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Brookings Institution selects Chancellor Cantor for panel on major metro study
The Brookings Institution tabbed Syracuse University Chancellor and President Nancy Cantor to serve on a distinguished panel assembled to discuss its recently released major report, “The State of Metropolitan America: On the Front Lines of Demographic Transformation.”
Syracuse University announces 2010-11 University Lectures season
Nine distinguished guests will share their global experiences and perspectives.
Treasures of SU Library’s special collections on display
The exhibition ranges from second-century-B.C. cuneiform tablets to the Bride of Frankenstein.
Reilly Lecture in Infant & Toddler Caregiving is May 19
The Fourth Annual Jack Reilly Distinguished Lecture in Infant & Toddler Caregiving will take place Wednesday, May 19, at 7 p.m. at the Community Folk Art Center, 805 E. Genesee St.
SU in the News: Thursday, May 6, 2010
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE A Mashable blog posting reports on Syracuse University offering graduating seniors a six-month subscription to Brand-Yourself.com’s online reputation management platform. Syracuse.com featured the “What if” project being carried out by School of Architecture students to…
SU in the News: Thursday, May 6
College of Law and Maxwell School’s William Banks quoted in ISN Security Watch on legality of targeted killings
College of Law student wins national writing award
Burton Award recognizes Gregory Eriksen work published in Syracuse Law Review.
SU Department of Public Safety honors those who contribute to safety of University community
The Syracuse University Department of Public Safety honored 12 of its employees, along with three members of the University community, at the third annual DPS Awards Ceremony, held April 28.
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.