Commencement Archives | Today https://news-test.syr.edu/topic/commencement/ Thu, 28 May 2026 19:54:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-apple-touch-icon-120x120.png Commencement Archives | Today https://news-test.syr.edu/topic/commencement/ 32 32 77-Year-Old Completes Maxwell MPA 50 Years After Starting It /2026/05/28/77-year-old-completes-maxwell-mpa-50-years-after-starting-it/ Thu, 28 May 2026 19:54:10 +0000 /?p=339140 A dinner conversation, a new laptop and a one-week course in Washington closed a 50-year chapter for Hadwen Fuller ’70, L’73, G’26.

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77-Year-Old Completes Maxwell MPA 50 Years After Starting It

A dinner conversation, a new laptop and a one-week course in Washington closed a 50-year chapter for Hadwen Fuller ’70, L’73, G’26.
Renée Gearhart Levy May 28, 2026

When Hadwen C. Fuller II crossed the stage at the Graduate Convocation this spring, the loudest cheers didn’t come from his wife and three sons.

They came from a group of classmates young enough to be his grandchildren.

A few months earlier, Fuller had walked into a weeklong January course in Washington, D.C., carrying a brand-new laptop he’d only recently learned how to use, a healthy dose of skepticism about artificial intelligence and unfinished business that dated back to the Nixon administration.

The three credits earned from that course—Public Management of Technology Development—finally allowed Fuller to complete the M.P.A. degree he had started at the Maxwell School more than 50 years ago.

“I’ve always liked to finish what I start,” Fuller says.

That persistence has defined much of his life.

He grew up in the Oswego County town of Parish, New York, population 411. His grandfather, despite never graduating from high school, climbed from local politics to the New York State Assembly and, eventually, Congress. Fuller absorbed that example and arrived at thinking seriously about a future in government.

After earning a political science degree from Maxwell in 1970, Fuller enrolled in the . In his second year, he added a public administration degree at Maxwell because it matched his interest in leadership and public service.

He finished law school in 1973. The M.P.A. stalled six credits short.

For many people, that unfinished degree would have faded into ancient history. Fuller carried it around like a pebble in his shoe.

“It just kind of gnawed at me that I never completed it,” he says.

Over the next five decades, Fuller built a varied and successful professional career. Shortly after law school, he served as justice of the peace in Parish, processing thousands of cases after state police flooded the area with traffic enforcement teams. He worked in his family’s Sunoco gasoline distributorship, eventually selling the business during the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics while helping coordinate corporate fundraising tied to the Games. Most of his professional life has been spent in the aviation fuel industry, launching and running companies of his own.

Along the way, he took another swipe at the Maxwell degree. In 1996, he petitioned to re-enroll and completed a three-credit course on management of the U.S. Forestry Service.

“I planned to enroll in another class to finish it up,” Fuller says. “It just never happened.”

A Chance Encounter

Until a dinner conversation changed everything.

Last fall, Fuller attended an event hosted by the Onondaga Historical Association, where he serves on the board. One of the guests was , newly arrived at Maxwell as professor of practice in public administration and international affairs and the Phanstiel Chair in Leadership.

At some point during the evening, Fuller casually mentioned he was “almost” a Maxwell alumnus. Parmeter quickly learned Fuller was only one course away from finishing the degree he had started in the early 1970s. By coincidence, Parmeter himself was teaching a one-week, three-credit course in Washington that January.

“Would you like to finish your degree?” Parmeter asked.

Fuller thought he was joking.

He wasn’t.

Soon, Assistant Dean of Online Programs was digging through decades-old records and untangling the academic equivalent of an archaeological dig. Expired credits needed reinstating. Approvals had to move through faculty leadership, the Graduate School and the registrar. Fuller had to be transferred into the executive M.P.A. program.

And then there was the technology.

“From soup to nuts, he needed help with everything,” Bartkowiak says with a laugh. “But he was a very good sport about it.”

Despite decades of business success, Fuller had largely managed to avoid becoming computer savvy. Bartkowiak convinced him he needed a laptop.

After a trip to Best Buy, Fuller launched into what amounted to a crash course in modern technology, teaching himself how to use the computer while diving headfirst into AI.

By January, he arrived in Washington equal parts prepared and panicked.

A group of eight people in graduation attire stand together in front of a brick building. Some are wearing mortarboards and stoles with colorful trims. There are orange and blue balloon decorations nearby, suggesting a festive graduation event
Hadwen C. Fuller II (fourth from right) is shown with fellow Class of 2026 graduates and two members of the Maxwell community who were determined to see him complete his degree: Brynt Parmeter (second from right) and Nell Bartkowiak (far right).

Back in the Classroom

His classmates included M.P.A. students, international relations students, law students and U.S. State Department fellows. Nearly all of them were decades younger. Fuller worried he would slow down group work or embarrass himself trying to keep up.

Instead, he became an integral member of the class.

Lauren Grosso G’26 initially thought Fuller was a guest speaker before realizing he was a fellow student. “I couldn’t believe that someone with that level of experience still wanted to be in a classroom, still wanting to learn,” she says. “That shifted something for me, not just how I saw Had, but how I see things in general. No matter how much experience you have or how much you know, there’s always more to learn.”

The course itself focused on public policy scenarios set in 2030, challenging students to use AI tools to solve complex problems while also evaluating the technology’s weaknesses and risks. For Fuller, it became a revelation.

“It’s like you have the smartest person in the world sitting next to you,” he says of AI. “They don’t get tired. They’re up all night. And you can ask them dumb questions because they don’t care.”

Still, Fuller wasn’t simply absorbing lessons. He was teaching them too.

Read the full story on the Maxwell School website:

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An individual in graduation attire stands smiling in front of a brick building. Above them, silver balloon letters spell CONGRATS.
Caps, Gowns and Postseason Success for Men’s Lacrosse Seniors /2026/05/20/caps-gowns-and-postseason-success-for-mens-lacrosse-seniors/ Wed, 20 May 2026 12:58:09 +0000 /?p=338816 Senior co-captains Finn Thomson and Billy Dwan III reflect on graduating and earning an NCAA tournament victory on Mother's Day.

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Campus & Community Caps, Gowns and Postseason Success for Men’s Lacrosse Seniors

Co-captains Billy Dwan III (fifth from the left) and Finn Thomson (fourth from the right) pose for a Commencement photo with the members of the Class of 2026. (Photo courtesy of Syracuse Athletics)

Caps, Gowns and Postseason Success for Men’s Lacrosse Seniors

Senior co-captains Finn Thomson and Billy Dwan III reflect on graduating and earning an NCAA tournament victory on Mother's Day.
John Boccacino May 20, 2026

For ’s seniors, Commencement is the culmination of years of hard work and dedication, a moment to celebrate earning their degrees.

But for the 10 seniors on the men’s lacrosse team, while the day was joyous, it was not a time for relaxing. They had to prepare for their next assignment: taking on Yale University in the first round of the NCAA Division I tournament.

In a seesaw contest featuring eight ties and five lead changes, it wasn’t until senior  ’26 came up with two crucial saves with 16 seconds left to that senior co-captains ’26 and ’26 could exhale and celebrate on the turf field inside the JMA Wireless Dome.

Thomson, an attacker, scored three goals and added a pair of assists, and Dwan, a defenseman, scooped up five groundballs and caused a turnover to help lift the Orange into the quarterfinals for the third straight season.

Among the highlights of Commencement weekend: each senior had their graduation photos taken, wearing their cap and gown over their jerseys.

“I felt excitement and happiness, but also a feeling of sadness,” says Thomson, who earned a communication and rhetorical studies degree from the . “The best four years of my life are coming to a close. Having my parents [Amanda and Tim] in the building made it more emotional. My mom has now seen her youngest child graduate. I felt so many emotions when I was sitting on the Dome turf with my cap and gown on.”

“It was a moment of reflection and gratitude for the great people and memories we’ve made at this place,” says Dwan, who also earned a communication and rhetorical studies degree.

Thomson and Dwan spoke with SU Today about the significance of graduating and winning an NCAA postseason game on the same day.

Two members of the men's lacrosse team celebrate after a goal was scored.
Seniors Finn Thomson (left) and Joey Spallina celebrate a Syracuse goal during the Orange’s 16-15 win over Yale. (Photo courtesy of Syracuse Athletics)

What were you more nervous about, Commencement or the first-round NCAA game?

Finn Thomson: I was more nervous about the game than graduation, because graduation is a celebration whereas the game’s outcome is out of my control. I knew I was going to graduate because I put the work in, but the game had yet to be played.

Billy Dwan III: For me, the playoff game where the season could have potentially ended was a more worrisome experience. Although graduation is a nerve-wracking time, I personally didn’t feel I graduated until our season was over.

How special is it to graduate in the morning and then kick off the quest for a championship in the afternoon?

Dwan: It hit me just how special of a day graduation would be during Selection Sunday the week before. We didn’t know whether we would be playing on Saturday or Sunday for the first round. When the bracket came out and we saw we were playing on the same day as graduation, it put everything into perspective. It’s a special experience.

Thomson: When I found out [Commencement] was the same weekend as our game against Yale, I was excited. There’s so much anticipation leading up to the day, and both events are about your hard work paying off. It was overwhelming, knowing that everything you’ve put into your classes and the team is coming to an end, but it was also a super fun day. Not everyone gets to experience graduation from that perspective.

What would it mean to you to guide this storied men’s lacrosse team to a national championship during your senior year?

A men's lacrosse player blocks a shot while leaping in the air.
Billy Dwan uses his body to block a North Carolina shot during the quarterfinals. (Photo courtesy of Syracuse Athletics)

Dwan: Everything this place has given me, from an education to the relationships I have built, will last a lifetime. Having that storybook ending for my senior year, going out the right way and winning a national championship would mean the world.

Thomson: Guiding this team to a national championship in my senior year would mean everything to me. Leaving this program in a better place than you found it is always the goal, and winning a national championship would do exactly that. Raising that trophy is always at the back of our minds. We know what it takes and we’re going to do everything we can to get there.

After the win over Yale, Syracuse (13-5) defeated North Carolina 13-11 in the quarterfinals to advance into Championship Weekend. The Orange will face Notre Dame (12-2) at 2:30 p.m. Saturday in the semifinals at Scott Stadium in Charlottesville, Virginia. Fans can , and .

If Syracuse wins, the Orange will play for the national championship at 1 p.m. on Monday.

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Ten SU men's lacrosse seniors pose in caps, gowns and student athlete stoles.
Kent Syverud Named Chancellor Emeritus of /2026/05/11/kent-syverud-named-chancellor-emeritus-of-syracuse-university/ Mon, 11 May 2026 19:02:41 +0000 /?p=338266 Chancellor Syverud told the Class of 2026 by video that serving the University has been "the honor of my lifetime."

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Kent Syverud Named Chancellor Emeritus of

Chancellor Syverud told the Class of 2026 by video that serving the University has been "the honor of my lifetime."
Kathleen Haley May 11, 2026

Chancellor Kent Syverud showed his Orange spirit and strength to the Class of 2026.

Although unable to attend Sunday’s Commencement exercises due to his recent medical diagnosis, Chancellor Syverud was recognized with an honorary degree and emeritus status and sent a congratulatory video message to the graduates, sharing the day with them in spirit.

“I’m sorry I cannot be there to celebrate this joyous day with all of you. Know that I am thinking of you and that I’m cheering you on as you take on your careers, seek further studies and pursue your passions,” Chancellor Syverud said. “You will do as Orange has always done. Change the world.”

In recognition of Chancellor Syverud’s leadership and legacy, Jeffrey Scruggs, chairman of the University Board of Trustees, announced Chancellor Syverud’s new richly deserved designation.

“Chancellor Syverud’s impact on will be felt for generations to come,” Scruggs said. “And that is why today on behalf of the Board of Trustees and with the approval of the University Senate, I am proud to announce the election of Kent Syverud to Chancellor Emeritus of .”

The recognition is not a ceremonial gesture but is among the highest of the University’s honors, Scruggs said.

“It is reserved by policy and tradition for those who have made extraordinary contributions over a sustained period of service,” he said. “For chancellors, it is not granted routinely and is reserved for those academic leaders whose impacts and legacies have forever transformed and strengthened our university.”

Led With ‘Steadiness, Pride and Purpose’

The title is now bestowed on Chancellor Syverud as his presence at Syracuse has left an enduring mark and a connection that is forever part of the University’s storied history.

“As the University’s 12th chancellor, Kent Syverud led this institution through periods of challenge with steadiness, pride and purpose,” Scruggs said. “He strengthened our academic mission, deepened our commitment to students and positioned Syracuse to strive for generations to come. He did so with integrity and with care for his community and with a genuine devotion to what represents.”

Chancellor Syverud was among those formally conferred with emeriti status, including faculty and librarians, as recommended by the University Senate and authorized by the Board of Trustees, during Commencement.

An Honorary Doctor of Laws and a Congratulatory Message

Two people in academic regalia shake hands on stage during a  ceremony, with one holding a framed award. Orange banners and the University seal are visible in the background as other faculty and administrators in regalia look on and applaud.
Jeffrey Scruggs (left), chairman of the University Board of Trustees, shakes hands with David Syverud, who accepted an honorary degree on behalf of his father, Kent Syverud, the 12th Chancellor and president of . (Photo by Amy Manley)

In another recognition of gratitude to Chancellor Syverud’s service to the University, he was granted an honorary degree. Chancellor Syverud’s son, David, accepted the honor on his behalf.

“Chancellor Kent Syverud, distinguished legal scholar, bold leader, dedicated teacher and a man of integrity. Your vision transformed , bringing distinction in academic and research excellence and a student experience that shapes global leaders,” College of Law Dean Terence Lau said, in reading the citation. “Your promise to veterans established a national model for opportunity and dignity. You forged partnerships and fostered investments strengthening campus infrastructure and driving regional development. We celebrate your extraordinary legacy with this Honorary Doctor of Laws.”

In his video message, Chancellor Syverud, who said it has been “the honor of my lifetime” to serve as chancellor, was grateful to all those who make up the Orange family.

“You have made these last 12 years more than I could possibly have imagined,” he said. “I will carry you with me always.”

To the Class of 2026, Chancellor Syverud wished them all the best.

“I can’t wait to see what you will do next,” he said. “Go Orange!”

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A person wearing doctoral regalia — a blue gown with an orange hood and gold trim, featuring two embroidered University seals — seated indoors with a stone backdrop and greenery visible behind him.
Commencement 2026 in Photos /2026/05/11/commencement-2026-in-photos/ Mon, 11 May 2026 17:33:34 +0000 /?p=338111 Relive the magic and smiles of Commencement weekend with our photo gallery.

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Campus & Community Commencement 2026 in Photos

The obligatory cap toss: a Commencement tradition that never gets old.

Commencement 2026 in Photos

Relive the magic and smiles of Commencement weekend with our photo gallery.
May 11, 2026

Congratulations, Class of 2026! Surrounded by family, friends, faculty and their fellow students, the University celebrated its newest graduates during the annual Commencement ceremony in the JMA Wireless Dome on Sunday, May 10.

NBC Sports broadcaster Mike Tirico ’88 returned to campus to deliver the keynote address. Acting Chancellor J. Michael Haynie conferred degrees on approximately 6,679 candidates.

These photos capture the energy, emotion and Orange pride of this milestone weekend. For more Commencement coverage, check out the keynote address by Tirico, Acting Chancellor Haynie’s remarks, a tribute to Chancellor Emeritus Kent Syverud’s leadership and student speaker and University Scholar Sadie Shaula Meyer ’26 addressing her fellow classmates.

(Photos by Amy Manley unless otherwise noted)

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Three graduates in caps and gowns toss their mortarboards into the air on the Shaw Quad on a sunny day, with the Holden Observatory dome visible in the background.
Mike Tirico ’88 Challenges the Class of 2026 to Find What They Love /2026/05/11/mike-tirico-88-challenges-the-class-of-2026-to-find-what-they-love/ Mon, 11 May 2026 16:07:10 +0000 /?p=338209 The NBC sportscaster urged 's newest graduates to lean on their resilience and never stop chasing their dreams.

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Communications, Law & Policy Mike Tirico ’88 Challenges the Class of 2026 to Find What They Love

"You are now part of the Syracuse alumni team, and it’s the best team in the world," Mike Tirico told the approximately 6,679 graduating students inside the JMA Wireless Dome. (Photo by Amy Manley)

Mike Tirico ’88 Challenges the Class of 2026 to Find What They Love

The NBC sportscaster urged 's newest graduates to lean on their resilience and never stop chasing their dreams.
John Boccacino May 11, 2026

has called Super Bowls, NBA Finals, the Olympics and the Kentucky Derby from broadcast booths around the world. On Sunday, he returned to where it all started to send ’s Class of 2026 off with a challenge: keep chasing your dreams, and “don’t leave your childlike wonder behind.”

“All of you have a Syracuse story,” Tirico told the approximately 6,679 graduating students inside the JMA Wireless Dome. “Here, you formed a foundation of resiliency. You learned to deal with the curves that the road ahead provides. I hope in years to come, when you tell your Syracuse story, it involves your dreams and it’s eventually going to include how you kept chasing them.”

Tirico, who serves as vice chair of the , is the of “Sunday Night Football” and “NBA on NBC,” and serves as the primetime host for NBCUniversal’s coverage of the Olympics. He has interviewed such elite athletes as Super Bowl-winning quarterbacks Tom Brady and Peyton Manning, four-time NBA champion LeBron James, and Olympic gold medalists Michael Phelps, Simone Biles and Lindsey Vonn.

Tirico compared the graduates to those world-class athletes, encouraging them to draw on the same traits that carried them through Syracuse to achieve professional success.

“They thrived because of their minds, their strength and their ability to out-plan, to outthink and to withstand the scrutiny,” said Tirico, a member of the . “They share a commonality [with you]. They loved what they did and love what they do. Go out and find what you love. Go find what makes you happy and let that fuel you to your future.”

The Commencement speaker delivers remarks at the podium wearing a navy  cap.
Mike Tirico told the Commencement crowd that no matter where he goes, he always brings his navy block “S” Syracuse cap with him. (Photo by Amy Manley)

With his mother, Maria, and his wife, Deborah Gibaratz Tirico ’89, in attendance, Tirico took a moment to celebrate the moms who were cheering on their graduating students. Tirico asked the Class of 2026 to get out of their seats and give the moms a round of applause and a big wave while wishing them a happy Mother’s Day.

Tirico recalled growing up in a single-parent household, crediting the support he received from “a village of amazing family members” with helping him become a first-generation college student. Tirico earned dual bachelor’s degrees in political science from the  and the , and in broadcast journalism from the .

He emphasized maintaining the strong relationships the Class of 2026 formed with their friends and professors while on campus.

“Many of you are surrounded right now by your closest friends and you’re sitting with your crew. Forty years after starting the journey, for me, my life is still filled with my day ones from Syracuse. The people I met in that very first class at Newhouse. The people who I called games with on ,” Tirico said. “Many of those people are going to be your people for the rest of your life.”

Tirico closed by welcoming the newest members of the alumni network, consisting of more than 250,000 alumni worldwide.

“Since I live in the space of sports, today is one of the best game days of the year because we get a few thousand new teammates,” Tirico said. “You are now part of the Syracuse alumni team, and it’s the best team in the world.”

The commencement speaker takes a selfie with the senior Class Marshals before Commencement.
Before Commencement, Mike Tirico took a selfie with the senior class marshals and school and college marshals. (Photo courtesy of the )

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Mike Tirico speaks at the 2026 Commencement celebration wearing academic regalia.
How Syracuse’s Class of 2026 Turned Disruption Into Strength /2026/05/11/how-syracuses-class-of-2026-turned-disruption-into-strength/ Mon, 11 May 2026 15:56:44 +0000 /?p=338211 Acting Chancellor J. Michael Haynie’s first Commencement address was equal parts tribute and challenge.

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Campus & Community How Syracuse’s Class of 2026 Turned Disruption Into Strength

Acting Chancellor J. Michael Haynie delivers his remarks at Sunday's Commencement ceremony. (Photo by Amy Manley)

How Syracuse’s Class of 2026 Turned Disruption Into Strength

Acting Chancellor J. Michael Haynie’s first Commencement address was equal parts tribute and challenge.
Kelly Homan Rodoski May 11, 2026

wasn’t supposed to be the one standing at the podium in the JMA Wireless Dome on Sunday, May 10. And he said so.

Haynie opened ’s Class of 2026 Commencement with a solemn moment, noting that his tenure as the University’s 13th chancellor and president was officially set to begin the following day. The man who had earned the right to preside over this ceremony was not there to do it.

“It is Chancellor Kent Syverud who should be here today,” Haynie said. “He earned this moment.”

Chancellor Syverud, who led the University for 12 years, recently disclosed his brain cancer diagnosis and is currently undergoing treatment in Michigan. Haynie asked those assembled to join him in wishing the outgoing Chancellor well. He acknowledged Dr. Ruth Chen, Chancellor Syverud’s wife, who traveled to Syracuse to accept an honorary degree.

In celebrating the graduates, Haynie acknowledged their families and loved ones and the University’s faculty and staff who supported the students through their Syracuse journeys.

“While the achievements we celebrate here today are those of our graduates, those achievements were made possible because of you. Thank you,” Haynie said.

“To every person who played a role in getting these graduates to this moment, whether you coached them, counseled them or simply loved them, thank you for being here,” Haynie said. “This day belongs to you as well.”

A Class That Persisted and Showed Up

Haynie then turned his attention to the graduates.

“You are taking your place in a world that many describe as uncertain and divided and sometimes even unkind,” he said. “And they’re not wrong. But here’s what those people don’t fully appreciate: you’ve been here before.”

The Class of 2026 had their high school years deeply affected by a global pandemic that canceled their proms, upended their routines and rewrote the world they thought they were growing up into. They arrived at Syracuse amid political polarization, economic volatility and international conflict.

And yet, Haynie said, they did not collapse. They adapted and persisted.

“When things got hard, you didn’t retreat, you recalibrated, you found a way. You carry something no generation before you has quite mastered and that is a fierce authenticity and uncompromising demand for honesty, for inclusion and the rare willingness not to just call things out for what they are, but to roll up your sleeves and play a role in fixing them,” Haynie said.

The Class of 2026 is uniquely built for the moment they’re entering. While industries debate artificial intelligence and digital transformation, he said, these graduates are already fluent. They set the curve rather than chasing it.

Haynie encouraged them not to coast on that advantage. “Wherever you go next—a workplace, a graduate program, a studio, a community, a stage that the world has not even built yet—make it better than you found it. Don’t lower the bar. Raise it.”

Haynie told the graduates that when someone tells them they can’t, they won’t or they never will, remind them where they came from. Remind them what house built them.

He asked the crowd what color that house is painted. And the response, of course, “Orange!”

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Acting Chancellor J. Michael Haynie addresses the audience from a podium bearing the " 2026" banner during commencement ceremonies.
‘Don’t Give Up’: Part-Time Student Earns Degree Decades After First Class /2026/05/11/dont-give-up-part-time-student-earns-degree-decades-after-first-class/ Mon, 11 May 2026 15:06:22 +0000 /?p=338155 Susan Wright ’26, a retired staff member, began pursuing a bachelor's degree in the late ’90s and graduated Sunday with honors.

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Arts & Humanities ‘Don’t Give Up’: Part-Time Student Earns Degree Decades After First Class

Susan Wright

‘Don’t Give Up’: Part-Time Student Earns Degree Decades After First Class

Susan Wright ’26, a retired staff member, began pursuing a bachelor's degree in the late ’90s and graduated Sunday with honors.
Dialynn Dwyer May 11, 2026

Susan Wright ’26 took her first class at in the fall of 1987, the same year she started working in the registrar’s office. Working full-time, she wasn’t able to take a class every semester, but credit by credit, balancing her job and personal life, she continued to forge ahead, earning an associate degree in 1998.

She immediately set her sights on her next degree—a bachelor’s. Through the decades, after her work was done in the registrar’s office, she’d turn her attention to the class she was taking.

At Sunday’s Commencement, 28 years after she started working toward the degree, Wright  graduated with magna cum laude honors, earning a bachelor’s in liberal studies and a minor in linguistics. She was also awarded the Nancy C. Gelling Award from the . The award is presented to the commuter, part-time graduate with the highest overall grade point average. It honors students who have demonstrated exceptional academic achievement while balancing the challenges of being part-time, commuter students.

Wright, 72, says she’s still floored by receiving the award.

“I’m like me, really? I’ve just been plodding away,” she says.

Pursuing Her Interests, One Credit at a Time

Wright worked in the registrar’s office until her retirement in 2021. Once she wasn’t working full-time, she was able to take classes during the day, which she says “made a big difference.”

“A couple semesters, I took two because I could, because I couldn’t decide between which one I liked better,” she says. “So I did them both, and they just kind of snowballed, and here I am at the end.”

Working in the registrar’s office through the years was rewarding. She enjoyed helping people across the University.

“The nice thing about being a student, as well as being staff, is you get to see both sides of it,” Wright says. “You know how things are going in the classroom, as well as the things that need to be done in order to get that person to the classroom.”Framed  certificate awarding the Nancy C. Gelling Award to Susan E. Wright, dated May 7, 2026. Her first job in the registrar’s office was working as a frontline staff member, fielding questions from students who came into the office. This was long before MySlice or Self-Service.

“You waited to talk to one of us, and we worked with you to try and figure out what the problem was and how to help and how to hopefully send someone away with a solution,” she says.

Being a part-time student throughout her time in the office, she says, added another helpful layer in assisting the students who came in. Later, as her roles changed and grew, she went on to do more managing and building processes behind the scenes and working with the curriculum committee in the University Senate.

Wright says there were many times over the years when she couldn’t pursue her own classes, when there was too much going on with work or her personal life.

“That’s why it’s taken so long,” she says.

She was drawn to liberal studies because she loved that she had access to a broad spectrum of disciplines.

It led her to taking a few classes in criminal justice and a few in geography, which she wasn’t expecting to enjoy as much as she did. Over the years, the feeling was the same, that craving to learn more and more skills.

“I have very eclectic tastes, so I’m like, ‘Oh, a little of this, a little of that, how about some more of that? How about some more of that?’” Wright says. “And it was nice to be able to do that and have that be a degree program.”

Never Give Up

Graduate in cap and gown receives framed  award on stage during commencement ceremony.
Susan Wright receives her award at the College of Professional Studies Convocation.

Wright says she hopes others considering pursuing a degree part-time take this lesson from her journey: don’t give up. Take it semester by semester, and if you need to take a break because of other things going on in your life, that’s OK.

She says not to let the fact that it might take time slow you down, just keep plugging away.

“Life will intervene, and you just kind of let life do its thing, and then you get back to it,” she says.

Wright also recommends taking a look at what’s going on in your life and asking if you can put in the work needed for a class. If the answer is yes, go for it. If not, wait until the next time the class is offered, or look for another the next semester. She says to make sure you know the requirements for the degree you’re interested in, look at the course catalogue and consider whether the classes meet at times you can attend.

“When I started, everything was on campus, in-person,” she says.

These days there are a lot more offerings for online classes and programs available to students who are working full-time and pursuing a degree part-time, she says.

“Really the thing is, don’t give up, keep going,” Wright says.

The University has been such a big part of her life as a staff member and student over the decades that Wright says she plans to keep supporting the campus as best she can. For now, she plans to embrace her free time in retirement as a graduate of the University.

“I’m just going to enjoy my retirement, and then figure out what else I can learn?” she says. “There’s learning opportunities out there and honing some skills that I already have.”

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Person wearing a blue graduation cap and gown with orange stole and honor cords, standing indoors near a doorway.
Student Speaker Sadie Shaula Meyer Urges Classmates to Remember ‘Orange Mindset’ /2026/05/11/student-speaker-urges-classmates-to-remember-orange-mindset/ Mon, 11 May 2026 14:50:56 +0000 /?p=338188 The University Scholar who studied biomedical engineering and mathematics called on the Class of 2026 to own the work behind their success.

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Campus & Community Student Speaker Sadie Shaula Meyer Urges Classmates to Remember ‘Orange Mindset’

Sadie Shaula Meyer

Student Speaker Sadie Shaula Meyer Urges Classmates to Remember ‘Orange Mindset’

The University Scholar who studied biomedical engineering and mathematics called on the Class of 2026 to own the work behind their success.
Dialynn Dwyer May 11, 2026

During her Commencement speech on Sunday, Student Speaker Sadie Shaula Meyer ’26 urged members of the Class of 2026 to keep close what she called the “Orange Mindset” as they head out into the world.

The University Scholar and biomedical engineering and mathematics major in the and encouraged her fellow graduates to remember that successful opportunities don’t simply “work out,” rather, that they all have the “Orange Mindset” driving those achievements.

“As an engineer and researcher, I have seen how every decision, no matter its scale, has the capacity to influence the system as a whole,” she said. “And it is that same spirit of initiative, collaboration, genuine curiosity and commitment to innovation that our graduates hold, which lies behind the success so clear to those around us. That is the real catalyst of our accomplishments. We do not rely on some instinctual intellect, nor do we expect opportunities to simply fall into our laps. We create them.”

Meyer pointed out Syracuse students have shown up for one another and the community through their years at the University, whether that meant dancing through exhaustion for OttoTHON, pitching in on Giving Day or lending support to a classmate in need.

“That is what defines the Orange Mindset that our graduates hold so close,” she said. “That quiet determination and that dedication are what makes Syracuse students truly extraordinary.”

As she closed her remarks, Meyer challenged her classmates to carry that spirit forward—and, when others marvel at how things seem to fall into place, to tell the real story.

“Tell them about the work,” she said. “Tell them about the failures that helped you grow. Tell them about the people who stood beside you and how you stood beside them. Lift those around you as you rise. And remember that failure is not final, but redirection, a necessary step toward where you are meant to go.”

Watch Meyer’s full remarks below:

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Graduate in cap and gown with an orange sash speaking at a podium labeled “,” with banners in the background.
10 Tips for Taking a Great Graduation Photo /2026/05/07/10-tips-for-taking-a-great-graduation-photo/ Thu, 07 May 2026 17:59:52 +0000 /?p=338003 Gregory Heisler, Distinguished Professor of Photography in the Newhouse School, shares his expert advice for getting the best picture to remember the day.

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Campus & Community 10 Tips for Taking a Great Graduation Photo

(Photo by Marilyn Hesler)

10 Tips for Taking a Great Graduation Photo

Gregory Heisler, Distinguished Professor of Photography in the Newhouse School, shares his expert advice for getting the best picture to remember the day.
Dialynn Dwyer May 7, 2026

Graduation day is fast approaching with its blur of hugs, happy tears and mortarboard tosses—which means the photos have to do the heavy lifting of preserving it all. Whether you’re the graduate, the proud parent or the friend drafted as the unofficial photographer, a little preparation goes a long way toward capturing images you’ll want to commemorate 2026 Commencement.

For advice, Today turned to renowned portrait photographer, , Distinguished Professor of Photography in the . Heisler has , shooting more than 70 cover portraits for Time alone and having his photographs and visual essays appear in Life, Sports Illustrated, The New York Times Magazine and ESPN among others.

Headshot of a person wearing round glasses, a dark suit jacket, and a polka-dot bow tie, smiling against a plain light background.
Gregory Heisler

With graduation season in full swing, Heisler, whose portrait subjects have ranged from presidents to rock stars to Olympic athletes, shares 10 tips for making the most of the moment—including the best place on campus to take a picture.

1. Use Your Phone

There’s no need for fancy equipment to capture a great picture.

“Honestly, these days we can truly take terrific portraits with our phone, plus it’s the camera we always have on hand and are most familiar with!” he says.

2. Use ‘Portrait’ Mode If You Can

Heisler recommends opting for the portrait setting on your phone’s camera if you can, which will allow you to blur the background to your taste after you take the picture.

“You can always just use the regular “PHOTO” setting if you want a really wide view (use the “0.5” lens setting) or a closeup (set it to “2x” or “5x”),” he says.

3. Change the ‘Lens’ Setting

If you’re able to adjust for portraits, Heisler says it’s worth changing the setting on your phone’s camera’s “lens” to 2x from the typical default of 1x, which tends to give more of a wide-angle. The zoomed-in setting will be worth it, he says.

“The portraits will look more natural and flattering,” he says.

4. For Group Shots, Have a Line of Sight

If you’re taking a group shot, make sure no one is obscured by someone standing in front of them.

“Tell the group, ‘If you can see me, I can see you,’” Heisler says.

5. Get a Laugh and Take a Lot of Pictures

To avoid that pained, posed group shot, Heisler recommends telling everyone you’re going to take the picture on the count of “three.”

“Then shoot on ‘TWO!’ Or even ‘ONE!’” he says. “They’ll all laugh, then quickly shoot another while they’re laughing. In fact, shoot a bunch. Digital photos are free!”

Graduate posing with an orange university mascot while others take photos on a sunny campus lawn outside a stone building.
Graduates on campus, taking photos and celebrating before commencement weekend. (Photo by Jeremy Brinn)

6. Avoid Shooting From Eye Level

Heisler says the most common mistake people make is to take their pictures from eye level.

Instead, he recommends “crouching slightly,” which you’ll often see professional photographers doing.

“The reason is that the busiest, most distracting part of the background is right at the horizon line—people, cars, signs, trees,” he says. “And the horizon always lines up with where you are and moves with you. If you move up, it moves up; if you go lower, it goes lower in the frame. If you shoot from eye level, the horizon is right at your subject’s eye level, so the most distracting part of the background is right behind their head.”

Crouching just a little, drops the horizon to the shoulder height or lower of your subject, so their head is now above it, freed from the visual distractions.

7. Shoot in Aperture Priority Mode

For those using a DSLR or mirrorless camera—where you can swap out the lens as opposed to a point-and-shoot or phone camera where the lens is fixed and built in—to capture the day, Heisler says it’s best to shoot your pictures in aperture priority mode (A or Av).

“This means that you choose the aperture (or ƒ/stop), so you decide how much is in focus, and the camera takes care of the rest,” he says.

8. The ‘Iconic View’ on Campus: The Hall of Languages

Heisler recommends opting for the “iconic view” of the Syracuse campus for your pictures: looking up at the Hall of Languages, which was the first building constructed on campus, dedicated in 1873.

The photographer says there are many “excellent vantage points” for your photos starting from the bottom of the hill at Waverly Avenue, where you can also capture the “” sign spelled out.

“Virtually anywhere up from there will work well, all the way up to the steps of the building, even off to one side or the other to see the trees,” Heisler says. “Your subjects can stand, you can arrange them on the steps or they can find a quiet spot to sit off to one side in the grass.”

Another good thing of taking pictures at the Hall of Languages: it faces north, so your subject will too. The sun stays behind them, and no one has to squint.

Editor’s note: The Remembrance Wall, which is on the slope in front of the Hall of Languages, is an active memorial and people should not sit or stand on top of it for photos.

Overhead view of campus quad with steps, walkway, and groups of graduates in caps and gowns gathered around a central lawn and historic building.

9. The Light Will Get Better As the Day Goes On

“The light just gets prettier later in the day toward sunset as the sun moves lower in the sky and to the west,” Heisler says.

That would be to the photographer’s right, looking uphill.

And if rain or clouds are in the forecast, Heisler says to bring a waterproof camera.

Though, he adds, most phones are pretty water-resistant.

If it’s really raining, he recommends leaning into the weather by bringing an umbrella to use as a prop. You’ll be able to shoot wherever you want and also give your subject something to play around with, while providing some shelter from the storm.

“This may sound strange, but placing your person a foot or two inside an open doorway looking out at you could be the way to go for a single portrait,” Heisler says. “While you’ll be out in the rain (with your now-available umbrella), your model will be bathed in beautiful light. This can be equally useful on a clear day; skillful fashion photographers employ it as their go-to solution to escape harsh midday sun.”

Using the “portrait” setting on the phone with that posing will once again do wonders to take the distracting background and save the focus for family and friends.

“If you have a fancy camera, try a zoom setting longer than 100mm for a flattering perspective, and leave your aperture wide open for shallowest focus – on most lenses ƒ/2 to ƒ/4 will blur the background beautifully,” Heisler says.

10. Have Fun

Heisler’s final piece of advice is to have fun while you’re taking pictures of the day.

“Shoot fast to catch great expressions while people are fresh,” he says.

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Back view of a graduate in cap and gown with a gold “2026” tassel, overlooking a campus with a domed building and cloudy sky.
What You Need to Know for Commencement 2026 /2026/05/06/what-you-need-to-know-for-commencement-2026/ Wed, 06 May 2026 13:29:38 +0000 /?p=337878 Pomp, circumstance and pure Orange pride—'s Class of 2026 takes the JMA Wireless Dome on Sunday, May 10, for the big celebration.

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Campus & Community What You Need to Know for Commencement 2026

(Photo by Coco Boardman)

What You Need to Know for Commencement 2026

Pomp, circumstance and pure Orange pride—'s Class of 2026 takes the JMA Wireless Dome on Sunday, May 10, for the big celebration.
May 6, 2026

Caps off, Orange! has arrived! It’s time to celebrate your academic accomplishments with family, friends and the entire University community.

The University’s Commencement exercises will be held in the JMA Wireless Dome Sunday, May 10, beginning with the degree candidates’ procession at 9:30 a.m.

Mike Tirico ’88, NBC Sports broadcaster and vice chair of ’s Board of Trustees, will deliver the Commencement address.

An overhead view of three smiling  graduates lying on green turf near an orange block "S," one holding a diploma cover and another wearing a bright orange marshal sash.
(Photo by Coco Boardman)

School and college convocations and Commencement will be livestreamed. Visit the to view the ceremonies online.

At Sunday’s Commencement, around 6,679 students are expected to graduate.

Acting Chancellor J. Michael Haynie will address the graduates and confer degrees. Vice Chancellor, Provost and Chief Academic Officer Lois Agnew will give the welcome.

The University will recognize six honorary degree recipients:

  • Ruth Chen, a professor of practice in biomedical and chemical engineering in the ;
  • Mantosh Dewan, president, SUNY Distinguished Service Professor and the Alan and Marlene Norton Presidential Chair at Upstate Medical University;
  • Clifford J. Ensley ’69, ’70, G’71, founder and chief executive officer of Leisure Merchandising Corporation;
  • Linda M. LeMura G’83, G’87, president of Le Moyne College;
  • Joanne M. Mahoney ’87, L’90, president of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry; and
  • Chancellor Kent Syverud, the 12th chancellor and president of .

Sam Clemence, Laura J. and L. Douglas Meredith Professor Emeritus, is mace bearer.

Tadodaho Sidney Hill, of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, will give the ceremonial opening. Fr. Gerry Waterman, Hendricks Chapel chaplain, and advisor, Catholic Association, Roman Catholic Diocese of Syracuse, will give the invocation. Alonna D. Berry ’11, president of the Alumni Association, will welcome the newest alumni.

Student Marshals and Scholars

Representing the Class of 2026, Chidera Olalere and Silke Pion are the senior class marshals and will lead graduates during the ceremony.

Along with the all-University marshals, 23 student marshals represent the 13 schools and colleges at the University. The marshals will lead the degree candidates of their respective schools or colleges.

A laughing graduate in a blue cap and gown embraces Otto the Orange on a sunlit campus walkway lined with blooming spring trees.
(Photo by Coco Boardman)

Twelve seniors have been designated as Scholars. This is the highest undergraduate honor the University bestows. University Scholar Sadie Shaula Meyer, College of Engineering and Computer Science and College of Arts and Sciences, was selected as the student speaker on behalf of the Class of 2026.

Retiring faculty members who have been recommended to receive the title of emeritus by the University Senate to the Board of Trustees will be recognized by Jamie L. Winders, vice provost for faculty affairs.

The University Marshal is Kira Reed, associate professor of management, Martin J. Whitman School of Management. Associate University Marshal is Tula Goenka G’86, professor and graduate program director, S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.

Also during the ceremonies, Army and Air Force ROTC cadets will present the colors.

The Wind Ensemble will perform under the direction of conductors Timothy W. Diem and Bradley P. Ethington.

The national anthem will be sung by Bridget Backer ’26, College of Visual and Performing Arts, and Catherine Grace Cosenza ’26, College of Visual and Performing Arts, will sing the alma mater.

Security and Other Important Information

To ensure a safe and enjoyable event, all guests and degree candidates will go through , including metal detection, prior to entering all Convocation and Commencement venues. The University has a , which will be in effect for Commencement weekend.

Get the OrangeNow App for the Commencement Experience

Download the and choose the “Commencement Experience” for easy access to Commencement weekend details and to receive push notifications related to the weekend’s events.

Update Your Email Address

Congratulations, Class of 2026! You’re Forever Orange, and the team wants to stay in touch with you. It’s especially important to so we can reach you!

Ask Orange Alumni

Syracuse alumni are standing by to help as you take the next step. Make career connections without any app, sign-up or login information to remember. Just !

Stay Connected

Check out more ways to stay engaged with the Orange family in this .

Class of 2026 Giving Campaign

 before Friday, May 8, to receive special orange, white and silver cords to wear at Commencement!

Fill up the Wishing Well!

Are you a soon-to-be grad or a friend or family member of someone graduating? Mark the milestone with a gift in honor of the Class of 2026 and to have it featured on our Wishing Well website!

More information about Commencement 2026 can be found at .

Six graduates in blue and orange regalia pose arm-in-arm on a green hillside
(Photo by Marilyn Hesler)

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A group of nine graduates in blue and orange caps and gowns laugh and pose together on the stone steps of a campus building
Class of 2026: 6 Steps to Take Before Commencement /2026/04/29/class-of-2026-6-steps-to-take-before-commencement/ Wed, 29 Apr 2026 19:00:30 +0000 /?p=337433 The below checklist helps the Class of 2026 make the most of their final days as they balance coursework and celebrations.

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Campus & Community Class of 2026: 6 Steps to Take Before Commencement

Members of the campus community gather with Otto to celebrate at a prior Commencement. (Photo by Jeremy Brinn)

Class of 2026: 6 Steps to Take Before Commencement

The below checklist helps the Class of 2026 make the most of their final days as they balance coursework and celebrations.
Gabrielle Lake April 29, 2026

“Leaving the place I’ve called home for the past four years is truly bittersweet. While I am sad to say goodbye, I am incredibly proud of what my peers and I have accomplished,” says Kate Jackson ’26. “I look forward to more amazing opportunities and adventures ahead. Go Orange!”

Here are six things seniors should do before they receive their diploma on May 10.

  1. : Don’t miss one of the last times on campus to celebrate with friends before graduation! Highlights include activities, food, giveaways and fun.
  2. : Pay it forward by making your Class Giving Campaign gift of $26 and you’ll !
  3. : Celebrate your next adventure and complete today!
  4. : Acting like a printed time capsule, order a yearbook to preserve University photos, memories of friendships, trends and more.
  5. : Including preparation instructions, a complete schedule of events, accessibility information and more, this is your one-stop for all Commencement Weekend information needs.
  6. : Graduation marks the start of the alumni experience! Be sure to stay in touch through the Alumni Association’s expansive events, services, clubs and more!

“Seeing the hard work of the past four years wrap-up is hugely rewarding and likewise emotional,” says Nora Benko ’26. “Leaving behind this place is bittersweet but the upcoming celebrations will be a great way to close out this chapter in Syracuse.”

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Graduates in orange stoles pose with a large orange mascot wearing a blue cap in front of architectural columns.
to Award 6 Honorary Degrees at 2026 Commencement /2026/04/29/syracuse-university-to-award-6-honorary-degrees-at-2026-commencement/ Wed, 29 Apr 2026 18:13:27 +0000 /?p=337404 Leaders in science, medicine, business, education and public service, including Chancellor Kent Syverud and Dr. Ruth Chen, will be honored at the May 10 Commencement ceremony.

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to Award 6 Honorary Degrees at 2026 Commencement

Leaders in science, medicine, business, education and public service, including Chancellor Kent Syverud and Dr. Ruth Chen, will be honored at the May 10 Commencement ceremony.
News Staff April 29, 2026

A distinguished scientist and educator, a physician and healthcare innovator, a pioneering entrepreneur, a ground-breaking academic leader, a distinguished public servant and a transformative national leader in higher education will be recognized with honorary degrees from at the .

Dr. Ruth Chen, a professor of practice in biomedical and chemical engineering in the College of Engineering and Computer Science at ; Dr. Mantosh Dewan, president, SUNY Distinguished Service Professor and the Alan and Marlene Norton Presidential Chair at Upstate Medical University; Clifford J. Ensley ’69, ’70, G’71, founder and chief executive officer of Leisure Merchandising Corporation; Linda M. LeMura G’83, G’87, president of Le Moyne College; Joanne M. Mahoney ’87, L’90, president of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry; and Chancellor Kent Syverud, the 12th chancellor and president of , will be honored for their outstanding professional contributions, achievements and service to their communities and the public good.

Dr. Ruth Chen
Doctor of Science

Person standing in front of a tree outside
Dr. Ruth Chen

An environmental toxicologist, Dr. Chen has built a distinguished career at the intersection of environmental science, public health and policy, and has had an indelible impact on the community and Central New York through her commitment to students, scholarship, service and the public good.

Dr. Chen holds a Ph.D. and M.P.H. in environmental toxicology from the University of Michigan and an M.S. in biomedical sciences from the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston. Prior to academia, she served as state toxicologist for the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, where she was responsible for risk assessment and risk management decisions across programs in permit, remediation, corrective action, combustion facilities, toxic substances and landfills. She provided expert counsel to multiple state divisions on issues of human health and toxicology while simultaneously managing Tennessee’s Drinking Water Laboratory Certification Program. She secured federal funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Environmental Protection Agency, and was a staff fellow at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), working on pharmacokinetics.

Before joining , Dr. Chen served on the faculty at the School of Engineering and Applied Science, Washington University in St. Louis, where she led a professional engineering master’s degree program and an international education program. At Syracuse, she is admired for her ability to translate complex topics into accessible and inspiring learning experiences, with courses that bridge theory and application and empower students to see engineering as a vocation.

Beyond the classroom, Dr. Chen’s leadership has strengthened student and community life in extraordinary ways. She has championed an award-winning International Student Success Model and hosts an annual International Thanksgiving Celebration for students who cannot travel home for the holidays. She is an advocate for Women in Science and Engineering and a consistent presence at student performances and athletics, ensuring every student feels they have a place at the University.

Dr. Chen’s impact extends well beyond campus. She has served on the boards of United Way, Interfaith Works and Syracuse Stage. During the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, she helped procure masks for the community. She launched Operation Orange Warmup, the University’s winter coat drive, and through her support of local nonprofits, she has turned generosity into action across Central New York.

Dr. Mantosh Dewan
Doctor of Science

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Dr. Mantosh Dewan

A physician scientist who has made significant contributions to clinical psychiatry, neuroimaging, psychotherapy and mental health systems, Dewan has dedicated his career to advancing medical education, expanding access to mental healthcare and serving the Central New York community.

Dewan began his career at SUNY Upstate in 1975 as a mixed medicine/psychiatry intern, becoming chief resident in psychiatry before joining the faculty as an assistant professor. Over the decades he has served as director of undergraduate education, director of residency training and chair of the Department of Psychiatry, and as interim dean of the College of Medicine from 2016 to 2017.

His scholarly output encompasses more than 80 papers, 35 books and book chapters, and hundreds of presentations on topics ranging from brain imaging and the economics of mental healthcare to psychotherapy and medical education. His research has been funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and the Health Resources and Services Administration. He is co-editor two books: “The Difficult to Treat Psychiatric Patient” and “The Art and Science of Brief Psychotherapies,” a best seller now in its third edition, translated into five languages and chosen for the American Psychiatric Association’s Core Competencies in Psychotherapy Series.

Dewan’s leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic was transformational. Under his direction, Upstate developed the world’s most sensitive saliva diagnostic test and provided over four million tests to 60 of the 64 SUNY campuses, enabling all of SUNY to remain open and in-person. partnered directly with Upstate in this critical effort. Reflecting Dewan’s vision for leveraging technology to expand access to care, Upstate provides tele-psychiatry diagnostic and treatment services to students at 56 SUNY campuses. More recently, Dewan launched Upstate Biotech Ventures with $6 million in seed funding to cultivate biotech companies incubated at the medical center.

Listed in The Best Doctors in America and a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association (APA), Dewan has received numerous honors, including the APA’s George Tarjan Award, designation as an “Exemplary Chair” by SUNY, ’s Chancellor’s Medal in 2021 and an honorary degree from Onondaga Community College. He is also an affiliated professor at Jönköping University in Sweden.

Dewan’s career reflects intellectual curiosity, innovation, ethical leadership and a deep commitment to using science and medicine in service to society. His accolades and leadership reflect a career that has made profound contributions to science and to improve the well-being of the Central New York community.

Clifford J. Ensley ’69, ’70, G’71
Doctor of Humane Letters

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Clifford J. Ensley

A dedicated University trustee, accomplished entrepreneur and a celebrated student-athlete, Ensley has demonstrated a lifelong commitment to his alma mater through service, philanthropy and unwavering Orange spirit.

Ensley arrived at Syracuse as a walk-on with the football team after no Division I programs recruited him. His tenacity on the practice field earned him a scholarship from head coach Ben Schwartzwalder, and by his sophomore year he was starting on the varsity squad.

Ensley went on to become the last three-sport letter winner in history, earning letters in football, wrestling and lacrosse. He was an honorable mention All-American in football, set interception and special teams records as a defensive back and delivered a record-setting 76-yard punt return for a touchdown against Navy.

He was captain and most valuable player of the lacrosse team and was named the 1969 Athlete of the Year, joining a distinguished list that includes Jim Brown ’57, Ernie Davis ’62, Floyd Little ’67, H’19, Dave Bing ’66, H’06 and Larry Csonka ’68. Ensley received the Letter Winner of Distinction Award from Athletics and the Varsity Club in 1993 and the Dritz Rookie Trustee of the Year Award in 2018. A champion of volunteerism, he also founded Athletes Who Care in 2022, an organization that partners with Syracuse student-athletes to support charitable causes and community organizations in Central New York.

Ensley earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from the and the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, a bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering from the and an MBA from the . He was a member of the U.S. Army ROTC and Phi Delta Theta fraternity. After his military service, Ensley entered the luggage industry. Drawing on his education, his experience in retail luggage sales and a perseverance built on the playing fields, he launched his idea for a wholesale luggage and accessories manufacturing business in 1978 with $2,500. The founder and chief executive officer of Leisure Merchandising Corporation grew the business into a multimillion-dollar enterprise with a brand presence in thousands of retail locations.

Elected to the Board of Trustees in 2015, Ensley currently serves on the Athletics, Advancement and External Affairs, and Facilities committees. Together with his wife, Sue, he has provided lead gifts for the Ensley Athletic Center, the Chris Gedney Endowed Football Scholarship and the Orange Forever Endowed Memorial Fund, which provides keepsake blankets to the families of every deceased former student-athlete. They have also lent their support to initiatives in the College of Engineering and Computer Science, the D’Aniello Institute for Veterans and Military Families, the Whitman School, the Maxwell School, the Catholic Center and the Sala Family Plaza, among other numerous initiatives.

Linda M. LeMura G’83, G’87
Doctor of Humane Letters

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Linda M. LeMura

LeMura’s career has been defined by groundbreaking leadership, scientific excellence and an unwavering commitment to educational equity and access.

LeMura graduated from Bishop Grimes High School as a three-sport athlete and honors student. She earned both a master’s degree (1983) in physical education and a Ph.D. (1987) in applied physiology from the at , where her academic training laid the foundation for a distinguished career. Her research in pediatric obesity, pediatric applied physiology and lipid and energy metabolism has produced more than 30 peer-reviewed articles, two books and 26 externally funded grant proposals. She has served as a research consultant for both the U.S. and Italian Olympic committees. She has consistently included students as co-investigators and co-authors in her work, highlighting her work as a mentor and a commitment to the next generation of scientists.

After serving as a professor, research scientist and graduate program director at Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania, LeMura joined Le Moyne College in 2003 and held leadership roles as dean of arts and sciences and provost before making history in 2014 as the first female layperson to serve as president of a Jesuit institution of higher education in the U.S. Her appointment opened pathways for women’s leadership across Jesuit higher education, with 10 additional women now serving in presidential roles at Jesuit institutions.

Under her leadership, Le Moyne has raised roughly $200 million, achieved eight consecutive years of record enrollment and led the college’s strategic transition to NCAA Division I athletics as a full member of the Northeast Conference.

LeMura co-chairs the Central New York Regional Economic Development Council. She was actively engaged in the Central New York’s efforts to bring Micron’s microchip manufacturing facility to the area and has aligned Le Moyne to the resulting workforce demand through new semiconductor-focused programs and the college’s ERIE 21 partnership with Micron.

She holds board positions with the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities and the International Association of Jesuit Universities. Her awards include the 2023 Tolley Medal, selected by the School of Education; the 2019 Syracuse Key4Women Achieve Award; the 2017 Temple Adath Yeshurun Citizen of the Year Award; the 2017 Bishop’s Award from the Diocese of Syracuse Catholic Charities and recognition as a 2016 New York State Senate Woman of Distinction.

The relationship between and Le Moyne College has grown in collaboration during LeMura’s presidency through joint academic initiatives, community engagement projects and shared commitments to excellence.

Joanne M. Mahoney ’87, L’90
Doctor of Laws

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Joanne M. Mahoney

Mahoney has built a career defined by her commitment to community, environmental stewardship and the advancement of Central New York. She earned a bachelor of science degree in marketing management from the Martin J. Whitman School of Management in 1987 and a juris doctor from the College of Law in 1990. She credits her legal education as the foundation of her career in public leadership. Her late father, Bernard J. Mahoney L’69, was also a graduate of the College of Law.

Mahoney began her legal career in private practice at Harris Beach before serving for five years as a criminal prosecutor in the Onondaga County District Attorney’s Office. She went on to serve on the Syracuse Common Council from 2000-03. In 2008, she became the first woman elected Onondaga County Executive, a position she held for three terms while overseeing a county government serving approximately 460,000 residents.

During her tenure, she created the nationally acclaimed Save the Rain green infrastructure program and helped lead efforts that transformed Onondaga Lake to swimmable water quality. She maintained the county’s highest bond ratings among all New York State counties and championed the Say Yes to Education partnership. Governing Magazine named her Public Official of the Year in 2011.

In November 2020, Mahoney was appointed president of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry (SUNY ESF), the first woman to lead the institution in its more than 110-year history. Under her leadership, SUNY ESF has risen in the Princeton Review’s rankings of the nation’s most environmentally responsible colleges.

She serves as co-chair of SUNY’s systemwide Sustainability Advisory Council and has sustained the historic partnership between SUNY ESF and , ensuring collaborative academic programs, shared student opportunities and joint diplomas.

Mahoney has also served as chair of the New York State Thruway Authority, where she oversaw completion of the Gov. Mario M. Cuomo Bridge, one of the nation’s largest infrastructure projects. She currently serves on the College of Law’s Board of Advisors and has supported the Hon. Theodore A. McKee L’75 Endowed Law Scholarship and WAER.

Chancellor Kent D. Syverud
Doctor of Laws

person standing on campus in front of buildings and trees
Chancellor Kent D. Syverud

Chancellor Syverud has led through 12 years of transformational change, reshaping the campus, strengthening research and academic excellence, and expanding ’s impact in Central New York and beyond.

Hailing from Irondequoit, New York, Chancellor Syverud earned a bachelor’s degree magna cum laude from Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, a law degree magna cum laude from the University of Michigan Law School and a master’s in economics from the University of Michigan. He counts among his closest mentors the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, for whom he clerked. His career in legal education spans three decades, including deanships at Vanderbilt University Law School and Washington University School of Law. An elected member of the American Law Institute, he received the 2024 TIAA Institute Theodore M. Hesburgh Award for Leadership Excellence, one of the highest national honors in higher education.

Since becoming chancellor in 2014, Chancellor Syverud has placed students at the center of the University’s mission. Under his leadership, Syracuse has seen record applications and enrollment, invested over $100 million in student life—including the Barnes Center at The Arch, a renovated Schine Student Center, two new residence halls and a transformed JMA Wireless Dome—and expanded global learning programs across five international centers and domestic sites in New York City, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

Chancellor Syverud played a central role in Central New York’s economic resurgence, including the University’s work to attract Micron Technology to build its largest American fabrication facility in the region. He directed the hiring of more than 700 faculty, helped the University achieve Research 1 status and oversaw the Forever Orange Campaign, which raised more than $1.59 billion—the largest fundraising effort in University history—as the endowment more than doubled to over $2 billion.

His dedication to veterans and military families stands among his most profound contributions. The expansion of ’s D’Aniello Institute for Veterans and Military Families and the creation of the National Veterans Resource Center at the Daniel and Gayle D’Aniello Building set a national standard for research, policy development and support to those who have served, and veteran enrollment has more than tripled since 2014. Throughout his chancellorship, Chancellor Syverud has continued to teach negotiation courses at the College of Law and the Whitman School of Management, embodying the teacher-scholar ideal.

Chancellor Syverud’s commitment to service extends beyond the University. He serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the Atlantic Coast Conference, having previously served as its president, and as an ex officio trustee of the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry. He is a trustee of Crouse Hospital and of Le Moyne College, and, by appointment of the governor of New York, serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York.

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Composite graphic with branding reading "Commencement 2026 Honorary Degree Recipients," featuring headshot photos of six honorees: Dr. Ruth Chen, Dr. Mantosh Dewan, Clifford J. Ensley '69, '70, G'71, Linda M. LeMura G'83, G'87, Joanne M. Mahoney '87, L'90, and Chancellor Kent D. Syverud.
It’s Finally Here: Seniors Pick Up Cap and Gown /2026/04/28/its-finally-here-seniors-pick-up-cap-and-gown/ Tue, 28 Apr 2026 20:22:01 +0000 /?p=337336 The Class of 2026 reflects on four years of late nights, breakthroughs and unforgettable memories as Commencement draws near.

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It’s Finally Here: Seniors Pick Up Cap and Gown

The Class of 2026 reflects on late nights, breakthroughs and unforgettable memories as Commencement draws near.
Amy Manley April 28, 2026

Seniors stopped by the Campus Store at the Schine Student Center to pick up their caps and gowns recently—and suddenly, it all became very real. All their work leading to this moment. The smiles, the nerves and so many thoughts as the Class of 2026 gets one step closer to walking across that stage.

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8 Things Seniors Want to Do Before Graduation /2026/04/28/8-things-seniors-want-to-do-before-graduation/ Tue, 28 Apr 2026 18:42:29 +0000 /?p=337319 From winning a national championship to visiting the chimes in Crouse College, these soon-to-be-graduates share what’s on their Syracuse bucket list.

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Campus & Community 8 Things Seniors Want to Do Before Graduation

The Crouse Chimes feature 14 bronze-cast bells operated by a system of levers and pulleys.

8 Things Seniors Want to Do Before Graduation

From winning a national championship to visiting the chimes in Crouse College, these soon-to-be-graduates share what’s on their Syracuse bucket list.
John Boccacino April 28, 2026

The Class of 2026 is wrapping up final assignments, studying for exams and gearing up for their next adventure. But the days before Commencement are a chance to take in everything campus has to offer one last time, whether it’s a final cup of coffee at People’s Place in Hendricks Chapel, a farewell slice of pizza at Varsity or a laughter-filled stroll through the Quad with friends.

Eight seniors shared with Today the one thing they need to do before they go.

A collage of eight  graduating seniors posing for individual portrait photos.
Top row (left to right): Daniel Baris, Caiyan Bass, Juinkye Chiang, Tommy DaSilva. Bottom row (left to right): Janese Fayson, Joy Mao, Emma Muchnick, German Nolivos.

Daniel Baris, a sport analytics and statistics major in the and the (A&S): “Win a championship in intramural wiffleball. My team has come close in the past, and I feel like this could be our year.”

Caiyan Bass, a communication sciences and disorders major in A&S and a Remembrance Scholar: “Take a trip up the Mount to visit Flint Hall, my freshman year residence hall. Walking through campus and the Quad to get to the top of the Mount steps was something I did every day when I first got to Syracuse. Going back would serve as a fun moment to not only remember that uphill trek, but also to reflect on everything the past four years have taught and given me.”

Juinkye Chiang, an architecture major in the : “I want to build a full-scale mockup of my architectural design, as this will be one of the only opportunities I will ever have to access the advanced fabrication facilities in Slocum Hall.”

Tommy DaSilva, a public health, policy studies and citizenship and civic engagement major in the and a Remembrance Scholar: “Have a movie night with friends. With college ending, I know that there is a very low possibility that I will live so close to all my friends again, so I want to make the most of our last few weeks together through our film nights.”

Janese Fayson, a marketing and finance major in the  and executive vice president of the (SGA): “Visit every academic building on campus. Somehow, there are still a few I’ve never stepped foot in, and it feels important to experience all the spaces that make up the University before I leave. It’s a way of fully taking in everything Syracuse has to offer while closing this chapter feeling complete.”

Joy Mao, a television, radio and film major in the , policy studies major in the Maxwell School and A&S and a Remembrance Scholar: “I took Fashion and Portraiture with Professor Gregory Heisler my sophomore year. It was an impactful class for my creative brain. One of the photographers we researched was Margaret Bourke-White, the first female photographer for Life magazine and the first female war correspondent. She gave her work to the University after she retired. I would like to visit the in Bird Library prior to graduation.”

Emma Muchnick, a sport management major in the Falk College and a midfielder on the : “Before I graduate, I want to win a national championship. To be able to bring back a national championship to Syracuse with this group would be so special and a perfect way to cap off my time as a student-athlete here. I’m so proud to represent this University and I want to do it on the biggest stage.”

German Nolivos, a political science major in the Maxwell School and A&S, public relations major in the Newhouse School, SGA president and a Remembrance Scholar: “Visit the chimes in the bell tower in Crouse College. It’s such a meaningful and recognizable part of the University, representing the history and tradition that defines the Syracuse experience. Being able to stand there before graduating feels like a full-circle moment.”

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Lewandowski and Limjuco Named Class of 2027 Senior Class Marshals /2026/04/14/lewandowski-and-limjuco-named-class-of-2027-senior-class-marshals/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 14:03:37 +0000 /?p=336249 The pair will represent the graduating class at Commencement and serve as liaisons to University administrators throughout the year.

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Lewandowski and Limjuco Named Class of 2027 Senior Class Marshals

The pair will represent the graduating class at Commencement and serve as liaisons to University administrators throughout the year.
Gabrielle Lake April 14, 2026

Through leadership, academics and an unwavering commitment to the Orange community, annually two students earn one of the most distinguished honors of a undergraduate career, being named the Senior Class Marshals. For the Class of 2027, the Student Experience division is proud to announce William Lewandowski ’27and Alyssa Limjuco ’27 as the rising Senior Class Marshals.

Together they will guide their graduating class during Commencement, play a role in recommending the Commencement speaker and engage directly with senior University administrators to discuss student experiences and perspectives. Among other responsibilities, Lewandowski and Limjuco will represent their class at Universitywide events and build connections with alumni.

“From integrity, heart and academics, to a genuine passion for community, William and Alyssa embody everything we hope to cultivate in our students. As Class of 2027 Senior Class Marshals, they have earned this honor not just through achievement but through both big and small intentional daily actions that have culminated into what it means to truly have Orange pride,” says , associate vice president for the Student Experience division, dean of students and chair of the selection committee.

William Lewandowski

Studio portrait of a person wearing a light-colored checkered button-down shirt against a neutral background
William Lewandowski

Originally from Lockport, New York, Lewandowski is preparing to enter his final year at more than 60 years after his grandfather, Dr. James Olson ’60, had his own student experience. Despite the distance, he says he has always found a piece of home within the Orange community.

Sharing an alma mater not only deepened Lewandowski’s bond with his grandfather but illuminated shared lifestyle philosophies that have ultimately built a foundation for being a Senior Class Marshal.

“Every time I would go back home from , I would talk to him and he loved hearing all my stories and what I was doing on campus,” says Lewandowski. “As a dentist for 50 years, he impacted so many people with his quality of care but also with his humility and willingness to accept payment in the form of homemade cookies or plants for his garden. He didn’t care who you were, he just wanted to make a positive impact on the lives of others. He taught me that true joy in life comes from people. It’s the people at this University that make it so great. I learned that very early on as a first-year student within the Whitman Living Learning Community.”

A Whitman Leadership Scholar and member of the dean’s list, Lewandowski is pursuing a bachelor’s degree in entrepreneurship and emerging enterprises in the . He has worked as a peer mentor and lead ambassador, showcasing the Whitman student experience for prospective and admitted students.

Throughout his undergraduate career his pursuit of experiential learning has propelled him into countless opportunities offered by . Weaving together hands on experience in venture capital, consulting, content marketing and private equity, Lewandowski’s internships have spanned Triangle Insights Group, 5Point Venture Partners and Blue Star Innovation Partners.

Helping student entrepreneurs and working to spark student interest in entrepreneurship, Lewandowski has spent much of his time immersed in the University’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. Additional highlights include his participation in the , where he has served as an Entrepreneur-in-Residence and as an Entrepreneurship Fellow. Expanding into content creation, he has been published in Poets&Quants, “,” and Ecology Prime, “.”

“ gave me a platform to be who I want to be,” says Lewandowski. During his undergraduate career Lewandowski has showcased where his academic rigor meets real-world impact. He has worked to help launch the new and has further harnessed his entrepreneurial spirit by starting two businesses. Clique Sports is a digital platform focusing on connecting college athletes with professional athletes regarding guidance and mentorship, and WM Media is focused on adding DJ and photography services to local events.

“To me, being Orange is about the people—making an impact on the lives of others to help them achieve their goals,” says Lewandowski. “ is a place where new ideas are encouraged and innovation is supported. There are big changes approaching the University and as the Class of 2027 we can become agents of change and leave our mark, which is quite a special opportunity.”

Alyssa Limjuco

Portrait of a person standing outdoors with arms crossed, wearing a white blouse, with greenery in the background.
Alyssa Limjuco

Alyssa Limjuco may have joined the Orange community from Silver Spring, Maryland, but she grew up in a military family, which meant moving between different places and school systems. These experiences quickly taught her how to adapt and understand different spaces and people, a skillset rooted in community building and empathy, that she has strengthened throughout each of her undergraduate experiences.

“I try to lead with empathy, stay open-minded and be someone who helps bridge gaps between groups,” says Limjuco. “Being selected as a Senior Class Marshal felt like recognition of a lifelong learning process. Not just the end result of my undergraduate experience but each time it has taken and will take, to get comfortable, to find my voice and to become someone who contributes meaningfully across different spaces while also fostering connections.”

As a student in the (VPA) and the , Limjuco is a dual major in film and sociology. Her dedication to academic excellence is quickly realized through multiple scholarships alongside membership in the Phi Kappa Phi Honors Society, being a Renée Crown University Honors Scholar and never missing a dean’s list placement.

As an Honors Academic Enhancement Awards recipient, studying abroad in Bologna, Italy, become possible. During this time she immersed herself in experiential learning weaving together classes that explored film history, visual strategy and preproduction planning, alongside Cinema Ritrovato, the world’s leading festival of restored cinema. Professional development highlights also include serving as the communications manager for the OrangeReels Film Festival and producing viral digital content as the Project FreeFall video editor.

“What gave me was permission to explore fully and commit deeply. Receiving honors and merit-based scholarships, including support to study abroad, affirmed that interdisciplinary work was not only possible here but valued,” says Limjuco.

Limjuco’s involvement spans widely as an active member of communities both on and off campus. On campus she has helped to connect veterans and military families with relevant support programs through the , she serves as the National Panhellenic Conference vice president of communications, as an active member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, a VPA peer coach, a Shaw Center STEM literacy tutor, OTTOthon team captain and as president of the Boxing Club. Globally, she amplifies the mission of Habitat for Humanity International, as video production and editing intern and as a volunteer for Habitat’s Women Build, a program that builds stronger and safer communities.

“The legacy I hope to leave is one of connection, demonstrating that involvement across disciplines, identities and roles strengthens a campus rather than divides it. I hope to be remembered as someone who embraced the full breadth of , someone who led with intention, while believing and supporting through intentional actions, that the University is at its best when students are encouraged to bring all parts of themselves into the spaces they serve.”

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