Pace Now
Pace Now
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Press ReleaseDecember 11, 2024
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Press ReleaseDecember 9, 2024
Pace News
Latest News
The Pace Women’s Justice Center (PWJC) was featured on CBS News showcasing their powerful work in the community, from providing free legal services for victims of abuse, to their innovative preventative outreach campaign, #LoveIsnt. The segment highlights the important discussions the PWJC is leading at local high schools to educate students on safety, legal rights, and how to recognize signs of abusive behavior.
“Ordering the dissolution of a business for financial fraud is an extraordinary remedy, some people even claiming it to be akin to the death penalty,” Bennett Gershman, a former New York prosecutor and law professor at Pace University, told Salon. “Dissolution, or liquidation, hardly ever happens, especially when there is no proof that victims were harmed or financial institutions lost money.”
Pace University Art Gallery is pleased to present Journey Illustrated, a comic arts exhibition curated by Prof. Tommy Nguyen and Anna Zhang ’24. The exhibit opens with a reception on Tuesday, February 13 from 5:00 p.m.–7:00 p.m.
Among 40 accredited online business degree programs, Insider Monkey places Pace at the 21st spot.
The NurseJournal ranks Pace University as the seventh best nurse practitioner program in New York for 2024.
News 12 reports Professor Shelby Green was elected as a new member to the Westchester Parks Foundation Board of Directors.
Richard Shadick, who directs the counseling center at Pace University in New York City says things only got worse with the advent of smartphones that it became a real problem. And I think one of the interesting things is a vote for Mo was coined before social media, it became a very popular turn because of social media. That led to the students spending a lot of time online in 2009.
Lubin Professor Steven Mezzio speaks with Accounting Today about the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration criticizing how the IRS oversee its cloud infrastructure.
Elisabeth Haub School of Law Professor Bennett Gershman speaks to Newsweek about conservative activist Charlie Kirk being at risk of sued for defamation over comments he made about New York City Council member Yusef Salaam.
"Since Salaam is a public official and a public figure, Salaam would have to prove that Kirk acted with malice, which means showing that Kirk knew his statement was false or recklessly disregarded the truth. Salaam was exonerated of the crime. It was a huge public fact. If Kirk didn't know that, he must be living on another planet. A lawsuit by Salaam would be appropriate and winnable."
President Marvin Krislov's Forbes article on why the humanities matter more than ever was cited in a recent op-ed published in the Grant County Herald.