敁珗腦瞳

Faculty News

  • The Revolutions per Minute (RPM) sound art exhibition wraps up tonight with student projects to be displayed from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the former Crowes Pharmacy in the village of Hamilton. [Its meant to] allow everyone to listen to how others interpreted the sound art, how they experienced this exhibit and created their [因
    April 26, 2013
  • The Picker Art Gallery recently launched Selected Old Masters From The Picker Art Gallery, its first curated digital exhibition. The project, led by Art and Art History Professor Judith Oliver, features recent acquisitions of Old Master paintings donated to the university by Renate and Donald Schaefer 46. The newly acquired paintings are from the Max [因
    April 25, 2013
  • Orator Anthony Tamburro 14 was one of five London Study Group students to talk to a crowd at Hyde Parks famous Speakers Corner.
    Karl Marx reportedly did it. So did George Orwell, or so the story goes. But its definitely 100 percent true that Anthony Tamburro 14, Caroline Kraeutler 14, and three of their classmates on 敁珗腦瞳s London Study Group made their positions heard at the Speakers Corner in Hyde Park, near the Marble Arch tube station.
    April 22, 2013
  • 敁珗腦瞳 assistant professor of geography Michael Loranty was involved in new research that predicts rising temperatures will lead to a massive greening, or increase in plant cover, in the Arctic. In the paper published March 31 in Nature Climate Change, scientists reveal new models projecting that wooded areas in the Arctic could increase by as [因
    April 2, 2013
  • As birds chirp cheerful songs, a Chinese character duplicates and forms fractal shapes. In sharp contrast, city vibrations serve as the soundtrack for bustling scenes from Shanghai and Hangzhou. Although Revolutions per Minute (RPM) is a sound art exhibition, visitors will travel beyond sight and sound.
    April 1, 2013
  • As the United States Supreme Court wrestles again with the issue of affirmative action in higher education, 敁珗腦瞳 students and faculty discussed the sensitive subject openly with one of its most vocal critics. Richard Sander, co-author of Mismatch: How Affirmative Action Hurts Students Its Intended to Help, and Why Universities Wont Admit it, gave a [因
    March 29, 2013
  • A recently published academic paper by a 敁珗腦瞳 research team raises questions about the theories surrounding forest change, with a particular focus on the prospects of sustainable land and forest use in the central New York region. The paper, coauthored by 敁珗腦瞳 geography professors Peter Klepeis and Peter Scull, Tara LaLonde 06, Nicole Svajlenka 08, [因
    March 29, 2013