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Two people wearing fashionable red, white and black winter clothing sit back to back on a large rock, each holding a book. They are surrounded by snow

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Your January 2025 reads

This month’s featured titles – most by A&S authors – include a work of nonfiction about honeybees, a kids’ picture book, and a novel set in rural Nova Scotia.
Photo illustration of the U.S. Capital Building topped by a Cornell flag

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A roundup of the Cornellians on the Hill – Capitol Hill

Seven alumni are currently serving in Congress, including a newly elected senator from Michigan. Two are A&S alumni.
Magazine cover, "Cornell Review," bearing an abstract design in red, blue and yellow

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The ‘marvelous, turbulent times’ when a literary magazine was born

A fellow alum’s passing sparked vivid memories of launching the Cornell Review, a cutting-edge journal of ideas, in the late 1970s.
Black and white historic photo of Ezra Cornell, frowning and holding a pen.

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‘Good health, tempered courage, and sound common sense’

Those are the gifts that fate gave Ezra Cornell, per one historian. Here’s a look at his life—from humble beginnings to great wealth.
Four people wearing suits, all chomping on slices of pizza and holding plates

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Marketing wisdom, from the alum who helped turn Domino’s around

Each year, now-CEO Russell Weiner ’90 comes back to the Hill to speak about the secret sauce behind the pizza chain’s renaissance
Person sitting near a window, reading a book. There is snow outside

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Your December 2024 reads

This month’s featured titles include a history Harlem by a government alum and a prof’s memoir about his education under Apartheid.
Book cover: Double Awesome Chinese Food

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Cookbooks by Cornellians: Ideas for tasteful (and tasty!) holiday gifts

From vegetarian classics to a deep dive into Spanish cured meats—plus tempting treats and more—there’s something for everyone, many by A&S authors.
Book cover: Thinking Otherwise

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Your November 2024 Reads

This month’s featured titles include an homage to a beloved government professor, edited by three alumni
Person in late-70s chic tan sport coat, touching models of planets

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‘Cosmos,’ a pulitzer, and more: fascinating facts about Carl Sagan

The astronomer’s legacy can be found on Earth and far beyond—from a record-setting exhibit to an iconic portrait of our planet.
Person wearing a yellow life jacket, standing up in a boat

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New course sets sail on understanding physics–by boat

… spectrometers and electron microscopes. But for the fall 2024 semester, he is also teaching a new course, the Physics …
Jennifer Lory-Moran, in multi-colored stripped shirt and long blond hair, is smiling while standing next to the controls for the Cornell chimes up in McGraw Tower.

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Bells Are Ringing for This Veteran Chimesmaster

The Cornell Chimes' advisor for nearly a quarter-century, Jennifer Courtley Lory-Moran ’96, MAT ’97, recently marked a carillon milestone.
Jenna Barnes, dressed in jeans, open sweater and t-shirt, with long brown hair, seated and smiling.

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Alum’s Firm Sells Garments Long Seen as an Oxymoron: Comfy Bras

At Harper Wilde, "30 Under 30" honoree Jenna Kerner Barnes ’11 offers underclothes for customers of many shapes and sizes.
Red brick gothic house

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The A.D. White House: Andrew’s abode is a campus gem

Commissioned by Cornell’s inaugural president, the villa later became an art museum—and has long hosted a humanities group.
Walter LaFeber in suit and striped tie in his office with bookshelf on one side and a pile of books on the other, talking to someone.

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New Book by Alumni Explores Walter LaFeber’s Life and Work

A year after former students held a conference in NYC that paid tribute to a giant in the field of U.S. history, Cornell University Press has published a companion volume to the event.
Book cover: Invisible Labor

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Your October 2024 reads

This month’s titles, featured in Cornellians, include "Invisible Labor: The Untold Story of the Cesarean Section" by A&S alum Rachel Somerstein ’04.
Ling Ma

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Author alum wins MacArthur ‘genius grant’

Ling Ma, MFA ’16, has earned raves for her fiction; a Cornell Tech prof also received one of the coveted fellowships.
Three people wearing suits

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To promote peace, I borrowed a principle from martial arts

As John Marks '65, a government alum, outlines in his new book, coming at problems from a non-confrontational stance can be the best way to solve them.
movie poster: The Man Who Saved the Internet with a Sunflower

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Indie drama depicts Cornellian couple's role in web history

Set in the 1980s, The Man Who Saved the Internet with a Sunflower chronicles two ’69 classmates in Silicon Valley
Cover of "The Witchstone" by Henry H. Neff, showing the silhouette of a demon with horns drinking a martini and smoking

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Your August 2024 Reads

The featured titles include Joe Fassler ’06's novel drawn from the Icarus myth and former dean Philip Lewis' book on the public humanities.
Two women with long hair and wearing Native American-patterned clothing and hairpiece.

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Alum’s Nonprofit Promotes Indigenous Sisterhood

Michelle Schenandoah ’99 founded Rematriation to empower Indigenous people and raise global awareness about Indigenous knowledge as viable ways to address global challenges.
College students with hats and scarves covering their hair and Saxbys t-shirts make coffee.

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A decaf soy latte, with a shot of entrepreneurship

Government alum's Saxbys coffee chain operates on a unique model: its employees—and managers—are all college students.
Book cover: The Rock of Arles

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Your July 2024 reads

This month’s feature titles include an ancient guide to romance and “the first book authored by a geological formation,” both by A&S faculty.
Person posing next to a statue

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In a new book, prof translates ancient advice for the lovelorn

How to Get Over a Breakup is Michael Fontaine’s latest entry in a series that mines modern wisdom from classical works
Black and white historic photo: Five people getting off a plane; one is shaking hands with a person wearing a suit at the bottom of the stairacase

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New Book Chronicles Cornell’s International Impact

In "Beyond Borders," more than four dozen authors – many from A&S – contribute to an overview of the university’s "global dimensions."
Person making a sign using both hands

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American Sign Language has found a growing home on the Hill

Now offered as a minor, the study of ASL at Cornell came about through years of student advocacy
Lorlei Boyd, long blond hair and in a Cornell jacket, smiling with Libe Slope trees behind her

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We Need Anthropologists Everywhere—Especially in AI

"I never imagined working in STEM with a humanities degree, but it actually prepared me for an amazing career."
Person wearing a bike helmet and shorts, holds a bicycle over her head. Mountains in the background

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Through cycling tours, alum peddles her passion

For more than three decades, anthropology graduate Lauren Hefferon ’83 has run a company that offers upscale trips on two wheels.
Amanda Hernandez ’21

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Dancing with the (collegiate) stars

A&S alumna Amanda Hernandez ’21, now a busy med student, coaches her former team to ‘pom’ glory—from hundreds of miles away.
Medalion featuring a smiling face, placed on a yellow cloth

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Remembering the sacrifice of a Cornellian lost in war

Campus event honored Marine Corps Maj. Richard Gannon ’95, who was just 31 when he died in Iraq two decades ago
Michelle Knudsen

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Bestselling children’s author weaves tales of wonder

The latest by Michelle Knudsen ’95, of Library Lion fame: the story of a sensitive spider who yearns to be a pet kitten
Person in racing gear runs on a blue pathway with the Eiffel Tower in the background

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Racing toward her second Olympics, Taylor Knibb ’20 preps for Paris

The Arts & Sciences alum (psychology) and Big Red four-sport standout is set to compete in the women’s triathlon for Team USA.
Anna Esaki-Smith

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What my winding career path taught me about college

Asian Studies alum Anna Esaki-Smith ’83, who struggled with what to do after graduation is author of 'Make College Your Superpower: It’s Not Where You Go, It’s What You Know'
Kate Manne

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A moral philosopher contemplates the evils of 'fatphobia'

After penning two acclaimed books on misogyny, Kate Manne turns her attention to a different—but related—form of oppression
Movie poster: Oppenheimer

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Poised for Oscar gold, Oppenheimer boasts a Big Red distinction

Thanks in part to its physics-centric plot, the hit movie may depict more Cornellians than any other feature film in history.
Elbert Cox: a black and white portrait of a person wearing doctoral regalia

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Remembering the Cornellian who broke racial barriers in math

After becoming the first Black person to earn a PhD in the field, Elbert Cox, PhD 1925, spent a lifetime inspiring others to follow.
Building with textured brick

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How much do you know about Africana Studies on the Hill?

During Black History Month, test your knowledge of Cornell’s ground-breaking program with 10 trivia questions!
Fatema Gunja Sumar ’01

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Founded by undergrads, service groups are still going strong

Meet some alums whose good works—from youth outreach to food drives—are being continued by a new generation
Black and white historic photo of a half dozen young men, relaxing togther around a table

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For 75+ years, students have made Watermargin a home

The pioneering co-op led the way in creating an interracial, interfaith house as a nondiscriminatory ideal.
three men on stage

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With 'Succession,' another Emmy for producer Scott Ferguson '82, BA '83

The veteran Hollywood exec boasts a resume including Oscar winners, ratings toppers and critical favorites.
Person touching papers coming out of an old box

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Campus time capsules are blasts from the past

From contemporary ephemera to a missive from Ezra himself, the historic containers are relics of an earlier Cornell.
Two people stand together in a studio with paints and paintings

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For two Cornellian pals, art meets life — now in book form

An enduring friendship between alums — dating back to when they were mentor and student — has led both to cultivate their creativity.
Book cover: Cornell, A History

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Big Red books, perfect for gifting

Need a present for the Cornellian on your list? Here are titles on University history, traditions, songs, famous alums—even recipes!
Person standing at a podium, holding a book, with a serious expression

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Giving voice to the often voiceless, alum wins a ‘Genius Grant’

Fiction writer Manuel Muñoz, MFA ’98, draws inspiration from his upbringing in a Mexican-American farming family
Joseph Holland ’78, MA ’79

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Alum’s book gleans inspiration from Black American trailblazers

From Oprah and the Obamas to lesser-known heroes, Joseph Holland ’78, MA ’79 finds words to live by.
Movie screen outdoors, showing a black and white still of Jimmy Stewart, with red-lit windows behind it.

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Cornell Cinema still lights up the silver screen

After more than a half-century in the Straight, the Hill’s iconic movie venue remains a film fan’s delight.
Clear jar with a brain inside, with a person behind it

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Brains! Collection is a (slightly spooky) artifact of an earlier era

Now overseen by the psychology department, the vintage cerebra draw many a visitor to the second floor of Uris Hall.
Black and white photo from 1914: a woman in a dark suit and hat highlighted by flowers stands on a wooden dock

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New memoir spotlights pioneering female surgeon's WWI service

The book curates the diaries and letters of ‘double Red’ alum and Cornell trustee Mary Crawford 1904, MD 1907.
Steve Salm

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Meet the alum behind some of music's biggest rights deals

Steve Salm ’93 is a founding partner at the firm that owns the catalogs of Genesis, KISS, Imagine Dragons, and much more.
Illustration of a clock tower on the left and a gold medal featuring a man's head and shoulders on the right

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Meet some of the (many!) Cornellians who’ve won the Nobel

From Hans Bethe to Toni Morrison, we offer a sampling of alums and profs who’ve earned one of the world’s highest accolades.
Person sitting in a red chair in front of a keyboard

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Cheryl Engelhardt ’02 Is a rising star in new age music

Her latest album snagged a Grammy nomination — and she once scored a Cheerios commercial starring Grumpy Cat