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Colorfornia: New Forms in West Coast Street Art: Apex, Chor Boogie and Jet Martinez
This fall/winter, the Warehouse Gallery’s exhibitions focus on the medium of painting.
Light Work to feature EN FOCO/IN FOCUS: Selected Works from the Permanent Collection
Light Work has announced the exhibition “EN FOCO/IN FOCUS: Selected Works from the Permanent Collection,” featuring photographs from the permanent collection at En Foco. It will be on view Sept. 1-Jan. 31, 2012, in the Robert B. Menschel Photography Gallery…
Pulse announces 2011-2012 season
The 2011-12 season features an exciting selection of ticketed performances.
Rylaxing LLC team returns to SU to put scholarship into action
As incoming freshmen take their first steps on campus this August, four Syracuse University graduates return for an extra year of school as part of the Kauffman Entrepreneurship Engagement Fellowship (KEEF) program. Fellows participate in local projects or ventures that…
Syracuse Welcome 2011 to receive new first-year and transfer students beginning Aug. 24
Very soon, some 3,700 first-year and transfer students will arrive at Syracuse University ready to kick off the new academic year. When they do, SU’s student orientation program, Syracuse Welcome, will help them get acclimated and ready to start the new…
SU in the News: Friday, August 19
National media cite research by College of Arts and Sciences’ Linda Ivany on fossilized clams off Antarctic coast
School supplies being collected for local K-8 classrooms
The Office of Residence Life holds its second annual student supply drive for K-8 classrooms in Syracuse City School District.
SU College of Law welcomes Class of 2014
The 115th College of Law first-year law class at SU arrived Aug. 15 for a weeklong orientation program.
Stampede.It takes first place at Syracuse Student Sandbox Demo Day
Nine colleges from across Upstate New York saw their students and recent graduates pitch startup businesses at the Syracuse Student Sandbox Demo Day at the Syracuse Tech Garden.
Ancient clams yield new information about greenhouse effect on climate
Ancient fossilized clams that lived off the coast of Antarctica some 50 million years ago have a story to tell about El Niño, according to Syracuse University researcher Linda Ivany.