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Faculty and StaffSeptember 2, 2025
Pace News
Latest News
We’re getting ready to kick off another successful semester, but first, there are a few important things you need to know as a member of the Pace Community.
President Krislov welcomes the Pace Community back to campus for the Spring 2022 semester, and discusses how Pace is continuing to move forward as we tackle Omicron and protect the health and safety of our students, faculty, and staff.
Pace’s School of Education students are getting a first-hand lesson in integrating science into the elementary school classroom and setting children up for a lifetime of curiosity.
The Maxwell case would likely have a different outcome, said Pace University law professor Bennett Gershman, who has written about jury misconduct. He noted that the jury acquitted Maxwell on one of the counts, suggesting they were responsible in their deliberations. "It's something that should have been revealed, but doesn't seem to have compromised the verdict," he said.
Professor Josh Galperin joined the faculty of the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University in 2021. He teaches Contracts, Environmental Skills, and Administrative Law. Professor Galperin also was in a band, likes to bake, and has great advice for law students – learn more in this candid student-led interview.
Despite the challenges of the pandemic, the school across from City Hall in Lower Manhattan won the 18th annual national College Fed Challenge and enrolled its largest incoming class of first-year students. Pace University finished out 2021 winning the 18th annual national College Fed Challenge. It was the school’s fifth win in seven years in the competition, which has students focus on the U.S. economy, monetary policy and the Federal Reserve System.
Meet Jennifer Zaurov '22, a Lubin student pursuing a Dual MBA who founded the first Arts and Entertainment Management Graduate Club at Pace.
At Pace, Aissatou Gningue has consistently challenged herself. She’s been a UN Millennium Fellow, Orientation leader, and is launching a new Entrepreneurship Club—in addition to being in a five-year MBA program and double majoring in accounting and political science with a minor in pre-law. Her philosophy: “What’s the point if it’s not challenging?”
A “harmless error” is not enough to overturn a conviction, Bennett Gershman, a professor at Pace Law School, told Reuters.
Even if an appellate court agreed that Nathan made a mistake, Maxwell's lawyers would need to show that it mattered to the outcome of the case. A "harmless error" is not enough to overturn a conviction, according to Bennett Gershman, a professor at Pace Law School. "It's a very heavy burden," Gershman said, adding that federal appellate courts tend to defer to trial judges.