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SU in the News: Monday, May 17
Syracuse University Commencement covered by national and local media
Remarks by Jamie Dimon at Syracuse University’s 156th Commencement and the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry’s 113th Commencement
Nancy [Cantor], thank you very much for that overly kind introduction. If you don’t already know, you have a fabulous chancellor. Board of trustees, Syracuse faculty, all members of the graduating class of 2010: it is a privilege to be…
SU in the News: Thursday, May 13
Newhouse School graduate student Patrick House featured in Post-Standard for “The Faith Hope Documentary”
SU in the News: Thursday, May 13, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE Patrick House, a graduate student in the Military Motion Media program in the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, is featured in the Post-Standard for his Syracuse documentary “The Faith Hope Documentary: A City’s Fight…
Commencement 2010—SU’s 156th and SUNY-ESF’s 113th exercises May 16
SU will celebrate the graduation of more than 4,760 degree candidates.
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.
College of Law student wins national writing award
Burton Award recognizes Gregory Eriksen work published in Syracuse Law Review.
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
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.