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After Clinton inauguration, second-term 'Socks' may find ghosts in the White House, suggests Cornell veterinary educator Very first 'first pets' were birds, but cats now rule the roost and polling places, says veterinary dean Franklin Loew

Potential presidential candidates in the year 2000 may want to adopt a cat, suggests one educator who has made an informal study of America's 'first pets.'

Potato late blight combat has begun in several countries

The scientific battle against the devastating fungal strain Phytophthora infestans - commonly known as potato late blight - has been elevated on international fronts, according to a report released this month by the Cornell-Eastern Europe-Mexico.

Donald F. Smith is named acting dean of College of Veterinary Medicine

Donald F. Smith, professor of surgery and associate dean for academic programs, has been named acting dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine while a search is conducted for a successor to Dean Franklin M. Loew. Loew, who has held dean's post since 1995, will leave Jan. 31.

Bog beetle, misidentified for 85 years, is 'discovered' by Cornell entomologists

Sitting patiently in museum insect collections for at least 85 years, this Ithaca bog beetle waited to be discovered.

Martin Luther King Jr. Day program is planned for GIAC on Jan. 20

A community program to celebrate the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. will be held at the Greater Ithaca Activities Center, 318 N. Albany St., on Monday, Jan. 20, from 11:15 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Carl Sagan memorial is Feb. 3 at Cornell

The Cornell community will gather in tribute to the memory of Carl Sagan, the late David Duncan Professor of Astronomy and Space Sciences and director of the Laboratory for Planetary Studies, at a service Monday, Feb. 3, at 2 p.m. in Bailey Hall.

Commission reaffirms Cornell University's accreditation without condition

The Middle States Association Commission on Higher Education has accepted Cornell's Periodic Review Report and reaffirmed without condition the university's accreditation. The commission, at its November 1996 meeting, deemed no follow-up to be necessary and set the next regular evaluation visit for 2000-2001.

For new course, Cornell students lead workshops at area prisons on works by minority writers and filmmakers

For a research project in one of her courses last semester, Cornell graduate student Vera Palmer drove a total of 1,000 miles on 10 Friday evenings to lead a workshop on Native American literature and culture for inmates at Auburn State Prison.

Cornell student ethnobotany expeditions to Amazon, Yucatan may yield secrets of Indian herbal medicines

Returning to campus from expeditions in the forests of South and Central America, a team of Cornell undergraduate science students is applying modern analytical techniques to learn the chemistry behind the nature-based medicinals that work for native peoples.

Small-scale food processing conference and workshop will take place Jan. 21 in Syracuse

The New York Sustainable Agriculture Working Group is sponsoring an all-day conference, "Making it in the Northeast: Small-scale food processing on the rise," on Jan. 21, from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Four Points Sheraton, 441 Electronic Parkway, Syracuse.

Revised guide offers curriculum on parenting skills for adolescent parents

What educators can teach young parents about becoming good parents is the topic of a new and revised curriculum from Cornell.

Northeast sloshes through its wettest year ever in 1996

It's official for 1996: The 12-state Northeast was sopping, soggy, soaked and sodden as the region sloshed its way to the wettest year in more than a century -- 102 years of official records -- with 53.89 inches of precipitation.