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17/12/06

NANOTACHNOLOGY

 
Written simply in layman's terms site / sites: SEE LINK ON LEFT HAND COLUMN. 


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Accurate information concerning the above issues:



Videos on Nanotechnology: Nanowires and Nanocrystals for Nanotechnology  1001 ~  Nanotechnology: Past, Present and Future 1002 ~ 1003 ~ 1004 ~ 1005 ~ 1006 ~ 1007
17/12/06

The nano world on a big scale: Cornell's 'Too Small to See' exhibit opens at Epcot's Innoventions in the Disney World Resort



ITHACA, N.Y. -- Thanks to nanotechnology there are new ways to fight cancer, lighter and stronger materials for consumer and commercial use, and it is making energy more efficient.


This tiny, miraculous world is now larger than life at the Cornell-developed, arcade-like exhibit "Too Small to See," newly opened at Innoventions in Epcot at the Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. The exhibit will remain there until May 12, 2007.


Simply, visitors won't see nanotechnology, they will be part of it: They can walk through a silicon crystal, build a molecule and climb a carbon nanotube or two.


"Too Small to See," which took more than two years to create, is a collaboration between Cornell University, the Sciencenter in Ithaca and Painted Universe in Lansing, N.Y.


The National Science Foundation funded the exhibit and it will be located in the Innoventions West building, where Epcot guests learn about science and technology. "It's important for the public to gain a better understanding of nanotechnology because of its potential impact on our lives" says David Ucko, head of informal science education at the National Science Foundation.


To make this exhibit, researchers spoke with thousands of children and adults to understand how they view nanotechnology. "The concepts in 'Too Small to See' are all based upon what visitors might already know about things on the nano scale," said Carl Batt, the Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor of Food Science at Cornell, who directed the project. "Important recent discoveries in areas like carbon nanotubes and quantum dots become more approachable. Everything returns to applications, where visitors can learn about why nanotechnology will be important in areas such as medicine, energy and information technology."


This is the second collaboration between Cornell, the Sciencenter and Painted Universe to land at Epcot. In 2004, "It's a Nano World" was an exhibit at the Innoventions East building, and it is now on its third year of a national tour.


Contact: Blaine Friedlander
Phone: (607)254-8093
Cell: (607)351-2610
bpf2@cornell.edu

17/12/06

Cornell Department of Music receives its largest gift ever from the estate of alumnus Sidney T. Cox, AB '47, MA '48


ITHACA, N.Y. -- The Cornell Department of Music has received its largest gift ever, $6.5 million, from the estate of alumnus Sidney T. Cox, AB '47, MA '48 (1922-2005). This bequest, the culmination of a lifetime of giving to the department, will be designated to support three areas within the department's activities: the performing ensembles; concerts and lectures; and graduate education in musicology, composition and performance practice.


"We are thrilled to be the recipient of this generous gift," said Rebecca Harris-Warrick, chair of the Department of Music. "Throughout his life, Sidney was a true friend to the department and to the university. His gifts helped make the Department of Music what it is today, and we are proud to continue to honor his memory."


Cox's support of the department was steadfast. He was an ardent supporter of student composition and performance at Cornell and a major donor to the Lincoln Hall Renaissance, the campaign to renovate Lincoln Hall, the home of the Cornell music department. In recognition of his magnanimous support, the library in Lincoln Hall was named the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance when it was dedicated in 2000. The Cox Library is one of 20 units of the Cornell University Library and is considered one of the finest music libraries in North America.


"Sid was not the kind of person that was in philanthropy for credit - he did it all quietly," said Steven Stucky, the Given Foundation Professor of Music at Cornell and 2005 Pulitzer Prize winning composer. "From the small to the large, on a day-to-day, month-to-month, year-to-year basis, his dedicated support has shaped what the department has become."


Cox earned degrees in English and music composition at Cornell; his musical works have been performed by the Syracuse Symphony Orchestra and many other groups. He was a member of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers and was a director of the Syracuse Symphony for several years. He was also an advisory board member of the American Institute for Verdi Studies and a steering committee member of the Cornell Friends of Music.


The Cornell Department of Music also recently acquired Cox's extensive Verdi collection, including original manuscripts, scores and recordings, which he bequeathed to Cornell upon his death in 2005. The collection arrived at Cornell this past summer and is now housed in the Cox Library.


Contact: Nicola Pytell
Phone: (607)254-6236
Cell: (607)351-3548
nwp2@cornell.edu

17/12/06

Wildlife Conservation Society and Cornell Combines

Wildlife Conservation at Cornell University:






Cornell and the Wildlife Conservation Society join forces in veterinary training



ITHACA, N.Y. -- The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and the Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine have expanded their collaborative relationship, creating a new training initiative that combines the academic rigor of a premiere Ivy League university with critical hands-on experience with a diversity of wild animals at the Bronx Zoo and other WCS facilities.
Cornell veterinary students in the initiative's two recently created residencies - wildlife medicine and wildlife pathology - will divide their three-year terms between Cornell, in Ithaca, N.Y., and WCS facilities in New York City, while gaining a truly comprehensive understanding of animal health issues and the skill sets to address the challenges of those disciplines at home and around the world.

The joint residencies are two of several collaborative programs in the new WCS-Cornell partnership, which also includes increasing animal disease surveillance around the world, boosting veterinary expertise in other nations, and developing a collaborative Global Center for Wildlife and Domestic Animal Health, to be located on the grounds of the Bronx Zoo. WCS and Cornell, with the assistance of the United States Agency for International Development and the government of Zambia, also have launched a project to develop models for balancing socio-economic development with biodiversity conservation in southern Africa.

"This collaboration provides a unique combination of scientific rigor and higher quality of professional practice," said Dr. Donald F. Smith, the Austin O. Hooey Dean of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell.

Dr. Robert Cook, chief veterinarian and vice president of WCS Wildlife Health Sciences, added, "The WCS 'One World, One Health,' model will give the world's health organizations and agencies multi-disciplinary practitioners who can really make a difference not only to wildlife but to the future health of domestic animals and people."

Residents in the wildlife medicine program will begin their training at Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine, where they will study internal medicine, surgery dermatology, epidemiology and other relevant topics. After completing the first part of the program, residents will continue their training at WCS's Wildlife Health Center, the primary care facility for some 20,000 animals in the Bronx Zoo, the New York Aquarium, and the Central Park, Prospect Park and Queens zoos. Medical challenges for residents may include experiences such as performing root canal surgery on a tiger, treating a shell wound on a sea turtle, vaccinating a rare bird species to protect it from West Nile Virus, or taking a radiograph of a red-tailed hawk's broken wing. Residents may also have opportunities to work with field veterinarians and biologists, applying what they have learned in the society s zoos and aquariums to wildlife health issues around the world.

In the pathology residency, students will spend two years studying comparative anatomy and the diseases of domestic and wild animals at Cornell, developing the ability to diagnose pathogens in a variety of species and settings. Residents will then hone their skills in disease identification during their third year at the Bronx Zoo and other WCS facilities. In addition to learning to apply course work on a wide range of species, pathologists in the program can help document poorly understood diseases through in-depth study and devise strategies to mitigate the threats of emerging infectious diseases, such as West Nile virus or avian influenza.
"The partnership between WCS and Cornell offers both organizations a means of maximizing our complementary expertise and giving veterinarians the most comprehensive training to date," said Cook. "As we increase our understanding of how health issues move across animal and human divides, we realize that collaborative programs such as these are critical in ensuring the health of wildlife, domestic animals and humankind."

Additional details Contact: Sabina LeePhone: (607)255-3024Cell: (607)227-3341

17/12/06

Charles Isherwood wins the Nathan Award

 








Drama critic Charles Isherwood wins the Nathan Award, administered by Cornell University
ITHACA, N.Y. -- New York Times drama critic Charles Isherwood has been named the winner of the Nathan Award for the theater year 2005-06. The award was endowed by the great theater critic George Jean Nathan (1882-1958), who wrote for and co-edited with H.L. Mencken the magazines Smart Set and The American Mercury. Because Nathan was an alumnus of Cornell University, the Cornell Department of English administers the prize. Nathan's will mandated that the winner be chosen "by a majority vote of the & heads of the English departments of Cornell, Princeton and Yale Universities."

Isherwood has been writing for the Times since 2004. A Stanford graduate, he began his career at L.A. Style but soon went to Variety and Daily Variety, where he was senior editor and Los Angeles theater critic, before moving to New York, where he was Variety's chief theater critic. He was also a contributing editor for the Advocate magazine from 1993-1998 and has written about Broadway for the London Times.

The Nathan committee was particularly impressed with Isherwood's willingness to voice strong opinions and take sometimes unpopular stands during the last theater season. For instance, he wrote of the Sydney Theater Company's production of Hedda Gabler with Cate Blanchette, which had been a popular success (and applauded by the Times' other drama reviewer), that the "audience & didn't seem to notice (or care) that a classic play was being publicly kneecapped." The committee also applauded Isherwood's range of knowledge and willingness to educate theater-goers, as when in a review of a performance of classic commedia dell'arte he noted a range of "comic archetypes whose influence cannot be overstated, stretching as they do from Shakespeare to Homer Simpson." And they admired his sense of New York theatrical trends, as in the summer review where he plaintively raised the "burning question," "Who's afraid of 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'"

The award consists of $10,000 and a statuette, which will be presented to Isherwood by Molly Hite, chair of the Cornell Department of English, in a February party at the Players' Club. More information about the Nathan Award, including a list of previous winners, can be found online at



For additional information Contact: Nicola PytellPhone: (607)254-6236Cell: (607)351-3548 nwp2@cornell.edu