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University Lectures series will turn focus to presidential, political speeches Oct. 12 with visit by Kathleen Hall Jamieson
As the 2010 election season kicks into high gear, the University Lectures series will welcome Kathleen Hall Jamieson on Tuesday, Oct. 12, to explore the meanings within presidential speeches with an emphasis on the history of American oratory in the broad terms of politics, media and culture
Vaudeville star Flossie Turner Lewis records at Belfer Archive
Vaudeville audiences knew Lewis as ‘Little Hot Mama.’
Bill Leaf Memorial Kickball Tournament to be held Sept. 25
Join the SU faculty/staff team for the 5th Annual Bill Leaf Memorial Kickball Tournament, which supports two scholarships.
Syracuse iSchool mourns the passing of research professor Joanne Silverstein
Joanne Silverstein, assistant research professor at the Syracuse University School of Information Studies (iSchool) and director of research and development of the Information Institute of Syracuse, died July 26.
Stone Canoe journal takes silver at international IPPY Awards
The 2010 issue of Syracuse University’s Stone Canoe, A Journal of Arts and Ideas from Upstate New York, won a silver medal in the anthology category at the 14th annual Independent Publisher Book Awards.
Newhouse School News21 student journalists to investigate consequences of war for veterans
This summer, nine students in the Newhouse School will go “off the grid” to rural Northeastern Washington State, where they will interview veterans as part of News21.
Newhouse School honored at national collegiate journalism competition
The Newhouse School recently won two 2009 Mark of Excellence Awards from the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ).
Newhouse mourns passing of beloved professor, Bill Glavin, 67
Bill Glavin, longtime professor in the Newhouse School, died Friday, May 7, at Francis House in Syracuse. He was 67.
Sutherland speaks at Alexia Photojournalism Seminar in Greece
Newhouse School’s Alexia Chair for Documentary Photography was one of five speakers.
SU mourns loss of beloved German scholar, teacher
Outside Gerlinde Ulm Sanford’s office in H.B. Crouse Hall is a small altar adorned with reminders of one of Syracuse University’s most beloved professors: a copy of Goethe’s “Faust,” photos and postcards, several origami balls, flowers and dried fruit and leaves. Tucked inside one of the artifacts—a magazine about Weimar, Sanford’s second home—is a faded clipping about the 2004 fire that tore through the city’s Herzogin Anna Amalia Library, destroying more than 50,000 books. Friend and colleague Karl Solibakke suspects that the conflagration was not far from Sanford’s mind, even up until her death on Tuesday, April 27, at age 70.