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SU community encouraged to wear red, raise awareness of heart disease among women Feb. 5
Syracuse University’s Healthy Monday initiative, in collaboration with the Sid and Helaine Center for Health Communications and the Lerner Center and with support from Newhouse School Dean Lorraine Branham, is asking SU students, faculty and staff to wear red on Friday, Feb. 5.
SU in the News: Thursday, January 28, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE LaVonda Reed-Huff, associate professor in the College of Law, is mentioned in Radio Business Report for her role in serving on a panel at an FCC investigation of ownership diversity in radio. The Post-Standard reported…
SU in the News: Thursday, January 28
Radio Business Report notes College of Law’s LaVonda Reed-Huff testimony for FCC investigation of ownership diversity in radio
SU commission ‘Borat in Syracuse’ up for Grammy Award
Paquito D’Rivera’s piece, “Borat in Syracuse,” created for Pulse and the Syracuse Symposium, has been nominated for a Grammy Award as Best Instrumental Composition.
SU in the News: Wednesday, January 27, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE Research by R. Craig Albertson, assistant professor of biology in The College of Arts and Sciences, and Thomas Stewart ‘09, is featured in a RedOrbit article on evolution and asymmetry in African cichlids, a scale-eating…
SU in the News: Wednesday, January 27
RedOrbit features research by Arts and Sciences’ R. Craig Albertson and Thomas Stewart ’09 on evolution of African cichlid fish
Legendary singer, civil rights activist Mavis Staples to perform at SU Feb. 27
Mavis Staples, a Grammy Award-nominee, will bring her inspirational music and experiences to Syracuse University on Saturday, Feb. 27.
Library resource guide on Haiti earthquake available
Syracuse University Librarians Bonnie Ryan and John Olson have compiled a resource guide related to the recent earthquake in Haiti.
Tunes and ‘Toons: Banjoist Tony Trischka, New Yorker cartoonist Matthew Diffee explore intersections of art and music
Last fall, College of Arts and Sciences professors Cathryn Newton and Samuel Gorovitz invited musician Tony Trischka and cartoonist Matthew Diffee to participate in HNR 250, “Linked Lenses: Science, Philosophy and the Pursuit of Knowledge.”