

A team of marketing students in YSU's Williamson College of Business
Administration recently helped the Cafaro Co. with a marketing study
for a shopping mall in Michigan. See News Brief below. From the left,
students Jason Green and Anthony Allen and Assistant Professor Peter
Reday are thanked by Joe Bell, director of corporate communications,
and Michael Ferguson, regional marketing director, both of the Warner
Management Co., for the outstanding service provided by the YSU student
marketing team. Team members not pictured are Amber Gallagher, Shawn
Butson and Sabreena Shrader.
Below are a variety of items about upcoming events and other news notes on the campus of Youngstown State University:
- ROTC appoints new Officer in Charge at YSU
- Marketing students help Cafaro Corp. with mall research
- Hispanic Heritage Conference set for Sept. 25 on campus
- YSU faculty/staff honors, presentations, publications
Calendar
Tuesday, July 28, 5 p.m. The YSU Presidential Search Advisory Committee holds its first meeting in Bresnahan 1 and 2 in Kilcawley Center. The 22–member
committee, appointed by the YSU Board of Trustees and chaired by Board
Chair Scott R. Schulick, will assist in identifying a new president for
the university. President David C. Sweet has announced that he will
retire June 30, 2010.
ROTC appoints new Officer in Charge at YSU


Maj. Patrick Williams
Ohio Army National Guard Major Patrick L. Williams, a native of Negley,
Ohio, is the new officer in charge of the Reserve Officers’ Training
Corps at Youngstown State University.
Williams replaced Major Michael C. Stull earlier
this summer. Stull, who was at YSU since January 2007, has been
re–assigned to Hunter Army Air Field in Savannah, Ga.
Williams is a 1987 graduate of Beaver Local High
School and earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration in
1992 from Kent State University. Williams is no stranger to the YSU
campus. He attended YSU for two years in the late 1990s, studying
pre–physical therapy. He also worked as an admissions coordinator from
2000 to 2003 in the Office of Undergraduate Admissions. In his current
position at YSU, he carries the title of assistant professor of
military
science.
YSU’s ROTC program, which has 35 cadets, is
operated in partnership with KSU. A proposal for the YSU program to
receive host battalion status and operate independently from KSU has
been submitted to the Department of the Army. That proposal, however,
has been put on hold due to funding shortfalls.
Williams said YSU’s goal is to grow the program to
such an extent that it is granted “host” status. “YSU''s proud ROTC
alumni base remains resolute and active in this endeavor,” he said.
For more information on the program, contact the ROTC office in the Department of Military Science at 330–941–3205 or visit http://rotc.ysu.edu/.
Marketing students helps Cafaro Co. with mall research
A team of marketing students in the Williamson
College of Business Administration at Youngstown State University
recently helped the Cafaro Co. with a marketing study for a shopping
mall in Michigan.
Students Jason Green of Salem, Shawn Butson of Mineral Ridge, Sabreena
Shrader of Waynesburg, and Anthony Allen and Amber Gallagher, both of
Youngstown, conducted a marketing research program for Warner
Management Co., a subsidiary of the Cafaro Co. The Cafaro Co. was
planning extensive renovations at a shopping mall in Monroe, Michigan.
The students are members of the American Marketing Association on
campus.
The research performed by the student team involved four steps:
- Consultations with Cafaro regarding the development of a survey.
Although the survey results revealed only a few surprises for Cafaro
management, the objectives of the research were met, said Peter Reday,
assistant professor of marketing for the WCBA. Reday said a fundamental
marketing principle is that a good marketing organization must know its
markets and its needs.
Reday coordinates projects with businesses to engage students in
economic research with an ongoing emphasis of applying theoretical
marketing principles to businesses in the Youngstown area and beyond.
Hispanic Heritage Celebration set for Sept. 25 on campus


Andres Gonzalez
“Sharing in the Hispanic Traditions” is the theme of the Hispanic
Heritage Celebration 5:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 25 in the Chestnut Room of
Kilcawley Center on the Youngstown State University campus.ᅠ
The event, which is free and open to the public,
is being held in conjunction with the national observance of Hispanic
Heritage Month, which is traditionally observed September 15 to October
15.
Mistress of ceremonies for the annual event will
be Mirta Reyes–Chapman, program manager at Eastgate Regional Council of
Governments.ᅠ Reyes–Chapman is also a member of the University
Diversity Council at YSU.
This year’s keynote speaker, Andres Gonzalez, has
worked in the non–profit sector for more than 14 years and has been
instrumental in creating culturally and linguistically competent
programs for Hispanic/Latino–serving agencies. Gonzalez spent 10 years
with the Hispanic Urban Minority Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Outreach
Program in Cuyahoga County, serving as a program director, associate
director and transitioning to executive director. He then served as
executive director of El Barrio, a workforce development agency that
serves the Hispanic/Latino community on the near west side of
Cleveland. Currently, Gonzalez serves as the director for the Office of
Diversity at the Cleveland Clinic, where he is responsible for
overseeing cultural competence and diversity training for the 37,000
employees that make up the Cleveland Clinic Health System. He is also
responsible for supervision of the Hispanic/Latino–specific initiatives
that include Hispanic/Latino talent acquisition, and he works closely
with the Community Outreach Department to identify new creative ways of
providing services and resources to the community.
In addition to the keynote speaker, the
celebration will include a flag ceremony featuring flags from 21 Latino
countries, display tables, and live entertainment.
For more information on the celebration, contact the Office of Equal Opportunity and Diversity at 330–941–3370.
YSU faculty/staff honors, presentations, publications
Gabriel Palmer–Fernandez, director, Dr. James Dale Ethics Center,
and professor, Philosophy and Religious Studies, published the chapter
“Moral Cosmopolitanism” in Morality and Justice, and
he was appointed to the Nominating Committee of the Association for
Practical and Professional Ethics and to the Board of Editors of the
journal Teaching Ethics.
Daniel J. Van Dussen,
assistant professor, Sociology and Anthropology, organized a symposium
entitled “Who will Provide Services and Care to Older
Adults? Education, Jobs and Underserved Elders,” and
he gave a presentation entitled “Perceived Emotional
Relationship Quality, Self–rated Health, Physical Health and Psychological Well–Being
Using Structural Equations Modeling” at the 61st
Annual Gerontological Association of America meetings in
Washington, D.C. He was also appointed to the board
of the Ohio Association of Gerontology and Education and named chair of the Policy
Committee.
Carmella Hill, instructor; Victoria Kress, associate professor; Don Martin, professor; and Jake Protivnak, assistant professor, Counseling, presented papers at the 25th
annual All Ohio Counselors Conference in Columbus. Hill’s presentation
was entitled “The Missing Links in Professional Identity: Promoting
Connectivity and Collaboration Among Professional Counselors,” and
Kress’s presentation was entitled “Ethical DSM Diagnosis: Practice
Considerations for Professional Counselors.” Martin’s presentation was
“Counseling Male Delinquents,” and Protivnak’s presentations were
“Failing Students’ Reflections on Participating in School Counseling,”
“School Counselors Addressing Abusive Partner Relationships,” and a
post–conference presentation entitled “Evaluating and Reporting the
Effectiveness of Your School Counseling Program.”
Center for Urban and Regional Studies staff Frank Akpadock, senior research associate/regional scientist; John Bralich, Research Associate II, senior GIS analyst, data services manager; and Thomas Finnerty,
associate director, have contributed a chapter to a report entitled
“The Role of Northeast Ohio Central Cities in the Regional Economy,
2000–2007,” which was prepared by members of the Ohio
Urban University Program under the auspices of the Northeast Ohio
Research Consortium.
Gary Salvner, professor and chair, English, presented a session entitled
“Young Adult Verse Novels” at the National Council of Teachers of
English Annual Convention in San Antonio.
Kelly Bancroft, coordinator, SMARTS, won
both the first– and second–place awards for nonfiction with “Singer
Sewing Machine No. 66 [With Attachments, For Family Use]” and “Crazy
Horses,” respectively, in the first MUSE Literary Competition, which
was held by Cleveland’s Literary Center (The LIT). MUSE is the
quarterly journal of The LIT, a literary organization that promotes
writers and their work throughout northern Ohio.
Zbigniew Piotrowski, professor, Mathematics and
Statistics delivered an invited address “An extension of the Closed
Graph Theorem for separately continuous functions” at the Special
Session on Set–Theoretic Topology at the meeting of the American
Mathematical Society in Huntsville, Ala.
Don Martin,
professor, Counseling and Special Education, received the OCA Research
and Writing Award at the All Ohio Counselors Conference. The award
is
given to an individual who has demonstrated extraordinary research and writing
ability as
evidenced by journal publications for the counseling profession.
Jake Protivnak,
assistant professor, Counseling and Special Education, received the OCA
Herman J. Peters Award at the All Ohio Counselors
Conference. The award is given to an individual who promotes
innovative ideas and theories in the counseling field and has
significant impact on future trends.
Anwarul Islam,
assistant professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering, had a journal
article entitled “Effective Methods of Using CFRP Bars in Shear
Strengthening of Concrete Girders” published in Engineering Structures of Elsevier.
This experimental research, which proposed a new formula for attaching
carbon fiber polymer bars for strengthening concrete members in shear,
was funded through a URC grant in 2006–2007. The author will also
present the outcomes of this research in the Structures Congress in
Austin, Texas, in April, and in the Fifth International Structural
Engineering and Construction Conference in Las Vegas in September.
Zara Rowlands, assistant professor,
Human Ecology, will present a paper entitled “The Challenges of an
Asynchronous, Multi–Disciplinary, Multi–Instructor Online Course” at
the Society for Information Technology and Teacher Education (SITE)
2009, 20th International Conference in Charleston, S.C.
Sylvia J. Imler and Sally A. Lewis, assistant professors, Counseling
and Special Education, presented “Collaboration Between P–16 Schools to
Achieve Academic and Behavior Supports: One Year Later” at the 7th Annual Hawaii International Conference in Education, Hilton Hawaiian Village, Honolulu. The presentation came from the 1st
Annual Northeast Ohio OISM Consortium which was funded by a grant
entitled “Reducing the Achievement Gap in Ohio: Implementing OISM to
Prepare Graduates of Youngstown State University to Meet the Needs of
All Students,” Phase II of which Imler is the principal investigator.
Alice D. Guerra, professor, Health Professions, served as
a member of the board of directors for the Mahoning Valley Hospital and
was a member of its executive committee since 2004. Guerra received the
Dr. John Politis Outstanding Service Award in December 2008 from the
Mahoning Valley Hospital.
Steven Brown, professor, English, served on the National Screening Committee
for the 2009–10 Student Fulbright Program.
Bradley Shellito, associate
professor, Geography, co–authored an essay entitled “Celebrate with
SATELLITES — An International Polar Year Partnership to Study Earth’s
Materials,” which was published in The Science Teacher.
Shellito’s co–authors were Mikell Hedley, Kevin Czajkowski, Janet
Struble, Terri Benko, Scott Sheridan and Mandy Munro–Stasiuk.
Zbigniew Piotrowski, professor, Mathematics and Statistics, was
chosen to serve on the Board of External Examiners at M. Sundaranar
University, Tirunelveli, India.
Frank X. Li,
assistant professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering, presented
"Joint Position Sense Monitoring Using Wireless Sensor Nodes," at the
2009 IEEE Radio and Wireless Symposium in San Diego in January. The
co–authors for this article are Kenneth Learman and Weiqing Ge,
assistant professors in the Department of Physical Therapy. This
research was funded through a University Research Council grant award
in 2008.
Brian K. Brennan, Librarian 2–Technical Services, Maag Library, had an article entitled “Being Through Doing” published in The Won–Buddhist Magazine.
(Note: The above Faculty/Staff items previously appeared in the YSUpdate.)