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Legal expert to talk about "Sex, Lies and the Internet" in Kops Lecture at Cornell on Sept. 16

Freedom of expression in cyberspace: Should there be any limits? If so, who should decide what the rules will be?

Cornell chemists create world's smallest wires and encase them in plastic polymer

Cornell chemists have created the world's smallest wires and encased them in a plastic polymer, an accomplishment that could lead to a host of new electrical or optical uses at the nanometer scale.

ew $3 million institute at Cornell to focus on working families

A new $3 million institute at Cornell University will look at how families are coping with changes in all stages of life and work.

Cornell's "Fabric/Flight Connection" video will be on exhibit at National Air and Space Museum

Fabrics have always been an integral part of flight, according to a Cornell University video. And now, this connection will be a featured part of a new Smithsonian Institution exhibit in the new gallery, How Things Fly, in the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

Cornell conservator restores German Bible spared by the Holocaust

Cornell conservator restores German Bible spared by the Holocaust.

Cornell statutory college tuition rates are lowered for 1996-97

Students enrolled in the four statutory colleges at Cornell are receiving good news this week. The elimination of a proposed tuition increase for the State University of New York when the state budget was passed, most students in the statutory colleges will see tuition reductions

Cornell psychological scientist edits two new books on psychopathology

Top scholars in psychological science present state-of-the-art thinking on personality disorders and developmental psychopathology in two new books edited by Cornell clinical psychologist and psychopathology researcher Mark F. Lenzenweger: Major Theories of Personality Disorder and Frontiers of Developmental Psychopathology

Cornell’s Africana Center to host colloquium series Semester’s topics will include Afrocentricity in “The Lion King” and on the Internet

Afrocentricity in "The Lion King" and senior living in upstate New York for African Americans are some of the topics to be addressed in a colloquium series this fall at Cornell's Africana Studies and Research Center. Free and open to the public, the series will be held Wednesdays from noon to 1:30 p.m. in the Hoyt Fuller Room of the Africana Center, 310 Triphammer Road, Ithaca; refreshments will be served.

Cornell helps combat child abuse and neglect with training, workshops, expert panels and publications

Every year, more than 3 million American children -- including more than 211,000 in New York -- are reported abused or neglected. Each day, three children die from such maltreatment.

Cornell’s John Silcox is Microscopist of the Year

John Silcox, the David E. Burr Professor of Engineering and director of the Materials Science Center at Cornell, has won the 1996 Distinguished Scientist Award in the Physical Sciences from the Microscopy Society of America.

Chaos reigns in this Cornell scientist’s office, where new uses of the theory are finding real-world applications

Chaos. To engineers, it has meant that their systems were at risk, and they did their best to engineer chaos out of them. “It used to be a nuisance. Engineers would avoid it at all costs,” said Steven H. Strogatz, Cornell associate professor of theoretical and applied mechanics.

New ultrasensitive technique for accurately characterizing biomolecules is developed by Cornell chemists

Cornell scientists report the accurate characterization of a sample representing 1 percent of the protein in a single red blood cell using electrospray mass spectrometry – a feat that opens the door to a wide area of basic medical exploration.