Arts Without Borders

Honors course, Arts Without Borders, exposes students to diverse forms of Art throughout the semester.  Here students visited the Everson Museum of Art to view the show “Female Artists over 60.” Students are pictured with Honors Deputy Director Kate Hanson and baby Sebastian.  Photo by class instructor Jonathan English.

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Alumni Brianna Collins and Kate Marolf share about work, creativity and finding your professional path

Honors alumni Brianna Collins (Communications Design, 2010) and Deputy Director, Creative Content, Education for the Council on Foreign Relations and Kate Marolf (Communications Design, 2010) and Senior Graphic Designer and Manager for the Gap, met with students to talk about their professional trajectories, how to transfer skills and interests across diverse career paths, the intersections between education…

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Spring Research Presentations at the National Baseball Hall of Fame

In Professor Rick Burton’s fall Honors’ Baseball in American Culture course, students conduct a semester-long research project on a topic of their choice. Students then have the option of submitting their work to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, for presentation at the Hall’s annual Cooperstown Symposium. Papers by Professor Burton and…

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Film Screening: A Plastic Ocean

Honors senior Katie Munster (Applied Mathematics/Information Management & Technology) presents a screening of the film A Plastic Ocean with an overview of her Honors Thesis research “An Analysis of Citizen Science and its Effect on Marine Plastic Pollution.” Film Screening: A Plastic Ocean Tuesday, February 26th, 6:30 PM, Shaffer 121

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Rodney D. Sieh, Liberian investigative journalist, speaks with Honors students

On Tuesday, November 13th, Rodney D. Sieh, Liberian investigative journalist, spoke with students in the Honors course – Conceptualizing Human Rights. Mr. Sieh is founder and editor of FrontPage Africa, Liberia’s largest independent daily print and online newspaper. Mr. Sieh spoke about his work which exposed poor governance, limited accountability, and lack of transparency within Liberia,…

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Diwali, The Festival of Lights

The university community celebrated Diwali, the Hindu Festival of Lights on Thursday, November 8. Celebrants created 1700 radiant luminaries that lit up the Orange Grove for four hours during the evening. The festivities continued in Bowne Hall with Bollywood music, samosas, biryani, sweets and spiced chai. Nearly 300 students, faculty, and staff participated in the…

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Megan Phan Awarded the Elie Wiesel Prize in Ethics

Megan Phan, Honors Program alumnus (Chemistry/Neuroscience, 2018), was awarded the 2018 First Prize in Ethics, from the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity. Her essay reflects on the Black Lives Matter and Blue Lives Matter social movements. The essay is written from the perspective of a police officer’s daughter. The Ethics Essay Contest provides a forum for college juniors and seniors to…

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Land Claim of the Mohawk/St. Regis People

Attorney Alan Peterman instructing students about perhaps the only one outstanding native land claim in the United States. The claim involves the Mohawk/St. Regis people, on the border of Canada and the United States. The St. Regis people live on both sides of the Canadian-U.S. border and have free movement between both countries. Attorney Peterman also…

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