News : page 77

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 Maria Cristina Garcia speaks Oct. 1 at the Rayburn House Building in Washington, D.C.

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Garcia briefs D.C. policymakers on the history of refugee policy

Historian Maria Cristina Garcia tells Congress why the past matters in the current debate over refugee admittance into the United States.
 Featured CCA Biennial artist Carrie Mae Weems discusses her Arts Quad installation “Heave”

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CCA Biennial launches with art projects across campus

The 2018 Cornell Council for the Arts (CCA) Biennial launched with a tour of outdoor projects on campus Sept. 28 and artist panels at a conference Sept. 29. The Biennial features Cornell and invited artists, such as Carrie Mae Weems and Xu Bing, with 18 project installations and performances on the theme “Duration: Passage, Persistence, Survival,” curated by CCA director Timothy Murray.
 A.D. White Professor-at-Large Xu Bing

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Milstein students get a glimpse of artist Xu Bing’s character

Bing's animation, “The Character of Characters,” is on display at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art.
 Erin S. Stache

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Plastics, Can’t Get Away from Using Them

If plastics are a mainstay of our lives—even with the negative impact on the environment and our health—new techniques for making them are paramount.
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Grad students recognized at dean’s scholars pinning ceremony

The Graduate School Dean’s Scholars pinning ceremony Sept. 26 celebrated its inaugural year in 2017, but the 2018 ceremony was not without its firsts.
 Four performers in the production of "You be Prettier If"

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PMA grad students honored with multiple awards

… of Performing Media Arts have been honored with multiple fellowships and grants over the course of the year. …
 Theater scholar examines critical reception of religion on Broadway

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Theater scholar examines critical reception of religion on Broadway

Since the era of George Jean Nathan, Cornell Class of 1904, the first-string critics of New York’s major newspapers – overwhelmingly white, male and educated at elite universities – have wielded outsized influence on which plays and musicals succeed in New York and thus the nation.
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Diplomat Fried to present LaFeber-Silbey Lecture Oct. 18

From NATO-Russian relations to the collapse of communism in Poland to Guantanamo Bay, Ambassador Daniel Fried ’75 has been on the front lines of U.S. foreign policy. He’ll share an analysis of U.S. foreign policy informed by his 40-year career in the U.S. government as this year’s LaFeber-Silbey lecturer.
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Acclimate or die: Book examines disease in the British Empire

Historian Suman Seth explores the intersection of disease theory and race in the British Empire.
 Conference explores migration, celebrates Wason Collection centennial

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Conference explores migration, celebrates Wason Collection centennial

More than 100 scholars and librarians from 12 countries celebrated the centennial of the Charles W. Wason Collection on East Asia at the seventh International Conference of the World Confederation of Institutes and Libraries for Chinese Overseas Studies, Sept.
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Arthur Ashkin, Ph.D. ’52, shares Nobel Prize in physics

Ashkin received the prize for his invention of "optical tweezers" that move objects with light.
 A headshot of novelist Alice McDermott

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Pulitzer Prize Nominee Alice McDermott to Speak at Cornell

Novelist Alice McDermott, a three-time Pulitzer nominee, will read from her work at Cornell on Thursday, Oct. 11 at 4:30 p.m. The Eamon McEneaney Memorial Reading will take place at the Rhodes-Rawlings Auditorium in Klarman Hall. The event, which is free and open to the public, will be followed by a catered reception and book signing in the English Lounge. 
 artificial intelligence graphic with brain,  lights and circuits

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New group to study AI’s impact on decision-making

Artificial intelligence is guiding a growing number of decisions in criminal justice, education, health care and other areas, with the potential to significantly alter people’s lives.
 Alexander Kluge

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Alexander Kluge: New Perspectives on Creative Arts and Critical Practice

The German Studies Department will host a three-day international conference Oct. 11-13 discussing the works and theoretical contributions of German multimedial artist and storyteller Alexander Kluge.
 Joseph Margulies speaks at a 2016 Symposium on Professor Tarrow's War, States and Contention.

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The Innocence of Abu Zubaydah

Joseph Margulies, professor of Law and Government, writes in this The New York Review of Books article that due to the demonization of radical Islam since 9/11, a signficant portion of the U.S. population and its leaders have uncritically embraced the torture  and emprisonment without trial of those accused of being followers of radical Islam. 
 Four student panelists talking about their internship experiences

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'An internship connects you to your future'

A panel of students shared their experiences with the Cornell in Washington program and their summer internships.
 Giant Magellan Telescope

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Astronomer to co-lead Extrasolar Planetary Systems Key Science Program

Image: Artist's concept of the completed Giant Magellan Telescope.
 Exterior of the A.D. White House

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CNY Humanities Corridor supports humanities collaboration

Cornell has received a $1.5 million endowment from the Central New York Humanities Corridor, thanks to a $3.55 million matching grant from the Mellon Foundation that also funded endowments at Syracuse and Rochester, which will support regional interdisciplinary humanities projects. With the Society for the Humanities stewarding the Cornell endowment, Cornell faculty will have faster access to funding with less paperwork.
 The Winning Side poster

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PMA lecturer featured in off-Broadway show

The off-Broadway world premiere of “The Winning Side,” a new play by James Wallert, will feature Godfrey L. Simmons, Jr., senior lecturer in the Department of Performing & Media Arts, as Major Taggert
 Vida Maralani teaches in one of the new conference rooms.

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Sociology students enjoy new spaces after Uris Hall renovations

New renovations and expansions in Uris Hall have improved classroom and seminar room spaces in the Center for the Study of Inequality (CSI), given undergrads in the sociology department a computer lounge and provided more space for graduate students to hold meetings and conduct research.
Lawrence Kidder

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Lawrence Kidder elected fellow of American Physical Society

Award-winning senior astronomy research associate Lawrence Kidder, who contributed to the 2016 confirmation of gravitational waves detected in 2015, has been elected a fellow of the American Physical Society (APS).
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$1.7 million Mellon grant fortifies prison education

The Cornell Prison Education Program (CPEP) has received a grant for $1.7 million to ensure the success of ongoing efforts to accelerate degree completion for incarcerated college students, to look at the benefits of college-in-prison in the broader society, and facilitate Cornell students’ education and engagement in criminal justice reform.
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Brett Kavanaugh and America’s ‘Himpathy’ Reckoning

Kate Manne, an assistant professor of philosophy at Cornell University, wrote an opinion piece for CNN Online surrounding issues of gender and power in politics.
 Georgene Huang

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'Fairygodboss' founder tackles workplace inequality

Georgene Huang '01 created an online, data-focused community of professional women who evaluate companies’ employment practices.
Graphic showing how the planet had a different light signature due to the dominance of moss.

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Astronomers use Earth’s history as guide to spot vegetation on new worlds

A new model by Cornell astronomers will help identify possible life on exoplanets.
 Jessica Chen Weiss

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The Trump administration wrongly assumed China would capitulate in a trade war. What happens now?

In this Washington Post opinion piece, Jessica Chen Weiss, associate professor of government, and David. A Lake, professor of political science at the University of California at San Diego, discuss the recent trade war that the Trump Administration has instigated with China.
 From left postdocs David Toews, Ana Maria Porras, Elizabeth Day and Tisha Bohr holding their awards

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Postdocs honored with achievement awards

Six postdocs at Cornell were honored with an inaugural Postdoc Achievement Award Sept. 17 at the Big Red Barn as part of the kickoff to National Postdoc Appreciation Week.
 Royal Solomon Islands Police Force female officers march down the main street of Honiara on International Women’s Day, 8 March 2010

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Government professor wins Best Book Award

Sabrina Karim, assistant professor of government, and her co-author Kyle Beardsley, Duke University, have been awarded the 2018 Conflict Processes Section Best Book Award from the American Political Sciences Association for their book, “Equal Opportunity Peacekeeping: Women, Peace, and Security in Post-Conflict States.”
 Shoucheng Zhang

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Quantum computing explored in Fall Hans Bethe Lecture

The mysteries of quantum computing will be explained by physicist Shoucheng Zhang, a lead researcher in the field, in the fall Hans Bethe Lecture on Wed., Sept. 26 at 7:30 p.m. in Schwartz Auditorium, Rockefeller Hall.
 Funmi Dosunmu

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NYC wedding planner organizes a couple’s big day

On the table in her cozy Fifth Avenue office, Funmi Dosunmu ’12 offers her clients the choice of champagne, a mimosa, a plate of sweets or just an Evian water. They are celebrating, after all. Most of them are planning for one of the biggest days of their lives. Adorning her walls are gorgeous shots from weddings that she’s planned.
 Brain scans of a six-year-old girl with medulloblastoma

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Top neuroscientists to speak at Cornell Neurotech symposium

The third annual Cornell Neurotech Mong Family Foundation Symposium on Sept. 27 features three renowned neuroscientists who will discuss their research and techniques to explore the brain: Michale Fee, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Gail Mandel, Vollum Institute, Oregon Health and Science University; and Kamil Ugurbil, University of Minnesota.
 smokestack spewing pollution

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Trump and the deep divide on environmental quality

This opinion piece in The Hill by Peter K. Enns, associate professor of government and executive director of the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research and Jonathon P.
 Scan of a glioblastoma brain tumor

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Cancer researcher alumnus targets toughest tumors

When Rolf Barth ’59 thinks about his time as a Cornell Chemistry major, he remembers the 80 hours a week he spent in classes, labs, his language courses in German and Russian, plus three summers doing research at CalTech and Scripps Oceanographic Institute.
 Katherine McComas, vice provost for engagement and land-grant affairs.

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Grants create community-engaged opportunities for students

Fourteen projects include partners from New York state communities – from Rochester to Ithaca to New York City – while seven projects include international partners.
 Students from Loughlin Memorial High School in New York City sample water from the Hudson River to help identify invasive species for the FishTracker program.

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From fish DNA to Mars: STEM programs inspire kids across NYS

Science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) programs Cornell carries out all over New York state are helping children get a leg up in a wide variety of fields. From space exploration to computer coding workshops to molecular biology lessons in the field, these programs enhance the educational experience and open up new career possibilities for thousands of students ranging from preschool age up through high school.
 A silver fox bred for tameness at the the Institute for Cytology and Genetics in Novosibirsk, Russia.

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Silver fox study reveals genetic clues to social behavior

Geneticists identify genes that were altered in tame animals in two areas of the brain involved with learning and memory.
 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.
 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.
 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. 
 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

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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.
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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.
 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.”