Biologist Tin-Chun Chu uses powerful natural substances to solve critical health and environmental challenges.
Comments closedSeton Hall Magazine Posts
Walter “Tre” Holloway III ’07 turned a childhood love of tap into a burgeoning career as a dancer and choreographer.
Comments closedIn an effort to save lives, counseling student Sgt. Kent Swanson has a mission to heighten awareness about suicide among police officers.
Comments closedA lasting legacy from the 53-year marriage of Sylvia and Tom Tencza, M.S. ’64/Ph.D. ’66.
Comments closedIt didn’t take John Fanta long to make an impression on Seton Hall Vice President and Director of Athletics Pat Lyons. As a freshman, Fanta, a broadcasting wunderkind from Westlake, Ohio, sounded so good behind a microphone and proved so determined to master his craft, Lyons says he “used to kid John and say he was going to be a one-and-done.”
Comments closedIsmael “Ish” Sanogo’s importance to the Seton Hall men’s basketball team can’t be measured in a nightly box score or in the season-ending statistics. As a sophomore on the 2015-16 team, Sanogo averaged just five points per game. But without Sanogo’s contributions, the Pirates would have never become the BIG EAST Conference Tournament champions.
Comments closedEmily Dell ’06 travels the trendy highway of mobile entrepreneurship, driving new clothes directly to her customers in a fashion truck business called Runaway.
Comments closedBarbara Mucha ’05 is a standout computer programmer in a field dominated by men — so much so that RecruitLoop.com named her one of the top 10 female full-stack developers in New York City.
Comments closedNow, more than ever, the world needs people who can view the complexities of modern science through the framework of faith and reason. Our science curriculum teaches students more than how the world around them is formed and changed. They learn how to think critically about moral and ethical issues.
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