Community Archives | Syracuse University Today https://news-test.syr.edu/topic/community/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 19:30:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-apple-touch-icon-120x120.png Community Archives | Syracuse University Today https://news-test.syr.edu/topic/community/ 32 32 National Library Week: 5 Public Library Resources to Use Now /2026/04/14/national-library-week-5-public-library-resources-to-use-now/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 19:25:53 +0000 /?p=336306 Beth Patin, an iSchool professor and library science expert, highlights lesser-known services that make public libraries essential community hubs.

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Campus & Community National Library Week: 5 Public Library Resources to Use Now

The Rose Reading Room at the New York Public Library (thepaintercat/AdobeStock)

National Library Week: 5 Public Library Resources to Use Now

Beth Patin, an iSchool professor and library science expert, highlights lesser-known services that make public libraries essential community hubs.
Dialynn Dwyer April 14, 2026

kicks off on Sunday (April 19-25), and to celebrate, we asked , associate professor and program director for the program in the , to share her favorite, lesser known, services and resources that local libraries offer their communities.

“Libraries are so much more than books and audiobooks; though they are two of my favorite perks,” Patin says.

The modern public library, she says, is community infrastructure, as essential to its functioning as roads or schools.

“What strikes me most is that public libraries are one of the few remaining truly public spaces,” Patin says. “Places where you don’t have to buy anything to belong. A teenager doing homework, a job seeker updating their resume, a new immigrant learning English, a senior researching a medical diagnosis, they’re all welcome, and they all get the same quality of professional help.”

The librarians, too, are doing far more than just organizing their collections, Patin says.

“They are trained information professionals who help people find, evaluate and use information in ways that change their lives,” she says. “Librarians don’t just connect people to information: they connect people to each other, to services and to a sense of belonging in their community. That’s not a side function. That’s the whole point.”

Patin says she wants library science students to understand the work they’ll be doing is relational, not just technical, since the best librarians are not just retrieving information. They are building trust, “meeting people where they are, listening deeply and advocating fiercely on behalf of their communities” she says.

Patin says the best way to support your local library and librarians is to use the library “loudly and often.”

“Usage data matters enormously when library budgets are being debated,” Patin says. “Check out books (physical and digital), attend programs, bring your kids, bring your neighbors. Beyond that: advocate. Show up to your local library board meetings. Contact your elected officials and tell them you value library funding.”

Headed into National Library Week, Patin says she hopes people not only appreciate their local library, but take steps to actively protect it, say thank you to a librarian and engage with the materials, programs and services they offer.

Below, Patin shares the five services and resources she wants every community member to know about at their local library.

Park and Nature Passes—Borrowable Like a Book

View from inside a cave overlooking a lush, tropical enclosure with rocks, palm-like plants, and a shallow pool.
The Rosamond Gifford Zoo (Mahmoud Suhail/AdobeStock)

Cardholders at (OCPL) can to county parks like Beaver Lake Nature Center, Highland Forest, Jamesville Beach and even the Rosamond Gifford Zoo. Library patrons can also get New York State Empire Passes for state parks across the state.

“It’s one of my favorite examples of libraries providing access to experiences, not just information,” says Patin.

If OCPL isn’t your local library, don’t worry. Most public libraries offer similar options to check out passes for cultural or natural resources like museums, parks, zoos, aquariums or even theaters. Ask your local librarian!

Makerspaces and Technology Access

It’s not uncommon now to find access to technological tools and makerspaces—collaborative workspaces that offer access to resources like 3D printing, laser cutters or audio/video equipment—at your local library.

“ give community members access to equipment, from 3D printers to adaptive technologies, that most people couldn’t afford on their own,” Patin says. “The Central Library also has a Preservation Lab and specialized adaptive technology resources for people with disabilities. You can also record your next album there!”

A ‘Library of Things’—Not Just Books and Media

Portrait of a person with long curly hair wearing a red top and dark cardigan, standing in an indoor hallway.
Beth Patin

While libraries have always been in the business of lending, Patin says that idea has expanded in remarkable ways.

“At Syracuse University Libraries, you can borrow laptops, cameras and other tech gear,” Patin says.

Public libraries around the country have taken the “library of things” even further, lending cake pans, seed libraries for gardeners, musical instruments, tools, board games, sewing machines, telescopes and more to patrons.

“The underlying principle is the same one that has always driven libraries: why should everyone have to own something they only need occasionally?” she says. “Access over ownership is a radical and quietly revolutionary idea, and libraries have been living it for over a century.”

Adult Literacy, GED Preparation and ESOL Programs

Public libraries also remain an important lifeline for adult learners offering a range of educational programming, Patin says.

“OCPL offers adult literacy tutoring, GED/TASC preparation, and English for Speakers of Other Languages programming,” she says. “This is workforce development, family stability and community building happening right at the branch level.”

Programming That Brings People Together

“Libraries are community living rooms: places where things happen, not just places where things are stored,” Patin says.

As such, many libraries run seed swaps, art supply exchanges, maker workshops and language learning circles for their communities. OCPL regularly hosts book clubs, storytimes, author talks, art events and technology help sessions.

“This programming serves every age and stage of life, and it’s all free,” Patin says. “That matters enormously in communities where paid entertainment and enrichment are out of reach for many families.”

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Grand library reading room with long wooden tables, green desk lamps, chandeliers, and readers seated beneath a high, ornate ceiling.
Donate Food to Reduce Your Libraries Fines /2026/04/14/donate-food-to-reduce-your-libraries-fines-spring-2026/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 14:14:22 +0000 /?p=336308 Starting April 20, patrons can donate nonperishable food and hygiene items at any campus library circulation desk to reduce fees.

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Donate Food to Reduce Your Libraries Fines

Starting April 20, patrons can donate nonperishable food and hygiene items at any campus library circulation desk to reduce fees.
Cristina Hatem April 14, 2026

is offering an end-of-semester opportunity for students to help others while reducing their library fines. “Food for Fines” will run from Monday, April 20, through the end of the spring semester.

All Libraries patrons with overdue circulation fines can reduce their fines by donating healthy, nonperishable food and hygiene items to the . Donations will be accepted at the circulation desks of Bird, Carnegie, Law, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial and King + King Architecture Libraries. Fine reductions exclude interlibrary loan and lost book fees. Even those without library fees are encouraged to donate!

Fines will be reduced by:

  • $1 per item for canned beans and vegetables;
  • $2 per item for soap, canned fish/soup, single serving cereal or oatmeal, lip balm, pasta, sauce, tissue, toilet paper or toothbrush;
  • $3 per item for baked beans, cereal, canned meat/fruit, oatmeal, ramen noodles, rice, shampoo/conditioner or toothpaste;
  • $4 per item for granola bars, deodorant, jam/jelly, hot chocolate, peanut butter or tea; and
  • $5 per item for coffee or lotion. Contributions should not be open or expired and single-use items are preferred.

Bird Library is a donation point for contributions to the Coach Mac Food Pantry year-round to support its mission to serve individuals who experience hunger, food insecurity and a lack of resources. The Libraries will accept any sealed, non-expired and non-perishable food or personal care items at the first floor checkout desk at Bird Library during regular . Visit the for more information. With questions, email circulation@syr.edu.

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Stack of Campbell’s condensed tomato soup cans arranged in a pyramid against an orange background.
Campus, Community Students Partner to Present Youth Theater Program April 25 /2026/04/03/campus-community-students-partner-to-present-youth-theater-program-april-25/ Fri, 03 Apr 2026 18:09:30 +0000 /?p=335635 University students and professionals from three campus and community-based organizations offer a creative arts programs for local kids.

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Arts & Humanities Campus and Community Students Partner to Present Youth Theater Program April 25

The program has mutual benefits: it builds language skills, artistic presentation abilities and stage-presence confidence for children and provides teaching skills and community engagement opportunities for University students. (Photo by Angela Ryan)

Campus and Community Students Partner to Present Youth Theater Program April 25

University students and professionals from three campus and community-based organizations offer a creative arts programs for local kids.
Diane Stirling April 3, 2026

A group of Syracuse University students has spent months working with Syracuse youth, guiding them through theater, design and media workshops that will culminate in a live public performance this spring.

The students are leading (Theater Workshop), an annual, bilingual creative arts program based at on Syracuse’s Near West Side.

The program, which involves and in addition to La Casita, delivers culturally oriented arts education for community youth, says , the University’s executive director of cultural engagement for the Hispanic community. The workshops build dual-language skills, artistic presentation abilities and stage-presence confidence for children ages 6 and up.

The public performance will be held on Saturday, , at La Casita as part of the annual Arte Joven/Young Art exhibition, a celebration of visual art, music and dance. The event is open to the public.

Mutual Benefits

Taller de Teatro benefits both the students who lead the workshops and the children who participate, Paniagua says. “This program creates meaningful opportunities for University students to engage directly with the community while developing professional skills.”

The structure of the collaboration creates a dynamic environment where students and youngsters learn from one another, she says. “Several of the student instructors are studying drama and they are facilitating workshops alongside students from the creative arts therapy graduate program. Other students are contributing through documentation, photography, video and communications skills. In this way, the program becomes a multidisciplinary learning experience where students apply their training in a real community setting.”

For young actors and for theater students in particular, the chance to gain experience as instructors early in their careers can open important professional pathways, Paniagua says. “They are learning how to guide creative processes, work with children and adapt theater practices to educational and community contexts. Ultimately, the efforts of those involved are tremendous and they allow La Casita to offer high-quality theater programming to local youth.”

Group of children and young adults stretching and pointing together in a colorful classroom.
Syracuse Stage, Point of Contact, the College of Visual and Performing Arts art therapy program and La Casita collaborate on a children’s theater workshop focused on creativity and self-expression. (Photo by Angela Ryan)

Kate Laissle, director of education at Syracuse Stage, says involving Syracuse students as teaching assistants for this program helps inspire and train the next generation of theater educators while providing programming that supports community connections.

‘For Everyone’

“The ability to partner with La Casita and build on our relationship and its well-established programming also helps show that theatre is for everyone,” Laissle says. “Working collaboratively between performance, design and storytelling, students get to experience the depth and breadth of theater. Using multiple capacities of theatrical art-making lets young people use their creativity in ways that serve them best. It is outstanding to see the growth of the students, both school- and college-aged, over the course of this program.”

Seven people smile for a group photo in an art-filled gallery space, with colorful student artwork and a green dinosaur sculpture displayed on the wall behind them. Several members of the group wear name tags.
Collaborating on the youth drama program are (from left): Bennie Guzman, programming coordinator at La Casita; Samantha Hefti, archivist and cultural programming coordinator for Point of Contact; Joann Yarrow, director of community engagement and education at Syracuse Stage; Catie Kobland, a fine arts program graduate and master’s candidate in creative arts therapy in VPA; Nashally Bonilla, a drama department major; Iman Jamison, archivist and programming assistant at La Casita; and Teja Sai Nara, a La Casita volunteer who is majoring in international relations and Spanish. (Photo by Angela Ryan)

This year’s student participants, who lead acting workshops and provide media support and documentation, are: GB Bellamy ’27 and Sofia Slaman ’27, acting majors, Department of Drama, VPA; Nashaly Bonilla ’28, major, Department of Drama, VPA; Catie Kobland ’21, G’26, fine arts graduate and master’s candidate in VPA; Iman Jamison G’26, master’s student in , School of Information Studies; Sara Oliveira ’29, film and media arts major, Department of Film and Media Arts, VPA; and Sophia Domenicis ’28, , Newhouse School of Public Communications.

Three Presenting Partners

The program is possible because of a collaboration among three university-connected organizations:

  • La Casita Cultural Center is a program of Syracuse University established to advance an educational and cultural agenda of civic engagement through research, cultural heritage preservation, media and the arts, bridging the Hispanic communities of the University and Central New York.
  • Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, celebrating its 50th year, bridges cultures and disciplines through exhibitions, poetry and  a permanent art collection. Its El Punto Art Studio has served youth since 2008.
  • Syracuse Stage, the city’s leading professional theater, contributes expertise through acting and playwriting workshops that strengthen University-community connections and support literacy development.

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A large group of children and teens pose playfully in the La Casita Cultural Center, climbing on and arranging themselves around two towers of colorful foam blocks. Artwork lines the walls and a projection screen is visible in the background.
Dialogue, Partnership, Progress: Lender Center Hosts Second Community Expo /2026/04/03/dialogue-partnership-progress-lender-center-hosts-second-community-expo/ Fri, 03 Apr 2026 16:01:06 +0000 /?p=335525 Participants discussed the region’s future and attended workshops on grant writing, mental health, data collection, legal services, artificial intelligence and conflict resolution.

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Campus & Community Dialogue, Partnership, Progress: Lender Center Hosts Second Community Expo

Lender Center Director Kendall Phillips welcomes Expo attendees. About 280 community residents attended the two-day event. (Photo by Enfoque Images)

Dialogue, Partnership, Progress: Lender Center Hosts Second Community Expo

Participants discussed the region’s future and attended workshops on grant writing, mental health, data collection, legal services, artificial intelligence and conflict resolution.
Diane Stirling April 3, 2026

More than 280 people representing approximately 110 organizations gathered in downtown Syracuse recently for the 2026 Lender Expo. This is the second year the communitywide convening and dialogue has been hosted by the University’s , and the expanded schedule was made possible by a new sponsorship from .

The Lender Center addresses important social issues through interdisciplinary research, community engagement and faculty and student fellowships. The expo is among the most visible expressions of that mission, offering organizations an opportunity to share resources, build partnerships and engage in dialogue about the area’s most pressing needs, says , director.

The program opened with a “State of the Region” panel discussion featuring Syracuse Mayor , Onondaga County Executive , U.S. Rep. and Syracuse City Court Judge .

Also addressing the group was , chief administrative officer and president of health plans at , who discussed the company’s efforts to address community health needs. Workshops covered grant writing, mental health, data collection, legal services, artificial intelligence and conflict resolution. A session, “Where Service Meets Progress,” drew a wide audience on the second day.

The convening also included recognition for , president emerita of InterFaith Works and founding member of the Lender Center Advisory Group, who was honored for her many years of social justice advocacy and community service.

More Event Photos

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A speaker addresses a full room of attendees at the Lender Expo 2026, presented by Nascentia Health. The speaker stands at the front of the room, smiling, with a projection screen displaying the event title and sponsor behind him and a CART captioning screen visible to the left.
Cruel April Poetry Reading Celebrates Artists Living With Disabilities /2026/03/31/cruel-april-poetry-reading-celebrates-artists-living-with-disabilities/ Tue, 31 Mar 2026 14:26:56 +0000 /?p=335303 The annual Point of Contact event will be held April 8 at 5:30 p.m. at Syracuse University Art Museum.

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Cruel April Poetry Reading Celebrates Artists Living With Disabilities

The annual Point of Contact event will be held April 8 at 5:30 p.m. at Syracuse University Art Museum.
Diane Stirling March 31, 2026

Stephen Kuusisto, Urayoán Noel and OlaRose Ndubuisi—three poets whose work embody resilience, identity and the radical possibilities of language—will present their work at the annual poetry reading on

The event, produced by Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, takes place at the , where the “ spring exhibition, which recognizes artists who live with disabilities, is currently displayed.

“This unique setting provides  much excitement for our Cruel April series this year,” says , the University’s executive director of cultural engagement for the Hispanic community and Point of Contact director. “Just as the exhibition’s artistic expressions expand on ideas of creativity shaped by body, mind, culture and history, the works of the three poets enter into a dialogue across cultures and disciplines. Both forums offer varied perspectives on how artists navigate the world on their own terms.”

The poetry program begins at 5:30 p.m. and is free and open to the public.

A black-and-white portrait of a man with sideswept medium length dark hair smiling warmly.
Stephen Kuusisto

Poet and essayist is a University Professor and director of the . Blind since birth, Kuusisto has built a celebrated body of work that redefines understandings of perception and beauty. His poetry collections, “Only Bread, Only Light” (2000) and “Letters to Borges” (2013), along with memoirs including “Planet of the Blind” and “Have Dog, Will Travel,” have established him as one of the most compelling disability voices in American letters. His work has appeared in Harper’s, Poetry and The New York Times Magazine.

A black-and-white portrait of a bearded man wearing a flat cap.
Urayoán Noel

is an internationally recognized poet and scholar, an associate professor of English and Spanish at New York University and a defining voice in Latinx and Nuyorican literary traditions. He is the author of the landmark study “In Visible Movement: Nuyorican Poetry from the Sixties to Slam” (2014) and the poetry collections “Buzzing Hemisphere/Rumor Hemisférico” (2015) and “Transversal” (2021), which was a New York Public Library Book of the Year. He is also the winner of the LASA Latino Studies Book Award. His work explores neurodivergence, migration and the politics of language. Cruel April is presented in partnership with the , , , and the .

A black-and-white portrait of a young woman with long box braids, smiling warmly while leaning against a tree trunk in an outdoor setting.
OlaRose Ndubuisi

’29, the 2024–25 New York State Youth Poet Laureate, is a Syracuse student pursuing dual majors in biology and journalism. She is also a Coronat Scholar and Renée Crown honors student and is enrolled in SUNY Upstate Medical University’s B.S./M.D. program. Her poetry draws on her experience with scoliosis, her Nigerian heritage and her commitment to uplifting marginalized communities. A premature birth survivor, she is the founder of The Finding Scoliosis Kindly Project and a Prudential Emerging Visionaries award winner.

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Cruel April Poetry Reading Celebrates Artists Living With Disabilities
HazMat Training Exercise to Take Place on South Campus /2026/03/25/hazmat-training-exercise-to-take-place-on-south-campus/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 16:25:22 +0000 /?p=335027 The drill, taking place March 31 to April 3, allows various agencies to practice their response to real-life events and plan for interagency cooperation.

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HazMat Training Exercise to Take Place on South Campus

The drill, taking place March 31 to April 3, allows various agencies to practice their response to real-life events and plan for interagency cooperation.
Jennifer DeMarchi March 25, 2026

Beginning Tuesday, March 31, and continuing through Friday, April 3, Syracuse University will host a multi-agency hazardous materials drill on South Campus. Several agencies, including the New York State National Guard Civil Support Team 2, the Syracuse Fire Department HazMat Team, Onondaga County Emergency Management and the Syracuse University Department of Public Safety will take part in the exercise, which is meant to showcase hazardous material response techniques used by military and civilian emergency response professionals.

The drill allows the various agencies and units to practice their response to real-life events and plan for interagency cooperation in the event of a genuine emergency, says Joseph Hernon, associate vice president for emergency and environmental risk services.

This training exercise will also involve a unique academic opportunity for students in the College of Arts and Sciences. Faculty and students in related academic programs, including forensic science, will be able to observe and engage with participating agencies, connecting students directly to practical, hands-on applications of their coursework in hazardous materials response and crime scene management.

“The HazMat drill is a great experiential learning opportunity for our students, bridging classroom instruction and real-world emergency response practice,” says Hernon.  “We’re looking forward to a full week of training for everyone involved.”

Minimal Campus Disruption Expected

All exercise activities will be confined to the South Campus area, away from residential areas. Members of the University community may observe agency vehicles and personnel in the area during the exercise and should expect no disruption to normal campus operations. If you have any questions or concerns, contact the Department of Public Safety at 315.443.2224.

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Aerial view of Syracuse University campus in summer, featuring the Hall of Languages at center, the JMA Wireless Dome stadium to the right, brick academic buildings, green lawns, and tree-covered hills in the background.
Artist Brings Alutiiq Storytelling and Art to Syracuse /2026/03/25/artist-brings-alutiiq-storytelling-and-art-to-syracuse/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 15:17:20 +0000 /?p=334989 Linda Infante Lyons will participate in several campus events April 6 to 17 as the 2026 Jeannette K. Watson Distinguished Visiting Professor in the Humanities.

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Arts & Humanities Artist Brings Alutiiq Storytelling and Art to Syracuse

Linda Infante Lyons

Artist Brings Alutiiq Storytelling and Art to Syracuse

Linda Infante Lyons will participate in several campus events April 6-17 as the 2026 Jeannette K. Watson Distinguished Visiting Professor in the Humanities.
March 25, 2026

’ paintings line the walls of her studio in Anchorage, Alaska. From “icon portraits” to landscapes, her artwork holds a palpable verve—carrying a panorama of stories, ideas and interpretations with them, often centered on Alutiiq culture and identity.

From April 6-17, Infante Lyons will bring her visual and academic storytelling to Syracuse University as the 2026 . Her two-week residency is organized around the theme of “Visions of Resilience: Sacred Art and Storied Landscapes.” Humanities Center Director Vivian May says she is excited about the many different ways Infante Lyons will engage the community through dialogues, lectures and seminars focused on her art, Indigenous cultural resilience, approaches to environmentalism and environmental activism, storytelling and more. Infante Lyons’ work, says May, “immerses us in a sense of place and asks us to build relationships across boundaries. Infante Lyons visualizes the sacred, imagines the environment and builds stories in ways that invite us to come together and imagine a more just future for all.”

All are welcome to meet Infante Lyons and experience her work in person at an at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 7, in Eggers Hall and at other .

Infante Lyons, a painter and multimedia artist whose work engages themes of Indigenous sovereignty, cultural resilience and environmental sustainability, was raised in Anchorage. After earning her bachelor’s degree from Whitman College, she studied at the Viña del Mar Escuela de Bellas Artes and spent 18 years in Chile. Her maternal family is from Kodiak Island—a large island in the Gulf of Alaska and the ancestral homeland of the Alutiiq/Sugpiaq people—where her grandparents were commercial salmon fishers. She is a registered Alutiiq Alaska Native and has tribal affiliation with the Alutiiq/Sugpiaq corporation, Koniag.

A painting of a partially frozen lake in winter, with bare trees in the foreground, a dense evergreen treeline across the water, and a soft purple and pink sky.
Landscape by Linda Infante Lyons

“I’m looking forward to conversations about learning from different cultures: the importance of a diverse mindset, the richness of looking at Indigenous cultures, how they see the world,” says Infante Lyons. Turning to the future, she asks: “And then, how can you apply that to a conversation [about] where we go forward? It could be applied to sustainability, or how we get along as human beings, or how we get along with the rest of the world.”

Notably, two new paintings by Infante Lyons will find a permanent home in the Syracuse University Art Museum. Melissa Yuen, curator at the museum, says Infante Lyons’ potrtaits “invite interdisciplinary conversation, highlighting humanity’s relationship with the environment, disrupting Eurocentric worldviews and celebrating the role women play in Alutiiq culture as connectors with the world.”

These as-yet unnamed pieces, to be unveiled on April 7, each depict Alaskan Native women dressed in kuspuks. The works incorporate traditional and contemporary Indigenous designs, and each woman cradles an animal central to Alutiiq culture: a seal pup in one painting, an otter in the other. The compositions echo a “Madonna and Child” style painting, complete with halos and other visual symbols of reverence.

In portraying animals in the style of sacred Orthodox paintings and iconography, Infante Lyons emphasizes an intimate relationship between humans and the natural world—one that opposes Western models of extraction and domination. Relatedly, some of her upcoming events on campus will highlight how Indigenous mindsets forge new pathways for understanding and caring for the environment.

Chie Sakakibara, associate professor of Native American and Indigenous Studies and geography and the environment, says when she came across one of Infante Lyons’ icon portraits, “” she was speechless.

A painting of an Indigenous woman depicted in a Madonna-like pose, holding a baby seal with a halo in place of a child. She wears traditional facial tattoos and an ornate headdress of feathers and decorative flowers. She holds a small yellow flowering plant and is dressed in dark robes with beaded details. A misty landscape with water and trees appears in the background.
“St. Katherine of Karluk’ by Linda Infante Lyons

“I was immediately struck by the work’s powerful expressivity, as Linda brings together multiple elements—ancestral presences and sacred, spiritual words—into the present, rather than relegating them to a past that no longer exists,” says Sakakibara.

Sakakibara invites the campus and broader Syracuse community into a shared encounter with Infante Lyons’ artistic wisdom, and hopes the residency will spark some of the same kinds of connections she cultivates with students around traditional and land-based knowledge, cultural resilience, multi-species relations and the continuity of Indigenous storytelling.

For co-host Timur Hammond, associate professor of geography and the environment, Infante Lyons’ residency opens up new points of academic connection, particularly for his Spring 2026 course, ‘Geography of Memory,’ and for strengthening his ongoing collaborations with the (EHN). One of EHN’s projects includes an , developed with Infante Lyons, to help spark discussion and activity in the classroom and community.

While Infante Lyons’ work carries many layers of meaning, her creative process begins without a preconceived agenda. Referencing Syracuse creative writing professor and author George Saunders, Infante Lyons subscribes to the idea that “the muse finds you.” A blank canvas is an invitation for her to explore meaning, and to see her life experiences naturally flow out onto the canvas.

“You come to the studio, you start something, and you may try to have a concept or an idea or a composition, but that will change,” she says. In being open to spontaneous inspiration during this creative process, “you end up with a better piece of artwork,” says Infante Lyons.

She hopes to inspire the same approach in those who come across her art. Her paintings—and the conversations that arise around them—need not uphold a rigid, absolute message. Rather, her work invites an opportunity for thought, exploration and emotion.

Story by Colette Goldstein G’25

Read the full story on the Humanities Center website

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A person wearing glasses and a dark shirt with suspenders stands in a well‑lit art studio, surrounded by canvases, shelves of supplies, and an easel in the background.
Campus Supports Syracuse City School District Students /2026/03/24/campus-supports-syracuse-city-school-district-students/ Tue, 24 Mar 2026 20:21:44 +0000 /?p=334160 Through a campuswide clothing drive, 267 dress shirts and blouses were collected to help students dress their best at a career fair.

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Campus Supports Syracuse City School District Students

Through a campuswide clothing drive, 267 dress shirts and blouses were collected to help students dress their best at a career fair.
March 24, 2026

Earlier this month, the led a campus-wide effort to collect new and gently used dress shirts and blouses for Syracuse City School District students who were preparing for an upcoming career fair.

The campus came together and responded with enthusiasm, as 267 dress shirts and blouses were donated to the Syracuse City School District through collection boxes at Bird Library, the Office of Campus Planning, Design and Construction, Crouse Hinds Hall, Dineen Hall at the College of Law, the National Veterans Resource Center at the Daniel and Gayle D’Aniello Building, the Skytop Office Building and the Martin J. Whitman School of Management.

The items were donated to the school district on March 9.

For many students, a career fair represents one of their first opportunities to make a professional impression, and having the right attire can make a real difference in how prepared and confident they feel walking in, says Jenny Dombroske, Community Engagement executive director.

“Our campus community came through to help local students,” Dombroske says. “Many of us remember the nerves that accompany those first interviews and professional interactions. You’re worried about saying the right thing and making a strong first impression.”

These donations helped remove a practical barrier that students might otherwise face, ensuring that every student can focus on what they have to offer rather than what they have to wear.

“The generosity shown by our campus community will have a real and lasting impact on these students. Thank you to everyone across campus who contributed. We are proud to be part of a University that shows up for its neighbors,” says Paige Altman, Community Engagement coordinator.

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Several boxes filled with donated button-down shirts and clothing collected for a clothing drive.
Soaring Into Another Nesting Season /2026/03/23/soaring-into-another-nesting-season/ Mon, 23 Mar 2026 16:41:02 +0000 /?p=334808 A newly installed camera atop Lyman Hall invites viewers to follow the day-to-day adventures of resident red-tailed hawks Oren and Ruth.

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Campus & Community Soaring Into Another Nesting Season

Red-tailed hawk Oren soaring above the Syracuse University campus. (Photo courtesy of Anne Marie Higgins)

Soaring Into Another Nesting Season

A newly installed camera atop Lyman Hall invites viewers to follow the day-to-day adventures of resident red-tailed hawks Oren and Ruth.
Dan Bernardi March 23, 2026

A familiar duo has returned to a Lyman Hall archway to raise their 2026 brood. Oren and Ruth, the mated pair of red-tailed hawks, have made the campus their year-round home since 2023, and once again are nesting on Lyman Hall. Viewers from around the world can watch the hawk pair raise their chicks in real time, thanks to a overlooking the pair’s nest that sits atop a ledge in the northern archway on the east side of Lyman Hall. The camera, generously funded by alumna Anne Marie Higgins ’76, G’90, offers a clear view of the day-to-day activities of the beloved raptor family.

A Front-row Seat

The nest cam provides a front-row seat to an extraordinary natural story as it happens. Viewers will see everything from nest building and egg laying to incubation, hatching, feeding, sibling interactions and the thrilling moment when the chicks take their first flights. The camera runs continuously, operated by Higgins and dedicated volunteers, giving the campus community and wildlife enthusiasts the chance to witness round-the-clock activity throughout the 2026 nesting season.

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Oren and Ruth’s presence on campus continues a remarkable lineage. Oren is the 2020 offspring of the legendary SU-Sue and Otto, the red-tailed hawk pair that nested on campus and raised 28 chicks between 2012 and 2022 before both died of avian influenza in early 2023. Oren and his mate Ruth first appeared together on campus in March 2023. They initially nested in a ginkgo tree in 2024 and successfully raised two chicks. In 2025, they moved to the Lyman Hall southern archway, refurbishing one of SU-Sue and Otto’s old nests, to raise another pair, both of whom fledged in June and spent the summer mastering flight and hunting on campus.

A red-tailed hawk sits in a large nest made of twigs and branches, built on the ledge of a white painted building. The hawk faces the camera directly, displaying its brown and rust-colored plumage, yellow beak, and piercing blue eyes. The nest is wedged into a corner where the building's architectural molding meets a recessed window or alcove.
Ruth looking down from her nest inside the northern archway on the east side of Lyman Hall. (Photo courtesy of Anne Marie Higgins)

Their names, too, reflect the University’s legacy: Oren honors Oren Lyons ’58, H’93, acclaimed Haudenosaunee faithkeeper and Syracuse University lacrosse standout, while Ruth is named after alumna Ruth Johnson Colvin ’59, H′84, founder of Literacy Volunteers of America and a Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient.

Oren and Ruth aren’t the only hawk pair you might spot around the university. On South Campus, Cliff and Ensley (with Ensley being a 2016 offspring of SU-Sue and Otto) have built a new nest on a light tower. They are named after the Clifford Ensley Athletic Center, where they often perch within the athletics complex. Although no camera will be installed at that site this year, Higgins and her team will continue monitoring the pair from the ground.

Livestream Made Possible by Alumna

The live stream is part of a multi-year effort made possible by Higgins in loving memory of her late husband, the Honorable Thomas W. “Tim” Higgins Jr.  Avid bird watchers, Anne Marie and Tim shared a special affection for hawks. After Tim’s passing in 2009, Anne Marie found comfort in hawk sightings and in the Cornell University nest cam. Everything changed in 2016 when she learned of a hawk family nesting at Syracuse University and witnessed, in person, five chicks exploring the southern ledge of Lyman Hall and one chick that had already left the nest. That experience sparked her commitment to bringing a nest cam to Syracuse University.

For Anne Marie, supporting the cameras is both a tribute to Tim and a gift to the community. She leads Zoom classes for schools around Central New York to share what she’s learned about red-tailed hawks, helping kids understand how these birds live and what they need to thrive. By giving the community a closer look at Oren and Ruth as they raise their brood, she hopes to spark a simple curiosity about wildlife and encourage a stronger connection to the natural world.

For additional coverage, visit the Facebook page.

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A red-tailed hawk in mid-flight, wings fully spread, soaring directly toward the camera against a backdrop of white horizontal metal louvers or ventilation slats on a building exterior. The bird's brown-and-white patterned plumage, yellow hooked beak, and bright yellow talons are clearly visible in sharp detail.
Undergraduate Researcher Takes Community-Based Approach to Speech Therapy /2026/03/09/undergraduate-researcher-takes-community-based-approach-to-equitable-speech-therapy/ Mon, 09 Mar 2026 22:18:36 +0000 /?p=333818 Senior Gillan Weltman and faculty mentor Yalian Pei are working to further culturally informed care in speech-language pathology.

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Syracuse University Impact Undergraduate Researcher Takes Community-Based Approach to Speech Therapy

Senior Gillian Weltman, left, credits her research mentor, Assistant Professor Yalian Pei, with guiding her interests toward a career in cognitive communication.

Undergraduate Researcher Takes Community-Based Approach to Speech Therapy

Senior Gillian Weltman and faculty mentor Yalian Pei are working to further culturally informed care in speech-language pathology.
Diane Stirling March 9, 2026

For Syracuse University senior , research isn’t confined to a laboratory. She’s taking her work directly into the community—hosting events, screening participants and listening closely to people who have long been underserved by the health care system.

Weltman, a dual major in communication sciences and disorders (CSD) and neuroscience with a minor in psychology in the (A&S), is conducting research in the under the mentorship of , A&S assistant professor of CSD.

Pei, a certified speech-language pathologist, researches ways to maximize cognitive-communication rehabilitation outcomes for individuals with traumatic brain injuries and how health communication discrimination affects their health care access and recovery.

Pei and Weltman are working in the project, “Integrating Culturally Adapted Principles in Cognitive Communication Rehabilitation,” which addresses a critical gap in speech-language pathology: the absence of culturally tailored care.

“The long-term goal of this research study is to improve speech-language pathologist therapy participation and outcomes for all clients, regardless of their backgrounds, thereby ensuring consistent healthcare delivery to all,” Weltman says.

Community Research Model

To gather insights, the research team uses a community-based model, hosting engagement events at locations such as the Westcott Community Center, Mckinley- Brighton Elementary School, Cicero Community Center, Interfaith Works of CNY and the Jewish Community Center of Syracuse. Participants come from local nursing homes, YMCAs, elementary school programs and other local groups that support community centers and senior companion programs. The events include presentations on healthy aging that feature games and prizes, free cognitive screenings and opportunities to participate in surveys and interviews. Weltman then analyzes those findings and connects them to the psychotherapy adaptation and modification framework—a systematic guide used to customize standard psychological treatments to fit a client’s specific personal background.

Learning New Skills

The work has pushed Weltman to develop skills that span clinical science, data analysis and community organizing. She has learned to code interviews, extract and analyze data, develop surveys and create clinical manuals, and says these technical competencies will serve her well in her future career as a speech-language pathologist specializing in neurogenic communication disorders.

Just as important, she has learned to see the broader landscape of how health care reaches and serves all patients. She says that work has allowed her to identify specific barriers to health care and learn how to recognize how personal nuances affect speech-language therapy.

A person with long dark hair smiles while standing next to research equipment in a lab setting. Behind her, a monitor displays a slide reading, "Question 2: Which activity is MORE beneficial for maintaining cognitive health?"
Weltman’s research involves working to advance culturally tailored care in the practice of speech-language pathology. (Photo by Amy Manley)

Weltman’s research is already reaching beyond Syracuse’s campus. She is preparing to submit a proposal to , a significant milestone for an undergraduate researcher.

She credits her faculty mentor with making that trajectory possible. Weltman has worked with Pei since her sophomore year and says the relationship fundamentally shaped her academic and professional path.

“From my very first assigned task, Dr. Pei has believed in my potential and supported me every step of the way,” Weltman says. “Without her and the lab, I would have never concentrated on the field of cognitive communication, which has inspired my future career.”

The (SOURCE) has also been instrumental in her work, Weltman says. SOURCE is where she first learned about the range of available to undergraduates.  The office provided research project components, including a received this past year. In addition, SOURCE support such as and programming including orientations, workshops and check-in meetings, have underpinned her ongoing success, she says.

For Weltman, the research is ultimately about more than data or frameworks—it is about making sure every patient, regardless of background, has a real chance at recovery.

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Two people smile as they stand together outside the Gebbie Clinic for Speech, Language and Hearing at Syracuse University.
Students Build Bridges Across Beliefs /2026/03/05/students-build-bridges-across-beliefs/ Thu, 05 Mar 2026 13:13:15 +0000 /?p=333934 The Global Interfaith Leadership Project combines religious and spiritual formation with practical civic engagement.

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Campus & Community Students Build Bridges Across Beliefs

Members of the GILP cohort, with Imam Amir Duric, far left, are pictured at one of the cohort's weekly meetings.

Students Build Bridges Across Beliefs

The Global Interfaith Leadership Project combines religious and spiritual formation with practical civic engagement.
Dara Harper March 5, 2026

In a world increasingly shaped by both connection and division, a diverse group of students is embarking on a distinctive journey of leadership and learning. The Global Interfaith Leadership Project (GILP), housed at Hendricks Chapel, represents a pioneering approach to preparing tomorrow’s leaders by combining religious and spiritual formation with practical civic engagement.

The program’s inaugural cohort, selected from across the University’s schools and colleges, brings together undergraduate and graduate students from varied faith traditions and backgrounds. From a Somali Banti student working to address food insecurity, to a chemical engineer coordinating interfaith dialogue, to a public administration student with White House experience, these scholars represent the rich tapestry of perspectives that GILP seeks to cultivate.

A Distinctive Approach to Leadership

What sets GILP apart is its “Roots, Reach and Results” framework—a holistic approach that moves beyond traditional interfaith dialogue. The program deepens students’ own religious or spiritual foundations (Roots), expands understanding and collaboration across traditions (Reach) and works to create tangible positive change in communities (Results).

“This project addresses a crucial need we’re seeing among students today,” explains Imam Amir Durić, GILP project director and assistant dean for religious and spiritual life at Hendricks Chapel. “Students are seeking meaningful opportunities to make a positive and profound impact. At the same time, we’ve witnessed a 150% increase in student participation in religious and spiritual programs at Hendricks Chapel over the past eight years. GILP brings these two trends together in a way that prepares leaders who can heal divides, imagine new possibilities and empower others in service to the common good.”

Diverse Backgrounds, Shared Commitment

The 2026 cohort members come from nine schools and colleges across the University and SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, spanning architecture, engineering, public policy and environmental science. Their varied academic pursuits reflect the program’s commitment to interfaith leadership across all disciplines.

Among the cohort is Abdirahman Abdi, a senior majoring in African American Studies from the South Side of Syracuse. Drawing on his lived experience as a refugee, he co-founded the Sadaqa Foundation to address food insecurity in Kenya’s Dagahaley Refugee Camp—exemplifying the program’s emphasis on translating spiritual values into concrete community action.

Two women sitting at a table talking
Samantha Greenberg and Lillie Kochis chat about their visit to the Congregation Beth Sholom-Chevra Shas Synagogue in DeWitt, New York.

Ronit Hizgiaev, a sophomore in the Maxwell School studying international relations and law, society and policy, brings her experience as multifaith chair for Syracuse Hillel. She has been instrumental in the Salaam Shalom program, where students learn Hebrew and Arabic to find common ground through language. “Ensuring everyone’s voices are heard and accounted for is a crucial value I hold,” she says.

Mian Hamid, a graduate student in the iSchool, serves as Hendricks Chapel’s interfaith engagement coordinator and convener of the Student Assembly of Interfaith Leaders. His role bridges the program’s academic learning with hands-on leadership development, rooted in both empathy and shared action for the common good.

Graduate student Gianna Juarez, pursuing a master of public administration in the Maxwell School, previously served in the Biden-Harris Administration and at United Way Worldwide. Her background in strategic implementation adds depth to discussions about translating interfaith values into policy and practice.

Beyond Dialogue: A Comprehensive Learning Experience

Scholars participate in weekly interactive sessions, civic projects and visits to local and regional faith communities. The program culminates in an international study journey and participation in the Interfaith America Leadership Summit.

The planned trip to Germany and Bosnia-Herzegovina will offer particularly powerful learning opportunities. Students will examine Holocaust memory in Germany and the aftermath of the Bosnian War and Srebrenica Genocide. In Sarajevo—often called the “European Jerusalem”—they will explore centuries of interfaith coexistence at the crossroads of East and West, examining how religious and moral frameworks shape both the best and worst outcomes of human history.

A Tapestry of Faith and Purpose

The cohort spans a wide spectrum of religious and spiritual identities. Sandy Smith, studying forest ecosystem science at SUNY-ESF, brings a spirituality rooted in nature. “Nature teaches us that diversity is our greatest strength,” she notes, “and I believe that through interfaith collaboration, we will bring humanity to its greatest potential.”

Each of the 16 scholars is also developing a civic engagement project aimed at creating lasting change in the Syracuse community and beyond—all grounded in the Roots, Reach and Results framework.

The GILP is a timely response to the challenges of our interconnected yet divided world. These scholars aren’t just learning about interfaith leadership—they are living it, demonstrating that differences can be sources of strength and that a shared commitment to the common good can overcome division.

For more information about GILP at Hendricks Chapel, visit the .

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members of the GILP cohort posing in a group
University Marks 41st Annual MLK Celebration in Virtual Format /2026/03/04/university-marks-41st-annual-mlk-celebration-in-virtual-format/ Wed, 04 Mar 2026 14:35:57 +0000 /?p=333850 The annual celebration included music and dance, remarks by Chancellor Kent Syverud and Syracuse Mayor Sharon Owens and recognition of the 2026 Unsung Heroes.

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Campus & Community University Marks 41st Annual MLK Celebration in Virtual Format

Members of the Adanfo African drumming ensemble perform during the MLK Celebration.

University Marks 41st Annual MLK Celebration in Virtual Format

The annual celebration included music and dance, remarks by Chancellor Kent Syverud and Syracuse Mayor Sharon Owens and recognition of the 2026 Unsung Heroes.
March 4, 2026

A January snowstorm may have forced the cancellation of an in-person event but did little to dampen the spirit of Syracuse University’s 41st Annual .

Organized by the Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration Planning Committee and hosted by Syracuse Athletics digital reporter and alumnus Sean Dorcellus ’21, the virtual program brought together students, faculty, staff, alumni and community members from across Central New York and from wherever else they happened to be watching.

This year’s theme, “The Dream Lives Here,” served as both a declaration and a challenge. Rebecca Reed Kantrowitz, interim dean of , who opened the program, framed it as a living call to action. “We hope this program leaves you feeling inspired, feeling hopeful and feeling the urgency of Dr. King’s dream,” she said, “not as a distant memory, but as a living call to action right here in our community.”

Chancellor Kent Syverud noted the form of the gathering was changed but not its purpose. “This celebration brings together champions of justice from across Central New York. Your participation and your commitment to serving our community carries forward Dr. King’s vision of a more just society. These ideals align with Syracuse University’s commitment to making our community a more welcoming place to all,” Chancellor Syverud said. “We encourage our talented students, our faculty, our staff, to volunteer their time, their energy and their expertise beyond the borders of our campus. When they do, amazing things happen.”

He recognized keynote speaker Mayor Sharon Owens ’85, a former standout on the track and field team, as a living embodiment of that purpose. Elected with 73.8% of the vote, Owens became the 55th mayor of Syracuse, this year, making history in the city she has called home for more than four decades.

In her keynote address, Mayor Owens reflected on the through-line connecting Dr. King’s legacy to today. Recalling the recent death of Rev. Jesse Jackson, a King protégé, she described how those who came before her instilled in her a drive to serve. “The dream exists,” she said, “and it is multifaceted—across all generations, across all races.”

The celebration also featured the presentation of 2026 Unsung Hero Awards, recognizing those who make a lasting difference without seeking applause. This year’s honorees were Jamie Sterling ’26, Eman Tadros, Pass Da R.O.C.K. and Bettie Graham.

Performances throughout the program gave the celebration its heartbeat. The Hendricks Chapel Choir, Community Choir and Black Celestial Choral Ensemble lifted their voices in song and praise. The Delta Zeta chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, the same organization King proudly belonged to, offered a powerful tribute accompanied by audio excerpts from King’s 1965 visit to campus. Adanfo, the University’s African drumming and dance ensemble, and Creations Dance Company, founded on campus in 1977, rounded out the program with vibrant performances rooted in culture and community.

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Drummers in colorful clothing performing
Public Scholarship Certificate Fuels Career Momentum, Collaboration Across Campus /2026/02/27/public-scholarship-certificate-fuels-career-momentum-collaboration-across-campus/ Fri, 27 Feb 2026 13:42:18 +0000 /?p=333597 The new public scholarship certificate offers graduate students, postdocs and community partners valuable opportunities for collaboration, community engagement and career advancement.

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Campus & Community Public Scholarship Certificate Fuels Career Momentum, Collaboration Across Campus

Sudents in the Public Scholarship Certificate program collaborate with community members through Salt City Harvest Farm, an initiative which cultivates culturally appropriate foods for New Americans, helping them preserve their cultural identity and heritage.

Public Scholarship Certificate Fuels Career Momentum, Collaboration Across Campus

The new public scholarship certificate offers graduate students, postdocs and community partners valuable opportunities for collaboration, community engagement and career advancement.
Dan Bernardi Feb. 27, 2026

Today’s challenges, ranging from public health crises to social inequities, don’t fit neatly into single disciplines. When scholars collaborate across fields, they combine complementary knowledge, methods and perspectives to create solutions no one researcher could achieve alone.

This approach is central to the (A&S)  (EHN), where scholars, teachers, students, artists and community partners work together to serve the public good and build relationships of trust.

EHN advances participatory research through programs like Engaged Courses, which provides funding and cohort-based support for faculty integrating community engaged learning into their curriculum, and Engaged Communities, which fosters research, programming and creative projects with mutual benefit.

In collaboration with the , EHN has launched a new offering called the (PSC). Open to graduate students and postdoctoral scholars in any program at Syracuse University or the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, along with community collaborators, the PSC recognizes commitments to ethical, publicly engaged research, creative work, teaching and programming.

The PSC Advantage

The PSC was created in part to formally recognize the meaningful community-centered work of graduate students and postdocs, says , associate professor of writing and rhetoric, Dean’s Professor of Community Engagement and founding director of EHN in A&S.

After recognizing that numerous graduate students across the University were interested in this type of work, Nordquist and his colleagues developed the certificate program. Since its launch in Fall 2025, more than 50 people from a range of disciplines have signed on to participate, demonstrating both the demand and necessity of this initiative.

“The certificate provides formal recognition for the engaged work grad students and postdocs are doing,” says Glenn Wright, executive director of professional and career development in the Graduate School. “It says, this is academic research, not just something co-curricular they’re doing on the side. And as a certificate, it’s very quickly and clearly legible on a CV. You don’t have to make a long argument that what you’re doing is scholarly.”

A Collaborative Framework

The success of the PSC relies on a strong partnership between the EHN and the Graduate School. “The EHN provides content expertise and much of the required programming for the certificate,” Wright says. “The Graduate School provides outreach and a bigger tent across disciplines and programs. Both are involved in setting the overall direction. It’s a great collaboration.”

This interdisciplinary approach has proven particularly valuable. “The brilliant aspect of this certificate is that all graduate students and postdocs benefit from participating,” says Ava Breitbeck, a Ph.D. candidate in science teaching and graduate assistant in the Graduate School. “We currently have participants from across the academic spectrum, including history, English, composition and cultural rhetoric, linguistics, cultural foundations of education, science teaching and mathematics.”

Breitbeck, who works alongside Wright and the Graduate School professional development team, emphasizes the importance of public engagement in today’s academic climate.

“It is more vital than ever that scholars be thoughtfully engaging the public in their scholarly efforts. Even more so, the certificate leverages the expertise of community partners in helping address key questions and solve important issues in the community,” Breitbeck says. “This work breaks down traditional barriers between academia and the public, which can go a long way in forging productive reciprocal relationships.”

Read the full story on the College of Arts and Sciences website:

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A small group gathers in an open-air pavilion overlooking farmland for an outdoor meeting with a sticky note board.
A Place to Rest Their Heads: Students Build 116 Beds for Syracuse Children /2026/02/24/a-place-to-rest-their-heads-students-build-116-beds-for-syracuse-children/ Tue, 24 Feb 2026 21:37:52 +0000 /?p=333408 The Syracuse University Volunteer Organization teamed up with the local chapter of Sleep in Heavenly Peace to provide a warm, safe place for kids to sleep.

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Campus & Community A Place to Rest Their Heads: Students Build 116 Beds for Syracuse Children

Student volunteers work on bed frames during the Feb. 20 bed build at the Skybarn on South Campus. (Photo by Amy Manley)

A Place to Rest Their Heads: Students Build 116 Beds for Syracuse Children

The Syracuse University Volunteer Organization teamed up with the local chapter of Sleep in Heavenly Peace to provide a warm, safe place for kids to sleep.
Kelly Homan Rodoski Feb. 24, 2026

The sound of drills, hammers and sanders filled the Skybarn on South Campus on Feb. 20, as 141 student volunteers came together to build beds for children in the Syracuse community who don’t have one to call their own.

The partnered with the Syracuse chapter of to work toward SHP’s mission, “No kid sleeps on the floor in our town.”

Throughout the day, the energy inside the venue was upbeat. Students who had never picked up a power drill were guided by more experienced SHP volunteers, sawdust collecting on sneakers as bed frames took shape across the floor.

Over the course of two two-hour shifts, volunteers built 116 bed frames, surpassing the goal of 100 and more than doubling what was done during the inaugural build in 2024. There was laughter, encouragement and a shared sense of purpose that organizers said made the day unlike anything they had experienced before.

A Growing Commitment

The growth of the program has been striking. When SUVO first partnered with SHP on a 2024 build, the group completed 44 beds. In 2025, that number jumped to 88. This year’s total of 116 represents not just a record, but a reflection of deepening commitment across campus.

Students from a wide range of programs and organizations showed up to help, and novel fundraising efforts, such as pie-in-the-face events, helped cover the cost of materials. The planning team included SUVO President Ava Portney ’26, Vice President Ryan Edwards ’26, Secretary Lara Sare ’26 and Treasurer Cody Wade ’26.

A student works on assembling a bed frame.
A student drills a bed frame under the guidance of an SHP volunteer. (Photo by Amy Manley)

Syracuse Mayor Sharon Owens ’85 stopped by and addressed volunteers, drawing a direct line between a good night’s sleep and a child’s ability to reach their potential. She noted that 10% of students in the Syracuse City School District lack a permanent address.

“No one’s potential is defined by where they live,” Owens said, “but their ability to be prepared to be the best they can be definitely is affected by how they live.”

She thanked the Syracuse students on behalf of the entire city, telling them the experience of giving to someone who may not be empowered to give to themselves would stay with them for the rest of their lives.

Portney said the eagerness she witnessed among student volunteers was inspiring and proof that community, even in discouraging times, has a way of sustaining itself. “Community is the closest thing to good we can have as humans,” she said.

Student leaders, in blue t-shirts, pose for a selfie with Syracuse Mayor Sharon Owens.
Syracuse Mayor Sharon Owens ’85, takes a selfie with student organizers. Mayor Owens stopped by the build to offer support and encouragement to the students. (Photo by Amy Manley)

Wade told the volunteers that a bed is far more than a piece of furniture. “A bed is safety. It’s dignity. And most importantly, it’s hope.”

He urged every volunteer to go a step further and help deliver the beds into the community on a future Saturday. SHP expert volunteers bring community members directly into the homes of families in need to assemble and set up the beds on-site.

‘This Is Where You Sleep’

Dave Hoalcraft ’85, a Syracuse native who worked for the University for 39 years, is now co-president of the Syracuse chapter of SHP. He described one of the deliveries he made in the community that remains at the forefront of his mind. A young girl pointed to a blanket and stuffed animal on the floor when telling him where her bed was. Once the bed was assembled, complete with new bedding, it dawned on her that she now had a safe and cozy place to rest her head at night.

“Sixty times you gave us the opportunity to tell this little girl: ‘This is where you sleep,” Hoalcraft told the first shift of volunteers, which completed 60 bed frames. “You did a lot more than play shop today—you gave 60 kids a warm, safe place to sleep.”

With each passing year, more students have learned about the cause, spread the word and shown up ready to work.

The build has become one of the most anticipated volunteer events on campus, a rare occasion where the output is something tangible: a sturdy wooden frame, carefully sanded and assembled, that will soon hold a mattress, sheets, bedding and a sleeping child who might otherwise have had nothing beneath them but the floor.

For the children of Syracuse who will receive these beds, the impact may be difficult to measure but is impossible to overstate. As Mayor Owens said, everyone’s day begins with how they laid their head the night before. Thanks to 141 Orange volunteers, 116 more children in Syracuse will have a chance to take part in a good night’s sleep.

To volunteer for a bed build, bed deliveries, donate bedding or make a monetary donation, visit . For more information about SUVO activities, email suvo@syr.edu.

Board with the letters SHP is signed by volunteers.
(Photo by Amy Manley)

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Students work on drilling and sanding bed frame materials
Turning Crisis Into Community: Policy Studies Alumna Feeds Millions /2026/02/24/turning-crisis-into-community-policy-studies-alumna-feeds-millions/ Tue, 24 Feb 2026 15:19:40 +0000 /?p=333296 Jaclinn Tanney’s food enterprise has donated 4 million meals while creating opportunity for its largely immigrant workforce.

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Syracuse University Impact Turning Crisis Into Community: Policy Studies Alumna Feeds Millions

Alumna Jaclinn Tanney  shown on the far right, joined volunteers to distribute 1,000 meals in Jackson Heights, Queens, during the USTA/U.S. Open. The catering and restaurant chain she co-owns, The Migrant Kitchen, was among the vendors selected for the famed tennis event, and as a way of giving back, it joined the nonprofit Love Wins New York City for the meal distribution.

Turning Crisis Into Community: Policy Studies Alumna Feeds Millions

Jaclinn Tanney’s food enterprise has donated 4 million meals while creating opportunity for its largely immigrant workforce.
Jessica Youngman Feb. 24, 2026

There was always an extra seat at the table in Jaclinn Tanney’s childhood home.

Raised in a family that emphasized helping those in need—a value shaped in part by her grandparents, Holocaust survivors who emigrated to New York after World War II—Tanney learned early that food could be an expression of dignity and hope.

That belief was tested in early 2020.

The Migrant Kitchen, a newly launched New York City catering business, faced uncertainty at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic—including a canceled order for 1,000 meals that had already been prepared.

The cancellation became the catalyst for a scalable social enterprise. Rather than discard the food, staff donated the meals to a nearby hospital, feeding health care workers treating an influx of critically ill patients. Within days, demand surged.

Woman in a kitchen holding pre-packaged meals.
Jaclinn Tanney ’05 holds two entrees prepared by the company she leads, JD Meals.

“We went from serving 1,000 meals to all of a sudden our phones ringing nonstop,” says Tanney, who soon teamed up with The Migrant Kitchen founder Daniel Dorado. “We called upon our restaurant industry friends, many of whom were out of work because of the pandemic, and said, ‘Let’s cook together to get this food out.’”

The surge in demand prompted Tanney and Dorado to formalize what began as an emergency response into an organized, cross-sector operation—partnering with restaurants, government agencies and community organizations to prepare and distribute thousands of meals daily.

Today, Tanney serves as president of JD Meals, part of JD Enterprises, the social impact food company she and Dorado founded in 2020. Through its nonprofit arm, The Migrant Kitchen Initiative, the organization has donated 4 million meals to people in need.

“We are serving thousands of meals daily to people in temporary housing in the New York City shelter system and in emergency sites,” says Tanney, who received a bachelor’s degree in policy studies from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs in 2005.

She notes that the workforce of roughly 100 is largely composed of immigrants, continuing the founding mission of The Migrant Kitchen. “I am proud to say our team reflects the diversity of the communities we support, and many share the lived experiences of our meal recipients,” she says. “That really strengthens our commitment to providing meals with empathy and dignity.”

Especially important to Tanney is ensuring the menus are culturally relevant to the communities they serve.

In addition to working closely with kitchen staff, Tanney coordinates with government officials, community leaders and other stakeholders to identify needs and align resources where they are most needed.

That coalition-building approach proved critical as JD Meals expanded into Philadelphia this past fall. City leaders turned to Tanney’s team to help strengthen emergency meal distribution for residents experiencing housing instability, part of a broader effort to promote recovery, stability and dignity.

That instinct to build coalitions traces back to her time at Maxwell.

Mission-Driven

As a teenager volunteering with food pantries, Tanney knew she wanted a career focused on creating change, though she wasn’t yet sure what form that would take.

Maxwell’s policy studies program helped translate that passion into practical skills.

Under the mentorship of the recently retired Professor Bill Coplin, founder of the policy studies program, Tanney developed skills in experiential learning, problem-solving and cross-sector coordination.

Culinary team members are pictured in a kitchen setting.
Alumna Jaclinn Tanney ’05 with her New York City culinary team, led by chef Alex Hernandez. Tanney’s business partner Daniel Dorado is shown second from left, back row.

Tanney soaked up Coplin’s lessons and his mantra: “do good.” She learned about interconnected networks while working with Syracuse youth through Syracuse University Literacy Corps and interning with Home HeadQuarters, the Syracuse nonprofit that supports affordable home ownership and leads an annual neighborhood revitalization effort.

Through a partnership Coplin formed with the New York City Board of Education, Tanney also joined a cohort of Maxwell students working in its schools in the aftermath of 9/11. And, she interned with an international NGO in Hong Kong through the study abroad program.

Coplin says Tanney exemplifies what the policy studies program aimed to achieve. “Jaclinn was her own motivation, a self-starter,” he says. “She possessed the skills and values we emphasized—collaboration, community engagement and hands-on problem-solving. She’s not just running a business; she’s addressing systemic needs with dignity and respect. That’s exactly what we hoped our students would do.”

After earning her undergraduate degree, Tanney held various roles in fundraising and development while pursuing a master of public administration at Baruch College in New York City. Baruch offered another Maxwell connection: Its president at the time was former Maxwell Dean Mitchel Wallerstein ’72 M.P.A.

Fellow Maxwell and Baruch alumna Alys Mann ’06 says Tanney is an “incredibly talented, hard worker and makes it look easy.”

“She is mission-driven and concerned with making the world better,” says Mann, who leads a housing and community development consulting business, Alys Mann Consulting. “I admire her ability to think outside the box. A perfect example of this was her ability to pivot at the start of COVID and figure out how to feed people while the rest of the world retreated to their homes. She makes you want to be part of the solution.”

Tanney has been honored in Crain’s New York Business magazine’s “40 Under 40” list and was named a “Women Culinarians You Should Know” by The Spruce Eats. Other honors include the Organizational Hero Award from the New York City chapter of the Association of Fundraising Professionals.

Two decades after studying policy studies at Maxwell, Tanney continues to embody the lessons she embraced there. What began with an extra seat at the table—and a canceled catering order—has become a model for feeding communities with dignity.

“My Maxwell experience helped me to understand that individuals can be changemakers,” she says. “I’m so thankful for my education.”

The post Turning Crisis Into Community: Policy Studies Alumna Feeds Millions appeared first on Syracuse University Today.

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People gathered outside a food pantry to distribute meals