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Calendar Monday, Oct. 26, 8 p.m.
Dana Symphony Orchestra performs in the Ford Family Recital Hall at The
Eleanor Beecher Flad Pavilion in the DeYor Performing Arts Center in
downtown Youngstown. Wednesday and Thursday, Oct. 28 and 29. Rhythm In Shoes, a Dayton–based dance and music company, conducts free workshops in Beeghly Center, followed by a free concert at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 29 in Ford Theater. See News Brief below. Wednesday, Oct. 28, 12:15 p.m. Music At Noon concert features the Dana School of Music's Tuba/Euphonium Ensemble in the Butler Institute of American Art. Free. Wednesday, Oct. 28, 8 p.m. The Dana School of Music's Percussion Ensemble performs in Butler North. Thursday, Oct. 29, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
YSU Student Organization of Dental Hygienist sponsors at blood drive in
McKay Auditorium at the Beeghly College of Education. Thursday, Oct. 29, 8 p.m. Faculty
Artist Recital features the Dana Flute and Guitar Duo (Kathryn Thomas
Umble, flute, and Francois Fowler, guitar) in Bliss Recital Hall Friday, Oct. 30, 4 p.m. Dana
Gioia, former chair of the National Endowment for the Arts, speaks in
the Gallery in Kilcawley Center. He gives a poetry reading at 7 p.m., also in the Gallery. Gioia has published three full–length collections of poetry as well as eight chapbooks. His collection, Interrogations at Noon,
won the 2002 American Book Award. Gioia is at YSU as part of a two–day
course on Literary Publishing presented by Etruscan Press. Friday and Saturday, Oct. 30 and 31. The YSU volleyball squad takes on Wisconsin–Green Bay 7 p.m. Friday in Beeghly Center, followed by a match with Milwaukee 2 p.m. Saturday. Friday and Saturday, Oct. 30 and 31. YSU's
Ward Beecher Planetarium shows 'Nightlights' at 6 and 8 p.m. both days
and 'The Halloween Show' 1 and 2:30 p.m. on Saturday. Visit http://www.cc.ysu.edu/physics–astro/planetarium_2009proofc.pdf. Friday, Oct. 30, 8 p.m. Misook Yun, Voice Studio Recital in Bliss Recital Hall. Saturday, Oct. 31. YSU Homecoming features a parade at 2 p.m. along Fifth Avenue, followed by YSU vs. South Dakota State in Stambaugh Stadium at 4 p.m. (Note: It is the first time in 17 years that YSU has played a home game on Halloween. All–time, the Penguins are 4–4 in Halloween contests.) At halftime, the 2009 Homecoming King and Queen will be crowned. For more Homecoming activities, see News Brief below. YSU celebrates Homecoming 2009 this week The full list of events is available at http://www.ysu.edu/reccenter/Homecoming_2009_Events_Poster_eps.pdf. Among the activities:
Exhibition of 'Anne Frank of Slovakia' at YSU YSU students in the Applied History program utilized a translation of the diary of Kitty's father, BŽla Weichherz, to create the exhibition text, which tells the compelling story of Kitty Weichherz, the Anne Frank of Slovakia. The diary's translator, Daniel Magilow of the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, will give a lecture titled "The Short Life and Death of Kitty Weicherz (1929–1942)." The exhibition and lecture are hosted by the YSU Center for Judaic and Holocaust Studies. It is free and open to the public. The exhibition features an accompanying book, "In Her Father''s Eyes: A Childhood Extinguished by the Holocaust." The book, which is a translation of the diary, is available at the YSU bookstore. The exhibition is co–developed and co–sponsored by YSU, University of Tennessee–Knoxville, and Kennesaw State University. It received additional funding from local residents Leonard Spiegel and Joy Elder. 'We are IT' conference set for Nov. 13 The professional Information Technology (IT) conference is an initiative of the Ohio IT Business Advisory Network, produced with funds provided by the federal Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Applied Technology Act and through a grant from the Office of Career–Technical and Adult Education, Ohio Department of Education. The purpose of the conference is to familiarize young women with various aspects of Information Technology and other Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics disciplines and to encourage them to continue their education and pursue a rewarding career in one of the STEM fields. During the daylong program, participants choose from eight workshops, including Engineering (Bridge Construction or Building a Digital Counter); Computer Science and Information Systems (How to Program with Alice, Building Lego Robots, Working with Binary Numbers, Cryptography: Writing Secret Codes; or Flash Animation); and the Planetarium (Behind the Console at the Planetarium). The keynote speaker is Dr. Consuelo Mendez, a physician specializing in general internal medicine. Born in the Dominican Republic, Mendez completed her education in Puerto Rico and moved to Youngstown to complete her internship and residency at St. Elizabeth Hospital in 1987. Besides having been in private practice full–time since 1987, Mendez has also been employed by Medix Evaluations. She was on staff at Shenango Primary Health Network from 1988 to 2002 and is currently on staff at St. Elizabeth and Forum Health. Sponsors for this year's program include Mahoning County Career and Technical Center, the YSU Division of Student Affairs, YSU Department of Associate Degrees and Tech Prep Programs, YSU Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, YSU Department of Engineering Technology, Ohio Department of Education, Industrial Information Institute for Education Incorporated and Youngstown City Schools. Dance group holds workshops, performs at YSU The workshops will be in several on–campus locations and the concert will be in Bliss Hall's Ford Theater. See schedule below. "We are happy to bring Rhythm In Shoes to YSU and to the community," said Christine Cobb YSU associate professor of dance. "Their unique brand of dance is appropriate for all ages and skill levels, and we encourage those interested to participate in one of the free, open workshops." Rooted in traditional forms of American music and dance—swing tunes & tap, hoedowns and clogging—the varied repertoire of RIS, directed by choreographer Sharon Leahy and composer Rick Good, is at once original and recognizable. RIS has toured in 47 states as well as Canada, Japan and Ireland, pursuing the companyÕs mission: to engage the world in music and dance. RIS' visit is underwritten through the Cliffe Family Visiting Artist Series program at YSU. Designed to bring artists of national prominence to YSU, the Series has multiple goals: Cliffe artists are not restricted to one media, rather they may engage in visual arts, music or music composition. They must conduct workshops with students and provide a community outreach segment to their visit. The Cliffe Family Visiting Artist is rotated between the disciplines yearly within the College of Fine & Performing Arts. Former Youngstown–area residents Wayne and Charles Cliffe established the Series to honor their late parents, Dr. Earle and Ida Cliffe. Dr. Cliffe was a prominent physician in Youngstown in the 1920s and 1930s and both were interested in the arts. More information about Rhythm In Shoes is available at www.rhythminshoes.org. Information about this or any of the workshops is available by calling the University Theater Box Office at 330–941–3105. The schedule:
Research luncheon celebrates record year Awards will be given to faculty members and academic departments for exceptional accomplishments in research. This year's awards ceremony comes on the heels of a record–breaking year for the university. Faculty and staff garnered $11.7 million in grants during fiscal year 2009, up more than 70 percent from 2008. Since 2000, the amount of grants awarded to YSU faculty and staff has nearly quadrupled. Chemistry professor Tim Wagner landed the year's largest grant, $2.1 million through the Third Frontier initiative from
the Ohio Department of Development to fund the Center for Excellence in
Advanced Materials Analysis. YSU also received more than $2.2 million
in federal appropriations, including $1.3 million to chemistry
professor Allen Hunter by the U.S. Department of Defense to establish the National Defense Center of Excellence in Industrial Metrology and 3D Imaging. External grant funding 2009 $11.7 million ### |
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