News

CCNY In the News

March 26, 2020

Catching Up With Demetrius Murray

The Sports Report, New York's #1 sports show, interviews Demetrius Murray, director and head coach of CCNY's cross country and track and field program.
Read more
March 24, 2020

Set in a Notorious Prison, a Novel Probes Iran’s Torturers and Their Victims

New York Times book review of the novel "Then The Fish Swallowed Him," by Amir Ahmadi Arian, adjunct professor in CCNY's Division of Humanities and the Arts.
Read more
March 10, 2020

Complete Streets Considerations for Freight (and Emergency) Vehicle Operations

NewYorkTruckStop.com piece on complete streets quotes CCNY civil engineer Alison Conway.
Read more
March 06, 2020

Why New Teachers are Burning Out Early

Rewire article on burnout in new teachers quotes CCNY psychologist Irvin Schonfeld.
Read more
March 03, 2020

Trump's India Visit Was Little Substance and All Show

National Interest op-ed by Rajan Menon, Anne and Bernard Spitzer Professor of International Relations in CCNY's Colin Powell School for Civic and Global Leadership.
Read more
March 03, 2020

Solving the Problem of Hydrogen

SUM article on hydrogenation research by CCNY bio-chemists Barbara Zajc and Mahesh Lakshman.
Read more
February 28, 2020

As White House fixates on China threats, other research priorities languish

National Journal article quotes CCNY physicist Michael Lubell Democratic lawmakers condemned the Trump administration’s science budget for fiscal 2021, arguing that boosts to AI and quantum research won’t make up for steep cuts elsewhere. The White House’s budget proposal for science and technology research met with disapproval from Democrats on the House Science Committee Thursday, with lawmakers pressing President Trump’s top science coordinator on massive proposed cuts to a number of federal research projects. Kelvin Droegemeier, director of the White House’s Office of Science and
Read more
February 13, 2020

NASA Soars and Others Plummet in Trump’s Budget Proposal

Scientific American article quotes City College physicist Michael Lubell.
Read more