You searched for news/ Shell | Syracuse University Today / Wed, 08 Oct 2025 14:40:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 /wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-apple-touch-icon-120x120.png You searched for news/ Shell | Syracuse University Today / 32 32 Experts Available to Discuss Amazon Prime Day /2025/10/06/experts-available-to-discuss-amazon-prime-day/ Mon, 06 Oct 2025 18:56:01 +0000 /?p=325750 Amazon’s Prime Day has evolved from a simple membership perk into a mid-year shopping phenomenon that forces every major retailer to respond, especially ahead of the holiday season.
Syracuse University has two faculty experts who can speak to the broader implications of this shift—from how these manufactured shopping holidays affect consumer psychology to what they reveal about the current sta...

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For the Media Experts

Tallinn, Estonia – 08/02/2020 EDITORIAL: In Big Warehouse Package with Amazon Logo Stacked with Cardboard Boxes Ready for Shipment. Logistics Distribution Center for Product Sorting, Customer Delivery

Experts Available to Discuss Amazon Prime Day

Supply chain expert Patrick Penfield and retail industry scholar Shelley Kohan can talk consumer trends, shipping expectations and more.
Daryl Lovell Oct. 6, 2025

Amazon’s Prime Day has evolved from a simple membership perk into a mid-year shopping phenomenon that forces every major retailer to respond, especially ahead of the holiday season.

Syracuse University has two faculty experts who can speak to the broader implications of this shift—from how these manufactured shopping holidays affect consumer psychology to what they reveal about the current state of e-commerce competition. Both are available for pre- or post-Prime Day analysis and are able to provide strategic context beyond the sales numbers.

Keep them in mind for your upcoming Black Friday stories too!

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is a professor of practice in supply chain management and director of executive education in the Whitman School of Management. Penfield has over 15 years of industry experience in supply chain management and manufacturing working for such companies as the Raymond Corporation, Johnson & Johnson and Philips Electronics. Professor Penfield’s research focuses on forestry, natural resource management and sustainability. He has appeared on , NBC, and ABC evening news programs and conducted dozens of media interviews for outlets like USA Today, , , , Newsweek and many more.

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Fellow Whitman School faculty member and retail expert is a highly accomplished and driven senior retail executive and consultant with more than 25 years of success in the retail industry. She has worked throughout the industry and across many functions including general management, marketing, operations, merchandising, buying, and human resources.

She also hosts a weekly podcast series called “Retail Unwrapped” which discusses timely retail and consumer product trends and consumer behavior.

 

To request interviews with Professor Penfield or Professor Kohan, or to get more information, please reach out to Daryl Lovell directly.

Faculty Experts

Professor of Supply Chain Practice
Adjunct Professor

Media Contact

Daryl Lovell
Associate Director of Media Relations

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boxes stacked in warehouse setting. boxes in the forefront display the Amazon smile-type arrow logo
Ukrainian Students Find Refuge in the Maxwell School Community /2023/12/22/ukrainian-students-find-refuge-in-the-maxwell-school-community/ Fri, 22 Dec 2023 17:34:53 +0000 /blog/2023/12/22/ukrainian-students-find-refuge-in-the-maxwell-school-community/ Yulia Bychkovska was in Boston in February 2022 when Russian missile attacks struck a mostly residential area west of her home in Zhytomyr, Ukraine. Though she was in the U.S., she learned of the invasion before her mother.

“I had to call my mom and wake her up to tell her the war had started,” said Bychkovska, who had recently completed a bachelor’s degree at Columbia College in Missouri....

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Ukrainian Students Find Refuge in the Maxwell School Community

Yulia Bychkovska was in Boston in February 2022 when Russian missile attacks struck a mostly residential area west of her home in Zhytomyr, Ukraine. Though she was in the U.S., she learned of the invasion before her mother.

“I had to call my mom and wake her up to tell her the war had started,” said Bychkovska, who had recently completed a bachelor’s degree at Columbia College in Missouri. “I was very worried because I didn’t know what was happening on the ground. All I knew was this terrible news.”

Yulia
Yulia Bychkovska is shown at a Boston rally that followed Russia’s full-scale invasion of her home country, Ukraine, in February 2022.

In the days that followed, she would call family just before she went to bed to check on them, and then do the same as soon as she woke up. “I didn’t know if I would see them again,” she said.

Around the same time, Bychkovska learned she had been accepted to the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs to pursue dual master’s degrees in public administration and international relations. It was a dream realized, but she knew she couldn’t begin her studies that July unless she returned to Ukraine to see her loved ones.

Without telling them, she boarded a plane for Poland and then embarked on a 16-hour bus ride home. The arduous route took her past the remains of shelled buildings and other signs of war. Though it was painful to see the destruction, she was relieved to be home. “I wanted them to know I didn’t abandon them,” she said of her family. “Also, in some ways it gave me peace of mind because I knew what my parents were doing, how society acted in war, and that they had some protections in place like the warning sirens.”

Bychkovska’s mother made her promise she would cut her visit short and return to the U.S. if their city was attacked. The day dozens of bombs exploded nearby, Bychkovska’s mother said, “It’s time to go.” She packed her bags and quickly returned to the U.S.

Soon after, Bychkovska began her Maxwell studies.

Nearly two years into the invasion in Ukraine, she and other students from the embattled country carry what few of their classmates can comprehend—worry for their loved ones back home, and sometimes, feelings of guilt for having been afforded such opportunity.

But they find refuge joining a community of scholars with a long history of supporting those impacted by war and the unique opportunities to collaborate, research and influence policy in support of Ukraine’s sovereignty.

Veterans Bridge

James
The Hon. James E. Baker is shown during an appearance on a Ukrainian news station during a visit last summer to the embattled country. During the interview, he advocated for the care of the growing population of Ukrainian veterans to bolster national security. Seated on the right is Nataliia Kalmykova, one of Ukraine’s deputy ministers of defense.

The US-Ukraine Veterans Bridge brings experts from the U.S. veterans’ community together with officials in Ukraine to support its bourgeoning veteran population and build national security. The leading academic partners in the relatively new coalition are two Maxwell professors, the Hon. James E. Baker and Vice Admiral Robert B. Murrett (U.S. Navy, retired).

Baker, a highly regarded national security lawyer, policy advisor and former chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, and Murrett, a principal investigator of the Intelligence Community Center for Academic Excellence, are aligning resources from Syracuse University and offering their expertise. The coalition works with the Ukraine Veterans Foundation (UVF), and it includes veterans from the U.S. and Ukraine and leaders in areas such as health care, benefits administration, education, employment, reintegration and family.

The professors, who serve as the director and deputy director of the Syracuse University Institute for Security Policy and Law, invited Bychkovska and fellow Ukrainian student Eduard Gusak to participate in meetings where they get to witness and take part in international collaborations to build their country’s national security.

“The students bring important perspective to our work in support of Ukrainian security, both in terms of direct contact with counterparts in Kyiv and in assisting Maxwell students in relevant research and programs dealing with the effects of the Russian invasion,” said Murrett, professor of practice of public administration and international affairs. “For example, both Yulia and Eduard have a role in a current master of public administration workshop, a semester-long student research effort which evaluates comparative veterans’ support programs and is sponsored by the UVF.”

Veterans Bridge meeting participants sometimes include Nataliia Kalmykova, a Fulbright scholar who became executive director of the UVF weeks before the Russian invasion. Now one of Ukraine’s deputy ministers of defense, she visited Syracuse University last spring and met with Baker, Murrett, Maxwell Dean David M. Van Slyke, Ukrainian students and numerous other University representatives, including from the D’Aniello Institute for Veterans and Military Families.

The students have gained experience in international collaboration and crisis response as well as a deeper understanding of the relationship between the care and treatment of veterans and national security.

“A society of demobilized veterans can be a force for good, as the World War II G.I. Bill boom demonstrated in the United States,” Baker explained in a position paper he recently shared with the U.S. government and Ukraine’s Ministry of Veterans Affairs. “It can also result in instability if those veterans are alienated from society or government and subsequently mobilized as a political movement or military force,” he wrote.

‘A way of paying it forward’

Mark
Mark Temnycky G’17 joined an alumni panel, “What is a public service perspective?” during a colloquium for incoming master of public administration students this past July. From Ukraine, he shared how he advocates for his home country in his work as a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center and as a freelance journalist.

Last July, Eduard Gusak and other incoming M.P.A. students began their year-long academic journey with a two-day colloquium that serves as an in-depth orientation and networking opportunity.

One of the colloquium events, “What is a public service perspective?” included a Ukrainian-American, Mark Temnycky G’17.

Temnycky, who is a defense contractor, a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center and a freelance journalist, writes about the war for major outlets like The New York Times and recently received the Ukrainian World Congress’ inaugural “Ukrainian diaspora 30 under 30” award. He was also recognized by the International Sports Press Association for his coverage of the Russian invasion. He shared some of the pivotal opportunities he took advantage of while studying at Maxwell, including an internship with NATO and work for the Ukraine Parliament. “I always had this desire for public service,” he said.

Of his writing, he added, “It is a way of paying it forward and informing people what’s happening.”

Gusak was inspired by Temnycky and fellow panelists. He appreciates the opportunities he has been afforded, for instance joining the US-Ukraine Veterans Bridge meetings and working as a research assistant to Murrett.

Murrett and other faculty often ask him to consider how he might apply what he learned back home. “For now, I have experienced the hardest period in my life, but on the other hand, I am being provided opportunities to learn from people with an enormous amount of life experience and a willingness to help,” said Gusak. “The reason why I came here is because of the opportunity to gain this experience to influence Ukraine’s future.”

Eduard
In the U.S. for two years through a program called “Uniting for Ukraine,” Eduard Gusak is pursuing a master of public administration at Maxwell and hopes to return to Ukraine to help it gain independence from Russia and rebuild from the war.

Gusak was home in Kyiv when Russia invaded. Shortly after, his parents asked him to bring his older sister to Slovakia, where she would be safer. While there, he received a call from Gennady Bratslavsky, a family friend who is chair of the urology department at Upstate University Hospital in Syracuse.

Gusak told Bratslavsky he considered returning to Ukraine, but as a young man he knew he would return to a higher level of responsibility while his country was at war. He didn’t expect he would be called to service in the military; a supporting role in government seemed more likely given his background—he’d received a bachelor’s degree in political science and government from Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv.

Bratslavsky told Gusak about a new program that enables Ukrainians to come to the U.S. with the support of a sponsor. He mentioned opportunities at Syracuse University and the Ukraine 1991 Foundation, a nonprofit he co-founded that provides humanitarian aid to the frontlines.

In August 2022, Gusak relocated to Syracuse to stay with the Bratlavskys. He enrolled at the English Language Institute in the College of Professional Studies to improve his fluency, and applied to Maxwell.

When he learned he’d been accepted, he said he “almost jumped to the sky” from excitement.

The Maxwell School is a community of faculty who research the rule of law, international politics, and peace and security, and are helping build networks of scholarship and training to support democracy in Ukraine. To read the full story, visit the .

Press Contact

Do you have a news tip, story idea or know a person we should profile on Ƶ? Send an email to internalcomms@syr.edu.

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Ukrainian Students Find Refuge in the Maxwell School Community
Featured Media Coverage – Week of Nov. 6 /2023/11/15/featured-media-coverage-week-of-nov-6/ Wed, 15 Nov 2023 22:51:24 +0000 /blog/2023/11/15/featured-media-coverage-week-of-nov-6/ Syracuse University thought leaders, events and research news were showcased in the following news outlets this month:

Gretchen Purser, associate professor of sociology in the Maxwell School, was quoted in the BBC article “Why so many healthcare workers are walking off the job.”
Jane Burrell, associate teaching professor at Falk College, was interviewed for the Bored Panda story ̶...

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Featured Media Coverage – Week of Nov. 6

Syracuse University thought leaders, events and research news were showcased in the following news outlets this month:

  • associate professor of sociology in the Maxwell School, was quoted in the BBC article “.”
  • , associate teaching professor at Falk College, was interviewed for the Bored Panda story “.”
  • , David M. Levy Professor of Law and Faculty Director of Online Education in the College of Law, shared her expertise in the USA Today piece “.”
  • , professor of sociology in the Maxwell School, was quoted in The New York Times article ““
  • , professor of geography and the environment in the Maxwell School, was quoted in the El País article “.”
  • , Professor of Law and Director of Bankruptcy Clinic in the College of Law, provided expert commentary for the Moneygeek articles “” and “.” He was also quoted in this article.
  • Researchers at the D’Aniello Institute for Veterans and Military Families co-wrote The Ripon Forum piece “.”
  • , retail expert and instructor in the Whitman School, was quoted in articles that ran in , and .
  • , associate professor of communications in the Newhouse School, was interviewed for Slate article “.”
  • , Managing Director of Programs and Services at the D’Aniello Institute for Veterans and Military Families (IVMF), was interviewed for .
  • , professor in the Maxwell School, co-wrote The Guardian opinion article “.”
  • , Trustee Professor of television, radio and film and director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture in the Newhouse School, was quoted in several outlets recently including The , , and .
  • , professor of public relations in the Newhouse School, was interviewed for the Inc. piece “.”
  • , Professor of Practice and Supply Chain Management and Director of Executive Education in the Whitman School, was interviewed by and .
  • , Syracuse University College of Law Board of Advisors Distinguished Professor and Emeritus Professor in the College of Law, was interviewed by.

To get in touch and learn more about Syracuse University faculty members available for interviews, please contactmedia@syr.edu.

Press Contact

Do you have a news tip, story idea or know a person we should profile on Ƶ? Send an email to internalcomms@syr.edu.

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Featured Media Coverage – Week of Nov. 6
Featured Media Coverage – Week of Aug. 21 /2023/08/24/featured-media-coverage-week-of-aug-21/ Thu, 24 Aug 2023 14:39:16 +0000 /blog/2023/08/24/featured-media-coverage-week-of-aug-21/ Syracuse University thought leaders, events and research news were showcased in the following news outlets this week:

Christopher Hamilton, assistant professor of television, radio, and film in the Newhouse School, was quoted in the LA Times article “Hollywood actors on strike, but many A-list celebrities still working. Inside side deals debate.”
Gregory Germain, professor of law and direct...

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Featured Media Coverage – Week of Aug. 21

Syracuse University thought leaders, events and research news were showcased in the following news outlets this week:

  • , assistant professor of television, radio, and film in the Newhouse School, was quoted in the LA Times article “.
  • , professor of law and director of the Bankruptcy Clinic in the College of Law, was interviewed for the Moneygeek.com piece “.” He was also featured in a about junk fees.
  • , the David B. Falk Endowed Professor in the Falk School, was published in the Sports Business Journal article” and the Yahoo Sports story “
  • , professor of physics in the College of Arts and Sciences, had research featured in the Genome Web article “.”
  • , professor of practice and supply chain management and director of executive education in the Whitman School, was interviewed for a and a .
  • , professor of advanced media in residence in the Newhouse School, was quoted in the Spectrum News story “.”
  • , associate professor in the College of Visual and Performing Arts, was quoted in the Lifewire story “.”
  • , Vice President of Community Engagement and Government Relations, and , associate professor and director of the Aphasia Research Lab, were spotlighted in this month’s .
  • , associate professor in the College of Arts and Sciences, was quoted in the Activist Post article “.
  • , professor of practice and director of the Newhouse Sports Media Center in the Newhouse School, was quoted in stories that ran in the and.
  • , assistant professor of geography in the Maxwell School, was quoted in the Bloomberg story “.”
  • , Retired Vice Admiral and deputy director of the Syracuse University Institute for Security Policy and Law, was quoted in the POLITICO piece “.”
  • , professor of marketing practice in the Whitman School, was interviewed for the WalletHub story ““
  • , associate professor and chair of the Human Development and Family Science Department in Falk College, was quoted in the Parents Magazine piece “.”
  • , professor of magazine, news and digital journalism and associate dean of graduate programs in the Newhouse School, was interviewed for the CBC story “.”

To get in touch and learn more about Syracuse University faculty members available for interviews, please contactmedia@syr.edu.

Press Contact

Do you have a news tip, story idea or know a person we should profile on Ƶ? Send an email to internalcomms@syr.edu.

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Featured Media Coverage – Week of Aug. 21
Featured Media Coverage – Week of Aug. 14 /2023/08/17/featured-media-coverage-week-of-aug-14/ Thu, 17 Aug 2023 15:23:21 +0000 /blog/2023/08/17/featured-media-coverage-week-of-aug-14/ Syracuse University thought leaders, events and research news were showcased in the following news outlets this week:

Nina Kohn, David M. Levy Professor of Law and Faculty Director of Online Education in the College of Law, was quoted in the USA Today story “’The Blind Side’ subject Michael Oher’s blockbuster lawsuit against Tuohy family explained.” CNN also included Prof. K...

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Featured Media Coverage – Week of Aug. 14

Syracuse University thought leaders, events and research news were showcased in the following news outlets this week:

  • , David M. Levy Professor of Law and Faculty Director of Online Education in the College of Law, was quoted in the USA Today story “’ also included Prof. Kohn in coverage of the story.
  • , research associate professor in the College of Arts and Sciences and director of research at the Forensic & National Security Sciences Institute at Syracuse University, was quoted in the BBC story “
  • , teaching professor and the Executive Director of the Betty and Michael D. Wohl Veterans Legal Clinic, was quoted in The Hill story “.”
  • , associate professor in the School of Information Studies, was quoted in the Washington Post story “
  • , professor of advanced media in residence in the Newhouse School, was interviewed for the CBS News Radio story “.”
  • , professor of newspaper and online journalism in the Newhouse School and director of the Tully Center for Free Speech, was interviewed for the Verify This story “,” and the Masslive story “
  • , assistant professor in the College of Engineering and Computer Science, was interviewed for the WRVO-FM story “.”
  • , professor of African American studies and political science in the Maxwell School, was a featured guest on the Democracy Now segment.”
  • , Trustee Professor of television, radio and film and director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture in the Newhouse School, was quoted in the Yahoo Entertainment article “.” Prof. Thompson was also interviewed by , (San Francisco), , (Los Angeles), (), , and (Spain).

To get in touch and learn more about Syracuse University faculty members available for interviews, please contact media@syr.edu.

Press Contact

Do you have a news tip, story idea or know a person we should profile on Ƶ? Send an email to internalcomms@syr.edu.

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Featured Media Coverage – Week of Aug. 14