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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.

Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Study questions validity of student evaluations
Cornell University

A Cornell study finds student evaluations of teachers invalid; ratings on many measures soared when the professor simply used a more enthusiastic tone of voice in teaching the same material.

Released: 19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
False memories in children can fool experts
Cornell University

When young children are interviewed suggestively over a long period of time, they begin to believe the fictitious events questioned about. Experts can't distinguish between children telling false or true accounts.

   
Released: 17-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Project Feederwatch Top 10 Birds in backyards
Cornell University

The most frequently seen birds at feeders across North America last winter were the Dark-eyed Junco, House Finch and American goldfinch, according to the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, which released its Project FeederWatch Top 10 Birds List. Project FeederWatchers also reported large numbers of downy woodpeckers, blue jays, mourning doves, black-capped chickadees, house sparrows, northern cardinals and european starlings.

Released: 4-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Utility deregulation could prompt innovation
Cornell University

Consumers can expect "unimagined innovation" as electric utility deregulation brings competitive suppliers to local distribution companies, Cornell University economist Richard E. Schuler is predicting. New technologies, materials and the packaging of all telecommunications and energy services in one super cable are possible outcomes of healthy competition among rival utility providers, he says.

Released: 4-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Hubble Telescope finds Vesta crater
Cornell University

Proving that even minor planets can survive cosmic fender-benders, astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope have discovered a large crater - with an estimated diameter at 285 miles and about 8 miles deep - on the asteroid Vesta. The crater is roughly the diameter of Ohio, and may be the source of many meteorites that reach the earth.

Released: 3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Focus on Looks Puts Young Girls in Peril
Cornell University

A new book by Joan Jacobs Brumberg discusses how early menarche and new focus on body parts put young girls in peril. They have become so preoccupied with their bodies that they spend much of their energy managing and maintaining their looks at the expense of their creativity and mental and physical health, she says.

   
Released: 3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Intel $6M grant to network desktop systems
Cornell University

Complex computing problems as different as modeling Earth's climate system or predicting effects of regulatory change in the dairy industry -- which once required massively parallel supercomputers -- will run on a scalable distributed network of powerful desktop computers, thanks in part to a $6 million grant from Intel Corporation to Cornell University. The grant from the Santa Clara, Calif., computing equipment manufacturer is one of 12 to American universities in Intel's three-year, $85 million "Technology for Education 2000" program .

Released: 3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Pea plant stem growth gene cloned
Cornell University

Plant scientists from Cornell University and the University of Tasmania, Australia, have successfully cloned one of history's first-studied genes -- the gene found for stem growth in peas, according to a report in the journal The Plant Cell.

Released: 29-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Self-organizing' polymers will change our lives
Cornell University

Complex, self-organizing polymers will have a profound effect on our lives, perhaps keeping airplane wings free of ice, according to a Cornell materials engineer in the latest edition of the journal "Science." These complex polymers are now seen as useful for creating films, replete with multiple, self-ordering layers, and each layer with different functions.

Released: 27-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Nurse home visits have lasting positive effects
Cornell University

In a 15-year follow-up of nurse home visit program, University of Colorado/Cornell researchers find enduring benefits, including less use of welfare, less child abuse and fewer criminal problems.

Released: 27-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Female fireflies lure males for chemical
Cornell University

The characteristic light flashes that summon male fireflies of the genus Photinus could come from female Photinus fireflies. Just as likely, the signaling females are from a different genus. The femmes fatales fireflies are luring unrelated males close enough to eat them. The males contain defensive chemicals that females need to repel predators, such as spiders.

Released: 27-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Wildlife rabies won't cross vaccination barrier
Cornell University

Now that vaccination barrier zones are halting the northward spread of raccoon rabies in New York, Vermont and Ohio, Cornell University rabies-fighters are ready to extend the barriers across New Hampshire and Maine. Then the raccoon rabies vaccination could move southward, they predict, to turn back the viral disease in already-infected states.

Released: 20-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Wild plant genes increase food production
Cornell University

With a burgeoning world population and fewer places to grow food, Cornell University scientists have begun to locate high-production genes from wild plants to put into domesticated, edible crop plants -- thus boosting food production worldwide, according to their report in the Aug. 22, 1997 issue of Science.

Released: 13-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Violence workbook's success depends on teachers
Cornell University

Evaluation of the workbook "Let's Talk About Living in a World With Violence," shows it can reduce aggression in children when the teacher is comfortable with the curriculum and integrates the material into other subjects.

Released: 12-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Livestock Grain Could Feed 800 Million People
Cornell University

The American system of farming grain-fed livestock consumes resources far out of proportion to the yield, accelerates soil erosion, affects world food supply and will have to change in the future, ccording to a Cornell University ecologist.

Released: 9-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Cornell University, Johnson School

Robert Jarrow, professor of finance, economics and investment management at Cornell University's Johnson Graduate School of Management, has been named the IAFE/SunGard Financial Engineer of the Year by the International Association of Financial Engineers (IAFE). He was cited not only for his cutting edge research, but for his work as an educator.

Released: 8-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Compost a hazard to dogs, vet toxicologist warns
Cornell University

The "greening" of American backyards -- as more people turn to composting food scraps -- is turning some dogs a bilious shade of green. Certain microorganisms and the toxins they produce can sicken or even kill dogs that get into unprotected compost piles, a Cornell University veterinary toxicologist is warning.

Released: 6-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Asian long-horned beetles found in Amityville
Cornell University

A Cornell entomologist confirmed the summer's first adult Asian long-horned beetles have emerged from their larval stage and have been found in Amityville, N.Y. The beetles kill hardwood trees, such as Norway maples, and pose a possible threat to industries dependent upon hardwood.

Released: 5-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
GRE fails to predict graduate school success
Cornell University

Cornell/Yale study finds Graduate Record Examination (GRE) fails to predict success or failure in graduate school for psychology and probably other fields as well.

   
Released: 1-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Biological approach to revitalize compacted soil
Cornell University

Cornell scientists are developing a biological approach to remediate compacted soils that involves rotating with deep-rooted cover crops that break up compacted soil layers and produce abundant organic matter. U.S. Department of Agriculture officials will tour Cornell's Homer C. Thompson Vegetable Research Farm in Freeville, N.Y., on Aug. 1, 1997, to see the fields used in testing the bioremediation procedures.

Released: 29-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Federal Dietary supplement label panel report
Cornell University

The Presidential Commission on Dietary Supplement Labels, chaired by Cornell's Malden C. Nesheim, issues its draft report calling for or more scientific research on supplements, guidelines for scientific substantiation of any statements of nutritional support and for government surveillance to identify safety issues.

Released: 29-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Wheat scab a threat to New York's winter wheat
Cornell University

Fusarium head blight, a plant disease also known as wheat scab, has taken aim at America's breadbasket and is now seriously threatening New York State's $30 million wheat-growing industry, according to Cornell plant pathologists. The plant scientists will be speaking on new ways to solving this threat at the American Phytopathological Society annual meeting, in Rochester, N.Y., Aug. 9-13.

Released: 23-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
World's smallest silicon mechanical devices
Cornell University

Using electron-beam lithography, researchers at the Cornell University Nanofabrication Facility have built what they believe are the world's smallest mechanical devices, including a Fabry-Perot interferometer and, for fun, the world's smallest guitar, carved out of crystalline silicon and no larger than a single cell. The technology that could have a variety of uses in fiber optics, displays, sensors and electronics. Mechanical force probes can be made much smaller than a single cell, and forces associated with single biological molecules could be measured.

Released: 18-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Carbon dioxide helps some plants survive cold
Cornell University

Elevated levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere benefit some plants by making them more tolerant to cold temperatures. If carbon dioxide levels double within the next century as we are expecting, some plant species should be able to withstand temperatures a few degrees cooler than they can now. Northeastern farmers and home gardeners may be able to plant some crops earlier in the spring. This will also affect the distribution and mixture of species.

Released: 18-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Except for some cool spots June was warm and dry
Cornell University

Atlantic City, N.J., was a relative cool spot as it broke five low temperature records and tied another in June, while Baltimore tallied three low temperature records, and Charleston, W. Va., marked its first 90-degree reading in more than a year, according to the climatologists at the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University.

Released: 15-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
20,000 beetles will fight Montezuma loosestrife
Cornell University

Scientists from Cornell University will help the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge in Seneca Falls, N.Y., exact revenge against purple loosestrife, a beautiful but prolific weed that strangles wetlands. More than 20,000 Galerucella pusilla and G. calmariensis -- leaf-eating beetles without a common name -- will be released Thursday, July 17, at 9 a.m. at the refuge.

Released: 11-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New international infant, child growth standards
Cornell University

Cornell nutritionists play key roles in calling for and constructing new international growth references for infants and children. Current standards result in too many faulty decisions.

Released: 11-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Disease still threatens poultry and human health
Cornell University

Significant progress in controlling poultry-borne infection was reported recently at a Cornell University meeting, the 69th Northeastern Conference on Avian Diseases. Still, two diseases (avian influenza or AI and infectious laryngotracheitis or ILT) threaten the economic health of the American poultry industry and at least one (Salmonella enteritidis) worries Americans who eat eggs.

Released: 7-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Cornell University, Johnson School

Cornell University researchers have found that pay hikes, not promotions, are critical in retaining high-performing employees. Looking at more than 5,000 petroleum company employees showed that high salary growth proved critical in retaining high performers. promotions, on the other hand, had no effect on turnover of those high performers.

Released: 7-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Cornell University, Johnson School

Donations of leftovers by restaurants to food pantries and other human service agencies are declining marketdly as restaurants become better managed, according to a study by Cornell University's School of Hotel Administration.

Released: 7-Jul-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Finding Minerals with Mars Pathfinder Camera
Cornell University

When Mars Pathfinder lands on Mars on July 4, James Bell, research associate in the Cornell astronomy department's Center for Radiophysics and Space Research, will help determine what types of minerals and rocks are present on the Martian surface, making use of a video camera on the lander which uses about a dozen color filters to discriminate individual minerals.

Released: 26-Jun-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Enhancin protein attacks insect immune system
Cornell University

Scientists at the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research Inc., located at Cornell University, have discovered and cloned a protein that, when delivered into an insect's gut by way of a "trojan horse," attacks the pest's intestines, rendering the pest helpless against a companion virus.

Released: 26-Jun-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Almost 1 million college students carry weapons
Cornell University

Researchers from Cornell and Southern Illinois University at Carbondale found that Seven percent of college students said they had carried a weapon on campus, translating to some 980,000 students nationwide. That is less than for the general population and for high school students, but still a problem for campuses, since weapon-carrying male students also report that they drink more alcohol, engage in binge drinking and substance abuse, and get in more fights and arguments.

Released: 25-Jun-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New Hampshire set snowfall record in cool May
Cornell University

Mt. Washington, N.H., had its old monthly snowfall record crushed for May by a whopping 43.6 inches. The Northeast's cool weather continued through May, as the average temperature for the 12-state region was 4.4 degrees cooler than normal. This was the fourth coolest May in the last 103 years, according to Keith Eggleston, a climatologist at the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University.

Released: 25-Jun-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Chloroplasts connect via tubes to share material
Cornell University

Chloroplasts, the green globules inside plant cells responsible for photosynthesis, communicate via slender tubules that exchange proteins, Cornell scientists find using a unique laser-micrscope.

Released: 20-Jun-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Animal Products Aren't Needed to Improve Growth
Cornell University

Growth and health indicators in China have improved despite plant-based diet; more animal products not needed, according to an ongoing study of nutrition in China.

Released: 20-Jun-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Food-Insecure Women Have Poorer Nutrition
Cornell University

Poor rural women who don't always have enough food in their homes exhibit binge eating patterns and are only about half as likely as other women to consume daily the recommended five servings of fruits and vegetables. Therefore, these women are less likely to consume adequate vitamin C, potassium and fiber, according to a new Cornell University study.

Released: 10-Jun-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New forecasts help farmers beat crop pests
Cornell University

Cornell University's Integrated Pest Management program has started a new pest-forecasting service. Growers and farmers can now belong to the Northeast Weather Association and get the latest in bacterial, fungal and pest forecasts.

Released: 6-Jun-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Arecibo radar shows no evidence of ice on Moon
Cornell University

No ice is on the moon, according to a radar survey done at the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico by Cornell and other researchers. This contradicts data from the military's Clementine mission last year, in which researchers suggested a small lake of ice might be around the South Pole. Not so, according to the Arecibo data.

Released: 6-Jun-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Teens pregnant on purpose, says Cornell expert
Cornell University

Cornell women's health expert Andrea Parrot says teen girls get pregnant because they've nothing else to strive for and she calls for expensive, but proven, multi-dimensional community programs that provide hope and skills and prevent pregnancy.



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