Latest News from: Cornell University

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Released: 9-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
ACS aids Cornell Vet School cancer research
Cornell University

Researchers studying the causes of cancer at Cornell University's College of Veterinary Medicine received grants from the American Cancer Society (ACS): Robert E. Oswald, pharmacology, $166,000 for a two-year study, "Structure and Regulation of Cdc42Hs;" James W. Casey, microbiology and immunology, $90,000 for a two-year continuation of "Development and Regression of a Retroviral Induced Sarcoma."

Released: 9-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Vegetarian Diet Pyramid released
Cornell University

Cornell scientists, Oldways Preservation & Exchange Trust and Harvard University have developed a Vegetarian Diet Pyramid to update the U.S. Food Guide Pyramid which is outdated.

Released: 24-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Book Compares New Media with Arts of the Past
Cornell University

Cornell University Professor of English Timothy Murray examines the relationship between early modern works and avant-garde theater, cinema and the new electronic and digital art forms in new book

Released: 24-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Fraternity Leaders Are the Heaviest Drinkers
Cornell University

Leaders of fraternities, and to a lesser extent leaders of sororities, tend to be among the heaviest drinkers and the most out-of-control partiers. A national survey of 25,411 students at 61 institutions reveals that Greek leaders are helping to set norms of binge drinking.

Released: 23-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Northeast Endures 15th Coolest Autumn on Record
Cornell University

November capped a cool autumn in the Northeast, making it the fifth month in a row of average temperatures below the 30-year normal, according to Keith Eggleston, a senior climatologist at the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University. The region's area-weighted monthly average temperature was 2.9 degrees cooler than normal, making it the 21st coolest November in the last 103 years.

Released: 19-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Images of asteroid 253 Mathilde published
Cornell University

Cornell University astronomer Joseph Veverka and a team of scientists are releasing humanity's first close-up images of a little-known c-class asteroid 253 Mathilde to be published exclusively in the journal Science on Friday, Dec. 19. Scientists didn't expect to find the minor planet so densely pocked with craters and so porous. It is made mostly of carbonaceous chondrite.

Released: 18-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
New images of FLIERS, mysterious cosmic spouts
Cornell University

Astronomers will release today (Dec. 17) the clearest Hubble Space Telescope images yet of zesty and mysterious cosmic spouts - known as FLIERs -- emanating from distant objects that once were stars like our sun.

Released: 16-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Researchers Construct Genetic Map for Dogs
Cornell University

Researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle and the James A. Baker Institute for Animal Health at Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine are reporting the development of a framework reference map of the canine genome. The map covers most of the canine genome. It was constructed from 150 microsatellite markers developed by the Seattle group and typed on pedigrees developed by the Cornell team.

Released: 16-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Bird invasion tracked by online citizens
Cornell University

As winter finches move south across the Canada-U.S. border in what may be record numbers, ornithological scientists are getting their best-ever look at a massive bird 'irruption,' thanks to thousands of citizen scientists using BirdSource, the interactive World Wide Web database for bird information operated by the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society. The online database records bird sightings -- by casual backyard bird-watchers as well as serious bird enthusiasts.

Released: 13-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Fraternity leaders are the heaviest drinkers
Cornell University

Leaders of fraternities, and to a lesser extent leaders of sororities, tend to be among the heaviest drinkers and the most out-of-control partiers, according to researchers at Cornell University and Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. Their national survey of 25,411 students at 61 institutions reveals that Greek leaders are helping to set norms of binge drinking and uncontrolled behavior.

Released: 13-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Dreaming of a white Christmas? Check the chart
Cornell University

The Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University has released this year's statistical probabilities chart for a white Christmas for major metropolitan areas and other selected cities in the Northeast. It is not a forecast.

Released: 11-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Got milk ads are working well, ag economist says
Cornell University

Got milk? Yes, you do. Those television commercials in which some poor dupe gets too little milk too late are working well. A Cornell University study to be published in December indicates that thanks to heavy doses of advertising, more and more American consumers are buying fluid milk.

Released: 10-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
New book looks at abusive families
Cornell University

In the new book "Understanding Abusive Families," Cornell University professors of human development James Garbarino and John Eckenrode explore why families become abusive and what it takes to help such families care for their children or, failing that, to protect children from harm.

Released: 10-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Enterotoxemia type D vaccination of lambs
Cornell University

Young lambs may not need inoculation against enterotoxemia type D -- otherwise known as "overeating disease" -- until past the age of 6 weeks, according to Cornell University animal scientists.

Released: 10-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Preventing family violence in the armed forces
Cornell University

Cornell university abuse experts have developed programs for the Army and Marines to enhance family stability, promote personal growth and responsibility and prevent family violence.

Released: 6-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Biodiversity worth $2.9 trillion
Cornell University

The annual economic and environmental benefits of biodiversity total approximately $300 billion in the United States and $2.928 trillion worldwide, according to an new analysis by Cornell University biologists, as reported in the December 1997 issue of BioScience.

Released: 6-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Natural variability is key to river restoration
Cornell University

The key to managing river ecosystems is to return them to their natural flow patterns, as much as possible. That is the conclusion of a six-university panel of river experts whose report, "The Natural Flow Regime: A Paradigm for River Conservation and Restoration," is published in the December 1997 issue (Vol. 47, pp. 769-784) of the journal BioScience.

Released: 5-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Pathfinder photos show role of water on Mars
Cornell University

After studying more than 9,500 images taken during the acclaimed Mars Pathfinder mission, scientists report in Science (Dec. 5) that surface photographs provide strong geological and geochemical evidence that fluid water was once present on the red planet.

Released: 3-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Cornell to build NASA airborne infrared camera
Cornell University

Cornell astronomers have been awarded a $2.1 million grant from NASA to develop and build an infrared camera called FORCAST, which will be among the main instruments aboard the space agency's newest airborne observatory.

Released: 26-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
Gay men relate their development in new book
Cornell University

Cornell University Professor of Human Development Ritch Savin-Williams analyzes developmental milestones and turning points of 180 gay young men with generous excerpts from their poignant and diverse personal stories.

Released: 21-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
Probability chart for a 'white' Thanksgiving
Cornell University

A probability chart developed by the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University shows the chances of a 'white' Thanksgiving. The chart gives the probability of one-inch or more of snow on the ground Thanksgiving morning.

Released: 21-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
Older moms have favorite children and admit it
Cornell University

Cornell University gerontologist finds that 80 percent of older moms have favorite children and most children think -- wrongly -- that they are it. Moms tend to favor children who had problems out of their control.

Released: 21-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
October climate was a little on the dry side
Cornell University

October turned out dry in the Northeast, according to climatologists from the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University.

Released: 15-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
Puerto Rico ionosphere research rocket launches
Cornell University

NASA sounding rockets carrying research payloads, including an experiment from Cornell to study the dynamics and composition of the ionosphere, will blast off next winter from Puerto Rico in a scientific campaign known as Coqui II.

Released: 8-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
Wild tomatoes yield nontoxic insect repellent
Cornell University

Cornell University scientists have discovered a wild tomato's chemical secret for repelling insect pests: a complex, waxy substance that commercially grown tomatoes have "forgotten" how to make. A simplified formulation of the wild tomatoes' chemical has been granted a U.S. patent on "Non-cyclic Esters for Pest Control" and could become the next-generation nontoxic insect repellent for a long list of crops.

Released: 8-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
Cornell rover to land on Mars in 2001
Cornell University

A late-model lander and rover, equipped with a Cornell University scientific instrument package called Athena, will roam and study a large corridor of the Martian highlands and ancient terrain. The mission, to be launched in April 2001, will seek out the geological record of ancient Martian waterways and possible biology.

Released: 7-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
Race and class intelligence gaps groups narrowed
Cornell University

Intelligence test scores among racial and socio-economic segments of American society are not growing ever wider, contrary to arguments in The Bell Curve, but are, in fact, converging, say Cornell University psychologists Wendy M. Williams and Stephen J. Ceci, based on analyses of national data sets of mental test scores. This is contrary to often-reported arguments that Americans are getting dumber because low-IQ parents are outbreeding high-IQ parents.

Released: 7-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
Gerontologist's book for nursing home leaders
Cornell University

A New handbook, "Leading the Way," co-authored by Cornell gerontologist Karl Pillemer, helps nursing supervisors in long-term care facilities develop leadership skills.

Released: 1-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
Planet Uranus has two more moons, Cornell and Canadian astronomers find
Cornell University

Astronomers using the 5-meter Hale telescope on California's Mount Palomar report the discovery of two "new" moons orbiting the planet Uranus. The objects -- first observed Sept. 6 and 7 and photographed again by the astronomers in late October -- bring to 17 the number of satellites known to orbit Uranus.

Released: 28-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EST
Research will save honeybee and pollination
Cornell University

Despite dramatic losses in wild honeybees and in colonies maintained by hobbyist beekeepers, Cornell University apiculturists say the pollination needs of commercial agriculture in the United States are being met -- for now -- by commercial beekeepers, although their supplies are precarious.

Released: 24-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Sensors to measure tsunamis in real time
Cornell University

Researchers from Cornell, USC, Harvard and the University of Washington plan to deploy bottom-pressure recorders (BPR's) and seismic instrument arrays for real-time monitoring of tsunami development and study sea-floor deformation that occurs during earthquakes that turn into tsunamis.

Released: 24-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Cornell text on international nutrition
Cornell University

Michael Latham, M.D., professor of international nutritional sciences at Cornell University writes new text on international nutrition, "Human Nutrition in the Developing World" (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 1997)

Released: 22-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Cornell to lead $154 million NASA comet mission
Cornell University

Cornell University will direct a $154 millon mission to conduct close-proximity comet fly-bys scheduled for launch early in the next century.

Released: 21-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
27 Low-temperature Records Fall in September
Cornell University

Despite 27 low-temperature records falling throughout the Northeast in September, the average temperatures for the month were not far from normal, making this the 30th coolest September in the last 103 years of records, according to the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University.

Released: 21-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
EPA Rules on Sewage Sludge Use Are too Lax
Cornell University

Growers who follow U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rules in applying sewage sludge as fertilizer to their land may be inadvertantly endangering human health, the environment and the future productivity of their own crops, an analysis by the Cornell Waste Management Institute has found.

Released: 16-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
5,400-Connection Microprocessors by Year 2009
Cornell University

A $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to the Electronic Packaging Program at Cornell University will support the design andconstruction of a PICT (precision interconnect cluster tool) capable of attaching integrated circuits with at least 10 times more connections than today's most powerful chips.

Released: 16-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
$10 million grant to reduce earthquake losses
Cornell University

Researchers at Cornell University will share in a $10 million grant awarded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to the University of Buffalo's National Center for Earthquake Engineering Research (NCEER), to engineeri structures to better resist earthquakes.

Released: 10-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Climate change will affect nation's workplaces
Cornell University

If workers aren't prepared for the workplace responses to climate change, there's stormy economic weather ahead, a report from the Cornell University Work and Environment Initiative predicts.

   
Released: 10-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New forms of leptospirosis threaten dogs
Cornell University

A potentially fatal bacterial disease that damages the liver and kidneys of dogs, humans and other animals -- leptospirosis -- is appearing in new forms in the United States. Citing an alarming increase in leptospirosis cases, bacteriologists in the Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine's Diagnostic Laboratory are urging dog owners to watch for symptoms of the disease until improved vaccines are available.

Released: 8-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Learning why Bangladesh children have rickets
Cornell University

Cornell University nutritionists and agronomists will travel to the Chakaria area of Bangladesh Oct. 6 to begin investigating why the disease rickets has been found in such a sunny place.

Released: 3-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Book for parents on choosing quality child
Cornell University

To help parents make sensible and trustworthy choices in the potentially overwhelming world of child care options, Cornell University Professor Moncrieff Cochran and wife, Eva Cochran have co-authored a new handbook that gives parents the tools to collect and assess information on child care.

Released: 2-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Bright days, cool nights create leaf colors
Cornell University

How leaves turn from green into colorful, autumnal splendor is known, but scientists have plenty of room to discuss how weather contributes to the leaves' autumnal vibrancy, says Peter J. Davies, Cornell University plant physiologist.

Released: 2-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
"Male-stuffing" conserves food in wasp nests
Cornell University

When female wasps return to the colony after foraging, some females initiate aggressive encounters with males and stuff them head first into empty nest cells. Cornell University researchers who observed the behavior call it "male-stuffing," and believe it contributes to the colony's fitness by making more food available to larvae.

Released: 1-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New Yorkers don't know about watershed agreement
Cornell University

Nine months ago, New York City and the upstate New York towns in the New York City watershed formally settled their differences over environmental restrictions in the watershed region, but close to a third of the upstate residents don't know about the agreement, according to Cornell University rural sociologists.

Released: 30-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New book reviews the evolution of home economics
Cornell University

A new book from Cornell University Press, "Rethinking Home Economics," reviews the history and evolution of the home economics professions.

Released: 30-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
It's time to recognize smoking as child abuse
Cornell University

James Garbarino, Cornell University's top child abuse expert, advocates viewing parental smoking as child abuse.

Released: 30-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
African women working can hurt children's health
Cornell University

When African women work outside the home, their families reap more income but often with potentially deleterious consequences on the health of their very young children and at the expense of daughter's education, according to new Cornell University research.

Released: 26-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Drug-grade proteins made from insect larvae
Cornell University

Thanks to the confluence of a new technology in virology and a recent patent in rearing insects, scientists at the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research Inc. (BTI), located at Cornell University, have found a better way to produce commercial quantities of pharmaceutical proteins out of insect larvae.

Released: 26-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Helping nursing home staff and families talk
Cornell University

Cornell gerontologist, Karl Pillemer, has developed a program and published a manual called "Partners in Caregiving" to improve communication between nursing home staff and families of residents.

Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Heavy rains hit Atlantic City, set new records
Cornell University

Heavy rains hit Atlantic City, N.J., with new records in August, while many parts of the Northeast region remained dry, according to the climatologists at the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University. The Atlantic City rain event of August 20-21 deluged the area with 13.52 inches. Atlantic City's daily precipitation total of 11.2 inches on Aug. 20 more than surpassed their all-time daily rainfall record of 6.46 inches set on July 10, 1949.



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