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SU’s Copeland-Morgan to participate in Capitol Hill panel, MTV College Affordability Challenge
On Jan. 19, Syracuse University’s Youlonda Copeland-Morgan will travel to Capitol Hill as part of a panel to review key findings from the College Board report “Cracking the Student Aid Code.” The day’s events will also include the announcement of…
SU in the News: Thursday, January 13
TechNews World quotes the iSchool’s Milton Mueller on freedom of speech online
Raymond Carver Reading Series announces spring lineup
The spring lineup for the Raymond Carver Reading Series begins Feb. 9 with novelist and literary critic Stacey D’Erasmo, and continues with essayist and novelist Victor LaValle (Feb. 23), novelist and short story writer Sam Lipsyte (March 9), award-winning poet…
SU in the News: Thursday, January 13, 2011
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE The New York Times reported on the discovery of new documents by SU’s Cold Case Justice Initiative and the SU Law students, which helped create a new lead for an unsolved, racially motivated murder case…
Cold Case Justice Initiative provides documents leading to identification of key suspect in 1964 racially motivated killing
FBI, Department of Justice promise to solve crime
SU physicist named 2010 Cottrell Scholar
Duncan Brown, assistant professor of physics in Syracuse University’s College of Arts and Sciences, was named a 2010 Cottrell Scholar by Research Corporation for Science Advancement (RCSA). The prestigious award recognizes outstanding scientist-educators in leading U.S. research universities and comes…
Setnor School of Music faculty, students to present New York City concert Jan. 28
Students and faculty of the Rose, Jules R. and Stanford S. Setnor School of Music in the College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) will present the concert, “A Setnor Sampler,” Friday, Jan. 28, at 8 p.m. at Tenri Cultural…
Syracuse Stage, SU Drama present ‘Rent’
Jonathan Larson’s Broadway phenomenon “Rent” ignites the stage with passion and energy. One year—525,600 minutes—in the lives of seven young friends from Alphabet City brings love, loss, tragedy and triumph in a whirl of non-stop music. Larson built the show…
SU in the News: Friday, January 7, 2011
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE The Bozeman Daily Chronicle and Land Letter reported on the research underway by Douglas Frank, professor of biology in The College of Arts and Sciences, in collaboration with National Park Service, focusing on grazing areas…
SU in the News: Friday, January 7
Maxwell School’s Len Burman quoted in McClatchy Newspapers on appointment of Gene Sperling to the National Economic Council