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Campus & Community

SU in the News: Monday, July 18

Monday, July 18, 2011, By News Staff
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SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE

Jennifer Baskerville-Burrows, Episcopalian chaplain at ϲ, authored a guest column on city and University developments and positive changes over the last seven years.

The previewed the Saturday opening of the Whitman School of Management’s fifth Entrepreneurship Bootcamp for Veterans with Disabilities (EBV) program. EBV is also mentioned briefly in a report on SU football coach Doug Marrone being named “America’s Friendliest Football Coach” by ESPN the Magazine.

Statistics from SU’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) are cited in a story on immigration court cases and referenced in an article on false or contradictory statements by asylum seekers on the website.

A photo of Kwame Dixon, assistant professor in The College of Arts and Sciences, accompanies an article on training professors how to integrate black history into class and research work.

FACULTY QUOTES

William Banks, Board of Advisors Distinguished Professor and director of the Institute for National Security and Counterterrorism in the College of Law and the Maxwell School, is quoted in and (New York) stories about the obstruction-of-justice trial of Mohammed Zazi, and the potential testimony of his son, Najibullah Zazi, who pleaded guilty in a New York City subway bomb plot. National security issues are key factors in the case.

Len Burman, Daniel Patrick Moynihan Professor of Public Affairs in the Maxwell School, is quoted in a article about divided opinions among economists on reducing the federal debt.

A story about the remains of an ancient Jewish quarter uncovered in archeological excavation in Cologne, Germany, quotes Samuel Gruber, part-time instructor in The College of Arts and Sciences.

Second-year College of Law student Ryan Suto, wrote an op-ed on public diplomacy and the U.S. Supreme Court in .

A Many Voices, Many Visions story airing on Rochester’s (view clip) about the 21st anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) features second-year College of Law student Stephanie Woodward.

Ines Mergel, assistant professor of public administration at the Maxwell School, is quoted in a Rochesterarticle discussing whether posts to social media by elected officials become part of the public record.

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