News : page 84

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 Andrea Restrepo-Mieth, a 2017-18 travel grant recipient, in Medellin, Colombia.

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Einaudi Center travel grants to send 100 graduate students packing

Zhiyu Gong (linguistics) will travel to China to record some of the last remaining speakers of the critically endangered Daur language. Kara Fikrig (entomology) will go to Colombia to study the feeding habits of mosquitoes that carry dengue fever and other diseases. Ali Abbas (applied economics and management) will spend time in Pakistan exploring collusion between citizens and the state in the property tax market.
 bound for glory

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Library preserves 'Bound for Glory' recordings and folk music history

Over the past 50 years the world has changed, but “Bound for Glory” has stayed almost exactly the same.
 Itai Roffman leans his head against a cage as Fergus, a chimpanzee, touches his face through the bars

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Ape communication explored at Cornell event

In a talk on “Gestural Communication and Pantomime in Great Apes” March 6 in Cornell's Goldwin Smith Hall, evolutionary anthropologist Itai Roffman from the University of Haifa and three Cornell faculty respondents explored the implications of the latest findings on primate culture and communication.
 flower

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Researchers identify the cells that trigger flowering

How do plants “know” it is time to flower? A new study uncovers exactly where a key protein forms before it triggers the flowering process in plants.Until now, no one has pinpointed which cells produce the small protein, called Flowering Locus T (FT). The study also points to an extensive intercellular signaling system that regulates FT production.
 hydrogen bonds

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First proof of hydrogen-bonded water wires could lead to better desalination

Identifying the chirality of water structures could inspire the design of more efficient purification technologies.
Peng Chen

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Understanding nanocatalysts' 'talk' could better inform design

Enzymes are nature’s best nanoscale catalysts, and often show what’s known as catalytic allostery – that is, reactions at one site affecting reactions at another site, typically a few nanometers away, without direct interaction between the reactants.
 Robin D. G. Kelley

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Undercover: UCLA Historian to Speak about the Secret Life of Journalist Grace Halsell

Historian Robin R. G. Kelley will visit campus April 16-18 for three lectures as part of the 2018 Carl Becker Lecture Series.
 Cornell student visting the United Nations

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Educational trip brings students to UN to appreciate complex world

UNITED NATIONS, New York City — A diverse group of undergraduates, graduate students, academic fellows and staff from Cornell took a trip to the city last month to tour the United Nations, learn more about disarmament issues and talk about career prospects with the global organization.
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Alumna finds parallels between Cornell experience, working at NYT

During her time at Cornell, Henig and a friend founded Kitsch, a student publication.
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Students launch journal to explore connections between politics and space

When someone commits a crime in outer space, whose laws govern their punishment?
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Giving Day 2018 breaks records with philanthropic innovations

Thanks to our generous alumni, parents, friends, faculty, staff, students and other supporters, the College of Arts & Sciences exceeded its goals on Giving Day.
 Basu

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Law and economics initiative launches with NYC event

The initiative connects economists, legal experts and other scholars with leading thinkers in government, international development, civil society and the private sector.
 McGraw Tower

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Faculty report offers ideas for structure of social sciences at Cornell

The report identified ways to better connect faculty, provide faculty with support and improve Cornell's external visibility and recruiting power in the social sciences.
 filiz garip

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Sociology professor Filiz Garip wins Komarovsky Best Book Award

Filiz Garip, professor of sociology, was awarded the Mirra Komarovsky Best Book Award for her work, “On the Move: Changing Mechanisms of Mexico-US Migration.” The award, given by the Eastern Sociological Society, honors the memory of Mirra Komarovsky, a pioneer in the sociology of gender.
 Speaker at Soup & Hope

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Soup & Hope speaker uses love of languages to push for social change

For José Armando Fernandez Guerrero ’18, two strong women – his grandmother, Apolonia, and his mother, Josefina – believed that his education would open opportunities. A third – a high school French teacher – showed him how to use his education, and the passion for languages and linguistics it inspired, to help him embrace and move beyond his past.
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A&S curriculum report recommends focus on exploration, simplified requirements

Faculty will take the next steps to determine whether the recommendation should move on to a proposal.
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Performance studies professor visits for Society for Humanities lecture

Fred Moten, professor of performance studies at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University and professor at the University of California-Riverside, will deliver the 2018 Invited Society Scholar Lecture at 4:30 p.m. March 21 in Lewis Auditorium in Goldwin Smith Hall. The subject of Moten’s lecture will be “The Gift of Corruption.” The lecture is free and open to the public.
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Student playwrights and screenwriters honored March 23

The winning stage and screenplays from this year’s Heermans-McCalmon Writing Competition will be showcased Friday, March 23, at 4:30 p.m. in the Class of ’56 Dance Theatre at the Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts.
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Student melds humanities, sciences to find her intellectual community

Finding life balance is a quest that junior Kylie Long, an aspiring radiologist, appreciates.Her pathway of learning and discovery at Cornell has led her to pursue the humanities along with the sciences and to study ancient texts as well as conduct stem cell research. She asks life’s big questions, while also getting down-to-earth at a local potting studio. She likes quiet meditation as well as using her voice to blog about self-care.
 goldwin smith hall

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Keeley Boerman receives top Employee Excellence Award

More than 200 awardees, nominees, nominators and senior staff members gathered at the Statler Ballroom for the fifth annual Employee Excellence Awards celebration March 13.“You are held in the highest regard by the student-athletes,” Vice President Ryan Lombardi told the audience, “for your willingness to listen when they are struggling with school work, family issues and missing home.”
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A journey to Cornell for creative writing

This Cornell Research story focuses on Nneoma Ike-Njoku, a first-year MFA student in creative writing, who hails fr
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Govt. professor has questions for new CIA director

In this opinion piece in Time magazine, Joseph Margulies, professor of government and law and a civil rights attorney, writes about one of his clients and President Trump's new nominee for CIA director, Gina Haspel.
 fencers

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Summer grants can support student research, travel

Through departments or the college, A&S students can find various ways to fund their summer adventures.
 zirin

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Dave Zirin to deliver 2018 Kops Freedom of the Press Lecture

Professional athletes have recently faced increasing criticism when they engage in political discourse, even though athletes have long had a history of political engagement. Dave Zirin, award winning sports editor for The Nation, will deliver the Daniel W. Kops Freedom of the Press Lecture on “The History of the Activist Athlete” March 22 at 4:45 p.m. in Hollis E. Cornell Auditorium in Goldwin Smith Hall. The lecture is free and open to the public.
 Archie

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The Complete Archie

Like generations of Cornell writers, I sat in the light of speech with poet and longtime English professor Archie Ammons morning after morning over coffee in the Temple of Zeus—first in the grand cavern that the café occupied on the left side of the Goldwin Smith lobby, later in the more modern but much diminished setting on the right, to which it was shifted in 1997.
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Teukolsky to explore the Dark Universe in Spring Hans Bethe Lecture

Einstein predicted black holes and gravitational waves – bizarre deviations from Newton’s theory of gravity – but it took almost a century before experiments proved him right. Those experimenters won this year’s Nobel Prize in Physics, but why do gravitational waves matter? And why is the recent detection of waves from colliding neutron stars causing such a stir?
 Daniel Schwarz, Frederic J. Whiton Professor of English Literature and Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow

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Conference to celebrate 50 years of Dan Schwarz's teaching

Three of the conference’s keynote speakers are former students of Schwarz who are now professors.
 Rhodessa Jones

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Activist and artist to speak on empowerment in theatre

Award-winning activist, artist, director, and scholar Rhodessa Jones brings her techniques of “Creative Survival” to Cornell’s Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts on March 20 and 22 for a public lecture and master class, respectively.
 Caroline Levine

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Levine keeps the 'Norton Anthology of World Literature' fresh

The 2017 edition adds new sections of oral works and poetry and politics.
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Fortune editor visits March 16 for Munschauer lecture

Leigh Gallagher '94, an English major, will talk about her work and her career path.
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Medieval and renaissance scholar speaks March 19

A Medieval and Renaissance literature scholar from Bard College will visit campus March 19 to talk about her research related to truth and fiction in texts from the Middle Ages.
 Wynton Marsalis
 Two patches of crystals are seamlessly "sewn" together to create atomically-thin fabrics.

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Researchers sew atomic lattices seamlessly together

Joining different kinds of materials can lead to all kinds of breakthroughs.
 Imogene Powers Johnson

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Cornell benefactor Imogene Powers Johnson dies at 87

Imogene “Gene” Powers Johnson ’52, a devoted alumna, benefactor and matriarch of a multigenerational philanthropic Cornellian family, died March 3 in Racine, Wisconsin. She was 87.
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Undergrad researcher explores ways to combat antibiotic resistance to cholera

Researchers have discovered a gene whose presence creates a larger “porin,” a hole in a bacteria’s outer membrane, allowing larger antibiotics to enter and attack the cell wall.
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Cornell Symphony Orchestra offers annual young person’s concert

Young musicians from Ithaca High School Chamber Orchestra, the Cayuga Chamber Orchestra’s Youth Orchestra and the Cornell Synphony Orchestra will come together to perform a concert for the Ithaca community on Sunday, March 11.
 McGraw Tower

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University reaffirms its commitment to, support of undocumented students

Numerous resources are available on campus for undocumented students with and without DACA status.
 Siu Sylvia Lee

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To stay young and disease-free longer

Lecturer Siu Sylvia Lee of the Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics is conducting research on aging.
 Professor Timothy Campbell

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Colloquia explore Italian art, culture, literature, philosophy

This spring, the Italian program within the College of Arts & Sciences is hosting the Italian Studies Colloquium, a series of lectures bringing together enthusiasts of Italian art, culture, literature and philosophy.
 Fukushima I nuclear power plant before the 2011 explosion, with ocean in the background

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Translation by Brett de Bary inaugurates new Cornell Press imprint

Brett de Bary has translated one of the first two books in a new Einaudi Center imprint at Cornell University Press, Cornell Global Perspectives.
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Professor offers talk on history of sexual minority rights in Zimbabwe

A professor from Queen’s University in Ontario, Canada, will visit campus March 7 to deliver a lecture examining the history of activism among sexual minority groups in Zimbabwe. Marc Epprecht, professor of Global development studies, History and Cultural studies will offer “Reflections on the Struggle for Sexual Minority Rights in Zimbabwe” at 4:30 p.m. at the A.D. White House.
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Boycotts won't weaken the NRA's bottom line – but that's not the point

In this piece in The Globe and Mail, Lawrence Glickman, the Stephen and Evalyn Milman Professor in American Studies, argues that recent NRA boycotts are succeeding at an unprecedented level, utilizing a boycott for what they've always been been about: indignant consumers puncturing political influence.
 Ravi Kanbur

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Forms of imbalance in our world

Two major issues face humanity: justice between the generations, and justice within the current generation, according to Ravi Kanbur, Applied Economics and Management.
 A sapling

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It's mostly luck, not pluck, that determines lifetime reproductive success

While trait variation can influence the fate of a population, researchers found that the fates of individuals are often determined by “dumb luck.”
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Undergrads can apply for new summer research opportunities at Cornell Tech

Students will work with Cornell Tech faculty and postdocs, or partner organizations over a 10-week summer program.
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Professor explores complexities of communicating the 'norms of science'

Overcoming gaps between knowledge and belief requires scientists to engage with the public, Bruce Lewenstein says.
 old chalkboard

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Enrichment program boosts STEM for black students but leaves Latinos behind

“There should be more connections with schools, parents and communities to fill the gaps in access to opportunity and to STEM resources."
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Cornell helps unlock doors to careers in data science

A new course this semester called Data Science for All offers data skills that students will need regardless of their career.
 Kate Manne

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Kate Manne on how attitudes to sexual harassment must change

The #MeToo movement seems to have sparked a sea change in how we think of sexual harassment. But in this Academic Minute, Kate Manne, assistant professor of philosophy, discusses why our attitudes are still not where they need to be. She is the author of the recently published “Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny.”
 Nelson Hairston sits watching two students use lab equipment in an experiment in his lab.

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Nelson Hairston elected Fellow of the Ecological Society of America

Nelson G. Hairston Jr., Frank H.T. Rhodes Professor of Environmental Science in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, has been elected a Fellow of the Ecological Society of America (ESA) for “outstanding contributions” in advancing ecological knowledge.