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Architecture Dean Mark Robbins named executive director of International Center of Photography in New York City
Robbins, who since 2004 has served as dean of the School of Architecture, will depart the University and begin his new position at the ICP in New York City on July 1.
SU in the News: Wednesday, May 9
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE The Christian Science Monitor and the Knoxville News Sentinel featured a photo from SU Florence’s 2005 production of “Where the Wild Things Are” in an article on the passing of author Maurice Sendak. The Huffington…
MacArthur Foundation awards $500,000 to Maxwell School for housing affordability research
The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation has awarded $500,000 to Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs to study how housing affordability affects decisions made by older adults about their health care, living arrangements and well-being. The…
SU in the News: Friday, April 27
National and international media quote College of Law’s David M. Crane on Charles Taylor conviction
SU Drama announces 2012-2013 season
The Department of Drama in the College of Visual and Performing Arts has announced its 2012-2013 season. Offerings will include Stephen Sondheim’s legendary musical “Merrily We Roll Along”; the passionate Jacobean drama “’Tis Pity She’s a Whore”; the comic “Top…
Giving students a new perspective on food waste
Think back to when you were a kid. Did your parents ever make you finish all of the food on your plate before you could be excused from the table? While many of us can probably recall such memories, you’d…
SU in the News: Thursday, April 26
College of Law’s Kevin Maillard discusses the myth of traditional families in New York Times
‘Sweet lovers love the spring’ in ‘As You Like It’
At the heart of the joyful play “As You Like It” is perhaps Shakespeare’s greatest comic heroine, Rosalind. As a woman disguised as a man, she exists not fully as either but in between, where she can relish the privilege…
Syracuse University study finds autumn advantage for invasive plants in eastern United States
Much like the fabled tortoise and the hare, the competition between native and invasive plants growing in deciduous forests in the Eastern United States is all about how the plants cross the finish line in autumn. A new study by…
SU in the News: Tuesday, April 24
College of Law’s David M. Crane quoted by AP on Special Court for Sierra Leone and Charles Taylor