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(11/13/25 2:00pm)
“What have we done? What can we do?” laments the chorus in the final moments of Hurricane Diane, facing a ravaged world that slipped through their fingers as they sat idly by, drinking coffee. Storms ravage their homes, flooding the streets and their beloved lawns as they sit sheltered behind their French doors.
(11/13/25 7:33am)
Each year, the ILR Labor Roundtable brings dozens of labor leaders to Cornell’s campus, giving students from all backgrounds an opportunity to learn about the labor movement — a movement where workers collectively bargain for improved wages, benefits and working conditions.
(11/13/25 7:36am)
A new public policy major option now available to College of Arts and Sciences students was announced on Sept. 25. This opens the program to the University’s largest college, as the major had previously been exclusive to its smallest school — the Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy.
(11/13/25 3:03am)
“It’s all connected.”
(11/13/25 2:54am)
The Common Council passed a resolution to adopt an adjusted budget for the 2026 fiscal year following a projected budget shortage at its Wednesday meeting.
(11/13/25 2:32am)
Students of PSYCH 4500 are turning psychology and cognitive science into fun, interactive exhibits for young children at the Sciencenter, a hands-on science museum in downtown Ithaca.
(11/13/25 12:24am)
Take Back the Tap is a student-led initiative at Cornell University that was first established in the early 2000s when the Student Assembly passed Resolution 35 called “Taking Back the Tap.”
(11/12/25 6:17pm)
Album of the Year
(11/12/25 3:37pm)
Making program history, sophomore Gilda Dondona placed first at the ICSA Women's Singlehanded National Championship on Nov. 9th at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, and brought home the Janet Lutz Trophy.
(11/12/25 2:42pm)
Following a loss to Yale in the Ivy League Tournament for the third consecutive season, the men’s basketball program looks at this year as an opportunity to claim the ever-elusive Ivy League title. Last season, the team picked up where it left off, finishing second in regular season play and narrowly losing out on a ticket to March Madness. Unlike two years ago, however, the Red was not given a spot in the National Invitation Tournament, making its loss against Yale its last game.
(11/12/25 2:38pm)
The men’s tennis team’s fall campaign is entering its final stages, but it’s been a long, eventful adventure — from early-season Ivy invitationals to national qualifying tournaments on opposite coasts. It began with developmental weekends at Yale and Penn, where the Red’s younger players gained match experience while the seasoned veterans found their rhythm.
(11/12/25 1:17pm)
Cornell played the game.
(11/12/25 1:00pm)
(11/14/25 8:59am)
Tensions over TeraWulf’s proposed data center in Lansing, New York, continue to escalate as the company and property owner, Cayuga Operating Company, threaten legal action against the Town of Lansing over alleged violations of public meeting laws. The Lansing Town Board is also considering passing a proposal that would delay construction on the data center.
(11/12/25 4:33am)
The men’s basketball team struggled to find its rhythm offensively on Sunday afternoon, resulting in a 76-65 road loss to Illinois State (1-1, 0-0 Missouri Valley).
(11/12/25 3:31am)
Under the lights of Schoellkopf Field, surrounded by family, teammates and four years’ worth of memories, Cornell sprint football’s seniors took the field for one final home game. The night was filled with emotion, pride, nostalgia and the kind of energy that only Senior Night can bring.
(11/12/25 3:29am)
In what was an otherwise clear evening, Cornell rained down on Columbia’s Senior Day celebrations on Nov. 8, bringing a tight 1-0 victory from the city back to central New York.
(11/11/25 11:18pm)
The Student Assembly announced the results of its Fall 2025 election on Tuesday. Out of 16 first-year and four transfer candidates running, four first-year and one transfer student were ultimately selected to represent their respective classes.
(11/11/25 10:13pm)
Last Friday, Cornell made a deal with the Trump administration. The settlement restores millions in federal funding while avoiding explicit limits on university autonomy. Cornell's leaders have framed the deal as a deft compromise — a way to move forward without betraying our principles.
(11/12/25 6:00pm)
While we may have grown up in the prime of television, it seems we’re now condemned to watching shows about contentious characters. Poor scripts, bleak screenplays and insufferable themes run rampant like a plague in modern pop culture. I fear I keep watching abysmal television out of an innocent desperation for just a bit of dopamine to be released in my rotting cranium.