In the News

Forbes

“As an immigrant myself, I’m an example of how immigration is so critical to advancing the U.S. biomedical research and clinical care,” says Augustine Choi, dean of Weill Cornell Medicine in New York and provost for medical affairs of Cornell University. “I would love for our trainees to have the same opportunities. I just hope we will have policies that will allow immigrants to really fulfill their potential. It’s good for them and it’s good for the United States.”

National Geographic

“It’s really exciting,” says Andrew Farnsworth, an ornithologist with Cornell University. “Having this approach and these findings as a baseline against which to compare a changing reality of habitat fragmentation and loss is really important.”

The New York Times

In parts of western Nepal, woman are banished to chhaupadi huts when they get their periods. “These practices are done in the name of protecting the purity of the community,” says Kathryn March, an anthropologist at the College of Arts & Sciences. “That’s why it’s so hard for individuals to change them.”

The Chronicle of Higher Education

Tenure bolsters the sharing of information, the most critical function of academe, says ILR Professor Ronald G. Ehrenberg. Ehrenberg did research earlier in his career that found that universities that offered lower probabilities of tenure had to pay higher salaries.

CNN

Op-ed from Stephen Wicker, professor of electrical and computer engineering at Cornell Engineering. Wicker says beyond the obvious risk to individual privacy is the concern that this never-ending leakage of data could add fuel to the raging fire of political disinformation.

The Washington Post

“There's nothing in the report which says the FBI was biased in favor of Clinton," Cornell Law School Vice Dean Jens David Ohlin says. "If anything, it's the opposite. The FBI handled the investigation in a way that was very problematic for Clinton and complicated her life immensely."

The Wall Street Journal

The death rate is climbing for those between 45 and 64, new CDC data show. “Life satisfaction hits an all-time low in middle age,” says Samantha Boardman, a clinical instructor in medicine and psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medicine. “Depression and stress are particularly high in this age group.”

Reuters

Arguments of religious and cultural freedom are not likely to hold much weight against the wall, says Gerald Torres, an expert on federal Indian law and a professor at Cornell Law School. “Tribes’ interest in religious ceremonies can’t be used to stop the federal government from pursuing its objectives.”

The Washington Post

Drew Harvell, a professor of marine ecology at the College of Arts & Sciences and one of the researchers, calls plastic “a triple whammy for coral. It cuts open the skin of the coral and then it can convey pathogenic microorganisms, and finally it can shade the light coral needs and cut off water flow.”

CNN

Op-ed from Jonathan Lunine, astronomy professor in the College of Arts & Sciences, on the significance of the discovery of organic compounds on Mars by NASA’s Curiosity rover.

The New York Times

“Trump’s bull in a china shop act is clearly grating on other trading partners, who now see the U.S. as a recalcitrant and unruly member of the global trading system rather than as a responsible steward,” says Eswar Prasad, a trade policy professor at Dyson.

Popular Science

An outbreak of the highly contagious canine influenza virus H3N2 has now hit New York, with 91 cases recorded since April 30. Edward Dubovi, professor of population medicine and diagnostic sciences at Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine, explains the risks and how to protect your pets.