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Finalists in Cornell architecture competition to present design proposals to jury and campus community April 18

Four internationally acclaimed architects who are finalists in an invited architecture design competition for Cornell's College of Architecture, Art and Planning will present their proposals for a $25 million building project to a selection jury of prominent architects and the campus community.

National Academy of Engineering president to speak on diversity and on fast pace of computing growth

Diversity in engineering is not just about fairness, but about creativity, according to Wm. [William] A. Wulf, president of the National Academy of Engineering, who will visit the Cornell campus to deliver two lectures on April 11 and 12.

Super fly lends an ear to bio-inspired hearing aids and robotic listening devices, Cornell neuroscientists report

Cornell University neuroscientists knew they had one amazing fly on their hands when they testedOrmia ochracea , a tiny insect parasite with such acute directional hearing that it has inspired a new generation of hearing aids and nanoscale listening devices.

Cornell cosmologist Thomas Gold revives old debate about moon to explain movement of dust into craters of asteroid Eros

More than just dust was kicked up when NASA's Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous spacecraft, NEAR Shoemaker, made a successful landing on asteroid 433 Eros on Feb. 12. Also disturbed were the memories of an experiment carried out more than three decades ago by a student of Thomas Gold, professor emeritus of astronomy at Cornell.

All tree biomass is created equal in forests of equal size, whether in the tropics or temperate climes, says Cornell biologist

Does the Amazon River basin thrive with more tree biomass than that along the shores of Opeongo Lake in Canada's Algonquin Provincial Park? Is the Congo Basin more tree biomass-rich than the Argonne Forest in northeastern France?

Hanan Ashrawi, a chief advocate for Palestinian independence, to give public talk at Cornell's Bailey Hall, April 11

Hanan Ashrawi, one of the chief advocates for Palestinian independence, will deliver a talk titled "Peace: Current Crisis and Future Prospects," April 11, at 7 p.m. in Bailey Hall, at Cornell.

New process for producing near-atomic scale silicon structures – nanobumps – developed by Cornell researchers

An engineer and a chemist, working together on a corporately funded research project at Cornell, are reporting a fundamentally new way to fabricate nanoscale structures on silicon that promises the development of devices ranging from biological sensors to light-emitting silicon displays.

Harvard's Lucie E. White will deliver Law School's Stevens Lecture, April 11

Anti-poverty law specialist Lucie E. White, the Louis A. Horvitz Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, will deliver Cornell Law School's Robert S. Stevens Lecture, April 11.

Can computers be tamed? Hewlett-Packard engineer will probe question in Henri Sack Memorial Lecture, April 11, at Cornell

"The Domestication of Computers" will be the topic for Joel S. Birnbaum, senior technical adviser at Hewlett-Packard Co. (HP), in the Henri Sack Memorial Lecture Wednesday, April 11, at 4 p.m. in Schwartz Auditorium of Rockefeller Hall at Cornell.

Itamar Rabinovich, former Israeli ambassador, lectures April 11 and 12 during visit as A.D. White Professor-at-Large

Itamar Rabinovich, the president of Tel Aviv University and former Israeli ambassador to the United States, will give two public lectures during his April visit as a Cornell Andrew Dixon White Professor-at-Large.

Cornell senior Kris Saha will study at Cambridge as a Churchill Scholar

Krishanu "Kris" Saha, a senior majoring in chemical engineering at Cornell, has been named a Churchill Scholar by the Winston Churchill Foundation. The Churchill scholarship provides for a year of graduate study in engineering, mathematics or science at Churchill College of the University of Cambridge.

New class of rubbery plastic materials, with promise of big economies, produced in lab by Cornell researchers

An entirely new class of rubbery plastics has been produced in the laboratory by a Cornell researcher and two co-workers. Because the material uses two common and inexpensive petroleum products, ethylene and polyethylene, for its feedstock, the research has the promise of greatly reduced production costs.