, showcasing the newest thinking from across the disciplines about the relationship between humans and love. Featuring audio essays written and recorded by Cornell faculty, the series releases a new episode each Tuesday through the fall semester.

 Students working in a lab

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Ways to promote and foster collaborative research in your lab

Katherine D. Kinzler, associate professor of psychology, joins with colleague Kristin Shutts in this Nature piece to share ideas for healthy teamwork in a lab.

 Headshot of Raven Schwam-Curtis ‘20, MMUF scholar and Cornell Arts & Sciences student

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MMUF scholar explores intersection between African, Asian cultures

"The intersections of cultures has always fascinated me because I live at one of those intersections.”
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Book traces influence of Southern white politicians on the US

The South has shaped America in subtle, surprising ways. In a new book, “Southern Nation: Congress and White Supremacy After Reconstruction,” three political scientists reveal the influence of Southern white supremacists on national public policy and Congressional procedures, from Reconstruction to the New Deal, and the impact that continues today.

 Senior investigates Latinx identity formation in higher education

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Senior investigates Latinx identity formation in higher education

Karen Loya is studying the way U.S. universities influence and support their Latinx students.
 Quilt depicting orange lines and slave ships in a half circle facing out

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Slave ship image helped end slavery, new book shows

Art historian Cheryl Finley provides the first in-depth look at how the 18th-century slave ship schematic became an enduring symbol of black resistance, identity and remembrance.
 Laurent Dubreuil

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New book analyzes poetry across the world

“What one cannot compute, one must poetize,” concludes a new interdisciplinary study of poetry.
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Unraveling titanium dioxide’s self-cleaning ability

Titanium dioxide is one of several minerals that are self-cleaning; they use energy from the sun to convert any “schmutz” that lands on their surface to a harmless gas, which then floats away.