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Media source: Cornell Chronicle

 Ella Maria Diaz

Article

Diaz's study of art collective journeys into Chicano/a culture

Assistant professor of English and Latino/a studies Ella Maria Diaz had never heard of the Royal Chicano Air Force (RCAF) arts collective before she realized she had been walking past their work for years.
 Woman measuring waist with tape measure

Article

Who is 'too fat'? That all depends on race, gender, generation

Sociologist Vida Maralani found that definitions of being overweight are subjective in the social world.
 Students in gallery looking at installation

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Critique, compassion are 'Side by Side' in Biennial artist's work

Race. Class. Determination. The tension and conflict within social systems.A point of contact between them is empathy. This is the context of “Side by Side,” a sculptural installation by multimedia artist and educator Pepón Osorio, on display until May 26 in Rand Hall.
 Jonathan Lunine

Article

Astronomer explores interaction of life and faith

Pursuing a life of science and a life of faith is not incompatible, said astronomer Jonathan Lunine at the St. Albert the Great Forum on Science and Religion April 26.
 Mohamed Abdel-Kader giving talk

Article

Einaudi speaker touts value of international education, languages

Multilingualism and the ability to understand cultures helps in solving global crises such as climate change and military conflicts, said Obama administration official Mohamed Abdel-Kader May 10 as part of the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies’ Distinguished Speakers Series.
 David Wilson

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Renowned biochemist David B. Wilson dies at 77

David B. Wilson, professor of molecular biology and genetics and a world leader in the field of enzymology, died April 29. He was 77.
 Laura Wilkinson

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Student, staff, faculty diversity honored with OADI awards

As a first-generation college graduate and a woman of color, Cornell trustee Laura Wilkinson, J.D. ’85, MBA ’86 – former deputy assistant director of the Federal Trade Commission, now an antitrust lawyer and partner in private practice – had little difficulty writing her keynote speech for the fourth annual Office of Academic Diversity Initiatives’ (OADI) Honors Awards Ceremony May 5.
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Article

Preserving our 'pale blue dot' is focus of first Sagan lecture

Lord Martin Rees, who has probed deep into the cosmos, studied gamma-ray bursts and galactic formations, spoke May 8 at Cornell’s David L. Call Alumni Auditorium on issues closer to home: the preservation of our “pale blue dot.”
 Bird in tall grass

Article

In brain evolution, size matters -- most of the time

The findings uncover a principle that may also help explain human evolution.
 Professor Hening Lin

Article

SIRT6's ability to suppress cancer cell growth is explained

The group found that preventing a certain type of reaction slows cell division and, therefore, cancer cell proliferation.
 Yimon Aye

Article

Yimon Aye awarded young investigator cancer research prize

Yimon Aye, a Howard Milstein faculty fellow and assistant professor of chemistry and chemical biology in the College of Arts and Sciences with a secondary appointment at Weill Cornell Medicine, is one of six winners of this year’s Pershing Square Sohn Prize for Young Investigators in Cancer Research, which supports New York-based scientists exploring innovative avenues in the fight against cancer.
 Students walking on city street

Article

Class gathers oral histories of Caribbean residents in Brooklyn

The oral history project and field trip were supported by an Engaged Opportunity Grant.
 Lryae Van Clief-Stefanon and Dagmawi Woubshet

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English professors discuss friendship, collaborative project

Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon and Dagmawi Woubshet, associate professors of English, discussed their ongoing collaborative project with the public May 3 in Klarman Hall.
 Students sharing posters at forum

Article

CURB enthusiasm: Undergrads show off research at forum

More than 80 students unveiled their scholarly work at the 32nd annual Spring Research Forum hosted April 27 by the Cornell Undergraduate Research Board (CURB).
 Geoffrey W. Coats in his lab

Article

Chemistry's Coates elected to National Academy of Sciences

Geoffrey W. Coates, the Tisch University Professor in the Department of Chemistry & Chemical Biology, is one of 84 new members elected to the National Academy of Sciences, the academy announced May 2.
 Rawling scholar student

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Rawlings scholars navigate to senior research success

The Rawlings scholars program, which features a wide range of undergraduate research, provides significant support to students who have strong academic potential and intellectual curiosity.
 Robert Hughes

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Robert Hughes, professor emeritus of chemistry, dies at 92

Robert E. Hughes, Ph.D. ’52, who taught chemistry at Cornell for 16 years and was co-founder of the University of Pennsylvania’s Laboratory for Research on the Structure of Matter (LRSM), died at his home in Round Hill, Virginia, April 2.
 Kim and refugees playing music in a field

Article

'Healing through the arts': Kim presents refugee project

Violinist and Assistant Professor of Music Ariana Kim found inspiration last year among a group of refugees and asylum-seekers in Italy.
 Celina Scott-Buechler

Article

Four Cornell students win 2017 Truman, Udall scholarships

Celina Scott-Buechler is studying how human-made forces drive change in marine coral reef systems.
 Female Black student listening to talk

Article

Scholars, artists convene to discuss black girls, women

In politics and activism, popular culture and social media, “black girls and women are hyper-visible,” according to associate professor of Africana studies Oneka LaBennett. They are portrayed “as ‘at risk’ and as cultural trendsetters, yet simultaneously rendered invisible in public policy discourses.”
 Jamila Mischener

Article

ISS supporting faculty research projects, conference

From analyzing how labor policies contributed to rapid economic growth in Europe in the 1950s to testing the therapeutic value of virtual reality technology, Cornell social science research projects are receiving assistance from the Institute for the Social Sciences’ (ISS) Small Grants Program.
 Eric Cheyfitz

Article

Book redefines disinformation in American democracy

Disinformation has been a constant force in American history, according to a new book by Eric Cheyfitz, the Ernest I. White Professor of American Studies and Humane Letters.
 Researcher

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Team measures effects of sentence structure in the brain

When we learn to read, we say one word at a time. But how does the brain actually put words together when we read full sentences?
 Conference attendee

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Conference will explore bodies and conversion

“Transforming Bodies,” an interdisciplinary conference April 21-22, will explore the centrality of bodies to concepts and practices of conversion in the early modern world.
 Mellon president speaking

Article

Mellon president proposes humanities tackle slavery

“When the world turns to the normally bodacious problems we call ‘grave challenges,’ shouldn’t the perspectives of humanists and artists be included to enhance what is known and how it is known?”
 Joshua Frieman

Article

Spring Hans Bethe Lecture to explore 'Dark Universe'

In this spring’s Hans Bethe Lecture at Cornell, physicist Joshua Frieman will introduce the Dark Universe, give an overview of what we have learned about it, and describe new experiments and observatories that aim to illuminate its enigmas.
 Enceladus photo

Article

For Saturn moon, possible 'restaurant' at bottom of the sea

Galactic hitchhikers take note: The restaurant at the end of the universe may be closer than we think. After probing data from NASA spacecraft Cassini’s flight through the watery plume of Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus, scientists from the Southwest Research Institute, Johns Hopkins’ Applied Physics Lab and Cornell confirm the presence of molecular hydrogen.
 Eun-Ah Kim

Article

Group works toward devising next-gen superconductor

The experimental realization of ultrathin graphene – which earned two scientists from the University of Manchester, U.K., the Nobel Prize in physics in 2010 – has ushered in a new age in materials research.
 Logo for the American Academy of Arts

Article

Four faculty elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences

Stephen Coate, María Cristina García, Suzanne Mettler and Fred Schneider will be honored at an Oct. 7 ceremony.
 Paula Vogel

Article

Playwright Paula Vogel honored for LGBT activism

The event coincided with the Broadway opening of Vogel’s play, “Indecent,” at the Cort Theatre.
 Libary

Article

Mellon grant supports open access to humanities texts

For the second year in a row, Cornell University Press has been awarded a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH)/Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant worth nearly $100,000 to fund the open access initiative, Cornell Open.“This is exciting news for the press and for the university,” said Laura Spitz, Cornell’s vice provost for international affairs. “Open access to humanities scholarship aligns with the mission of a global and engaged Cornell.”
 Students in front of U.S. Capital

Article

Students share tales of global climate change on Capitol Hill

"Making the climate change issue more personal, rather than hammering a person with ‘facts,’ is our first step in getting acceptance of it as a global problem."
 Michael Macy

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Study: Conservatives, liberals read different scientific books

Sociologist Michael Macy found connections between people's political views and their interest in various fields of science.
 faculty with new electron microscope

Article

New electron microscope sees more than an image

The electron microscope, a powerful tool for science, just became even more powerful, with an improvement developed by Cornell physicists. Their electron microscope pixel array detector (EMPAD) yields not just an image, but a wealth of information about the electrons that create the image and, from that, more about the structure of the sample.
 Students harvest vegetables on a farm in Bến Tre, the Mekong Delta, Vietnam

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Course reveals Vietnam through lens of climate change

“Climate Change Awareness and Service Learning in the Mekong Delta” featured seven weeks of in-class preparation, two weeks in Vietnam, then another seven weeks back on campus.
Saturn's small moon Pan

Article

Cornell team planned cosmic photo shoot of Saturn's moon Pan

Astronomy meets gastronomy: NASA’s Cassini spacecraft flew by and photographed a close-up of Saturn’s small moon Pan, never before seen in high resolution. Those images – as science hungered for joviality – revealed this moon looks like ravioli.
 Alex Townsend with supercomputer

Article

Math professor mentors winner of science talent search

When 18-year-old Aaron Yeiser was awarded second place honors – and $175,000 – in the national Regeneron Science Talent Search, no one was prouder than his mentor Alex Townsend, assistant professor of mathematics.
 Ichion Hutchinson

Article

Hutchinson wins National Book Critics Circle poetry award

'House of Lords and Commons' explores the landscape of Jamaica and Hutchinson’s memories of growing up there in Port Antonio.
Hong Kong at night

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Cornell hosts Hong Kong sustainability meeting April 6-7

Cornell’s wide-ranging, interdisciplinary expertise in global sustainability issues will be front and center when the university hosts a conference about sustainability research, community engagement and opportunities for collaboration in Asia, April 6-7 in Hong Kong.
 Cornell campus

Article

Cornell ranked among best in U.S. News grad school rankings

Our English, history, economics, sociology, government and psychology departments all ranked high in the annual report.
 Mariana

Article

Grant explores using seminal fluid proteins to control mosquitos

The spread of mosquito-borne viruses, including dengue, chikungunya and Zika, has created a public health crisis that poses risks to nearly 4 billion people living in 120 countries.
 Cook Awards recipients

Article

Cook Awards honor those committed to women's issues

Several individuals and organizations received Constance E. Cook and Alice H. Cook Awards March 9. Cook Awards honor Cornell students, faculty and staff members for their commitment to women’s issues and for improving the climate for women at Cornell. The Cook Award Committee and the University Diversity Council select winners from nominations made by members of the Cornell community.
 Student on computer infront of libary

Article

Library tackles fake news with workshops, resources, advice

In the well-attended workshops, librarians are reviewing tips and guidelines to help students identify nontrustworthy news sources.
 Basu

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Basu: Economics of climate change will affect world poverty

If the world’s climate changes dramatically, societal equilibrium and the economics of market forces fall apart.
 Students walking across quad

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Historian to speak on American exceptionalism

Can American exceptionalism – conservative or progressive – explain America to itself?
 Klarman Atrium

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Arts & Sciences plans campaigns for Giving Day

Cornell Giving Day 2017 is March 14, one 24-hour period for alumni, parents and friends to come together to support the university. “Now in its third year, Giving Day is a special moment for Cornell,” said Fred Van Sickle, vice president for alumni affairs and development. “For one day, we reconnect with one another as Cornellians. Our alumni, friends and parents show their deep commitment through their support for the university’s vital work in a myriad of important areas.”
 Rebecca Harris-Warrick

Article

Musicologist revives dance in French Baroque opera

When the Boston Early Music Festival needed advice on how to revive a French baroque opera, they turned to Cornell musicologist Rebecca Harris-Warrick, author of “Dance and Drama in French Baroque Opera: A History.”
 poster for the Southeast Asia Program with family in a farm

Article

Bulletin immerses readers in Southeast Asian cultures

The perspectives learned and connections made through cross-cultural exchange are critical to creating a society of global citizens.
 Faculty

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'Radical collaboration' through machine learning

An Ithaca-Cornell Tech partnership explores machine learning possibilities using visual recognition, crossing the humanities with technology.
 Hunter R. Rawlings III

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Library study honors Interim President Hunter Rawlings

The Hunter R. Rawlings III Research Study, a bright office space overlooking the Arts Quad and Goldwin Smith Hall on the sixth floor of Olin Library, was dedicated March 3.