When the $140 million New Life Sciences Technology Building (LSTB) opens in 2007, 11,000 square feet on two floors will be devoted to a center designed to foster start-up companies.
Mary Jo Dudley has been named director of the Cornell Migrant Program and a senior extension associate in the Department of Development Sociology in CALS.
Got art? The Cornell Council for the Arts is seeking applications for multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary projects that represent collaborative interests among different departments, units or faculty.
With singing, dancing and labor politics too controversial for the 1930s, 'The Cradle Will Rock' will open the 2005-06 theater season at Cornell's Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts.
A new research and development park affiliated with Cornell is seeking tenants interested in developing the next generation of food, agriculture and bio-based products.
U.S. Navy Lt. Bibianna Danko '99, who flies one of the largest helicopters in the world, has been using her piloting skills to rescue victims of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans.
A Web site being developed at Cornell University will give reconstruction workers and researchers access to detailed information on the status of critical infrastructure in communities along the Mississippi coast.
Assessing how a pride of lions eat a zebra and how horn lengths of antelopes may relate to why only some males have harems were just two of the many activities 16 students experienced working as field biologists in Kenya.
The College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell is now offering new majors for undergraduate students in viticulture (grape growing) and enology (winemaking).
"Resource Guide for Organic Insect and Disease Management," just released by Cornell and available online, offers organic growers research-based information on how control insects and diseases.