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Omar Padilla-Vélez and Renee Sifri examine the tensile strength of a high-density polyethylene “dog bone.”

Article

‘Triangle 2’ plastic containers may see environmental makeover

Recyclable plastic containers with the No. 2 designation could become even more popular for manufacturers as plastic milk jugs, dish soap containers and shampoo bottles may soon get an environmental makeover.
 image of a cell

Article

Researchers pinpoint mechanism controlling cell protein traffic

Cells depend on signaling to regulate most life processes, including cell growth and differentiation, immune response and reactions to various stresses.
 Joshua Johnson and a classical statue

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A&S junior combines love of Classics, Africana for unique research project

Joshua Johnson’s ’21 senior research project won’t be just on paper – he envisions kids walking through his senior project: a museum that helps them think more broadly about the term “classical civilizations.”
 Fruit flies

Article

Improved CRISPR gene drive solves problems of old tech

Gene drives use genetic engineering to create a desired mutation in a few individuals that then spreads via mating throughout a population in fewer than 10 generations.
 Girl looking at birthday cake

Article

Sci-fi thriller “The Nether” questions ethics in virtual worlds

Note: The Saturday, March 14, performance of "The Nether" has been cancelled. The Friday performance will take place at 7:30 pm as scheduled.
 Associate professor Caitlín Barrett takes the Casa della Regina Carolina Project group on a tour of Pompeii.

Article

Faculty forge archaeology partnership at Pompeii

Caitlín Barrett, associate professor of classics in the College of Arts and Sciences, and Kathryn Gleason ’79, professor of landscape architecture in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, have been collaborating since 2016 on the excavation and survey of a large house and garden site, the Casa della Regina Carolina Project, at Pompeii in southern Italy.
campus buildings with lake in background

Article

Center for Social Sciences names 2020-21 faculty fellows

Climate change, school segregation and online interaction are among the topics to be investigated by the Cornell Center for Social Sciences’ newest group of faculty fellows.
 Zebras on the move.

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Migrations initiative announces cross-campus awards

What impact does weather have on Mexican migrants’ decisions and routes? What is the connection between contemporary human migrations and the forced migration of the African slave trade?Can we relocate a sinking city to become a new political crossroads and hub of biocultural diversity? And how are emerging diseases like COVID-19 related to the increasingly mobile practices of humans and animals?
students walking on quad

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Support Arts & Sciences students on Giving Day March 12

The College of Arts & Sciences is gearing up for Giving Day on Thursday, March 12 and we hope you'll join in the fun!Your gifts to our annual fund, undergraduate scholarship fund or any of our departments and programs help our faculty and students reach their full potential.
 Physicist Suzanne Staggs of Princeton University

Article

Physicist illuminates Big Bang in spring Hans Bethe Lecture

This lecture has been cancelled.Leftover radiation from the Big Bang – the cosmic microwave background (CMB) – carries clues about the fundamental nature of the universe, which was only 400,000 years old when the CMB was released.
Xi Jinping

Article

In South Carolina, Democrats debated when a dictator is really a dictator. So what’s the answer?

After the focus on dictatorships in the South Carolina democratic debate on Tuesday, Valerie Bunce, the Aaron Binenkorb Professor of International Studies and government professor at Cornell, and Jessica Chen Weiss, associate professor of government, discuss differing types of dictatorship and authoritarian regimes
 Students in a workshop

Article

NYC Visioning projects host cross-campus events

The four faculty teams that received funding support through the President’s Visioning Committee on Cornell in New York City have conducted cross-campus workshops, hosted interdisciplinary talks and expanded their outreach as they move towards presenting final results in the fall.
 Provost Michael I. Kotlikoff

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Provost announces School of Public Policy, superdepartments

Concluding a multiyear review, Provost Michael I. Kotlikoff has announced a pair of initiatives intended to chart the future of social sciences scholarship and education at Cornell.The university will launch the Cornell School of Public Policy, a separate school with its own dean who will report to the provost. In addition, “superdepartments” drawing faculty from multiple colleges or schools will be created or expanded in the disciplines of economics, psychology and sociology.
 Derrick Spires

Article

English professor honored for book on black politics

Derrick R. Spires, associate professor of English, was awarded the St. Louis Mercantile Library Prize for his book, “The Practice of Citizenship: Black Politics and Print Culture in the Early United States.” The award, given by the Bibliographical Society of America, honors research in the bibliography of American literature and history. The award carries a prize of $2,000 and a year’s membership in the organization.
 Robert Moog

Article

Moog festival to feature talks, music, exhibition

The strange oscillations that first emanated from the small synthesizer factory of Robert Moog, Ph.D. ’65, more than a half-century ago in the quiet village of Trumansburg, New York, have become signature sounds reverberating throughout the history of electronic music – from Wendy Carlos to Daft Punk; from Emerson, Lake and Palmer to Flying Lotus.
 Book cover of "Naked Agency"

Article

‘Dramas of desperation’: Book examines naked protest in Africa

Insurgent nakedness is the most universal and yet the most highly context-driven mode of dissent, writes Naminata Diabate, assistant professor of comparative literature.
 A dancer

Article

“Transformation,” collaborations with guest artists inspire annual Locally Grown Dance

Student dancers of the performing and media arts department will explore “the politics of expression in the dancer’s body” in this year’s Locally Grown Dance, according to the event page. Each of the four dance pieces will incorporate the idea of transformation — either literally, figuratively or both. 
 Professor Joe Margulies interacts with his students at Cayuga Correctional Facility in Moravia, New York

Article

‘Making the turn’: from inmate to scholar

It is 4 p.m., and Darryl Epps has just put in a full day at work. Yet his day is only half over.
 Peter Enns
Peter K. Enns, the Robert S. Harrison Director of the Cornell Center for Social Sciences, Executive Director of the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research and professor of government

Article

Roper Center gives voice to American public opinion

With voting to select this year’s presidential nominees in full swing, the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at Cornell has launched a series of initiatives to help inform citizens and journalists and support the democratic process.Their goal: to bring public opinion back to the public.
 The domed wind and thermal shield covers NASA InSight lander's seismometer

Article

InSight detects gravity waves, low rumbles and devilish dust

Don Banfield ‘87, principal research scientist at the Cornell Center for Astrophysics and Planetary Science, is the science lead for a suite of sensors aboard InSight.
 Lee Rosenthal at Paramount

Article

Paramount exec can manufacture explosions, but says story still makes the movie

Lee Rosenthal ’87 fell in love with filmmaking as an English major at Cornell.
 Justin J. Wilson

Article

Expanding bone cancer therapy radium-223 for other cancers

Radium-223 is highly effective for treating bone metastases in patients with castration-resistant prostate cancers. Despite the therapeutic potential of radium-223, its current formulation approved by the Food and Drug Administration is effective only for patients with bone metastases. Justin J.
NY Times journalist Marc Lacey speaking with students

Article

First visiting journalist shares world of the NYT with students, faculty

Marc Lacey '87 offered advice to students, visited classes and learned about faculty research.
 Microfluidic chip containing four identical three-channel devices

Article

Physics tool helps track cancer cell diversity

The team of economists and physicists took a novel approach to analyzing the behavior of breast tumor cells.
 Dr. Virginia Rath leading a workshop at Cornell.

Article

Entrepreneur facilitates workshop on design thinking, ethnographic interviewing

Dr. Virginia Rath, a scientist, design research consultant and serial entrepreneur, led Cornell students in a workshop on Jan. 29, encouraging attendants to employ design thinking skills to innovate solutions. During the workshop, students practiced qualitative approaches to design thinking such as user observations and ethnographic interviews to help them understand stakeholders. 
 Yusef Salaam speaks to students

Article

Salaam promotes value of resilience, faith in MLK Lecture

Criminal justice activist Yusef Salaam, one of “The Exonerated Five” wrongly accused and convicted in the Central Park jogger case in New York City three decades ago, offered wisdom and hope to students and community members in the 2020 Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Lecture, Feb. 17 in Sage Chapel.
 Voting sticker help up by a smiling person

Article

Cornell professor, pollster taking pulse of Latino voters

Univision last year tapped Sergio Garcia-Rios as director of polling throughout the presidential campaign.
 Kim Weeden

Article

NYC panel discusses changing expectations for success

Professors from the College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Human Ecology and Cornell's Institute of Politics and Global Affairs shared their thoughts during “The State of the American Dream,” Feb. 6 in New York City.
 Medication

Article

Hospitality, not medical care, key to patient satisfaction

Would you choose a hospital based on its Yelp reviews?Relying on hospitals’ patient satisfaction scores as a guide amounts to much the same thing, according to new Cornell research.
 Associate Professor of English Derrick R. Spires

Article

Bibliographical Society of America honors English professor

Derrick R. Spires, associate professor of English, was awarded the St. Louis Mercantile Library Prize for his book “The Practice of Citizenship: Black Politics and Print Culture in the Early United States."
 Aoise Stratford, lecturer in the Department of Performing and Media Arts

Article

Stratford wins essay award from Northeast Modern Language Association

Aoise Stratford, lecturer in the Department of Performing and Media Arts, recently won the CAITY (Contingent/Adjunct/Independent Scholar/Two-Year Caucus) Essay Award from the Northeast Modern Language Association.
 Noliwe Rooks, Professor of Africana studies and feminist, gender and sexuality studies

Article

Rooks to give talk on ‘underside’ of cannabis legalization

This talk has been cancelled and will be rescheduled at a later date.
 Earth, shown faintly in space

Article

Iconic ‘pale blue dot’ photo – Carl Sagan’s idea – turns 30

The photo of Earth was taken at a distance of 3.7 billion miles by the NASA spacecraft Voyager 1.
 Panelist talk about coronavirus

Article

Panel discusses global uncertainties surrounding coronavirus

With the recent emergence of the coronavirus from China’s Hubei province, another “virus” has the potential to spread, a Cornell faculty member said Tuesday at a wide-ranging panel discussion on the outbreak.
 Carol-Rose Little and Morelia Vázquez Martínez presenting their research.

Article

Linguistics grad student receives award for indigenous language presentation

Doctoral student Carol-Rose Little and collaborator Morelia Vázquez Martínez (Instituto Tecnológico Superior de Macuspana) received a special distinction award in the best student presentation category from the Society for the Study of Indigenous Languages of the Americas during the society's winter meeting in January in New Orleans, La.
TRAPPIST-1 planetary system art

Article

Astronomers will probe exoplanets with Webb telescope

This month marks the third anniversary of the discovery of a remarkable system of seven planets known as TRAPPIST-1. These rocky, Earth-size worlds orbit an ultra-cool star 39 light-years from Earth; 1 light-year is approximately 5.88 trillion miles.
 Book cover of "1774: The Long Year of Revolution"

Article

Norton chronicles road to American Revolution in new book, ‘1774’

The book is the first in-depth recounting of 1774 as a critical “long year” for revolutionary change.
 Robert A. DiStasio Jr.

Article

Davis, Delimitrou, DiStasio win Sloan fellowships

… and Robert A. DiStasio Jr. have won 2020 Sloan Research Fellowships from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The fellowships support early-career faculty members’ original … and economics. … Davis, Delimitrou, DiStasio win Sloan fellowships
 Sabrina Karim with Liberian police

Article

Face-to-face contact with police builds trust in fledgling states

After times of major conflict, such as the civil wars in Liberia from 1980 to 2003, peace often leaves a power vacuum, especially in remote areas not yet reached by a developing government.
 writer Jacqueline Kahanoff

Article

Film screening and discussion to celebrate writer Kahanoff

Writer Jacqueline Kahanoff was born in 1917 to a French-speaking Jewish family in Cairo, and came of age intellectually in New York City and Paris.When she settled in Israel in 1954, she brought vast cultural experience with her. She also brought an opinion, unpopular with Israel’s ruling elite, that the culture of Jews from the Eastern Mediterranean region – known as the Levant – should be celebrated alongside those from Europe.
 Natasha Holmes

Article

Inquiry-based labs give physics students experimental edge

New Cornell research shows that traditional physics labs, which strive to reinforce the concepts students learn in lecture courses, can actually have a negative impact on students. At the same time, nontraditional, inquiry-based labs that encourage experimentation can improve student performance and engagement without lowering exam scores. 
 A scene from "Charlie Says" the movie showing Charles Manson

Article

Faculty, cinema collaborate to show films on Manson murders, gardens, Japanese pop culture

When Mary Fessenden, Cornell Cinema director, sits down to think about what films to show each semester, she has lots of movies in mind, but she also works closely with professors to find ties to the classes they’re offering.
 American flag

Article

How Never Trumpers Fell in Line

Former Congressman Steve Israel, director of the Cornell University Institute of Politics and Global Affairs, writes in the New York Times that he sees political rationalization at work among today's representatives.
 Thomas Hartman

Article

An Exciting Mysterious World—Spacetime

Thomas Hartman, assistant professor of physics, studies high-energy theoretical physics. His goal, he explains in this article in Cornell Research, is to bring to light the fundamental properties of nature, which derive from the subatomic world of quantum physics.
 Thought-action figures of Ruth Bader-Ginsburg and Sid Vicious

Article

‘Thought-action figures,’ new media inform research, learning

Jon McKenzie, professor of practice in the Department of English, is working with area school teachers and their students to address issues meaningful to them and their communities, using strategic storytelling, a variety of media-making and participatory research.
 Geoffrey Coates

Article

Coates honored by American Chemical Society

Chemistry professor Geoffrey W. Coates has received the 2020 Gustavus John Esselen Award for Chemistry in the Public Interest from the Northeastern Section of the American Chemical Society
 The gate of Auschwitz

Article

Panel examines Jewish rescuers during the Holocaust

As a young child in World War II Poland, Nobel Prize-winning chemist Roald Hoffmann and members of his family spent 15 months hiding in an attic, kept safe from the Nazis by a Ukrainian couple who risked their own three small children to do so.Hoffmann’s life was spared, thanks to the courage and kindness of others.
 Image of Lady Liberty with children tugging on her gown

Article

Political theorist, feminist scholar to lecture Feb. 18

Image provided/ This image is based on archived work at maydayrooms.org from the Wages for Housework Campaign, a feminist movement of the 1970s. In the 1970s, what Marx and Engel satirized as the most “infamous proposal of the communists,” the abolition of the family, became the most scandalous demand of feminists.  
 students walk across the arts quad in winter

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Four new minors now available to A&S students

The new minors are offered in public service studies, media studies, migration studies and science communication and public engagement.
 Malik leads a session at the Pakistan Higher Education Commission

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Passing it on: The values I learned at Cornell

An alumna gives back to Cornell by working with other international students.