Search Results for: ,FaS
Hendricks Chapel seeks applicants for 2011 spring break interfaith trip
“Many Faiths … One Humanity,” will be an interfaith travel study experience to London.
SU in the News: Tuesday, September 14
Chronicle of Higher Education and Inside Higher Ed stories feature ACRL report authored by iSchool’s Megan Oakleaf
SU in the News: Tuesday, September 14, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE Syracuse University’s inclusion on a recently released Newsweek national poll of the 25 most service-minded schools was noted in a Times-Picayune article about Tulane University’s community-service ranking. A report on the value of academic libraries…
Westcott Neighborhood Bulb Giveaway/Garden Extravaganza will distribute more than 17,000 daffodil bulbs
The Westcott Neighborhood eighth annual Bulb Giveaway/Garden Extravaganza is working to distribute more than 17,000 bulbs for planting throughout Syracuse this fall.
University Lectures 2010-11 season begins Sept. 21 with award-winning green economic strategist Majora Carter
Majora Carter, green economic strategist, television and radio host and president of the Majora Carter Group, LLC, will kick off a spectacular 10th season of the University Lectures series on Tuesday, Sept. 21.
SU in the News: Tuesday, September 7, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE Data from Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) is mentioned in a Law.com article about asylum seekers and legal representation; a CBS News (Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas) story on deportation cases involving noncitizens with pending…
SU in the News: Tuesday, September 7
Whitman School Dean Melvin Stith featured in Diverse Issues in Higher Education
SU in the News: Thursday, September 2, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE The fashion design program in the College of Visual and Performing Arts and its spring 2010 menswear design competition is highlighted in the August issue of MR magazine. The Downtown Express, a community newspaper of…
SU in the News: Thursday, September 2
Lower Manhattan’s Downtown Express features Syracuse University Mentor Mentee Alliance and first-year student Melissa Peralta
Syracuse University research team uses nanobiotechnology-manipulated light particles to accelerate algae growth; may be a key to creating efficient biofuel production
Scientists and engineers seek to meet three goals in the production of biofuels from non-edible sources such as microalgae: efficiency, economical production and ecological sustainability. A team led by Syracuse University’s Radhakrishna Sureshkumar, professor and chair of biomedical and chemical engineering in the L.C. Smith College of Engineering and Computer Science, has uncovered a process that is a promising step toward accomplishing these three goals.