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September 29, 2008 • Volume 31, No. 2
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A New Face at Fordham:
University Rolls Out Rejuvenated Ram
His face has been in print for 90 years: this year the Fordham Ram gets a makeover.
The fiercer, more robust Ram makes his debut this season, marking Fordham’s resurgence and its bid to become the nation’s top Catholic university.
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Verizon Executive Appointed Vice President for Government Relations and Urban Affairs
Thomas A. Dunne has been appointed Fordham’s new vice president for government relations and urban affairs.
Dunne, a native of Brooklyn, N.Y., comes to Fordham from Verizon-New York, where he was the vice president of public policy and external affairs. He has more than 20 years of experience in both the public and private sectors on legislative and policy issues. At Verizon, he was responsible for the corporation’s interaction with various government agencies and officials.
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Orthodox Christian Studies Nets $100,000 Commitment, $200,000 Challenge Grant
The Orthodox Christian Studies program at Fordham has received a $100,000 commitment and a challenge grant of $200,000 to establish a conference examining Orthodox/Catholic relations. The program hopes to build a $500,000 endowment through the initial gift and matching funds.
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Ribbon Cutting Marks Official Opening of
Fordham Westchester
Newest Crop of Executive MBA Students Is Most Diverse
CBS Taps Media Professor to Cover Georgian Conflict
A Blessed Welcome
University’s Institutional Review Board
Upholds Ethical Treatment in Human Research
Biologist Looks to the Ground for Animal Clues
Fordham Hosts Catholic Biblical Association
Law Professor Plumbs Depths of Conflict Between
Property Protection and Free Speech
Sudanese Refugee Works to Free His
Homeland from Strife
Professor Charts Pathways to Male Delinquency with
Eye on Intervention
New for 2008-2009:
Inside Fordham Staff and Submission Deadlines
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Cambodian Heroine Fights Against Human Trafficking
When Somaly Mam was on the brink of adolescence, her grandfather sold her into the sex trade in Cambodia. Today, Mam is a published author and advocate for victims of a global human trafficking industry that sells nearly a million people into slavery each year.
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NEW FEATURE:
Fordham at Work
A profile of Linda LoSchiavo, Director, Quinn Library
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| Copyright © 2008, Fordham University. |
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