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SU in the News: Wednesday, August 25, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE Immigration information from SU’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) is featured in the Houston Chronicle and the Dallas Morning News in articles on the Department of Homeland Security reviewing thousands of pending immigration cases and…
SU in the News: Wednesday, August 25
Nanobiotechnology research on accelerating algae growth is covered in several web-based science sites
SU in the News: Wednesday, August 11, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE A New York Times article highlights Chancellor Nancy Cantor as being among the leaders of the revitalization of Syracuse’s Near West Side. The article focuses on the work that the University is doing in collaboration…
SU in the News: Wednesday, August 11
The New York Times highlights SU’s involvement in the revitalization of Syracuse’s Near West Side.
SU in the News: Thursday, August 5
College of Human Ecology’s Eric Kingson writes in Nieman Watchdog on Social Security annual report
SU in the News: Thursday, August 5, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE A Nature News article about the Higgs particle and the Nobel Prize mentions Syracuse University physicist Daniel Ferrante, a research associate in The College of Arts and Sciences. Continuing coverage of recently analyzed and released…
SU in the News: Wednesday, June 16, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE Mediaite and Hollywood Reporter reported on the Newhouse School’s fourth annual Mirror Awards, presented June 10 in New York City. A book review by Erik Chaput, a graduate student in the Maxwell School, on the…
SU in the News: Wednesday, June 16
Tallahassee TV reports on Entrepreneurship Bootcamp for Veterans with Disabilities at Florida State University
Say Yes to Education honors Frazer School students with red carpet entrance
Eleven third-graders from Frazer School in the Syracuse City School District will walk the red carpet into Barnes & Noble Booksellers in DeWitt on Tuesday, June 15.
Treasures of SU Library’s special collections on display
The exhibition ranges from second-century-B.C. cuneiform tablets to the Bride of Frankenstein.