Skip to main content



Table of Contents VOL. 2 NO. 2, WINTER 2010

UPDATE

Recommitting to ideals, a period of great challenge

Nearly a decade into the 21st century and just a few short years away from Cornell's sesquicentennial in 2015, we will be reshaping Cornell for the challenges of contemporary times. Read more

Graffiti is an integral  and authentic  part of the set for Romeo and Juliet at the Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts
THE ESSENTIALS

The Essentials

Remembering an eagle named Ithaca, ovary images as art, 'Romeo and Juliet' tagging, Ezra's homestead site and more. Read more

Victoria Averbukh, right, director of the Cornell Financial Engineering Manhattan program, chats with students Raymond DiFelice, left, and Di Li in the financial district.
COVER STORY

NYC is an urban laboratory for many disciplines

The opportunities and experiences New York City affords for hundreds of Cornell students and faculty couldn't be replicated anywhere else. Read more

Sushmita Mukherjee
COVER STORY SIDEBAR

WCMC brings research from bench to bedside

The Weill Cornell Clinical and Translational Science Center, founded in September 2007 with a $49 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, brings together researchers and clinicians from disparate disciplines to tackle pressing medical issues. Read more

Campus to campus bus at Ithaca campus
COVER STORY SIDEBAR

Campus to campus, five years down the road

One indicator of Cornell's growing relationship with New York City is the growing ridership on the Campus-to-Campus bus that has been making 14 round trips a week between Manhattan and Ithaca for the past five years. Read more

John Zelenka 03 on the platform of the Wall Street subway station. Zelenka leads the Cornell Wall Street networking program for alumni.
COVER STORY SIDEBAR

Cornell Wall Street enhances alumni connections

Instead of distancing itself from the financial crisis last year, Cornell embraced its alumni in the financial sector with a new program, Cornell Wall Street. Since May, CWS has been hosting networking events, seminars and more. Read more

Don Tobias
VIEWPOINT

The Cooperative Extension that never sleeps

Cornell University Cooperative Extension (CUCE) has had offices in the Big Apple since 1959. But lately, its New York City footprint has been getting bigger. Ezra talked with Don Tobias, the CUCE-NYC's executive director, about what the organization accomplishes for New Yorkers and for Cornell. Read more

Plane from Cornell in NYC map centerspread
CENTERSPREAD

CU in the City: An illustration mapping Cornell's physical footprint in NYC

Read more

Maya LinÕs ÒListening ConeÓ at the California Academy of Sciences is part of her larger multimedia and multi-site project, ÒWhat Is Missing?Ó
OUTREACH

Lab of O helps Lin create series on species loss

Two years ago, world-renowned artist Maya Lin, the creator of the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C., contacted the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's Macaulay Library for help with an ambitious multi-site, multimedia project she was dreaming up. Read more

The Cayuga Nature Center gets a fall cleaning by, from left, Josh Rosario 10, Neesha Schnepf 13 and Vanish Grover 10 during the Into the Streets day of service Oct. 31.
CAMPUS LIFE

Service learning takes students into the streets

Cornell's Public Service Center now provides mini-grants to faculty, enhances core university curricula and promotes the importance of scholarship in the field — service learning — by partnering with faculty to take the experience of the streets into the classroom. Read more

Robert Langer
PEOPLE

Langer '70 saves lives with biomedical engineering

A lot of people are alive today because Bob Langer's parents gave him a Gilbert microscope set when he was 10 years old. Read more

Jamie Lloyd searches for Earthlike, extrasolar planets orbiting small, red stars. In this picture, the size of the ÒstarÓ and the Òplanet,Ó as well as the distance between them, are approximately to scale.
RESEARCH SPOTLIGHT

Jamie Lloyd seeks clues on solar system's origin

Somewhere in the galaxy, a rocky, blue-green planet like Earth, teeming with oxygen, water and life, might be orbiting its own sun. Astronomy professor Jamie Lloyd wants to find it. Read more

Three of five Helmsley scholars at the hotel school, from left: Diana Zehr 12, Jose Arrue 10 and Rebekah Victory Falcone 10.
WORTH SUPPORTING

A big boost from Helmsley Charitable Trust

A look at how hotel school students are benefitting from a $2 million scholarship gift from the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust. Read more

Dale R. Corson, the friend and protg of Bethe who served as Cornells eighth president from 1969 to 1977
WORTH SUPPORTING

Bethe House deanship endowed in Corson's name

Robert Harrison '76 recently committed $2 million to name the post of house professor-dean of Hans Bethe House for Dale R. Corson.
Read more

Members of the Cornell-Ithaca College team of researchers in Cyprus.
ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Team to uncover ancient cities on Cyprus

A Cornell-Ithaca College team of interdisciplinary researchers will use 21st-century technology to study relationships among architecture, social interaction and social change in an early civilization on Cyprus. Read more

Book covers: The Legacy of Dale R. Corson, The Vanishing Physician-Scientist?, Musical Form, Forms & Formenlehre: Three Methodological Reflections, War, Revenue, and State Building: Financing the Development of the American State.
CORNELL BOOKS

Physicians, friendship, Dale Corson's legacy

The vital role of physicians in medical discovery ... memories of an outstanding teacher ... The Corson era documented ... history, music and poetry from Cornell scholars. Read more

Brian Kreefer 09 gets ready to inbound the ball during Cornells 81-67 loss at No. 8 Duke on Jan. 6, 2008, with the Cameron Crazies making their presence known all around him.
BIG RED ATHLETICS

Where athletes have proudly worn their 'C'

From the River Thames to Madison Square Garden, the Big Red has played on fields of dreams for aspiring athletes and sporting fans for more than 100 years. Read more

Joe Caccio 12 was among the first class of students to benefit from Cornells enhanced financial aid incentive a year ago. Today, he is a sophomore engineering student.
CAMPAIGN UPDATE

Scholarships create opportunity

A year ago, in the pages of this magazine, we introduced you to a few Cornell students who were among the first to benefit from increased financial aid packages for qualified students. In this issue, we catch up with several of them. Read more

Samuel Bacharach
ENDNOTE

Academic entrepreneurship in New York City

When I joined the Cornell faculty in 1974, among my thoughts was how I could find reasons to spend time in New York City. You might say that I had a personal agenda in building connections between the Ithaca campus and New York City. Read more



From The Publisher

Tommy Bruce At the center of this issue of Ezra is artist Jim Houghton's fanciful look at Cornell's physical footprint in New York City, which spans Manhattan Island and extends into the other four boroughs. Read more