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SU honors Boeheim with scholarship, banner, and name on entry to the Melo Center
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse University (SU) on Saturday afternoon honored long-time former men’s basketball head coach Jim Boeheim with a new scholarship and a banner in the JMA Wireless Dome. The university also plans to name the entrance to the Carmelo K. Anthony Basketball Center after Boeheim, who concluded his 47-year coaching career following the […]
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse University (SU) on Saturday afternoon honored long-time former men’s basketball head coach Jim Boeheim with a new scholarship and a banner in the JMA Wireless Dome.
The university also plans to name the entrance to the Carmelo K. Anthony Basketball Center after Boeheim, who concluded his 47-year coaching career following the 2022-23 season.
Those announcements, along with local and state–government proclamations declaring Saturday as Jim Boeheim Day, were part of the post-game ceremony inside the Dome after Syracuse held off Notre Dame, winning 88-85.
Mike Tirico, an SU graduate who handles play-by-play for NBC’s Sunday Night Football, served as the ceremony’s emcee on the Jim Boeheim court.
CNYBJ monitored the event online at ACC Network Extra.
Syracuse University Chancellor Kent Syverud and his wife, SU professor Ruth Chen,presented Boeheim a plaque signifying the creation of a new, endowed scholarship in his name.
“The Jim Boeheim ‘66 Central New York scholarship … will be awarded to undergraduate students with demonstrated financial need with a preference to students who are residents of the Central New York and Finger Lakes region,” Tirico said in addressing the crowd.
Head coach Adrian Autry and current members of the Syracuse men’s basketball team presented the former coach with a painting they had commissioned that represents “some of the most iconic moments through [Boeheim’s] career,” as Tirico described it.
The ceremony also included a video showing new renderings from the Carmelo K. Anthony Basketball Center, and as Tirico announced, “As a permanent feature, the entry way to the Melo Center will pay homage to Coach Boeheim and forever be known as the Jim Boeheim Entrance to the Carmelo K. Anthony Basketball Center. That means that every recruit and student-athlete who walks through those doors will know the rich history and the expectation of playing basketball at Syracuse.”
John Wildhack, SU’s director of athletics, was then introduced and shook Boeheim’s hand as the university raised a banner above section 309, acknowledging Boeheim’s Hall of Fame basketball–coaching accomplishments between 1976 and 2023, including the 2003 NCAA Championship, five NCAA Final Fours, and 35 NCAA Tournaments.
In his remarks, Boeheim acknowledged his wife Juli; children Elizabeth, Jimmy, Buddy, and Jamie; the current Orange basketball team; and Coach Autry, the coaching staff, and former players who attended the event.
Those players included Boeheim’s former teammate, Dave Bing, who Boeheim called“the greatest player to ever play at Syracuse University who started this all,” which was greeted with applause from the crowd in the JMA Wireless Dome.
He also thanked the fans who Boeheim said come to the games “no matter what.”
“I’ve been forever grateful for that,” he added.
Boeheim then went on to say, “From the bottom of my heart, thank you for giving me a life nobody could’ve asked for.”

Le Moyne uses county grant to expand ERIE21 program to additional school districts
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Le Moyne College is expanding its ERIE21 technology-education program to both the Onondaga Central and LaFayette Central school districts. Onondaga County has awarded Le Moyne $250,000 in funding to enable the expansion. ERIE21 stands for Educating for our Rising Innovation Economy in the 21st century. The program is designed to address the
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Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Le Moyne College is expanding its ERIE21 technology-education program to both the Onondaga Central and LaFayette Central school districts.
Onondaga County has awarded Le Moyne $250,000 in funding to enable the expansion.
ERIE21 stands for Educating for our Rising Innovation Economy in the 21st century. The program is designed to address the region’s “twin problems of persistently” high poverty in Syracuse — particularly among Black/African–American and Latino residents — and the challenges employers face in attracting and retaining the skilled workers needed to fill current job openings in technology, per Le Moyne’s Thursday announcement.
Focusing on early intervention (middle school) and providing ongoing support to students in high school and college, ERIE21 is “strengthening the region’s capacity to develop pathways that generate local talent to feed the growing demand for computational, software and engineering professionals,” Le Moyne contends.
“Since it was launched in 2018, ERIE21 has focused on providing transformative learning experiences for middle- and high-school students within the Syracuse City School District,” Le Moyne College President Linda LeMura said in the school’s announcement. “Our long-term goal has been to bring those same experiences to students throughout Central New York. Thanks to the generosity of Onondaga County, this goal is now becoming a reality.”
Students from the two school districts will begin work in the ERIE21 program starting this spring.
“With cutting edge companies like JMA Wireless, SAAB, Inficon, Lockheed Martin and many others already calling Onondaga County home, it is imperative that we make strategic investments in our young people now to train them for these high-demand jobs,”Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon said in Le Moyne’s release. “With Micron soon coming, we must be prepared to meet the moment and create the workforce necessary to fill these jobs. Thanks to our partner at Le Moyne College and their innovative ERIE21 program, students in the City of Syracuse – and now OCS and LaFayette – will be part of that critical effort.”
Le Moyne’s ERIE21 program has partnered with organizations across the region that include M&T Bank (NYSE: MTB), KeyBank (NYSE: KEY); JP Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Empire State Development; City of Syracuse; Onondaga County; CenterStateCEO;MACNY, the Manufacturers Association; PEACE Inc.; and the Syracuse City School District, Le Moyne College said.

Bassett Healthcare Network extends sign-on bonus program
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Bassett Healthcare Network announced that it is extending an organization-wide sign-on bonus program to help recruit new nurses and other staff members.
People news: UR Medicine Finger Lakes Health adds primary care physician
GENEVA, N.Y. — UR Medicine Finger Lakes Health announced that Jennifer Mungari, M.D. has joined the medical staff of Geneva General Hospital. She will be
New York DEC Commissioner Seggos to leave his post this spring
ALBANY, N.Y. — Basil Seggos, who has served as commissioner of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) since 2015, will be leaving
People news: Wheeler joins SWBR as project designer
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — SWBR announced that it recently hired Andrew Wheeler as a project designer in its Syracuse office. Wheeler is responsible for building–information modeling,
Guthrie Clinic to use $3 million Mother Cabrini donation for maternity-care initiative
The Mother Cabrini Health Foundation has donated $3 million to the Guthrie Clinic,supporting the health–care organization’s systemwide Maternity Care Oasis initiative. Sayre, Pennsylvania–based Guthrie Clinic

BAE selected to work on computer system for U.S. Navy’s unmanned aerial-refueling system
ENDICOTT, N.Y. — Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA) has chosen BAE Systems to upgrade and modernize the vehicle–management system computer (VMSC) for the U.S. Navy’s MQ-25

SUNY Morrisville receives $500K grant for wind-technician training
MORRISVILLE, N.Y. — SUNY Morrisville is one of eight SUNY institutions to receive a $500,000 grant from the Offshore Wind Training Institute (OWTI) to prepare

Rome Health readies for construction of new surgical center, ICU addition
ROME, N.Y. — Rome Health says crews have started the site work to build the addition for the new intensive care unit (ICU) and Kaplan
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