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Qatar

A Clear Stance on Cornell’s Values

Sep 15, 2011

Cornell owes it to its students to take a stance on the Sheikha Mozah controversy and future conflicts that arise due to cultural differences between Qatar and the U.S.

COLA Pushes for Better Labor Standards in Qatar

Max Schindler  —  Mar 1, 2011

Citing a U.S. State Department report, members of Cornell’s Organization for Labor Action organized a teach-in at Ives Hall on Monday to urge the University to stengthen its employment practices in Qatar.

Dean David Hajjar Receives Fulbright Scholarship

Max Schindler  —  Feb 16, 2011

David P. Hajjar will work with biological science faculty at Qatar University and try to develop more research ties with Cornell.

COLA Cautions Against Worker Abuses in Qatar

Joseph Niczky  —  Feb 4, 2011

After hearing stories of labor abuses in Qatar, students from COLA took steps Wednesday to ensure that the same abuses will not happen to Cornell employees.

There's a Place Like Home

Isabel Spyrou  —  May 6, 2010

On a visit abroad as an IthaQatar ambassador, Izzy Spyrou finds that Cornell University's most distant campus is as similar to the Ithaca campus as it is different.

Qatar Campus Expands Despite Current Economy

Michael Linhorst  —  Mar 6, 2009

While Cornell faces a $200 million budget shortfall and University-wide budget cuts, the Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar is continuing to expand. The Qatari campus, which is largely funded by a non-profit organization established by the Qatari government, expects a larger budget and expanded research program next year.

Cornell’s campus in Qatar, a small nation on the Persian Gulf, was established in 2002. It has not yet reached its “full maturity,” said Stephen Cohen, the associate provost of Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City.

“Overall, the student body is still growing and faculty is growing,” he said.

Ithaca and Abroad: What it Means to Be a Cornellian

Sanjiv Tata  —  Feb 3, 2009

I am in my last semester at Cornell, so perhaps it’s not surprising that I find myself missing Cornell even before I have left with my coveted degree in hand. As I stroll across the Arts Quad under the watchful eyes of Ezra Cornell and A.D. White, I am fiercely proud to call myself a Cornellian. And yet, this sense of nostalgia raises a profound question: Do we share a common conception of what it means to be a Cornellian?

Quite frankly, the more I ponder the question, the more I’m convinced that it is overly simplistic and risks missing the point. Cornell is more than the sum of its parts, and its multifaceted nature ensures that each of us has a slightly different understanding of what it means to be a Cornellian.

Weill Qatar’s First Dean and Pioneer Retires Post

Brendan Doyle  —  Sep 30, 2008

After 43 years as professor and administrator of the Weill Cornell Medical College, Dr. Daniel R. Alonso announced his retirement as dean of the school’s Qatar campus. When he leaves this January, he will be replaced by Deputy Dean Dr. Javaid Sheikh. Alonso’s retirement comes shortly after the graduation of WCMC-Q’s first class in May.

“He brought really bold vision to the project,” said Dr. Carol Storey-Johnson, senior associate dean of education, WCMC in Manhattan. “He had faith in the project at a time when people weren’t sure it would work.”

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