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Press ReleaseDecember 11, 2024
Pace News
Latest News
For his part, Schuelke did a thorough job investigating the DOJ and the circumstances surrounding the case. After almost two and a half years and nearly a million dollars, he delivered a 500-plus page report. Described by Pace University School of Law Professor Bennett L. Gershman as “an extraordinary contribution to criminal procedure,” the report was damning ...
"At its core, the missing Titanic submersible vessel contains all the essential elements of an addictive, alluring media spectacle," says Melvin Williams, associate professor of communication and media studies at Pace University.
A large group of Pace University lacrosse players from Long Island, together with their coaches and other teammates, were honored at the White House this week for capturing the NCAA DII championship this spring.
Seventeen of the 31 women on Pace’s roster are from communities on Long Island, including Kayla Conway of Wantagh. That’s her in pink in the photo above, right beyond Vice President Kamala Harris’ left shoulder.
Not long ago, I joined 30 accomplished young women to go to the White House.
They weren’t political science students embarking on internships or aspiring journalists preparing to grill world leaders. Rather, they were the members of the Pace Setters women’s lacrosse team — newly crowned as the NCAA Division II champs, our first-ever national championship squad — and they were in Washington for College Athlete Day. While the White House has long invited winners in the big-deal Division I sports for a visit — your Michigan football teams, your Duke basketball squads — this was the first time teams from all three NCAA divisions were included.
The Pace University women's lacrosse team is being invited to the White House to celebrate their NCAA national championship. The Setters will be among NCAA championship teams from across the country being recognized on the South Lawn. It's part of College Athlete Day at the White House next Monday. Pace University defeated No. 1 ranked West Chester University 19-9 last month to win the first title in program history.
For a closer look at this, KCBS Anchor Jennifer Hodges spoke with Emily Gold Waldman, Professor at Pace Law School with a focus on employment discrimination and feminism. Haub Law Professor Emily Gold Waldman speaks with KCBS Radio about how the law overlooks women who are working while experiencing menopause.
CHP Professor Christen Cupples Cooper discusses cooking techniques for veterans and enthusiasts:
“Cooking meats above 300°F, which usually results from grilling or pan frying, can form compounds called HCAs (heterocyclic amines) and PAHs (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) that may be harmful to human DNA.” While these findings require further research, Cooper explains that high temperatures may activate certain enzymes and increase cancer risk. She then has these pieces of advice: “Avoid cooking foods for any length of time over an open flame or hot metal surface, turn meat frequently during cooking, and cut away charred portions of meat.”
Professor Nicolas A. Robinson is part of over 100 International organizations and individuals issuing a demand for creation of an international law against ecocide after the horrific Russian destruction of the Kakhovka hydroelectric plant and dam in Ukraine last week, EnviroNews Nigeria reports.
Dyson Professor Kim Collica-Cox and the her program Puppies on the Block, an extension of the Parenting, Prison & Pups Program, will soon extend to more incarcerated young men ages 18 to 25, Corrections1 reports.
Professor Katrina Kuh speaks with E&E News about Montana’s pro-environment constitution trial:
“We definitely looked to Montana as a model,” said Katrina Fischer Kuh, a law professor at Pace University, who chaired a New York bar association task force that examined constitutional environmental issues.