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Cornell presents live, interactive PBS telecast Jan. 27 on 'Racial Legacies and Learning: How to Talk About Race'

Cornell will present a live, interactive Public Broadcasting System (PBS) telecast Wednesday, Jan. 27, addressing the question of how higher education should prepare its students to resolve the legacies of racism and to promote racial reconciliation.

Gwendolyn Alden Dean named coordinator of Cornell's LGBT Resource Center

Gwendolyn Alden Dean has been named coordinator of Cornell's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Resource Center, ending a six-month national search. Dean most recently was director of Stanford University's Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Community Center.

Barbara Krause is named assistant secretary of the corporation at Cornell

Barbara Krause, Cornell's campus judicial administrator, has been named assistant secretary of the corporation and associate university counsel. Krause, a 1986 Cornell Law School graduate.

Cornell University chosen as site of national USDA center for research and storage of genetic data on grains and other food plants

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will establish a national gene data research center, the Center for Bioinformatics and Comparative Genomics, at Cornell. Judy St. John, an associate deputy administrator with the USDA's Agricultural Research Service, made the announcement Jan. 17 in San Diego at the Plant and Animal Genome VII Conference.

New York drama critic and scholar Alisa Solomon wins $10,000 George Jean Nathan Award administered by Cornell University

The George Jean Nathan Award for Dramatic Criticism for the 1997-8 season has been awarded to Alisa Solomon. Solomon is a staff writer at the 'Village Voice', where she writes theater criticism as well as news features on a wide range of political and cultural subjects.

How babies are ushered into life determines how healthily they will live as adults, book by Cornell pregnancy researcher says

Presenting the case that a lifetime of poor health - from coronary artery disease and stroke to obesity and diabetes - can start with poor conditions in the womb, says Cornell researcher and author Peter W. Nathanielsz, M.D., Ph.D.

Cornell students participate in week of community service, Jan. 17-20

Cornell is announcing the first winter program of the Pre-Orientation Service Trips (POST), a project of the Cornell Public Service Center. POST is an opportunity for students to participate in hands-on community service, learn about the Ithaca community and make a group of new friends.

Termite 'honeymoon' is time for mate-swapping, Cornell biologist reports

Before settling down with their mates for a five-year life of raising a family, some termites suddenly have second thoughts: They use their brief "honeymoon" to find a better partner.

Appellate court upholds dismissal of Maas suit against Cornell

In a decision dated Jan. 7, 1999, the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, in Albany, unanimously upheld the dismissal, in its entirety, of a lawsuit brought by Professor James Maas against Cornell.

Martin Luther King Jr. celebration day at GIAC is Monday, Jan. 18

A community program to celebrate the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. will be held at the Greater Ithaca Activities Center (GIAC), 318 N. Albany St., on Martin Luther King Day.

How a down-to-the-wire computer fix at Cornell enabled a troubled spacecraft to take images of an asteroid

Some 240 million miles from Earth, a spacecraft hurtled through the black void of space, off its intended course. But thanks to the creation of a last-minute fix by Cornell mission engineers during a tense 24 hours the $150 million mission now has hundreds of new images of a distant asteroid.

A national search is being launched for his successor

Charles H. Moore, Cornell's director of athletics and physical education for the past four years, will retire when a search for his successor is completed, university officials announced today.