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July / August 2012
From The Hill
University Celebrates 144th Commencement
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R&D

More information on campus research is available at www.news.cornell.edu

Ingesting engineered nanoparticles in food and pharmaceuticals may be damaging. In studying chickens, chemical engineering professor Michael Shuler has found that short-term, high-intensity exposure blocks iron absorption—though, over the longer term, changes in intestinal cell structures compensate by allowing increased absorption of the nutrient.

Campus plant breeders are working to make green beans, cultivated at high altitudes in Kenya, grow at lower altitudes. The beans are a profitable crop for Kenya and could benefit its neighbors in sub-Saharan Africa.

The University has released two new disease-resistant raspberry varieties. Horticulture professor Courtney Weber praises Crimson Night and Double Gold for their flavor, abundant fruit, and appealing color.

An iPhone and iPad app designed by the Lab of Ornithology’s Bioacoustic Research Program aims to reduce the risk of ships hitting endangered right whales. The free app warns mariners when the whales are swimming through shipping lanes.

Combining electrical engineering and exercise, students have developed a device to guide users through a proper bicep curl. It tracks movement using accelerometers attached to the wrist and upper arm; vibrations indicate when the user’s form needs correction.

Using data from NASA’s Kepler mission, Cornell astronomers have identified three Earth-like planets orbiting their own suns. Located in the sky between the constellations Cygnus and Lyra, the planets are between a few hundred and a few thousand light years from Earth.

Thanks in part to the decade-long efforts of the Cornell Death Penalty Project, Edward Lee Elmore—who spent nearly thirty years on death row in South Carolina—has been released on the grounds that he didn’t have effective counsel during his trial. Under an agreement with prosecutors, he maintained his innocence and his sentence was commuted to time served. Says law professor John Blume: “I am 100 percent convinced he is not guilty and that a jury would have acquitted him.”

Two Cornellians from Africa—fiber science postdoc Frederick Ochanda and apparel design major Matilda Ceesay ’13—have designed a hooded bodysuit embedded with insecticides to repel malaria-infected mosquitoes.

A 2008 research trip by Michael Grundler ’10, Eric Rittmeyer ’08, and Derrick Thompson ’09 has led to a world record. While in Papua New Guinea, the three helped discover a type of frog, Paedophryne amauensis, that has been declared the world’s smallest vertebrate species by the Guinness Book. Several of the tiny creatures could fit on a dime.

Give My Regards To...

These Cornellians in the News

Novelist Toni Morrison, MA ’55, awarded a Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama.

Professors Joseph Fins, MD ’86 (medicine), Thomas Gilovich (psychology), and Steven Strogatz (mathematics and mechanical and aerospace engineering), and Medical college Board of Overseers chair Sanford Weill ’55, elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Mary Jo Dudley, MRP ’96, director of the Cornell Farmworker Program, named a Cesar Chavez Champion of Change by the White House’s Office of Public Engagement.

Biology major Julian Homburger ’13 and electrical and computer engineering major Adam Izraelevitz ’13, winners of Goldwater scholarships.

Sociology and American studies major Joanna Smith ’13 and ILR student Alexander Bores ’13, named Truman scholars.

Law professor John Barceló III, recipient of the Legion of Honor from the French government for creating a partnership with the Sorbonne Law School.

Africana studies major Christopher Dobyns ’13, winner of a Udall Scholarship.

The Cornell DREAM Team, which works to support and raise awareness of undocumented students, winner of the Perkins Prize for Interracial Understanding and Harmony. The proposed federal DREAM (Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors) Act would protect some residents who immigrated to the U.S. as small children.

Adam Siepel ’94, a professor of biological sciences and computational biology, winner of a Guggenheim fellowship.

Former Cornell President Jeffrey Lehman ’77, named vice chancellor (chief executive for academic affairs) of NYU Shanghai, which will open in 2013.

Theodore Christoph ’12, Daniel Durfee ’12, Jordan Fisher ’12, and Ariel Garland ’12, who won first place at the North American Intercollegiate Dairy Challenge, held in Virginia in April.

Andrew Clark, the Jacob Gould Schurman Professor of Population Genetics, elected to the National Academy of Sciences.

College Scholar and philosophy major Daniel Young ’13, winner of a Beinecke Brothers Memorial Scholarship.

Archaeology and German studies double major Mallory Matsumoto ’12, the sole winner of the Keasbey Memorial Foundation Scholarship. She’ll pursue two master’s degrees at Oxford.

grads
Robed and ready: The grads in Schoellkopf

Some 5,000 Cornellians received their degrees on Memorial Day weekend, as President David Skorton urged them to “give us all good reason to believe that the future will be better than today.” More than 37,000 people viewed the Commencement ceremonies in Schoellkopf Stadium, enjoying mostly sunny skies. “Go out there and do something remarkable,” Skorton said. “Help others realize their dreams. We believe in you. I believe in you. I am counting on you.”

child on bike
As the marchers line up, a future Cornellian travels on two wheels.

The previous day, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg gave the Senior Convocation address in Schoellkopf. His talk included praise for the CornellNYC Tech campus on the city’s Roosevelt Island and thoughts on the Morrill Act, the legislation creating land-grant universities that President Abraham Lincoln signed 150 years ago this summer. The day before, he noted, Lincoln had signed the Pacific Railroad Act, which provided land and financing to build rail lines from the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean. “In fact,” Bloomberg observed, “one could argue that in the span of forty-eight hours, Lincoln did more to advance American economic growth than any president before or since.”

NYC Tech Names Architect; Google Donates Space

Greg Pass
Greg Pass ’97

CornellNYC Tech took some major steps forward in May, with the hiring of its inaugural architect and entrepreneurial officer and the acquisition of temporary classroom and administrative space. Pritzker Prize-winner Thom Mayne and his firm, Morphosis—architects of Gates Hall, currently under construction on the Ithaca campus—have been tapped to design the flagship building at NYC Tech, to be constructed on Roosevelt Island. The building, set to open in fall 2017, is envisioned as a net-zero energy consumer with geothermal and solar power. “Our goal is to design an iconic, landmark building that will resonate with the mission and spirit of the new campus,” says University Architect Gilbert Delgado. NYC Tech will begin classes this fall with a small group of current and previously admitted graduate students; those recruited specifically into NYC Tech will matriculate the following year.

A major goal of NYC Tech is to connect academia and industry, and the project’s initial locale will put students and faculty under the same roof as a tech behemoth: Google has donated 22,000 square feet of its New York City headquarters, located on Eighth Avenue in Chelsea, to serve as the campus’s temporary home. Tech veteran Greg Pass ’97, former CTO of Twitter and a former system architect and software engineer at AOL, has been named the campus’s founding entrepreneurial officer, charged with establishing its culture of collaboration with industry.

Fraternity Suspended After Alleged Bias Incident

A racial incident at Sigma Pi in early May put the fraternity on interim suspension, triggered an investigation by Ithaca police, and prompted protests and anti-bias events on campus. In early May, a group of black men and women reported that people on the roof of the fraternity house pelted them with bottles and cans and shouted racial insults—including references to Trayvon Martin, the African American teenager whose shooting by a neighborhood watch member in Florida sparked national outrage. In the wake of the alleged incident, the University held a series of campus events including a community forum and discussions of diversity issues; in mid-May, a group of students, faculty, and local residents marched from Sigma Pi to Day Hall to voice their demands that Cornell increase efforts to curb racism.

In early June, an out-of-town visitor to the fraternity house pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct in Ithaca City Court, admitting to throwing beer cans and making racial comments; he stated that none of the fraternity members participated or encouraged his actions. The man, a twenty-three-year-old from Florida, was fined $250 and permanently banned from campus.

Arts Dean to Step Down

Arts college dean Peter Lepage will leave his post at the end of the 2012–13 academic year. By that time, he will be the second-longest-serving Arts dean in University history, with ten years in office. A physics professor, Lepage will remain on the faculty. A search for his successor will be conducted during the upcoming year with the aim of a new dean taking office in July 2013.

Senate Approves Calendar; Students Object

Over the opposition of some students, the Faculty Senate has approved a new academic calendar. Its changes include inserting a daylong break near the midpoint of final exams; reducing study days to four from the current 4.66; establishing a new scheduling method to lower the chances of having multiple finals close together; shortening senior week by three days; making the Wednesday before Thanksgiving a full day off; creating a two-day break in February; and designating Martin Luther King Jr. Day a University holiday. According to hospitality professor Kate Walsh, MPS ’90, vice chair of the Academic Calendar Committee, “The resolution passed because faculty saw an opportunity to truly innovate how we educate in ways that could address student stress due to prolonged periods of instruction.”

However, a substantial number of undergrads have countered that the shortened senior week and lost two-thirds of a study day would have the opposite effect, and an online petition opposing the new calendar garnered more than 1,600 signatures. “While we have serious concerns about the negative impacts on mental health,” said an editorial in the Daily Sun, “the main problem that we have with the current proposal is that students were not consulted to the extent that they should have been.” The new calendar, which would likely be phased in over four years, will not be made official until it has been accepted by President David Skorton and Provost Kent Fuchs. Their decision is expected to come this summer.

Scholar of Caribbean Lit Named Africana Director

Gerard Aching
Gerard Aching, PhD ’92

A professor of Spanish and French literature has been named director of the Africana Studies and Research Center. Gerard Aching, PhD ’92, is also a member of the graduate fields of African, African American, and Latin American studies; his area of expertise includes nineteenth- and twentieth-century Caribbean literature and intellectual history, with a focus on the relations among slavery, literary sensibility, and philosophy. He began a three-year term on July 1. In late May the center announced that its faculty will grow by 25 percent, with the hiring of two additional professors and a Swahili instructor.

Ithaca Campus Boasts Balanced Budget

Four years after posting a structural deficit of $148 million, the Ithaca campus ended the fiscal year with a balanced consolidated operating budget, University officials announced. “The achievement of a balanced consolidated budget could not have happened without the contributions from strategic, campuswide initiatives to reduce administrative cost and budget reductions shared by all units across campus,” says Elmira Mangum, vice president for planning and budget. According to the University, the budget was balanced by such factors as a staff retirement incentive program, workforce reductions, a commitment to avoiding new debt, reduced central administration, hiring and construction “pauses,” increased alumni support, and hikes in tuition and fees. Cornell had projected that if no changes were made, the deficit would balloon to more than $215 million by 2015.

Image

Bugging Out: On Slope Day, the shell of a VW Beetle mysteriously appeared on the roof of Risley Hall—bringing to mind other classic Cornell pranks like the 1997 clocktower pumpkin.

CU Mourns Two Undergrads

A rising sophomore died of meningococcal meningitis just days after returning home for the summer. Nineteen-year-old Krista Depew ’15, an applied economics and management major and a member of Alpha Phi sorority, passed away in May at a hospital in Albany, New York. The University has said that according to state and local health departments, members of the Cornell community are not at increased risk due to Depew’s illness.

In early June, the University announced the death of thirty-three-year-old Michael Augustin, an earth and atmospheric sciences major. Augustin, who was expected to graduate in December, died of as-yet-undetermined causes at a hospital in Palo Alto, California, where he was studying on a research fellowship.

Big Red Cheddar to Debut

ImageThe University of Wisconsin has its Cheeseheads; soon, Cornellians can show their Big Red spirit through the consumption of cheesy comestibles. This fall, Cornell Big Red Cheddar will go on sale online and in campus retail outlets such as the Orchards and the campus store. The mild white cheddar, aged for six months, will be packaged in bright red one- and two-pound wheels. In addition to being sold to the public, the cheese will be served by Cornell Dining and Cornell Catering—which go through a cumulative 2,400 pounds of mild cheddar annually.

Alum Wins Pulitzer Prize

Jeffrey Gettleman ’94, the New York Times’ East Africa bureau chief, has won a Pulitzer Prize for international reporting. According to the award citation, he was honored for his “vivid reports, often at personal peril, on famine and conflict in East Africa, a neglected but increasingly strategic part of the world.” In the spring of 2011, Gettleman came to campus to speak about being kidnapped—along with his wife, Times online producer Courtenay Morris ’94, and another colleague—while reporting on Somali rebels in Ethiopia. They were released after a week in prison.

Major Gifts for Engineering and Real Estate Program

The Engineering college has received a $10 million gift in support of undergraduate education. It comes from John Swanson ’61, MEng ’63, founder of ANSYS, a firm that makes software for engineers and designers. Half of the gift is earmarked for student project teams that design and build such things as race cars and autonomous submarines, with the rest for scholarships and other initiatives. The Program in Real Estate also received a major gift: $11 million from Richard Baker ’88 and his wife, Lisa. It more than triples the endowment of the program, which will be renamed in their honor. The Bakers are owners of the Hudson’s Bay Company, the world’s oldest continuously operated retail firm.

Edwards Appointed CIO

A. J. Edwards, the University’s interim chief investment officer since May 2011, has been appointed to the position on a permanent basis. His job entails leading a team of investment officers and analysts responsible for management of Cornell’s $5.3 billion endowment, in collaboration with the investment committee of the Board of Trustees. He has been with the University since 2008.

Comments (1)Add Comment
'74 (MS '83)
written by Leah MacLeod, July 10, 2012
Regarding the 144th Commencement in May, it was unfortunate that President Skorton chose to mention a handful of students by name. I am certain he meant no disrespect by choosing to briefly relate their stories, but he managed to anger and upset a lot of people in our seating area alone (and I'm guessing in a lot of other areas, too). I know I was disappointed in his choice.

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Twice a year I give “flying lessons” at College Park (MD) Aviation Museum.
Sabra “Piper” Baker Staley ’51

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