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Alicia Bennett '24, a double major at Pace, is this year's NYC Campus Community Service Award recipient, in part for her dedication to helping people who are incarcerated. Find out how her passion for service shaped her journey at Pace.
As Mikayla Meachem embarks on the next chapter of her journey, she joins SisterLove Inc. in a full-time role, continuing her mission to champion sexual and reproductive justice. Her message to current students? "Ask questions and pursue topics you're deeply passionate about!"
As program coordinator of the BA in Writing for Diversity and Equity in Theater and Media (W4DETM), Colby Hopkins creates and facilitates social justice and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programming for students; cultivates partnerships within and outside of Pace; writes grant proposals, reports, and program assessments; and much more.
Pace University’s documentary film team – PaceDocs –premiered “The Cooper: Crafting the Soul of the Cask” on Thursday, May 2, 2024 at the Jacob Burns Film Center.
Associate Professor of History Michelle Chase, PhD, has been selected as a Periclean Faculty Leader by Project Pericles and has received a $4,500 grant from the organization to create a new humanities course that incorporates a community-initiated project.
Pace University’s documentary film team – PaceDocs – is set to premiere “The Cooper: Crafting the Soul of the Cask” at 7 p.m. this Thursday, May 2 at the Jacob Burns Film Center in Pleasantville.
Accessing your GradPass, when to arrive, where to park, what to eat, and so much more. You've got questions and we've got answers. Get ready to walk, grads.
The trailer for 2024 PaceDocs documentary, “The Cooper: Crafting the Soul of the Cask”.
Dean of the Dyson College of Arts and Sciences, the School of Education and interim dean for the Sands College of Performing Arts Tresmaine Grimes was featured on the Crimes, Coffee and Consequences with Professor Cathryn Lavery discussing the state of universities and on preparing students in the field of criminal justice.
Dyson Professor Stephen Rolandi writes an op-ed in the PA Times about the Proposed S.E.A.T. Act.