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News

Stanford Summer Interns 2017

Five CCNY undergrads Stanford-bound

A fifth cohort of City College of New York students is headed to Palo Alto, California, this month for the annual CCNY-Stanford Summer Research Program. The competitive program is designed for outstanding undergraduates considering graduate school -- specifically doctoral research -- in the humanities. The students, their majors and research topics, are: Junior Romiesa Ahmed (English literature and sociology), literature that reflects the portrayal of women and their roles in society in the novels of Jane Austen; Senior Maria Claudia Chaname (Spanish), the literary work of Peruvian writer
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Pamela Laskin

Alumni Association honors Pamela Laskin and Vernon Ballard

Pamela L. Laskin, director of Poetry Outreach in the English Department, and Vernon Ballard, director of Front Line User Support Services in IT, are this year’s CCNY service award honorees at the Alumni Association of The City College of New York’s 165th annual meeting, June 15. Laskin will receive the Faculty Service Award for her outstanding commitment to City College’s Poetry Outreach Center. She leads its mission to encourage poetic activity at all levels of public education. In addition, Laskin serves as a mentor to the MFA faculty she trains and sends out to teach poetry to public school
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Faculty books June 2017

Faculty books discuss public parks, development models and Schomburg

The transformation of public parks, alternative development models for emerging economies and a study of formidable Black scholar Arturo Alfonso Schomburg are some of the new book topics by City College of New York faculty. John Krinsky, political scientist in City College’s Colin Powell School for Civic and Global Leadership is the co-author of, " Who Cleans the Park? Public Work and Urban Governance in New York City” (Chicago Press). “ Infrastructural Ecologies: Alternative Development Models for Emerging Economies” (The MIT Press), is the latest book by Hillary Brown, professor in the
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NYC Hackathon participants Kirstyn Natavio and Michael Ousseinov

Engineering and computer science students compete in NYC hackathon

Teams Good Bot and SignThis, comprising engineering and computer science students from The City College of New York, collaborated on creative coding challenges in a 24-hour coding sprint in the Spring 2017 hackNY Student Hackathon. Team Good Bot received the Hack Harassment Prize, which is the Major League Hacking’s themed prize against online harassment. Good Bot’s five members built a social media application called SlackBot to monitor Slack channels looking for inappropriate content or content that may be considered harassment. The bot uses artificial intelligence to identify such content
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Rep. Adriano Espaillat

CCNY Launches New Master’s Program Track in Dominican Studies

Popular MA Program in the Study of the America’s gets a new focus The City College of the City University of New York (CCNY) is pleased to announce a new program, the Dominican Studies Track in the Master in the Study of the Americas Program in the Division of Interdisciplinary Studies at the Center for Worker Education. The program is the first of its kind in the nation. “City College’s new master’s degree recognizes the importance of the Dominican Republic and Dominicans in our city, in our culture and at our university,” said CUNY Chancellor James B. Milliken. “Nearly 10 percent of CUNY’s
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Class of 2017

Class of 2017 shines at CCNY

Annika Lüdke, a graduate of the Master’s Program in International Relations from the Colin Powell School for Civic and Global Leadership, is one of the many outstanding members of the Class of 2017. After a stint as an au pair in the United States and an introduction to intercultural communications at a community college, Lüdke knew that small town life in Germany was not for her. So she made her way to The City College of New York. “I looked for programs, and I found City College and the Colin Powell School. I was totally convinced this would be a great school, so I looked into professors and
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Grove School

CCNY-UTEP partner to produce next generation Latino professors

$3.7 million NSF grant to fund project The City College of New York is partnering with the University of Texas at El Paso to educate the next generation of Hispanic professors in environmental sciences and engineering. Entitled “Collaborative Research: The Hispanic AGEP Alliance for the Environmental Science and Engineering Professoriate,” the five-year project is funded by a $3.7 million grant from the National Science Foundation. It begins July 1, 2017. Harlem-based City College, which is designated a Hispanic Serving Institution of Higher Education by the U.S. Department of Education, will
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New Master's Track in Dominican Studies Launched at CCNY

MEDIA ADVISORY WHAT: The City College of New York/CUNY launches Dominican Studies specialization in the Master in the Study of the Americas Program in the Division of Interdisciplinary Studies. The first of its kind in the United States, the program will focus on the legacy and the socioeconomic development of the Dominican people in the Dominican Republic, in the United States, across the Americas, and around the world. WHO: Congressman Adriano Espaillat Dr. Vita C. Rabinowitz, Executive Vice Chancellor and University Provost, The City University of New York Dr. Vincent Boudreau, Interim
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Charisse Holder and Erica Lopez

BIC trio wins LAGRANT Foundation national scholarships

Charisse Holder, Sean Feol-Baugh and Erica Lopez, all from The City College of New York’s Masters in Branding + Integrated Communications (BIC) program, are recipients of 2017 LAGRANT Foundation scholarships. The scholarships support students from ethnically diverse backgrounds pursuing careers in advertising, marketing and public relations. Twenty graduate students nationally have been honored by the Los Angeles-based LAGRANT Foundation (TLF). Holder, a resident of Valley stream, N.Y., is in BIC’s strategic management track. She received her undergraduate degree in international marketing and
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Benjamin Black Space Research

Experts explain origins of topographic relief on Earth, Mars and Titan

The surfaces of Earth, Mars, and Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, have all been scoured by rivers. Yet despite this similarity and the amazingly Earth-like landscapes of Titan complete with valleys, lakes, and mountains, researchers led by City College of New York geologist Benjamin Black report new evidence that the origins of the topography there and on Mars are different from on Earth. In their paper “Global drainage patterns and the origins of topographic relief on Earth, Mars, and Titan,” published in the latest issue of “Science,” the team identifies plate tectonics on Earth as one key
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