Cornell mock trial team is victorious at Ivy League competition Pre-law students to go on to regionals in February

Cornell's mock trial team took first place in the Ivy League Invitational Mock Trial Tournament at Yale University on Nov. 13 and 14, beating a team from archrival Princeton in the fifth and final round.

William T. Miller, Manhattan Project scientist and Cornell professor of chemistry, dies at 87

William T. Miller, a key scientist on the Manhattan Project team that developed the atomic bomb in World War II and a member of the chemistry faculty at Cornell from 1936 to 1977, died Nov. 15 at the Cayuga Medical Center in Ithaca.

Noted French sociologist and political figure to give two lectures on women in French politics, Oct. 21-22

Franoise Gaspard, professor of sociology at the famed Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (School of Higher Education in Social Sciences) in Paris, will give two free and open lectures Oct. 21-22 at Cornell on women in politics in France.

Nobel laureate and chemist Richard Ernst gives lectures on campus Oct. 14-29 as A.D. White Professor-at-Large

Richard Ernst, 1991 Nobel laureate in chemistry and professor at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, will visit Cornell Oct. 14-29 as an A.D. White Professor-at-Large.

Cornell food scientists discover why baked-then-cooled mozzarella cheese turns translucent

A Cornell food science student has answered an age-old question that has puzzled collegians through the years: Dude, why is the cheese on this cold pizza translucent?

El Niño absolved: No (immediate) weird weather effect seen by 13,000 bird-counters in Cornell Ornithology Lab's Project FeederWatch

The much-maligned El Niño of 1997-98 can't be blamed for bird shortages, bird surpluses or other avian population perturbations -- at least not yet -- say Cornell ornithologists who are analyzing reports from 13,000 North American citizen-scientists in Project FeederWatch.

'Garden Cities to Green Cities' symposium at Cornell Sept. 17-19

The College of Architecture, Art and Planning will host a two-day symposium, Sept. 17 - 19, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the publication of Ebenezer Howard's influential book, 'Tomorrow: A Peaceful Path to Real Reform.'

Orienteering adventure is set for Cornell Plantations Aug. 30

An all-family adventure -- orienteering with map and compass through Cornell Plantations' F.R. Newman Arboretum -- is planned from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 30, at Cornell.

Cornell Plantations' 1998 fall lecture series spans the globe

Plants of China and Japan, foods of South America, tree rings of the Mediterranean and gardens of New England are among the topics for this fall's free Wednesday night lecture series sponsored by Cornell Plantations at Cornell.