Horses 2002 conference featuring equine educational seminars and clinics to be held at Cornell April 6-7

Cornell will host Horses 2002, a two-day conference April 6 and 7, featuring demonstrations, clinics, educational seminars related to equine issues, and speakers, including horse-and-rider relationship expert GaWaNi Pony Boy.

Proposals sought for 2002 Smith Award for community progress and innovation projects

The committee for the 2002 Robert S. Smith Award for community progress and innovation is calling for proposals from local organizations and agencies. Proposals are due by April 12.

NASA's comet tour challenges teachers and students to enter contest

NASA's Contour space mission and Cornell are challenging students and their teachers in the United States to participate in the spacecraft's forthcoming exploration of comets.

Dramatic reading of 'The Vagina Monologues' slated for Feb. 14 on campus, and the director of the College Campaign for V-Day will speak Feb. 9

The Vagina Monologues , Eve Ensler's Obie award-winning play that premiered in 1996 and addresses issues of violence against women, will be read at Cornell University on Valentine's Day.

Cornell senior Joshua Goldman receives prestigious Marshall Scholarship to study at Cambridge and Edinburgh

Joshua Goldman, a senior majoring in physics at Cornell University, is one of 40 student winners nationwide of the prestigious Marshall Scholarship for two years of study in the United Kingdom.

Honoring Veverka, a man who chases snowballs and discovers 'continents'

Astronomer Joe Veverka, chair of Cornell's Department of Astronomy, will celebrate his 60th birthday with a unique gift from his colleagues: a symposium, "Exploration of the Universe," to be held Oct. 4-6 on campus.

LaFeber gives remarks at National Day of Prayer and Remembrance

The text of remarks by Walter LaFeber, the Marie Underhill Noll Professor of American History, on Sept. 14, 2011, the National Day of Prayer and Remembrance, at Cornell University.

Soybean aphids, a potential agricultural threat, found by Cornell entomologists in New York state

Potentially damaging soybean aphids have been detected in several central and western counties of New York state, according to Cornell University entomologists.

Two Cornell graduate students receive three-year fellowships from Semiconductor Research Corp.

Two Cornell University graduate students have received generous graduate fellowships from the Semiconductor Research Corp., the microchip industry's long-term research consortium.