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Bloomberg leads the week, featuring Pace University’s Fed Challenge Team in its Economics Daily Newsletter after winning the 22nd Annual National College Fed Challenge—an extraordinary national achievement. Pace topped finalists Harvard College and UCLA.
From mastering digital media tools to reporting stories across New York City, Liseberth Guillaume ’25 is putting her Pace training to work at The Associated Press.
Great research starts with great mentors. Meet the 2024 and 2025 recipients of the Faculty Undergraduate Research Mentor Award.
The Pace University Federal Reserve Challenge team has been named the national winner of the 22nd Annual College Fed Challenge, the Federal Reserve recently announced.
USA Today turns to Dyson Professor Melvin Williams for perspective on the economics of political “tell-alls.” Professor Williams explains that memoirs chronicling the scandals and transgressions of political figures are often highly lucrative, especially when they center on affairs, misconduct, and personal drama—context that helps explain the enduring market for books that blur the line between politics, media, and entertainment.
On the West Coast, FOX-KTVU speaks with Dyson Criminal Justice Professor and Department Chair Cathryn Lavery, as survivors push for greater transparency in the Jeffrey Epstein case. Professor Lavery offers insight into the stakes of congressional action and how renewed scrutiny could affect public trust, victim advocacy, and accountability in high-profile abuse case.
Missed a deep dive? Catch up with past issues here.
Dyson Political Science Professor Laura Tamman remains an essential voice in coverage of New York City’s political landscape. In Lohud, she discusses how Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani galvanized young voters by translating policy proposals into direct, concrete messages that can overcome generational distrust in government.
Dyson Communication and Media Studies Professor Adam Klein pens a widely circulated op-ed in The Conversation examining how today’s cultural icons, including global superstar Bad Bunny, have become vehicles for political expression and catalysts in broader ideological battles. He argues that the convergence of entertainment and political identity has turned artists into frontline actors in America’s intensifying culture wars.
In Newsday, Dyson Political Science Professor Laura Tamman questions whether Mayor Eric Adams can be trusted to do the right thing as his term winds down amid persistent allegations of corruption and self-dealing. She also joined NY1’s Inside City Hall with Errol Louis to analyze Mamdani’s early City Hall appointments and what they signal about his transition priorities.