The Notable Lives Behind (Seven More) Big Red Buildings In part two of our continuing series, we meet a celebrated scientific couple, a distinguished Chinese scholar, and much more
Works of Art, Inside and Out: The Johnson Museum at 50 In its half-century on the Hill, the campus landmark has become much more than a home for Cornell’s art collection
Bridge Project Connects Student Engineers with ’80s Alumni Four decades after an undergrad team repaired the scenic walkway over Flat Rock, a new generation is fixing it up again
After More than a Century, Cornell’s Hydroelectric Plant is Still Humming The facility in Fall Creek Gorge contributes a small but significant—and renewable—portion of the University’s power
Cornell Maple Program Sees Acres of Untapped Opportunity With its two research forests and state-of-the-art sugar houses, the program aims to support producers across the state
Meet the University Librarian Elaine Westbrooks on what her job entails, her vision for the Library—and what she’s reading for pleasure these days
At the Cornell Fashion + Textile Collection, History Is Always in Style With its 10,000-plus items, the archive illuminates how people dressed, worked, and lived in the past—as well as today
In a Posthumous Memoir, Famed Prof Recalls a Turbulent Childhood Long before Isaac Kramnick joined the Cornell faculty, he was a foster child from a family grappling with poverty and mental illness
Protecting All Creatures, Great and Small—Around the Globe From Ithaca to the plains of southern Africa, the Cornell Wildlife Health Center is working to heal the natural world
Revisiting a Professor’s Fictional ‘Lost Civilization’ The University Archives recently acquired the late Norman Daly’s richly detailed ‘Llhuros,’ which captured imaginations in the ’70s