Search Results for: ,ULA
SU in the News: Wednesday, May 5
Newhouse School’s Robert Thompson quoted by NPR on media coverage of bomb scare incidents
SU linguist lands coveted Humboldt Research Award
Jaklin Kornfilt, professor of languages, literatures and linguistics (LLL) in SU’s College of Arts and Sciences, has been elected recipient of the 2010 Humboldt Research Award.
University College Commencement honors part-time graduates
University College of Syracuse University will honor the part-time students of the class of 2010 at its 62nd annual Commencement celebration, May 13 at Hendricks Chapel.
SU in the News: Tuesday, May 4, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE An article on the future of academic libraries in the Library Journal mentions the Syracuse University Library and quotes Vice Chancellor and Provost Eric Spina and Kal Alston, associate provost for academic affairs and professor…
SU in the News: Tuesday, May 4
The iSchool’s Dale Meyerrose quoted by Fox News about industrial espionage vulnerability at Shanghai’s 2010 World Expo
SU in the News: Monday, May 3, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE Donald Siegel, earth sciences professor in The College of Arts and Sciences, is featured in a Post-Standard article about the debate over hydrofracking and its regulation in New York State. Retired Syracuse University professors Bryce…
SU in the News: Monday, May 3
Maxwell School’s John Palmer quoted in Associated Press on health care law and Medicare
iSchool students to offer observations on Interop 2010 conference at May 5 presentation
Four Syracuse iSchool students in the M.S. in telecommunications and network management program will share highlights from their recent trip to the Interop 2010 conference during a presentation at 5 p.m. on Wednesday, May 5.
Early Education and Child Care Center, VPA students collaborate on play-centric learning tools
The tools were designed and built by students in the Environmental Practicum class.
SU mourns loss of beloved German scholar, teacher
Outside Gerlinde Ulm Sanford’s office in H.B. Crouse Hall is a small altar adorned with reminders of one of Syracuse University’s most beloved professors: a copy of Goethe’s “Faust,” photos and postcards, several origami balls, flowers and dried fruit and leaves. Tucked inside one of the artifacts—a magazine about Weimar, Sanford’s second home—is a faded clipping about the 2004 fire that tore through the city’s Herzogin Anna Amalia Library, destroying more than 50,000 books. Friend and colleague Karl Solibakke suspects that the conflagration was not far from Sanford’s mind, even up until her death on Tuesday, April 27, at age 70.