What can law students learn from a Harvard University literary critic about the moral legality of questionable detention practices in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo? Quite a lot, if she's Elaine Scarry, an outspoken critic of…
"Liberals have been attacking this country for 50 years. Well, now it's time we hit back and hit back hard," exclaimed conservative columnist and pundit Ann Coulter '84 to a capacity audience in Statler Auditorium May 7.
…
The Cornell Life Sciences Core Laboratories Center provides an array of instruments and services for experimentation on genomics, proteomics, imaging, IT and informatics. (June 25, 2008)
Cornell archaeologists are rewriting history with the help of tree rings from 900-year-old trees, wood found on ancient buildings and radiocarbon dating of isotopes in that wood. (Oct. 24, 2007)
The international Biophysical Society has awarded undergraduate Moataz Gadalla '07 a Minority Travel Award to attend the society's 51st annual meeting in Baltimore. (Feb. 5, 2007)
The Galileo spacecraft has taken a risky spin through Jupiter's lethal radiation belts to capture the highest-resolution images yet of three of the planet's four innermost moons.
Bruce Ganem, Ronald Harris-Warrick, Mary Beth Norton and Richard Rand have been chosen for the 2008 Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellowships for excellence in teaching and advising. (Jan. 26, 2009)
Kent L. Hubbell '67 has been reappointed to a second five-year term as Cornell's Robert W. and Elizabeth C. Staley Dean of Students.
The reappointment, announced by Vice President for Student and Academic Services Susan H…
In an effort to improve lives and save African wildlife, Cornell researchers are helping farmers in Zambia develop such products as peanut butter and tofu under the It's Wild! brand name. (Oct. 16, 2007)