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Book examines how new waves of immigrants are changing America

For generations the United States welcomed immigrants who were primarily white Europeans. But immigrants from Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean over recent decades have been largely nonwhites from developing countries.

Cornell Costume Collection now can be viewed and researched online

Rather than having to travel to Ithaca to examine Eleanor Roosevelt's 1937 inaugural gown or another of the 9,000 pieces in the Cornell University Costume and Textile Collection, fashionistas now can go online.

Use of retention specialists to reduce chronic shortage of nursing home workers to be tested by Cornell researchers

For years, news stories have warned that the country's long-term care system is in crisis, partly because of an unprecedented shortage of nursing home workers. Cornell University researchers believe they have a remedy.

FeederWatchers report fewer crows and chickadees in West Nile virus-infected areas as bird-counting season nears

In West Nile virus-afflicted parts of the country last winter, counts of American crows dropped to a 15-year low. Other species, including chickadees, also were scarce, but some species appeared in record-high numbers.

Former Attorney General Janet Reno to join Cornell symposium on juvenile justice and death penalty, Nov. 6-7

A symposium, "Rethinking the Criminalization of Youth," will be held Nov. 6-7 at Cornell University, featuring former U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno.

Astronomer Tor Hagfors to give Gordon Lecture at Arecibo Nov. 3

ARECIBO, P.R. ---- The prominent Norwegian-born astronomer Tor Hagfors will deliver a lecture during next weekend's 40th anniversary celebrations at Arecibo Observatory, home of the world's largest and most-sensitive single-dish radio telescope. Hagfors, who will give the William E. and Elva F. Gordon Distinguished Lecture on Nov. 3, is an internationally known pioneer in studies of the interaction of electromagnetic waves with ionized plasmas and solid surfaces. (October 28, 2003)

Father of Arecibo telescope to give 40th anniversary address

William E. Gordon, the father of the world's largest and most sensitive single-dish radio telescope at the Arecibo Observatory, will deliver the 40th anniversary keynote address on Nov. 1.

Team from Cornell, including two grad students, wins international prize for top invention of year

Two Cornell University graduate students and a researcher have won a top prize in the 2003 Collegiate Inventors Competition for building an utlra-small electronic generator. Their award of $25,000 was presented at a ceremony at the New York Public Library, Manhattan, on Oct. 23. The three are applied physics student Keith Aubin, mechanical engineering student Robert Reichenbach and research associate Maxim Zalalutdinov. Their advisers on the project, Harold Craighead, Cornell professor of applied and engineering physics, and Jeevak Parpia, Cornell professor of physics, shared a $5,000 prize. (October 27, 2003)

Mate or a meal? Familiarity decides if female wolf spider loves 'em or eats 'em, Cornell researcher finds

Sometimes familiarity does not breed contempt: A Cornell University behavioral scientist has found that female wolf spiders prefer mates that are comfortably familiar. However, the researcher has discovered, a male wolf spider unlucky enough to attempt to mate with an unfamiliar female probably is doomed to be killed and eaten by the female. October 24, 2003)

Cornell researchers' probe discovers pollutant-eating microbe and a strategy to speed cleanup of old gasworks

Cornell University microbiologists, looking for bioremediation microbes to "eat" toxic pollutants, report the first field test of a technique called stable isotopic probing (SIP) in a contaminated site. And they announce the discovery and isolation of a bacterium that biodegrades naphthalene in coal tar contamination. Although naphthalene is not the most toxic component in coal tar, the microbiologists say their discovery might eventually help to speed the cleanup of hundreds of 19th and 20th century gasworks throughout the United States where the manufacture of gas from coal for homes and street lighting left a toxic legacy in the ground. (October 24, 2003)

DuPont environmental director John Carberry to give Thorpe Lecture Oct. 30

Cornell alumnus John Carberry, director of environmental technology for DuPont, will deliver the 10th Raymond G. Thorpe Lecture in the School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering on Thursday, Oct. 30.

A limited number of tickets are still available for Bill Cosby performance at Cornell's Barton Hall, Oct. 31

A limited number of general admission tickets are still available for actor and comedian Bill Cosby's performance at Cornell University, Friday, Oct. 31, at 8 p.m. in the university's Barton Hall. Cosby is appearing at Cornell as part of the university's annual First-Year Family Weekend. Tickets for Cosby's Barton Hall show will remain on sale at Cornell's Willard Straight Hall ticket office (255-3430) until they are sold out. The ticket office is open weekdays, 9 a.m. -5 p.m. General admission tickets are $30 each. (October 24, 2003)