Articles
Events and news of what's happening around the Fredonia campus.
Events and news of what's happening around the Fredonia campus.
The current production of “Murder on the Orient Express” at Syracuse Stage features a set designed by Department of Theatre and Dance Associate Professor Czerton Lim, who brought 2022 graduate Donald “Donnie” Woodard, a former student, on board as associate designer.
The Devonian (about 355-415 million years ago) was when the clam shrimp — a still-living group of crustaceans that can be found in western NY — first appeared in the fossil record.
A new theatre design resource, “Raising the Curtain: Technology Success Stories from Performing Arts Leaders and Artists,” features information and insight by Scenic Design Associate Professor Czerton Lim.
“Food and Insects,” an essay written by Department of History Professor David Kinkela, has been published in “A Cultural History of Insects in the Modern Age.”
School of Music Lecturer and alumnus Andrew Martin Smith and former adjunct lecturer Jamie Leigh Sampson were commissioned by the Toledo Alliance for the Performing Arts to collaborate in the creation of new musical compositions in celebration of the total solar eclipse crossing North America.
Two faculty in the College of Education, Health Sciences, and Human Services and a graduate of its Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) program are co-recipients of an award from The International Research Foundation for English Language Education (TIRF).
Assistant Professor Ignacio Sarmiento recently signed a book contract with the University of Arizona Press to publish his first monograph, “Specters of War: The Battle of Mourning in Post-Conflict Central America."
Dr. Miroslawa Wielopolska-Szymura, a Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence at SUNY Fredonia, will give a presentation at the Darwin R. Barker Historical Museum on Saturday, March 23, at 2 p.m.
Several SUNY Fredonia students completed a recent IoT (Internet of Things) workshop organized by the Department of Computer and Information Sciences.
Department of English Professor Birger Vanwesenbeeck has published a review of Marlen Eckl and Jeffrey Berlin’s recent monograph "Stefan Zweig und Jakob Wassermann: Eine Lebensbekanntschaft im Licht ihrer Korrespondenz, 1908–1933" in the Spring 2024 issue of the Journal of Austrian Studies.