Articles
Events and news of what's happening around the Fredonia campus.
Events and news of what's happening around the Fredonia campus.
Within weeks of being awarded a B.S. in Molecular Genetics from SUNY Fredonia in May, Emilee Stenson will embark on a new education journey – a two-year research training program with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Md.
Science denial will be examined from different perspectives by Department of Biology faculty at the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences’ first Brown Bag Lunch Zoom meeting of the spring semester on Wednesday, March 3, beginning at noon.
Emilee Stenson and Jacob “Jake” Traverse, who share a goal to become medical doctors, are gaining valuable on-the-job experience at Brooks Memorial Hospital before receiving their undergraduate degree in Molecular Genetics at Fredonia.
The United States Geological Survey has awarded a five-year contract to Department of Biology Associate Professor Courtney Wigdahl-Perry to continue operation of an acid precipitation monitoring station.
An admissions representative from the New England College of Optometry (NECO) will give a virtual presentation about the optometry profession and its program to interested students on Monday, Nov. 9, at 7 p.m.
Fredonia graduate Steven Gangloff, M.D., will present one of his own interesting case studies, “The Haunting of Willow Lane,” and discuss his overall medical school journey in the Alumni Speaker Series, hosted by the Health Professions Advising program, on Tuesday, Oct. 20, at 7 p.m.
Dr. Lisa Cleckner, who serves as director of the Finger Lakes Institute, will give a virtual talk on water resource management in the Finger Lakes region on Tuesday, Oct. 20, from 1 to 2 p.m.
For the past two years, a SUNY Fredonia group has traveled to Honduras to conduct medical brigades, and is holding its annual art raffle in planning for future trips.
Medicine abroad will be explored by Department of Biology Professor Ted Lee and two students in the first Brown Bag Lunch of the fall semester on Wednesday, Oct. 7, from noon to 1 p.m. “The Health of the Nation” is the theme of the series of talks.
Throughout his medical training and practice, Dr. Brian Strollo hadn’t experienced a disease affecting so many people that the medical community knew so little about, but that’s the grim reality the Fredonia graduate – and healthcare providers everywhere – are confronting in the coronavirus pandemic.