Articles
Events and news of what's happening around the Fredonia campus.
Events and news of what's happening around the Fredonia campus.
During Fall Break, four School of Business students, accompanied by Dr. Mark Nickerson, had the opportunity to travel to New York City for a once-in-a-lifetime trip.
Dr. Miroslawa Wielopolska-Szymura will travel from her home in Poland to join the Department of Communication as a Fulbright Scholar in Residence at SUNY Fredonia for the Spring 2024 semester.
“Peculiar Travel Suggestions: Discovering the Story of Kurt Vonnegut's Planetary Citizenship,” the Robert W. Kasling Memorial Lecture, will be given by Department of English Professor Christina Jarvis on Oct. 11.
Western Illinois University Geology Professor Leslie Melim will present a public lecture, "The Secret Life of Speleothems (Caves): It’s Dead . . . but was it ever Alive?" on Friday, Oct. 13, at 1 p.m. in Houghton Hall Room 028.
Dynamics behind the proliferation and ongoing racial housing segregation in Buffalo, NY, in the mid-20th century, will be examined in a talk by SUNY Fredonia alumnus James Coughlin.
The Department of Communication Disorders and Sciences will host a live, in-person event, "Trauma-Informed Care for Providers," open to school, hospital and university service providers who are interested in furthering their understanding and use of trauma-informed care practices.
“The root question was not ‘How can I paint a piece that looks like the American West,’ but rather ‘How can I portray the experience of standing in the open land through painting.’”
The advisory group to the Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at the SUNY Fredonia invites the campus and community to hear renowned poet, novelist, performer and art journalist Eileen Myles at the Collingwood Distinguished Lecture on Diversity.
Alumni and emeritus faculty from across the 60-year history of the Department of Geology (now Geology and Environmental Sciences) will converge at SUNY Fredonia over Homecoming weekend, Oct. 20 to 21.
You won’t find it on the menu, but “experiential learning” will be the key ingredient or takeaway for students who will operate the Snack Shack when it reopens in Thompson Hall at noon on Tuesday, Oct. 10.