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A canoe covered in written messages, in an exhibit hall

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Things to do: Apple Bake-Off, orchestra and wind, Mohawk River exhibit

Enjoy symphony concerts this weekend among other campus activities.
woman smiling

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Sophomore's organization fosters conversations on racial justice, mental health

"Poetry and artwork were my ways of processing the world around me."
Five people hold awards

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Employee Excellence Awards honor nearly 250 employees

A&S staff member Lynda Sovocool, interim associate director/department manager for Cornell Center for Astrophysics and Planetary Science, received the Mission-Possible Award, for supporting the university’s core mission to learning, discovery and engagement.
Book cover: The Perversity of Gratitude

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Farred analyzes his apartheid education in ‘philosophical memoir’

In “The Perversity of Gratitude: An Apartheid Education," Grant Farred describes his experience of flourishing intellectually, despite and even thanks to being educated under apartheid, while also analyzing concepts that made such an education possible.
Illustration featuring algebraic topology imagery on a yellow background, a sketch of Bill Thurston's headshot, and a paper with mathematical equations.

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Stretching shapes and building tools: topology at Cornell

“Cornell has had a considerable impact across many subfields of topology and across decades, reflecting and at times directing the mainstream of the subject,” says Martin Bridson M.A. ’89, Ph.D. ’91, the Whitehead Professor of Pure Mathematics at the University of Oxford and the president of the Clay Mathematics Institute.
A few dozen people stand in front of a movie screen

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Town-Gown awardees foster business, community, sustainability

Partnerships aiming to minimize construction waste in Central New York, address isolation and cognitive loss through performance, and promote and nurture local startups received the annual Cornell Town-Gown Awards, announced Nov. 16 at Cinemapolis.
Three baboons in the wild; one is a baby clinging to an adult

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Researchers assess whether animals feel emotion

Do animals have emotions? The answer is a resounding yes, according to an interdisciplinary group of animal behavior researchers from the fields of biology, psychology, anthropology and philosophy surveyed in a recent project.
Missile heading up into the sky

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Ahead of Trump takeover, long-range missiles unlikely to change tide in Ukraine

The Biden White House is likely trying to give Ukraine everything it can before the administration changes, says military historian David Silbey.
Book cover: The Architecture of Blame and Praise

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Holding people responsible through a system of blame, praise

Philosopher David Shoemaker examines the complicated nature of both modes of response, teasing out their many varieties while defending a general symmetry between them.
Book cover: Thinking Otherwise

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Your November 2024 Reads

This month’s featured titles include an homage to a beloved government professor, edited by three alumni
Person in stunning blue dress, singing

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Things to do: Much music, Supreme Court panel, advice for aspiring filmmakers

Pick from several concerts, attend the Town-Gown Awards, consider the Supreme Court and get advice for a career in film at events around campus.
Illustration showing a mountain, clouds and nearby rocks spewing vapor

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Scientists compile library for evaluating exoplanet water

Cornell scientists are developing a library of basalt-based spectral signatures that not only will help reveal the composition of planets outside of our solar system, but also could demonstrate evidence of water on those exoplanets.
Person accepts an award at a podium

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Veterans Day celebrated through campus camaraderie

On Veterans Day, a series of speakers shared personal reflections about how camaraderie shapes both military and academic life as part of Cornell’s celebration of its military and veteran community.
small orange handheld video game player with a spaceship backdrop

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Nintendo music app ‘rivals major record labels,’ not just for gamers

Some of Nintendo's music has attained classic status, says music professor Roger Moseley.
Person in late-70s chic tan sport coat, touching models of planets

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‘Cosmos,’ a pulitzer, and more: fascinating facts about Carl Sagan

The astronomer’s legacy can be found on Earth and far beyond—from a record-setting exhibit to an iconic portrait of our planet.
Person speaking into a microphone

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Sagan celebrated for scientific mind – and imagination

In person and online Nov. 9, thousands attended an interdisciplinary program of research presentations and music celebrating Carl Sagan’s legacy, on what would have been his 90th birthday.
Blocks of cream colored mineral substance

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Microbe atlas could reveal how to mine critical metals sustainably

A Cornell-led team will use a $2 million National Science Foundation grant to develop a “microbe-mineral atlas,” a catalog of microorganisms and how they interact with minerals, key for mining critical metals used for generating sustainable energy.
two people talking to one another while sitting

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Polishing resumes, building confidence: The impact of peer advisors

Peer advisors in A&S Career Development help students accomplish their dreams and goals.
Person wearing a yellow life jacket, standing up in a boat

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New course sets sail on understanding physics–by boat

Students venture out onto Cayuga Lake for hands-on learning about wind speed, velocity, buoyancy, and more
Person lifting the lid of a public compost container

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Global experiences advance student learning

Over 70 undergraduates learned career-shaping lessons in the field last summer with support from Global Cornell. Students will share their international work at the November 19 Global Cornell Experience Showcase.
A comic-style globe of Earth in tan and orange

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BTPI releases new report on AI regulation

The Brooks Tech Policy Institute, with support from the Jain Family Institute (JFI), has released a new report that offers “a high-level framework to analyze regulation of AI technologies.”
Person bending over to sweep a flat grave marker

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At Carl Sagan’s gravesite, inspiration endures

On the eve of what would have been Sagan's 90th birthday, well-wishers commune at Lake View Cemetery, leaving notes and trinkets.
Woman in business clothes walking down the steps of the Supreme Court with the tall columns behind her.

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Polarized Supreme Court explored in Nov. 20 panel

The panel, moderated by the Washington Post’s Supreme Court correspondent, Ann Marimow ‘97, the College's Zubrow Distinguished Visiting Journalist, will include Peter John Loewen, Harold Tanner Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.
hundreds of people crowded together, waiting for a public event to being. It is cold; most of them wear hats and coats

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What the election of Donald Trump says about democracy globally

Trump’s actions and signaling illustrate that the U.S. is not immune to the same democratic backsliding now occurring in an unprecedented number of wealthy countries, says Rachel Riedl, professor of government and policy and director of the Center on Global Democracy.  
person wearing glasses

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Student creates AR glasses with transcriptions for people with hearing loss

Nirbhay Narang ’25 has created smart glasses that use AI to provide transcriptions of conversations in real time.
Two people -- characters in a play -- stand in a field full of flowers

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German studies hosts evening with ‘Rosa and Blanca’ playwright

Rebekka Kricheldorf will talk about writing comedy and more with Samuel Buggeln, the play’s director and artistic director of Cherry Arts, on Nov. 12 – one of several collaborations.
Dozens of people standing on a lawn, at a public rally

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‘Violent indifference to women’ and gender stereotypes affect top ticket

The results of the 2024 U.S. presidential election aren’t due to a simple dislike or distrust of women, but a reflection of America’s violent indifference to women.
Voting stickers on a roll

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A new political landscape: Hispanic voters, Trump's transactional politics

With about 45% of Hispanics voting for Trump, we’re witnessing an important realignment of a group previously thought to be squarely within the coalition supporting Democratic candidates, says professor Gustavo Flores-Macías.
Brown eggs in a cardboard container

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Economic woes: Can Trump fix inflation?

Will President Donald Trump’s policies rectify the high prices Americans are seeing? Kaushik Basu, professor of economics at Cornell, says inflation is beyond the control of the party in power and is shaped by other actors.   
Four people stand with a mascot bear

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Food waste solution wins top prize at hackathon

The hackathon included more than 150 undergraduate and graduate students from almost all of Cornell’s Ithaca campus schools and colleges.
Illustration of a sign "Fake News" on an easel

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Could ‘inoculation’ limit election misinformation?

A popular strategy for combating misinformation can help people distinguish truth from falsehood – when combined with reminders to focus on accuracy, Cornell-led research finds.
Person holding an LP in front of recording equipment in a studio

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Jones understood all art, especially Black art, is ‘political’

Music producing legend Quincy Jones understood the political aspect of art, says Cornell music scholar.
A field of connected hexagons against a dark gray background

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Revealing the superconducting limit of ‘magic’ material

Cornell researchers have identified the highest achievable superconducting temperature of graphene – 60 Kelvin. The finding is mathematically exact and is spurring new insights into the factors that fundamentally control superconductivity.
four people on a minimally set stage

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New Feldshuh play premieres Nov. 1 at Schwartz Center

“Orlando’s Gift,” a new play written and directed by David Feldshuh, professor of performing and media arts, and inspired by Virginia Woolf’s novel “Orlando,” will premiere Nov. 1 at the Schwartz Center.
Jennifer Lory-Moran, in multi-colored stripped shirt and long blond hair, is smiling while standing next to the controls for the Cornell chimes up in McGraw Tower.

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Bells Are Ringing for This Veteran Chimesmaster

The Cornell Chimes' advisor for nearly a quarter-century, Jennifer Courtley Lory-Moran ’96, MAT ’97, recently marked a carillon milestone.
Jenna Barnes, dressed in jeans, open sweater and t-shirt, with long brown hair, seated and smiling.

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Alum’s Firm Sells Garments Long Seen as an Oxymoron: Comfy Bras

At Harper Wilde, "30 Under 30" honoree Jenna Kerner Barnes ’11 offers underclothes for customers of many shapes and sizes.
Two people in casual clothes stand in a room full of bric-a-brac, holding professional grade recording equipment

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Crowdfunding launch supports Ways of Knowing podcast at Cornell

A crowdfunding campaign launched Nov. 1 to support a Cornell-based season of "Ways of Knowing,” a new podcast created by The World According to Sound.
 Candle

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Mathematician Al Schatz dies at 90

Alfred H. Schatz, an emeritus professor of mathematics who taught at Cornell for nearly 50 years, died at home on Oct. 11 after a long bout with Parkinson’s disease. He was 90.
Red brick gothic house

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The A.D. White House: Andrew’s abode is a campus gem

Commissioned by Cornell’s inaugural president, the villa later became an art museum—and has long hosted a humanities group.
Person holds a large, yellowed document in a library setting

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Klarman Fellow presents findings on housing cost history

This fall, Jake Anbinder, a historian with an interest in cities and strong ties to public policy, presented two conference papers elaborating on his award-winning book project.
Aerial view of the Arts Quad in the fall

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Center for Racial Justice and Equitable Futures holds first event

During “Beyond 2024: Envisioning Just Futures and Equitable Democracy,” faculty and students from across the university will come together to creatively showcase research and art, build community and be inspired to imagine a better future.
Danish String Quartet

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Danish String Quartet featured on Cornell Concert Series Nov. 14

At Cornell, the GRAMMY-nominated quartet will perform works by Caroline Shaw, Haydn, Shostakovich, and a selection of their original compositions and traditional folk tunes.
Yuval Grossman

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Physicist Yuval Grossman elected to American Physical Society

Yuval Grossman, professor of physics in the College of Arts and Sciences, has been elected as a fellow of the American Physical Society for seminal contributions in “flavor” physics.
Book cover: Purchase

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Poet pictures ‘a place where a woman may find some peace’

In “Purchase,” a new collection of poems from Associate Professor Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon, the author seeks consolation for grief by turning to specific sources of beauty.
Book cover: Short Film Screen Writing

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Short film screenwriting: a high-wire act of abbreviation

In his new book, filmmaker Austin Bunn delves into the mechanics of the short form by reprinting notable scripts and interviewing the films’ creators, as well as providing insights and advice based on his own screenwriting career.
 doctors in an operating room

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Conference considers medicine from historical standpoint

The Nov. 2 conference will focus on an interdisciplinary approach.
A microphone

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Cornell experts analyze rhetoric used by both campaigns in final stretch

Following former President Trump’s campaign rally at Madison Square Garden on Sunday, Cornell experts comment on the event's speeches and on Democrats' responses.
Arts Quad in fall

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A&S celebrates meeting 'Greatest Good' campaign goal

The College met its goal of $400 million nearly two years ahead of schedule.
Walter LaFeber in suit and striped tie in his office with bookshelf on one side and a pile of books on the other, talking to someone.

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New Book by Alumni Explores Walter LaFeber’s Life and Work

A year after former students held a conference in NYC that paid tribute to a giant in the field of U.S. history, Cornell University Press has published a companion volume to the event.
Beyoncé

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‘Icon of national femininity’: Beyoncé to appear at VP Harris Houston rally

As Election Day closes in, a Cornell expert in Black feminism sees 'deep meaning and significance' in superstar Beyoncé's support for Vice President Kamala Harris.