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Calendar Monday, April 27, 8 p.m. The Dana Symphony Orchestra, featuring guest conductor Svilen Simeonov, presents a premier performance at the Ford Family Recital Hall, Eleanor Beecher Flad Pavilion in the DeYor Performing Arts Center. See News Brief below. Tuesday, April 28, 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Nearly 600 area high school students and 20 educators will receive education and hands–on experience in financial literacy at a financial life skills conference called “Financial Starting Points” in Kilcawley Center on campus. The conference is being held in recognition of National Financial Literacy month in April and is sponsored by Junior Achievement of the Mahoning Valley, YSU’s Williamson College of Business Administration and the Associated School Employees Credit Union, through the Ohio Credit Union Foundation. Tuesday, April 28. YSU Board of Trustees meets on the following schedule: 3:30 p.m., Academic and Student Affairs Committee, in the President’s Conference Room, second floor of Tod Hall; 4 p.m., joint meeting of the Finance and Facilities and the Internal Affairs committees, also in the President’s Conference Room; and 5 p.m., special Board of Trustees meeting in the Board of Trustees Meeting Room on the first floor of Tod Hall. Tuesday, April 28, 7 p.m. YSU
hosts the 2008–09 Honors Convocation in the Chestnut Room of Kilcawley
Center on campus. Hundreds of students will receive awards. Twenty–four
faculty members will also receive Distinguished Professor Awards. ![]() ![]() Wednesday, April 29, 8 p.m. The YSU Wind Ensemble and YSU Jazz Ensemble perform in Stambaugh Auditorium. See News Brief below. Thursday, April 30, 5:30 to 9 p.m. Penguin Productions will sponsor the 2nd annual May Day festival in the Rec 5 area, located in front of Pete’s Place on the YSU campus. The event features singers Josh Kelley, Ryan Cabrera, The Kin and Brandon Whyde, as well as free festival–style food, free carnival games and more. Thursday, April 30, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
“President Barack Obama’s First 100 Days” is the topic of a free forum
in the auditorium (Room 132) of DeBartolo Hall on campus. The forum,
presented by YSU’s Black Faculty and Staff Association, will include a
panel discussion moderated by Victor Wan–Tatah, director and professor
of YSU Africana Studies. Friday, May 1, 6:30 p.m. Former
head women’s basketball coach Ed DiGregorio and former Philosophy and
Religious Studies department chair Tom Shipka will receive the
prestigious YSU Heritage Award during the annual Faculty and Staff
Awards Dinner in the Chestnut Room of Kilcawley Center. See News Brief
below. Students selected to present at exclusive LaunchTown “Tim and Mike were inspired by their clinical experiences and worked diligently on an idea to improve patient care, contain costs and assist the respiratory care community in becoming environmentally conscious,” Volsko said. Capp and Repasky designed a heat and moisture exchanger with a replaceable filter. The housing remains inline with the ventilator circuit, reducing the cost of humidification and reducing plastic waste. The unit is in compliance with current practice guidelines for the prevention of ventilator associated pneumonia. The students were awarded $1,000 for their proposal Volsko said Capp and Repasky received valuable feedback at LaunchTown and will be pursuing a path to bring the product to market. Faculty member wins Outstanding Educator honor ![]() ![]() Five years later, she is being honored by the Ohio Council of Teachers of English Language Arts with the Outstanding English Language Arts Educator Award in the university category. “It’s nice to be recognized by one’s peers, especially since I’m new to university teaching, and I’m doing this late in life,” she said. Rees, assistant professor of teacher education at YSU, earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees from YSU and a Ph.D. in curriculum and instruction from the University of Akron in 2005. Before beginning work at YSU, she taught elementary through high school students at Warren City Schools and the Catholic Diocese of Youngstown. A lifelong instructor, Rees believes she was called to teach. “I really enjoyed working with the students in the public schools, finding ways to motivate them to be lifelong learners,” she said. “Now, I enjoy teaching students who are going to be teachers, and I enjoy their motivation.” Rees, state coordinator for the Ohio Council of Reading Teachers and president of OCTELA, said she is not unique and that she is only as passionate as the next teacher, but her students say otherwise. ![]() ![]() Rees was honored at the OCTELA spring conference in Columbus. For more information on OCTELA or past award winners, visit www.octela.org. DiGregorio, Shipka to receive Heritage Awards The Heritage Award was established in 1980 to recognize former faculty and staff whose contributions to the university have had a major impact on its development. ![]() ![]() DiGregorio’s storied 20–year career as head coach of the Penguin women’s basketball team included five consecutive Mid–Continent Conference regular season championships. His teams also won Mid–Continent Tournament Titles and appeared in the NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament in 1996, 1998 and 2000. In 1998, he led YSU to its first NCAA Tournament win with a 91–80 upset over Memphis. Shipka was honored for a career at YSU that spanned 1969 through 2006, including 20 years as chair of the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies. He raised substantial funds for the Dale Ethics Center, the University Professor of Islamic Studies, the American Studies Program and the Shipka lecture series. Shipka led the drive to create the YSU chapter of the Ohio Education Association, the first faculty union at a public university in Ohio. He also was involved with the Ohio Faculty Council and National Education Association. Grad students inducted into counseling honor society ![]() ![]() The induction ceremony featured two keynote speakers: Meghan Brown, a 2006 graduate of the YSU counseling program, current president of the Eastern Ohio Counselors Association, and program manager of NORCAT at Meredian Services; and Chris Faiver, a member of the faculty in the YSU counseling department from 1976 to 1989, and the current coordinator of the counseling program at John Carroll University. Jake J. Protivnak, assistant professor, and Victoria Kress, associate professor, are the advisors for the YSU chapter of Chi Sigma Iota. For more information, visit http://www.ysu.edu/counselingandspecialeducation/eta/index.htm. YSU Press Day features NY Times sports columnist Karen Crouse, a sports columnist for The New York Times since June 2005, will be the keynote speaker. Crouse, who covers the New York Jets, will talk about her career and the future of the profession. Prior to joining The Times, she worked as a sports columnist for four years at the Palm Beach Post. She is a graduate of the University of Southern California, where she was journalism major and member of the Trojan women’s swim team. She grew up in Santa Clara, Calif., and started her newspaper career in Georgia at the Savannah News–Press.
Cinco de Mayo to be celebrated at YSU brunch Bulgarian conductor takes baton for Dana concert ![]() ![]() Soloists for the concert are Hristo Popov, violin, and Kalin Ivanov, cello. The concert pieces include: Don Giovanni Overture, K527 (W. A. Mozart); Symphony No. 7 in A major, Op. 92 (Beethoven); and Concerto for Violin and Cello, Op. 102 (J. Brahms). Svilen Simeonov has established himself as one of Bulgaria’s foremost conductors. Since his 2003 appointment as chief conductor of Sofia Sinfonietta, it has become one of the most sought after Bulgarian orchestras. He has been awarded the Musician of the Year Prize with Sofia Amadeus orchestra (1999) by Bulgarian National Radio, the Crystal Lyre Award (2001) with Colegium Musicum orchestra–Bankja, and the Golden Lyre Award with Sofia Sinfonietta Orchestra (2007) for high artistic achievements in the performing arts. Maestro Simeonov is also the chief conductor of Vidin State Symphony Orchestra in Bulgaria and serves as guest conductor at the Viennese Operetta Stage. Ivanov, cellist,
is a prominent recitalist, chamber musician, and recording artist. A
native of Bulgaria, he holds a master of music degree from Brooklyn
College Conservatory and has performed at concert halls around the
world. For tickets, call the DeYor Box Office, 330–744–0264. Wind, Jazz ensembles close out New Music Festival The concert is the closing event for the 2009 Dana School of Music New Music Festival. The featured artist at the concert is trumpeter Allen Vizzutti, one of the nation’s most accomplished classical and jazz trumpet artists. In addition, the Wind Ensemble will be premiering a new work by composer David Morgan, YSU associate professor of double bass and jazz studies. The composition, “The Art of Seven,” was commissioned by the American Wind Symphony in summer 2008. Vizzutti will also teach master classes for trumpet students in the Dana School of Music and for regional trumpet performers. For specific information on the times and locations of the sessions, and for concert ticket information, call the Dana School of Music at 330–941–3636. Dance ensemble presents spring concert this weekend Under the direction
of Christine Cobb, a faculty member in the YSU Department of Theater
and Dance, the concert will showcase an array of modern dance, jazz,
hip hop, belly dancing and Irish step dance. ![]() ![]() Siegenfeld’s work was made possible by a grant from the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education and will be performed by Thom Cobb, dance faculty at The YSU Dance Ensemble, a sanctioned student organization sponsored in part by Student Government, accepts members via an audition process in the fall term. Members practice weekly and hone their performance skills as well as their leadership skills. “The young women who audition and are accepted into the YSU Dance Ensemble put countless hours into practicing their discipline, Cobb said. “They also learn the basics of running a student organization since they must elect officers and participate in activities. The spring concert is the culmination of their year–long efforts.” Tickets are $7 for the general public and $3 for YSU faculty, staff, and students, as well as children under 12 and senior citizens. Tickets may be purchased at the door. Rec Center offers Youth Summer Climbing Camp The camps are being offering in three, five–day sessions: June 22 to 26, July 13 to17 and August 3 to 7. The sessions run from 9 a.m. to noon each day. The camp is instructed by Travis Dusz, an American Mountain Guide top rope site manager. Registration is limited to ages 12 to 17. Space is limited. The cost is $100 per participant. The fee includes instruction, a T–shirt and a chalk bag. Participants are encouraged to bring a snack and a water bottle. Register in person at the recreation and wellness center, or call 330–941–2240 or e–mail tudusz@ysu.edu. Volunteers are needed for artist registration; information booths; in the children''s hands–on art tent; for technical assistance at performance sites; and at the Festival of Nations international area, among others. Various shifts are available for the two–day event. Each volunteer receives a Festival tee shirt, cold water and reserved free parking. “Each year our participants compliment our volunteer corps on their knowledge, enthusiasm and professionalism,” said Lori A. Factor, Festival coordinator. “Our volunteers are crucial to the festival''s success and offer a personal touch to make this event successful.” Interested individuals may receive an application by calling 330–941–2307, emailing lafactor@ysu.edu or logging on to www.ysu.edu/sfa for a downloadable form. The Summer Festival of the Arts is presented by YSU. ###
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