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A six-generation New York family farm with deep Cornell ties celebrated 200 years of continuous operation in August. “Every generation has gone through tough times,” said George Lamont ’57. “You just have to be willing to persevere through the...

News

Following a four-year project to modernize facilities at Stocking Hall, the Department of Food Science toasted its freshly renovated home with milk, cider, ice cream and New York wine. The Oct. 22 ceremony officially introduced the state-of-the...

  • Food Science
  • Food
  • Dairy

News

A family with more than three decades of experience in food ingredient technology has enabled the Department of Food Science to pursue big opportunities in small-scale packaging, with the recent hiring of an expert in micro- and nanotechnology...

  • Food Science
  • Food

News

A foundation was dug, 120,000 bricks were molded and fired, and sand and crushed stones were stashed for making concrete: The villagers of Masopo in Zambia’s Choma province had laid the groundwork for a new—and much needed—classroom building by...

News

Just moments after winning the Grade 1 Belmont Oaks Invitational last July, Lady Eli—a mare who won all six races that she entered in 2014 and 2015—stepped on a nail. A diligent and patient approach to overcoming the painful, possibly career...

News

Once dormant like a spore waiting for the right conditions to germinate, a club for fungi aficionados has been revived by a group of dedicated students. The Fantastic Fungi Fanatics (FFF) became an active club again last fall, with Rico Lin ’18...

News

It’s the first day of class. Students take their seats, pull out their notebooks... and watch dozens of sea lions give birth, mere feet away. Close encounters with sea lions, dolphins and penguins were regular occurrences for students in BIOEE...

  • Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  • Ecosystems

News

Senior Allie Cohen is looking forward to hanging up her lab coat and heading to law school, but not until she untangles a few more mysteries of fruit fly mating. The biology and society senior—and six-year veteran of fruit fly research—will...

News

An agricultural development agency in Tanzania, a marketing firm in Thailand, and a finance and banking firm in Australia: These are just a few of the workplaces that will host students this summer through the new CALS Global Fellows Program...

  • Global Development

News

With 75% of supermarket sales captured by chains, independent grocers face stiff competition for consumers’ grocery dollars. A new program offered by the Cornell Food Industry Management Program (FIMP) this September will focus on strategies for...

News

Cornell’s New York State Agricultural Experiment Station (NYSAES) will be home to a comprehensive center combining food safety research and training for New York growers and producers, offering a farm-to-fork bulwark against foodborne illness in...

  • Institute for Food Safety
  • Food Science
  • Food

News

In a competition for funds among New York’s Regional Economic Development Councils, the Southern Tier won $500 million over the next five years in New York’s Upstate Revitalization Initiative, including a project that taps CALS expertise in...

News

Cornell brought its message of education, discovery and engagement to the state capital Jan. 26 for Cornell Day in Albany, taking the opportunity to show off its diverse offerings to lawmakers and visitors to the capital. A casual breakfast and...

News

The rebuilt Liberty Hyde Bailey Conservatory Greenhouse opened Feb. 9, continuing the legacy of botanical discovery of its namesake, the first dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. The 4,000-square-foot facility on Tower Road...

  • School of Integrative Plant Science

News

A new College of Business will bring together Cornell’s three accredited business programs: the School of Hotel Administration, the Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management, and the Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of...

News

“We know that the Aedes aegypti mosquito—its common name is yellow fever mosquito—is a very important vector of the Zika virus. It’s the only example I know of a truly domesticated mosquito; it coevolved with humans. In fact, our ancestors...

  • Lab of Ornithology
  • Development Sociology

News

For African emigrants 125,000 to 60,000 years ago, the Arabian Peninsula was the first stop en route to populate Europe and Asia. However, genomic evidence has revealed that some put down roots in the desert instead of migrating north, and...

  • Computational Biology

News

CRUISING THE WATERS of Puget Sound in January, the crew aboard the research vessel the Clifford A. Barnes netted some good news: several healthy sunflower stars (Pycnopodia helianthoides), which had been thought to be functionally extinct in the...

News

During the past 50 years, the Green Revolution helped transform India’s countryside into productive plots dedicated to the staple grains wheat, rice and maize, but the displacement of vitamin and mineral-rich foods has left much of the rural...

  • Animal Science
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Nutritional Sciences

News

Come along for the journey as researchers take their skills on the road: rice paddies in The Gambia, a village in Malawi, an Indonesian national park, the Aegean island of Santorini, and the metropolis of São Paulo, Brazil. Shaped by...

  • Global Development