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Most teens get pregnant on purpose because other life goals seem out of reach, says Cornell researcher

"Many teenage pregnancies aren't accidental but intentional because of girls who see no life goals other than being a mother as realistically within their reach," says Andrea Parrot, Ph.D., a Cornell University women's health and human sexuality expert.

Cornell receives $310,000 from Exxon's matching gift program

Cornell has received a $310,815 grant from the Exxon Education Foundation, which donates $3 for every $1 Exxon employees, retirees and surviving spouses contribute to colleges and universities.

PCCW awards 17 research grants to Cornell women

The President's Council of Cornell Women at Cornell has awarded 17 grants to help advance the careers of women in academia through support of the completion of dissertations and research leading to tenure and promotion.

Campus Road delays expected during repairs June 9 to July 14

Motorists on the Cornell campus should expect some delays when traveling on Campus Road between Stewart and Central avenues due to road construction from June 9 to July 14. James Finnigan of the Department of Planning, Design and Construction said Campus Road will be milled and resurfaced during that time.

Family businesses are focus of July 14 conference at Chautauqua, N.Y.

More than 90 percent of all businesses in this country are family businesses, which make them an integral part of the American economy. Strengthening these family firms will be the focus of the 1997 Chautauqua Family Business Conference: Growth and Transitioning, Monday, July 14.

Conditions ripe for blight? Check the Northeast Weather Association to find out

The forecast: Sunny with a chance of fungus. Such a forecast would be welcome news to farmers when used with conventional weather reports, as fruit, vegetable and crop growers in the Northeast try to get a jump on crop pests that could decimate their stock.

Risk analysis may cut some 'shots' from standard list, Cornell feline health official says

The threat of a rare but serious condition in cats - vaccine-associated feline sarcoma - is prompting veterinary experts to advise cat owners and their veterinarians to think twice about whether all vaccinations are necessary for all cats.

Cornell astrophysicist Edwin E. Salpeter shares Crafoord Prize from Royal Academy

Edwin E. Salpeter, the James Gilbert White Distinguished Professor in the Physical Sciences at Cornell, has won the 1997 Crafoord Prize, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced on Wednesday (May 28).

Women with low, but not anemic, iron also have impaired physical performance, studies find

Young women with low body iron -- but who are not quite anemic -- must use more effort to do the same amount of physical work or exercise than women who are not iron- deficient, according to several new Cornell studies.

Armed with 'Swiss Crepes,' Cornell's Food Product development team to defend title in Orlando June 14-16

Cornell's student Food Product Development Team is a finalist in the prestigious Institute of Food Technologists' national competition and are hoping for a three-peat. The Cornell team, which has been one of six finalists for three consecutive years, won the competiton last year and the year before.

Barclay Gibbs Jones, Cornell planning professor and national authority on the social and economic devastation of earthquakes, is dead at 72

Barclay G. Jones, Cornell professor of city and regional planning and regional science who was a noted expert on protecting historic structures from earthquake damage and on the social and economic devastation of national disasters, died May 26 at Cayuga Medical Center in Ithaca, N.Y.

Tcat introduces its new Summer Fun Pass

If you're wondering how you're going to get the kids from point A to point B, over to C, back to B, over to D and finally back to point A again, Tcat -- Tompkins Consolidated Area Transit -- has a solution.