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Environmental hazards, from noise to crowding, affect American poor more widely than once thought, says Cornell expert

It has long been known that Americans living in poverty are at a much higher risk than the more affluent for exposure to such health-threatening environmental hazards as air pollution and landfills.

First site plans for proposed athletic fields at Cornell's paddocks area to be presented to Town of Ithaca Planning Board, Oct. 15

Initial plans for the construction of two athletic practice fields at Cornell University's paddocks area -- at Ellis Hollow and Pine Tree roads in the Town of Ithaca -- will be presented by Cornell officials at the Tuesday, Oct. 15, Town of Ithaca Planning Board meeting. The town planning board will meet at 7 p.m. at Ithaca Town Hall, 215 N. Tioga St., in the city of Ithaca. Cornell's sketch plan review is scheduled to begin at 7:45 p.m. (October 9, 2002)

Cornell's Stephen Ceci receives prestigious Psychological Association award

Cornell University developmental psychologist Stephen J. Ceci is the co-winner of the 2003 American Psychological Association's Distinguished Scientific Award for the Applications of Psychology.

Cornell physicist James York wins coveted Heineman Prize

James W. York, a professor of physics at Cornell University who theorizes about universal time, space and gravity, has been awarded the prestigious Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics by the American Physical Society and the American Institute of Physics. The prize is regarded as one of the world's major scientific awards, and at least six Nobel prize winners are among previous recipients. York, a theorist in the rarified field of mathematical physics, shares the prize with Yvonne Choquet-Bruhat of the Faculté des Sciences de Paris, who in 1979 became the first woman elected to the 300-year-old French Academy of Sciences. The value of the prize is $7,500. (October 8, 2002)

Watch bird feeders for impact of West Nile virus, Cornell Lab of Ornithology advises 17,000 citizen-scientist volunteers

Thousands of volunteers have a new assignment from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology – documenting the impact of West Nile virus while counting birds for the 2002-03 season of Project FeederWatch.

Study of German children living near airports shows jet aircraft noise impairs long-term memory and reading ability

Excessive noise, such as jet aircraft flying overhead, impairs children's reading ability and long-term memory, a Cornell University environmental psychologist and his European colleagues conclude in a study of schoolchildren living near airports. "This is the first long-term study of the same children before and after airports near them opened and closed. It nails down that it is almost certain that noise is causing the differences in children's ability to learn to read," says Gary Evans, an international expert on environmental stress, such as noise, crowding and air pollution. (October 7, 2002)

Caring for sick spouse prompts older women to retire much earlier than men, who put income first, Cornell study finds

Working wives in late midlife are five times more likely to retire early to care for ill or disabled husbands than wives who are not caregivers, according to a new study by Cornell University sociologists. However, the study found, when men are caregivers, they are slower to retire than those who are not taking care of their wives. (October 4, 2002)

Qualcomm founder Jacobs to lecture at Cornell Oct. 10

Cornell University engineering graduate Irwin Jacobs '54, founder and chief executive of telecommunications giant Qualcomm, will deliver the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Distinguished Lecture Thursday, Oct. 10. The lecture is the first in a series to commemorate the centennial of the establishment of the local chapter of IEEE. His talk will focus on "The Third Generation of Wireless Communications." The talk, which is free and open to the public, will be at 5 p.m. in 101 Phillips Hall on the Cornell campus. (October 3, 2002)

Urban development, public policy and new communities to be addressed at Cornell conference in Chicago, Oct. 4-5

CHICAGO -- Prominent national architects and city planners will lay out their visions of public places and private spaces in the 21st century at a conference, "Public Places, Private Spaces and People's Lives," in Chicago on Oct. 4-5 sponsored by the President's Council of Cornell Women, a Cornell University alumnae group. One of the highlights of the meeting will be a presentation by New York architect Jill Lerner, co-chair of the Civic Alliance Memorials Committee and the New York Visions Memorial Committee, an open process to develop a plan for the memorials at the World Trade Center site in New York. She will speak Friday afternoon on the debate over rebuilding the trade center or building a memorial to the victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The conference also will address many other issues -- from urban development and public policy to America's new communities. (October 3, 2002)

Cornell astronomer tells Congress it should spend $125 million for new telescope to detect Earth-threatening asteroids

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- A Cornell University astronomer told a House of Representatives space subcommittee today that Washington should spend $125 million for a new type of ground-based telescope that could detect hundreds of asteroids and numerous comets that pose a potential threat to the Earth from space over the next century. Reporting on a government-commissioned review of solar system exploration by some of the nation's leading scientists, he said that the new wide-field telescope is needed to produce a weekly digital map of the visible sky in order to track space rocks called near-Earth objects (NEOs), the great majority of which have yet to be discovered. There is, he said, a 1 percent probability of an impact with Earth by a 300-meter-diameter (350 yards) body in the next 100 years, resulting in many deaths and widespread devastation. (October 3, 2002)

Homecoming panel details what is 'new' about Life Sciences Initiative

The publication of the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA in April 1953 by a pair of Cambridge biologists named James Watson and Francis Crick set the stage for a revolution in the way we study living organisms.

Bethe lecturer to discuss matter at lowest temperature in universe

Carl E. Wieman, winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics, will discuss a new form of matter that occurs at record cold temperatures in a nontechnical talk on the Cornell University campus Oct. 9. The talk, which is free and open to the public, will be given at 7:30 p.m. in Schwartz Auditorium of Rockefeller Hall. Wieman, a Distinguished Professor at the University of Colorado in Boulder, will be presenting the second of his two Bethe Lectures at Cornell. (October 2, 2002)