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Bowling!!

The Ag Sciences Club is planning for a fun night of extreme bowling, free food, and fellowship!

When:     Tuesday, October 27, 7:30 p.m.
Where:    Helen Newman, North Campus


Come join the fun as we show off  our awesome bowling talents as  Ag Sci students or, if you’re anything like me, try and acquire some new ones  🙂

This is such a great opportunity to get to know everyone in our incredible major better! Come join the fun!

R.S.V.P. on the Facebook club page

-Laura Stamp, Ag Sciences club president

Fall Orientation 2009

35 new freshman, transfer, and exchange students attended orientation on Monday, August 24. The AgSci Ambassadors led some crazy-awesome team-building and icebreaker activities, including a rousing game of SPUD. Students and faculty connected over lunch, which was followed by remarks from Program Coordinator Kari and Director Toni about the major. The Ambassadors offered some useful links and suggestions for getting involved on campus.

Check out the video! Orientation 2009

Ambassadors in Summer

Contrary to popular belief, campus isn’t deserted in summer.  Professors work year-round on research, special projects, or teaching summer classes.  Some students remain for summer classes, research, or internships.  Sports camps, 4-H events, Cornell reunions, and high school summer programs take over the dorms.  Staff – from dining hall employees to the CALS Career Development Office – also keep busy during summer.

The AgSci Ambassadors are also finding plenty to do!  Some of us have met prospective or newly-admitted students for lunch; others are in touch with prospective or new students via email.  Even better, a few intrepid Ambassadors are blogging up a storm about their internships!

If you’d like to connect with a current student in AgSci, email us at agsciambassadors@cornell.edu.

We celebrate graduates!

May 24 we celebrated our first cohort of five graduates. We’re so proud!

Joe Brightly, Matt Eckhardt, and Megan Fenton

From left: Joe Brightly, Matt Eckhardt, and Megan Fenton

JOE BRIGHTLYJoe Brightly transferred to Cornell as a junior, taking classes that aim to improve soil health and fertility, business management, and control of harmful insects and weeds. He returned home to work for his father on the family farm.

 

 

 

MATT ECKHARDTMatt Eckhardt came to Cornell as a transfer student in Fall 2007 with an Associates in Crop Production from SUNY Cobleskill. Matt grew up on his family’s 800 acre cash crop and vegetable farm in Eastern New York. During his time at Cornell, Matt continuing pursuing his interest in crop consulting and crop advisor certification. After graduation he will continue working with the farm and crop consulting.

 

ROB FARNHAMRob Farnham always knew his passion was agriculture. He has always had the feeling that if he couldn’t be a farmer that he would devote himself to helping them. Rob started his college career at SUNY Cobleskill where he received an Associates Degree in Agricultural Business in 2006. As an Agricultural Sciences student, Rob interned with a large dairy farm in western NY and with Syngenta Seeds in Omaha Nebraska. He has now taken a full time position with Syngenta as a Seed Sales and Marketing Representative in Central Pennsylvania. Rob’s long term plans are to return to farming after gaining experience in industry.

 

MEGAN FENTONMegan Fenton did not move far from home when she came to Cornell. Megan grew up only a short distance from Ithaca in Penn Yan, New York. While at Cornell, Megan maintained involvement in Future Farmers of America and received her American degree last semester. For Megan, her time at Cornell University was a period of intellectual and personal growth in an environment where she felt lucky to have professors she truly admired. After graduation Megan plans to continue with a life in production agriculture and utilize all the knowledge she gained.

 

MIRIAM GOLER Miriam Goler is from New York City. She started her undergraduate studies in Biological and Environmental Engineering and switched into the Agricultural Sciences major her junior year. She is most proud of the semester she spent working in Mexico, where she helped start a community garden, coordinated a series of workshops on organic gardening, and helped build a rooftop vegetable garden. She also completed a research project with Quirine Ketterings on the Illinois Soil Nitrogen Test that culminated in a co-authored paper in a peer-reviewed journal. She is currently working at Cooperative Extension on issues of food access for low-income community members, and is returning to New York City to continue working on similar issues as an AmeriCorps volunteer with the non-profit Just Food.

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