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Jason Hopwood ‘14 did not initially pursue a career in the wine industry. Before coming to Cornell, Hopwood worked in hospitality, as a chef and eventually co-owner of a restaurant. His interest in wine grew through these experiences until he...

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Yesterday, New York State Senator Mike Nozzolio announced that $3.4 million in new state funding would be allocated to the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva, NY, to modernize the Fruit and Vegetable Processing Pilot Plant...

Seven plant roots placed on a white surface

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Farmers have a new weapon in their arsenal in detecting and combating the soil-borne plant pathogen Phoma sclerotioides, commonly known as brown root rot/BRR, thanks to Cornell researchers. First detected in the eastern United States in Clinton...

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It was cheers for beers this week, at news from Albany that Governor Andrew M. Cuomo would be investing $350,000 for research into hops and malting barley, key beer-brewing ingredients, to help Cornell specialists understand the varieties and...

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It grows 18 feet tall, bears a cone-shaped flower that begins to form after the summer solstice, has the potential to yield 400 different oils, and claims marijuana as its closest relative in the plant kingdom. What is it? The hop plant, once...

Basil leaves

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From Margaret Tuttle McGrath, Department of Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology, Long Island Horticultural Research & Extension Center: Reminiscent of the late blight outbreak of 2009, basil plants with downy mildew are being found at big...

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Cornell President David Skorton joined Dean Boor and a host of other dignitaries and Reunion attendees on the Ag Quad today to help launch the new School of Integrative Plant Science in CALS. The school brings together CALS’ former plant and...

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Via the Cornell Horticulture blog: On a sunny Tuesday, associate professor of horticulture Justine Vanden Heuvel and research support specialist Michael Brown got a good start on planting a new cranberry bed, the first at Cornell Orchards. (The...

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Via Cornell Horticulture Blog: Associate professor of horticulture Ken Mudge, program aid Steve Gabriel and research support specialist Jonathan Comstock appear in a new movie, The Resilient Ones: A Generation Takes On Climate Change from Bright...

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Christian Shaw 14, CALS alumnus and organizer of the Plastic Tides initiative, has launched a new Kickstarter campaign to raise funds to shoot a short documentary of a planed paddle board expedition in the Sargasso Sea surrounding Bermuda. The...

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In recognition of her extraordinary commitment to the fields of agriculture and science, horticulture professor Susan Brown was recently honored at the 2014 “Women of Distinction” ceremony at the State Capitol. Brown, director of Cornell’s Fruit...

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Coffee drinkers, rejoice! Aside from java’s energy jolt, food scientists say you may reap another health benefit from a daily cup of joe: prevention of deteriorating eyesight and possible blindness from retinal degeneration due to glaucoma...

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Guest Post from Christian Shaw ’14 and Céline Jennison ‘14* “Having both grown up enjoying water sports, we feel a responsibility to work towards protecting our playground for generations to come. Along with a group of three other friends who...

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Jennifer Tiffany, Ph.D. ’04, is the new executive director of Cornell University Cooperative Extension of New York City ( CUCE-NYC). She has served as CUCE-NYC interim director since the unexpected death of former director Don Tobias in November...

A tick on a green leaf

News

The frigid bite of this past winter’s Polar Vortex was not enough to wipe out one biting scourge of summer – ticks. “Despite the long, cold winter, ticks are abundant in New York State and surrounding areas,“says Paul Curtis, coordinator of...

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If you’re one of the legions of health-conscious Americans who regularly cook with tofu, a new study by the Cornell Food and Brand Lab suggests new ways to persuade your tofu-reticent friends and family to try cooking with the jiggly, white...

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They may be small, but the so-called “glass eels” ( Anguilla rostrata) are a key component of the river ecosystem. Chris Bowser, an extension support specialist for Cornell’s New York State Water Resources (WRI) Institute, has been using them as...

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Alex Krakoski ’16 has come up with a creative way to fund his Cornell education: beef jerky. And the entrepreneurial student has enlisted the help of several other CALS students to help turn his idea into a burgeoning business that recently...

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How do you explain complicated science to the general public? In a word: Claymation. Cait Costello and Caitlin Feather, two post-docs in the laboratory of John March, associate professor of biological and environmental engineering, turned to the...

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Elephants don’t only roam the savannahs - they also inhabit rainforests, where there are difficult to study because of the dense habitat. Scientists with the Elephant Listening Project, based at the Lab of Ornithology, have come up with some...