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Cornell Hillel awards Tanner Prize to Abby Joseph Cohen '73 and husband, David '73

Cornell Hillel's Board of Trustees has announced that the 2006 Tanner Prize will be awarded to Cornell alumni Abby Joseph Cohen '73 and her husband, David M. Cohen '73, for their significant contributions to the Jewish people and to Cornell. (February 21, 2006)

Autistic mind well suited for animal-based study - both involve thinking in pictures, explains visiting professor Grandin

Temple Grandin a renowned animal scientist and a Frank H.T. Rhodes Class of '56 Professor at Cornell, has autism. As a result, she learned to think in pictures, which has strong parallels, she believes, to how animals think, she said in a public lecture Feb. 15, 2006 at Cornell. (February 21, 2006)

Teaching with technology: How FIT fits into instruction

John W. Sipple, an associate professor of education at Cornell, had been teaching the Social and Political Context of American Education (Education 271/571) for seven years and had a smattering of audio and video in his class…

Festival of Black Gospel to spotlight longtime choir member Stephanie McClain

The annual Festival of Black Gospel (FBG), a 30-year tradition at Cornell University, will put the spotlight on one of its perennial performers this year. Lifelong Ithaca resident Stephanie McClain, who has sung in the FBG Mass…

On the wings of dragonflies: Flapping insect uses drag to carry its weight, offering insight into intricacies of flight

ST. LOUIS -- If mastering flight is your goal, you can't do better than to emulate a dragonfly. With four wings instead of the standard two and an unusual pitching stroke that allows the bug to hover and even shift into reverse,…

Genetic engineering saved Hawaii's papaya industry -- so why aren't other countries following suit?

ST. LOUIS -- Genetically engineered papaya that resists the devastating papaya ringspot virus (PRSV) has saved Hawaii's papaya industry. But efforts to grow PRSV-resistant papaya in developing countries are stalled, and…

Cornell museum exhibits allow children to enter world of the very, very small

ST. LOUIS -- Science learning isn't all in books. Sometimes you can hold it in your hand, walk through it, sit inside it, play with it. Those approaches are especially effective with children and can make abstract concepts easier…

Computer security problems are outside the box -- in law and public policy, Cornell expert says

ST. LOUIS -- When a virus infects a computer or a hacker steals credit card numbers from an online retailer's Web site, programmers aren't the only ones at fault. Existing laws and public policy are also significant impediments…

If science can send rockets to Mars and Pluto, it can reduce world hunger and poverty, asserts Cornell food policy expert

Pinstrup-AndersenST. LOUIS -- Applying science and technology to build a Pluto-bound spacecraft that travels more than 10 times faster -- 47,000 miles per hour -- than a speeding bullet or a tiny cell phone that fits in a…

Cornell biogeochemist shows how reproducing the Amazon's black soil could increase fertility and reduce global warming

ST. LOUIS -- The search for El Dorado in the Amazonian rainforest might not have yielded pots of gold, but it has led to unearthing a different type of gold mine: some of the globe's richest soil that can transform poor soil into…

South Korean delegation visits campus to discuss extending collaborations

Jason Koski/University Photography. A delegation from South Korea's Seoul National University met with College of Agriculture and Life Sciences faculty and administrators Feb 16. From left to right: Joon-Ho Lee, James Haldeman…

Seniors raising children second time around getting support from expanding Cooperative Extension program

Millions of grandparents are doing it all over again: raising children. But raising grandchildren is much harder than the first time around. Grandparents have lower energy levels; their discipline techniques can be outdated;…