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Cornell United Way campaign kicks off, with 10 percent of its goal already met

The 2006 Cornell United Way campaign kicked off Oct. 11 with the goals of $660,000 a 20 percent participation rate.

Theater troupe teaches ethics in biology class by showing how not to take the easy way out

The Cornell Interactive Theater Ensemble proves to be an 'extraordinary teaching resource' by helping Professor Carl Hopkins run a class discussion on responsible conduct in the biological sciences as part of a freshman biology course.

Give peas a chance: Alum's cookbook offers lots of legume recipes with science on the side

From appetizers to desserts and every dish in between, Nancy Longnecker's cookbook, 'Passion for Pulses: A Feast of Beans, Peas and Lentils From Around the World,' offers legume-rich recipes with a side of science.

Forthcoming Nicaraguan election is a critical turning point, the nation's OAS ambassador stresses on campus visit

The outcome of Nicaragua's Nov. 5 elections will have far-reaching international political and economic ripples, according to Jose Luis Velazquez Pereira, who spoke at Cornell Oct. 12.

TV producer Don Hewitt talks about why '60 Minutes' is both a 'freak' TV show and the future of news

Marilyn Berger Hewitt '56, a New York Times contributor, and her husband, Don Hewitt, creator of CBS' '60 Minutes,' reflected on their lives as journalists Oct. 12 at the Alice Cook House on campus.

Pei Shin Nei, Clark Award winner, dies at 86

Pei Shin Ni, a former lecturer in the Department of Modern Languages, died Sept. 30 at her son's home in Las Cruces, N.M. She was 86.

Four Cornell area studies programs receive $7 million in federal funding

Four Cornell area studies programs have been designated National Resource Centers with grants totaling a little more than $750,000 per year through 2010.

New Arctic exhibit comes on eve of Cornell's two-year-old pact with Paleontological Research Institution

As the Paleontological Research Institution ends its second year of formal affiliation with Cornell, a new photography exhibit of the natural beauty and the fragility of Alaska's Arctic slope is to be featured at the institution's Museum of the Earth.

Steve Kresovich seeks to improve sub-Saharan staples by focusing on crops' African centers of origin

Cornell's vice provost for life sciences and professor of plant breeding and plant biology applies plant agriculture to human well-being while also overseeing the New Life Sciences Initiative.

Hotel roundtable reveals that when it comes to human resources, one size does not fit all

Companies use very different ways to determine and carry out their human resources priorities, according to the third Human Resources Roundtable at the School of Hotel Administration, Sept. 28-29.

Two Ph.D. candidates win prizes

Kathleen Foley has received a 2006 Trustees' Merit Citation from the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts, and Misty Urban won a first prize for fiction in the 21st annual New Letters Awards for Writers contest.

Cornell releases two new cherry varieties

The cherry processing industry now has two new varieties to work with, thanks to recent releases by Cornell's New York State Agricultural Experiment Station and International Plant Management Inc.