Black Lives Matter community events to commemorate King

“Black Lives Matter” is the theme of a community celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day Jan. 18 in Ithaca, and founders of the Black Lives Matter movement will come to Cornell Feb. 3 for the 2016 Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Lecture.

Arts and Sciences faculty can apply for digital grants

College of Arts and Sciences faculty and graduate students are invited to submit proposals to digitize Cornell collections by Jan. 31. more than two dozen faculty members place collections online.

Three Cornellians among inaugural Schwarzman Scholars

A new program modeled on the Rhodes Scholarship will include three Cornellians among its 111-member inaugural class: Juliana Batista ’16, Atticus DeProspo ’15 and Andrew Schoen ’12. They were chosen among 3,000 applicants.

Emeritus professor and alum Edgar Rosenberg dies at 90

Edgar Rosenberg, a literary scholar and friction writer and professor emeritus of English and comparative literature at Cornell, Dec. 19 in Cayuga Heights, New York, at the age of 90.

December graduation features record number of participants

Nearly half of the more than 900 January degree candidates took part in the Dec. 19 recognition ceremony, held before thousands of family and friends in Barton Hall.

Philandering prairie voles cued by genes, brains, environment

Genes can be influenced by such environmental factors as population density, and cheating voles have more reproductive success when the population is high.

Polymer breakthrough could revolutionize water purification

A team of Cornell researchers has used cyclodextrin, the same material found in the air freshener Febreze, to develop a technique that could revolutionize the water-purification industry.

Two juniors receive Harry Caplan Travel Fellowships

This year's Caplan Travel Fellowship winners are Christopher Erdman '17 and John Hall '17, who will each use their $4,000 award to study and conduct research in Italy.

Robots learn by watching how-to videos

Cornell researchers are teaching robots to watch instructional videos and derive a series of step-by-step instructions to perform a task.