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TRAC: Non-immigration federal prosecutions fall
According to a new analysis of Justice Department data and other records by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC), federal criminal enforcement under President Obama is significantly different than it was during the last two years of the Bush Administration….
SU in the News: Tuesday,February 1, 2011
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE Agence France Presse made note of a Maxwell School South Asia Center presentation by Robert Blake, assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asian Affairs in which Blake indicated the Obama administration’s support for…
Acclaimed contemporary music ensemble counter)induction to present free concert Feb. 6
Acclaimed contemporary music ensemble counter)induction will present a concert on Sunday, Feb. 6, at 8 p.m. in the Rose and Jules R. Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College. The concert is free and open to the public. Free parking is available in…
SU in the News: Tuesday, February 1
International media note Maxwell School’s SAC presentation by Robert Blake, assistant secretary of state for South Asia
Celebrate winter during Upstate Snowdown this weekend at Lipe Art Park
The Stewards of Lipe Art Park, 40 Below’s Public Arts Task Force, and the Near Westside Initiative (NWSI) invite the local community to celebrate winter during Upstate Snowdown, a fundraising party and snow celebration this weekend at Lipe Art Park, 900…
WiGiT collaboration expands with addition of new partners
The Seneca Nation of Indians, City College of New York (CCNY), Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) and BOCES Rockland County have joined WiGiT: The Wireless Grid Innovation Testbed, a National Science Foundation Partnerships for Innovation (PFI) project headed up by Syracuse…
Jonathan Katz to lecture on controversial exhibition, censorship Feb. 7
Light Work, Hendricks Chapel and the LGBT Resource Center have announced a Feb. 7 lecture by Jonathan Katz, co-curator of the important Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery exhibition “Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture.” The talk will take place at…
Students, faculty explore business, cultural implications of Super Bowl in new course offering
A new course, “The Super Bowl and Society,” debuted in the College of Human Ecology this semester. With enrollment of more than 100 students, SPM 199 explores the evolution and strategic brilliance that has allowed a football game to become a…
Bhutanese-Nepalese to speak about resettlement in Central New York
Members of the Bhutanese-Nepal community who’ve resettled in Syracuse as the result of a decades-long civil conflict with the Bhutan government, will share their stories of struggles and success with the Syracuse community on Wednesday, Feb. 9, at 4 p.m….
Ray Smith Symposium continues music of conflict theme with ‘Refugees and Exile,’ Feb. 17-18
The Ray Smith Symposium in Syracuse University’s College of Arts and Sciences continues its yearlong exploration of “Music of Conflict and Reconciliation” with a two-day program titled “Refugees and Exile.” Events include a colloquium, featuring ethnomusicologists Michael Frishkopf (University of…