News
A decade later: Details surrounding April 11, 1997, Denny's incident still remain unclear, despite strong emotions within SU community
By Kevin Sajdak
Three days of events to help campus remember
By Kevin Sajdak
In an act of remembrance of the 10-year anniversary of the Denny's Incident, a group of Syracuse University students are kicking off a three-day event to call on their peers to remember, reflect and speak out against hate crimes. "What are we doing 10 years later? We are trying to make a good out of a bad situation," said Jennifer Zhao, education chair of the Denny's 10-Year Remembrance Committee.
Clinton speaks at V.A. hospital: N.Y. senator outlines vision to improve U.S. veteran's case
By Matt Reilly
A typical visit to a Veterans Affairs hospital highlighted with a tour and brief speech by a U.S. senator is usually a quiet affair. But Hilary Rodham Clinton - New York's junior senator, former first lady and a 2008 Democratic presidential hopeful - is not any typical U.
News Analysis | The footsteps of protest: Activist momentum may build at SU as Iraq war rolls on
By Matt Reilly
Student leaders of the anti-war movement could not ask national politicians for better circumstances to spur their recruiting efforts. The Iraq war recently turned four years old as President George W. Bush and the U.S. Congress have continued to entrench themselves in a fierce debate about the conflict's future.
N.Y. school sparks debate on accuracy of U.S. News's annual college rankings
By Aleksey Shats
When choosing which college to attend, high-school students often consider the school's competitiveness and rank. But recent criticism of U.S. News & World Report's college ranking system by Sarah Lawrence College President Michele Myers may give students a different perspective about the rankings.
Families of college students wealthiest in 3 decades, study says
By Chelsea Prince
Parents of college students have deeper pockets today than at any point in the last 35 years, according to a recent study by the University of California, Los Angeles. The study reveals that today's college freshmen have a family income 60 percent higher than the national average.
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