Three student lawyers with the Betty and Michael D. Wohl Veterans Legal Clinic meet with a local veteran.
Service members injured in active duty are entitled to receive disability benefits and associated medical care from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). But navigating the process can be intimidating.
Beth Kubala
Thanks to the efforts of the (VLC) within the , hundreds of area veterans have received their benefits or successfully upgraded their military discharge through the pro bono, student-offered legal services since its founding in 2015.
鈥淥ur law students get a chance to get into the legal practice, taking everything they鈥檝e learned and put it into practice working on real cases with real clients with real challenges,鈥� says , executive director of the Office of Clinical Legal Education, director of the VLC, teaching professor in the College of Law and a U.S. Army veteran. 鈥淭his is a chance to make a tremendous difference, helping veterans get the VA medical care and the disability benefits they earned.鈥�
Veterans are referred to the VLC through organizations like the Onondaga County Veterans Service Agency, which provides a yearly grant to help facilitate the VLC鈥檚 efforts, and the 黑料不打烊 VA Medical Center. The community partner organizations will often refer veterans who have had their medical claims denied multiple times.
Knowing that new evidence is needed for the VA to consider reopening a claim, Kubala鈥檚 students study pages of military documents and health care records to learn everything they can about the tasks the client performed and the injuries or illnesses the veterans suffered while serving that contributed to their current health issues. Comprehensive medical exams are conducted to verify the disabilities being claimed.
Annie Mancilla
鈥淭here鈥檚 a great collaboration between our teams,鈥� says Annie Mancilla, director of the Onondaga County Veterans Service Agency and an Army veteran. 鈥淲e know how to handle new and initial claims, and Beth鈥檚 team comes in, handles those trickier claims and succeeds at getting intricate cases adjudicated quickly and fairly.鈥�
When she was training as a veteran service officer, Mancilla says veterans service agencies partnering with clinics like the VLC were rare. She hopes the collaborative work on display in 黑料不打烊 can inspire other partnerships across the country between university-led student law clinics and veterans service agencies.
鈥淲e have to work together to help our veterans,鈥� Mancilla says. 鈥淭his partnership is so beneficial and we鈥檙e at the beginning of something special that is going to continue to grow and have a tremendous impact on our veterans.鈥�
Two years ago, the VLC received a听, a first-of-its-kind grant opportunity from the VA to fund legal services providers. The VLC is one of just four University-affiliated veterans legal clinics to receive grant money.
Once a week, VLC students go over cases at the Altamont House, a facility that provides transitional housing to veterans facing homelessness. Kubala says this grant has enhanced and solidified the VLC鈥檚 partnership with the 黑料不打烊 VA while showing how the clinic can help those veterans receive access to health care and their benefits.
鈥淲e鈥檙e able to make such a significant difference in the lives of so many homeless veterans in and around 黑料不打烊,鈥� Kubala says. 鈥淥ur students not only gain expertise while strengthening their legal skills, they gain confidence and a better ability to relate to others, and they understand how they can help others with their law degree.鈥�
Beth Kubala (center) meets with two student lawyers in the Betty and Michael D. Wohl Veterans Legal Clinic.
VLC student lawyer Sarah Simon-Patches 鈥�24 took on the case of a veteran who filed his own claim with the VA after suffering medical hardships stemming from his time in the military.
Sarah Simon-Patches
Oftentimes, veterans who file their claims on their own don鈥檛 fully understand the criteria and can be denied a portion of their benefits. With a rating of only 20% of his disability benefits, the veteran, a self-employed mechanic from Kansas City, Missouri, was unable to return home to his sons, lost his job and experienced homelessness.
After Simon-Patches combed through the evidence to understand why the veteran fell short of the VA鈥檚 criteria, she successfully helped him obtain his full share of benefits and he has been reunited with his family.
鈥淚t felt like a huge relief. Here was someone who was experiencing homelessness, unemployed and anxious about his future being separated from his family and came to us for help,鈥� says Simon-Patches, who has a brother and grandfather who served in the military.
鈥淭he average veteran, especially our homeless veterans, would not have access to these resources otherwise,鈥� Simon-Patches says. 鈥淥ur clinic is well-equipped to successfully navigate this system and handle the different needs of our veterans.鈥�
Before Seth Owens enrolled in the College of Law, he spent 13 years as a physical therapist, treating many veterans and active-duty service members. He started in the VLC in the spring of 2023 and realized he was meant to be there.
Seth Owens
鈥淵ou have to bring this mindset to every interaction with a client that I鈥檓 going to know everything I can about your case,鈥� says Owens, the LSV-H program manager and a Veterans鈥� Health and Disability Law Fellow with the VLC. 鈥淧rofessor Kubala鈥檚 reputation for having an amazing clinical experience and producing students who do such a high quality of work is well known in the veterans鈥� community.鈥�
Simon-Patches was so inspired by the impact her work was making, she applied to and was accepted into the U.S. Army Judge Advocate General鈥檚 Corps, a government law organization that defends the Army and its soldiers in all military legal matters.
鈥淭his work has meant so much to me and this program wouldn鈥檛 be what it is without the work that Professor Kubala does,鈥� Simon-Patches says. 鈥淲e make a difference in the lives of our veterans and we want veterans to know we鈥檙e here for them as a resource.鈥�
鈥淚t amazes me every day the work that comes out of the clinic,鈥� Kubala says. 鈥淚 like to think that I inspire the next generation of veteran advocates. There are ways to use a law degree for the greater good, and this is one of those ways.鈥�
Beth Kubala (center) leading a classroom discussion in the Betty and Michael D. Wohl Veterans Legal Clinic. (Photo by Angela Ryan)
Students wearing garments from SOLACE Collective’s new line of clothing for neurodivergent individuals.
Carolyn Fernandes 鈥�25 remembers walking out of an interview for a design internship that she ended up not getting. She wondered if fidgeting with her nails鈥攁 common, repetitive expression of her nervous energy every day鈥攚as misconstrued as a sign of not paying attention and a reason for her not getting the position.
Carolyn Fernandes
Fernandes is part of the 20% of people worldwide who are neurodivergent and live with neurological differences like autism, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), dyslexia, bipolar disorder and social anxiety.
Stories like the one above motivated Fernandes and fellow students Lucas d鈥橭elsnitz 鈥�25, Aphrodite Gioulekas 鈥�25 and Aidan Turner 鈥�25 to create , which aims to provide everyone, especially neurodivergent individuals, with comfortable garments that alleviate anxiety, increase confidence and reduce distractions by providing opportunities for fidgeting discreetly or openly.
鈥淧eople like me need to fidget to cope and feel comfortable, so I started researching ways clothing could be made to help neurodiverse people like myself feel more comfortable,鈥� Fernandes says.
After an inspiring conversation with Linda Dickerson Hartsock鈥攖he retired founder and executive director of 鈥攁nd after taking an class focused on inclusive product design, Turner came up with the idea for SOLACE 鈥渢o meet the needs of a huge portion of the population that is currently underserved,鈥� says Turner.
Aidan Turner
In October, Turner set about assembling what he proudly refers to as his team of Avengers to turn concept into reality. As part of the group, Turner, a fifth-year architecture student in the , recruited Fernandes, who is studying industrial design in the (VPA) and Spanish and environmental geoscience in the ; d鈥橭elsnitz, who is studying finance and entrepreneurship in the ; Gioulekas, a fashion design major in VPA; Maria-Camila Molina 鈥�25, a fashion design major in VPA; Christine Ianniello 鈥�25, a biology major in Arts and Sciences; Bobby Anzaldua 鈥�25, an economics major in the ; Bella Tabak 鈥�25, a magazine, news and digital journalism in the ; and Francine听Tongol 鈥�24, a communications design major in VPA.
Lucas d鈥橭elsnitz
After sharing their personal experiences with uncomfortable clothing with each other, Turner pitched creating the neurodivergent clothing line. The project鈥檚 potential impact immediately resonated with d鈥橭elsnitz. At Whitman, d鈥橭elsnitz does a lot of idea pitching but always struggles to control his fidgeting. After one of his first pitches before his peers, d鈥橭elsnitz nearly passed out because, unable to rely on his usual coping mechanisms like playing with his rings, he felt anxious and light-headed.
鈥淩ealizing this is something I would wear motivated me to go all-in on this project because this is not just a clothing brand; it鈥檚 solving an important social issue,鈥� says d’Oelsnitz, who has ADHD and bouts of anxiety.
The team set out to collect data on how SOLACE could better meet the needs of neurodiverse individuals, beginning with a wardrobe analysis and personal interviews to determine what types of clothing neurodivergent people liked or didn鈥檛 like鈥攊ncluding textures and how a garment feels.
Lucas d鈥橭elsnitz (right) discusses SOLACE Collective’s line of clothing with a student during one of 10 on-campus events where students could try on the clothes and provide feedback.
For the next step, Fernandes conducted a survey of 430 people ages 5 to 91 and discovered that 95% of respondents, including 97% of neurodiverse people, experienced discomfort from their clothing.
Incorporating the feedback and relying on sketches, Turner created a visual design brief that served as the blueprint for the first line of clothing, and Fernandes and others on the team used sewing machines to create prototypes from fabric samples collected from their closets and local thrift shops.
Currently there are four prototypes consisting of a matching sweatshirt or hoodie and sweatpants of assorted colors, fabrics and designs:
The clothes are tagless (product details and cleaning instructions are screen-printed on the outside), with many of the items providing its wearer a sense of grounded-ness thanks to the use of heavy fabric, while others rely on light and airy fabrics.
鈥淥ur product line serves to confirm to a lot of neurodivergent people that what they鈥檙e doing is okay and that they can be normal,鈥� says Fernandes, who serves as SOLACE鈥檚 industrial designer. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 not just neurodivergent people that want this clothing. If everyone is wearing it, then no one is going to feel like they鈥檙e sticking out like a sore thumb while they fidget.鈥�
Aidan Turner (far right) talks with students during one of SOLACE Collective’s on-campus feedback events.
鈥淲e try to achieve a grounded feeling while providing warmth and the reassurance that you鈥檙e safe. We鈥檙e trying to find a sustainable way to produce items of clothing for everyone, no matter how your neurodiversity presents,鈥� says d’Oelsnitz, SOLACE鈥檚 project coordinator.
The group has received more than $32,000 in startup investment money through entrepreneurial competitions held on campus and through grants, including the听2025 School of Information Studies鈥� Raymond von Dran Fund for Student Entrepreneurship iPrize competition. Earlier this semester, they held 10 events on campus for students to try on the clothes and provide feedback.
After running a marketing campaign, including the launch of a website and social media channels, they hope to start accepting pre-orders in late June, with items being distributed to customers by the end of the summer. Knowing how well-received their casual prototypes have been, Turner, Fernandes and d鈥橭elsnitz next want to expand into business casual clothing.
鈥淚 have a passion for designing fashion, for retail and for entrepreneurship, and I was introduced to the lack of solutions that exist for neurodivergent individuals,鈥� says Turner, SOLACE鈥檚 team coordinator. 鈥淭here are a lot of opportunities for us to give this overlooked community reassurance and warmth through our clothing, and I鈥檓 proud of what this wonderful team has accomplished so far.鈥�
Members of the campus community learn about the SOLACE Collective’s line of clothing for neurodivergent individuals.
Community engagement. Reciprocal learning. Service to others through volunteering.
Those were the principles behind the creation of the in 1994 under the direction of then-黑料不打烊 Chancellor Kenneth Shaw and his wife, Mary Ann, who also served as the associate of the Chancellor.
The Shaw Center represented Kenneth and Mary Ann鈥檚 promise to the University and Central New York community that student learning would hold the highest priority on campus, promoting volunteer service as a fundamental component of the student experience.
For 30 years, the Shaw Center has proudly served as the University鈥檚 hub for academic community engagement. By giving back to nonprofits and organizations around 黑料不打烊 through service learning and volunteering, the campus community engages in the high impact practice of experiential learning.
Claire Ceccoli
When senior Claire Ceccoli 鈥�25 learned that there were children who didn鈥檛 have a bed to sleep on at night, she chaired the annual bed-building project that benefits the local chapter of Sleep in Heavenly Peace. Through efforts she spearheaded the last two years, 132 beds have been built and donated to children in need.
鈥淲e want to help the community, and we鈥檙e also learning from them. It’s a two-way street, doing this work with that reciprocal learning mindset,鈥� says Claire Ceccoli 鈥�25, a Shaw Center leadership intern who is studying public relations in the and psychology in the .
Derek Wallace
Derek Wallace 鈥�00 was in the first group of tutors in the 黑料不打烊 City School District during the summer before his sophomore year. He eventually took over as Literacy Corps student manager, planting the managerial and entrepreneurial skills that inspired him to become CEO of Golden Fork Media and founder of the children鈥檚 book series and brand, 鈥淜alamata鈥檚 Kitchen,鈥� a multimedia property that uses the power of food to help children get excited to experience all that their world has to offer them.
鈥淚t’s hard to imagine what I would be doing or where I would be if I wasn鈥檛 given those opportunities to do well, do good and create change in the community under the mentorship of [Shaw Center Associate Vice President and Director] Pam Heintz,鈥� says Wallace, who earned dual degrees in policy studies from the and public relations from the Newhouse School.
On April 21, the and ahead of the event, Wallace and Ceccoli discuss how their involvement with the Shaw Center transformed them into leaders in their communities.
Check out听 featuring Ceccoli and Wallace. A transcript [PDF]听is also available.
Wallace: I wanted to do impactful things, and the Shaw Center felt like that鈥檚 exactly what we were trying to do. There was an innovative vision for how we would leverage the skillset of the students in a way that wasn’t just learning in a classroom. It was applied learning and skills applications outside of the classroom that not only benefited our careers as students but also built bridges to the community.
Ceccoli: What drew me to the Shaw Center was the people. Every intern and staff member is so passionate about the work they’re doing. My whole life, I’ve been interested in mission-driven work and nonprofit work. Having an office at the University that’s committed to these initiatives and getting students into the community, I don’t think I could have found a better or more natural fit.
Claire Ceccoli (second from left) poses with two volunteers who helped build beds for Central New York children in need.
Ceccoli: As president of the 黑料不打烊 Volunteer Organization, we鈥檝e partnered with Sleep in Heavenly Peace, an incredible nonprofit organization, to build beds for children in the community. The 黑料不打烊 chapter has delivered 6,000 beds within our area. They always wanted to do a bed build on campus with our students, so I pitched this idea and the staff at the Shaw Center were so supportive. The leader I鈥檝e become today is largely a result of my experiences at the Shaw Center.
Wallace: As a Literacy Corps tutor, I worked in an inclusive kindergarten classroom, reading to children with autism and getting them excited about literacy. I wound up taking over as the student manager, which was one of the best leadership experiences I ever had. Along with my classmate, Chad Duhon, we launched Shooting for A鈥檚, an athletic and academic program that invited fifth and sixth graders to come to campus, meet some of their athlete heroes and learn civics lessons. We also launched a service and experiential learning program, Balancing the Books, in partnership with the Whitman School.
As a Shaw Center volunteer, Derek Wallace (third from left) helped launched Shooting for A鈥檚, an athletic and academic program that taught fifth and sixth graders civics lessons while introducing them to their athlete heroes.
Derek Wallace relies on lessons learned as a Shaw Center volunteer to fuel his career as CEO of Golden Fork Media and founder of the children鈥檚 book series and brand, 鈥淜alamata鈥檚 Kitchen.鈥�
Wallace: My career started at the Shaw Center in children’s literacy, and now I’m the co-creator of a children’s book series. It鈥檚 a full circle moment for me. The passion I have for the work I do, what led me down this path were the values I learned and the lessons taught at the Shaw Center. Chancellor Shaw, Mary Ann Shaw, Pam Heintz and [Maxwell School] Professor Bill Coplin believed in my abilities to make a difference and they provided mentorship that put me on this path and I couldn鈥檛 be more grateful.
Ceccoli: I know this is the type of work I want to do for the rest of my life. This passion that I see in these community organizations and the change that is possible when people take their skills and step up for their community is something that I want to model for the rest of my life.
]]>The cutting-edge weight loss and diabetes research developed by medicinal chemist has offered significant and consistent weight loss and glucose control to its recipients through peptide-based treatments.
Doyle and his fellow collaborators reported that two new peptide compounds颅颅鈥擥EP44 and KCEM1鈥攃onsiderably reduce body weight and normalize blood glucose levels without causing the typical negative side effects experienced by patients who take currently available GLP-1-based anti-obesity drugs.
Doyle, the Jack and Laura H. Milton Professor and Dean’s in the , focuses his research on pharmaceutical drug development for the treatment of obesity and type 2 diabetes. He says that while the first-generation of weight-loss drugs did lead to results, there was a problem: while weight loss occurred, it was almost a reaction to taking the GLP-1 peptide, and that weight loss came with a cost.
Due to side effects like nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal pain, 70% of patients who started taking these drugs were not taking them one year later, and that 30% stopped taking the drugs within three months, generating a very low patient tolerability for the drugs, Doyle says.
Robert Doyle
The recent discoveries Doyle and his collaborators introduced at conferences of the American Chemical Society and The Obesity Society give hope for those battling obesity and type 2 diabetes. The methodology behind these peptide and similar weight-loss compounds could also hold the key to treating two other public health crises: cardiovascular disease, the leading cause of death in the U.S., and opioid addiction.
鈥淎s medicinal chemists, we are focused on using peptides, or small proteins, to treat neuroendocrine disorders, primarily disorders that affect the brain,鈥� says Doyle, the Dean’s Professor of Chemistry and adjunct associate professor of medicine and pharmacology. 鈥淲e are looking at addiction, cravings, food intake, body weight reduction, glucose regulation, all those complex endocrine issues that are prevalent today.鈥�
On this 鈥溾€機use Conversation,鈥� Doyle discusses his breakthrough weight loss research, the important role students play in advancing his research, and how, through philanthropy, his work has come to life.
Check out听 featuring Doyle. A transcript [PDF]听is also available.
A team of researchers at 黑料不打烊, led by medicinal chemist Robert Doyle, has co-developed a novel treatment for obesity and type 2 diabetes without any of the harmful side effects.
The major change in the last 10 years is the creation of these GLP-1 drugs, exemplified by Ozempic and Zepbound. Until these drugs existed, there were no safe, viable weight loss alternatives. Diet and exercise have always been on the table, of course, but for people who needed or wanted a pharmaceutical intervention, there was nothing that could achieve anything greater than the 5% body mass index [BMI] loss that you’d be looking for to have any kind of clinical benefit.
With the creation of the first real breakthrough drug, Victoza, you were seeing that 5% BMI decline from a pharmaceutical perspective, and that was a huge success. That set the stage for these newer, more potent and more active weight-reducing drugs. But those initial drugs were often once- or twice-a-day injectables, and patients didn鈥檛 want to do that. In these last few years, we have upwards of 10% and greater body mass reduction coupled with once-a-week injectables. That has really broadened the appeal and created quite a phenomenon.
There was this discovery that this little hormone that you make in your stomach, if made long-acting and then injected, could trigger food intake reduction. We realized that and did pharmacological science to improve its half-life, make it hang around longer so it would maintain what was normally only a very short activity in a human. We drove that appetite off switch. The discovery of GLP-1鈥攁nd what GLP-1 could do鈥攈asn鈥檛 won a Nobel Prize yet, but it is going to. I wouldn’t be surprised this year if you see the Nobel Prize awarded for the discovery of GLP-1 because it has revolutionized weight loss.
Robert Doyle works alongside student researchers. (Photo by Evan Jenkins)
Within my own lab, we have multiple large scale peptide synthesizers that allow us to produce gram quantities of these drugs. We have multiple purification setup systems so that we’re able to purify to 99%, and we have cell labs that can screen for the required receptor binding.
We also have artificial intelligence and a molecular operating environment, these computational chemical approaches to aid in design. We can start from a concept on a piece of paper, begin to design something computationally and then physically make it in the lab. If it makes the grade, we put something in place that outlines what we want the drug to be able to do, and if it meets those criteria, it goes out into preclinical animal models at the University of Pennsylvania in this case. We’ll look and see if what we’ve created here is manifesting the effect we want it to in that preclinical model. If not, we go back to the drawing board. But if it does, we call that a hit and we’ll begin the process of optimizing it for development.
They’re the ones who are in there grinding out the production, the purification, the screening, the failures and the redesigning. They bring passion and intellect. They’re wonderful. They roll up their sleeves. They jump wholeheartedly into all the aspects of drug development. I have to be willing to trust them that they’ll do it right. They have that sense of confidence, inquisitiveness and can-do. Every day they surprise me with some wonderful question or clever idea.
Robert Doyle talks with lab member Emily Ashlaw G鈥�27, a Ph.D. candidate interested in peptide therapeutics.
鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 imagine myself anywhere else. HDFS has done a great job and supports every student possible,鈥� Konjufca says, 鈥淚f it wasn鈥檛 for HDFS, I probably wouldn鈥檛 know where I want to go in life, but now it鈥檚 amazing to have that idea of 鈥榊eah, this is exactly it.鈥欌€�
Konjufca wants to be a child life specialist who helps children and their families navigate illness, disability or hospitalization. In the fall of 2024, with the support of human development and family science faculty (particularly undergraduate director and professor of practice ), Konjufca launched the 黑料不打烊 chapter of the nonprofit , which facilitates play sessions, called Here to Play, at children鈥檚 hospitals nationwide.
鈥淭heir whole motto is that play heals and so we come in and do crafts with the kids and foster a lot of play,鈥� Konjufca says. 鈥淭he play sessions help normalize life during a hospital stay for children, which can often be an unfamiliar experience.鈥�
Human Development and Family Science majors Jonida Konjufca (left) and Kate Harrington are charter members of the 黑料不打烊 chapter of the nationwide non-profit Project Sunshine.
The University chapter of Project Sunshine partners with and arranges for students like Konjufca to visit the hospital for play sessions with patients. Activities include painting, coloring, using stickers and making 鈥渟lime鈥� out of shaving cream. The space at Golisano is filled with playroom items such as books, dollhouses, a piano and video games to help children feel at home during their hospital stays.
Konjufca says her experience with Project Sunshine and Upstate Golisano Children鈥檚 Hospital has been fulfilling.
鈥淥ne of my first events I was solo and was just starting it and I had a mom tell me her son hasn鈥檛 come out of his room in a really long time,鈥� Konjufca says. 鈥淎nd so, she said, 鈥業鈥檓 happy to see him do crafts. Even if it鈥檚 just for 30 minutes, he鈥檚 getting out and doing something.鈥� She was very appreciative.鈥�
Here to Play sessions occur every month for a two-hour block. All University students, regardless of major, are welcome to join Project Sunshine.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a really fun thing to do, even if you鈥檙e not on the child life specialist route,鈥� Konjufca says. 鈥淚t gives you diverse experiences and it鈥檚 a rewarding feeling. You get to come do crafts with kids. Every time I leave, I鈥檝e had so much fun.鈥�
For those interested in joining the Project Sunshine chapter on campus, please contact Konjufca at 黑料不打烊u@projectsunshine.org for more information. You can also apply to volunteer with Project Sunshine through our .
]]>Students work on building bed frames under the guidance of Sleep in Heavenly Peace volunteers. (Photos by Angela Ryan)
More than 200 members of the University community came together on Feb. 21 at the Skybarn on South Campus to build 88 beds for children in the local community. The space was a hive of activity, as volunteers sanded, tapped, drilled and assembled wood bed frames under the watchful guidance of SHP volunteers.
SUVO, which is supported by the Mary Ann Shaw Center for Public and Community Service, collaborated with seven campus student groups to raise more than $16,500 to cover the cost of all materials needed. In addition, SUVO partnered with the Student Association鈥檚 鈥淪pring Into Action Community Service Initiative,鈥� which funded an additional $5,500. Each bed costs $250 to produce.
The seven student groups that contributed to the fundraising efforts included Alpha Phi Omega, Delta Sigma Pi, Franklin Supply Chain Club, Kappa Theta Pi, Alpha Kappa Delta Phi, Oxfam and the Winnick Hillel Center. Members of those organizations, along with many other student organizations, participated in the build.
Odette Sherk, vice president of the Franklin Supply Chain Club, said the build was the perfect opportunity for the club to give back to the 黑料不打烊 community while also learning more about their area of study.
Students drill boards during the build.
鈥淚n class we learn a lot about assembly lines and the challenges that can arise when working on an assembly line,鈥� said Sherk, a junior supply chain management and marketing management major in the Whitman School of Management and an environment, sustainability and policy major in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. Sherk is also a Shaw Center intern. 鈥淧articipating in the bed build gave our student volunteers real life experience on an assembly line where we could witness some of these things we learned about in class occurring.”
SHP is a national nonprofit organization with the mission of 鈥淣o Kid Sleeps on the Floor in Our Town.鈥� The 黑料不打烊 chapter of SHP delivers an average of 30 beds a week and delivered its 6,000th bed in the community last weekend. There is still a list of more than 400 applicants in the area waiting for a bed.
Dave Hoalcraft 鈥�85, a University retiree, is co-president of the 黑料不打烊 chapter of SHP. On Friday, he was orientating new volunteers to the build and making sure that things were running smoothly.
鈥淚 grew up one mile from here,鈥� Hoalcraft said on Friday as he looked out over the build. 鈥淭his is what it鈥檚 all about 鈥� community. Students giving back to our town. It鈥檚 amazing.鈥�
Ceccoli, a senior dual public relations and psychology major in the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and the College of Arts and Sciences, said the process of 鈥渂uilding the build鈥� was challenging. She had to pivot and find new ways of raising funds this year. As the project developed, a wave of support from students materialized on both logistics and fundraising. 鈥淚’ve been so impressed by the way the students have stepped up and rallied around this because it takes a village,鈥� she said. 鈥淧eople I barely knew were reaching out to me saying 鈥榟ow can I help?鈥� I’m just so grateful to go to a university with others who step up in this way.鈥�
A student sands a board during the bed build.
Volunteer spots were filled quickly, mainly by word-of-mouth. 鈥淎s soon as sign-ups went out, everyone was jumping in to sign up, which is such a great problem to have,鈥� she said.
Ryan Edwards, a junior computer science major in the College of Engineering and Computer Science and a Shaw Center intern, moved lumber from a truck to the building space. He also participated in last year鈥檚 build. 鈥淧eople forget that a bed is a basic necessity, and some kids don鈥檛 have that,鈥� he says. 鈥淚 am happy to be here helping to make a difference.
Dayton Kandrovy, a sophomore in the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, is philanthropy chair for the rugby club team and arranged for some of his teammates to volunteer. 鈥淚 received only positive feedback on the event and everyone was wondering when the next one is,鈥� he said. 鈥淚 will definitely be seeking out more ways to volunteer and create more opportunities for my team to give back.鈥�
A year and a half ago, Ceccoli had not heard of Sleep in Heavenly Peace. Now, after leading the last two bed builds, she plans to be engaged in nonprofit work after graduation. 鈥淢y whole life, I’ve been searching for purpose-driven, mission-driven work. I want something where I’m able to use the gifts that I have to help and empower others and bring communities together,” Ceccoli said. “The Shaw Center has really helped me learn how to do that and given me the leadership skills to take on an event like this.鈥�
鈥淭he most important thing to me is I want students to walk away from this with a positive experience because I want to show them that volunteering is fun and they can do it and it’s accessible,鈥� she said.
Ceccoli has been on deliveries and sees the excitement of children when they see their bed鈥攁nd bedding鈥攆or the first time. She keeps a wood chip in her pocket, taken from one of the builds, to remind her of the importance of this work.
鈥淲hen I reach in my pocket, I feel that wood. It鈥檚 a reminder of the privilege I have, and the work that still needs to be done and is happening in this community,” Ceccoli said. “It’s just really, really powerful.”
To volunteer for a bed build, bed deliveries, donate bedding or make a monetary donation, visit .
]]>Doyle and his fellow researchers have since worked on refining the compounds, GEP44 and KCEM1, and have undertaken lab-animal testing, filed patents, spoken with investors and explored market placement. They believe these drugs, ultimately intended for use in humans, will offer significant advances in how obesity and diabetes are treated in the U.S. and around the world. The researchers have also discovered another highly promising weight-loss compound and new outgrowths that have potential to treat opioid addiction through similar neuroendocrine pathways.
Doyle is also a professor of pharmacology and medicine at . He is working with two primary collaborators on the compounds: , Albert J. Stunkard Professor in Psychiatry at the , and , an endocrinologist at .
Doyle, a medicinal chemist, teaches at 黑料不打烊 and is also on the faculty at SUNY-Upstate Medical University.
GEP44 consists of 44 amino acids that target receptors in the brain, pancreas and liver simultaneously, uncoupling the connection between food intake and nausea and vomiting. 鈥淚t鈥檚 sort of a reboot of the body鈥檚 computer. It鈥檚 the sum of those receptors communicating with each other that is facilitating changes to metabolic behavior like what you鈥檇 see in a lean person or someone post bariatric surgery,鈥� Doyle says.
GEP44 works very well and is a significant improvement over GLP1-based drugs; however, it requires daily injections鈥攁 regimen Doyle acknowledges would be challenging for many patients. That鈥檚 why the researchers are working to reformulate the compound as a long-acting version.
鈥淣ow, we鈥檙e looking at how proteins are changing, what neurons are firing and which genes are changing in response to our drug that aren鈥檛 changing in response to the current therapies,鈥� Doyle explains. 鈥淲e can definitely do a once-a-week injectable, control weight loss, control tolerability as measured by pica (a craving to eat things having no nutritional value). However, we want to create a formulation that has the best tolerability and the highest efficacy before we move into licensing. After all, it is not a trivial thing to take something you鈥檝e optimized to work beautifully well, then go ahead and make it long acting.鈥�
The second compound, KCEM1, was formulated to treat hypothalamic obesity in children, a genetic (as opposed to calorie intake-related) condition. Roth is testing the drug in lab animals and the team is working with the German researchers who discovered the causative gene.
Doyle and Hayes recently produced another 鈥渆xtraordinary compound鈥� that Doyle says is 鈥渧ery exciting and really, really positive for the future.鈥� DG260 targets different mechanisms in the body. In addition to producing weight loss with high drug tolerability and no adverse side effects, it has added health benefits: higher caloric burn and the ability to flush glucose from the blood without needing to increase insulin secretion.
An unexpected outgrowth of this effort has been the team鈥檚 discovery that GEP44 reduces cravings in opioid-addicted lab animals, extending the intervals between periods of drug-seeking behavior. This 鈥減leasant surprise鈥� may lead to new therapies to help reduce human cravings for drugs such as fentanyl, Doyle believes. , a neuropharmacologist and associate professor of psychiatry at听the , is collaborating with Doyle on this work.
All compounds are produced in a campus lab at 黑料不打烊’s Center for Science and Technology equipped as a sort of mini pharmaceutical design and manufacturing center. It houses three state-of-the-art, microwave-assisted peptide synthesizers and a fourth robotic system, which allows high throughput peptide synthesis of up to 1,200 peptides in the span of three to four days.
Manufacturing of the peptide compounds is done in the University’s state-of-the-art lab, located on campus in the Center for Science and Technology. The facilities allow rapid pivoting based on ongoing test findings.
鈥淲e can get data back, turn it around in days and turn that into a genuine lead in the space of a few weeks. Our setup also lets us manufacture and purify at large scales. That lets us pivot quickly, screen quickly and get back into an in vivo (testing on whole living organisms) setup again quickly. We鈥檙e able to operate at a real cutting-edge, rapid-pivoting capability,鈥� Doyle says.
The sophisticated machinery was acquired in part through a $3 million grant awarded in 2019 by the (DoD) . The team鈥檚 work holds particular promise for military personnel and veterans, for whom obesity and weight-related diabetes rates have steadily increased, according to a from the . Those conditions cost the government $135 billion annually and have negative implications for U.S. military readiness, the report states.
鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 have gotten anywhere near where we are now without that initial DoD grant,鈥� Doyle says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 fantastic that we鈥檝e been able to take this all the way through to patentability, have active engagement with investors, get licensed to an existing company and work this as far forward as we have with hopes of seeing its use in people.鈥�
Doyle’s peptides investigation provides robust research opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students and postdoctoral scholars, such as Nick Najjar, left, a third-year graduate student and Lucy Olcott, a senior.
More recently, the researchers鈥� work has been awarded four additional National Institutes of Health grants totaling more than $6 million. The projects also provide important experiential laboratory learning for undergraduate and graduate students and cutting-edge research opportunities for postdoctoral associates.
When their work began eight years ago, the researchers aimed to make safety and tolerability a front-and-center focus, Doyle says. 鈥淲e were adamant that nausea, vomiting and indigestion were more of an issue than had previously been put forward. Now, everyone knows that these side effects are a problem and that the existing drugs need to be replaced with ones that are better tolerated. So, the race is on to find new pathways to achieve what we鈥檝e all gotten a taste for鈥攖hese miraculous weight-loss drugs鈥攁nd make them effective in the long term.鈥�
Accordingly, Doyle sees a coming explosion in the development of 鈥渟uper safe, super effective weight-loss medicines.鈥�
鈥淭he market鈥檚 only going to double and triple over the next 20 years. In the next five to 10 years, we may see six, seven, eight new drugs that are well tolerated without the current side effects and that are super long acting. Now, everyone鈥檚 racing toward that. We鈥檙e trying to drive that forward from 黑料不打烊 and Central New York, and we鈥檝e had a good start.鈥�
]]>On this “‘Cuse Conversation,” Kathrine Switzer discusses making history as the first woman to run the Boston Marathon, why she鈥檚 never stopped advocating for the inclusion of women in sports and what it means to be a proud alumna.
Instead of wallowing in what could have potentially been the lowest moment of her life, Kathrine Switzer 鈥�68, G鈥�72, H鈥�18 used the adversity she overcame during her historic run at the Boston Marathon as fuel to inspire women around the world.
Switzer, who in 1967 became the first woman to officially run and finish the Boston Marathon when she entered as K.V. Switzer using bib number 261, contended not only with the grueling course and frigid race conditions, but also a physical challenge from race director Jock Semple. Around mile four, Semple leapt out of the photographers鈥� press truck and headed straight for Switzer and her contingent of runners from 黑料不打烊.
Kathrine Switzer (wearing bib number 261) is harassed by Boston Marathon race director Jock Semple (in black) while she is running in the marathon. Switzer’s boyfriend at the time, Tom Miller (wearing bib number 390), delivers a block to Semple that frees up Switzer to continue running. (Photo courtesy of the Boston Herald)
As Semple tried to rip Switzer鈥檚 bib off the front and back of her grey 黑料不打烊 track sweatshirt, Switzer was frightened. Her coach, Arnie Briggs, the University鈥檚 mailman and a veteran runner at the Boston Marathon, tried to convince Semple that Switzer belonged in the race, to no avail. Only after Switzer鈥檚 boyfriend, Tom Miller, a member of the Orange football and track and field teams, blocked Semple, was Switzer free to continue chasing down her pursuit of history.
In that moment, Switzer followed Briggs鈥� advice to run like hell, driven to prove Semple and the other doubters wrong by finishing the race. She hasn鈥檛 stopped running with a purpose since.
Kathrine Switzer
鈥淎s I was running, I realized that if these women had the opportunity, just the opportunity, that’s all they needed. And by the time I finished the race I said, 鈥業’m going to prove myself, play by their rules and then change those rules,鈥欌€� says Switzer, an emeritus member of the of Sport and Human Dynamics鈥� .
鈥淔rom the worst things can come the best things and that’s what I tell students whenever I speak to classes. If something is wrong, there’s an opportunity to change it, and we can then reverse it. When you鈥檙e training for a marathon, you鈥檙e out there for hours by yourself. I loved to use that time to take on a problem and solve it,鈥� says Switzer, who earned bachelor鈥檚 degrees in journalism from the and English from the , and a master鈥檚 degree in public relations from the Newhouse School.
After her triumph in Boston, Switzer would complete more than 40 marathons, including winning the New York City Marathon in 1974, and she was instrumental in getting the women’s marathon included in the Summer Olympics. Switzer’s global nonprofit, (an homage to her Boston race bib), has helped thousands of women discover their potential through the creation of local running clubs, educational programs, communication platforms and social running events.
On this 鈥溾€機use Conversation,鈥� Switzer discusses making history as the first woman to run the Boston Marathon, why she鈥檚 never stopped advocating for the inclusion of women in sports and what it means to be a proud alumna whose running career was launched as a student on campus.
Check out听 featuring Switzer. A transcript [PDF]听is also available.
Kathrine Switzer finishes the Boston Marathon in 1975 doing her personal best: 2:51.37. (Photo courtesy of Jeff Johnson)
I was raised by parents who said you know right from wrong, so always go for what’s right. I knew it was going to be time-consuming, but I knew it was important to both correct the error the establishment had made, but more than that, I wanted women to know how great you can feel when you’re running. When I was running, I felt empowered. I felt like I could overcome anything. Running is naturally empowering, it’s a super endorphin high, and I wanted women to experience that.
One of the issues I wanted to solve was getting the women鈥檚 marathon into the Summer Olympics. It came down to opportunities and I wanted to create these opportunities, so [once I was working for Avon Cosmetics] I created the Avon International Running Circuit, a series of races around the world that are for women only, where we could make every woman feel welcome and treat her like a hero.
Eventually, we had 400 races in 27 countries for over a million women around the world. We had the participation, we had the sponsorships, we had the media coverage and we had the international representation. In 1981, by a vote of nine to one, women鈥檚 marathon was voted into the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. That was an incredible feeling.
Running has given me just about everything. It鈥檚 given me my religion, my husband, travel opportunities, my health and wellness, but the biggest thing it has given me is this听perspective on myself, this empowerment and belief in myself that I can do whatever I set out to accomplish.
We鈥檝e already proved that, regardless of your age, your ability or your background, if you get out there and put one foot in front of the other, you’re going to become empowered. If you want to lift a woman up, show her how to run.
We need to do it at the grassroots level and invite women around the world to have a jog or a walk with one of our more than 500 trained coaches. We鈥檙e working village by village, city by city, country by country to spread the word on the life-changing benefits of running, and we鈥檝e worked with nearly 7,000 women in 14 countries and five continents so far. 261 was perfect for this mission. It became a number that means being fearless in the face of adversity. People have told me that 261 Fearless has changed their lives and that they鈥檙e taking courage from what I did.
Note: This conversation was edited for brevity and clarity.
Kathrine Switzer speaks to students in Falk College Professor Lindsey Darvin鈥檚 Sport Management 鈥淩ace, Gender and Diversity in Sport Organizations鈥� class. (Photo by Cathleen O’Hare)
Kevin Du
It鈥檚 a mentality that has served Du, an electrical engineering and computer science professor in the , well as he has carved out a decorated career as a global cybersecurity expert. His labs have been used by more than 1,100 institutions and universities across the world, and it all started with the launch of the , which developed hands-on instructional laboratory exercises known as SEED labs for cybersecurity education.
But at the time of its creation in 2002, the experiences Du wanted to provide to his students around cybersecurity education didn鈥檛 exist in a practical fashion. He set out to create a virtual training tool that could help prepare cybersecurity experts on how to handle the pressing issues they would face in the future.
The initiative launched thanks to $1.3 million in funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF). The SEED project鈥檚 objectives are to develop an instructional laboratory environment and accompanying laboratory exercises that help students comprehend the practical security principles, concepts and technologies associated with cybersecurity issues; apply those principles to designing and implementing security mechanisms that can counter cybersecurity attacks; analyze and test computer systems for potential security issues; and apply these security principles to resolving real-world cybersecurity problems.
鈥淚 designed the SEED project so students can actually walk through those attacks by themselves on their computer,鈥� says Du, who is a fellow of both the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and the Association for Computing Machinery. 鈥淣ot just talk about the attack, but now they can actually see the attack and think about what they would need to do to stop the attack.鈥�
Since its founding, the open-source (software that is made freely available to interested parties) SEED project, which operates by having the students access the lab work through virtual machines, has accomplished the following:
鈥淲e are not teaching students to carry out these attacks, but if you don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 happening behind the attack, you won鈥檛 know what to do when you encounter an attack,鈥� Du says.
Kevin Du (second from right) has carved out a decorated career as a global cybersecurity expert. His labs have been used by more than 1,100 institutions and universities across the world. (Photo by Jeremy Brinn)
Before Du created these virtual labs, cyberattacks would be explored on paper, with professors describing how a theoretical cyberattack could be carried out. While it is important for students to understand the theoretical workings of cyberattacks, Du says this approach leaves out the equally important practical application, the actual stopping of a cyberattack as it is happening or once it has happened.
Professors would discuss cyberattacks in theory, but gaining hands-on, practical experience was very limited, for one very good reason, according to Du. Working through cyberattacks represents a security threat, one that can鈥檛 be tackled on a normal University-issued computer, because some of the cyberattacks being studied could bring down the entire internet if they were successfully carried out.
The solution, according to Du, was to build virtual machine technology that would allow 黑料不打烊 students鈥攁nd students in classrooms all across the country鈥攖o access and run the cybersecurity software on their own personal computers.
At the time, virtual machine technology was still relatively new on college campuses. Du fine-tuned the project鈥檚 goals and objectives, focusing on educating students about the dangers of the different kinds of attacks while emphasizing ways to keep these attacks from happening.
鈥淭here was a huge gap between the theory and the practice of a cybersecurity attack. We needed to fill that gap,鈥� Du says. 鈥淭he big achievement with the SEED lab is we brought the ideas that students were learning about in their research and we simplified those ideas and made this hands-on component that compliments the theoretical teachings.鈥�
Since starting as a professor at the University in 2001, Du鈥檚 research papers have been cited 17,800 times, and he has won two ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security Test-of-Time Awards.
In 2015, Du, who was always interested in hands-on learning, began offering training workshops funded through a $1 million NSF grant for interested cybersecurity educators at colleges and universities across the country. Each summer, approximately 80 instructors converge on Link Hall for a weeklong intensive training workshop where they learn the ins and outs of Du鈥檚 open-source software. Since offering the sessions, Du estimates that more than 400 college professors were trained on the software and are now teaching their students many of the same cybersecurity awareness and prevention lessons Du teaches through his labs.
鈥淚鈥檝e found that many instructors share my teaching philosophy that they want to have hands-on practice with their classes, but they鈥檙e finding there weren鈥檛 many opportunities,鈥� Du says. 鈥淣ow, my SEED lab can fill that gap and it鈥檚 very easy for the instructors to use. Because I put a lot of thought into designing this SEED lab, it makes it easier for other professors to bring the teachings back to their campuses.鈥�
Du has also written a textbook based on the SEED labs, 鈥淐omputer and Internet Security: A Hands-on Approach,鈥� that is used by nearly 300 universities. Knowing the source material can be a bit dry when digested only in a textbook, Du built a recording studio in his basement and produces video lessons complete with hands-on demonstrations to accompany his lectures. The videos are posted online and available at a cost of $10 per class.
鈥淭he videos certainly help enhance the teachings through demonstrations of the attacks or the lessons we鈥檙e learning and have helped more people benefit from my SEED labs,鈥� says Du, who hopes to one day introduce artificial intelligence topics into his SEED labs鈥� educational environment.
]]>Dwayne Murray, deputy director of the Office of Veteran and Military Affairs (OVMA), discusses its impact on campus and around the world, explores what sets 黑料不打烊 apart as a best place for veterans and shares his love for working with veterans and military-connected students.
黑料不打烊 has a long, proud history of serving our veterans and military-connected students that dates back to World War I and the post-World War II era when thousands of veterans embarked on their journey to a college degree through the G.I. Bill.
One of the central organizations on campus that helps the University accomplish this mission is the (OVMA), which, for the last 10 years has played a critical role in helping veterans, military-connected students and their family members pursue their higher education dreams.
Dwayne Murray 鈥�97 is living out his dream job as the OVMA鈥檚 deputy director, and he鈥檚 proud of the work the organization does through its programs and initiatives while serving as the University鈥檚 central hub for veteran and military-connected students.
Dwayne Murray
鈥淭he OVMA sets our veteran and military-connected students with an opportunity to go through the entire life cycle of being connected to 黑料不打烊, from being recruited to when they graduate with their degrees,鈥� Murray says. 鈥淲e provide student success opportunities, immersion trips, job readiness activities and an outstanding 100% job placement rate thanks to our career services office.鈥�
Murray was a track and field student-athlete on campus and earned degrees in sociology ( and ) and information management and technology () before enlisting in the U.S. Army immediately after graduating.
Following a decorated 25-year active-duty career in the Army, both as an enlisted soldier and an officer, Murray returned to his alma mater in June 2022 to take on this latest career challenge, which blends his passion for his country with his drive to help veteran and military-connected students achieve their goals.
鈥淭o be at the intersection of where I’ve had some of the most formidable experiences of my life as a student, and then to combine that with the purpose, direction and motivation that comes from being in the Army, I had to take advantage of this opportunity,鈥� Murray says. 鈥淚t’s the only calling for me that was bigger than continuing to serve in the military because I could pay back my institution, I could pay back the students that walk these halls and I could share those lessons I鈥檝e learned and experiences I鈥檝e had with our campus community.鈥�
On this 鈥溾€機use Conversation,鈥� Murray discusses the impact the OVMA has had on campus and around the world, explores what sets 黑料不打烊 apart as a best place for veterans and shares his love for working with veterans and military-connected students.
Check out . A transcript [PDF] is also available.
Murray says the commitment to our veterans and military-connected students is 鈥渂aked into our DNA as a University,鈥� including the advent of the Student Army Training Corps, which was the forerunner to the Army ROTC. 黑料不打烊 was also home to one of the first Air Force ROTC programs on a college campus in the nation.
Dwayne Murray (second from left) poses with attendees at the OVMA’s Stars & Stripes tailgate.
Among the many ways the OVMA and the University help facilitate the transition from active duty to student, Murray points to:
Dwayne Murray enjoyed a decorated 25-year active-duty career in the U.S. Army, both as an enlisted soldier and an officer, before returning to 黑料不打烊 in June 2022.
Add it all up and Murray says it鈥檚 easy to see why Military Times consistently ranks 黑料不打烊 among the 鈥渂est place for veterans鈥� among private universities.
鈥淲e are fully committed to enhancing the opportunities for our students, and these efforts have led to a global impact,鈥� Murray says. 鈥淲e have close to 60 veterans enrolled in the fully interactive hybrid online juris doctorate program [known as JDinteractive], which gives our veterans and military-connected students the opportunity to earn their law degree completely online. We have students in the Defense Comptrollership program, that earn an MBA from the and a master鈥檚 degree in public administration through the Maxwell School. They go on to serve as leaders in their civilian agencies or their military branch of service.鈥�
While Murray has always seen 黑料不打烊 as part of his identity鈥攚hen he was 7 years old, his grandmother bought him a 黑料不打烊 sweatshirt from the Salvation Army that became a cherished possession鈥攖he University is also ingrained in his family.
Dwayne鈥檚 wife, Alison Murray 鈥�01, currently serves as the assistant dean for student assistance with Hendricks Chapel, where she is responsible for religious and spiritual outreach programs and services that assist students seeking holistic support. Alison, who earned a nursing degree on campus, served in the Army for more than 20 years.
With November being National Veterans and Military Families Month, the Murrays are an outstanding example of service to country and passion for giving back to students.
鈥淎lison is a nurse by trade, and Hendricks Chapel is like a hospital in that she can diagnose folks and provide them with the type of support and assistance they need to grow, thrive and be successful,鈥� Dwayne says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an amazing feeling knowing we share this strong connection with our alma mater.鈥�
Alison and Dwayne Murray.
鈥淪pending time with my grandparents was really an important part of my childhood, and it helped me develop a lot of compassion and respect for older adults in our community,鈥� Sako says.
Katarina Sako ’24 speaks with a participant in the recent Age Well Days event (Photo by Charles Wainwright)
Sako’s interactions with her grandparents, including more recently as part of her family鈥檚 role in caregiving, planted the seed for her interest in her work assisting older adults through the creation of community programming.
Sako is an volunteer through . As a community organizer, Sako works to improve how older adults get connected to services that can help them thrive.
鈥淚’m able to look at systemic issues in our society and how that impacts older adults and their health,鈥� says Sako, who is also working to strengthen and expand a coalition of aging services organizations. 鈥淏ecause you can’t really address one facet without addressing the model.鈥�
As an undergraduate student, Sako was initially interested in researching memory from a psychology perspective. She joined a lab at SUNY Upstate Medical University, and through that work, Sako decided to focus on neurodegeneration and dementia from a biology perspective.
鈥淲hen you’re talking about dementia, which is my hope to study as a geriatrician, it’s not just focused on the biology鈥攜ou can’t just address things from a biological perspective,鈥� she says. 鈥淵ou really need to look at the entire person.鈥�
The skills utilized in her current role took shape during her time on campus, where she majored in biology and neuroscience and minored in Spanish in the .
Katarina Sako demonstrates an apple crisp recipe during a recent Age Well Day event in 黑料不打烊
Sako volunteered as a telehealth consultant over the summer with InterFaith Works. She created a pilot program to help older adults gain the skills needed to navigate telehealth appointments, which gained popularity during the COVID-19 pandemic.
鈥淭here are a lot of benefits offered by telehealth, such as not going in person to your doctor’s appointment, which can be especially helpful if you have mobility issues,鈥� says Sako. 鈥淗owever, technology issues can be really challenging for many older adults.鈥�
The AmeriCorps VISTA program is focused on reducing poverty in the community. Sako鈥檚 skills and experience made her the perfect fit for the community organizer role.
Lori Klivak, senior director for the Center for Healthy Aging at InterFaith Works, was Sako鈥檚 supervisor in her telehealth consultant role and later introduced Sako to the community organizer opportunity, where Klivak听continues to be Sako’s supervisor.
One of InterFaith Works’ initiatives is the Greater 黑料不打烊 Aging Services Coalition, which started in 2020 to unite aging services organizations under one umbrella.
One of the ways Sako reaches out and makes connections is through Age Well Days, an event that brings community services together for older adults. During the most recent event, held on Sept. 24 at Park Central Presbyterian Church in downtown 黑料不打烊, attendees were served a healthy lunch (including a salad made by Sako). They heard presentations from community organizations on health, digital literacy, voting and food assistance, while Sako demonstrated how to make a healthy (and tasty) apple crisp. Attendees took home fresh produce.
鈥淭hese are opportunities for lower-income older adults in the community to receive important services. The goal is to have people actively enroll in things,鈥� says Sako. 鈥淔or example, if you need food assistance or you are experiencing food insecurity, let’s enroll you in SNAP. We want to ease this enrollment process because as much as we have these resources available, the number of older adults who are actually enrolled in these programs is low.鈥�
A timeline of Age Well Day events is still being determined, but Sako plans to hold the events at three different locations throughout the community. The Sept. 24 event focused on eating well, and funding was provided by the 黑料不打烊 Onondaga Food Systems Alliance.
Sako believes the project has a lot of longevity. 鈥淵ou could compare it to a resource fair, but it’s really meant to be a more intimate setting where we’re connecting with the participants who are there,鈥� she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 affirming the dignity of all races, all religions and recognizing the diversity that is 黑料不打烊 and Onondaga County.”
鈥淢y hope is that in forming these connections, we鈥檙e able to build long-term partnerships for the Greater 黑料不打烊 Aging Services Coalition,鈥� Sako says. 鈥淥ur goal is promoting aging well in the community and reiterating that ageism doesn’t have a place here.鈥�
Klivak says that Sako鈥檚 work is helping to fill a critical gap between services and knowledge. 鈥�We have programs, we have support, we have things in place in our community that can help older adults who age better,鈥� she says. 鈥�But there’s a gap between what people understand or know about what we have and actually providing those services. And we don’t have all the services in all the right places.鈥�
鈥淥ur goal is to improve the way that we, as service providers and program providers get information out, connect with communities and build relationships with communities so that they feel comfortable coming to us,鈥� Klivak says.
It鈥檚 also raising awareness about what older people need that goes beyond the conventional wisdom that may focus on food or heat assistance or health care. There are other needs, such as AIDS and HIV prevention, digital literacy and voting issues that are not at the forefront of people鈥檚 minds.
鈥淵ou may think of food or help with heat, but you’re not thinking about how it may not be easy for them to get on a computer or a smartphone and access these resources,鈥� Klivak says. 鈥淲e tend to think about aging through the lens of death, disease and decline, but that’s not the full story.鈥�
Older adults are the number one voting bloc, the number one volunteering demographic and 42% of the local tax base, Klivak says. 鈥淭hese are people who are helping raise their grandchildren, helping their neighbors and who want to communicate with friends who have moved, all sorts of things,鈥� she says. 鈥淎nd we want them to thrive.鈥�
Klivak says as more outreach and connections are made, everyone is learning how to move the conversation forward and change the narrative to be more age-positive and age-friendly.
Klivak says that Sako has been a good fit for her role. 鈥淪he is pretty fearless,鈥� she says. 鈥淪he jumps right in, asks really good questions and then just gets to work.鈥�
Her title, community organizer, illustrates her mission to build relationships. 鈥淭his is about making change, and change happens when people trust you,鈥� Klivak says. 鈥淗er primary role is to be out and about in the community, meeting people, learning what’s going on, getting people interested in what we’re doing. And she has taken that seriously.鈥�
Ultimately, Sako believes that, through her work, she is honoring her grandparents. 鈥淚 think my grandparents could also benefit from Age Well days, definitely,鈥� Sako says. 鈥淚 think that they’re happy that I’m trying to make a difference.鈥�
]]>On this 鈥溾€機use Conversation,鈥� Jason Davis and Jenny Stromer-Galley offer up tips and tools you can use to help spot misinformation, share advice to help us be better-informed consumers of information and social media, and analyze the latest research on misinformation trends in the upcoming presidential election.
With the increase of misinformation and disinformation on the internet and social media, our brains struggle to process what we’re seeing and whether an image, a video clip or a story is real or not.
Faculty members and have studied the trends and created tools to help discern what鈥檚 real and what is synthetic when it comes to content posted online and on social media.
Stromer-Galley is an expert in political campaigns and misinformation and is a professor in the ; Davis is an expert on misinformation and disinformation detection. He is a research professor with the Office of Research and Creative Activity in the , and is also co-director of the .
鈥淒epending on where people are getting their information, the quality and credibility of that information could be quite low,鈥� Stromer-Galley says. 鈥淚t leaves the public more vulnerable to state actors who are trying to engage in disinformation campaigns or U.S.-based malignant actors who are trying to manipulate the public for their own ends.鈥�
鈥淥ur brains have not evolved as fast as the technology, and so we are still as vulnerable as we ever were to the same sorts of approaches at being deceived, intentionally or unintentionally,鈥� Davis says. 鈥淲ith this new digital landscape and digital speed and scale, we need digital tools to help us protect ourselves from ourselves sometimes, and sometimes from that malicious information ecosystem.鈥�
On this 鈥溾€機use Conversation,鈥� Stromer-Galley and Davis offer up tips and tools you can use to help spot misinformation, share advice to help us be better-informed consumers of information and social media, and analyze the latest research on misinformation trends in the upcoming presidential election.
Check out featuring Davis and Stromer-Galley. A transcript [PDF]听is also available.
Davis is involved with the Semantic Forensics program, whose work is funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Through his efforts with DARPA, Davis is helping to advance research into the detection of disinformation and misinformation in the media.
Jason Davis
Semantic forensics is the understanding of not just whether something is real or fake, Davis says, but also delves into the why. What was the intent? Who was the target?
In its fourth year of concentrating on this research area, Davis has been developing digital tools that identify synthetic, manipulated media. The program evaluates the detectors being used, striving to understand what they can and can鈥檛 do when it comes to identifying synthetic media, as well as how effective they are at spotting real or synthetic content.
鈥淲e can say with confidence that this detector works for detecting these kinds of fake, synthetic images at a 98% accuracy, and it is capable of doing this but not being able to do that. They鈥檙e not a panacea, but here’s what they can do, so we learn how to use these detection devices properly and use them appropriately,鈥� Davis says. 鈥淭hen there鈥檚 the development of the tools and the modeling of the threat landscape. How do we create controlled versions of what we know is going on out there in the wild so that we can study, train and better understand our capabilities.鈥�
Stromer-Galley, who leads the University鈥檚 听team, has studied misinformation trends in this presidential race and other top 2024 contests.
Jenny Stromer-Galley
After the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, over the summer, the ElectionGraph team explored the money being spent by the candidates, political action committees, political parties and unknown actors that mentioned presidential candidates in advertisements on both Facebook and Instagram.
The aim was to 鈥渧isualize the firehose of information and misinformation coming at voters from groups with a jumble of motives, ties and trustworthiness ahead of the 2024 elections,鈥� Stromer-Galley says.
The findings showed that:
鈥淭o our surprise, there was a large network of individuals and organizations that we didn鈥檛 know who was behind this that were running scam ads targeted to people who are activated and excited about the presidential election. They were capitalizing on their enthusiasm by turning over their credit cards and then they’re getting scammed,鈥� Stromer-Galley says. 鈥淲hile Facebook is trying to take down those pages, the scammers continue to stay a step ahead.鈥�
When you find yourself aimlessly scrolling through social media without thinking about the validity of what you just saw, that act makes you fully engaged in the platform and susceptible to misinformation or disinformation.
Users are encouraged to embrace cognitive friction when scrolling, because, according to both Davis and Stromer-Galley, the social media apps are designed for you to absorb content at face value, without applying deeper thought to who was behind the post or what their intent might be. By increasing friction, you take the proactive step of slowing down and contemplating the legitimacy of a post.
Both Davis and Stromer-Galley say that the best defense to misinformation and disinformation campaigns is knowledge, urging people to get their news from a wide-range of diverse, traditional media outlets, and to not solely rely on social media as a reliable news source.
]]>From an early age, Mark Radel 鈥�28 always demonstrated compassion for his peers. As a precocious 9-year-old, Mark would rush onto the basketball court (accompanied by the coaches) whenever someone got hurt to check in and offer a helping hand.
Luke Radel 鈥�26 says empathy is his brother鈥檚 superpower. 鈥淢ark is overflowing with empathy, and he has a great ability to know if somebody is having a bad day, and what he can do to help them through it,鈥� Luke says, with a proud smile鈥攁nd that trait will serve Mark well as he strives for a career in sports and exercise science as an athletic trainer.
Mark鈥檚 career ambition is being supported by , an initiative from the听 that sets a high standard among inclusive higher education programs, making higher education more accessible for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities through individualized and inclusive coursework, student-centered planning, internships, and social and extracurricular activities.
鈥淚 want to help people. I鈥檓 loving learning about the body, and how what we eat helps make us strong, and when I graduate, I want to work with my football team, the Buffalo Bills, as a trainer,鈥� says Mark, a sports and exercise science major at the University who was born with Down syndrome.
When Luke (left) attended 黑料不打烊 and study both political science and broadcast and digital journalism, Mark decided to follow in his brother鈥檚 footsteps. (Photo by Chuck Wainwright)
Mark鈥檚 benevolent spirit helped Luke during his darkest days. While visiting colleges with his family in Boston, Massachusetts, Luke, an aspiring broadcast journalist, was out to dinner when he discovered his voice had left him. Realizing there was a potential health problem, Luke checked into Massachusetts General Hospital for observation.
Within a few hours, the doctors gave Luke their diagnosis: Stage 4 Hodgkin lymphoma. With his head spinning, Luke began undergoing chemotherapy sessions twice a month for six months, oftentimes for five or more hours per visit. What got him through those trying times?
鈥淢ark was by my side, and his compassion was so helpful. Plus, he gives the best hugs. Whenever I was having a bad day, those hugs were just amazing and turned my day around,鈥� says Luke, whose cancer is in remission. 鈥淢ark鈥檚 had his fair share of health struggles, and in that moment, I realized what Mark overcomes every day just to keep going, all the work he does to go to school and live his life. If he鈥檚 taking on that daunting situation every single day, I can take care of my chemotherapy.鈥�
When Luke decided to attend 黑料不打烊 and study both political science in the and broadcast and digital journalism in the , Mark decided to follow in his brother鈥檚 footsteps, applying to and being granted admission into InclusiveU鈥檚 highly competitive program.
Their unbreakable bond was further strengthened as roommates on campus. Luke helps Mark with his homework and with prepping his meals, and configured Mark鈥檚 Google Maps app on his phone with the relevant directions needed for Mark to traverse campus on a daily basis.
Luke and Mark Radel during their shared class in the Falk College. (Photo by Chuck Wainwright)
鈥淢ark is Mr. Independent on campus. He doesn鈥檛 want to rely on someone else to help him get across campus. He鈥檚 done an amazing job of navigating everything it takes to be a student,鈥� Luke says. 鈥淚鈥檓 really grateful to be at an institution like 黑料不打烊 that is always striving to ensure everybody has access to the opportunities they need to succeed and feel welcome in these spaces.鈥�
From the moment Mark came into his life, Luke has embraced advocating on behalf of his brother, fighting to ensure he was given access to every possible opportunity. It鈥檚 part of the Radel family鈥檚 genetic makeup. Their father, Patrick, was an attorney who helped people with mental and developmental disabilities be included in their elementary and high school鈥檚 educational programs, and their mother, Mary, created a support group, , that raises awareness and educates and connects parents of children born with Down syndrome to resources.
October is Down Syndrome Awareness Month, which, Luke says, is the perfect time for members of the University to learn how people with Down syndrome are valuable contributors to the University community.
鈥淧eople with Down syndrome are more alike than they are different from us. Mark needs to be in environments that will push him outside of his comfort zone and push the limits of what a person with Down syndrome can accomplish,鈥� Luke says. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l be helping Mark by interacting with him, but you鈥檙e also helping yourself gain a better understanding of how people with Down syndrome see and interact with the world around them.
Inspired to become a broadcast journalist from his efforts advocating on Mark鈥檚 behalf, Luke has amassed an impressive portfolio as a broadcast journalist, recently covering both the Republican and Democratic national conventions and serving as a in Utica, New York.
Luke hopes to use his dual degrees to continue telling impactful stories that make a difference, including his brother鈥檚 inspirational journey to 黑料不打烊.
When Mark got his acceptance letter into InclusiveU I cried tears of joy. I was so excited for him, and I have loved being able to share in the 黑料不打烊 journey with Mark, Luke says.
鈥淚 always wanted to go to college, and being here with my brother has been amazing. This experience has changed my life,鈥� Mark says.
A lifelong fan of playing sports, Mark Radel enjoys participating in the Special Olympics Unified Sports club basketball team on campus. (Photo by Chuck Wainwright)
The table tennis area in the lounge of Luke鈥檚 off-campus apartment complex is getting quite the workout on a Tuesday morning before they both have class in the Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics. Good-natured comments fly back and forth whenever a point is scored. Their friendly matches, typically a best two-out-of-three affair, offer insights into their dynamic.
鈥淚t鈥檚 fun to play sports and I like learning new things while I am playing,鈥� Mark says. 鈥淎nd I like to beat Luke. We always have fun when we play.鈥�
鈥淥h yeah, this is always fun whenever we play [table tennis]. Mark loves watching and playing sports because it鈥檚 exciting and fun for him, and it鈥檚 a great way to stay active and also be part of a team and a community. Mark just loves being around people,鈥� Luke adds.
Outside of their sibling showdowns in table tennis, Mark also participates in the Special Olympics Unified Sports club basketball team on campus, practicing every Sunday in the Women鈥檚 Building.
Surrounded by friends, Mark takes great pride in his basketball abilities. 鈥淚t鈥檚 fun to shoot, dribble the ball and then pass it to my teammates, but what I鈥檓 really good at is shooting and scoring,鈥� Mark says with a smile鈥攂ut more than his performance, he enjoys the camaraderie and friendships that form with his peers.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the best. We cheer each other on, cheer for big shots and we all want everyone to play well and have fun,鈥� Mark says. 鈥淚 play better when my teammates are cheering me on, yelling 鈥楳ark, Mark, Mark!鈥� It makes me happy and motivates me.鈥�
Brothers Mark (left) and Luke Radel share an unbreakable bond, one that has only strengthened during their time at 黑料不打烊.
An avid fan of the 黑料不打烊 football team, Luke and Mark eagerly await each home game. Mark can often be found yelling and cheering on the team while wearing his No. 6 黑料不打烊 jersey, originally purchased to honor former starting quarterback Garrett Shrader 鈥�23, but this year, the jersey is a nod to current starting quarterback Kyle McCord 鈥�25.
From his seats in the 300 section inside the JMA Wireless Dome, fans flock to Mark鈥檚 infectious attitude, exchanging fist bumps and high-fives every time 黑料不打烊 comes up with a big play.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really cool and it makes me feel great to know I鈥檓 making new friends while we鈥檙e cheering on 黑料不打烊,鈥� Mark says.
鈥淢ark has such a big smile on his face when he鈥檚 interacting with our fans, and it makes me so happy to see his joy,鈥� Luke adds.
]]>The project is the first step in a plan that could possibly make such screenings available at OFAs across New York.
Early recognition of memory changes that could indicate an early stage dementia is important in order to help older adults gets the medical attention they need to avoid a crisis.
鈥淚f we are aware of early signs of memory issues, we are able to connect the individual to health care professionals who can begin appropriate treatment, while taking steps to educate and support families to improve the individual鈥檚 quality of life,鈥� says , MD, SUNY Distinguished Service Professor and chair of the Geriatrics and director of the Center of Excellence for Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease. 鈥淭he ability to easily screen this segment of the population has the potential to significantly benefit both the individual and their families.鈥�
Changes that might be caused by early dementia can include changes in memory, depression, anxiety, aggression or lack of interest, Brangman says.
Here鈥檚 how the program works: OFA case managers in the selected counties have been trained by Upstate staff to administer what is called the 鈥淢ini-Cog,鈥� a three-minute screening tool to assess potential memory loss. The screening can be administered in an individual鈥檚 home during a routine visit by OFA staff or at the county office. OFA case managers will not make any diagnoses based on the screening results; they will only administer the screening.
If the Mini-Cog shows any sign of memory change, the individual will be referred to Upstate University Geriatricians for a comprehensive geriatric assessment.
School of Social Work Associate Research Professor Maria Brown (right) speaks with reporters following the news conference announcing the partnership between 黑料不打烊 and Upstate Medical University.
To evaluate the merits of this screening approach in community settings, , Ph.D., associate research professor in 黑料不打烊鈥檚 and will analyze screening information over the yearlong project to identify the number of clients screened, number of clients with scores indicating memory changes, number of clients who receive follow-up comprehensive assessments and their diagnostic results.
鈥淲e are excited about improving the ability of OFAs to identify older adults across the Central New York region who could benefit from geriatric evaluations and connection to services to address their changing needs,鈥� Brown says.
Officials say they expect to screen about 3,750 individuals. Based on statistical analysis, they project that about 975 of those individuals will have scores suggesting some memory concerns.
If results of the evaluation show this screening approach with OFA to be a success, Upstate will create an online training manual and companion videos for use by the New York State Office for the Aging that could be included in the training of OFA staff throughout New York. The training resource also has the potential to be used by Offices for the Aging nationwide that have similar missions, programs and staffing.
In an earlier Upstate/黑料不打烊 pilot program that looked at Onondaga County residents, Brown found that over a nine-month screening phase, 18 (26%) of the 69 mostly African American adults over the age of 65 who were screened had scores suggesting cognitive impairment.
Project officials say OFAs are appropriate entities to participate in this project as they already conduct standard assessments for clients. Called COMPASS, for Comprehensive Assessment for Aging Network Community Based Long Term Care Services, this assessment addresses issues such as housing, nutrition, psycho-social status, medications, daily activities, support network and health, but it does not currently screen for memory issues.
“Early detection of a memory problem such as dementia is vital for timely medical intervention and, just as importantly, to begin connecting individuals and families to the many community-based supports available through local offices for the aging,鈥� says , the New York state director of the .
“These offices for the aging are ideally suited to support detection efforts because of their experience assessing individuals holistically, screening for targeted areas of concern, and delivering on the services and supports necessary to help a person age in place, whether it鈥檚 case management, home adaptations, personal care supports, nutrition, or other programs. I applaud SUNY Upstate’s Department of Geriatrics and 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Aging Studies Institute for this innovative collaborative effort with offices for the aging in their region.”
It鈥檚 noteworthy that Upstate and 黑料不打烊 have joined forces to address this issue. The Upstate/黑料不打烊 collaboration leverages significant resources and expertise on aging issues. Upstate is home to a Department of Geriatrics and a state (CEAD). CEAD currently has a staff that includes geriatricians who work in conjunction with geriatric nurse practitioners, social workers, and nurses with expertise in geriatrics. Social workers provide caregiver support with a particular emphasis on older adults at risk, especially those who live alone or with frail caregivers.
黑料不打烊 is home to the Aging Studies Institute, which includes dozens of faculty working on age-related research and education issues, including age-based public policy; the causes and consequences of population aging; health and functioning across the life course; family, care work, and intergenerational support; and aging design, engineering, and technology.
Funding for the Upstate/黑料不打烊 collaboration was made possible by the and the .
鈥淭he Health Foundation is proud to support this important initiative as part of our ongoing work on behalf of older adults,鈥� says , Ph.D., president of the Health Foundation for Western and Central New York. 鈥淭his program will break down barriers to bring earlier screening for memory issues to more people, meaning they鈥檒l have the resources and treatments they need and deserve. Because those barriers to access often occur in communities of color or among people with lower incomes, this is a crucial health equity effort as well.鈥�
]]>The new station, 鈥�,鈥� is 鈥渁 thrilling and significant breakthrough鈥� for the growing Spanish-speaking community in the area, says , executive director of cultural engagement for the Hispanic community and director of the University鈥檚 . 鈥淭he station is poised to become a vital resource, reflecting the vibrant mix of Hispanic and Latino cultures and effectively engaging these populations like no other local or regional medium does.鈥�
Paniagua and many others at the University were integral to the development of the station. She first got involved in the summer of 2023 when WCNY CEO and President approached her wondering if a Spanish-language radio station was available in the area. When he discovered there wasn鈥檛 one, Gelman asked Paniagua to help him assess the community鈥檚 interest in filling that void.
Gelman formed a community task force, which he co-chaired with Paniagua and WCNY-FM Station Manager . Over many months, more than two dozen task force members planned the station鈥檚 structure, helped developed funding, sought collaborators and generated programming ideas.
Teresita Paniagua, left, the University’s executive director of cultural engagement for the Hispanic community, speaks to students at an event celebrating Hispanic culture. Paniagua was instrumental in spurring community interest in and involvement to help bring about WCNY’s Spanish-language radio station.
Several University faculty members and instructors from the College of Arts and Sciences, including , associate teaching professor of Spanish and Portuguese and Spanish language coordinator, and , Spanish instructor, participated in the task force efforts.
Also involved in other ways were , Spanish department professor and chair; , Spanish professor; , assistant teaching professor of film in the College of Visual and Performing Arts; , development director for 黑料不打烊 Stage; , professor of Spanish at Onondaga Community College; Josefa 脕lvarez Valad茅s, 听Spanish professor at LeMoyne College; and , a Newhouse School of Public Communications alumnus and former radio/TV producer who is an associate professor of communications at SUNY Oswego.
As part of the task force鈥檚 fact-finding, Paniagua enlisted Whitman School of Management students Nicolas Cela Marxuach 鈥�25, Zachary Levine 鈥�25 and Jonah Griffin 鈥�24 to develop and distribute a community interest survey, which the students circulated to several hundred local residents at community events. She says 98% of respondents supported the idea. The survey also provided insights into audience demographics and programming ideas鈥攊ncluding sports, community news, talk shows, music and faith-based content.
There are upwards of 1,000 Spanish-speaking radio stations in the U.S. but Pulso Central is the first of its kind in Central New York. The region is home to some 18,000 Spanish-speaking households, with Spanish-speaking people making up about 10.5% of the area鈥檚 population and comprising a segment of the community that has grown 30% over the past decade, according to research done by WCNY.
Pulso Central also provides a unique learning opportunity and 鈥渁n extraordinary new pedagogical tool for experiential education鈥� for the University’s students, says Ticio Quesada.
M. Emma Ticio Quesada, center, a professor in 黑料不打烊’s Spanish department, uses WCNY’s radio station studio as an experiential learning space and resource for her courses.
Five students from her immersive course, Community Outreach: Language in Action, are interning at the station. The students, Lailah Ali-Valentine, Adam Baltaxe, Kimberlyn Lopez Herrera, Nicolas Bernardino Greiner-Guzman and Jade Aulestia recently created their first podcast.
Ticio Quesada says she also expects students in SPA 300: Our Community Voices, an course, to benefit from the same kind of internship opportunity. The course connects native and non-native Spanish speakers, inspires them to contribute to the local community, and promotes inclusion and social justice.
Miranda Traudt, the University鈥檚 assistant provost for arts and community programming, says the task force is a good example of the positive outcomes that can result when members of the University and local communities work together to achieve specific goals. 鈥淭his project continues La Casita鈥檚 meaningful engagement with Hispanic communities in Central New York and helps fulfill its mission through work in the arts, media, cultural heritage preservation and research adding to the high quality of life,鈥� she says.
Several dozen community members helped WCNY form and air the area’s first Spanish-language radio station. They included, from left, Mitch Gelman, WCNY president and CEO; M. Emma Ticio Quesada, 黑料不打烊 professor of Spanish; Stephanie Gonzalez Rawlings, content producer; and DJ Lorenz (Renzo Quesada), music host. (Photo by Eric Hayden, WCNY)
Paniagua believes the station 鈥渃an be a game changer,鈥� not only in providing news and information about and for the Latina/Hispanic community but also by 鈥渉elping to change long-established stereotypes and present a whole new world of possibilities for the people of this community,鈥� she says. 鈥淭here are many wonderful stories about people who have established their lives in this community and I hope Pulso Central can be a showcase for those stories.鈥�
An official launch event, 鈥�,鈥� will be held Thursday, Oct. 24, at WCNY studios and La Casita.
鈥淲CNY is thrilled to help launch Pulso Central,鈥� Gelman says. 鈥淥ur goal is to provide a platform that will come alive with music and talk that engages listeners and fosters community connection.鈥�
The station reaches listeners in 19 counties. Pulso Central airs on WCNY 91.3 HD-2 in 黑料不打烊, WUNY 89.5 HD-2 in Utica and WJNY 90.9 HD-2 in Watertown. It is accessible online at and streaming on the Pulso Central app.
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InclusiveU Director Brianna Shults and student Matthew Falanga discuss the life-changing opportunities InclusiveU affords its students, how InclusiveU has made a profound impact, how InclusiveU has become the standard-bearer for how colleges run an inclusive higher education program and how the benefits extend to the greater campus community.
The White House. Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. The New York State Capitol building in Albany.
Matthew Falanga
These are just some of the places an enthusiastic delegation from 黑料不打烊鈥檚 InclusiveU program have traveled over the years, meeting with policymakers, politicians and higher education leaders to push for change to make higher education more accessible for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
For more than a decade, InclusiveU, an initiative from the听, has set the standard by which all other inclusive higher education programs are judged. Its model encompasses individualized and inclusive coursework, student-centered planning, internships, and social and extracurricular activities.
鈥淚 always wanted to go to college, and when I heard about 黑料不打烊 and its InclusiveU program, I knew that was where I wanted to go to achieve my dreams,鈥� says Matthew Falanga 鈥�26, who was born with Down syndrome and is majoring in communications at 黑料不打烊. 鈥淭he best part of coming to 黑料不打烊 is making new friends and being involved on campus. It makes me feel very happy.鈥�
Over the last 10 years, InclusiveU has experienced exponential growth and is now the largest program of its kind in the country. This year, 102 students are pursuing their academic dreams on campus, including 44 students who, like Falanga, live in residence halls.
Check out featuring Falanga and InclusiveU Director Brianna Shults G’20. A transcript [PDF] is also available.
Over the years, InclusiveU Director Brianna Shults G’20 has led countless trips to bring current InclusiveU students and recent graduates to meet with elected officials. These trips serve to recruit new advocates, increase support and awareness of the program, and reduce the stigmas that still exist surrounding students with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
The opportunities InclusiveU affords aren鈥檛 readily available for many students like Falanga. According to , only 2% of school-age students with intellectual disability are likely to attend college after high school, and of the 472 colleges and universities in New York state, only 24 have inclusive postsecondary education programs.
Brianna Shults
鈥淭here was this cliff that many students with developmental and intellectual disabilities would drop off once they graduated high school. Some would find work or a program that filled time in their day, while some would do volunteer activities. Some just stayed home. By being able to take that next step in their development alongside their peers, continuing their educations while gaining skills to launch their careers, InclusiveU has given students the opportunity to define who they are and what they want to be. They get to have the same experiences their peers were afforded,鈥� Shults says.
Now, thanks to a $200,000 grant from the B. Thomas Golisano Foundation, the School of Education鈥檚 听will provide technical assistance to schools and colleges in Western and Central New York to create and enhance inclusive college programs for students with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
This is in addition to the technical assistance InclusiveU has already provided to colleges and universities in Arizona, Florida, Kansas, New York, Pennsylvania and Tennessee when representatives from those institutions visited campus in 2023. InclusiveU students led campus tours while sharing how their higher education experiences had changed their lives.
鈥淭here are not enough inclusive programs like ours and our field is very collaborative. We want all students with intellectual or developmental disabilities who want to go to college to have an opportunity that fits their needs,鈥� Shults says. 鈥淭he demand versus available opportunity and the capacity of these programs is something that needs support. We are thankful for the Golisano Foundation鈥檚 help to build out this program and provide the type of support and knowledge that other programs [at other institutions] are looking for.鈥�
For many adolescent students with developmental disabilities, the pursuit of higher education is filled with roadblocks and can be a daunting task for both aspiring students and their families. But thanks to InclusiveU, students of all ages with intellectual and developmental disabilities are empowered to come to campus and experience college life in a fully inclusive setting, learning the necessary skills to thrive in the classroom and find a job after graduation.
These experiences prove to be life-changing for students like Falanga, who over the summer interned with , where he worked on a project promoting voting rights for people with disabilities, and also represented InclusiveU as an inclusive higher education advocate at a Disability Pride Event in the White House.
It was a once-in-a-lifetime moment for Falanga, who had a specific message for the government officials he met during his visit.
鈥淛ust because I was born with a disability, I want to celebrate my disability. I also want to help other people with disabilities feel better about themselves. Be proud of who you are. It is important for people with disabilities to learn about these programs [like InclusiveU] and know that they can go to college and start their new life,鈥� says Falanga, who hopes to use his degree to land a job where he can help create more legislation that opens doors for people with disabilities.
Representing InclusiveU at a Disability Pride Event in the White House over the summer were (from left to right): Karly Grifasi, assistant director of operations and communications, Jennifer Quinn, internship and employment coordinator, Matthew Falanga and Shafreya Wilkins.
黑料不打烊 has a proud 154-year history of opening its doors to all students who are interested in receiving a college degree, regardless of their background or upbringing.
InclusiveU, which was founded in 2001 as a dual enrollment program with the 黑料不打烊 City School District, has provided the necessary skills for students to both thrive in the classroom and find a job after graduation. By incorporating InclusiveU students in classes with the general 黑料不打烊 student body, Shults says the entire campus community benefits.
鈥淚t helps make all 黑料不打烊 students better friends, better classmates, better coworkers and better community members,鈥� Shults says. 鈥淗aving this experience and interaction with InclusiveU students helps our whole campus think inclusively. It helps our administration think differently and more inclusively. We’re able to adjust the way students access their classes or how they interact with faculty to make sure those experiences are inclusive for all.鈥�
The initiative鈥檚 work is evolving. InclusiveU students now participate in the University鈥檚 First Year Seminar course, and in May, InclusiveU is launching the first inclusive 黑料不打烊 Abroad experience to Italy, with a goal of expanding opportunities for its students to study abroad.
Once they earn 黑料不打烊 degrees, many InclusiveU students successfully find paid, competitive jobs, due in part to the strong relationships InclusiveU develops with its partners, both on campus and in the Central New York community. It鈥檚 also a result of the yearlong internships InclusiveU students participate in as part of their three years of academic education.
Matthew Falanga (left) and Shafreya Wilkins during a visit to Washington, D.C.
But there鈥檚 more work to be done when it comes to support and funding for InclusiveU, including thinking beyond the students鈥� time on campus.
鈥淲e want to ensure that students can lead the lives that they want to live afterwards, and that goes for employment, community involvement and living situations. We have advocated for ending subminimum wage and closing sheltered workshops. The Higher Education Opportunity Act hasn’t been reauthorized since 2008,鈥� Shults says. 鈥淭hese are all really important things to help individuals with disabilities lead productive and meaningful lives beyond higher education.鈥�
For now, Falanga is focusing on fine-tuning his public speaking skills, continuing to make new friends on campus and finding ways to get and stay involved with the University he loves so much.
鈥満诹喜淮蜢� makes me feel very happy and proud. InclusiveU has helped me to make new friends, take great classes and explore my career choices. This has changed my life,鈥� Falanga says.
]]>The network鈥檚 expanded reach is the result of its recent designation as a (CDC) Northeast Region Center of Excellence. The designation recognizes the network鈥檚 exemplary performance in the early detection and monitoring of communicable diseases as well as the innovative research coming from Larsen鈥檚 group. It also provides the new Center of Excellence with $1 million in CDC funding. Approximately $500,000 of that amount will support the University鈥檚 continuing affiliated operations and research.
David Larsen
, public health department chair and professor in the听, is gratified by the recognition, which is a nod to the program鈥檚 vast potential.
鈥淚 had a vision for the New York State Water Surveillance Network, but to be named a federal CDC Center of Excellence is just a real honor,鈥� Larsen says. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e doing now is building systems that will keep people healthier; operational processes that let people live more freely and improve the public health response are the ultimate goal.鈥�
Larsen, members of his research team and their partner in the network, the ) and its , met earlier this month to formalize goals for their work with the CDC.
Not long after COVID-19 was named a global pandemic, Larsen assembled a team of researchers from the Falk College, the , the and to begin developing the wastewater surveillance technology that would eventually become critical to New York State鈥檚 response to the disease. The team built a grassroots network that included sewage treatment plant operators, lab technicians and public health program workers to collect sewage samples, test for coronavirus, and report and share results.
The initiative first benefited Onondaga County and the University and soon expanded through the NYS DOH partnership. Today, the New York State network operates in all 62 counties and covers a population of more than 15 million. Testing has expanded beyond COVID to aid response to polio, mpox, influenza, RSV, hepatitis A, norovirus and antimicrobial-resistant genes.听
A total of $43 million, including $28 million from the CDC and $15 million from New York State, has already been invested in the state鈥檚 disease wastewater surveillance efforts, according to Daniel Lang, NYS DOH deputy director of the . He says the program鈥檚 efficacy and extensive operational network distinguished it for selection as a CDC Center of Excellence.
鈥淥ur partnership with 黑料不打烊 was essential right from the start of the pandemic,鈥� Lang says. 鈥淲e worked with Dave Larsen鈥檚 team to establish a comprehensive statewide wastewater surveillance program, an impressive tool we didn鈥檛 have before. It provides universal coverage to assess disease trends and detect where variants are popping up, plus a system that reports back to community participants. Now, we鈥檒l be able to expand the expertise we鈥檝e developed here to other jurisdictions around the country.鈥�
Professor David Larsen, standing, addresses workers from the New York State Department of Health who visited to plan strategy with the University’s research team for their work with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Photo by Cathleen O’Hare)
Bryon Backenson, NYS DOH director of the , says the detection of communicable disease spread through wastewater surveillance is groundbreaking science 鈥渂ecause it doesn鈥檛 rely on the fickleness of whether people go to the doctor or not when they鈥檙e sick. We can only affect what we find out about. Awareness of the presence of disease allows us to sound the alarm, to take action and notify others to take action, allowing us to minimize the spread of disease.鈥�
Backenson says the CDC designation 鈥渟hows that we are a leader in this, and it allows us the resources to train others in what we do. Now, we鈥檒l be teaching other cities, counties and regions.听We鈥檙e proud to be part of it.鈥�
As the CDC Northeast Region Center of Excellence, the team鈥檚 work will support several New England states plus Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The researchers and health officials also want to coordinate with the CDC鈥檚 five other wastewater surveillance Centers of Excellence comprising the . They plan to share research and offer education and training on their operating protocols, efforts that could benefit communities throughout the U.S. and potentially impact disease-detection work globally.
Larsen鈥檚 research on infectious disease surveillance and the public health response to these threats will also help people around the globe.听He recently completed a program in Austria at the Medical University of Innsbruck where he worked with the Austrian wastewater surveillance network. He also spoke about the approach at a technology roundtable at the White House last month.
Wastewater testing research was underway by Larsen’s research team in the early days of COVID-19.
Larsen鈥檚 team is now transitioning program operations to NYS DOH, which will permit the researchers to refocus on how these systems can support public health responses to infectious diseases and 鈥渄ive deeper to maximize the benefits of the systems,鈥� he says.
鈥淧ublic health functions dealing with infectious disease surveillance alert us to when a community is at increased risk and also confirm when a community is no longer at risk,鈥� Larsen says. 鈥淲astewater test results provide awareness of both aspects and key information needed to decide whether to close down community operations or keep them open and operating. Wastewater is a great way to gauge these elements and may be one of the most cost-effective ways to confirm levels of community risk.鈥�
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Davis Hood 鈥�26, Carter Thompson 鈥�26, Jennifer Mason 鈥�26, and Matthew Pinto 鈥�27 with Jim DaRin and professor and Invent@SU director, Alex Deyhim. (Photo by Alex Dunbar)
Former 黑料不打烊 student听Jim DaRin听is one of many wheelchair users who rely on adapted vehicles to drive. These vehicles are equipped with a docking system designed to secure the wheelchairs in place while users focus on the road. However, even when the wheelchair is locked in, it鈥檚 not completely secure, causing DaRin to move back and forth while driving.
鈥淭he docking system moves and I鈥檓 rocking back and forth. I鈥檓 paralyzed from my waist down and have my hands on the steering wheel and throttle. It鈥檚 not secure or safe,鈥� says DaRin. 鈥淭he wheelchair鈥檚 pin also has a tendency to get caught on certain surfaces and the bolt drags on the pavement.鈥�
DaRin is far from the first to complain about docking systems for adapted vehicles, but very few attempts have been made to fix these issues. That鈥檚 when he reached out to engineering students Davis Hood 鈥�26 (electrical engineering), Jennifer Mason 鈥�26 (mechanical engineering), Matthew Pinto 鈥�27 (biomedical engineering) and Carter Thompson 鈥�26 (aerospace engineering) to explore ways to improve his docking mechanism.
鈥淚 showed them the challenge I was having and the problems with my current docking system,鈥� DaRin says.
Jennifer Mason 鈥�26 and Carter Thompson 鈥�26 measuring Jim DaRin鈥檚 docking system. (Photo by Alex Dunbar)
As part of , a six-week summer program where student teams prototype, design and pitch original devices to judges, Hood, Mason, Pinto and Thompson created MagniClaw, a device that securely locks wheelchairs in moving vehicles. Their device has a lightweight bar attachment on the back of the wheelchair and a docking mechanism that holds a clamping and electromagnet.
鈥淲e鈥檝e gone through multiple different design iterations, and we are always trying to keep in mind Department of Transportation standards,鈥� says Hood. 鈥淥ur device is easy to use, has a universal design, and can go on a majority of manual wheelchairs.鈥�
MagniClaw鈥檚 lightweight attachment can easily be connected to wheelchairs using two small clamps. Once attached, the user can connect to the docking frame. The attachment has a steel plate in the center that interacts with the electromagnet to securely hold the wheelchair in place.
鈥淥ur device has a clamping mechanism. With this, wheelchair users can back into clamps without any extra input from the control center and the clamp鈥檚 shape provides enough security for the electromagnet to turn on,鈥� says Pinto.
The electromagnet, which holds the wheelchair in place, can pull up to 600 lbs. and is activated by a remote. The remote has a Bluetooth feature that can communicate whether the electromagnet is on or off.
Matthew Pinto 鈥�27, Jennifer Mason 鈥�26, David Hood 鈥�26, and Carter Thompson 鈥�26 examining Jim DaRin鈥檚 adapted vehicle and docking system. (Photo by Alex Dunbar)
鈥淎ll wheelchair users have to do is back up, and the system gets locked in, holding them in place until they press a button that activates the electromagnet. They鈥檙e held for the car ride, and when they鈥檙e done, they press a button to release the electromagnet, and they can roll away freely,鈥� says Mason.
MagniClaw鈥檚 hitch-less design and customizability not only sets it apart from competitors but also provides more freedom and mobility for wheelchairs with a more accessible docking system. They showcased their original device at Invent@SU鈥檚 final presentations to a panel of 14 expert judges and guests, including faculty, staff, Dean Cole Smith, 黑料不打烊 Life Trustee Bill Allyn and program supporter Mike Lazar. The team tied for second place, winning a cash prize of $1,200.
鈥淚t was nice to have a broad spectrum of engineers in our group. It also feels great to help Jim out,鈥� says Thompson.
鈥淢y previous docking system was not good. Their system is a hundred times better,鈥� says DaRin. 鈥淚t鈥檚 much more safe and secure. The potential for MagniClaw is huge.鈥�
鈥淢r. Jim Darin, a former student of 黑料不打烊, approached me with a problem that he hoped an Invent@SU team could solve,鈥� says Kenneth and Mary Ann Shaw Professor of Practice in Entrepreneurial Leadership听Alex Deyhim. 鈥淚t was amazing to watch the students work directly with Mr. Darin to design and prototype MagniClaw, a magnetic wheelchair docking system that could be helpful to the millions of Americans who use wheelchairs full-time. This project is a wonderful example of what our students can accomplish when they work across engineering disciplines.鈥�
Carter Thompson 鈥�26 examining Jim DaRin鈥檚 docking system. (Photo by Alex Dunbar)
Larsen, Chair of the Department of Public Health in 黑料不打烊鈥檚 , was invited to present to a panel of scientists, policymakers and policy implementers at an information-gathering event called the 鈥淲hite House Roundtable on Emerging Technologies for Preventing Health Emergencies.鈥� At the onset of COVID in 2020, Larsen spearheaded an interdisciplinary team of experts in coordination with the New York State Department of Health to create a wastewater surveillance system throughout New York State.
David Larsen presents his 鈥渓ightning talk鈥� at the White House.
As one of many presenters during the three-hour roundtable, Larsen was given two minutes to discuss the merits of testing wastewater for COVID-19 and other infectious diseases.
鈥淚t was quite humbling to receive the invitation,鈥� Larsen says. 鈥淚 always hope that my work can influence public health, and since COVID-19, I鈥檝e been trying to support the improvement of our infectious disease surveillance systems in New York State and this country.鈥�
Today, the听听is testing for COVID in at least one wastewater treatment plant in all 62 of the state鈥檚 counties, covering a population of 15.4 million. The听听provides the most recent statistics regarding the network.
Days before Larsen鈥檚 trip to Washington, D.C., the (CDC) named the New York State Department of Health Wastewater Surveillance Program as a new in the National Wastewater Surveillance System. New York鈥檚 system was recognized by the CDC for its exemplary performance in the early detection and monitoring of communicable diseases such as COVID-19, polio, influenza and more.
This past spring, Larsen received a prestigious to teach and continue his wastewater surveillance research at the Medical University of Innsbruck in Austria.
Larsen is clearly a leading expert in this field and he received the invitation to speak at the White House from Nicole Fehrenbach, the Branch Chief of the Rapid Response Research and Surveillance Branch of the CDC. The CDC is intimately familiar with Larsen鈥檚 work as the New York State Wastewater Surveillance Network is a part of the CDC鈥檚 .
Larsen had visited Washington, D.C., before Aug. 27 and saw the White House from the outside, but he had never been in the complex until he attended the roundtable hosted by the White House Office of Science and Technology in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.
鈥淲alking into the Eisenhower Office Building and seeing the offices of the Chief of Staff and other executive officials and the west wing of the White House was a bit surreal,鈥� Larsen says. 鈥淚t was the culmination of a lot of hard work since March of 2020.鈥�
During his 鈥渓ightning talk,鈥� Larsen says he emphasized that the functions of infectious disease surveillance are two-fold. First, they need to alert us when a community is at increased risk,鈥� he told the panel. 鈥淎nd second, they need to confirm a community is no longer at risk.”
David Larsen at the White House with the Washington Monument in the background.
鈥淭he Covid-19 pandemic showed how inadequately our systems performed in these two functions,鈥� he added. 鈥淪o, improvements are needed. Wastewater is a great way for both of these, and perhaps one of the most cost-effective ways to confirm a community is not at risk.鈥�
Larsen says his remarks were 鈥渨ell received,鈥� although he can鈥檛 share specific reactions because of the privacy guidelines for the roundtable. He鈥檚 encouraged that panelists were responsive because of the looming funding needs for wastewater surveillance.
鈥淩ight now, wastewater surveillance in the U.S. is largely being funded by COVID-19 emergency funds,鈥� Larsen says. 鈥淎s the emergency is over, those funds will expire. I hope that future funding will be made available to continue these efforts.鈥�
Those efforts, which started on the campus of 黑料不打烊 and now extend worldwide, will continue at 黑料不打烊 with Larsen leading the way.
鈥淩ight now, my team at 黑料不打烊 is focused on transitioning the operations of the program we鈥檝e built in New York over to the State Department of Health,鈥� he says. 鈥淭hat will allow us to dive deeper into the science and maximize the benefits of the systems.
鈥淲ith the newly awarded Center of Excellence, we will support other states in the region, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands,鈥� he adds. 鈥淎nd then globally, the Europeans are leading an effort to coordinate global wastewater surveillance and we鈥檒l continue to support those efforts.鈥�
]]>Tarzan
Have you met Tarzan or Juan yet on campus? These latest members of the University community are hard to miss, with their friendly dispositions, shiny coats and wagging tails.
Tarzan, a one-year-old black lab, and Juan, a听four-month-old yellow lab, are puppies being raised by good friends Arianna Kuhn 鈥�25 and Megan Panny 鈥�25 for , a nonprofit organization that trains and cares for guide dogs for people with vision loss.
Kuhn, a biology major in the College of Arts and Sciences, and Panny, a dual degree English major in the College of Arts and Sciences and School of Education, became involved through outreach being done on campus by Mary Oonk, the organization鈥檚 local volunteer region co-coordinator.
Headquartered in Yorktown Heights, New York, Guiding Eyes for the Blind has puppy raisers along the Eastern Seaboard from Maine to North Carolina, including in Central New York. Founded in 1954, the organization, with more than 1,700 volunteers, provides all of their services free of charge.
Juan
Kuhn was interested in the organization after reading about its mission. 鈥淚 am passionate about giving back to the community and wanted to have a positive impact on an individual that would benefit from the services of Guiding Eyes,鈥� she says. 鈥淚n addition to the opportunity to volunteer, the chance to combine my devotion to helping others and my love for dogs drew me to want to take part in this experience.鈥�
Panny wanted to get involved after seeing the impact it had on people鈥檚 lives firsthand. 鈥淢y hometown is near the Guiding Eyes for the Blind headquarters, which has given me the ability to see how the program works throughout my life,鈥� Panny says. 鈥淲hen I saw the opportunity to be involved through 黑料不打烊, it was one I was excited about. This program has allowed me to help others while also fulfilling the love I have for animals.鈥�
The organization was first connected with the University through a simple phone call: Oonk called the JMA Wireless Dome box office to order basketball tickets and started talking to the representative about the work of Guiding Eyes for the Blind. 鈥淚 explained to him the work I do for Guiding Eyes for the Blind, and that socialization of these puppies is a huge part of that and asked if there was a way we could bring the dogs into the JMA Dome for training,鈥� Oonk says. 鈥淭he next thing I know, I got a meeting with the entire team at the JMA Dome.鈥�
Mary Oonk
The JMA Dome offers a good training experience for the puppies. Guide dogs must navigate large spaces, like an arena, with stairs, elevators and expansive areas.
鈥淢ary approached us about hosting a one-time training class with the volunteers and puppies, but we worked with them to create something more where they could come into the JMA Dome for regular training and even attend a women鈥檚 basketball game so that the puppies could be exposed to a live event in the Dome,鈥� says Pete Sala, vice president and chief facilities officer. The organization has had a relationship with the JMA Dome since 2015鈥攙olunteers come approximately once a month to walk the arena, attend a game or train.
While the experience in the Dome is invaluable, Oonk says the group was hoping to find a way to get students involved with the program. A University campus makes an ideal learning and socialization space for raising guide dogs, with a variety of spaces and situations and groups of people.
Puppy trainers and their dogs in the JMA Dome
In Summer 2022, Stephen Kuusisto, University Professor and director of interdisciplinary programs and outreach for the Burton Blatt Institute, met with local volunteers and their puppies and shared his story about how his life changed since getting his first dog, Corky, from Guide Eyes for the Blind.
Steve Kuusisto with his former guide dog, Nira
鈥淎 lot of things were going on in my life that were difficult, including losing an adjunct teaching job and becoming unemployed,鈥� says Kuusisto. 鈥淪o I suddenly thought, well, here I am, really visually impaired, and have nothing on the calendar. Why not get a guide dog?鈥�
His life was forever changed. Kuusisto went from not really going anywhere without the dependence of a friend and their schedule to going wherever he wanted, whenever he wanted.
鈥淚 spent the next month walking everywhere from country roads to Midtown Manhattan, learning that I could trust this dog with my life,鈥� Kuusisto says.
Kuusisto, who is forever grateful for the volunteers at Guiding Eyes for the Blind, connected Oonk with the Student Experience team during the Fall 2022 semester, who was very supportive in finding ways to gain student volunteers for the puppy raising program. “We are so grateful for the University’s support. Everyone we’ve worked with on campus has become an integral part of the Guiding Eyes mission,” says Oonk.
The only stipulation for students wanting to be involved with raising puppies on campus is that they cannot live in North Campus student housing; puppies in training are, however, allowed in South Campus housing. But that was no problem; even for those students who live on North Campus or perhaps have a busy schedule that wouldn鈥檛 allow for puppy raising, there are still many ways to get involved with the program.
The campus program got a boost when the Guiding Eyes for the Blind group was invited to table at the Fall 2023 student involvement fair. Kuhn and Panny saw the opportunity to take their love for dogs and make a difference in someone鈥檚 life.
Otto the Orange becomes fast friends with one of the guide dog puppies in training.
Kuhn says one of her favorite parts about this program is the community of Guiding Eyes volunteers.
Tarzan at the 黑料不打烊 Mets game with Kuhn and Panny.
鈥淭hese individuals have taught me countless invaluable lessons outside of just puppy raising that I will carry with me into my future endeavors,鈥� Kuhn says. 鈥淎s I have embarked on my puppy raising journey, it has been life-changing to see the impact that this organization and its pups have on the lives of not only individuals with visual impairments but the lives of us as raisers as well.鈥�
Panny agrees. 鈥淭he Central New York region of Guiding Eyes has so many wonderful people and has provided me with a home away from home while at school. I have also loved my time training our puppies. This program and time spent with the pups is one I will cherish forever,鈥� she says.
For others who might want to get involved, Kuhn says the organization is a great way to give back and be of service to others. 鈥淲ithin this program, there are countless ways to get involved, including campus volunteer work, puppy raising and sitting, as well as home socialization, among other ways,鈥� she says.
鈥�Guiding Eyes is not only fulfilling but goes on to change the lives of those who receive the pup they have raised,鈥� Panny says. 鈥淢any involved in the programs have also gained lifelong friendships with whom their pup goes on to guide!鈥�
Interested in becoming a puppy raiser or looking for other ways to get involved? Faculty and staff are welcome to get involved with the program too. “In guide dog training, we talk a lot about relationship-based training. The dogs learn to build a relationship with their puppy raiser and then their formal guide dog trainer and finally they transfer that relationship to the partner they are matched with to form a lifelong bond,” says Oonk. “Relationship building is what we have strived to do with the campus community. Administration, faculty, staff and students have come together to support these dogs that will go on to change lives.”
Visit the , or connect with Oonk and the local chapter by email: centralnyregion@guidingeyes.net. Check out the puppies and their .
]]>A new $40 million award for the New York Semiconductor Manufacturing and Research Technology Innovation Corridor (NY SMART I-Corridor) was announced yesterday by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer at a press conference in 黑料不打烊 hosted by INFICON. 黑料不打烊 will lead the NY SMART I-Corridor鈥檚 Collaboration and Commercialization Center. (Photo courtesy of Onondaga County)
黑料不打烊 will play a leading role in advancing Central New York鈥檚 semiconductor manufacturing capabilities thanks to $40 million in new funds made available to the Buffalo-Rochester-黑料不打烊 region through the U.S. Economic Development Administration鈥檚 . The new award for the New York Semiconductor Manufacturing and Research Technology Innovation Corridor () was announced yesterday by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer at a press conference in 黑料不打烊 hosted by INFICON. J. Michael Haynie, vice chancellor for strategic initiatives and innovation, spoke at the event, and Duncan Brown, vice president for research, represented the University as principal investigator on 黑料不打烊鈥檚 component of the Tech Hub award.
鈥淭his is a monumental victory for the Buffalo-Rochester-黑料不打烊 region as the first major Tech Hub award in the nation, bringing a whopping $40 million from my CHIPS and Science Law. With this major investment, the feds are shining a national spotlight, and confirming what I have long known, that America鈥檚 semiconductor future runs through the heart of Upstate NY along the I-90 corridor,鈥� said Senator Schumer. 鈥淔rom the fields near 黑料不打烊 that will become Micron鈥檚 massive mega-fab to the cutting-edge research labs in Rochester and workers learning these manufacturing skills in Buffalo, this award helps connect the region to seize this once-in-a-generation opportunity and establish Upstate NY as the heart of America鈥檚 semiconductor industry. I created the Tech Hubs competition with Upstate NY in mind, and pulled out all the stops to win this award鈥攆irst proposing this program in my Endless Frontier Act, then passing it into law as part of my CHIPS and Science Act, making the case to bring the region together, advocating at the highest levels and delivering the transformational investment to make today possible. It鈥檚 never been more clear: the heart of America鈥檚 semiconductor industry runs along the I-90 corridor in Upstate NY!鈥�
黑料不打烊 will lead the NY SMART I-Corridor鈥檚 Collaboration and Commercialization Center (C3), which includes Cornell University, Rochester Institute of Technology, University of Rochester and University of Buffalo. C3 will administer millions of dollars in grants to allow small and medium-sized businesses to collaborate with the region鈥檚 universities, bring new ideas to market and accelerate growth of the semiconductor industry in the region.
鈥満诹喜淮蜢� is proud to lead this higher education collaboration that will help drive innovation and establish the NY SMART I-Corridor as a world leading entrepreneurial incubator for the semiconductor industry,鈥� says Chancellor Kent Syverud. 鈥淚 am grateful for Senator Schumer鈥檚 steadfast advocacy. This substantial new grant builds on major investments the University is making. It will help create critical high-tech infrastructure and facilities, attract top semiconductor manufacturing researchers and faculty to the region, and develop unique experiential learning and internship opportunities for talented students.鈥�
To support the NY SMART I-Corridor, the University is investing $10 million, which is matched by a $10 million investment from Onondaga County, to create a state-of-the-art advanced semiconductor manufacturing facility. The center is part of a more than $100 million investment in strategically transforming STEM and expanding the College of Engineering and Computer Science (ECS) at 黑料不打烊 over the next five years.
鈥淭ogether with our regional partners, and with the dedicated support of Senator Schumer, 黑料不打烊 has a key role to play in the revitalization of Central New York,鈥� says Haynie. 鈥淭oday鈥檚 announcement is another exciting milestone in the realization of that goal, and we are gratified by the continuing opportunity to foster collaboration and innovation across the Tech Hub.鈥�
As the NY SMART I-Corridor seeks to become the epicenter for American semiconductor commercialization efforts, C3 will integrate the region鈥檚 extensive assets into a single 鈥減oint of entry鈥� for small and medium-sized businesses, according to Brown.
鈥淚n our knowledge-driven society, university-led research and development is central to economic development. C3 will allow businesses of all sizes to partner with universities to develop, prototype and test new products,鈥� Brown says. 鈥淭hrough these partnerships, the NY SMART I-Corridor will accelerate the transfer of ideas from lab to market.鈥�
Modeled on New York State’s Centers for Advanced Technology, C3 will drive innovation in the I-Corridor鈥檚 semiconductor supply chain by establishing:
The federal Tech Hub designation spans 黑料不打烊, Rochester and Buffalo and includes Ithaca, Auburn and Batavia. Key academic partners include Monroe Community College in Rochester, which will lead the hub鈥檚 workforce development efforts, and University at Buffalo, which will lead the effort to improve the region鈥檚 supply chain for semiconductors.
Schumer created the Regional Tech Hubs competition as part of the CHIPS and Science Bill, and said the three-region consortium beat out hundreds of applications and was one of only 31 regions across the U.S. chosen for the Tech Hub designation.
]]>Recent Maxwell graduate Isabelle Lutz is an enrolled member of the Oneida Nation in her home state of Wisconsin. Participating in the 鈥淟isten to the Elders鈥� talks and engaging with the Not in the Books team has provided a chance to connect directly with Indigenous leaders in the 黑料不打烊 area.
Senior Isabelle Lutz joined a group of fellow 黑料不打烊 students and community members for a short bus ride last fall to the Sk盲鈥o帽h Great Law of Peace Center鈥攖he Haudenosaunee cultural hub on the shore of Onondaga Lake in Liverpool.
The evening鈥檚 event, part of a series called 鈥淟isten to the Elders,” featured Onondaga Hawk Clan Chief Spencer Ohsgo帽:da鈥� Lyons speaking about the history of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy and sharing the traditional Thanksgiving address. The gathering included an array of Haudenosaunee foods, including three sisters soup made with corn, beans and squash.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not a people of the past,鈥� Lyons told the audience. 鈥淭he Haudenosaunee are still the Haudenosaunee. We have our language; we have our songs.鈥�
For Lutz, an enrolled member of the Oneida Nation in her home state of Wisconsin, the Sk盲鈥o帽h event provided a chance to connect directly with Indigenous leaders in the 黑料不打烊 area.
鈥淪o much of Native American studies or Indigenous studies can be taught from a historical/past context, when the people, traditions, and cultures are still present and active in the community,鈥� said Lutz 鈥�24, who in May earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in political science with a minor in Native American and Indigenous studies. 鈥淪o, when there are opportunities to attend and listen to members of different nations share their story and knowledge, it truly complements and enriches my classroom studies.鈥�
The 鈥淟isten to the Elders鈥� series began in 2022, organized by a University group called Not in the Books, which fosters a reciprocal learning relationship between the University community and the peoples of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy.
The Maxwell School is strongly connected to the effort: two of its faculty members, Aaron Luedtke and Heather Law Pezzarossi, are among its key organizers and it is supported with funding from the Tenth Decade Project, an initiative created 10 years ago in the lead of to the school鈥檚 100th anniversary (see related story: From Sovereignty to Mortality: Tenth Decade Awards Support Research Across Disciplines).
鈥淭he Tenth Decade awards have energized and enabled interdisciplinary research around critical themes to the Maxwell School,鈥� says Carol Faulkner, professor of history and Maxwell鈥檚 senior associate dean for academic affairs. 鈥溾€楲isten to the Elders鈥� engages the 黑料不打烊 community around issues of citizenship, democracy and environment. It is a particularly appropriate project for our centennial because it highlights how our present obligations as citizens are tied to our past.鈥�
Members of the 黑料不打烊 Not in the Books team include, from left to right, Diane Schenandoah, Oneida Nation Faith Keeper and the University鈥檚 Honwadiyenawa鈥檚ek鈥攐r 鈥渙ne who helps them鈥�; Heather Law Pezzarossi, assistant professor of anthropology; Jim O鈥機onnor, producer with the special collections team at 黑料不打烊 Libraries; Patricia Roylance, associate professor of English; and Aaron Luedtke, assistant professor of history. (Photo by David Garrett)
The work of Not in the Books aligns with the teaching and research of Aaron Luedtke and Heather Law Pezzarossi.
Law Pezzarossi, an anthropologist trained in critical heritage studies, does collaborative work that addresses colonial history while serving the contemporary needs of Indigenous communities, such as the Nipmuc people of New England. Her teaching includes courses on contemporary Native American issues, and on Indigenous museum relations and Native Americans. She is a faculty affiliate in the Native American and Indigenous Studies Program and a member of the advisory board for the University鈥檚 new Center for Global Indigenous Cultures and Environmental Justice.
Luedtke, an assistant professor of history at Maxwell since 2022, is also a faculty affiliate with the Native American and Indigenous Studies Program. He focused his graduate research at Michigan State University on the native peoples of the Great Lakes鈥攑articularly, in his words, 鈥渉ow they used the authoring of their own histories as resistance to colonial erasure.鈥�
The connections Luedtke has made with 黑料不打烊-area Indigenous communities through Not in the Books and other projects are influencing his research direction. 鈥淚 have the privilege to build these relationships with Haudenosaunee elders,鈥� says Luedtke, who is of Suquamish and Duwamish descent. 鈥淚 am going to spend the rest of my career working in tandem with the Haudenosaunee to tell Haudenosaunee stories of resistance.鈥�
The impetus for creating the Not in the Books group initially came from Diane Schenandoah, Oneida Nation Faith Keeper and the University鈥檚 Honwadiyenawa鈥檚ek鈥攐r 鈥渙ne who helps them.鈥� A sculptor for 40 years, she earned an art degree from the College of Visual and Performing Arts in 2011. Her daughter, Michelle Schenandoah, is a graduate of the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and an adjunct professor in the law school, and her son-in-law, Neal Powless, serves as the University鈥檚 ombuds.
As Honwadiyenawa鈥檚ek, Schenandoah offers intuitive energy work grounded in traditional Haudenosaunee culture and teachings to the University community. She also leads events such as a Haudenosaunee welcome ceremony opening the academic year and a monthly full moon ceremony. 鈥淚 was asked to be a Wolf Clan Faith Keeper in 1988,鈥� she says. 鈥淎s a Faith Keeper, part of my duty is to share our teachings of how to live in peace though gratitude. We have duties and responsibilities to one another as humans, and to our Mother Earth for all that is provided. Giving thanks on a daily basis is of great importance.鈥�
Through her initial work on campus, Schenandoah began connecting with Native students as well as with professors, such as Luedtke, Law Pezzarossi, and Patricia Roylance, associate professor of English, who teach courses related to Native American and Indigenous studies.
The audience at a recent 鈥淟isten to the Elders鈥� presentation at the Sk盲鈥o帽h Great Law of Peace Center鈥攖he Haudenosaunee cultural hub on the shore of Onondaga Lake in Liverpool鈥攊ncluded several students from 黑料不打烊. (Photo by David Garrett)
While students were clearly keen to learn more, many had little background on the impacts of colonialism and the dispossession of Indigenous lands, or on the persistence and current-day realities of Indigenous communities鈥攖opics rarely addressed in primary or secondary education. 鈥淎s Indigenous people, our history is so erased,鈥� Schenandoah says. 鈥淢any students see the purple and white flag flying around campus but don鈥檛 really know what it is. You鈥檙e standing in the capital of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. This is the birthplace of democracy.鈥�
Looking for ways to help fill this gap in knowledge and awareness of the area鈥檚 Indigenous heritage and contemporary presence鈥攁mong not only students but faculty and staff鈥擲chenandoah lit on the idea of connecting the University community with a tribal elder. She contacted Freida Jacques, Onondaga Turtle Clan Mother Whatwehni:neh. Jacques agreed to do a series of lectures, and the Not in the Books team鈥攏amed by Schenandoah鈥攃oalesced to organize these events at Sk盲鈥o帽h.
In addition to Luedtke, Law Pezzarossi, Schenandoah and Roylance, the Not in the Books team includes Scott Catucci, associate director of outdoor education at the Barnes Center; Jim O鈥機onnor, producer with the special collections team at SU Libraries; and Tammy Bluewolf-Kennedy, a member of the Oneida Nation鈥檚 Wolf Clan who leads Indigenous student recruitment in the University鈥檚 Office of Admissions.
鈥淭he Onondaga are still here, and the Onondaga reservation is minutes away from SU鈥檚 campus,鈥� says Luedtke. 鈥淲e decided as a group very early on that we have a coherent job to do: to educate the campus community that Native peoples are not the mythological, ahistorical stereotype representations that people are accustomed to seeing. Native peoples are just as modern, nuanced, complicated and fully capable of all aspects of humanity as anyone else.鈥�
Hosting the series at a Native cultural center, rather than bringing elders to campus, was important for the spirit and intent of the project. 鈥淪k盲鈥o帽h is a Haudenosaunee welcome center,鈥� Law Pezzarossi says. 鈥淪o, it鈥檚 the perfect place for people to start learning.鈥�
Freida Jacques, Onondaga Turtle Clan Mother Whatwehni:neh, is recording her history and experiences for documentary project called 鈥淒ropping Seeds鈥� that is supported with a Maxwell School Tenth Decade grant. The first episode is expected to release later this year.
Supported with a $5,000 grant from Maxwell鈥檚 Tenth Decade Project and other campus programs, the 鈥淟isten to the Elders鈥� series began in the 2022鈥�23 academic year with four presentations by Freida Jacques, who in addition to being a clan mother has served for decades as a Haudenosaunee cultural liaison for educational institutions across New York state and beyond.
During these Sk盲鈥o帽h events, Jacques led tours of the center and explained how in Haudenosaunee tradition, women choose the clan leaders and men marry into women鈥檚 clans rather than vice versa.
In one session, she discussed the enduring impact of the boarding schools run by churches or the federal government that tens of thousands of Indigenous children鈥攊ncluding Jacques鈥� grandfather鈥攚ere forced to attend between the late 1800s and the 1960s.
In a letter written to support a funding application, Jacques said that sharing her life experiences and knowledge has been fulfilling. 鈥淏oth grandparents on my mother鈥檚 side attended Carlisle Indian Industrial boarding school in Pennsylvania,鈥� she wrote. 鈥淢y family was affected by this fact. My father was a Mohawk Wolf Clan person and originated at Akwesasne, whose territory is divided by Ontario, Quebec and New York State. 鈥uilding bridges between cultures appears to be one of my life鈥檚 purposes.鈥�
Onondaga Chief Spencer Lyons continued the series in 2023-24 with presentations on Haudenosaunee traditions and governance. With free transportation available from campus to Sk盲鈥o帽h, the 鈥淟isten to the Elders鈥� series have consistently drawn capacity crowds.
To read the full story, visit the .
]]>Members from the YWCA organization pose in front of their van while holding a bin full of 鈥機use Collections donations.
The Office of Sustainability Management hosted 鈥機use Collections during the last week of the Spring 2024 semester to provide a convenient location for students to donate unwanted and gently used items before leaving for the summer. The office partnered with local nonprofits and charities to get the donated items into the hands of those in need, helping to reduce dumpster waste while assisting the local community.
鈥淲e are grateful to the Office of Sustainability Management for organizing this event,鈥� said Lydia Montgomery, project manager at A Tiny Home for Good, a local 黑料不打烊 nonprofit. 鈥淎s we work to build community and assist our tenants in creating homes, events like these support our mission for long-term supportive housing.鈥�
Bedding, clothing, shoes, refrigerators, microwaves, household items and more were collected and donated. On-campus departments such as the Mary Ann Shaw Center helped to recruit volunteers. Student volunteers and peer-to-peer educators assisted donors and helped the organizations picking up donations.
In total, over 70 gray bins of items (equivalent to roughly half of an 18-wheel tractor trailer) were donated to 11 organizations, including the Rescue Mission, RISE, A Tiny Home for Good, Mary Nelson Youth Center, Catholic Charities, YWCA, InterFaith Works, Center for Justice Innovation, Huntington Family Center, Spanish Action League of Onondaga County and the Westside Family Resource Center.
鈥淐atholic Charities was able to acquire much-needed clothing items from the event,鈥� said Kerina Herard, program manager of emergency services for Catholic Charities of Onondaga County. 鈥淓very day, people come to our door at Cathedral Emergency Services in need of clothing. Thanks to 鈥機use Collections, we are better able to provide for them. This opportunity will make a significant impact on the lives of those we serve.鈥�
Donations loaded into the Rescue Mission van.
Community members loading items from the Sheraton Hotel onto a truck.
As 鈥機use Collections wrapped up for the semester, the former Sheraton Hotel was able to make a big contribution to the effort. As the hotel closed its doors after Commencement to prepare for its conversion into a 400-bed residence hall, the building鈥檚 200 rooms were cleared of furniture, linens and bedding ahead of the start of construction. The hotel鈥檚 furniture was transferred to a local warehouse, where organizations could collect donated items. The response was overwhelming: TVs, mattresses and chairs were quickly reclaimed and given to those in need.
鈥淢attresses from the Sheraton Hotel will be steam cleaned and used in several of our housing sites,鈥� says Montgomery. 鈥淒onations like these allow us to serve more people in the Central New York community.鈥�
Sustainability Management plans to host 鈥機use Collections on an annual basis. For more information, visit the .
Warehouse full of people sorting miscellaneous items from the Sheraton Hotel such as televisions and refrigerators.
Tyler Sliker (left), clinic director at the Couple and Family Therapy Center, chats with Department of Marriage and Family Therapy graduate student Kalila Taylor in one of the therapy rooms at Peck Hall.
In 2023, student therapists from the Department of Marriage and Family Therapy in 黑料不打烊鈥檚 provided a total of 9,134 therapy sessions to 682 individuals. Those free sessions in the Couple and Family Therapy Center at Peck Hall included 3,713 for individuals and 5,412 for couples and families.
Think about those numbers for a minute鈥揳nd the impact the sessions had on those in the community surrounding the 黑料不打烊 campus.
鈥淚f not for the hard work of our students and faculty鈥揼iven the dire state of mental health services in our community and most communities鈥搃t鈥檚 likely many of these clients would experience long waitlists elsewhere, reduced services due to expense or go without mental healthcare altogether,鈥� says , clinic director at the . 鈥淭his work is truly critical to our community and beyond as it鈥檚 training much-needed therapists and providing much-needed care.鈥�
Indeed, this is a mutually beneficial arrangement as students seeking to earn their or in marriage and family therapy are provided real-life opportunities to hone their craft.
Kalila Taylor says she gravitated toward marriage and family therapy because it鈥檚 鈥渁 field that gives me the opportunity to make a real difference in peoples鈥� lives.鈥�
鈥淭he thing about studying to be a therapist is that the only way to learn is by doing,鈥� says Kalila Taylor, who鈥檚 on track to earn her master鈥檚 degree in May. 鈥淚 was incredibly nervous when I first started seeing clients, but with the support of my colleagues and supervisors, I was able to develop my skills and build my confidence as a therapist.鈥�
Taylor, who is from Jacksonville, Florida, earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in philosophy with a minor in psychology from Florida State University. In researching graduate programs, she discovered 黑料不打烊 and the exceptional reputation forged by the , which offered the first accredited master鈥檚 degree in the country.
鈥淚鈥檝e always wanted to better understand human behavior and have been continuously fascinated by how we relate to one another as people,鈥� Taylor says. 鈥淢arriage and family therapy combines a lot of my various interests while also being a field that gives me the opportunity to make a real difference in people鈥檚 lives.鈥�
Student therapists start seeing clients when they鈥檙e enrolled in MFT 760 (Practicum in Marriage and Family Therapy), and that鈥檚 typically in their second semester of the program. Sliker says their caseload varies depending on client need and the readiness of the student, but ideally students start their clinical work with four to five cases.
Taylor says when she first started seeing clients, she was concerned about managing conflict in the room. However, through supervision and experience, she learned how to help her clients navigate conflict in their relationships while also normalizing that conflict for herself.
Eventually, Taylor was providing up to 20 sessions per week.
鈥淚 think it can be especially challenging to help a client process an experience that you haven鈥檛 worked through yet in your own life,鈥� she says. 鈥淎gain, that鈥檚 why supervision is so important so that you get the opportunity to talk through your own personal obstacles to show up better for your clients.鈥�
To ensure quality training for student therapists and beneficial care to their clients, Marriage and Family Therapy faculty and staff provide supervision to the students working with individuals, couples and families. In 2023, faculty and staff provided more than 1,800 hours of supervision to 16 students.
The students are supervised on a weekly basis, at minimum, and Sliker says it鈥檚 common for student therapists who are just getting started to reach out to on-call supervisors between their regularly scheduled supervision meetings.听Marriage and family therapists are only able to see clients unsupervised when they鈥檙e fully licensed.
In New York State, that鈥檚 roughly two years after graduation, if they鈥檝e been working full-time as a therapist since receiving their graduate degree. If you鈥檙e a member of the community who meets with a fully licensed marriage and family therapist, and that therapist is licensed in New York, you can expect your therapist has had about 3 陆 years of supervised clinical experience, including 1 陆 years of graduate school.
As clinic director of the Couple and Family Therapy Center, Tyler Sliker works with faculty and staff to coordinate the thousands of therapy sessions that marriage and family therapy students provide each year.
鈥淪tudents often begin their journey to become a therapist with excitement as well as plenty of anxiety and uncertainty of their ability,鈥� Sliker says. 鈥淗owever, therapy is most effective when there is a strong relationship between therapist and client. For those who find themselves in a Marriage and Family Therapy graduate program, there is often already a strong ability to build relationships, and beginning therapists usually have the necessary skills to successfully navigate those initial sessions with clients.
鈥淭hen the path to becoming a great therapist, in my opinion, is forged by the therapist鈥檚 continued investment in their growth and development, a lifetime connection with supervisors and mentors, and genuine care for the clients they serve,鈥� Sliker adds.
Taylor says there鈥檚 an immense feeling of satisfaction when a therapist is able to form relationships with clients, watch them progress in real time, and help them develop skills they didn鈥檛 have at the start of therapy. In what may seem like a strange twist to someone outside of the therapy sessions, Taylor says one of her proudest moments occurred when a couple she was working with chose to separate.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe it鈥檚 the job of a therapist to tell clients what to do because I think clients should be treated like the experts of their own experience,鈥� Taylor says. 鈥淚 was proud of this couple for coming to the realization that breaking up was the best thing for both of them because that can be one of the most difficult decisions to make. I remember those clients thanking me for helping them throughout the process, which was such an amazing moment that provided to me a lot of encouragement.鈥�
For Taylor, it was a rewarding moment among many that occur for student therapists every day at the Couple and Family Therapy Center.
鈥淏ecoming a therapist is similar to learning a craft or an art: One learns by doing,鈥� Sliker says. 鈥淪o as much as our community benefits from the services the Couple and Family Therapy Center provides, the students are benefiting just as much.鈥�
The Couple and Family Therapy Center is open from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday. The center provides free, confidential sessions in-person and virtually. To inquire about receiving therapy services, call 315.443.3023.
]]>Prof Quinn Qiao (third from left) with his research team (from left) Hansheng Li, Madan Bahadur Saud, Muhammad Bilal Faheem Sattar, Poojan Indrajeet Kaswekar and Yuchen Zhang
黑料不打烊 is a core partner in the , one of 10 inaugural Regional Innovation Engines created by the National Science Foundation (NSF).听The program was Monday by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer, whose CHIPS and Science Act helped create the NSF Engines.
鈥淯p to $160 million is now on its way to supercharge Upstate New York as a booming battery research hub from 黑料不打烊 to Binghamton and beyond,鈥� Sen. Schumer says. 鈥淭hanks to my CHIPS and Science Law, Upstate New York will be the beating electric heart of federal efforts to help bring battery innovation and manufacturing back from overseas to spark the growth of this critical industry vital to America鈥檚 national and economic security. Whether it is Micron鈥檚 historic investment in Central New York or cutting-edge innovation in battery development, my CHIPS and Science Law has been the catalyst to supercharge a transformation in Upstate New York鈥檚 economy. Batteries are the building block for the next generation of technology鈥攆rom cell phones to electric vehicles鈥攁nd this esteemed award from the National Science Foundation shows that America鈥檚 top scientific minds believe Upstate New York universities and workforce are best-in-class for the scientific discovery and innovation to ensure this industry grows in America.鈥�
Led by Binghamton University and its New Energy New York coalition, the Upstate New York Energy Storage Engine will bring $15 million in federal funding over two years and up to $160 million over 10 years to support research and development in battery and energy storage technologies.
The goal, according to NSF, is to establish a 鈥渢ech-based, industry-driven hub for new battery componentry, safety testing and certification, pilot manufacturing, applications integration, workforce development and energy storage, including through material sourcing and recovery.鈥� It builds on the region鈥檚 historical strengths in battery innovation and manufacturing.
鈥満诹喜淮蜢� looks forward to collaborating with New Energy New York to further world-renowned research and development, address next-generation energy storage challenges and inspire the future innovators of this critical industry,鈥� says Vice President for Research .
At 黑料不打烊, the program lead is , professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering in the (ECS) and an expert in solid-state batteries. Qiao is the 黑料不打烊 site director for the Center of Solid-State Electric Power Storage, an NSF Industry-University Cooperative Research Center.
鈥淭he transportation sector produces the largest share of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States. Battery is a key component in electric vehicles, which will significantly reduce the amount of carbon emissions,鈥� Qiao says. 鈥淣SF Engines funding will address the entire battery technology value chain and facilitate new battery technologies for a green world by working on the three key areas including use-inspired battery research and development, technology translation and workforce development.鈥�
Professor Quinn Qiao works with his graduate students on testing new solid-state batteries.
Qiao will conduct use-inspired battery research and development and training activities, work with industry partners and collaborate with local economic development agencies and government. Leveraging the work of the Center of Solid-State Electric Power Storage, he will also work with faculty, graduate students and existing entrepreneurship programs for technology transfer and commercialization. Additionally, he will organize workshops and other training opportunities for students from primary to graduate school as well as local industry employees.
鈥淭he College of Engineering and Computer Science is dedicated to research that tackles the grand challenges facing our planet today: research that improves the human condition,鈥� says ECS Dean . 鈥淭he NSF Engines award speaks to the heart of our college鈥檚 mission by promoting the development of cleaner, safer and more affordable energy sources. This prestigious award will serve as a vital cornerstone as our college embarks on its 50% growth trajectory in the next five years.鈥�
In addition to Binghamton and 黑料不打烊, core partners include Rochester Institute of Technology, Cornell University, New York Battery and Energy Storage Technology Consortium, Launch NY and Charge CCCV.
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