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Jamaican American entrepreneur and trailblazing author Glen Laman ’73 is a Dyson alumnus whose success has been built on a foundation of the liberal arts and sciences.
Dyson alumna Juliana Martins ’19 is a Forbes 30 Under 30 entrepreneur whose success is built on communications and business skills developed at Pace.
Dyson Professor S. Perl Egendorf is the winner of The Story Exchange’s Women In Science Incentive Prize — a $25,000 grant program that supports innovative female scientists working to combat the devastating impacts of climate change.
Dyson Professor James Brusseau speaks with CNBC about why AI won’t replace humans any time soon.
“AI and humans are both knowledge producers, just like the sculptor and painter are both artists,” he tells CNBC Make It. “But they will be forever, in my mind, be distinct and separated. One will never be better than the other so much as they will just be different.”
Dyson Professor Seong Jae Min pens an op-ed in The Korea Times about the obsession with standardized beauty.
Colombian-born bilingual and investigative Emmy-winning reporter Yomara Lopez ’12 is a Dyson alumna who provides a platform for underrepresented voices in the Latino community in the US and abroad.
The Pace University Art Gallery has received a $20,000 grant from the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA), recognizing the quality of the gallery’s exhibitions over the past three years. The grant, which will support artist stipends and exhibit marketing, will take effect on January 1, 2024.
As the year concludes amidst shorter days and final exams, President Krislov reflects on a momentous 2023, marked by the opening of a 26-story campus center in New York City, athletic achievements, accolades for the law school, and the establishment of the Sands College of Performing Arts.
Pace student and UN Millennium Fellow Lucie Belle Flagg ’24 channeled both her frustrations and her energy into bringing greater awareness of hidden disabilities to the Pace Community. Through her collaborative work, she’s helped make Pace the first university in New York to officially launch the Hidden Disabilities Sunflower program.
The Pace Community's incredible generosity on Giving Tuesday surpassed our goal, resulting in 2,430 gifts and over $823,901 raised for student success.