News : page 34

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Student in the grass

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Ask our ambassadors: How to get involved in campus clubs

Erir offers some advice on joining one of the many clubs on Cornell's campus.
Student outside under tree

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Ask our ambassadors: How I chose Cornell

Ethan Tong found that the Cornell experience allowed students to explore and be ever curious — there was no mold, no set ideal hobby or study method one had to adopt in order to succeed.
View of a city at dawn

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Protests in Sri Lanka unprecedented, unlikely to fade away

Pressure on the current government has not lessened, says Daniel Bass, manager of the South Asia Program and adjunct assistant professor of Asian studies.
painting depicting a sea battle

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The long history of disinformation during war

While we might crave information, we are right to be suspicious of the sources that provide it, Barry Strauss, professor of history and classics, writes in Washington Post commentary.
Person in lab coat operating machinery

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First cohort of A&S Nexus Scholars chosen for summer research positions

Fifty undergrads in the College of Arts & Sciences will take part in paid research projects in Ithaca this summer with faculty from throughout the College.
Colorful planet

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Cornell-chaired panels advocate Uranus, Enceladus missions

Professors Jonathan I. Lunine and Alexander Hayes played leadership roles in identifying U.S. national scientific priorities through 2033.
Person carries a heavy cement block around a wall

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Klarman Fellow Nancy P. Lin interprets urban on-site art

Focusing on Chinese contemporary art, Lin brings her fascination with urban spaces to her work as an art historian.
above-ground pipeline extends across a rugged landscape

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Russian gas threat could force European economy to reform

Cristina Florea provides a historical perspective on energy and economic development.
Illustration of a telescope in space

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Glowing Planets and Chemical Fingerprints

Nikole Lewis will be one of the first to characterize distant exoplanets using infrared data from the newly launched James Webb Space Telescope.
Roland Molina

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Student veteran Roland Molina continues to serve

As a student at Cornell and president of the Cornell Undergraduate Veterans Association, Molina has dedicated himself to strengthening the veteran community on campus.
Campus buildings and pink blossoms on trees

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Three students in STEM win 2022 Goldwater Scholarships

A sophomore and a two juniors have won Goldwater Scholarships, the top undergraduate award for students pursuing careers in mathematics, the natural sciences and engineering. Jeffrey Backus, ’23 and Abhi Sarma ’24, both in the College of Arts and Sciences,
Bright pink flowers in front of a decorative stone wall

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Story circles foster intercultural conversations, belonging

Launched by the Office of Global Learning (OGL), the story circles initiative is intended to bridge the gaps in intercultural understanding between Cornell’s international and domestic populations.
People in a subway car, Moscow

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Biden admin rhetoric strengthens Russian propaganda about U.S.

Majorities in Russia, going back to the 1990s, have consistently believed Russia has reason to fear Western NATO countries, says professor Brynn Rosenfeld, who studies post-communist politics and public opinion.
Thousands of people stroll up a wide avenue lined with red, white and blue flags

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Despite election loss, Marine Le Pen influence in France to continue

This was Le Pen’s third try for the Presidency, professor Mabel Berezin points out, and in every try she gains more votes.
Bright pink lawn signs

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Students, county agency raise awareness of commercial sexual exploitation of children

Students Against the Sexual Solicitation of Youth (SASSY), together with a Tompkins County team, targeted the local lodging industry for outreach efforts.
Banners flying outside a stately building

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Russia and Ukraine peace talks likely have nothing to do with ‘peace’

As peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine appear to be proceeding in fits and starts, Barry Strauss, writes that history shows that such talks are a way station to the real arena: the battlefield.
Person wearing graduation cap, seen from the back

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Girls raised by Jewish parents more likely to graduate college

Researchers from Cornell, Tulane and Stanford universities concluded that girls raised by at least one Jewish parent acquire a particular way of viewing the world that influences their education choices, career aspirations and various other experiences.
Eight people arranged in a circle; an artistic black and white photo

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Talks mark exhibits, campus LGBTQ milestones

The “Radical Desire” symposium April 27 to 28 brings pioneering lesbian feminist scholars, publishers, and photographers to speak at Cornell.
Report cover: "Bipartisan Policy Review"

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Bipartisan Policy Review spotlights U.S. foreign policy options

The annual publication, now in its third edition, is produced by the Institute of Politics and Global Affairs (IOPGA) at the Cornell Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy to "give voice to policy insights that are often drowned out in the partisan echo chamber.”
Three people wearing lab coats and protective glasses

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Chemist Song Lin honored by Chemical & Engineering News

Lin said he is honored and proud to be included in a special LGBTQ+ Trailblazers issue of the newsmagazine of the American Chemical Society.
Solders stand at attention behind a row of heavy guns

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Military aid to Ukraine comes amid ‘diplomatic dance’ on world stage

With President Biden expected to announce additional security assistance to Ukraine, Sarah Kreps comments on relations with Russia.
A.R. Ammons

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‘Ammons & the Falls’ highlights poet’s ties to Ithaca landscape

The April 26 celebration will include the unveiling of a new display of Ammons’ poem “Triphammer Bridge," a screening of an episode of “Poetry in America," and more.
Sevearl people, including children, in a row boat with belongings. Birds fly overhead

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The U.K. wants to send refugees to Rwanda. That’s become a trend.

In The Washington Post, Rachel Beatty Riedl comments on a new program shifting migrants to nations in the Global South.
Marc Lacey

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Alum Marc Lacey named managing editor of the New York Times

In his new role, Lacey, Arts & Sciences' inaugural Distinguished Visiting Journalist, will oversee the breadth of the paper's news operation.
Halle Livermore

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Ask our Ambassadors: Why choosing a humanities major was right for me

Halle Livermore says there are infinite pathways you can take to decide on your major.
John Martinis

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Quantum computing pioneer to share insights in Bethe lectures

On April 27, physicist John Martinis will explain the basic concepts behind quantum computing for a general audience.
Nanor Seraydarian

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Concerto Competition winner to perform with Cornell Symphony Orchestra

Nanor Seraydarian will perform Ernest Chausson’s “Poème” as a featured soloist alongside the Cornell Symphony Orchestra at Bailey Hall
Person wearing bizzare eye gear, bathed in green and blue light

Article

2022 Cornell Biennial artist preview

With the theme “Futurities, Uncertain," the fifth Cornell art biennial will feature artworks, installations, and performances.
DNA double helix against a dark background

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Genetics affects functions of gut microbiome

Collaborative research explores how the gut microbiome is shaped by the genome of its human host.
Scientists talk in a lab

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Cornell joins NY-led group to propose hydrogen energy hub

Cornell chemists and Cornell research-startups aim to propose a Northeast research hub to make hydrogen a viable, clean-energy alternative to carbon-based fuels.
Sgt. Scott Grantz

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Sgt. Scott Grantz ’99 Serves His Alma Mater on the CUPD

The Ithaca native and Arts and Sciences grad embodies a community-based approach to public safety
Unmanned aerial vehicle parked on a runway

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International OK shapes public perceptions of drone warfare

Government department researchers find that armed drone strikes earn more public support and legitimacy when they have international approval from organizations such as the UN.
girl in band uniform

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Ask our Ambassadors: What's the College Scholar Program?

The College Scholar Program allows students to pursue their own interdisciplinary major.
Circular logo that says John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation around the outside and 1925 on the inside

Article

Musicologist and poet awarded Guggenheim fellowships

… as fellows. … Musicologist and poet awarded Guggenheim fellowships
Two hands holding a cellphone and scrolling through a Twitter feed.

Article

Russian trolls tried to distract voters with music tweets in 2016

The researchers' finding has implications for the 2022 midterm elections.
Alejandro Martínez-Marquina

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Klarman fellow questions common financial decisions

Behavioral and experimental economist Alejandro Martínez-Marquina wants to know the mechanisms through which people make choices about money, especially when debt or uncertainty are present.
A huge pile of white styrofoam shipping boxes jumbled together.

Article

Light, oxygen turn waste plastics into useful benzoic acid

The new reaction can even take place in a sunny window, as the researchers demonstrated in their experiments.
Surprise - French Flag

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Surprise, no surprise: round 1 of the French presidential election

Sociologist Mabel Berezin, an expert on nationalist and populist movements in Europe, comments on the French elections.
M. NourbSe Philip wearing glasses and a checkered top, leaning on her hand.

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PEN/Nabokov award winner M. NourbSe Philip to read her poetry April 14

The event is part of the Spring 2022 Barbara & David Zalaznick Reading Series for the Creative Writing Program
Mother holding baby, leaning her forehead against the baby's forehead. Both are smiling.

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After ‘mama,’ children’s first words include ‘this’ and ‘that’

A new Cornell study by Klarman Fellow Amalia Skilton is the largest ever, by sample size, of early vocabulary development in an Indigenous language.
Eunice Ngai in a blue Cornell t-shirt with trees and the Ithaca hills in the background.

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Ask our ambassadors: International student resources and community

International student Eunice Ngai ‘24 shares resources and advice.
Seal of the United Nations, sheaths of wheat encircling an image of the continents

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Russia’s role in U.N. questioned amid war in Ukraine, atrocities

Historian Cristina Florea comments on the United Nations General Assembly vote on expelling Russia from the U.N. Human Rights Council.
A view of Paris, showing the Seine, buildings and the Eiffel Tower in the distance.

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Marine Le Pen to ‘win’ French election, even if she loses

Sociologist Mabel Berezin, an expert on fascist, nationalist and populist movements in Europe and associated threats to democracy, comments on the French elections.
Several small, striped fish against a dark background

Article

Rational neural network advances machine-human discovery

This machine-human partnership is a step toward the day when artificially intelligent deep learning will enhance scientific exploration of natural phenomena such as weather systems, climate change, fluid dynamics, genetics and more.
Three people look at an artifact on a lab table

Article

Cross-college researchers unravel mummy bird mystery

What began as a passion project for a master’s student in archaeology, has become a cross-campus fascination that encompasses everything from ancient burial rituals to the lost history of donated artifacts, the totemic power of animals, and even Egyptian beer.
Conor Hodges in suit and tie, smiling and holding his award plaque, flanked by other alumni.

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John F. Kennedy Award recipient reimagines public safety

An Army combat medic veteran from a justice-involved family, Hodges has dedicated his academic study, campus leadership and social justice advocacy to understanding and offering alternatives to the current model of policing.
People protest with signs outside a metal fence, holding blue and yellow flags

Article

Why aren’t Americans rallying around Biden during a war?

More Republicans disapprove of President Biden than Democrats disapprove of Trump: analysis by government professors Peter Enns and Douglas Kriner in the Washington Post.
Catherine Cherry in a white sweater, smiling, with Cornell's Libe Slope in the background.

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Ask our ambassadors: Easing the transition from high school to college

A student reflects on her transition to Cornell.
Ariana Kim

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Ariana Kim’s piece for Korean zither highlights April music offerings

“Gayageum, Meet Violin” is a recital and discussion, set for April 16, featuring a preview performance of a new composition “Apba Hagoo, Nah Hagoo” by Ariana Kim for the Korean traditional zither (gayageum) and violin.
Blue phone screen glows against a dark background

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Musk’s Twitter stake speaks to value of platforms by tech titans

Faculty expert on social media Alexandra Cirone reacts to Musk becoming the platform's biggest shareholder.