Search Results for: ,maL
SU in the News: Tuesday, February 2, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE Leonard Burman, Daniel Patrick Moynihan Professor of Public Affairs in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, authored a column in the Washington Post on tax expenditures and the U.S. budget deficit. Pramod Varshney,…
SU in the News: Tuesday, February 2
L.C. Smith’s Pramod Varshney writes in RT Image magazine on stochastic resonance in mammograms
Syracuse iSchool announces creation of Center for Convergence and Emerging Network Technologies
The Center for Emerging Technologies (CENT) and the Convergence Center merged to create the new Center for Convergence and Emerging Network Technologies (CCENT).
The HUB 2010 Spring Speaker Series begins Feb. 2
Nadege J. Charles, vice president and talent development manager with JPMorgan Chase & Co., will kick off The HUB 2010 Spring Speaker Series on Tuesday, Feb. 2.
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.
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.”
Deaf, queer writer/comedian Terry Galloway to perform ‘Out All Night and Lost My Shoes’ Feb. 15, will read from her memoir ‘Mean Little deaf Queer’ Feb. 16
The SU Center on Human Policy, Law and Disability Studies presents “Out All Night and Lost My Shoes,” a solo performance by writer and comedian Terry Galloway. Galloway will perform on Monday, Feb. 15.
SU professor wins MLA award for feminist scholarship
Kathryn A. Everly essay earns Florence Howe Award from the Women’s Caucus for the Modern Languages.
SU one of six institutions receiving national Judaic studies matching grant
The Judaic Studies Program at Syracuse University has received a $50,000 matching grant from the Foundation for Jewish Culture (FJC).