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Alumni Login

The online community is a free service to alumni that will enable you to network with your friends and classmates. Registration is required to protect the security of the site. You may choose to make your business address, phone and email available to other alumni. Even if you do not choose to participate in the community, we hope you will update your information so we can keep you in touch with school news through the newsletter, email and other mailings.

Once you are logged in, the alumni community will display alumni by year of graduation. You can also search for individuals by name and other fields. Remember you can only access work information for alumni who choose to make their records viewable.

To activate your record, please login with the user and password that was recently mailed to you. if you have misplaced this information, please email istalum@syr.edu and include your name, degree and year of graduation. When you review your record, you may choose a "field of business" to describe your job. This field will be searchable to allow alumni to find other alums in specific areas of work.

We plan to offer alumni an opportunity to participate in a discussion board. We expect to implement this in the near future.
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Luk Boral ’06, G’07
New York City
Grant Audit Professional Program participant/analyst, JPMorgan Chase Finance/Auditing

Programs: B.S. in information management and technology and M.S. in information management

Luk joined JPMorgan Chase in 2007, and began in a two-year Grant Audit Professionals Program. Luk is responsible for internal IT audit within the Treasury & Securities Services (TSS) department. In this position, Luk carries different responsibilities in each audit performed: understanding the business needs and operations; maintaining a relationship with the stakeholders; analyzing IT processes within the audited area, parameters, and usage of various applications; assessing and measuring risks; identifying mitigating controls; and finally testing and grading them. Some of the systems within TSS transfer over a trillion dollars each day and a deficiency in any of them might directly affect the U.S. global economy.
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