

The 200th birthday of Charles Darwin, the father of the theory of
evolution and natural selection, will be celebrated with two events
next week at YSU. See News Brief below.
Below are a variety of items about upcoming events and other news notes on the campus of Youngstown State University:
- Two campus events mark Darwin’s 200 th birthday
- ‘Working Portraits’ exhibited this month at library
- N.Y. prof lectures on Ten Commandments, Lincoln
- Journalists participate in election forum on Feb. 10
- High school drama workshop set for Feb. 19 at Bliss
- Dates set for mental health awareness training
- International Business Workshop this week on campus
Calendar
Wednesday, Feb. 4, 6:30 p.m., Shereka:
The Black Heritage Festival will be held in the Chestnut Room of
Kilcawley Center on the YSU campus. The event will include poetry
readings and performances from a gospel choir, mimes and the Harambee
Youth Group and step dancers. Food from various cultures will be
provided. The festival is part of the YSU African American History
Month and co–sponsored by the Office of Housing and Residence Life.
Thursday, Feb. 5, 5 p.m. Reception and panel discussion in the McDonough
Museum of Art and Bliss Hall Gallery. The event features Pittsburgh
artist and art educator Christine Bethea. Her art will be on display at
the Bliss Hall Art Gallery throughout February. The event is part of
YSU’s African American History Month.
Thursday, Feb. 5, 7 p.m.
Sherry Lincoln, co–director of the YSU Center for Working Class
Studies, and Alyssa Lenhoff, director of YSU’s journalism program, give
a presentation about “Worker Portraits: Faces of Strength” at the main
branch of the Public Library of Youngstown and Mahoning County. See
News Brief below.
Friday, Feb. 6. The YSU men’s and women’s indoor track and field teams compete at Baldwin Wallace College in Berea, Ohio.
Friday, Feb. 6, 9 a.m. to noon. YSU Career
and Counseling Services presents “Job Search Strategies for the
Displaced Worker” in the Ohio Room and Gallery of Kilcawley Center on
the YSU campus. The event is dedicated to supporting the job searches
of individuals in the region by providing training on becoming a better
job seeker.
Friday, Feb. 6, 8 p.m., and Saturday, Feb. 7, 1 p.m., 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. YSU’s Ward Beecher Planetarium presents “A Briefer History of Time.” Free.
Saturday, Feb. 7, Noon to 6 p.m. The African
Marketplace will be held in the Chestnut Room of Kilcawley Center.
Goods made by Africans and African Americans will be for sale. The
Harambee Youth Group will perform. The marketplace is part of YSU’s
African American History Month.
Sunday, Feb. 8, 11 a.m. The Youngstown Diving Invite is presented at the Beeghly Natatorium.
Two campus events mark Darwin’s 200th birthday
Youngstown State University marks Darwin Day —
the global celebration of science and reason held on or around Charles
Darwin’s birthday — with two events.
- Tuesday, Feb. 10, 12:45 to 1:45 p.m.
Jeffrey K. McKee from Ohio State University presents a lecture entitled
“Darwin''s Prescient Insights on Human Evolution” in Moser Hall Room
2000. The lecture is sponsored by the YSU Office of the Provost,
College of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics, and
College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences.
- Thursday, Feb. 12, 4 to 5 p.m. Evolution & Darwin Forum with Ian Renne of the YSU Department of Biological Sciences, Bruce
Wallerᅠ of the YSU Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, and
John Grabowskiᅠ of the Champion Local Schools,ᅠ in the
Jones Room in Kilcawley Center.ᅠ The forum is sponsored by the YSU Chapter of Sigma Xi (The Scientific Research Society).
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Darwin’s birth and the 150th anniversary of the publishing of Darwin’s “On the Origin of the Species.” Darwin was born Feb. 12, 1809.
‘Worker Portraits’ exhibited this month at library


This photo of Gloria Steward, bus driver, is part of the “Worker Portraits: Faces of Strength” exhibit.
The Public Library of Youngstown and Mahoning County will host an
exhibit in February that features stories written by Youngstown State
University journalism students.
“Worker Portraits: Faces of Strength” is sponsored by the YSU Center
for Working–Class Studies and organized by Alyssa Lenhoff, director of
YSU’s journalism program, and Sherry Linkon, co–director of
CWCS.
The exhibit features profiles of Mahoning Valley workers from a variety
of fields, together with photographic portraits and background
information on how work is changing in our community.
The Public Library will also host three special events related to the
exhibit. At 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 5, at the Main Branch of the
library on Wick Avenue in Youngstown, Lenhoff and Linkon will give a
presentation about the exhibit, followed by discussion. At 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 11 and at 1 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 28, Linkon will host
storytelling sessions at the main library. During these sessions, local
residents are invited to share their own work experiences.
All of the programs and the exhibit are free and open to the public.
N.Y. prof lectures on Ten Commandments, Lincoln
Paul Finkelman, a President William McKinley
Distinguished Professor of Law at Albany Law School in New York, is
visiting Youngstown State University to give two free lectures on
Tuesday, Feb. 10.


Paul Finkelman
The first lecture, “Are the Ten Commandments the Moral Foundation of
American Law?” is 11 a.m. in the McKay Auditorium of Kilcawley Center.
The second lecture, “The Great Emancipator as Lawyer: How Lincoln Ended
Slavery” is 5 p.m. in the Jones Room of Kilcawley Center. The second
lecture is in celebration of the 200th anniversary of Lincoln’s birth.
Finkelman is a specialist in American legal
history, race and the law and is considered to be an expert in the law
of slavery, constitutional law and legal issues surrounding baseball.
He has written more than 100 scholarly articles and more than 20 books.
He was recently named the ninth most cited legal historian according to
“Brian Leieter’s Law School Rankings.” He has just returned from Osaka
University in Japan, where he was a visiting research scholar.
The lectures are sponsored by the YSU Center for
Judaic and Holocaust Studies, the YSU James Dale Ethics Center, the YSU
History Department, the YSU Center for Applied History and the YSU
History Club.
Journalists participate in election forum on Feb. 10


Marilyn Geewax
Reporters from the
Wall Street Journal, The Plain Dealer
in Cleveland and National Public Radio will be featured in a forum 7:30
p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 10 in the Ohio Room of Kilcawley Center on the
Youngstown State University campus.
The forum will involve discussion of whether political journalists in
the 2008 presidential election adequately covered issues relevant to
the working class and the people of the Mahoning Valley.
The event is free and open to the public.
Featured panelists will be Jonathan Kaufman of the Wall Street Journal, Connie Schulz of The Plain Dealer and Marilyn Geewax from NPR. The moderator is Todd Franko, editor of The Vindicator in Youngstown.


Connie Schulz
The panelists will also present a journalism
seminar for students 2 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 10 in Room B0013 in Fedor
Hall on the YSU campus.
The lecture is sponsored by the Center for Working–Class Studies, the YSU journalism program and The Vindicator. A reception prior to the forum is sponsored by The New York Times.
High school drama workshop set for Feb. 19 at Bliss
Youngstown State University’s Department of
Theater and Dance presents a high school drama day Thursday, Feb. 19 in
Bliss Hall’s Ford Theater in conjunction with University Theater’s
performance of “The Servant of Two Masters.”
Sponsored by the YSU chapter of Alpha Psi Omega
and the national theater honorary society, the event gives students the
opportunity to participate in three interactive workshops: acting,
stage combat and scenic or costume design.ᅠ
A full performance of “The Servant of Two Masters” will be presented in the afternoon.
The cost is $6 per person and includes the workshops, lunch and performance.
High school drama teachers, or others who advise
drama or theater departments, are encouraged to register their students
by e–mailing Jennifer Young at jlyoung03@ysu.edu or by calling 330–941–3810.
Dates set for mental health awareness training
Youngstown State University, in conjunction with
the Mahoning County Mental Health Board and NEOUCOM Criminal Justice
Coordinating Center of Excellence, will present “Mental Health
Training, Response, and Awareness on Campus, M–TRAC.”
The training for YSU faculty, staff, and
administrators will be Tuesday, Feb. 17 and Wednesday, Feb. 18, in
McKay Auditorium in Beeghly Hall.
The sessions identify signs and symptoms of mental
illness and stress which potentially may lead to violent behaviors both
inside and outside of the classroom. The sessions also include
information on how to deal with such behaviors.ᅠ
The eight–hour (divided into two days, four hours
per session) workshop is open to allᅠ faculty, staff, and
administrators; however, registration will be limited to the first 200
individuals to register. The workshop is tailored specifically to YSU
and is a repeat of the program presented during the fall semester.
The training is divided into two half–day sessions. Morning and afternoon times are available.
Participants can register online by Tuesday, Feb. 10 at http://www.cc.ysu.edu/bannertraining/mtrac.htm.ᅠ
For more information, call the Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs at Ext. 3532.
International Business Workshop this week on campus
Youngstown State University’s Williamson College
of Business Administration and the Emerging Markets Initiative will
host the second International Business Workshop for high school
students in the Greater Youngstown area on Wednesday, Feb 4.
Thirty students from Liberty High School are expected to participate in
the workshop aimed at creating awareness of the growing international
economic interdependence and the role of the American business within
the new international economic order.
The workshop includes a computer–based business
simulation, online quiz on international cuisine, role playing, case
discussion and an international idea lab team project and presentation.
Participants will learn about international business/management with
maximum student involvement and hands–on experiences. The workshop was
designed and developed by a team of faculty from the Williamson College
of Business Administration.
The YSU Emerging Markets Initiative
is funded by the U.S. Department of Education under the Business and
International Education program. Community partners include the Ohio State Governor’s Regional Office, Northeast Ohio Trade and Economic Consortium, Mahoning
County Commissioners Office, Youngstown/Warren Regional Chamber of
Commerce, and the Greater Youngstown Area School Districts.
Area high schools interested in participating in future workshops may contact Ram Kasuganti at 330–941–3070 or rrkasuganti@ysu.edu.
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