Philanthropy Archives | Today https://news-test.syr.edu/topic/philanthropy/ Wed, 27 May 2026 13:23:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-apple-touch-icon-120x120.png Philanthropy Archives | Today https://news-test.syr.edu/topic/philanthropy/ 32 32 ‘Devoted to the Greater Good’: University Mourns the Passing of Donald Newhouse /2026/05/26/devoted-to-the-greater-good-university-mourns-the-passing-of-donald-newhouse/ Wed, 27 May 2026 02:27:23 +0000 /?p=339039 The publishing magnate and longtime benefactor and friend of the University was the son of Advance Publications founder Samuel I. Newhouse, for whom the Newhouse School is named.

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‘Devoted to the Greater Good’: University Mourns the Passing of Donald Newhouse

The publishing magnate and longtime benefactor and friend of the University was the son of Advance Publications founder Samuel I. Newhouse, for whom the Newhouse School is named.
Wendy S. Loughlin May 26, 2026

Publishing magnate Donald Newhouse H’16, whose family’s philanthropy changed the face of and set the course for generations of communications students, died May 26. He was 96.

“Donald Newhouse was one of the most consequential figures in American media and one of the greatest benefactors this University has ever known,” says Chancellor . “His generosity, leadership and vision have given generations of students the education, preparation and opportunity to pursue meaningful careers in journalism and communications. He built a media empire that pushed the industry forward, embracing the demands of modern storytelling while never wavering in his belief that local journalism is essential to informed and engaged communities. We are deeply grateful for everything he gave to , and our hearts are with the Newhouse family.”

“Donald Newhouse deeply understood —not just its history and mission, but its character,” says Chancellor Emeritus Kent Syverud, who worked closely with Newhouse during his tenure as chancellor. “Over the many years I knew him, I came to appreciate his abiding commitment to the idea that journalism done well is one of the highest forms of public service. Losing him is a profound loss for this university, and personally, for me. I am grateful for every conversation we had and for his great love and care for . My deepest sympathies go to Steven, Katherine, Michael and the entire Newhouse family.”

“Donald Newhouse set a standard for what it means to be a true champion of this university,” says Chairman of the Board of Trustees Jeffrey Scruggs. “As an honorary trustee, he inspired our board not just through his extraordinary philanthropy but through his genuine, tireless advocacy for —the kind that came from someone who believed in this institution with his whole heart and showed up for it in every way. My thoughts are with the entire Newhouse family, especially Trustee Michael Newhouse, as he and his family grieve an extraordinary man.”

Dedicated to Communications Education

The is named for Newhouse’s father, Samuel I. Newhouse, who was born to immigrant parents in a New York City tenement in 1895 and by the time of his death in 1979 had built the publishing empire .

His $15 million gift to the University in 1960 supported the construction of the first two buildings of the Newhouse complex: Newhouse 1, , and Newhouse 2, . In recognition of his philanthropy, the school was named for Samuel Newhouse in 1971.

A group of adults and children standing on the steps inside the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications
Donald Newhouse (center) and members of the Newhouse family pose on the steps in the Newhouse 1 lobby with President Lyndon Johnson and First Lady Lady Bird Johnson on the day of the Newhouse 1 dedication in 1964.

Donald Newhouse and his brother, Samuel I. “Si” Newhouse Jr., took over Advance Publications following their father’s death. They continued his legacy as shrewd and successful publishers, and as dedicated supporters of communications education at Syracuse.

“Donald Newhouse’s impact on American media, and the school that bears his family’s name, is difficult to put into words,” says Newhouse Dean . “He believed deeply in the core values of journalism, and in the importance of diverse voices in the newsroom as a way of strengthening coverage of the communities we serve. His generosity made it possible for to become home to the country’s top communications programs and train generations of journalists.”

Moving Into the Future

With continued philanthropy in the years following the naming of the school, the Newhouse family—through the Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation led by Donald Newhouse—became the University’s largest benefactor. A $15 million gift in 2003 supported the construction of Newhouse 3, .

A line of dignitaries stands outside a modern glass building, holding a large banner designed to look like a newspaper with the headline "Dedicates Newhouse III." The group is participating in a ribbon-cutting-style ceremony for the Newhouse III building at .
Donald Newhouse (fourth from right) cuts the ribbon at the dedication of Newhouse 3 in 2007. With him are Dean Emeritus David Rubin (second from right), Susan Newhouse (third from right), U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts (sixth from right), Si Newhouse (fourth from left) and other honored guests.

An $18 million renovation of Newhouse 2, supported in part by the Newhouse Foundation, produced the Newhouse Studio and Innovation Center—featuring Dick Clark Studios, the Alan Gerry Center for Media Innovation and the Diane and Bob Miron Digital News Center—which was dedicated by Oprah Winfrey in 2014. In 2020, a marked the largest-ever gift in University history.

Donald Newhouse visited the school to announce the gift in January of that year. In a full-circle moment, he posed in the Newhouse 1 lobby, just as he had done alongside his father and the rest of his family on the day of the Newhouse 1 dedication. “The Newhouse School resulted from my father’s dream to establish the finest journalism school in the world,” he said. “In this era in which public communications is undergoing continual and radical change, my family and I expect to continue our long-term commitment to ensure that the school my dad helped found almost 60 years ago remains the leading communications school in the world for another generation.”

Lifelong Connection

Donald Newhouse’s vision for the school embraced technology and innovation while honoring the core values of journalism that remained key to its foundation. In this new era, the Newhouse family’s generosity was indeed a cornerstone of the school’s strength. “Without this Newhouse money, the school would not be what it is today,” says Newhouse Dean Emeritus . The foundation’s gift in support of Newhouse 3, he says, “catapulted the school to the very top of communications education.”

A group of approximately 13 students poses with a person in a dark suit and orange tie in a wood-paneled room with ornate leaded glass windows.
After announcing the Newhouse Foundation’s $75 million gift to the University, Donald Newhouse joined students for a luncheon at the Chancellor’s Residence in January 2020.

Newhouse funds also supported technological advancements, endowed professorships, student scholarships and other areas of need. The Newhouse Dean’s Leadership Fund, established in 2007 with a $10 million matching challenge, provides discretionary funds allowing the dean to leverage opportunities to enhance the educational mission of the school. The , which began in 1994 as a partnership with the Advance-owned Syracuse Post-Standard, was undergirded by Donald Newhouse’s commitment to diversifying news reporting. “Donald recognized that the quality of journalism would only be as good as the people in the newsrooms who produced it,” Rubin says.

The family’s philanthropy touched other areas of the University as well, including , and the , where a gift from the foundation helped establish the Chancellor Kent Syverud and Dr. Ruth Chen Endowed Chair in Applied Artificial Intelligence. Newhouse also gave to the fund for the Marley Building, which is named for the parents of his late wife, . And he and was awarded an honorary degree in 2016.

Throughout his life, Donald Newhouse remained connected to the University, offering his quiet guidance and steadfast support—a presence that was appreciated by numerous deans, Rubin included.

“Despite his wealth and success, he was an idealist, a man devoted to the greater good, a man of warmth and empathy,” Rubin says. “Look around. How many such industry titans does one see who are like him?”

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A person in a dark suit and red tie sits in a wooden chair at the base of a stone staircase inside the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. Behind him, a quote from Samuel I. Newhouse is engraved on the wall: "A free press must be fortified with greater knowledge of the world and skill in the art of expression."
School of Design Receives a Priceless Gift From Fashion Icon /2026/05/15/school-of-design-receives-a-priceless-gift-from-fashion-icon/ Fri, 15 May 2026 23:44:24 +0000 /?p=338683 Couture legend Claire B. Shaeffer's 2,500-piece collection of designer garments, patterns and books, valued at $1.2 million, now calls home.

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Arts & Humanities School of Design Receives a Priceless Gift From Fashion Icon

Jeffrey Mayer and Kirsten Schoonmaker display a 1950s couture sequin-embellished silk organza evening dress by British designer Hardy Amies, one of Queen Elizabeth's favorites. The dress was featured on the cover of Claire Shaeffer's 2011 book "Couture Sewing Techniques." (Photo by Amy Manley)

School of Design Receives a Priceless Gift From Fashion Icon

Couture legend Claire B. Shaeffer's 2,500-piece collection of designer garments, patterns and books, valued at $1.2 million, now calls home.
Eileen Korey May 15, 2026

With an extraordinary and unique gift valued at more than $1.2 million, the School of Design in the is likely to become a travel destination for fashion researchers, haute couture designers and sewing enthusiasts worldwide. The school has received thousands of stunning designer garments, books, patterns and accessories that once belonged to an iconic figure in the fashion industry: Claire B. Shaeffer.

Shaeffer’s career path, from aspiring circus performer to couture expert and educator, is fascinating. Her relationship with is equally intriguing, given that it began when she was 80 years old after she reached out to a professor who shared her passion “for reading garments,” including every stitch, hem and buttonhole.

A person wearing blue protective gloves and a dark gray jacket examines a black pleated garment on a rack, surrounded by a colorful array of stored pieces including gold, teal, pink, and green garments
Jeff Mayer examines a 1950s black-pleated linen couture dress by the Irish designer Sybil Connolly. (Photos by Amy Manley)

“Claire was all about delving one layer deeper to understand and show how each garment was constructed,” says Jeffrey Mayer, professor of fashion design and coordinator for the fashion design program. Shaeffer reached out to Mayer after seeing a book he co-authored, “Vintage Details: A Fashion Sourcebook,” which documents 160 garments found within the Sue Ann Genet Costume Collection at .

Shaeffer was impressed by the detailed photography, from hems to buttons. She told Mayer she wanted her next book to have similar photography. “That’s what fascinated Claire, how things were created,” Mayer says. “She went down rabbit holes to understand every detail of design.”

A Collection of Garments, Patterns and Books

Shaeffer’s relationship with Mayer blossomed, and when she began to think seriously of where she might want her collection of more than 2,500 garments, patterns and books to end up after her lifetime, she chose , a teaching institution where students could learn from the study of each garment and pattern.

A close-up view of colorful garments hanging on a rack, showcasing a range of textured woven fabrics in vibrant pinks, reds, multicolored tweeds, and cream tones
Designer clothing from the collection of Claire B. Shaeffer, now part of the Sue Ann Genet Costume Collection and Research Center in the College of Visual and Performing Arts

Shaeffer began her own studies in fashion design in the early 1960s after initially exploring the idea of circus performance. Proficient in acrobatics, she enrolled in the circus curriculum at Florida State University after high school. Her broad shoulders and slight build made it difficult to find clothes that fit, so she began to sew her own wardrobe. After realizing that basic patterns just wouldn’t fit her frame, she switched her academic interests and professional pursuits, turning a fascination with detail into a distinguished career.

A digital microscope on a flexible stand displays a magnified close-up of fabric details on its monitor screen. Below it, a black and gold embellished garment with sequins and metallic trim lies on a white table.
A Chanel Couture black and gold beaded, sequined and embroidered jacket (Automne-Hiver, 1996-1997) designed by Karl Lagerfeld and embellished by the House of Lesage in Paris is part of a fashion collection gifted to the University. The digital microscope is used to examine fiber, weave and construction techniques of garments.

Throughout her life, Shaeffer collected examples of haute couture and designer ready-to-wear and studied others in museum collections, design workrooms and factories. She excelled at the analysis of garment construction details and sewing techniques.

Shaeffer taught classes at the College of the Desert in Palm Springs, gave workshops, wrote dozens of magazine articles and books, developed instructional videos, had her own , and created the Claire Shaeffer Custom Couture Collection of patterns for Vogue Patterns. She received the Professional Association of Custom Clothiers Lifetime Achievement Award and the American Sewing Guild Sewing Hall of Fame Award.

A Dedication to Precision

Mayer was a former designer of women’s wear himself and a specialist in 20th-century fashion and construction techniques. He knew of Shaeffer’s history and stature, but never foresaw working so closely with this icon of industry. Given his personal history, though, it seemed destined. Mayer was the son of a seamstress.

“I would sneak into my mother’s room and, at the age of 6, I would start cutting out patterns,” Mayer says. When his mother saw him so engaged with very pointy scissors, she told him: ‘If you’re going to do this, you’re going to do this right.’”

Similarly, Shaeffer taught countless students of fashion how to do things right and came to believe that ’s program was similarly dedicated.

A gloved hand carefully handles a purple and cream plaid textile piece with a whipstitched leather edge, selecting it from a rack of stored garments and fabrics
Kirsten Schoonmaker shows the cuff detail of a Chanel haute couture suit from the 1960s. 

Before her passing in January 2025, she had shipped close to 1,000 pieces from her collection to the school. Afterward, Mayer and Kirsten Schoonmaker, fashion design collections manager, flew out to Palm Springs and worked with Shaeffer’s sons to pack up another 1,500 pieces.

The gift perfectly matched the mission of the Sue Ann Genet Costume Collection and Research Center: “…to provide the University and broader community with access to exemplary garments and accessories that reflect high standards of craftsmanship, design and stylistic significance. With a sustained focus on the object itself and its material, structural, and aesthetic integrity the collections advance the preservation, study and interpretation of these works.”

Pieces of History

Among the many works that will be available for study is a Chanel suit recognized around the world and a part of American history. It is the “twin” of the suit worn by First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.

There are dozens of Chanel pieces in the collection, along with pieces by many other iconic designers like Yves Saint Laurent, Dior, Givenchy and McQueen, and such American designers as Adrian, Norman Norell, James Galanos, Geoffrey Beene and Bill Blass.

Garments displayed in a fashion collection storage area, with a red piece featuring ornate gold embroidery and jeweled embellishment in the foreground. Behind it, dress forms showcase a pink tweed skirt suit and a black-and-white houndstooth jacket, while additional garments hang on metal racks.
The pink suit is a Chanel haute couture from 1961, the same collection as worn by First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy.

“This collection is a unique gem,” says Michael Tick, dean of the College of Visual and Performing Arts. “Its value is truly priceless. I had the pleasure to visit with Claire and her late husband many times in Palm Springs. More than once I expressed to them how excited our students and visitors to the collection will be to learn from her extensive body of work.”

Mayer says that Shaeffer received offers from other academic institutions to house pieces of her collection, but was the one place willing to keep her collection together, including all the clothes, patterns, books and even handbags from her personal closet. That willingness means generations of students will be the beneficiaries of an extraordinary woman’s talents, determination and dedication.

“Our students don’t just design, they learn to actually make things, from concept to garment,” says Mayer. “We fall into that ‘maker space’ in our approach and we are honoring Claire’s commitment to detail, process, research and design.”

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Two people stand behind a white table displaying a golden-yellow beaded or embellished gown spread across its surface. Behind them, metal garment racks hold a variety of stored clothing and textiles
A Transformational Gift Changes Orange Hall Into Riley Hall /2026/04/30/a-transformational-gift-changes-orange-hall-into-riley-hall/ Thu, 30 Apr 2026 19:23:37 +0000 /?p=337549 Diane Riley's legacy gift honors her late husband, H. John Riley Jr. '61, whose own journey inspired a lifetime of giving back to the students and university he loved.

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A Transformational Gift Changes Orange Hall Into Riley Hall

Diane Riley's legacy gift honors her late husband, H. John Riley Jr. '61, whose own journey inspired a lifetime of giving back to the students and university he loved.
Eileen Korey April 30, 2026

John Riley was just 16 years old when he set foot on the campus. It was a dream come true for the young man of modest means, the first in his family to go to college. He was awarded a scholarship that allowed him to get a degree, but he couldn’t afford to live on campus, commuting all four years by bus from his family home on Syracuse’s North Side.

“John missed out on that total student experience, because he didn’t live on campus,” says his wife, Diane.  “He couldn’t join a fraternity or participate in sports.” That’s why Diane decided that the best way to pay tribute to her late husband, who passed away on June 1, 2024, was with an extraordinary legacy gift to the Orange Hall Facilities Fund that ensures residential housing in the center of campus for generations of students.

In recognition of her generosity, Orange Hall will be renamed H. John Riley Hall. A dedication event is planned for Saturday, May 9, during Commencement Weekend. “John believed that gave him the education and opportunities to be successful,” says Diane. Riley graduated in 1961 with a degree in industrial engineering from the . “I think he would be proud—and humbled—to have his name on this beautiful building that provides a home to the students he loved to serve.”

“John was all about service to his alma mater, always looking for ways to provide opportunities that would position our students for personal and professional success,” says Chancellor Kent Syverud. “He was an engaged alumnus, a dedicated trustee and, along with Diane, a most generous and thoughtful benefactor.”

An Inspired Journey

Riley’s own journey from university graduate to successful businessman was inspiring, taking him from his first job in the mail room at Crouse-Hinds, the electrical products manufacturing company, to the executive suite as CEO of Cooper Industries, the multi-billion-dollar parent of Crouse-Hinds.

Riley was first elected to the Board of Trustees in 2004 and served as a voting trustee until 2016, chairing the Student Experience Committee from 2008 to 2012. He continued his service as a life trustee and, at the time of his passing, was tri-chair of the National Campaign Council Executive Committee for the University’s Forever Orange Campaign, which achieved its fundraising goal of more than $1.5 billion.

Over the years, the Rileys targeted their philanthropy to improving the student experience, both inside and outside the classroom. A 2017 endowed gift established the H. John and Diane M. Riley Dual Engineering/MBA Program Endowed Fund designed to give students a distinctive edge, allowing them to earn a bachelor’s degree in engineering along with an MBA in just five years. When the Rileys recognized the need for a new home for the University’s School of Management, they endowed a classroom in the state-of-the-art building, helping prepare future business leaders. They supported many other initiatives at the University, including Athletics and the Winnick Hillel Center for Jewish Life.

“John and I had been discussing what form our next gift should take, but he died before we could make a decision,” says Diane. She says it was Chancellor Syverud who proposed the idea for Riley Hall. “I felt incredibly honored and was so touched by his enthusiasm.” She took the idea to the family who ultimately decided that it was “a no brainer” and a fitting way to honor their father.

Family Stories

Son Patrick “Pat” E. Riley ’90, who graduated from the Newhouse School, says their father’s name will no doubt live on in the stories future students will tell about life in Riley Hall. That’s especially meaningful for the Riley family, which made many of its own memories at that same site when it was the Sheraton Hotel & Conference Center. “I think I had my first drink there when I was a senior and my sister came to visit and stayed at the hotel,” Pat says. “It was always the place where our family socialized.” The Sheraton was closed in 2024 for extensive renovations and transformation into a modern residence hall.

Diane also remembers gathering at the Sheraton bar and restaurant with the spouses of other board members while John was attending trustee meetings. And it was the place to stay when visiting their grandchildren who attended (Megan graduated in 2024; Tristan will graduate this year; and John will attend in the fall.).

“The location of Riley Hall at the center of campus is such a fitting tribute to John,” says Allen Groves, senior vice president and chief student experience officer. “As a trustee, John was always focused on how best to meet the evolving needs of students. He was both a visionary and a passionate champion for students.”

At his memorial service, Riley’s daughter Beth talked about the values her father taught to his family, values that clearly shaped his commitments to . “He was a rock of stability, good judgment, fun and common sense,” Beth said at the service. “My dad had a no-nonsense way about him that cherished truth over fanfare, responsibility over impulsiveness, long-term value over short-term gain.” Son Tom said, “He was a great executive, leader, servant. Along the way, he always had mom by his side.” Son Pat recalls his father reassuring his family that no matter what challenges they faced, “You’ll always make it through. You’ll all be OK.”

Recently, Diane and all the children and grandchildren (Beth, Marcus, Tom, Lizabeth, Pat, Beatrice, Emma, Charlotte, Matthew, Megan, Tristan, John and Connor) completed a trip to Egypt that John had been planning for them before his passing. “He was so detailed in his planning, and we carried out many of them on the trip,” says Pat. “As in life, here was Dad behind the scenes, telling us what to do…and how to do it right!”

Diane says that the life of Riley was defined by “doing things right the first time and doing the right things.” Riley Hall is one of those right things done right.

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Audie Klotz Named Inaugural Heighberger Family Faculty Fellow of Public Service /2026/04/02/audie-klotz-named-inaugural-heighberger-family-faculty-fellow-of-public-service/ Thu, 02 Apr 2026 16:20:31 +0000 /?p=335089 The fellowship was created to honor the highly accomplished public service careers of alumnus Eric Heighberger ’93 and his spouse, Genevieve.

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Campus & Community Audie Klotz Named Inaugural Heighberger Family Faculty Fellow of Public Service

Eric and Genevieve Heighberger

Audie Klotz Named Inaugural Heighberger Family Faculty Fellow of Public Service

The fellowship was created to honor the highly accomplished public service careers of alumnus Eric Heighberger ’93 and his spouse, Genevieve.
Jessica Youngman April 2, 2026

has spent her career studying how the world moves—the migration of people across borders, the evolution of international norms and the political forces that shape both. Now, the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs professor of political science has been named the inaugural Heighberger Family Faculty Fellow of Public Service, a recognition of scholarship that has influenced both academic debate and real-world policy.

“Audie’s research on migration and international norms addresses some of the most consequential questions in global politics,” says Dean David M. Van Slyke. “This fellowship recognizes her work and provides resources to support it. We’re thrilled to honor her, and grateful for the generosity that made it possible.”

Professional headshot of a woman with short gray-brown hair wearing purple-framed glasses and a navy blue sleeveless top, photographed against a neutral gray background.
Audie Klotz

A specialist in global migration, Klotz has shaped scholarly debates and public understanding of pressing issues in international politics. She has authored five books and contributed to an additional 15. Her work has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, the MacArthur Foundation and the Fulbright Program.

Klotz’s many honors include Maxwell’s 2023 Wasserstrom Prize for excellence in teaching and mentoring. She is the incoming president of the International Studies Association, one of the world’s oldest and largest interdisciplinary organizations devoted to the study of international and global affairs.

Klotz will hold the fellowship for three years.

Decades of Public Service

The fellowship takes its name from Eric Heighberger, a 1993 graduate of Maxwell’s international relations undergraduate program, and his spouse, Genevieve, whose combined careers span decades of public service. Eric held roles with the White House Homeland Security Council and Senate and House committees on homeland security, before serving as chief of staff at FEMA from 2017-21. He is now senior director of federal affairs for LA28, the organizing committee for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games. Genevieve has spent more than 20 years in public sector consulting, focused on FEMA and the local governments it serves.

“Being named the first Heighberger Family Faculty Fellow of Public Service is especially meaningful to me,” Klotz says. “Their careers using expertise in the service of others is how I think of my efforts to foster greater equity in academic communities. I am also grateful to the donors for recognizing the crucial place of public service within a school of citizenship.”

The Heighbergers’ commitment to public service traces back to a pivotal time in their careers. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Eric joined his longtime friend and fellow Maxwell alumnus Stephen Hagerty ’93 M.P.A. at PricewaterhouseCoopers, where their team helped New York City access $8.8 billion in federal recovery funding. Genevieve joined them.

“Working on the World Trade Center recovery efforts gave both of us a sense of professional purpose that has stayed with us ever since,” Eric says. “Genevieve and I are motivated by using our skills in the service of others, and Steve played a big role in shaping that, as a friend and as a mentor.”

The fellowship was established through a gift from Hagerty, a Maxwell Advisory Board member and Trustee, and his spouse and fellow alumnus Lisa Altenbernd ’93 M.P.A. With combined funds from the University’s Forever Orange Faculty Excellence Program, it totals $1 million.

“Neither of us would have had the careers we have had without Steve and Lisa’s friendship and mentorship,” says Eric. “We are so honored by their decision to include us in this gift.  Having our family name on a fellowship at Maxwell is a genuine honor, as the school shaped my professional path in ways I couldn’t have anticipated. To see it given to someone like Audie Klotz—whose work and mentorship embody everything Maxwell stands for—makes it even more meaningful.”

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A man in a tuxedo with bow tie and a woman in a black dress with a light pink/mauve wrap and pearl necklace pose together on an outdoor terrace at night, with the illuminated White House visible in the background against the Washington, D.C. skyline.
Syracuse Giving Day Is Tomorrow—Celebrate Syracuse’s 156th Birthday! /2026/03/23/syracuse-giving-day-is-tomorrow-celebrate-syracuses-156th-birthday/ Mon, 23 Mar 2026 13:00:00 +0000 /?p=334597 The annual day of giving on March 24 features campus events, student challenges and a goal of 4,444 supporters nationwide.

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Campus & Community Syracuse Giving Day Is Tomorrow—Celebrate Syracuse’s 156th Birthday!

(Photo by Angela Ryan)

Syracuse Giving Day Is Tomorrow—Celebrate Syracuse’s 156th Birthday!

The annual day of giving on March 24 features campus events, student challenges and a goal of 4,444 supporters nationwide.
Shaina M. Hill March 23, 2026

 isn’t just about gifts—it’s a global celebration where the Orange community comes together to make an impact!

Tomorrow, March 24, Syracuse celebrates 156 years of Orange pride, and Syracuse Giving Day promises a full day of energy, generosity and campuswide fun. From grabbing giveaways in Schine Student Center to supporting from wherever you are, Giving Day is all about fueling what makes Syracuse extraordinary.

What’s Happening on Campus?

Free Food, Giveaways and Stamp Card Rewards
Schine Student Center | 10 a.m.–5 p.m.

Energize your day! Make a gift, enjoy treats and earn your way to an Otto straw topper while supplies last. Visit the photo booth or record your own Giving Day video with a branded ring light to help you create your best Orange content. Watch live shows throughout the day for exciting student-created stories.


Goldstein Auditorium | 11 a.m.–2 p.m.

Discover the incredible work of 41 student organizations! Meet students, learn about their goals and support your favorites. When 150 alumni support any project, $2,100 in additional funding will be split among the top five groups thanks to the generosity of the Alumni Association Board.

Class of 2026 Donor Exclusive Party
Make your class gift, earn your grad cord and join Otto’s After Party from 6 to 8 p.m.

How to Make an Impact

  • ! The University’s goal is to inspire 4,444 supporters on Giving Day. When there is at least one donor from every state and the entire map turns orange, $100,000 will go to thanks to our Regional Councils.
  • ! You’ll receive an exclusive Syracuse gift wrap set.
  • ! Create an account, share your personal link and earn Syracuse keyboard stickers.
  • ! Whether it’s your favorite school, college or program, help unlock additional funding that will multiply your impact.

Let’s give Syracuse the best birthday gift: a powerful show of Orange pride and generosity.

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Otto the Orange mascot wearing an ‘S’ hat posing beside a table of blue and orange cupcakes
On Syracuse Giving Day, Here Are 5 Unique Ways to Fuel the Orange /2026/03/20/on-syracuse-giving-day-here-are-5-unique-ways-to-fuel-the-orange/ Fri, 20 Mar 2026 14:04:00 +0000 /?p=334552 These funds benefit students Universitywide, across years, majors and disciplines, and keep the Orange legacy going strong.

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On Syracuse Giving Day, Here Are 5 Unique Ways to Fuel the Orange

These funds benefit students Universitywide, across years, majors and disciplines, and keep the Orange legacy going strong.
Kelly Homan Rodoski March 20, 2026

—March 24—is a day to celebrate all that it means to be Orange, to keep beloved traditions alive for students and keep building the community that makes extraordinary.

There are countless ways to support students—through greatest needs and deans’ funds in all of the University’s schools and colleges and through initiatives that benefit students Universitywide, across majors and disciplines.

Here are five unique ways you can make your impact on the Orange in support of experiences, community and traditions:

Since 23 students gathered at Crouse College on Feb. 4, 1901, the Marching Band has grown into one of the most celebrated collegiate bands in the nation. From its first football game appearance that fall to marching in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade and performing at Super Bowl XLVIII, the band has represented the University on some of the world’s biggest stages.

The band earned its iconic nickname, The Pride of the Orange, in 1970, when an announcer introduced the band following its award-winning performance at the World Band Festival in Kerkrade, Netherlands. The name has defined the band ever since.

Today, with nearly 220 members drawn from five Central New York colleges (Syracuse, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Le Moyne College, SUNY Oswego and Onondaga Community College) and more than 80 majors, the band is far more than a performing ensemble. It is a cornerstone of life; it’s a community where students find lifelong friendships and carry the Orange spirit forward.

As the band marks its 125th anniversary, the College of Visual and Performing Arts is raising funds for new uniforms, which will debut at the Sept. 5, 2026, football home opener vs. New Hampshire. A generous donor has pledged an $85,000 matching gift, doubling every dollar contributed to this historic milestone.

Syracuse is home to more than 300 registered student organizations—from performance groups and cultural organizations to service clubs and everything in between—and they’re at the heart of what makes the Syracuse experience special.

On Giving Day, 41 student organizations are competing for a share of $3,500 in bonus funding through the Student Organization Challenge, rallying their communities to give, engage and show up. Winners are determined by unique donor count, social media engagement and on-campus spirit at Schine Student Center, so every gift, like and share genuinely moves the needle. The challenge dollars have been allocated via Senior Vice President Allen Groves and the Student Experience team.

Can’t find a group that speaks to you? A gift to the Student Experience Fund supports small grants that help all Syracuse students fully enjoy campus life. This is your chance to invest in the people and communities that make home.

The Center for the Creator Economy (CCE) is the first academic center of its kind on a U.S. college campus. Led jointly by the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and the Martin J. Whitman School of Management, the center reinforces the University’s commitment to bold, forward-looking academic leadership.

By aligning strengths in entrepreneurship, media, communications, athletics and digital infrastructure, the University is charting how higher education can prepare students for the 21st-century economy. The center will serve as a dynamic platform for teaching and learning; workshops and executive education; speaker series and showcases; on-campus incubators and makerspaces; research and thought leadership; and college athletics.

The fund will support many CCE initiatives, including The Vibe, a student-run creative agency providing students real-world experience through working with clients, and the ’CUSE Creator Crew, which will support creator and brand collaborations and hands-on student learning.

Thomas O’Brien ’25, who helped launch the new center, will co-host six live shows from the Schine Student Center throughout the day to showcase creators.

In May, the Hendricks Chapel Choir will perform on the African continent for the first time. The choir travels internationally every four to five years, providing unique experiential learning opportunities to its members. The choir has previously performed in China (2005); Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay (2009); Europe (Poland and Germany, including Auschwitz, 2013); Mexico (2018); and London and Lockerbie and Edinburgh, Scotland (2023). With plans to visit Oceania in 2030, the choir will have performed on every habitable continent by the 100th anniversary of the chapel.

The performances on the South African tour include Johannesburg (performing with the University of Johannesburg Choir); Soweto (Apartheid Museum and Mandela House); Pretoria (University of Pretoria-Tuks Camerata); Drakensberg (performing with the Drakensberg Boys Choir); Pietermaritzburg (UKZN School of Religious Studies) and Cape Town (performing with the St. George’s Cathedral Choir).

“When our graduating seniors consider the most impactful and meaningful moments of their time studying at , international performing tours always top the list,” says Jose “Peppie” Calvar, professor and chair of applied music and performance and director of choral activities in the Setnor School of Music in the College of Visual and Performing Arts and director of the Hendricks Chapel Choir. “Performing tours forge lifelong friendships and memories within our students. The experience of singing in front of an international audience confirms our shared humanity and our students’ place as citizens of a larger world and stewards of the world they’re shaping.”

Syracuse Giving Day is a great time for fans and alumni to support Athletics. Make a gift to the athletic department’s top priorities through Athletics Competitive Excellence. Your support pushes our 20 varsity athletic programs to compete for championships and elevates the student-athlete experience for more than 550 student-athletes on campus.

Visit the for the complete Giving Day experience.

 Giving Day promotional graphic for March 24, 2026, featuring Otto the Orange mascot in a party hat and sunglasses, holding a gift box and birthday cake, on an orange and yellow background. Long/descriptive version: A vibrant orange and yellow promotional graphic for  Giving Day on March 24, 2026. The  mascot, Otto the Orange, is illustrated in a celebratory pose wearing a navy blue party hat with an "S" logo, dark sunglasses, and a navy tracksuit. He holds a wrapped gift box in one hand and a birthday cake in the other. Background icons include a clock, video camera, orange slice, cake, mobile device, and building silhouette. Bold white and navy text reads "Syracuse Giving Day 3 • 24 • 2026."

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Three smiling staff members or volunteers at a Syracuse Giving Day table inside Schine Student Center, holding promotional items including a mini pennant, a branded ball, and a sticker.
Harrold Organ Is ‘A Dream Come True’ /2026/03/13/harrold-organ-is-a-dream-come-true/ Fri, 13 Mar 2026 21:21:29 +0000 /?p=334340 A Malmgren Concert on March 29 will include the dedication of the newly installed organ and feature works by professors from the Setnor School of Music.

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Harrold Organ Is ‘A Dream Come True’

A Malmgren Concert on March 29 will include the dedication of the newly installed organ and feature works by professors from the Setnor School of Music.
Amy Manley March 13, 2026

is now the proud home of a truly unique pipe organ. Crafted in 1994 by renowned organ builder Greg Harrold for scientist Alan Kay, the Harrold Organ made quite the journey from California to its new place in the Catholic Center chapel. Generously donated to the University, this magnificent instrument will enrich both the Catholic community and the University’s organ program for years to come.

The 24-stop organ is modeled on 18th-century building practices and sounds, and is a visually and aurally stunning complement to the Catholic Center’s new St. Thomas More Chapel.

The Malmgren Concert Series will host the dedication of the organ and the first public concert on Sunday, March 29, from 4-5:30 p.m. The Catholic Center is located at 110 Walnut Place in Syracuse. Visit the to register for the concert (required).

University Organist Anne Laver, associate professor in the Setnor School of Music in the College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA), will perform with the Hendricks Chapel Choir and dancers from the Meagan Woods Collaborative, featuring music by Bach; Buxtehude; Vivaldi; Natalie Draper, associate professor in the Setnor School; and a new work by José “Peppie” Calvar, professor in the Setnor School.

The concert is the culminating event in the third annual Syracuse Pipe Organ Festival, co-sponsored by the Syracuse Chapter of the American Guild of Organists and the Setnor School of Music.

 

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A pipe organ with light wood cabinetry and ornate decorative lattice panels flanking rows of silver metal pipes, installed in a church. To the left hangs a large colorful crucifix banner depicting Jesus on the cross, decorated with the flags of many nations."
You’re Invited to #CuseGivingDay on Syracuse’s Birthday! /2026/03/13/youre-invited-to-cusegivingday-on-syracuses-birthday/ Fri, 13 Mar 2026 14:44:54 +0000 /?p=334326 Tuesday, March 24, marks 156 years since was founded; this is your moment to show the world what Orange can do.

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You’re Invited to #CuseGivingDay on Syracuse’s Birthday!

Tuesday, March 24, marks 156 years since was founded; this is your moment to show the world what Orange can do.
Shaina M. Hill March 13, 2026

Get ready! Tuesday, March 24, marks 156 years since was founded—AND it’s Syracuse Giving Day, a 24-hour burst of Orange spirit, generosity and collective impact. Whether you’re on campus or celebrating from afar, this is your moment to show the world what Orange can do.

Here’s how to be part of #CuseGivingDay:

  • to support students, programs and campus life. Every dollar fuels success.
  • . We’ll send you an exclusive Syracuse gift wrap set.
  • . Create an account and share your personal Giving Day link to rally others and earn Syracuse keyboard stickers.

And if you’re on campus March 24, the celebration gets even bigger:

  • Free food and giveaways in Schine from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Make a gift, grab treats and fill your stamp card to get an Otto straw topper.
  • Student Organization Showcase in Goldstein Auditorium from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Meet student orgs, support your favorite, earn stamps and win prizes.
  • Go behind-the-scenes with student-created stories, live shows and new challenges throughout the day.
  • Content Creator Stations in Schine. Record your own Giving Day video or snap a photobooth pic. Grab a branded ring light while you’re at it!
  • Support what matters to you. Give to your favorite school, college or program and help unlock challenge dollars.
  • Class of 2026 exclusive party. Make your class gift, earn your grad cord and join Otto’s After Party from 6 to 8 p.m.

Give Syracuse a birthday gift and help keep the Orange family thriving!

early and watch the #CuseGivingDay magic unfold!

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Two smiling women in navy blue t-shirts and jeans pose enthusiastically with Otto the Orange, 's mascot — a large orange character wearing a navy cap with an "S" logo. One woman wears an orange cowboy hat and holds up an Otto fan sign; the other raises her arm excitedly. They stand in front of a branded step-and-repeat backdrop with orange "S" logos.
Merrin Named Inaugural Syracuse Association of Zeta Psi Endowed Faculty Fellow /2026/03/04/merrin-named-inaugural-syracuse-association-of-zeta-psi-endowed-faculty-fellow/ Wed, 04 Mar 2026 19:44:52 +0000 /?p=333879 The fellowship supports scholarly work focused on men’s mental health and related issues.

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Merrin Named Inaugural Syracuse Association of Zeta Psi Endowed Faculty Fellow

The fellowship supports scholarly work focused on men’s mental health and related issues.
Wendy S. Loughlin March 4, 2026

Gabriel “Joey” Merrin, assistant professor of human development and family science in the College of Arts and Sciences, has been selected as the inaugural Syracuse Association of Zeta Psi Endowed Faculty Fellow.

The fellowship was established with a gift from the Syracuse Association of Zeta Psi under the umbrella of the Forever Orange Faculty Excellence Program and matched by the University to create a $1 million endowment. The five-year, renewable appointment is intended to support faculty members whose scholarly work focuses on men’s mental health and related issues.

“We believe the most meaningful investments in mental health are those that begin early and produce measurable impact across a lifetime,” says Stanley P. Gorski Jr. ’86, president of the Syracuse Association of Zeta Psi and executive director of ZP Gamma Foundation. “By strengthening prevention efforts early on, Dr. Merrin’s work helps build resilience that can change long-term outcomes—especially for those men who face the highest suicide risk later in life. This fellowship supports hard research that aims to not just respond to the crisis, but to reduce it before it begins. The SU alumni brothers of Zeta Psi Fraternity are pleased to be part of this long-term partnership.”

A prevention scientist and applied developmental methodologist, Merrin examines how risk and protective processes interact to shape adolescent development and the transition to young adulthood. His research looks at the influence of individual, peer, family, school and community contexts on developmental pathways related to harassment, victimization, mental health and risk behaviors including substance use and aggression. His work explores how distinct adverse childhood experiences differentially shape peer relationships, mental health and resilience, informing more effective prevention strategies for diverse youth populations.

“I’m deeply honored to be selected as the inaugural Zeta Psi Endowed Faculty Fellow,” Merrin says. “This fellowship will enable me to expand my research on adolescent and young adult mental health during a time when young people’s mental health issues are at historic highs. The support will enable me to develop a new undergraduate course on mental health across the lifespan, launch a longitudinal study of mental health and help-seeking behaviors among college students, and strengthen partnerships with community organizations. I’m grateful for the support to expand research that can make a positive impact on the lives of young people and their communities.”

Merrin is director of the Methodology, Adolescent Development, and Prevention (MAP) Lab, which addresses critical questions about healthy adolescent development. His work employs sophisticated longitudinal analytical approaches to understand when and for whom developmental processes differ, and how empirical findings can be effectively translated into prevention and intervention efforts. The MAP Lab has produced 14 student-led peer-reviewed publications.

Merrin was co-investigator and lead methodologist on a National Institute of Justice-funded multi-site investigation examining bias-based harassment and its prevention in U.S. schools. He has also developed innovative methodological tools, including the CATAcode R package, which advances principled approaches to demographic measurement and analysis in social science research.

Merrin serves on the board of directors at Elmcrest Children’s Center in Syracuse and collaborates with schools and community organizations serving vulnerable youth.

He earned a Ph.D. in educational psychology, an M.E.D. in human resource development and a B.A. in sociology, all from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He joined the Syracuse faculty in 2021.

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Fialka-Feldman Family Creates Fund to Support InclusiveU Students /2026/02/18/fialka-feldman-family-creates-fund-to-support-inclusiveu-students/ Wed, 18 Feb 2026 16:45:18 +0000 /?p=333032 Inspired by son Micah's lifelong advocacy for disability inclusion, the family's gift helps InclusiveU students cover essential expenses and stay enrolled.

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Campus & Community Fialka-Feldman Family Creates Fund to Support InclusiveU Students

The Fialka-Feldman family, from left: Alyssa Hughes, Emma Fialka-Feldman, Micah Fialka-Feldman, Richard Feldman and Janice Fialka

Fialka-Feldman Family Creates Fund to Support InclusiveU Students

Inspired by son Micah's lifelong advocacy for disability inclusion, the family's gift helps InclusiveU students cover essential expenses and stay enrolled.
Cecelia Dain Feb. 18, 2026

Rich and Janice Fialka-Feldman have established the Opening Doors Fund for InclusiveU as part of the Center on Disability and Inclusion’s . The fund will provide critical financial support for students in the School of Education’s , ensuring that students with intellectual disability can pursue their college dreams without financial barriers.

The fund’s name carries deep personal significance. When their son, Micah Fialka-Feldman, entered his first-grade special education classroom, he noticed he had to enter through a different door than the rest of the grade. He came home with a simple but powerful request to his parents: “I want to go through the same door as my friends.” That moment when their child sought belonging has become the family’s guiding principle.

Genuine Understanding

With the support of his parents and many others, Micah grew up determined to pave his own path in life. That determination led him to become the first student in the country to win a lawsuit securing access to university housing, at Oakland University, a landmark victory that opened doors not just for himself but for students with disabilities across the nation.

After graduation, his commitment to advocacy only deepened when he accepted a paid internship with Michigan Roundtable, a social justice organization working throughout the state.

It was during this internship that Micah was invited to speak at , where he shared his experiences, advocacy and vision for disability inclusion. The connections he made during that visit were immediate and profound. He felt something different in the room; a genuine understanding that resonated with him.

Micah called his parents with certainty in his voice: “They get me here,” he said, referring to the Syracuse community’s warmth and embrace for exactly who he is. It was a moment that validated his journey and reinforced that he had found a place where he truly belonged.

What began as a peer trainer position has grown into Micah’s current role as outreach coordinator for InclusiveU, as well as a co-teacher for disability studies classes, continuing to champion the same access and inclusion he once had to fight for.

Inspire and Motivate

The Opening Doors Fund for InclusiveU will be administered at the discretion of the , with support for housing, meals, textbooks and other essential expenses that help students to remain enrolled and succeed in the program.

Micah is also the author of ““, published by Inclusion Press, the same organization that supported his parents’ efforts in learning about inclusion when he was born. Co-written with his friend and colleague, Lynn Albee, he tells his story of advocacy, disability pride, circles of support and determination.

The Fialka-Feldmans emphasize that their support for inclusive higher education is more than just rhetoric. They have witnessed firsthand how life-changing it can be, not just for InclusiveU students, but for the University’s matriculated students, faculty and staff, who learn alongside them.

Their hope is that the Opening Doors Fund for InclusiveU will help ensure no student has to leave the program due to financial need, and that their fund will both inspire and motivate others to take action toward making their own gift.

Learn more on the or by visiting Micah’s website at .

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A Gift Idea and Bequest to Benefit Generations of Students /2026/02/09/a-gift-idea-and-bequest-to-benefit-generations-of-students/ Mon, 09 Feb 2026 21:08:31 +0000 /?p=332474 Alumnus’ $7.6 million bequest creates endowed scholarship honoring mother who championed power of education.

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Campus & Community A Gift Idea and Bequest to Benefit Generations of Students

Dr. Jason Adour with the inner ear model gifted to him by his great-uncle, Dr. Kedar Adour.

A Gift Idea and Bequest to Benefit Generations of Students

Alumnus’ $7.6 million bequest creates endowed scholarship honoring mother who championed power of education.
Eileen Korey Feb. 9, 2026

More than two decades before his passing, Dr. Kedar Karim Adour made a decision about how he wanted his family name to be remembered. That kind of focus and planning has resulted in a $7.6 million gift to the University in the form of a scholarship that will benefit countless students.

Working with the Office of Gift Planning back in 2002, Adour established the Zina Adour Endowed Scholarship Fund in memory of his mother. Kedar Adour passed away Nov. 1, 2024, and now the scholarship has been fully funded through his charitable gift annuities, trust and beneficiary distributions.

“Charitable planned giving is thoughtful and a smart way to give a gift that can benefit you during your lifetime and benefit others afterwards,” says Jason Tripp, executive director of the Office of Gift Planning. Well-planned giving can bring income to the donor, reduce their tax burden and ultimately “leave a tremendous charitable legacy.”

“When you’re leaving a legacy, you’re trying to make a statement about what’s really important to you, and that’s exactly what my great-uncle Kedar did,” says Jason Adour, who remembers his great-uncle as a dedicated physician who wanted his research and work to be meaningful, even groundbreaking. Jason says Kedar’s work ethic, focus and determination to educate other physicians and patients helped “change the world” specifically in the treatment of Bell’s Palsy, a neurologic disorder that affects the facial nerve and is often managed by both neurologists and otolaryngologists (ENTs).

A Passion for Education and Health Care

Adour attended as an undergraduate for one year, and completed his medical degree there (before the medical college evolved into today’s SUNY Upstate Medical University). An ENT specialist, Adour’s focus on education and health care defined his life’s work—and his passion for both wasn’t lost on his relatives.

Jason’s mom still has the teddy bears dressed as doctors that Adour gave her two sons. “Uncle Kedar wanted my sons to go to and to become doctors,” says Colleen Adour. Though Jason pursued a different path in health care, becoming a doctor of physical therapy, he appreciated his great-uncle’s influence. When he was a young boy, Kedar gave him an anatomical model of the inner ear. “Forty years later, I still have it in my clinic and use it to educate patients,” says Jason, a recognized expert in vestibular disorders and a preferred provider for ENT physicians. “I use that model weekly and think of Kedar often.”

Teddy bears dressed in green doctors' scrubs
Doctor-themed teddy bears that Dr. Kedar Adour gifted to his great-nephews.

 

Kedar Adour’s journey to professional and financial success was not easy and that, too, was motivation for his desire to create a scholarship in his mother’s name. His parents had emigrated in 1912 to Clark Mills in Oneida County, New York, seeking opportunity and the freedom to marry. Zina Abraham was from Syria and a Christian; Abdel-Karim “Sam” Adour was from Lebanon and a Muslim. Marriage was forbidden for the couple. They came to America to marry, settled in a farming community and had 10 children, including Kedar.

“My mother drummed it into our heads that education is the pathway to a better life,” Adour told a writer for Magazine in 2003. “Unfortunately, my mother died while I was in high school, but I know she would have been absolutely thrilled that I became a doctor.”

Honoring Family

Growing up, Adour was especially sensitive to the challenges facing Arab American children, particularly those desiring higher education. The scholarship in his mother’s name was designed to help others overcome those same hardships. “Education is what takes you ahead,” Adour said in the article. “If people want to leave something of importance behind when they die they should leave a legacy of education.”

Adour’s philosophy is especially poignant today, with institutions nationwide working to make higher education more accessible and affordable for students. Endowed scholarship gifts like Adour’s are particularly valuable, as they provide permanent financial support for future generations.

“We are deeply grateful to Dr. Adour for having the foresight to create this scholarship and the incredible opportunities it will provide students as a result,” says Tracy Barlok, senior vice president and chief advancement officer. “The Adour family legacy will be forever woven into the fabric of , and it’s an honor to carry his vision forward.”

Prolific Researcher

A story Adour told about his medical school experience captures the intensity with which he approached his studies and was written in a letter to the editor in the Upstate Medical Alumni Journal (Winter 2019). “A favorite Upstate memory involves Dr. Phillip Armstrong, professor of anatomy at Upstate, who had the charming habit of taping a penny to the blue book of superior test answers. I desperately wanted one of those pennies and on the final written exam, I wrote pages and pages. When my blue book was returned, I had earned a penny, along with the comment, ‘Not for quality but for quantity!’ When I finally write my autobiography, I will call it ‘A Penny for the Doctor.’”

Though Adour never authored his own biography, his published research was prolific, including papers titled  “The Bell Tolls for Bell’s Palsy” and “Mona Lisa Syndrome: Solving the Enigma of the Geoconda Smile.”  “My great-uncle knew how to artfully construct the title of a paper, how to make things ‘sticky’ and compelling in the way he wrote up his research results, which made them more memorable,” says Jason Adour.

In the medical field, Kedar Adour will be remembered for those “sticky” titles and the ground-breaking research that transformed treatment for countless patients. At , he will be remembered for a well-planned gift that will transform the lives of countless students through the Zina Adour Endowed Scholarship Fund.

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Man standing with an inner ear model and a sign that says Maine Strong Balance Center
Sport Management Club Raises $76.5K for Upstate Golisano Children’s Hospital /2026/01/16/sport-management-club-raises-76-5k-for-upstate-golisano-childrens-hospital/ Fri, 16 Jan 2026 13:48:37 +0000 /?p=331313 The 21st annual auction benefited the Upstate Pediatric and Adolescent Center at the Nappi Wellness Institute.

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Impact Sport Management Club Raises $76.5K for Upstate Golisano Children’s Hospital

From left to right: Sport Management Club faculty advisor Jeremy Losak, The Upstate Foundation Assistant Vice President of Development Dave Bartell, student organizer James Stickel and The Upstate Foundation Development Director Cassandra Rucker.

Sport Management Club Raises $76.5K for Upstate Golisano Children’s Hospital

The 21st annual auction benefited the Upstate Pediatric and Adolescent Center at the Nappi Wellness Institute.
Jan. 16, 2026

The in the raised $76,540 for at its 21st Annual Charity Sports Auction. The ceremonial check was presented to Golisano officials Jan. 13 before the Orange men’s basketball game at the JMA Wireless Dome.

During the Syracuse men’s basketball game on Nov. 18, supporters purchased items and placed bids on sports memorabilia, electronics, jewelry, gift baskets, experiences and trips, among other items. In addition to the in-person event, an online auction ran through Nov. 23, allowing supporters to bid on hundreds of items.

served as Title Sponsor for the 2025 auction.

Proceeds from this year’s Charity Sports Auction benefited the Upstate Pediatric and Adolescent Center (UPAC) at the . UPAC is a full-service pediatric and adolescent primary care clinic that provides well-child care, adolescent medicine, foster care support through its ENHANCE program, behavioral health integration, immunizations, and other family-centered services to children, adolescents and young adults.

“At Upstate Pediatric and Adolescent Center, we take care of 11,000 patients from 25,000 visits every year,” says UPAC Director Dr. Steven Blatt. “These are children and families like every other family in the community, but often with economic or logistical challenges in their life. We at UPAC have done many things to help them, but the money the students have raised will help with the extras.”

The auction donation will create a Sport Management Club of Endowment in honor of Blatt and is being highlighted by recognition at the playground at , and naming in the UPAC elevator lobby on the fourth floor of the Nappi Wellness Institute.

“We are incredibly grateful to the Falk College Sport Management Club for their extraordinary generosity and commitment to Upstate Golisano Children’s Hospital,” says Dave Bartell, assistant vice president of development for The Upstate Foundation. “Through their leadership, dedication and passion for service, these students are making a meaningful difference for the children and families served by the Upstate Pediatric and Adolescent Center, and we are honored to partner with them in this important work.”

A large group of students and faculty posing together on a stadium field in front of a blue backdrop with an orange ‘S’ logo

The Sport Management Club is a student-run organization. Since its founding in 2004, the club has raised more than $849,000 for local charities.

Previous beneficiaries of the club’s annual charity auction include Boys & Girls Clubs, the Ronald McDonald House Charities of CNY, the Central New York SPCA, Upstate Cancer Center, Special Olympics New York, Food Bank of CNY, the Salvation Army, Rescue Mission Alliance, American Diabetes Association, Make A Wish CNY, Meals on Wheels, the Jim and Juli Boeheim Foundation, McMahon/Ryan Child Advocacy Center, Vera House and Tillie’s Touch.

Over the years, the club has contributed more than $125,000 to , a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit corporation. Notable gifts include $20,000 to Upstate Golisano Children’s Hospital in 2009–10 and $30,444 to the Upstate Cancer Center in 2011–12.

“Students from the Sport Management Club, for the past 20 years, have done what I think is one of the most important activities you will do, not only in college but in your life, and that’s making efforts to help people in your community,” Blatt says.

The Sport Management Club meets weekly during the academic year. For more information about the annual charity auction, visit , , or the .

Story by James Stickel

In the News

To promote the auction, student organizer James Stickel ’26 appeared on WSYR-TV’s “Bridge Street.”

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Four people standing on a basketball court holding an oversized donation check during a game, with stadium seating and spectators in the background
Special Collections Research Center Gifted Warren Kimble Collection /2025/12/18/special-collections-research-center-gifted-warren-kimble-collection/ Thu, 18 Dec 2025 14:50:40 +0000 /?p=330548 The newly donated archive offers insight into Kimble’s creative process, career milestones and lasting impact on American folk art.

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Arts & Humanities Special Collections Research Center Gifted Warren Kimble Collection

In his home in Vermont, Warren Kimble (center) poses with Libraries Advisory Board Co-Chairs Adam and Amy Fazackerley (left), along with Dean David Seaman and Libraries’ Strategic Advisor Linda Dickerson Hartsock (far right).

Special Collections Research Center Gifted Warren Kimble Collection

The newly donated archive offers insight into Kimble’s creative process, career milestones and lasting impact on American folk art.
Cristina Hatem Dec. 18, 2025

The Libraries’ (SCRC) was recently gifted the personal papers of notable artist and University alumnus Warren Kimble ’57. The collection includes original sketches, personal correspondence, exhibition materials, product catalogs, press clippings, photographs and other unique materials that trace Kimble’s artistic evolution and entrepreneurial journey.

Kimble, who turned 90 in 2025, began his artistic training at , where he studied fine art in the . Under the guidance of accomplished faculty, he developed strong foundational skills and experimented with new techniques and mediums, laying the groundwork for his long and varied career.

As an undergraduate, Kimble was deeply engaged in campus life—serving as president of both his junior and senior classes, joining Lambda Chi Alpha and leading the cheerleading squad during the era of athletics  that included Jim Brown ’57 helping propel the football team to the 1957 Cotton Bowl. Beyond his student leadership roles, Kimble immersed himself in the University’s vibrant artistic community.

Tracing an Artistic Journey From Syracuse to National Recognition

Following graduation, Kimble taught art for many years before settling in Vermont in the early 1970s. At age 50, he was “discovered” while selling his folk-inspired art at a local gallery in Woodstock, Vermont, which launched his national career.

At the height of his success, Kimble partnered with more than 50 companies to produce home décor and household goods featuring his artwork. Today, Kimble maintains an active studio and gallery where he continues to paint, create new works and engage with the arts community. He currently lives in Brandon, Vermont, with his wife, Lorraine, whom he credits as a significant partner in the success of his business and career.

Kimble’s artistic journey has taken him from the traditional to the contemporary, with recurring motifs such as weathered barns, farm animals and New England landscapes—often inspired by his rural Vermont surroundings.

With formats ranging from paintings to assemblages and sculptural works, his work has appeared in reputable galleries in New York and Boston and across New England, as well as in homes across the world via prints, ceramics, furniture, wallpaper and more. The newly donated collection documents the transition of his work from sketches to mass production, and from small gallery showings to national commercial fame.

A Legacy Preserved

Kimble says his decision to donate his papers to Libraries was easy. Drawn to in 1953 without even taking an entrance exam, Kimble still speaks of the University’s early support with gratitude. “They took a chance,” he says. “Syracuse gave me everything: direction, mentors and a belief in what I could become. I owe so much to this place, and I am forever grateful. This is my way of giving back and inspiring future artists and creative entrepreneurs.”

“We are honored and delighted to receive Warren Kimble’s papers,” says David Seaman, Libraries dean and University librarian. “Beyond Warren’s affection for Syracuse, he has been a good friend to the Libraries. We were fortunate to capture his story in his own words through SCRC’s Access Audio production of ‘.’ He created an original owl painting for Bird Library that we used in our holiday card. He has even welcomed our Libraries team to his home and studio in Brandon, Vermont. He is a beloved friend of the Libraries, and we are grateful for his generous gift.”

As an undergraduate at Syracuse, Kimble was inducted into Orange Key, a Junior Men’s honorary, and Tau Theta Upsilon, a Senior Men’s Honorary. Throughout his life, Kimble has remained one of the University’s most enthusiastic and engaged alumni.

The University awarded him the George Arents Pioneer Medal, the highest alumni honor, in 2002 and the Melvin A. Eggers Senior Alumni Award in 2017. The archival donation, Kimble notes, is a homecoming of sorts. “These are the stories behind the work, the trial and error, the joy, the doubts, the breakthroughs. It is my whole journey. And I am thrilled that it will live on at the university that believed in me first.”

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Philanthropy That Ensures Students ‘Move at the Speed of Industry’ /2025/12/17/philanthropy-that-ensures-students-move-at-the-speed-of-industry/ Wed, 17 Dec 2025 22:13:41 +0000 /?p=330507 Real Chemistry founder and Chairman Jim Weiss '87 establishes The Agency, Home of the Weiss Center, to prepare students for careers in AI-driven health and strategic communications.

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Communications, Law & Policy Philanthropy That Ensures Students ‘Move at the Speed of Industry’

Beth Egan, associate professor of advertising and co-director of the Weiss Center at the Newhouse School; Newhouse Dean Mark Lodato; Jim Weiss; Chancellor Kent Syverud; and Emily Friedman, Newhouse student and Weiss Center brand ambassador, cut the ribbon during the dedication of The Agency, Home of the Weiss Center, in November. (Photo by Amy Manley)

Philanthropy That Ensures Students ‘Move at the Speed of Industry’

Real Chemistry founder and Chairman Jim Weiss '87 establishes The Agency, Home of the Weiss Center, to prepare students for careers in AI-driven health and strategic communications.
Eileen Korey Dec. 17, 2025

James “Jim” Weiss ’87 has a diploma from the , but he says he feels like he never really graduated: “I feel like I’m a perpetual college student! I get energy from being around students. The reverse mentoring that you get out of it is pretty incredible.”

That energy is a driving force behind Weiss’ recent $1.75 million gift to , with $1.25 million directed to enhancing programs at the Newhouse School to ensure that students are career-ready in the rapidly changing field of communications.

person in sport coat sitting at a high table
Jim Weiss (Photos by Amy Manley)

With a degree in public relations, Weiss “fell into” health care communications (he worked at Genentech a few years after graduating) and ultimately built a company that is now the largest public relations firm in the nation. provides artificial intelligence-driven data, analytics, marketing and communications to advance the science of communications and the communication of science.

“Communications is leadership and leadership is communications,” Weiss likes to say, and he’s committed to ensuring that his business remains at the leading edge of the evolution in communications. He believes that Newhouse students can help him do that. “When I was building a firm, it made sense to me to go back to the school that gave me such amazing preparation for the world.”

It was 2012 when Weiss’ former professor and mentor Maria P. Russell G’72 invited him back to campus. Russell, now professor emerita in public relations, says that visit was life-changing for Weiss and the Newhouse School: “That walk down memory lane has led to a fully engaged commitment to philanthropy. Proud of the school’s educational foundation, Jim saw an opportunity to help current and future students be prepared for the world and a profession that was changing dramatically.”

Weiss and his late wife, Audra ’89, began making gifts that expanded experiential learning in social commerce, the use of data, AI and rapidly changing technologies to help communications and marketing students refine communication strategies. The was borne out of those meaningful conversations with Russell, an initiative that brings experts to Newhouse to meet frequently with students, run simulations, and review resumés and portfolios.

“Jim brought in Real Chemistry’s to a workshop that taught students  how to use AI to weed out bias and unfounded claims and how to segment audiences and customers for targeted marketing,” says Beth Egan ’88, co-director of the Weiss Center and associate professor of advertising. “In another workshop, they learned about influencer marketing and the science behind finding the right influencers for each market segment. For the students, these experiences have been a great opportunity to move at the speed of industry.” In turn, Real Chemistry has hired many Newhouse graduates.

“Jim has never forgotten his Orange roots and has championed initiatives to help students transition seamlessly into jobs in strategic communications, fields that are constantly evolving because of technology,” says Newhouse Dean Mark J. Lodato. “We are so thankful for Jim’s generosity and devotion to helping Newhouse students succeed.”

Where Theory Meets Practice

Now, with his latest gift to the school, the center has a new hub at Newhouse. A dynamic space for learning and collaboration is now called The Agency, Home of the Weiss Center. The space is meant to resemble the collaborative work environments found at leading professional advertising and PR firms. Egan says it’s “where theory will meet practice, where students come together and learn what it really means to work as a team. Innovation flourishes when curious minds have room to experiment, to fail safely, and to push boundaries together.”

Weiss says The Agency has a dual meaning. “It’s about taking agency, having more control over your career. We want students to feel empowered to go out there, take initiative, perhaps start their own business. We encourage and foster entrepreneurship and innovation that can make a big impact in the real world,” Weiss says. “Never has there been a better time to do what we do in our fields. It’s all changing so fast and is right for disruption and new approaches.” As the keynote speaker at Newhouse’s convocation last May, Weiss told the graduates: “Let’s take advantage of this chaos and change.”

“Jim Weiss doesn’t just support Syracuse—his generosity and vision help transform it,” Chancellor Kent Syverud says. “The Agency and the Weiss Center provide our students real-world experience that prepares them for success after Syracuse and sets them apart from others pursuing similar career paths. Jim shows us what it means to turn success into opportunity for others.”

entrance to Weiss Center with ribbon strung across the front
The Agency, Home of the Weiss Center, in the Newhouse School

“The Weiss Center’s depth and diverse lessons have transformed me into a more integrated version of myself—someone who understands how every experience, challenge  and lessons connect,” says Emily W. Friedman ’26, a senior public relations major and Weiss Center . “How amazing is it to see someone who once sat in our seats now creating opportunities for the next generation to dream just as big!”

Weiss is particularly interested in bringing more communications students into health and life science fields.  “Health care is the number one consumer product, and we want to make health care marketing as cool as sneaker marketing,” says Weiss. “Newhouse students have firsthand access to how we are changing the industry.”

But behind the fun and enlightenment lies a very serious purpose: Weiss wants to make all Americans healthier. He knows first-hand the despair created by disease. He lost his wife to cancer on Dec. 31, 2024. “Audra was the driving force in how Real Chemistry and all my business endeavors took shape,” says Weiss.

She used every tool available to research the most promising treatments, to mine the best minds, to combine Eastern and Western therapies to preserve quality of life, and to help other cancer patients along the way. In his eulogy, Weiss said: “She chose life, always making it the very best it could be, and that’s what she would want us to do: Get busy living because you’ve got to live life while you are alive.”

Delivering Accurate Information

Weiss is determined to shape generations of communicators who can help Americans better understand scientific discoveries, weed out myths and misinformation, and find the facts that can help them live better and longer. As science evolves with more precision targeting to fight disease, so must communications evolve to precision target audiences and deliver life-enhancing information.

“Accurate information is absolutely critical,” he says. “We are leveraging technology and data to tell a more precise story, just as in medicine where we will more precisely treat disease.”

His interest in health also motivated his gift to Syracuse Athletics in the new pledge.  He directed $500,000 of the $1.75 million gift to the Athletics Opportunity Fund and Athletics Competitive Excellence Fund. “A healthy athletics program is critical to a healthy school,” says Weiss. “People rally around sporting events and teams. Athletes are great influencers.”

“Jim’s passion for the Orange and his devotion to student success resonates on and off the field, across the campus and across disciplines,” says Athletics Director John Wildhack ’80.

“I’ve always said, ‘If you give, you get,’ and it’s really that simple,” says Weiss.

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Giving Students a Future of Promise /2025/09/03/giving-students-a-future-of-promise/ Wed, 03 Sep 2025 13:30:10 +0000 https://syracuse-news.ddev.site/2025/09/03/giving-students-a-future-of-promise/ A new matching gift initiative empowers donors to expand scholarship support and create lasting opportunities for Syracuse students.

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Giving Students a Future of Promise

A new matching gift initiative empowers donors to expand scholarship support and create lasting opportunities for Syracuse students.
News Staff Sept. 3, 2025

In the spring launched a game-changing fundraising initiative, aimed at significantly expanding scholarship support for high-achieving students.  The Syracuse Promise seeks to raise $50 million in scholarship funding over the next three years, and the Orange community has responded with incredible enthusiasm—already raising over $5.2 million in new funding. This growth will provide more meaningful scholarship packages and position the University to award scholarships to more students, which is vital to keeping enrollment strong and ensuring the affordability of a Syracuse education.

At the heart of The Syracuse Promise is a transformative matching program that empowers donors to enhance their impact and deepen their commitment to student success. Fueled by two generous unrestricted estate gifts, the University is offering a 1:2 match for contributions supporting scholarship endowments, in particular. Eligible gifts include contributions of $100,000 or more that establish new endowed scholarships, and $50,000 or more to enhance and sustain existing ones.

Meeting the Need

Today, 78% of Syracuse students receive some form of financial aid, and in recent years, the University has reduced the average student debt burden by more than 10%. The University also takes pride in meeting the demonstrated financial need of every incoming student, but the type of aid provided—scholarships and grants compared to loans—is a major factor in its ability to attract the best students. This underscores the importance of growing and sustaining permanent funding sources in perpetuity.

“Endowed gifts provide ‘forever funding’ that grows over time and insulates both students and the University from external factors like world events and economic uncertainty,” says Tracy Barlok, senior vice president and chief advancement officer. “Institutions with more endowment funding per student are positioned for greater success and long-term security, and The Syracuse Promise gives our donors an excellent opportunity to partner with us in building lasting support for future generations of students.”

Donors Embrace The Syracuse Promise

The simplicity of the match program boosts its appeal. Donors can establish new endowed funds or strengthen existing ones.

Trustee Jeannine Lostritto, in Commencement robe, with her husband and children standing in front of a  step and repeat
Pictured with their family, Trustee Jeannine Lostritto ’90 and her husband, Glenn, were the first donors to The Syracuse Promise initiative.

From the moment they learned of The Syracuse Promise initiative, University Trustee Jeannine Lostritto ’90 and her husband, Glenn, wanted to lead by example. The first donors to support The Syracuse Promise, they made an additional gift to their Lostritto Family Endowed Scholarship, which supports undergraduate students in the School of Architecture and was established a few years ago.

The Lostrittos, who also established a current-use fund that supports architecture students studying abroad, were particularly drawn to The Syracuse Promise initiative for its ability to grow their endowed fund and provide a greater, lasting level of financial support to students.

“We started this scholarship because we believe in the power of education to change lives,” says Jeannine Lostritto. “The School of Architecture is so important to us because students arrive with a clear purpose, and over the course of the challenging five-year program, they grow not only as professionals but as a close community that feels more like family.”

Lostritto isn’t alone in recognizing the familial nature of the architecture community and how it motivates others. Bernard Armstrong III ’85 was a peer advisor to Christopher Baylow ’88, P’24 during their student years, and helped him through a challenging time. When Armstrong made a Syracuse Promise gift expanding the School of Architecture 150 Global Study Endowed Scholarship, which he established a few years ago in honor of the school’s 150th anniversary, Baylow felt inspired to make his own gift in appreciation for their lasting friendship. Their combined gifts, with the match contribution, will provide $225,000 in additional funding for the already-endowed scholarship, which supports undergraduate students with preference to those studying abroad in Florence, Italy.

“It’s a critical skill for aspiring architects to understand the influence of purposeful design across various communities, cultures and historical periods. I’ve been fortunate to live in and travel to many parts of the world, and I’m thrilled to give Syracuse students the opportunity to develop these global perspectives,” Armstrong says. “I’m also deeply grateful to my friend, Chris, for his support and shared belief in helping this next generation of talented architects.”

The Syracuse Promise initiative is especially powerful for those who wish to make an enduring endowment-level gift but who might not have previously thought it possible.  For Joe ’84 and Linda Bockskopf, The Syracuse Promise match put their desire to create an endowed scholarship in reach, and they’re delighted to provide enduring support for SU students.

The daughter of Italian immigrants, whose own college experience was made possible by a full scholarship, Linda knows the life-changing impact of scholarship support. The Joseph T. Bockskopf ’84 and Linda D. Bockskopf Endowed Scholarship supports SUSTAIN Scholars in the College of Arts and Sciences. The SUSTAIN program enhances undergraduate STEM student learning, academic performance, retention to graduation, and STEM career or higher education placement.

“Linda and I wanted to give back and help SUSTAIN Scholars who might not have the financial resources to attend SU,” says Joe Bockskopf. “We wanted to endow a scholarship, but we were unsure about the timing of when to begin. We preferred to do something during our lifetime so we could see the benefit the scholarship would have for students. The Syracuse Promise initiative presented an opportunity that was too good to let pass, and the matching funds will enhance what we’ve donated to provide even greater support.”

Like the Bockskopfs, Robert ’85 and Teresa Heitsenrether recognize the power of education and the need to create opportunity for bright students regardless of their financial circumstances. They established the Robert and Teresa Heitsenrether Endowed Scholarship Fund to support first-generation college students pursuing undergraduate degrees at any of Syracuse’s schools and colleges.

“As a first-generation college student myself, I understand the transformative power of a education. While I have been making annual gifts to existing SU scholarship funds, I wanted to make a greater impact and help make an SU education more affordable for first-generation students,” says Robert Heitsenrether. “My wife and I were considering funding a scholarship over time, but when we became aware of The Syracuse Promise initiative we decided to fully fund a scholarship up front to take advantage of the matching funds. We hope to continue growing the impact of our scholarship over time with additional contributions to the scholarship.”

Scholarships can support students pursuing advanced degrees too. Stephanie D. Jones L’03 established the Spirit of Sankofa – Stephanie D. Jones L’03 Endowed Law Scholarship for students in the College of Law, with preference for residential students who are in leadership positions of student associations in which she participated. Wanting to make an impact as soon as possible, Jones has fully funded the scholarship, and the College of Law expects to begin awarding the scholarship to a student in Spring 2026.

“Being in student leadership at the College of Law was an invaluable kickstart to my legal career and professional development,” Jones says. “While ‘sankofa’ has several meanings, to me it means moving forward while never forgetting the learnings of the past. It is my honor, knowing how much student leadership did for me, to support generations of SU law students in their leadership journeys through the Spirit of Sankofa scholarship.”

Reflecting on the outpouring of generosity from donors since the launch of the initiative, Barlok says it demonstrates the true connection of the Orange community. “Many of our donors were once students who received scholarship support themselves, or family members of SU students, and their own Syracuse experiences inspired them to carry the tradition of giving forward. This is the exact kind of engagement and support that The Syracuse Promise symbolizes, and we hope it compels others to join in this partnership.”

To learn more about The Syracuse Promise scholarship fundraising initiative, contact Lynn Vanderhoek at 315.443.9236 or Lavander@syr.edu.

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Do you have a news tip, story idea or know a person we should profile on News? Send an email to internalcomms@syr.edu.

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