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Holocaust and genocide scholar Samuel Totten to present lectures, workshops Feb. 9-10
The Regional Holocaust and Genocide Initiative: Resistance, Resilience and Responsibility, will welcome Samuel Totten to Syracuse University on Feb. 9 and 10, to participate in a series of lectures and workshops on the Holocaust and present-day genocides. On Feb. 9…
SU in the News: Friday, February 4, 2011
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE A Wall Street Journal blog featured the new class, “The Beatles,” being offered this semester through the College of Visual and Performing Arts. WSYR-TV reported on Wednesday’s blood drive at the Schine Student Center, as…
SU in the News: Friday, February 4
Wall Street Journal blog features new SU class, “The Beatles”
Dahesh Museum of Art and SU continue collaboration with ‘The Essential Line’
First in-depth exhibition of Dahesh Museum’s excellent drawing collection Drawing, an integral part of 19th-century academic training and art-making process, is the focus of the third collaboration in three years between the Dahesh Museum of Art and Syracuse University. “The…
SU campus to celebrate Chinese Spring Festival Feb. 4
Spring Festival, the important Chinese holiday marking the arrival of the New Year, begins on Feb. 3. The Chinese Student and Scholar Association (CSSA) will simultaneously celebrate the holiday and educate the University community about it through a unique collaboration…
Jonathan Katz to lecture on controversial exhibition, censorship Feb. 7
Light Work, Hendricks Chapel and the LGBT Resource Center have announced a Feb. 7 lecture by Jonathan Katz, co-curator of the important Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery exhibition “Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture.” The talk will take place at…
Students, faculty explore business, cultural implications of Super Bowl in new course offering
A new course, “The Super Bowl and Society,” debuted in the College of Human Ecology this semester. With enrollment of more than 100 students, SPM 199 explores the evolution and strategic brilliance that has allowed a football game to become a…
Ray Smith Symposium continues music of conflict theme with ‘Refugees and Exile,’ Feb. 17-18
The Ray Smith Symposium in Syracuse University’s College of Arts and Sciences continues its yearlong exploration of “Music of Conflict and Reconciliation” with a two-day program titled “Refugees and Exile.” Events include a colloquium, featuring ethnomusicologists Michael Frishkopf (University of…
SU in the News: Thursday, January 27, 2011
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE The New York Times and the Chronicle of Higher Education reported on the performance of Syracuse University’s endowment, as reported annually by the NACUBO-Commonfund Study of Endowments. The Utica Observer-Dispatch highlighted an upcoming performance at…
SU in the News: Thursday, January 27
Arts and Sciences’ David Yaffe writes in Village Voice on Bob Dylan