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Candace Brakewood

Transportation expert Candace Brakewood named Rising Star Fellow

Dr. Candace Brakewood, assistant professor of civil engineering at The City College of New York, joins an elite group of academics this summer to explore the nexus of mobility and communications. She is one of seven transportation experts selected globally to participate in the 2016 Chan Wui and Yunyin Rising Star Workshop for Early Career Professionals aboard an England-bound cruise ship, July 6-13. Named along with her as Rising Star Fellows are Paleti Rajesh Paleti (Old Dominion University), Gregory D. Erhardt (University College of London), Ke Han (Imperial College of London) and Rolf
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Ellianna Schwab

CCNY junior wins national science award

For her research on star-like objects known as brown dwarfs, Ellianna Schwab earns the Chambliss Student Poster Award from the American Astronomy Society. “By calculating the space motions and positions of a sample of brown dwarfs, my collaborators and I successfully placed three brown dwarfs into moving groups, thus confirming that they were between the ages of 30 million and 257 million years old,” explains Schwab, a B.S. candidate in physics and mathematics at Macaulay Honors College at the City College of New York. Schwab conducts her research with Professors Emily Rice of the College of
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Lou Marinoff

South Korean students fly in for philosophy seminar

Twenty-one students from South Korea’s Kyungpook National University are spending Feb. 16-23 at The City College of New York for a week-long seminar on philosophical counseling led by noted CCNY philosopher and author Dr. Lou Marinoff. The founding president of the American Philosophical Practitioners Association, Marinoff has held similar seminars at institutions in Asia and other parts of the world. It is being offered at City College for the first time in conjunction with the school’s Continuing and Professional Studies program. “The students coming from Korea are very eager for this
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Architecture students design and build table for Solar Roof Pod

How many architecture students does it take to build a table? Six architecture students—Justyna Drodzd, Christina Bien-Aimé, Shereese Trumpet, Wei Zhang, Julian Usman and Jamie Huang—were charged with designing and building a collapsible table for the Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture’s Solar Roof Pod. Serving as a classroom and event table, the project had to be designed and built under onerous restrictions: it had to be collapsible with no single piece longer than 27 inches so that it could be taken apart and stored, and there was no money budgeted for it. Fortunately, Huang
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Physician Assistant program graduates Class of 2016

Thirty-three newly-minted physician assistants received their diplomas at the Sophie Davis School of Biomedical Education Physician Assistant Program at Harlem Hospital Center’s 42 nd Commencement Ceremony on Jan. 29. During the ceremony in The Great Hall of Shepard Hall on the CCNY campus, six graduating students received recognition for their achievements: Nichole Wallace (Dean’s Award); Hannah Chang and Andrey Frenkel (Director’s Award); Nargiza Khikmatova (Clinical Year Excellence Award); Flora Williams (Didactic Year Excellence Award); and Talaya Centeno (Research Writing Award). Chang
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Engineers’ Activism is highlight of Presidential Conversations

Associate Professor of Civil Engineering Beth Wittig presents her work with Engineers Without Borders in the fourth installment of The City College of New York’s 2015-16 “Presidential Conversations: Activism, Scholarship, and Engagement” series on Thursday, Mar. 24, 4-5:30 p.m. in the Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture’s Sciame Auditorium. The presentation, “Public Engagement through Engineers Without Borders: Rewards and Challenges,” is free and open to the public. Wittig examines the Engineers Without Borders projects in which the CCNY Chapter has been involved; how students and
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School of Education dean talks teacher training with City Council panel

Mary Erina Driscoll, dean and Harold Kobliner Chair in Education at The City College of New York’s School of Education, testifies before the New York City Council’s Committee on Higher Education. The sole item on the agenda was “Are Post-Secondary Institutions in New York City Adequately Training Teachers?” In her testimony, Driscoll answers the committee’s question in the affirmative, adding that “adequate is not good enough for the children of New York.” She provided data from the New York City Department of Education to support her twin contentions that CCNY meets the needs of its students
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Princeton Review names CCNY one of the best “Colleges That Pay You Back”

The City College of New York is among the outstanding colleges and universities that offers students a valuable return on their investment in higher education, according to the new 2016 edition of The Princeton Review’s Colleges That Pay You Back: The 200 Schools That Give You the Best Bang for Your Tuition Buck. Highlighting academics, affordability and career prospects, The Princeton Review editors said CCNY offers students a real opportunity to realize their future at a remarkably affordable cost. City College stands out not only for its outstanding academics but also for affordability via
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Alessandra Benedicty-Kokken examines activism in the humanities

Interdisciplinary Studies Assistant Professor Alessandra Benedicty-Kokken highlights recent research, which operates at the intersection of Africana Studies, Haitian Studies, Postcolonial Studies, and Jewish Studies, in the third installment of the City College of New York’s 2015-16 “Presidential Conversations: Activism, Scholarship, and Engagement” series on Thursday, February 4, 4-5:30 p.m., in the Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture’s Sciame Auditorium. The presentation, titled “Is Engagement in Postcolonial Scholarship Activism?,” is free and open to the public. “I interrogate
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Scientist leads team that wins $2 million NSF grant

A City College of New York Physics Department team led by Professor Vinod Menon, in collaboration with Assistant Professor Pouyan Ghaemi, is using a $2 million National Science Foundation Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation grant for its project, Excitonics and Polaritonics using 2D materials (ExPo2D). The four-year project aims to develop the next generation of photonic and electronic systems and sub-systems that exploit the unique advantages of atomically thin (graphene-like) semiconductors. The team also includes Professors Marc Baldo, Dirk Englund and Jing Kong of the
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