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  • CCNY’s Solar Roof Pod Showcases Innovative Technology

    A unique structure in the urban landscape has arisen on a plaza of The City College of New York campus over the past few months.  Designed and built by CCNY students, faculty and team sponsors, it is meant to be installed on the roofs of commercial and residential buildings in high-density urban centers.  Dubbed the Solar Roof Pod, it showcases cutting-edge green technology inside and out, including a novel heating and cooling system with more than twice the energy efficiency of conventional units.

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  • New Depiction Of Light Could Boost Telecommunications Channels

    Physicists with the Institute for Ultrafast Spectroscopy and Lasers (IUSL) at The City College of New York have presented a new way to map spiraling light that could help harness untapped data channels in optical fibers.  Increased bandwidth would ease the burden on fiber-optic telecommunications networks taxed by an ever-growing demand for audio, video and digital media.  The new model, developed by graduate student Giovanni Milione, Professor Robert Alfano and colleagues, could even spur enhancements in quantum computing and other applications.

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  • CCNY Biologist Finalist for Blavatnik Young Scientist Awards

    The New York Academy of Sciences Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists acknowledge and celebrate the excellence of the most noteworthy young scientists and engineers in the tri-state New York metropolitan region.  This year, a member of The City College of New York faculty, Associate Professor of Biology Robert P.  Anderson, was chosen as a finalist in the competition.

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  • Academics Weigh New Field of Study on ‘Spanish Caribbean’

    After close to a year of groundwork, nearly 100 academics representing some 50 institutions from around the world will gather July 25 - 27 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, for an academic conference titled “The Spanish Caribbean: Toward a Field of its Own.”  The scholars will discuss the creation of a new field of graduate-level study focused on Cuba, Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico plus émigré populations who trace their ancestry to these lands.

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  • Two CCNY Graduate Science Students Earn Top Recognition

    Swapnil Jadhav and Giovanni Milione, graduate students in The City College of New York’s Division of Science, have been lauded for their leadership potential by prominent organizations in their respective fields.

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  • CCNY Sustainability Program Receives Green Infrastructure Grant

    A joint proposal from The City College of New York’s interdisciplinary Sustainability in the Urban Environment master’s program and two other organizations was one of 15 projects funded in the New York Department of Environmental Protection’s 2011 Green Infrastructure Grant Program.  The team, which also includes New York Restoration Project, as lead partner, and Stantec Consulting, received $244,920.

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  • Dominicans In U.S. Subject of Special Issue of Journal ‘Camino Real’

    “Camino Real,” the journal of the Instituto Franklin of the University of Alcalá, Spain, has published a special issue devoted to Dominican studies, a growing field in the United States focused on the study of people of Dominican ancestry.  This is the first time a multidisciplinary academic journal has published an entire issue devoted to the field.  Dr. Ramona Hernández, director of the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute (CUNY DSI), based at The City College of New York, and Anthony Stevens-Acevedo, CUNY DSI assistant director, edited the issue.

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  • CCNY Students Tweeting Their Summers

    Each summer, many City College of New York students leave the classroom behind to immerse themselves in exciting off-campus experiences. This year, a cadre of undergraduates invites you to follow their adventures on Twitter as they launch summer projects in academia, government, and the non-profit sector.

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  • Professor Tedesco Tracks Life and Death of Greenland Glacial Lake

    How do you observe signs of climate change in real time?  Dr. Marco Tedesco, associate professor of earth and atmospheric sciences at The City College of New York, plans to be the first to catch sight of one dramatic indicator of a warming world on the Greenland ice sheet this summer, and through social media, people will be able to track his progress.

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  • CCNY-Led Team Gets $3M for Northeast Earth System Model

    An interdisciplinary team of researchers led by Dr. Charles Vörösmarty, professor of civil engineering in the Grove School of Engineering at The City College of New York, was awarded $3 million from the National Science Foundation to develop a regional earth system model of the Northeast. The effort involves partner institutions from around the region, including Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, Mass.

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  • Two Teams Named Kaylie Entrepreneurship Prize Winners

    Two student teams were chosen as winners of The City College of New York’s first annual Kaylie Prize for Entrepreneurship.  CCNY alumnus and award benefactor Harvey Kaylie, EE ’60, announced the surprise decision, which was made by a five-member panel of judges, following final presentations by five teams on Tuesday, May 10.

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