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Music, Messages and an Orange Visor Make History at the Dome

The Dalai Lama

The Dalai Lama thrilled a crowd of 24,000 at the Oct. 9 One World Concert with his messages of compassion, understanding and peace. A star-studded cast of international artists followed, rocking the Dome and ending the historic "Common Ground For Peace" event on a high note. See photos

The University Lectures

Browstein

Ron Brownstein, noted political analyst and Pulitzer Prize finalist, will present "American Politics, Today and Tomorrow" on Tuesday, October 23 at 7:30 p.m. at Hendricks Chapel. Read more

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Missed the Peace Forums? Watch Them Here

Led by His Holiness the Dalai Lama, the Oct. 8 forums convened international thought leaders, the SU campus and the greater community in critical conversations about how to shift global consciousness toward matters of peace. Watch "The Rise of Democracy in the Middle East" and "Shifting the Global Consciousness" by clicking here.

Newhouse alumna Beth Ann Kaminkow to speak Oct. 17

Beth Ann Kaminkow ’89, president and CEO of TracyLocke, will discuss the need for strategic planning and measurement in business at 7:30 p.m. in Watson Theater.

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Syracuse Stage presents “Moby Dick”

With action, adventure, and rousing sea shanties, the granddaddy of all fish tales comes alive as Syracuse Stage mounts “Moby Dick”  through Nov. 4.

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Merging video games and citizen science

Ingenious video games "Forgotten Island" and "Happy Match" help scientists understand creatures of the natural world.

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    Beth Ann Kaminkow
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    "Moby Dick"
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    video games

Engaging The World

SU’s Project SWIFT to develop tools to detect potential groundwater contamination from shale-gas drilling

SU team

Project SWIFT(Shale-Water Interaction Forensic Tools) was launched during spring 2012 by researchers in the Department of Earth Sciences in Syracuse University's College of Arts and Sciences in response to the public debate over hydraulic fracturing in New York State. Project SWIFT is the first project of its kind in the state. Researchers aim to develop new tools to detect possible groundwater contamination associated with shale-bed methane production in the Appalachian Basin. Read more

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