News at Adelphi
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Adelphi graduate student Jennifer Hindieh and her husband share their love story with The New York Times.
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The 17 high school students who participated in the Hispanic Community Partnership Program, Adelphi's first college-readiness initiative aimed at Hispanic students, came away with a better understanding of college life and the importance of pursuing higher education.
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Dr. Weida's research examines the intersections between textiles and feminism in many art movements.
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Through years of detective work with faculty from several different departments at Adelphi, Anagnostis Agelarakis, PhD and his team were able to determine why the woman was buried in such an unusual manner. In the process, they challenged long-held beliefs about the role of women in ancient Greece.
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The United States insisted the Taliban hand bin Laden over if they wanted to gain diplomatic recognition—a moment, Jonathan Cristol, PhD, argues, that represented another consequential fork in the road.
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Kirsten Ziomek, Ph.D., is co-director of Adelphi's Asian Studies program and the author of Lost Histories: Recovering the Lives of Japan's Colonial Peoples (2019). She is currently working on her second book about World War II and Japan's colonial peoples.
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As the global population ages, the number of people living with dementia is growing rapidly, along with the need for improvements in care for them. Adelphi faculty members are studying ways to give a better quality of life to patients with dementia and ease the emotional burdens of family caregivers. Here are ways that three Adelphi professors are doing that.
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Alexander Heyl, PhD, is researching the evolution and functioning of signaling pathways, particularly in the origin of a class of plant hormones called cytokinins. He holds a PhD from the University of Cologne, Germany.
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Brian Stockman, PhD, associate professor and chair of the Department of Chemistry and his five collaborating students—Samantha Muellers, Juliana Gonzalez, Abinash Kaur, Vital Sapojnikov and Annie Laurie Benziehas—identified an innovative approach to curing a drug-resistant parasite.
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Korede K. Yusuf, MBBS, PhD, assistant professor in the College of Nursing and Public Health, has dedicated her career to changing these statistics. She aims to find solutions that address maternal and child health inequalities—and save lives.
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A. Hasan Sapci, MD, evaluated and documented the relationship between training methods and the confidence necessary to use new technologies among undergraduate nursing students in a recent study.
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Damian A. Stanley, PhD, has written several articles on implicit race bias and social neuroscience. His other research interests and specializations include social learning and decision-making and functional MRI, which measures brain activity.
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Murat Sakir Erogul, PhD, focuses his research on entrepreneurship, gender and identity, organizational leadership and family business management. He has published research on the topic of female entrepreneurs in developing and emerging countries.Â
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A discovery in Utah by Michael D'Emic, PhD, assistant professor of biology shows that flowering trees grew in North America 15 million years earlier than previously thought.
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When Geoffrey Ream, PhD, associate professor in the Adelphi University School of Social Work, set out to study the variability in circumstances around suicide deaths among youth and young adults by sexual/gender identity, he didn't anticipate the media attention around one finding.
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Perry Greene, PhD, who will be retiring as vice president for diversity and inclusion at the end of the 2019–2020 academic year, is continuing to add accomplishments to his Adelphi University legacy.
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According to the Adelphi University Career Outcomes Survey: Class of 2018, our career survey, undergraduate and graduate students report impressive outcomes. They leave Adelphi primed to land employment, succeed in their careers or pursue more advanced degrees. Those working are earning salaries above national averages.
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Adelphi University has been nominated in 10 categories in the annual Bethpage Best of Long Island competition.
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Were you unable to get tickets to author Tara Westover, PhD's sold-out lecture and book signing? Catch up with our coverage of what the bestselling author shared about Educated: A Memoir, this year's Adelphi Community Reads selection.
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Jovia Financial Credit Union has awarded Adelphi University a three-year, $135,000 grant to support a financial literacy program as well as student consulting projects.
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A three-year grant from Jovia Financial Credit Union will support an Adelphi financial literacy program as well as student consulting projects for students, faculty and staff, says Newsday.
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Did you know that this year marks the 150th anniversary of the periodic table of elements? And that the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed 2019 as the International Year of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements (IYPT 2019)?
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In 1991, John Bunn, age 14, was framed by a detective and charged with the murder and attempted murder of two correctional officers in Brooklyn. He was given a one-day trial followed by 17 years in prison. During his term, he didn't receive an education.
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The Sal Primeggia Show
CategoriesPublished:A perennially favorite professor—and 2019 Adelphi Legend—has license to be as “crazy, inventive and creative" as he wants to be.
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Marc S. Strachan '81 found his career path at Adelphi and is committed to helping today's and tomorrow's students do the same.
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Ruth Militrano '19 won't let her past define her future.
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After surviving the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, biology major Nootshy Romage wants to practice medicine in countries where she's needed most.
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Molly Cuevas '16, MS '17, challenged herself to run across the United States to support the Challenged Athletes Foundation.
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College students report being stressed and depressed. A new program helps them weather an age of anxiety.
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Provost Steve Everett, DMA, connects music composition to computer literacy and how technology shapes cognition.