Cornell's Christine A. Shoemaker and Thomas D. Seeley receive von Humboldt Research Awards

Christine A. Shoemaker, professor of civil and environmental engineering, and Thomas D. Seeley, professor of neurobiology and behavior, at Cornell University have received Alexander von Humboldt Research Awards.

Cornell mathematician Robert Connelly to present talk, "How to Unfold a Carpenter's Rule in the Plane," April 28

Robert Connelly, professor of mathematics, will present the Cornell University Mathematics Department's annual Math Awareness Month lecture, "How to Unfold a Carpenter's Rule in the Plane," April 28 at 2 p.m. in 251 Malott Hall on campus.

Former U.S. Sen. Warren Rudman to give inaugural Belnick government studies lecture on April 26

Warren Rudman, former U.S. senator from New Hampshire, will deliver the inaugural Ben and Rhoda Belnick Fund for Government Studies Lecture Thursday, April 26, at 4:30 p.m. in Hollis E. Cornell Auditorium of Goldwin Smith Hall at Cornell.

Public workshop to launch Cornell's cutting-edge Internet art journal Ctheory Multimedia April 20 and 21

A collaborative workshop drawing from the disciplines of art, science, and computing will be held April 20 and 21 to launch Cornell Library's sponsorship of the Internet art journal Ctheory Multimedia , a semi-annual collection of electronic art and theory to be published this spring.

Poet Ruth Stone to read from her works at Cornell April 19

Celebrated poet Ruth Stone will read from her works at Cornell for the Creative Writing Program's biannual Chasen Poetry Reading Thursday, April 19, at 4 p.m. in the Hollis E. Cornell Auditorium of Goldwin Smith Hall.

Israeli ambassador Alon Pinkas to speak at Cornell April 16 Counsel general of Israel will present talks in Goldwin Smith Hall in Hebrew and in English

On Monday, April 16, Ambassador Alon Pinkas, the Counsel General of Israel, will give two talks titled "The Middle East After Israeli Elections: Thoughts on the Past and Prospects for the Future" in Hollis E. Cornell Auditorium of Goldwin Smith Hall.

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?

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.