Opinion
SCHWARZ | How We Learn from Our Students
Some of my colleagues and even my own students are surprised when I say that I learn from my students every day. I was told when I first thought about being a professor that high school and elementary school teachers teach a subject to students, and college professors teach the subject and are not […]
LITVAK | The Middle East Conflict and the Faculty’s Responsibility
There is an episode of Seinfeld in which Jerry’s Catholic dentist, Tim Whately, converts to Judaism. Jerry is very upset and goes to complain to a priest that Whately has been telling Jewish jokes. The priest, perplexed, asks whether Jerry takes offense at Whately’s jokes as a Jewish person. “No, father,” Jerry insists indignantly, “I […]
EINHORN | How Cornellians Can Rise to the Challenge of Our Time
Dear Cornell students, Today, I’m reaching out as part of the Cornell community, which is of deep importance to me and my family. I attended Cornell, as did my parents and two of my children. Our Cornell family is struggling and in turmoil. At a time when many of my peers are sending angry letters […]
MARGULIES | There Is No Them, There Is Only Us
I have been at Cornell for 10 years and in academia for two decades and have never seen so many students in so much distress. A great many Muslim and Arab students feel unseen, unheard and unsafe. More recently, their ranks have been swelled by the many Jewish students who feel the campus has become […]
SCHWARZ | Anti-Semitism at Cornell and Beyond: Then and Now
I not only have taught and written with great pleasure at Cornell for 56 years, but I have also been treated very well here. For those reasons, this is a difficult piece to write. We at Cornell do not want to become the poster people for blatant anti-Semitism on campuses, and we do not think […]
LIVSHITS | The United States is Not a Third-World Country
The rise of globalization has inevitably revitalized fields of comparison for state economic success, including measures of Gross Domestic Product, Purchasing Power Parity, Corruption Perceptions Index and inflation rate. For most people, assuming they were born after World War I, these economic measures for the standard of living have dominated the perception of wealthy and […]
Letter to the Editor | Cornell University’s Funds Must Not, Cannot be Diverted
Re “Cornell Still Does Not Pay its Fair Share to the City of Ithaca” (Guest essay, Nov. 4) To the Editor: The guest piece by three officers of the Cornell Chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) posted on Nov. 4 regarding Cornell’s financial obligations to the City of Ithaca is misguided. They […]
SENZON | Put the Phone Down?
It feels surreal to live in an age where everyone has access to the internet, allowing us to create a narrative of who we are, and what we stand for from the touch of our phone screens. The technological advancements in the past century have created unspoken interconnectedness, resulting in people giving their two cents […]
BATEMAN | Cornell Still Does Not Pay its Fair Share to the City of Ithaca
Wealthy universities across the country benefit from tax exempt status while they sit on endowments in the billions that grow every year and collect millions in tuition dollars annually. Their tax exempt status can have a significant impact on the budgets of the cities and towns that host them. PiLOTS (payments in lieu of taxes) […]
SEX ON THURSDAY | The Thrill of Submission
All sex is fun, but not all sex is exciting. I enjoy all sex: tender and passionate sex; lots of kisses accompanied with a cuddle session at the end is my ideal evening date. However, I have a soft spot for rough play, especially when I am on the submissive end of things. The energetic […]