974,121 research outputs found
Cornell Veterinary Medicine, Winter 1999-2000
Cornell Veterinary Medicine, Winter 1999-2000Topics of articles in this issue of Cornell Veterinary Medicine include: Scientists Uncover Structure of Essential Protein Complex: A Key Step Toward Cancer-Fighting Drugs; Cornell's Veterinary Legacy (Donald F. Smith); In Honor of His Father: Foremost Benefactor Gift (Robert H. Udall); Recent Gifts; Nutritional Deficiencies Cited As Risks in Equine Motor Neuron Disease; Celebrating Millennium 2000: College to Honor Former Deans; Millennium Celebration; Announcing: Cornell University Hospital for Animals; From Helicobacter pylori to Helicobacter bizzozeronii: The Stomach Is Not a Sterile Place; Conserving a Species; Zoonotic Pathogens and Drug Resistance in Dairy Cattle; Scientist Uses Forensic 'Gold Standard' in Animal and Human Poisoning Cases; People, Honors, and Awards; Dedicated Scholars; Scholarship Established to Honor Robert E. Clark, DVM '72; In Memoriam (Peter Poggi, Clarence R. Roberts); Announcing Early Sales: The Transforming Influences of Veterinary Medicine [book]
Cornell Cosmic, Spring 2018
Our purpose is to inform the Cornell Community of contemporary developments in outer space, whether it be through scientific advancements or the changing dynamics in international relations. We hope to foster a futuristic mindset by emphasizing the search for new life as well as the possibility of inhabiting planets other than Earth. Furthermore, we seek to investigate how outer space operations reflect the shifting dynamics among countries on Earth. Through intertwining these various elements we offer you a holistic representation of our newest frontier
Cornell University Meets the Challenge of World Agriculture
The book reviews the international activities of CALS over the years and was prepared as a contribution to the 50th anniversary celebration of IP-CALS. The first three sections of the manuscript were adapted from an IP-CALS 50th anniversary presentation by the author on February 15, 2013.Cornell University, College of Agriculture and Life Science
Cornell Veterinary Medicine, Summer 2001
Cornell Veterinary Medicine, Summer 2001Topics of articles in this issue of Cornell Veterinary Medicine include: Biomedical Sciences: Leading the Revolution; A Bit About Michael Kotlikoff; Building a Better Mouse House; Thinking Out of the Box; The Flower-Sprecher Veterinary Library Society; Oncology Service Expands; Cancer, Pets, and People [book]; A Message for Referring Veterinarians; Gene Therapy Restores Vision in Blind Dog; Donald Smith Reappointed as Dean; The Art of Balanced Life; David Robertshaw Tapped for Post at Weill Cornell in Qatar; Qatar Fast-forwards to Democracy; The Veterinary School's Veterinarian, Fred Quimby, Retires; Grants Program Supports Feline Health Research; New Faculty; James Law Remembered; [John Saidla Honored]; Oncologist Honors Parents with Endowment; Endnote (Donald F. Smith); Coming Events
CeRI (Cornell e-Rulemaking) Moderator Protocol
From 2005-2017, CeRI was a multidisciplinary group of Cornell University researchers engaged in theoretical and applied research, in partnership with government agencies and civil society groups, to discover how the design and process of online engagement can support public discussion that is informed, inclusive and insightful.
The Moderator Protocol was used by moderators (students in a Cornell Law School e-Government Clinic) to facilitate dialogue and discussion during live discussions on our RegulationRoom.org and SmartParticipation.com platforms. It is provided here as a resource and reference tool. Additional information on the project is available at SmartParticipation.com
34th Annual Cornell Real Estate Conference Recap
Every October, the Cornell Real Estate Conference draws together the real estate community of Cornell and other significant industry individuals to meet and discuss current issues in real estate. In 2016, the theme of the conference was Disruption in Real Estate. The central discussion was simple: as with many industries, the pace of change in real estate is accelerating. New technologies have affected every sector of real estate including property management, data analytics and investment sourcing
Cornell: Glorious to View
Selections available for preview as PDFs. Hardcover available for purchase at the Cornell Store: http://www.booksite.com/texis/scripts/oop/click_ord/showdetail.html?sid=3635&isbn=093599503X&music=&buyable=0&assoc_id=&spring=The steep hills and dramatic gorges of Ithaca were the setting for a revolution in American education when, in the 1860s, a self-made man sought "to do the most good . . . to the poor and to posterity." Ezra Cornell's philanthropy, enhanced with funds from the Morrill Land Grant Act and enlarged by the vision of educator Andrew Dickson White, created what has been called the first American university - a modern, democratic, research-oriented institution open to young men and women of all creeds and races. Reflecting the ideas of its founders, Cornell University has combined the industrial science and technology of America with the humanism of Athens to serve both the individual and society.
In her concise, generously illustrated account of Cornell, Carol Kammen places that bold vision in its nineteenth-century context - a time when higher education was restricted to a privileged few. Now the university enters the twenty-first century as an institution of international stature and a leader in educational opportunity.
Kammen, a noted local historian and lecturer in history at Cornell, tells the story of this great university with verve. Highlighting the text are excerpts from important documents and images from archives in the Cornell Library's Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, selected by Susette Newberry, a Cornell archivist specializing in photography and media studies. Together, words and images illustrate the growth of the university, the origins of its famous schools and colleges, and its enduring commitment to excellence in education.
About the AuthorCarol
Kammen is Senior Lecturer in History at Cornell University. She is the author of several books, including Plain as a Pipestem: Essays about Local History and Lives Passed: Biographical Sketches from Central New York. She is also editor of The Pursuit of Local History and coeditor of The Encyclopedia of Local History. Walter LaFeber is Marie Underhill Noll Professor of American History at Cornell University, where he has taught since 1959. His many books include The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion, 1860-1898 (also from Cornell), Michael Jordan and the New Global Capitalism, and The Clash: U.S. Relations with Japan from the 1850s to the Present
37th Annual Cornell Real Estate Conference Recap
[Excerpt] The theme of the 37th Annual Cornell Real Estate Conference was “20/20: Hindsight and Foresight” and featured panelists who discussed the unfolding challenges, disruptions, and opportunities in commercial real estate as 2020 approaches. Opening remarks by the Cornell Real Estate Council’s Chairman Paul Rubacha, Co-Founder and Principal of Ashley Capital, and Board Member Lynn Zuckerman Gray, Founder and CEO of Campus Scout, LLC, set the tone, after which Alan Riffkin, Managing Director at Lazard, introduced the first panel: “The CEO’s Check- In.” The panelists were Owen Thomas, CEO & Director of Boston Properties; Don Wood, President & CEO of Federal Realty Investment Trust; Ben Harris, CEO of Link Industrial Properties; and Doug Yearley, Chairman & CEO of Toll Brothers. The moderator for this panel was the benefactor and Advisory Board member of Cornell’s Baker Program in Real Estate, Richard Baker, Governor of Hudson’s Bay Company and an owner of National Realty & Development Corporation.2020PREREVIEWFINALConferenceRecap.pdf: 15 downloads, before Aug. 1, 2020
Information for Graduate Students Supplementary to the Announcement of the Graduate School as Published for 1917-18
Official Publication of Cornell University V.09 1917/1
A Retrospective Study on Application Technology in the Vineyards of New York
Andrew Landers, who joined the faculty as Senior Extension Associate in 1999, reflects on innovations in spray technology during his 19-year research and extension effort at Cornell
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