News Archives

Title Article Summary
Geography Researchers Awarded NSF Grant to Study Oak Forests

Geography faculty members David Robertson and Stephen Tulowiecki ’09, have received an NSF grant to study 200 years of environmental and cultural changes in eastern US white oak forests.

Student Recycling Benefits Goodwill

As part of its environmental sustainability efforts, the Center for Community expanded its student recycling program to college off-campus residents this spring.

Mistletoe Research May Keep You Healthy

New research by Suann Yang, assistant professor of biology, examines the interactions of mistletoe, a parasitic plant, host trees and two species of birds that disperse the mistletoe seeds.

Educator Randy French '83 Goes on National Geographic Journey to Antarctica

Randy French '83, a science teacher at Geneseo Central School, journeyed to Antarctica last year, made possible by a Grosvenor Teaching Fellowship from the National Geographic Society. He was one of a handful of educators selected from among hundreds of applicants for a 13-day trip around the Antarctica peninsula.

Education Student Involves Holy Childhood Students in Recycling Project

A childhood/special education major's class project on Earth Day resulted in a group of children learning about how recycling benefits the environment.

CHAS Grant to Support STEM Mentoring Program at Geneseo

Anne Pellerin, assistant professor of physics and astronomy, and Amber Charlebois, chemistry department lecturer, have received a Consortium for High Achievement and Success (CHAS) faculty grant of $6,500 for a pilot project to build a tiered mentoring program for undergraduate women and underrepresented minorities in STEM fields at Geneseo.

Geography Faculty Members Earn NSF Grant to Study Oak Forests

Two faculty members in the Department of Geography have received a National Science Foundation (NSF) Research in Undergraduate Institutions (RUI) award of $232,099 for a collaborative research project to assess the environmental and human drivers and the cultural dimension of changes in oak forests in the eastern United States.

Class of 2017: Meet Daniel Ruiz, Political and Community Bridge-Builder

As a senior political science major and a public administration minor, Daniel Ruiz has taken advantage of Geneseo’s numerous opportunities to attain more hands-on experience with his major.

Geneseo Hosts Cuba Symposium April 20 and 21

Cuban speakers and experts on the ever-changing country are on campus today and tomorrow for an interdisciplinary symposium on contemporary Cuba.

Mountain Class: Geography Students Explore How Communities Work — in the Rockies

In the peaks of the Canadian Rockies, students in this geography class immerse themselves in culture and explore how communities work.

eGarden Research Facility Now Equipped With Electricity

At Geneseo's eGarden, faculty, staff and students are sowing the seeds of ingenuity and better earth practices. Now they have the added power of electricity in the barn.

Professor's Amazon Research Published in National Journals

Assistant Professor of Political Science Karleen West’s research on indigenous reactions to oil development in Ecuador has earned national attention in two publications.

Relay for Life Ready to Break Records

Geneseo's Relay for Life is one of the most successful in the country. This year, students will try to break a new fundraising record on April 8.

MLK Jr. Commemoration to Feature SNCC Activists

SUNY Geneseo's annual April commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr.'s legacy will feature panel discussions with Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) activists Jennifer Lawson, Karen Spellman, and Freddie Greene Biddle. The Civil Rights era activists will take part in panel discussions on April 3 & 4.

‘Year Without a Summer’ is Topic of American Rock Salt Lecture April 6

Gillen D’Arcy Wood, professor of environmental humanities at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, will deliver the 14th Annual American Rock Salt Lecture April 6 at 7:30 p.m. in Newton Hall 202. The lecture, titled “Frankenstein’s Weather: The Year Without a Summer, 1816,” is free and open to the public.

Peace Corps Voices: Meara Bowe '15, at the Core, We Are All the Same

The Peace Corps was always on my radar, but it wasn’t until after I took Humanities II in Nicaragua as a junior through Geneseo that it became a very real plan for after graduation. The trip forever changed my outlook on the world, and the path that I saw myself taking in the future.

Peace Corps Voices: Bethany Stewart ’03, Becoming Part of the Family in The Gambia

One perspective I gained is to know that it's ok when things don't work out as you planned. You simply use that experience and learn from it. And, perhaps the outcome is actually something better or more effective than what you originally planned.

Peace Corps Voices: Danielle Ellingston '97, Lessons from Ghana

I learned so much that it's hard to say what the one most valuable lesson was.

Peace Corps Voices: Planting Seeds for Change in Senegal

When I introduce myself in Senegal, I tell people my name is Mata Dia, the name my host family gave me when I began my Peace Corps service as a Community Economic Development volunteer. In America, I’m better known as Jessica Kroenert, adventure seeker, dog enthusiast, and Geneseo grad, class of 2015.

Urban Immersion: Geneseo’s Uncommon Study Ground

Red Hook, Brooklyn, was once a struggling neighborhood and is changing dramatically. It is now the college’s newest learning space.

Geneseo Professor Studies Afro-Brazilian Marriage

Assistant Professor of Anthropology Melanie Medeiros is getting ready to celebrate the release of her book, Marriage, Divorce and Distress in Northeast Brazil: Black Women's Perspectives on Love, Respect and Kinship.

Amazon Leader Discusses Land Preservation Fight

When their land in the Ecuadorian Amazon was opened for oil drilling, the First People of Sarayaku fought back - and have won in the highest international courts to protect their land and the ecosystem’s resources.

Printing Initiative Reduces Waste

As part of CIT’s ongoing printing improvement Initiative, Computing and Information Technology’s gPrint system is helping to reduce waste on campus.

Ambassador Dennis Ross to Deliver Roemer Lecture on the Middle East

Ambassador Dennis Ross will deliver the Kenneth Roemer Lecture on World Affairs at SUNY Geneseo. He will address "How Should We Think About the Middle East" at 4 p.m. Thursday, March 23 in the MacVittie College Union Ballroom. The event is free and open to the public.

Fraternity Brothers Fight Cancer in Memory of Friend

Sigma Phi Epsilon brothers established the Don Litzelman Foundation to preserve Don’s legacy by funding cancer research, providing awards to lacrosse players at Geneseo, supporting youth lacrosse in Don’s hometown of Camillus, N.Y., and donating a $500 scholarship to an athlete at Don’s high school.