Table of Contents VOL. 2 NO. 1, FALL 2009
THE ESSENTIALS
The Essentials
100,000th bird banded at Appledore, ROTC standout Carolyn Evans '10, IthaQatar Ambassadors' second summer, CALS dean to step down in 2010, Milstein Hall is tweeting. Read more
COVER STORY
Why creative writing is a force on campus
Creative writing instruction at Cornell is not only central to the humanities -- its techniques are employed by scientists, engineers, lawyers and business people alike. Read more
COVER STORY SIDEBAR
Cornell Library preserves creative work
Before they were famous, they left traces of their pasts in the library. Copies of students' theses line the shelves of Olin Library, and they have been collected in the university archives ever since graduate studies began at Cornell. Read more
COVER STORY SIDEBAR
Epoch: A decades-long history of publishing
Epoch, Cornell's literary magazine, has a national reputation for publishing traditional and experimental work by exemplary authors. It features fiction and poetry, sometimes essays, graphic art, screenplays or cartoons. Read more
VIEWPOINT
'Mischievous abandon' and solidarity
During my junior year at Cornell, I signed up for my first writing course -- The Art of the Essay. I recall the people and the peculiar madness and camaraderie of that first writing class at Cornell. Read more
OUTREACH
Students recount service trip to Rwanda
Kit Dobyns '12 figured that spending time in Africa would transcend anything he could learn from a textbook. So he and six other Cornell students spent three weeks in Rwanda this summer. Read more
CAMPUS LIFE
Lawns grow long and roofs go green to cut costs
As Cornell becomes more sustainable -- and cuts costs -- Cornellians are seeing fewer lawns and more meadows on campus, longer grass and more green roofs and functional plantings. Read more
PEOPLE
Peter Yarrow '59 on 'Romp-n-Stomp'
Peter Yarrow '59 remembers his time as a guitar-wielding student instructor in a popular folklore class at Cornell as a watershed experience, shaping his life and career as a musician. Read more
NEW YORK CITY
Architecture program explores 'Common Ground'
Cornell's 14 graduating Master of Architecture II students held their final design research seminar this summer at the College of Architecture, Art and Planning's New York City studio. Read more
RESEARCH SPOTLIGHT
Hatching long-dormant eggs and evolution
Suspending a life in time is a theme that normally finds itself in the pages of science fiction, but now such ideas have become a reality in the annals of science. Cornell ecologist Nelson Hairston Jr. is a pioneerin a field known loosely as resurrection ecology. Read more
WORTH SUPPORTING
Small change, big deal
Maya Gasuk, director of the Cornell Annual Fund, wasn't sure it was possible, in such a dire economy, to meet the fund's $23 million fundraising goal for the 2008-09 fiscal year. Read more
WORTH SUPPORTING
Bullish on Cornell, with no strings attached
People who study Seth Klarman '79, iconoclastic hedge fund manager and philanthropist, realize that he chooses investments very, very carefully -- and that if the crowd is stampeding in one direction, he usually goes the other way. Read more
ARTS AND HUMANITIES
40 years of Cornell's Africana Center
Cornell's Africana Studies and Research Center, established during political struggle and minority exclusion on campuses nationwide, is entering its 40th year with its sights set on the future. Read more
CORNELL BOOKS
Cornell Books
Richard Swedberg on Alexis de Tocqueville and Max Weber, Salah Hassan co-edits a volume about the crisis in Sudan, Elizabeth Peters tackles the question of marriage, and more. Read more
BIG RED ATHLETICS
How student athletes spent their summers
This past summer, Cornell student athletes built houses, volunteered in other countries and explored potential careers, making a difference for themselves and others in just three short months. Read more
CAMPAIGN UPDATE
Matching-gift challenges seek to inspire support
Cornell is fortunate to have loyal and committed alumni and friends. They continue to ensure that Cornell can open its doors to the best and brightest students, regardless of their financial means. Read more