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Syracuse University students train with Steiner Sports for Syracuse-Steiner Collectibles
Syracuse University students train with Steiner Sports for Syracuse-Steiner CollectiblesJune 07, 2007Gillian Ottmangeottma@syr.edu An innovative partnership between leading sports memorabilia and marketing company Steiner Sports Marketing and Syracuse University’s Department of Sport Management and Department of Athletics is providing students…
2002 Syracuse Symposium to feature Tibetan Mandala painting and celebrated physicist Brian Greene
2002 Syracuse Symposium to feature Tibetan Mandala painting and celebrated physicist Brian GreeneMarch 07, 2002Judy Holmesjlholmes@syr.edu The 2002 Syracuse Symposium, “Exploring Beauty,” continues through March with such featured events as Tibetan mandala painting by members of the Namgyal Monastery in…
Syracuse University researcher Doug Nelson on team exploring what lies beneath the Tibetan Plateau
Syracuse University researcher Doug Nelson on team exploring what lies beneath the Tibetan PlateauMay 05, 2001Judy Holmesjlholmes@syr.edu Each summer, dozens of intrepid explorers embark on a precarious journey to climb to the top of Mt. Everest, located in the heart…
Major League Advice: Falk College Students Meet Baseball Legend Darryl Strawberry
As a teenager growing up in South Central Los Angeles, Darryl Strawberry taped a sign on his bedroom door saying that he was going to be a Major League Baseball player one day. At first, he didn’t really believe it….
Tyna Meeks-Siptrott ’15 Retires After 28 Years of Transformative Teaching
Tyna Meeks-Siptrott, Ph.D., has dedicated 28 years to teaching, leaving an indelible mark on her students and colleagues at Indian River High School in Upstate New York. Her relationship with the University began with Syracuse University Project Advance (SUPA) and…
Improving Quality of Life for Post-Stroke Patients
A painless and non-invasive pulse of electrical stimulation to specific brain areas can ease some symptoms of post-stroke patients, though how it works remains a physiological mystery. A pilot study of a post-stroke population by researchers from the Department of…
A&S Researchers Explore the Impact of Climate Warming and Population Growth on America’s Rivers
The chemistry of U.S. rivers is changing—and will change further in complex ways in different regions of the country. Scientists are exploring ways to predict future changes in watershed chemistry, which could improve managing them for climate change and community…
A&S Chemist Develops Ultrasensitive Molecular Force Sensors
Professor Xiaoran Hu in the College of Arts and Sciences has developed molecules that undergo mechanochemical transformations, which could be used to report nanoscale stress in plastics and help scientists study mechanobiology processes. Plastic components are commonly used in infrastructure…
Philanthropy That Brings Outside the Box Thinking to the Student Experience
Michael “Mike” Venutolo ’77 and his wife, Kim, vividly remember sharing an eight-hour bus ride through the 110-degree desert in the United Arab Emirates with a half dozen engineering students from Syracuse University. Mike had helped design a novel two-week…
Champion ’CUSE: Syracuse University Athletics Launches Sweeping $50M Campaign to Create Champions and Win Championships
Syracuse University Athletics today announced the launch of Champion ’CUSE: The Campaign for Syracuse Athletics—a sweeping $50 million fundraising campaign aimed at leveling up its success—on and off the playing fields—and across all its 20 NCAA Division 1 programs. Champion…