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 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.

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

Article

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

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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.

 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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Article

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.

 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

Article

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.

 Quilt depicting orange lines and slave ships in a half circle facing out

Article

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.
 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.
 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.

 Homecoming fireworks

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Arts & Sciences welcomes alumni for Homecoming 2018

Art exhibitions, faculty research presentations by faculty and fun events are all on tap for Sept. 21-22.
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Weill Cornell Medicine internship allows chemistry major to continue NIH work

Ashley Kim ’19 spent her summer with researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City, working on research that could help doctors determine what role proteins play in the progression of disease.

 Gregory Pardlo

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Pulitzer Prize-winning authors featured in Fall 2018 Barbara & David Zalaznick Reading Series

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Gregory Pardlo kicks off the Fall 2018 Barbara & David Zalaznick Reading Series, sponsored by Cornell’s Creative Writing Program.
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Lectures explore politics and justice in the Trump era

“Politics and Justice in the Era of Donald Trump” will be explored in a lecture series at Cornell featuring eminent social scientists, beginning with Daniel Ziblatt (Harvard University) on Sept. 12. The co-author of “How Democracies Die” will speak on dangers to democracy.

Article

Arts & Sciences welcomes Class of 2022

Watch as students and their families join the Cornell community during the new student convocation Aug. 18.
 Dejah Powell ’18 outside Mann Library, with foliage visible in the window behind her

Article

Cross-college Program in Environment and Sustainability launches

The expanded environmental and sustainability sciences major is now available to students in both the College of Arts & Sciences and CALS.
 Green, old-fashioned image of Beatrice Fairfax

Article

New immersive headphone play premieres this month

“The Missing Chapter,” by Katie Marks & Aoise Stratford, visiting assistant professor of performing and media arts, is The Cherry Art’s new, immersive headphone walking play based on Ithaca's silent film past.
 Mikail E. Abbasov, Assistant Professor, Chemistry & Chemical Biology

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Mikail E. Abbasov

Name and title:

Mikail E. Abbasov, Assistant Professor, Chemistry & Chemical Biology

Academic focus:

Chemical biology, chemical proteomics, activity-based protein profiling, drug discovery, cancer, neurodegeneration, immunology

Current research project:

Article

The college welcomes new faculty

Twenty new faculty members join the College of Arts & Sciences this year, enriching the college with interdisciplinary strengths.
 Cornell's baroque organ

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Organ conference and concert festival Sept. 6-8

The baroque organ was an artifact of global culture produced by international networks of artists, artisans, traders, and adventurers. “The Organ in the Global Baroque” conference and concert festival will celebrate these organs Sept. 6-8 on the Cornell campus.
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A&S faculty to consider new revised curriculum proposal

The newest revision encourages exploration and addresses concerns related to the language requirement.
 Abi Bernard standing amidst library shelves

Article

‘Serendipity’ leads to summer research for history major

Abi Bernard ’19 says her experience is pretty typical at Cornell: she came in with one plan – to major in linguistics – but that changed in her first semester when she took a history course.
 ‘Paths to Peace’ explores legacy of antiwar campaigner

Article

‘Paths to Peace’ explores legacy of antiwar campaigner

On June 12, 1982, an estimated one million people marched through the streets of New York City to protest the nuclear arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union. They had a simple proposition: immediately freeze the development and deployment of nuclear weapons. Then, they argued, we can begin the hard work of eliminating them altogether.

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Article

Revisiting the Time of J.S. Bach

This Cornell Research story focuses on Bach scholar and accomplished organist/pianist, David Yearsley, who is exploring not only Bach’s music but also the music of Bach’s wife and their world.

 Donald Holcomb

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Donald Holcomb, emeritus physics professor, dies at 92

Emeritus professor of physics Donald F. Holcomb, who served two terms as chair of the department and championed the cause of improving physics education, died Aug. 9 in his residence at Kendal at Ithaca.
 	American literature scholar kicks off Botanic Gardens’ lecture series Aug. 29

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American literature scholar kicks off Botanic Gardens’ lecture series Aug. 29

Cornell Botanic Gardens opens its annual Fall Lecture Series with author George Hutchinson, the Newton C. Farr Professor of American History and Culture in the College of Arts and Sciences, delivering the 2018 William and Jane Torrence Harder Lecture Wednesday, Aug. 29, at 5:30 p.m. in Call Auditorium. The lecture will be followed at 7 p.m.

 Robert Plane smiling, holding a pencil

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Former Cornell Provost Robert Plane dies at 90

Robert A. Plane, a professor emeritus of chemistry who served as the university’s eighth provost during the tumultuous late 1960s and early 1970s, later becoming an innovative Finger Lakes vintner, died Aug. 6 at his home in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
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New program welcomes A&S first generation students

Students spent a week in reading and writing workshops and activities related to academic and career development, health and wellness and financial literacy.
 Prison cells , with toilet and sink visible through the bars. Credit: 	Marine Perez

Article

Rising from the ashes: redemption through theater at Auburn prison

The process of attending a show by the Phoenix Players Theatre Group (PPTG) in Auburn Correctional Facility gives attendees a hint of what it’s like to be a prisoner in the maximum security facility.
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Article

Do You Use Somebody’s First Name or Last Name? The Answer Speaks Volumes

Psychology graduate student Stav Atir and Professor Melissa Ferguson write in this Wall Street Journal article about their research into the use of last names or first names based on gender.

 Hand filling in form

Article

How attitudes on race, immigration, gender will affect the 2018 midterm elections

“As the congressional campaigns unfold, we will actually be able to observe what factors correspond with shifts in vote choice."
 Junior studies cosmology at Cornell nanoscale facility

Article

Junior studies cosmology at Cornell nanoscale facility

Mahiro Abe ‘20 won an Arts & Sciences Tanner Dean’s Scholar Grant for his research this summer at the Cornell NanoScale Science & Technology Facility.
 Joel Sibley

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Joel Silbey, emeritus professor of history, dies at 84

Historian Joel H. Silbey, the President White Professor of History Emeritus and a member of the Cornell faculty since 1966, died Aug. 7. He was 84.

Silbey was a prolific scholar of American history and political behavior, with a particular focus on the 19th century, and his teaching and scholarly interests included the Jacksonian era, sectional controversy, the Civil War and Reconstruction, and quantitative methods in history.

 plant-bacteria symbiosis

Article

NSF awards BTI $1M to study plant-bacteria symbiosis

To root out the scientific complexities between nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria and its close alliance with plants, the National Science Foundation has awarded a $1.1 million Dimensions of Biodiversity grant to the Cornell-affiliated Boyce Thompson Institute (BTI). Unlocking the genetic and ecological detail behind this symbiotic relationship may help reduce agricultural dependence on synthetic fertilizer.

 Researcher looks at slide

Article

Summer research programs intrigue diverse students

Visiting students representing the next generation of physicists got a taste of life as a researcher during a pair of eight-week summer programs hosted by the Cornell Laboratory for Accelerator-based Sciences and Education (CLASSE).

 Members of the Brett Fors lab in chemistry

Article

On-demand polymers may yield designer materials

Researchers at Cornell are devising a method for creating new polymers in much the same way that a jewelry maker creates a beaded necklace.
 	For more cohesive police forces in war-torn countries, adding women may help

Article

For more cohesive police forces in war-torn countries, adding women may help

When the United Nations and other international players rebuild war-torn countries, they frequently require that women have greater representation in the country’s security forces. The idea is integrating women helps improve peace and security for everyone.

But critics of these gender-equity reforms often suggest that women harm the cohesion of the police force.

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Article

English major’s gift supports new classes on traditional works

Joe Martino '53 had a long career as a high school English teacher before his retirement.
 Peter Enns

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Trump's political base is weaker than it seems, new study finds

Government Professor Peter K.

 PSP bowling

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A summer of camaraderie and chemistry for new students

“These students have so much to offer this campus and it’s an honor to get to know them throughout the summer.”
 'Toolkit' aids sustainable manufacture of medicines

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'Toolkit' aids sustainable manufacture of medicines

A new technique that combines electricity and chemistry offers a way for pharmaceuticals – including many of the top prescribed medications – to be manufactured in a scalable and sustainable way. The procedure for this technique is outlined in a new paper published Aug. 2 in Nature Protocols.

 Volunteers at the Ithaca Children's Garden, pushing wheelbarrows

Article

Topophilia

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.

 Image from Cornell University College of Arts and Sciences

Article

Student combats healthcare inequalities at Ithaca Free Clinic

Since freshman year, Emily Wang ‘20, has been combining social justice and healthcare by interning at the Ithaca Free Clinic. From working to start a non-profit to investigating patient outcomes, this biology major and Public Service Center Scholar is continuing her work this summer with the clinic’s chronic care program thanks to an Arts & Sciences Summer Experience Grant.

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Undergrads explore diverse interests at Cornell Tech

Alexa may not be able to read your mind -- at least not yet— but Hannah Lee ’19 is trying to help her move in that direction.

“We want to train machines so they can know by looking at people’s facial expressions or hearing their speech patterns that the machine got something wrong, even before the person tells them,” Lee said.

 Maria Fernandez

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Book explores Latin American modernity, technology

The impact of technology on modernity has been a worldwide phenomenon, but Western art historians tend to ignore the “global south” – less developed countries – as María Fernández explores in her new edited work, “Latin American Modernisms and Technology.”