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Calendar Friday, March 13. YSU Board of Trustees meets on the following schedule: 1 p.m., Finance and Facilities Committee, in the President’s Conference Room on the second floor of Tod Hall; 2:30 p.m., Trusteeship Committee Meeting, in the President’s Conference Room on the second floor of Tod Hall; and 3 p.m., Board of Trustees quarterly meeting in the Trustees Meeting Room on the first floor of Tod Hall. YSU Diversity Leadership Celebration set for April 2
The keynote speaker is Luke Visconti, partner and co–founder of DiversityInc., and a recognized leader in the field of diversity. His magazine has an audited circulation of more than 200,000, and his website reaches more than 1 million unique visitors monthly. The cost is $30 per person, and tables are available. Proceeds from the event go toward a scholarship. Those attending the event will receive a free digital subscription to Diversity,Inc. magazine. For more information and reservations, contact the Office of Alumni and Events Management at 330–941–3497. Elected officials headline Rich Center Variety Show U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson The event is Friday, April 3, at Mr. Anthony’s in Boardman. Dinner begins at 6:30 p.m., with entertainment at 8 p.m. Tickets are $50 per person. For the past four years, Parents of Autistically Learning Students at the Rich Center have organized the Variety Show, featuring regional talent and raising as much as $20,000 a year. The funds support programs at the Center that help children living with autism achieve their absolute best. This year, Mahoning Valley elected officials have agreed to donate their time and talent to be part of the show. In addition to Ryan and Wilson, the cast includes Youngstown Mayor Jay Williams, Warren Mayor Michael O’Brien, State Sen. Joe Schiavoni, State Reps. Tom Letson, Sandra Harwood, Bob Hagan, Linda Bolon and Ron Gerberry; Mahoning County Commissioners John McNally, Anthony Traficanti and Dave Ludt, Mahoning County Auditor Mike Sciortino, and former State Sen. Harry Meshel. For more information and tickets, contact Tricia Perry at 330–941–1927. Films, lectures highlight Women’s History Month The film "When Two Won't Do" will be screened at YSU as part of Women's History Month.
For more information, contact G. Mehera Gerardo, director of Women''s Studies and assistant professor of history, at 330–941–3459. Saxophonist Ralph Lalama performs Leonardi Concert Ralph Lalama The pre–concert reception starts at 6:30 p.m., followed by the concert at 8 p.m. Included in his busy recording career are five CDs as a leader for the Criss Cross jazz label. One of the CDs, “Circle Line” earned Lalama four–and–a–half stars from DownBeat magazine. The Leonardi Legacy Series Concert is named in honor of the founder of YSU’s Jazz Studies program, Tony Leonardi. Professor emeritus at the Dana School of Music at the time of his death in 2001, Leonardi had a storied career, performing with jazz greats Bob Mintzer, Marvin Stamm and Harold Danko, among others, and as a member of the famous Woody Herman Big Band. As a public school teacher by day and jazz musician by night, his experience and acclaim became well known to students at the Dana School of Music, who asked if he would help start a jazz program. In 1969, Leonardi agreed and began teaching at YSU part–time. In a short time, Leonardi had developed a nationally–recognized program which lead to numerous awards. The concert will help mark the 40th anniversary of the Jazz Studies program at YSU. Tickets are $35, which includes the pre–concert reception and the concert. Concert only tickets are $25; and $10 for students. All tickets are general admission. Tickets may be purchased by calling 330–941–3105 or visiting the first floor Bliss Hall Box Office at YSU. Women in Science/Engineering scheduled for March 28 The event, which runs from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., is designed to expose young women in grades 6 through 12 to career opportunities in science and technology. Panel discussions on careers will be held during the morning and hands–on activities and lab demonstrations will be held in the afternoon in Kilcawley Center on the YSU campus. This workshop is open to all middle and high school girls from Mahoning and Trumbull counties, and western Pennsylvania. Parents can receive college planning and financial aid information and take campus tours while their daughters participate in the workshop. Registration must be submitted by March 26. The workshop is free. For more information and to register online visit www.ysu.edu/WIS. For more information or to receive a registration form in the mail, contact Diana Fagan, YSU associate professor of biological sciences, at 330–941–1554 or e–mail at dlfagan@ysu.edu. Beta Gamma Sigma inducts YSU business students Students installed: Anthony Angnardo, Michael Maiorano, Scott Miller, and Jason O’Malley of Warren; Tarik Awad, Karen Cooper, Katherine Garrett, Donna Hardick, Alyssa Rich and Emily–Anne Woodall of Canfield; Oludare Banwo, Daniel DeMaiolo, Sarah Ellis, Megan Gregory, Jaime Kapsal, Michael McBride, Brian Mellott, Lindsay Miller, Timothy Morrow, Sarah Stafford, and Artem Yarmolinskiy of Youngstown; Justin Battisti and Jason Debelyak of Struthers; Robert Bresson and Rachel Sweany of Austintown; Stephen Carchedi of Lowellville; Christopher Copploe and Raymond Michaels of McDonald; Michael Cramer, Carla Hill, and Michael Leskovec of Girard; Angela DeChristofaro of Niles; Jennifer Frayer and Joseph Propri of Mineral Ridge; Ryan Garman of Sandusky; Kelsi Garwood of Leetonia; Jason Green, Melanie Kiko, and Benjamin Miller of Salem; Kayla Huffman and Stacy Rhoads of New Middletown; Antonette Joseph and Safa Khaleq of Boardman; Daniel Kernich of Rogers; David Marshall of Hubbard; Nicholas O’Bruba and Carly Roberts of Poland; Sarah Pasqual of Beloit; Jessica Sferra and Scott Wilms of Columbiana; and Ashley Tonkovich of Cortland. Students from outside Ohio include Matthew Adkins of Sharpsville, Pa.; Jason Heyman of Aliquippa, Pa.; RaNeen Lannutti of Sharon, Pa.; Jamie Smith of New Castle, Pa.; and Erin Schindler of Sammamish, Wash. The YSU chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma was recognized as a Premier Chapter for its superior level of membership acceptance. With Premier Chapter status, the YSU BGS chapter awarded a $1,000 Beta Gamma Sigma scholarship to Ellen Stafford, an MBA student, in the 2008–2009 academic year. Greg Claypool of Akron, chapter advisor and president and a professor of accounting and finance at YSU, was honored for five years of service. Bill Vendemia of Youngstown, YSU associate professor of management, was inducted as incoming president and advisor, and Tony Kos of Transfer, Pa., YSU assistant professor of management, was installed as secretary/treasurer. Majors Explorations Fair will be Monday, March 23 Representatives from the following colleges will be in attendance: Beeghly College of Education; Bitonte College of Health & Human Services; College of Fine & Performing Arts; College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences; College of Science, Technology, Engineering, & Mathematics; and the Williamson College of Business Administration The event is sponsored by the YSU Academic Advising Association. Prof’s quirky one–liners offer a lesson about life Joanna Zuckla During her classes with Chan, Zuckla, a graphic design major, took note of the professor’s unusual dialogue, scribbling the cryptic metaphors and peculiar one–liners he offered in his lectures in the margins of her notebook. Zuckla decided to compile these short life lessons, memorializing her courses with Chan at the same time, in a 38–page paperback book that she designed as part of her senior project for the fall graduating senior art show last December at the McDonough Museum of Art. “The Typofile’s Guide to the Galaxy” took Youngstown native Zuckla one and one–half months to create, and it showcases Chan’s quirky quotes amid black–and–white themed backgrounds. Released in early November, the book was made internationally available through an online publishing company, Blurb. “It was a step–by–step process. I created my designs to fit their format and went from there,” Zuckla said. “The company allowed me to set my price and take control of my profit.” At $22.95, Zuckla feels that the book will incite nostalgia in her former classmates and entertain and encourage her readers for a reasonable price. For Chan, however, the book was free – and a surprise. Until the senior art show, Zuckla kept her book a secret so that Chan would be surprised when she presented him with a complimentary copy. “The Typofile’s Guide to the Galaxy” is available online at www.blurb.com/book–store/detail/412975. ### |
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