- Paul Ginsparg
Paul Ginsparg is a physicist widely known for his development of the ArXiv.org e-print archive. Since 2001, he has been a professor of Physics and Computing & Information Science at Cornell University. The pre-print archive was developed while he was a member of staff of Los Alamos National Laboratory, 1990-2001. He has been awarded the P.A.M. (physics astronomy math) Award from the Special Libraries Association, named a Lingua Franca "Tech 20", … - Stephen D. Krasner
Stephen Krasner 's research interests include market failure and distributional conflict in international political economy and the historical practices of sovereignty, especially with regard to domestic autonomy, state building and non-intervention. In 2002 he served as Director for Governance and Development at the National Security Council where he worked on the Millennium Challenge Account, a new foreign assistance program. - Hunter R. Rawlings III
Hunter R. Rawlings III was appointed Cornell University's tenth president on December 10, 1994, and took office on July 1, 1995. His administration saw the restoration of central campus: the transformation of Sage Hall into the new home of the Johnson Graduate School of Management; the conversion of Tjaden Hall for the Department of Art; and the renovation of Lincoln Hall for music students and faculty. The Laboratory of Ornithology opened a magnificent new building. - John S. Knight
John Shively Knight was an American newspaper publisher and editor. He was born in Bluefield, West Virginia to Charles Landon Knight and Clara Scheifley. He attended Cornell University but never graduated, leaving early to enlist in the Army. While at Cornell he was a member of the Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity. In 1920 he started at his father's newspaper, "The Beacon-Journal", as sportswriter, and moved up to managing editor before inheriting the paper in 1933. - Jennifer Lee
Sonia Pressman Fuentes , who was born in Berlin, Germany, came to the US as a child with her immediate family to escape the Holocaust. - Irwin Stelzer
Irwin Stelzer is a business adviser and director of economic policy studies at the Hudson Institute. In our view, Irwin Stelzer always seems to present a well thought out and sensible view. - Donald Kuspit
Donald Kuspit is an American art critic, poet, and professor of art history and philosophy at the State University of New York at Stony Brook and professor of art history at the School of Visual Arts. He was formerly the A. D. White Professor-at-Large at Cornell University (1991-1997). He received the Frank Jewett Mather Award for Distinction in Art Criticism in 1983 (given by the College Art Association). - Philip Gourevitch
Philip Gourevitch is a staff writer at The New Yorker, where his work has appeared since 1995. His first book, We Wish To Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families: Stories from Rwanda -published in 1998-won a number of major prizes, including the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and, in England, the Guardian First Book Award. - George Jean Nathan
George Jean Nathan (February 14, 1882 - April 8, 1958) was an American drama critic and editor. - Roger Parker
Roger Parker (born London United Kingdom, 2 August, 1951) is an English musicologist, and is currently Thurston Dart Professor of Music at King's College London. He studied at the University of London, first at Goldsmiths' College, then at King's. In 1982, he moved to Cornell University in upstate New York, where he was Assistant Professor and then Associate Professor. - Rod Serling
Rodman Edward "Rod" Serling (December 25, 1924 - June 28, 1975) was an American screenwriter, most famous for his science fiction anthology television series, "The Twilight Zone". - Tarleton Gillespie
Tarleton Gillespie is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at Cornell University, with affiliations in the Department of Science and Technology Studies and the Information Science program. He is also a fellow with the Center for Internet and Society at the Stanford School of Law. His first book, Wired Shut: Copyright and the Shape of Digital Culture , will be published by MIT Press in April 2007 -- see more at http://www.wiredshut.org/ . - Douglas H. Ginsburg
Judge Ginsburg is a graduate of Cornell University and of the University of Chicago Law School (1973), where he was the Articles Editor of the Law Review. He was law clerk to Hon. Carl G. McGowan on the D.C. Circuit, and to Justice Thurgood of the U.S. Supreme Court before joining the Harvard Law School Faculty (1975-83). - Jessie Redmon Fauset
Jessie Redmon Fauset (April 27, 1882 - April 30, 1961) was an African American editor, poet, essayist and novelist. She was the most prolific female novelist of the Harlem Renaissance. - Stephen Zunes
Stephen Zunes is Middle East editor for Foreign Policy in Focus ( www.fpif.org ). He serves as a professor of Politics at the University of San Francisco and is the author of Tinderbox: U.S. Middle East Policy and the Roots of Terrorism (Common Courage Press, 2003). - Harriet Creighton
Harriet Baldwin Creighton (27 June 1909 - January 9 2004) was an American botanist, geneticist and educator. Born in Delevan, Illinois, Creighton graduated from Wellesley College in 1929, and went on to complete her Ph.D. at Cornell University in 1933. During her time at Cornell she worked in the field of maize cytogenetics with Barbara McClintock, the pair published a very influential paper in 1931 in which they described chromosomal crossover for the first time. - Marilyn Hacker
Marilyn Hacker (born 1942) is an American poet, critic, and reviewer. Her books of poetry include "Going Back to the River" (1990), "Love, Death, and the Changing of the Seasons" (1986), and "Presentation Piece" (1975), which won the National Book Award. - Jacob Sullum
Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine and Reason.com and a nationally syndicated columnist. Sullum is the author of two critically-acclaimed books: Saying Yes: In Defense of Drug Use (Tarcher/Penguin, 2004) and For Your Own Good: The Anti-Smoking Crusade and the Tyranny of Public Health (Free Press, 1998). - Henry Bienen
Henry Bienen is the 15th president of Northwestern University and has held the position for the last nine years. His extensive career in higher education includes 28 years at Princeton University as a distinguished political science professor, department chair and dean. - William Bagley
William Chandler Bagley (born March 15, 1874, in Detroit; died July 1, 1946, in New York City), an American educator and editor, was born in Detroit, USA. He graduated in 1895 from Michigan State College, currently called Michigan State University; completed M.S., in 1898, from the University of Wisconsin, 1898; and was awarded Ph.D. by Cornell University in 1900. He taught in elementary schools before becoming (1908) professor of education at the University of Illinois. - Ed Ochester
Edwin Frank Ochester (b. 1939) is an American poet and editor. Born September 15 in Brooklyn, New York, USA, he was educated at Cornell University, Harvard University, and the University of Wisconsin. Currently he is a core faculty member of the Bennington College MFA Writing Seminars. For nearly twenty years Ochester served as director of the writing program at the University of Pittsburgh, … - Martin Blinder
Martin Blinder, M.D. is a forensic psychiatrist and the author of "Psychiatry in the Everyday Practice of Law". Blinder is noted for his testimony in the 1979 trial of Dan White. In that trial, Blinder testified that White was suffering from depression and pointed to several behavioral symptoms of that depression, including the fact that White had gone from being highly health-conscious to consuming sugary foods and drinks such as Twinkies and Coca-Cola. - Bristow Adams
Bristow Adams was an American journalist, professor, forester, and illustrator. He taught at Cornell University from 1914 to 1945. Adams also founded the Stanford Chaparral, the oldest humor magazine in the west, in 1899. - Hans Neurath
Hans Neurath (1909-2002) was a biochemist, a leader in protein chemistry and the founding chairman of the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Washington in Seattle. - Siobhan Adcock
- Allen Funt
Allen Funt (September 16, 1914 - September 5 1999) was an American producer-director, best known as the creator and host of "Candid Camera" from the 1940s to 1980s, as either a regular show or a series of specials. Its most notable run was from 1960 to 1967 on CBS. - Dick Schaap
Father of Jeremy Schaap, with whom he co-hosted a weekly radio program, The Sporting Life. Inducted into the Center for the Study of Sport in Society Hall of Fame, at Northeastern University (2001). Coined the nickname "Fun City" for New York. Won six Emmy Awards, one CableACE Award and the Women's Sports Foundation Award for excellence in covering women in sports. Graduated from Cornell University in 1955 and attended the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism on a Grantland... - Haki R. Madhubuti
He is a much sought-after poet and lecturer, and has convened workshops and served as guest/keynote speaker at thousands of colleges, universities, libraries and community centers in the U.S. and abroad. - Alston Scott Householder
Alston Scott Householder (Rockford, Illinois, USA, 5 May 1904 – Malibu, California, USA, 4 July 1993) is an American mathematician who specialized in mathematical biology and numerical analysis, inventor of the Householder transformation. Married to Belle Householder (d. 1975), children: John, Jackie and remarried 1984 to Heidi Householder, née Vogg. Householder spent his youth in Alabama; getting a BA in philosophy from the Northwestern University of Evanston, … - Albert Graham Ingalls
Albert Graham Ingalls (January 16, 1888-August 13, 1958) was an American astronomer and editor. He was born in Watkins Glen, New York, an only child. In 1914 he graduated from Cornell University. He worked odd jobs, including telegraph operator, until enlisting in the New York National Guard and serving in France during World War I. In 1923 he joined the staff of the Scientific American and worked there as an editor until his retirement in 1955. - Franklin Benjamin Sanborn
Franklin Benjamin Sanborn (December 15, 1831-February 24, 1917) was an American journalist, author, and reformer. Sanborn was a social scientist, and a memorialist of American transcendentalism who wrote early biographies of many of the movement's key figures. He founded the American Social Science Association, in 1865, "to treat wisely the great social problems of the day." He was a member of the Secret Six, … - Carol Mendelsohn
Carol Mendelsohn (born 1951) is an American TV writer, notable for her work on the crime drama "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation". Mendelsohn grew up in Chicago. She went to Smith College, but later transferred and in 1973 graduated from Cornell University. She then went to the George Washington University Law School and practiced at the Washington, D.C., office of the prominent Los Angeles-based firm Wyman, Bautzer, Rothman, & Kuchel. - Evan Caminker
Evan H. Caminker (born June 26, 1961, Los Angeles, California) is Dean of the University of Michigan Law School, United States. He succeeded Jeffrey S. Lehman, who resigned to become president of Cornell University. Caminker was appointed dean just as the United States Supreme Court issued a landmark ruling upholding the constitutionality of the Law School's affirmative action admissions policies, … - Erick Schonfeld
Erick Schonfeld is the Co-Editor of TechCrunch. He has been covering startups and technology news since 1993. Prior to TechCrunch, he was Editor-at-Large for Business 2.0 magazine, where he wrote feature stories and ran their main blog, Next Net, which had nearly 50,000 RSS subscribers. He also does a lot of video work and hosts regular panels of industry luminaries. Schonfeld started his career at Fortune magazine. - John Carew Rolfe
John Carew Rolfe, Ph.D. (b. 1859, Newburyport, Massachusetts - d. 1943) was an American classical scholar, the son of William J. Rolfe. He graduated from Harvard in 1881 and from Cornell (Ph.D.) in 1885. He taught at Cornell (1882 - 1885), at Harvard (1889 - 1890), at the University of Michigan, and at the University of Pennsylvania. He was professor in 1907 - 1908 at the American School of Classical Studies in Rome. - Rabeah Ghaffari
Rabeah Ghaffari is an Iranian-born filmmaker, writer, film editor and actress. As an actress, she has performed at many New York theaters including La MaMa, ETC, Theatre 22, The Judith Anderson and The Kitchen. Most recently she has played a lead role in "Windows", a film by Shoja Azari (Competition selection of the Tribeca Film Festival 2006). As a filmmaker she has made a feature length documentary, "The Troupe", … - Marc Zawel
An accomplished journalist, digital media strategist and entrepreneur raised in Purchase, New York, Marc is a first year MBA student concentrating in both Entrepreneurship and Marketing at the University of North Carolina's Kenan-Flagler Business School . At UNC, he is actively involved with the Entrepreneurship Club , Admissions Advisory Board and the MBA Ambassadors. He is a blogger on the Kenan-Flagler Blog . - James Tiedje
James Tiedje tiedjej@msu.edu James Tiedje is University Distinguished Professor of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, and of Crop and Soil Sciences, and is Director of the Center for Microbial Ecology at Michigan State University. His research focuses on microbial ecology, physiology and diversity, especially regarding the nitrogen cycle, biodegradation of environmental pollutants and use of molecular methods to understand microbial community structure and function. - Eqbal Ahmad
Eqbal Ahmad (1933/34 - May 11, 1999) was a Pakistani writer, journalist, and anti-war activist. He was strongly critical of the Middle East strategy of the United States as well as what he saw as the "twin curse" of nationalism and religious fanaticism in such countries as Pakistan. - Carl Sagan
As you can see I'm not that into myspace. It really only exists because I'm too lazy to click the delete account button. I really only check it once a week or so. If you really want to get a hold of me use facebook...
|
| |