… and I'll always be glad that I initially took that first course. What is your main extracurricular activity and …
Kate Blackwood/College of Arts and Sciences
Tanenhaus conversing with Dean Peter John Loewen during “The Man Who Built a Movement: How William F. Buckley Invented Modern Conservativism" on Oct. 9
… Review and the Week in Review and a Times writer at large, visited Cornell Oct. 6-10 as the fall Zubrow Distinguished Visiting Journalist in A&S. He met with students and … Fox News and, more recently, Bari Weiss’ online outlet The Free Press, even as it launched writers like Joan Didion and …
These simulations, developed with significant input from Cornell researchers using code written at Cornell, help scientists analyze gravitational waves observed by the LIGO, Virgo and KAGRA detectors located in the U.S., Italy and Japan.
… I have two major research initiatives right now. The first is to understand how galactic winds regulate the …
Ryan Young/Cornell University
Florencia Ardón (center), founder of Neurodiversity @ Cornell and staff member in the Learning Strategies Center, with neurodiversity ambassadors Carol Anne Barsody M.A. ’23 (left), master’s student in archeology, and Becca McCabe, doctoral student in mechanical engineering, in Duffield Hall
Enabling farmers to tinker with their own systems and involving them early in the design process could better translate technology from the lab to the field.
Provided by the family of Dr. Edward Hart
Martin Luther King Jr. and colleagues stand outside Anabel Taylor Hall on Nov. 13, 1960, during King’s first visit to Ithaca. Left to right: Kenneth Hagood ’60, a Cornell student organizer; Martin Luther King Jr.; the Rev. Joseph Lowery, a co-founder with King of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference; Dr. Edward Hart, an Ithaca ophthalmologist and chair of the Cornell Committee Against Segregation.
King’s historic visit on Nov. 13, 1960, and a second, on April 14, 1961, came during a period when he was honing ideas that would take center stage at the March on Washington in 1963
Matthew Meiselman/Provided
Dorsal neurons (green) express AstC peptide (magenta) in the female fly brain.