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They came in as underdogs. Players who'd never even reached a conference championship game before this season. Players about to take the field in Indianapolis, Indiana, against a program that was making its 11th appearance in the Division II NCAA women's lacrosse championship game and had won it twice.
Watch all the excitement from the championship match-up at the 2023 DII women's lacrosse championship in Indianapolis, IN. Pace took down undefeated West Chester 19-9, to win their first national championship.
Pace won its first NCAA Championship in program history by defeating previously unbeaten West Chester, 19-9. Pace’s 19 goals broke the record of goals in a title game, which was previously 17.
On this episode of The Lubin Link podcast, Mariama Diallo '20 highlights how she came to the Lubin School of Business as part of an exchange from France but ended up staying for the entire school year due to the endless opportunities presented to her. She also discusses her experience leading the Lubin Sales Team and how it helped her land a job at the height of the pandemic.
Maria T. Iacullo-Bird, Ph.D., assistant provost for research and clinical associate professor of history, Dyson College of Arts and Sciences at Pace University, has been elected 2024–2025 president of the Council on Undergraduate Research (CUR).
History has been made! The Pace Women's Lacrosse team are your NCAA DII National Champions after a resounding win against West Chester University.
Communication and Media Studies student Michael Huertas of the class of 2023 discusses his research and experiences at Pace while reminding other students to "eat your rice."
A number of Dyson students in the STEM disciplines earned accolades at research conferences this spring, highlighting their impressive faculty-sponsored work.
Haub Law’s Bridget Crawford speaks with Forbes about gift and luxury tax issues relating to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.
Bennett L. Gershman, a prosecutorial ethics expert at Pace University law school, said making such statements after acquittals is wrong. “That’s highly improper for a prosecutor after a jury has acquitted you to suggest you lied,” Gershman said. “Prosecutors can’t do that, because that erodes our confidence, our trust in the system. It’s really a very dangerous thing to do.”