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 Ron Rash

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Zalaznick series Includes readings by Quan Barry, Marlon James

Poet and fiction writer Ron Rash kicks off the Fall 2017 Barbara & David Zalaznick Reading Series on Thursday, Sept. 7, 4:30 p.m., at the Rhodes-Rawlings Auditorium in Cornell’s Klarman Hall. All events in the Reading Series are free and open to the public.
 Katharine Poor

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FGSS alum continues social justice work in India, Texas

After spending a year helping human trafficking victims in Mumbai, India, alum Katharine Poor ‘16 is headed to Texas to work for an organization that aids refugees and undocumented immigrants.
 Faculty and students in classroom setting

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Courses address recent events and national climate

Faculty in the College of Arts & Sciences are exploring questions about recent events in their research and scholarship, and students have the opportunity to engage with their expertise through numerous courses this Fall relevant to our current national climate.
 Ishion Hutchinson

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Cornell poet to kick off Botanic Gardens’ lecture series

Cornell Botanic Gardens opens its annual Fall Lecture Series with award-winning poet Ishion Hutchinson on Wednesday, August 30, at 5:30 p.m. in Call Auditorium, followed by a garden party at Cornell Botanic Gardens.
 Fullbright poster

Article

Fulbright recipients head off to global destinations

Fourteen Cornell students and recent alumni are setting out this fall for destinations around the world, thanks to grants from the Fulbright U.S. Student Program.
Camper Mary draws an excavation trench at Gegharot, an archaeological site in Armenia.

Article

Armenian girls uncover the past in archaeology camp

From July 17-20, six Armenian girls got an insider’s view of archaeology as participants in the pilot session of Camp Aragats
 Students and families listening to convocaiton speech

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Dean welcomes Class of 2021

Under sunny skies on Saturday, Aug. 19, incoming first-year students, transfer students, and their families gathered on the Arts Quad for a convocation ceremony.
 Doughnuts

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Devil versus angel: When do they shift into action in the face of temptation?

What might cause a person to choose a doughnut for breakfast instead of a bowl of oatmeal?This piece in the San Francisco Chronicle, explores reserach into temptation conducted by Melissa Ferguson, Cornell professor of psychology, and Paul Stillman, a postdoctoral researcher in the Center for Cognitive and Brain Sciences at The Ohio State University.
Solar eclipse

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Solar eclipse offers moon-walk moment: Science is all the rage

In this USA Today opinion piece, astronomy Professor Philip Nicholson writes that Monday's solar eclipse could have impacts beyond a one-day event.
 Arts quad in the fall

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College celebrates year of generous giving

The growth of annual funds in the College of Arts & Sciences has been the most significant of all of Cornell's schools and colleges this year.
 Jamila Michener

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People who get Medicaid are made to feel powerless

In this Washington Post opinion piece, Jamila Michener, assistant professor of government, writes about her research, which shows that people on Medicaid often feel powerless and therefore disengage in politics.
 Meera Kattapuram

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Ecuador trip solidifies classroom work

For the past two years, Meera Kattapuram ’17 has been conducting research on infectious diseases and micronutrients in a Cornell lab, focusing especially on the role they play in the health of mothers and young children. This summer, she got a chance to see her research in action in an Ecuadoran hospital.
 Azat Gündoğan

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Cornell provides refuge for scholars under threat

Cornell works with several organizations that protect academics threatened by violence or persecution.
 poster offering reward for runaway slave

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Freedom on the Move project awarded NEH grant

The project is creating a database of fugitive slaves in North America, using information in “runaway” advertisements placed by slave owners.
 human brain illustration

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Early career scientists named Mong Fellows in Cornell Neurotech

Ten new Mong Family Foundation Fellows in Neurotech will work under the mentorship of faculty across Cornell to advance technologies that promise to provide insight into how brains work, as well as strategies to fix them when they don’t.
 Chemistry equipment, glass tubes

Article

Chemistry student enjoys 'making invisible things tangible'

Chemistry major Cathy Ly ‘19 is spending her summer in Ithaca doing research at Cornell, thanks to the J. Emory Morris Fellowship she received from the chemistry department.  “I love doing hands-on work,” said Ly, “and being able to make invisible things tangible, to discover what isn’t immediately apparent to human eyes.” She’s interested in chemistry’s applications to astronomy and material science.
 Yimon Aye

Article

Chemistry professor honored with prestigious ACS award

Yimon Aye, a Howard Milstein faculty fellow and assistant professor of chemistry and chemical biology, has been honored by the Eastern New York Section of the American Chemical Society as the 2017 Buck-Whitney Award winner. Aye has been invited to give a talk at the awards ceremony Nov. 15 in Troy, N.Y.
Chemist doing research

Article

Chemists use electricity to amp up drug manufacturing

Give your medicine a jolt. By using a technique that combines electricity and chemistry, future pharmaceuticals – including many of the top prescribed medications in the United States – soon may be easily scaled up to be manufactured in a more sustainable way. This new Cornell research appears in Science Aug. 11.
 Milos Balac

Article

American Studies alum says major was perfect match for documentary career

Milos Balac ’11 found out that his language skills in Serbian and French – as well as his time on the Cornell ski team and his American studies courses — have paid off handsomely so far in his career as a documentary filmmaker.Balac, a producer at Film 45 based in Santa Monica, is hard at work these days finishing up a project about Serbian tennis great Novak Djokovic.
 undergraduate students

Article

Global scholars study English and more

This summer, 38 undergraduates, grad students, and visiting scholars from 12 nations are enrolled in Cornell's English for International Students and Scholars (EISS) program, according to this story on the Global Cornell website.
 Valzhyna Mort Hutchinson

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Belarusian professor releases new poetry collection

Valzhyna Mort's collection focuses on themes of war and displacement, music and gardens, language and earth.
Joseph Fetcho looking at zebra fish

Article

$9M grant will create neurotech research hub at Cornell

New tools developed at Cornell will provide neuroscientists an unprecedented glimpse into the inner workings of the brain.
 Jerrold Meinwald

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Co-founder of chemical ecology celebrates 90 years

Colleagues are planning a symposium in August to celebrate the birthday of Jerrold Meinwald, Goldwin Smith Professor of Chemistry Emeritus, who turned 90 in January. The symposium will take place during the meeting of the International Society of Chemical Ecology in Kyoto, Japan.  
 Warrior-scholar student

Article

Warrior-scholars explore the relevance of 'Our Declaration'

Whether they served in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps or Coast Guard, the 15 veterans and reservists of the first 2017 Warrior-Scholar Project (WSP) class agreed they gained a greater appreciation for democracy in the United States by seeing people from other countries aspire to a way of life many Americans take for granted.
 Students in the CAPS program

Article

Arts & Sciences student spends summer building bridges in U.S.-China relations

Zhangmin Abigail Chen ‘19, a College Scholar focusing on government and China & Asia-Pacific studies, is pursuing her interests in international affairs and non-profit management as an intern at the Carter Center’s China Program this summer.The Carter Center, founded in 1982 by President Jimmy Carter and First Lady Rosalynn Carter, is a nongovernmental organization commited to human rights and the alleviation of human suffering.
 Postage stamps featuring Roald Hoffman

Article

Ukrainian hometown celebrates Nobel prize-winning professor

The hometown of Roald Hoffmann, the Frank H.T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters Emeritus, has held an event, with lectures and music, to commemorate Hoffmann’s 80th birthday, which was July 18.
 Yimon Aye

Article

Aye group discovers avenue for precision cancer treatment

One of the goals of personalized medicine is to be able to determine which treatment would work best by sequencing a patient’s genome. New research from the lab of Yimon Aye, assistant professor of chemistry and chemical biology, could help make that approach a reality.
 Students in fencing uniforms

Article

Students conduct research in Asia with assistance from travel grants

Students found they had a lot in common with the people they met during their summer work.
Megan Zhang

Article

Gap year allows alum to pursue passion for working with homeless

The American studies major says her coursework prepared her to work with a diverse population.
 Entrance to the Akwesasne reservation

Article

Collaborative play transcends borders, cultures

A new play about borders has found an unusual way to transcend them: by integrating local experiences in each new place it is performed.
 Students using tree-ring dating

Article

Arts & Sciences students use tree-ring dating at UNESCO site

Dendrochronology can help to date buildings, wooden objects and works of art such as icons.
 Jonathan Culler

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New novel celebrates Cornell’s stature in literary theory

Prize-winning French novelist Laurent Binet’s new book features a chapter on a fictional conference at Cornell, organized by none other than (the real) Jonathan Culler, the Class of 1916 Professor of English and Comparative Literature in the College of Arts and Sciences.
 Kyle Lancaster with student in lab

Article

Nitric oxide plays key role in forming potent greenhouse gas

Cornell chemists have uncovered a fresh role for nitric oxide that could send biochemical textbooks back for revision.They have identified a critical step in the nitrification process, which is partly responsible for agricultural emissions of harmful nitrous oxide and its chemical cousins into the atmosphere, contributing to global climate change.
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Article

Research offers new hope for gender equity in STEM fields

Men continue to be much more likely to earn a degree in STEM fields than women, despite efforts made over the last few decades. New research from Cornell's Center for the Study of Inequality (CSI) on fields of environmental study offers unexpected hope in closing this gender gap.
 Naomi Enzinna in linguistics lab

Article

Grad student studies Miami English dialect

As the number of bilingual speakers in the United States grows, so will language variation.
 Tigers on an enclosed bridge

Article

Veteran banker and A&S alum leads America’s oldest zoo

Philadelphia Zoo president and CEO Vik Dewan ’76, an alum of the College of Arts & Sciences, is profiled in this piece in the most recent Cornell Alumni Magazine. Leader of the zoo since 2006, the story says that Dewan, an economics and government major, has spearheaded many innovations during his tenure, including an ever-expanding system of enclosed trails.
 McNair Scholar students

Article

McNair scholars advocate on Capitol Hill for TRIO programs

Thirteen students participating in federally funded TRIO programs at Cornell, including two in the College of Arts & Sciencs, went to Capitol Hill June 28-29 and met with their members of Congress and legislative staff to advocate for the programs.
 Ant-mimicking jumping spider

Article

Jumping spiders mimic ants to defy predators

Humans aren’t the only actors on the planet. To avoid being eaten, the ant-mimicking jumping spider pretends to be an ant, according to Cornell research published July 12 in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Rebecca Macklin

Article

University of Leeds student receives Fulbright for research at Cornell

Rebecca Macklin, a PhD candidate in comparative literature at the University of Leeds, has received an All Disciplines Fulbright Award to undertake research at Cornell University.
 Students in Spanish city

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Summer in Madrid program transforms students

Students return from the six-week trip with the confidence of knowing they can make their way in a Spanish-speaking country.
 Leo Ikenaga playing taiko drum

Article

Alum tours the world with Japan drumming group

This Cornell Alumni Magazine article tells the story of Leo Ikenaga ’12, a member of Kodo, an elite, 30-member Japanese musical group. The group is primarily focused on the dynamic drumming style known as taiko. Ikenega was introduced to taiko at Cornell, where he was a member and became musical director of Yamatai.
 Patrick McGovern

Article

Brew Master

This Cornell Alumni Magazine story explores the career of Patrick McGovern ’66, a pioneer in the field of biomolecular archaeology.
 Student in front of shelf full of video games

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Connecting video games and creative writing

Student says video games "have a vast capacity for expression and emotion, and a huge potential for humanistic inquiry."
Sabrina Karim

Article

New professor wins book prize

Sabrina Karim received the prize for her book, Equal Opportunity Peacekeeping: Women, Peace, and Security in Post-Conflict States.
 Graduate student with tortoise during field course

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Crowdfunding campaign supports biology field study

Gopher tortoises and blue jays… a vintage Army-issue shovel… sun and rain and wind: the hundreds of students who have gone on field courses through the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology over the last 50 years have memories as diverse as the ecosystems they studied.
 Tablet

Article

How Hobby Lobby damaged history

Sturt Manning, the Goldwin Smith Professor of Classical Archaeology in the classics department, writes in this CNN opinion piece that Hobby Lobby's decision to buy more than 5,000 artifacts from the ancient Near East in December 2010 is "tragic."
 Kim Weeden

Article

Work: Aspirations, inequalities, markets

This Cornell Research story focuses on Kim Weeden, the Jan Rock Zubrow ’77 Professor of the Social Sciences and director of the Center for the Study of Inequality, whose work focuses on inequality and opportunity in the United States and other industrialized countries.
 Robert Richardson

Article

Secrets of superfluid helium explored

When Cornell physicists Robert Richardson, David Lee and Douglas Osheroff received the 1996 Nobel Prize for their discovery of the superfluid state of liquid helium, it was only the beginning. Now a new team of Cornell researchers, building on that work, have found new complexities in the phenomenon, with implications for the study of superconductivity and theoretical models of the origin of the universe.
 Researchers from the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source

Article

Out of the blue: Medieval fragments yield surprises

Analyzing pigments in medieval illuminated manuscript pages at the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source(CHESS) is opening up some new areas of research bridging the arts and sciences.
 Researcher standing infront of American flag

Article

Mouse tracking may reveal ability to resist temptation

The devil on your right shoulder is telling you, “Go ahead, grab that candy bar! You know you want it!”Meanwhile, the angel on your left is gently saying, “The apple is a much healthier option, isn’t it?”