

YSU students Kristin Hanna and Lauren Linville, both of Austintown,
review information on study abroad opportunities at a Study Abroad Fair
last month in Kilcawley Center. The number of YSU students spending a
semester abroad is on the rise. Also on the rise is the number of
international students enrolled at YSU. See story below.
Below are a variety of items about upcoming events and other news notes on the campus of Youngstown State University.
- International enrollment up 45 percent in three years
- Beethoven sonatas featured at Nov. 9 concert
- Health Fair on Nov. 4 features free screening
- November Music at Noon concerts set
- Business 2020 attracts more than 725 high school students
Calendar
Monday, Nov. 3, 4:15 to 6 p.m. The
YSU Dental Hygiene Program hosts an open house in the Ohio Room of
Kilcawley Center. Prospective students will have the opportunity to
tour the Dental Hygiene Clinic and meet with faculty, academic advisors
and current students.
Tuesday, Nov. 4, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. YSU faculty and staff are invited to a Health Fair in the Andrews Student Recreation and Wellness Center.
Monday, Nov. 3, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Representatives from several law schools will be on hand to answer
students’ questions at YSU’s annual Law Day event in the Presidential
Suites of Kilcawley Center. For more information, call 330–941–1672.
Tuesday, Nov. 4, 7:05 p.m. YSU women’s
basketball team plays an exhibition game against Ashland in Beeghly
Center. The team plays Pitt–Johnstown in another exhibition match 2:05 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 9.
Wednesday, Nov. 5, 12:15 p.m. The
weekly free Music at Noon concert features the Dana School of Music’s
Clarinet Studio Recital in the Butler Institute of American Art.
Thursday, Nov. 6, 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. More than 725 high school students attend Business 2020 in Kilcawley Center. See News Brief below.
Thursday, Nov. 6, 4 p.m. The YSU Poetry Center features Phillip Lopate in the Gallery in Kilcawley Center. Lopate is the editor of the bestsellers The Art of the Personal Essay and Writing New York.
He is professor of English at Hofstra University and is the author of
five works of nonfiction, two novels and two books of poems.
Friday, Nov. 7, 6 p.m. YSU’s swimming and diving squad takes on Cleveland State/Niagara in Beeghly Natatorium.
Friday, Nov. 7, 8 p.m. WYSU holds its annual
Folk Festival in Peaberry’s Caf← in Kilcawley Center. Admission is
free. The festival features singer–songwriter Mike Stout. For more
information, visit http://www.wysu.org/.
International enrollment up 45 percent in three years


Jef Davis is the new director of the YSU Center for International Studies and Programs.
Enrollment of international students at Youngstown State University is
up 20 percent this fall over last fall and has increased 45 percent
over the last three years.
Jef Davis, director of YSU’s Center for
International Studies and Programs, said the university has 161
international students on campus this fall, compared to 134 a year ago.
Since 2005, international student enrollment is up
by 50 students, or 45 percent. Davis noted, however, that international
students still comprise less than 1.5 percent of YSU’s total student
population. The university’s goal, as part of its strategic plan, is to
increase that number to 3 percent, or about 400 students, by 2013.
Faculty members and staff at the university’s
graduate and undergraduate admissions offices get much of the credit
for boosting enrollment numbers, he said, because they have been
providing the support and encouragement to international students who
apply or inquire about study at YSU.
“There has always been involvement of faculty,
especially with international graduate student enrollments, and that’s
important,” Davis said. “There’s got to be someone shepherding those
applications, communicating with the students, keeping interest high.
Those students have options as to where they will go, so we must be
responsive.”
CISP assumed responsibility this fall for handling the international student admission process.
“Our goal is to provide consistency of contact for
every need, and we want the international students to talk to the same
person as they go through the admission and orientation process,” Davis
said. “Faculty and the admissions staff will still have a role — for
example, the decision on whether to admit graduate international
students will remain with the academic departments and the graduate
school – but we want to provide a single place where students can go to
get all their questions answered, from the point of inquiry through
matriculation.”
YSU has 70 international undergraduates, 70
graduate students, plus 21 students enrolled in the non–credit
intensive English Language Institute. ELI is a resource for students
who want to pursue a degree but need to first improve their use and
understanding of English.
The fact that YSU’s graduate and undergraduate
numbers are equal is surprising, said Davis, because international
graduate enrollment generally far exceeds international undergraduate
enrollment at most state universities in Ohio.
Students from India make up 20 percent of YSU’s
international enrollment, the largest representation, followed by 12
percent from Ghana, 7 percent from Canada, 6 percent from Eastern
Europe and 5 percent from China. In all, students from more than 38
countries are represented.
The number of YSU students spending a semester
abroad has also been rising. This year’s numbers for students studying
abroad won’t be tabulated until spring, Davis said, but last year’s
total was about double the number from the previous year.
International Enrollment
2000 124
2001 125
2002 125
2003 131
2004 127
2005 111
2006 131
2007 134
2008 161
Beethoven sonatas featured at Nov. 9 concert


Hristo Popov
Violinist Hristo Popov and pianist Per Enflo will perform four sonatas
by Beethoven 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9 in Bliss Recital Hall on the
Youngstown State University campus.
The concert is free and open to the public. Parking is available for $5 in the Wick Avenue parking deck.
For more information, call 330–941–3636.
The performance is part of a series of three
concerts in which Popov and Enflo will perform 10 of Beethoven’s
sonatas. The other concerts will be 8 p.m. Monday, Feb. 23, 2009, and 8
p.m., Thursday, March 19.
Popov made his orchestral debut at the age of nine
and since then has performed throughout the United States, England,
Germany, Czech Republic, Poland, Bulgaria, Italy, Switzerland and
Mexico as both recitalist and concerto soloist. Popov is a prize–winner
at the Kozian International Violin Competition, silver medalist at the
California Young Artist Competition, winner of the grand prize at the
International Institute of Music (Germany, USA), and placed first at
the American String Teachers’ Association Chamber Music


Per Enflo
Competition. He has appeared as guest artist in numerous festivals and
has performed in major performing arts centers in the United States
including the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, Severance Hall
in Cleveland, John F. Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. and Casa Verdi
in Milan, Italy. He is artistic director of the Chagrin Valley Chamber
Music Concert Series, and is founder and artistic director of
International Festival for Strings & More in Sandusky, Ohio.
Formerly, he was the music director of the Euclid Orchestra and has
been on the faculty at Kent State University. Currently, he teaches at
YSU and Western Reserve Academy in Ohio.
Enflo
was born in Stockholm, Sweden. In addition
to piano, he has studied conducting and composition. He has performed
frequently in recitals and as a concerto soloist in the United States
and Europe. In the recent years, Enflo has performed in a variety of
recitals and chamber music settings with Kent State University music
faculty. Other performances include being a soloist in 13 different
Mozart Piano Concerti with the Triune Festival Orchestra in Columbus,
Ohio. Many of these performances, as well as recent solo piano
recitals, have been broadcast on the WOSU Classics Network in Ohio.
Enflo is a professor at Kent State University.
Health Fair on Nov. 4 features free screenings
Youngstown State University faculty and staff
are invited to a Health Fair 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 4 in the
Andrews Student Recreation and Wellness Center.
The fair is sponsored by the junior YSU Nursing Community Class.
Free health screenings offered at the fair include bone density, blood pressure, blood sugar, fitness testing and more.ᅠ
For more information, call the YSU nursing department at 330–941–3293.
November Music at Noon concerts set
Youngstown State University’s Dana School
of Music, in collaboration with the Butler Institute of American Art,
presents free Music at Noon concerts throughout the fall. Performances
are Wednesdays at 12:15 p.m. in the Butler Institute of American Art.
The concerts are open to the public and parking is free at the Butler.
The performances for the month of November are as follows:
Nov. 5 — Clarinet Studio Recital
Nov. 12 — James Umble Saxophone Studio Recital
Nov. 19 — Tuba/Euphonium Recital — Brian Kiser, tuba
Nov. 26 — Faculty Chamber Music
For more information please call the Dana School of Music at 330–941–3636.
Business 2020 attracts more than 725 high school students
Youngstown State University's Williamson College of
Business Administration, in conjunction with the FirstEnergy
Foundation, will sponsor “BUSINESS 2020” 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.,
Thursday, Nov. 6, in the Chestnut Room in Kilcawley Center on the YSU
campus.
More than 725 students from 17 high schools throughout the tri–county
area will attend. Panel sessions will be offered showcasing
various aspects of business, inlcuding ntrepreneurship, careers in
business, preparing for the job market, and financial literacy
. More than 35 area leaders from various segments of business will
offer insight and information during the concurrent sessions. Some
of the participating businesses include: Hill, Barth, & King,
LLC; First Place Bank; Commercial Metal Forming; Packer Thomas;
Lamar Outdoor Advertising; Fluent, Sackella, & Associates; National
City Bank; Progressive Insurance; Huntington Bank, RTI International
Metals; Home Savings & Loan and IRS Criminal Investigations Bureau.
Panel sessions will run concurrently from 10 a.m. to noon.
Craig Zamary, president of GreenEnergy, will speak to students about
entrepreneurial opportunities and the differences people can make by
showing and sharing with the world what they are doing to be green.
Green Energy TV is an Online Television Channel that is dedicated to
airing green videos for millions of viewers around the world. Green
Energy TV now has viewers from 104 countries and six continents .
For more information, call Christine Shelton, coordinator of external relations for the WCBA, at 330–941–3068.