Sure, they were the reigning national champs, but at this year's contest the Big Red soil judging team had something more to show: their appreciation. "We dedicated our effort to Jeff Wagenet, who is currently fighting cancer," said John Galbraith, coach of the team and a research support specialist in Cornell's Soil, Crop and Atmospheric Sciences Department.
H. Alex Brown, Ph.D., assistant professor of pharmacology and newly named Kimmel Foundation Scholar in the College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell, is assembling a research team to study the function of phospholipase D, a natural enzyme that is believed to be a crucial biochemical link in the cell-signaling cascade that permits the spread of many kinds of cancer cells.
At 24, Thien Minh Ly was the oldest child of a family of first-generation immigrants from Vietnam. A successful student, he held degrees from Georgetown University and UCLA, where he headed the Vietnamese Student Association. His promising future was cut short when he was fatally stabbed -- the victim of a hate crime -- by two men in Los Angeles in January 1996.
M&T Bank is offering a full scholarship to Cornell's Summer College, one of the nation's first summer programs for high school students. High school juniors and seniors from Broome, Cortland and Tompkins counties are eligible for the M&T scholarship, which is worth $4,950.
A one-week course on designing and managing indoor water-reuse systems for fin fish culture is scheduled for June 24-28 by the Cornell Aquaculture Program and the Northeastern Regional Aquaculture Center. Course registration is $600. The course is conducted at the Cornell Animal Science and Teaching Center in Harford, N.Y., and at Cornell's Ithaca campus.
Cornell President Hunter Rawlings today issued a statement in response to recent events on campus involving articles published in the Cornell Review and the resultant protests.
Labor unions representing technicians in film, the performing arts and the broadcasting and recording industries face an uphill battle to survive the technological, regulatory and economic changes transforming the entertainment industry.
Two Cornell faculty members have been selected as Woodrow Wilson Fellows. Lourdes Bener’a, professor of city and regional planning and of women's studies and director of the Latin American Studies Program, and Peter J. Katzenstein, the Walter S. Carpenter Jr. Professor of International Studies and Comparative Politics.
An interdisciplinary, regional conference entirely organized and conducted by Cornell graduate students will be held on campus May 7-9 in Room 401 Warren Hall. The Second Annual Great Lakes Graduate Conference in Political Economy.