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Presidential search narrowed down to 'less than a handful of excellent candidates'

In a memo to the Cornell University faculty Dec. 9, faculty members of the Presidential Search Committee provided a short update on the search process. (December 13, 2005)

Cornell birth control pill pioneer Sam Leonard turns 100

Sam Leonard, who turned 100 on Nov. 26, played a role in one of the most significant medical advances of last century -- the birth control pill -- that liberated women's attitudes toward sex and launched the swinging '60s. (December 13, 2005)

Two orphans of the storm return to Tulane with fond farewells to 'gracious,' 'amazing' Cornell

Tulane University musicologist John Joyce and his daughter, Maggie, an undergrad at Tulane, are returning to that New Orleans campus after spending the semester at Cornell. (December 13, 2005)

Cornell and India sign new agreement for agricultural development

Susan Henry, dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell, signed a memorandum of understanding with the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, Dec. 12. Many of the Indian visitors were affiliated with the new Knowledge Initiative in Agriculture, an agreement between India and the United States. (December 13, 2005)

Extra! Extra! Cornell e-News now available for alums, parents and friends

Cornell E-News, a new monthly electronic newsletter for alumni, parents and friends of the university, is the result of a collaborative effort between the Division of Alumni Affairs and Development and the Division of University Communications. (December 13, 2005)

Educator Grande wants to rethink U.S. democracy in accounting for treatment of Native Americans

Author and educator Sandy Grande lectured on democracy and colonialism as it relates to both current events and the history of American Indians in "At the Crossroads of Democracy and Sovereignty: The Indigenization of America," Dec. 1 at Cornell. (December 13, 2005)

United Way Campaign getting close to its goal -- but keep those pledges coming in

With the holiday season now in full swing, the 2005 Cornell United Way Campaign is well on its merry way to meeting its goal of $627,000. (December 13, 2005)

Cornell's Drinkwater and Wolf head up federal study on how responses to agricultural pollution target the problem

Laurie Drinkwater of Cornell University is leading a $1.6 million, multi-institution National Science Foundation study to determine the correlation between biogeochemical processes in agriculture pollution and institutional responses to the problem. (December 13, 2005)

Diversity Digest: Bias response program marks fifth year

This month marks the fifth year of Cornell University's bias response program. The universitywide program addresses bias activities based on race, national origin, sexual orientation and gender that were not previously addressed through existing discrimination complaint processes. (December 12, 2005)

In 'Six Degrees of Reputation' Cornell authors track plagiarism and abuse of online reviewing systems

Positive bias in online consumer reviews has become almost standard industry practice, but plagiarizing user reviews and passing them off as authentic is another animal altogether, says a new Cornell study that has been tracking that other animal. (December 12, 2005)

Cornell University Press author wins $200,000 award

Cornell University Press author Fiona Terry, writer of "Condemned to Repeat? The Paradox of Humanitarian Action," has received the 2006 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for "Ideas Improving World Order." (December 09, 2005)

Keeping cancer from fertile ground: Weill Cornell team identifies key players in 'pre-metastasis'

NEW YORK (Dec. 7, 2005) -- Turning a corner in the history of cancer research, a Weill Medical College of Cornell University team, led by Dr. David Lyden, has pinpointed key players in "pre-metastasis" -- cells and compounds that coalesce in tumor-specific niches before the arrival of cancer cells to create the "fertile ground" metastasis needs to spread and grow. The research is being published in the Dec. 8 issue of Nature.