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Company news: Jeanine Cryan and Meghan Reap hired by Scolaro Fetter Grizanti & McGough law firm
Updated May 04, 2021;
Posted May 04, 2021
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Scolaro Fetter Grizanti & McGough P.C. announced two staff changes:
Jeanine M. Cryan has joined the firm as an associate attorney in the litigation practice group. She is a graduate of
Syracuse University College of Law. During law school, she was the editor-in-chief of the Syracuse Journal of International Law and Commerce and a member of the Travis H.D. Lewin Advocacy Honor Society (Moot Court). Her experience includes an externship in the legal department of
State Street Global Advisors in London, England, and an externship with transactional team in the legal department of
1931: SU student builds and rides (briefly) a rocket sled on Oneida Lake
Updated Mar 14, 2021;
Posted Mar 14, 2021
In 1958, during the midst of the “Space Race,” Post-Standard reporter Dave O’Brien went out to Oneida Lake, near South Bay and the Syracuse Yacht and Country Club, to ask residents if they remembered something which had happened there 27 years before.
Did they recall 21-year-old Syracuse University student Harry Bull and his rocket sled in March 1931?
Nearly all did, some chuckling.
One local resident remembered Bull as “that crazy college student who nearly got himself killed on Oneida Lake in 1931.”
But he was much more than that.
1936: Syracuse University chancellor sees the funny side of the ‘Sugar Bomb Hoax’
Updated Mar 13, 2021;
Posted Mar 13, 2021
Charles W. Flint was chancellor at Syracuse University from 1922 to 1936. Under his administration, SU his administration saw a period of academic growth for the University, including the expansion of the School of Education and the establishment of the School of Journalism and the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs.
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On March 7, 1936, troops marched into the Rhineland and British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden warned Adolf Hitler that any attack against France or Belgium would force Britain to defend their allies.
While the situation worsened in Europe, in Syracuse, people were reading about what sounded like a shocking crime.