We're gonna be in the news again

Started by stereax, March 10, 2025, 09:04:56 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

David Harding

Quote from: nyc94Not sure if it's correct but

https://www.reddit.com/r/Cornell/comments/1knh24o/cornell_presidents_house_in_cayuga_heights_is_up/
QuoteEdmund Ezra Day was the last president to live in the A.D. White House on central campus. For his successor, Deane Malott, the university rented, renovated, and eventually purchased 205 Oak Hill Road. He was given this house for life as a retirement gift, and the university purchased the 511 Cayuga Heights Road property in 1963 for James Perkins—one theory being that this property was farther away from campus and therefore more difficult for students to stage protests at.

Dale Corson chose not to move in after Perkins' resignation, so Cornell sold it. They purchased 603 Cayuga Heights Road for Frank Rhodes, which too became a retirement gift. With a "special" alumni gift, the university then re-purchased Robin Hill for Hunter Rawlings in 1995, after which Lehman, Skorton, and Pollock also took residence.

I think that's right.  I only had part of the story in my mind.  https://www.ithaca.com/news/ithaca/cornell-lists-historic-president-s-house-for-sale-at-2-5-million/article_55d7359a-f67c-4222-ba4b-aa595e09db06.html   https://www.cayugaheightshistory.org/robin-hill-pdf.html

Chris '03

Quote from: Scersk '97
Quote from: upprdeckyou would think if we join forces the board could buy this and people would have a place to stay when they come in for hockey games.

house for sale

Am I mistaken, or is that where Charlie Moore invited the band over when he became AD?

It looks like where they invited the band and hosted "hats off for hunter" to recognize his (first) retirement in 2003.
"Mark Mazzoleni looks like a guy whose dog just died out there..."

George64

Cornell only mentioned in a table in this NY Times article.  It appears that our large enrollment may soften the impact from the proposed endowment tax.  At the moment, it's progressive tax based on endowment per student.

Roy 82

Quote from: HeafDog
Quote from: ugarte
Quote from: upprdeckHarvard gonna play hardball over this stuff they are trying to pull.
so is cornell

Good. :-( I would rather we go flat broke, and our beloved alma mater turn into a ghost town, than buckle to these clowns.

I'm not sure how this relates to Cornell's own legal action but there was a lot of press recently about how Cornell and Columbia were the only Ivies that didn't officially support Harvard's legal action. I'll leave legal terms like "Amicus Brief" to the experts.
Crimson article on who is supporting Harvard[/url

If Cornell is not offering support due to its own separate legal action then that is one thing. But I hope we are not cowering in fear.

(BTW the formatting issues with this post are due to eLynah processing of a URL insertion.)

George64

Here is the administration's response to my April 17 email to Kotlikoff:

Thank you for your message to President Kotlikoff, which I am sharing with leadership. President Kotlikoff deeply appreciates the engagement of our community. I wanted to share information about how Cornell is responding to recent changes in the federal and higher education landscapes.
 
Cornell is actively seeking details from federal officials regarding research funding freezes reported in the news media. While the university has not received any official notice confirming these cuts or the rationale behind them, we have experienced substantial federal research funding loss across every campus and within every college and school. The research at risk is vital to public health and medicine, military readiness and national security, and a range of U.S. industries.
 
We are responding thoughtfully and strategically – including legal, communications and policy-level engagement to reverse these cuts and protect our core mission. When federal agencies imposed funding cuts to research activities sponsored by the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Energy, Cornell swiftly stepped forward, along with higher education groups and other leading research universities, to challenge these actions in court.
 
In April, President Kotlikoff joined more than 550 leaders and officials from other institutions to sign on to a letter from the American Association of Colleges & Universities calling for constructive engagement between higher education and government. Cornell leadership continues to be guided by our foundational commitment to "... any person ... any study" and our institutional principles.
 
Alongside peer institutions, we're collectively showcasing the tangible, everyday impact of Cornell's research to our state, nation, and world, and the value of colleges and universities to educating our nation's citizens and workers. We hope you can join us by sharing this website with your fellow alumni and networks.
 
Sincerely,
Sarah Evans
 
Sarah Evans
Staff Writer & Correspondence Manager
Offices of the President and Provost
Cornell University
.

George64

Quote from: George64Here is the administration's response to my April 17 email to Kotlikoff:

Thank you for your message to President Kotlikoff, which I am sharing with leadership. President Kotlikoff deeply appreciates the engagement of our community. I wanted to share information about how Cornell is responding to recent changes in the federal and higher education landscapes.
 
Cornell is actively seeking details from federal officials regarding research funding freezes reported in the news media. While the university has not received any official notice confirming these cuts or the rationale behind them, we have experienced substantial federal research funding loss across every campus and within every college and school. The research at risk is vital to public health and medicine, military readiness and national security, and a range of U.S. industries.
 
We are responding thoughtfully and strategically – including legal, communications and policy-level engagement to reverse these cuts and protect our core mission. When federal agencies imposed funding cuts to research activities sponsored by the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Energy, Cornell swiftly stepped forward, along with higher education groups and other leading research universities, to challenge these actions in court.
 
In April, President Kotlikoff joined more than 550 leaders and officials from other institutions to sign on to a letter from the American Association of Colleges & Universities calling for constructive engagement between higher education and government. Cornell leadership continues to be guided by our foundational commitment to "... any person ... any study" and our institutional principles.
 
Alongside peer institutions, we're collectively showcasing the tangible, everyday impact of Cornell's research to our state, nation, and world, and the value of colleges and universities to educating our nation's citizens and workers. We hope you can join us by sharing this website with your fellow alumni and networks.
 
Sincerely,
Sarah Evans
 
Sarah Evans
Staff Writer & Correspondence Manager
Offices of the President and Provost
Cornell University

You might also want to read President Kotlikoff's State of the University address.

stereax

Quote from: Roy 82
Quote from: HeafDog
Quote from: ugarte
Quote from: upprdeckHarvard gonna play hardball over this stuff they are trying to pull.
so is cornell

Good. :-( I would rather we go flat broke, and our beloved alma mater turn into a ghost town, than buckle to these clowns.

I'm not sure how this relates to Cornell's own legal action but there was a lot of press recently about how Cornell and Columbia were the only Ivies that didn't officially support Harvard's legal action. I'll leave legal terms like "Amicus Brief" to the experts.

Crimson article on who is supporting Harvard

If Cornell is not offering support due to its own separate legal action then that is one thing. But I hope we are not cowering in fear.

(BTW the formatting issues with this post are due to eLynah processing of a URL insertion.)
Roy, bud, you forgot this: ]

George64

Friday's NY Times: "And in a statement on Wednesday ominously titled "a message on financial austerity," leaders at Cornell, which also has a substantial endowment, described a dire landscape."

billhoward

This from the Ithaca Voice. Says Cornell headcount [one assumes this to mean to employees not stoners] grew wildly the last 3-4 years. Maybe Cornell did not replace some departed staff during the Covid years and then overdid the hiring:

Quote from: Matt Butler, EIC, The Ithaca VoiceCornell President Michael Kotlikoff and other university leaders delivered the news via a campus-wide email Wednesday [6/18/25] afternoon.

The letter announced the initiation of a "comprehensive review of programs and headcount across the university," caused by a 15% growth in the workforce since 2021 that has, in Kotlikoff's words, "greatly outpac[ed] our revenue."
https://ithacavoice.org/2025/06/layoffs-further-cuts-likely-at-cornell-as-federal-scrutiny-continues/
Our 15th president, in addition to being a solid hoops fan, is master of the dry understatement.

Iceberg

Quote from: billhowardThis from the Ithaca Voice. Says Cornell headcount [one assumes this to mean to employees not stoners] grew wildly the last 3-4 years. Maybe Cornell did not replace some departed staff during the Covid years and then overdid the hiring:

Quote from: Matt Butler, EIC, The Ithaca VoiceCornell President Michael Kotlikoff and other university leaders delivered the news via a campus-wide email Wednesday [6/18/25] afternoon.

The letter announced the initiation of a "comprehensive review of programs and headcount across the university," caused by a 15% growth in the workforce since 2021 that has, in Kotlikoff's words, "greatly outpac[ed] our revenue."
https://ithacavoice.org/2025/06/layoffs-further-cuts-likely-at-cornell-as-federal-scrutiny-continues/
Our 15th president, in addition to being a solid hoops fan, is master of the dry understatement.

No doubt they overhired like many other private organizations within and outside of the higher education sector. They're just a bit late in reducing headcount because it looks much worse when a university does it compared to a Deloitte or a Meta.

upprdeck

I think they forget that the head count has been down and they are trying to fill lines that were in the budget but have been empty.

billhoward

When headcount is relative to the Covid years then maybe there was some extra positions to fill. But a little part of us all suspects academia doesn't run as lean as, say, Google.

George64

Finally, some good news!  Will Professor Steve Strogatz do for math what Carl Sagan did for science?

Al DeFlorio

Quote from: George64Finally, some good news!  Will Professor Steve Strogatz do for math what Carl Sagan did for science?
Can't access the Times, but Strogatz co-authored a brilliant piece of instructional software for differential equations that was sold by Addison-Wesley back in the 90s.
Al DeFlorio '65

George64

Quote from: Al DeFlorio
Quote from: George64Finally, some good news!  Will Professor Steve Strogatz do for math what Carl Sagan did for science?
Can't access the Times, but Strogatz co-authored a brilliant piece of instructional software for differential equations that was sold by Addison-Wesley back in the 90s.
Try archivebuttons.com: [https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/01/insider/math-revealed.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare]