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Wright State to host public health care forum

Wright State University experts will address such hot-button health care issues as the H1N1 pandemic and insurance reform today, Nov. 9, at a public health care forum.

The forum, “Your Money, Your Health: A Discussion About Health Care,” will be held from 5:30 to 8 p.m. today in the Student Union atrium on the Wright State campus in Fairborn. The event is free and open to the public.

The panel of health care experts will include:

  • Stephanie Dopson, health communications specialist and technical specialty unit lead for H1N1 Response, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

  • Gary L. LeRoy, associate dean for Student Affairs and Admissions, Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine.

  • Leatha Ross, director of Wright State Student Health Services

  • Hailey Mahan, co-chair, Wright State Student Government Health Care subcommittee.

The panel discussion will be moderated by Wright State medical students Avash Kalra and Lakshman Swamy, hosts and co-founders of Radio Rounds, the nation’s only medical talk show produced entirely by students.

The event also will feature free refreshments and raffle prizes, according to university officials.

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Fingerhut to honor Choose Ohio First scholars in Dayton

Eric D. Fingerhut, chancellor of the Ohio Board of Regents, will provide congratulatory remarks on Sunday, Nov. 8, at a reception honoring nearly 600 local scholars of the Choose Ohio First Scholarship Program. The event will be held at 2 p.m. at the Dayton Convention Center.

U.S. Air Force Col. Bradley D. Spacy, commander of the 88th Air Base Wing and Installation at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, will give the keynote address.

The scholars, from the eight institutions that make up the Dayton Regional Collaborative, represent some of Ohio’s most promising students studying in Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics and Medicine (STEM) and STEM education programs, according to the Board of Regents.

“Our future workforce depends on our ability to retain our best and brightest students in Ohio,” Fingerhut said. “This next class of STEM scholars will become the competitive advantage our businesses need in a global marketplace.”

Students chosen to participate in the two-year, $100 million Choose Ohio First Scholarship Program are Ohio residents studying in STEM disciplines, the health care professions or STEM teacher education. Scholarships are awarded in varying amounts, from $1,500 to $4,700 annually, to promising undergraduate and graduate students at Ohio institutions.

Eight area colleges and universities joined together to form the Dayton Regional STEM Collaborative, which was awarded a $3.9 million grant from the Board of Regents for their proposal, “Growing the STEM Pipeline in the Dayton Region — Becoming an International Center of Excellence for Human Effectiveness/Human Performance.”

Wright State University is the lead institution in the Dayton Regional Collaborative. The other schools are Central State University, the University of Dayton, Wittenberg University, and Clark State, Edison, Sinclair and Southern State Community Colleges.

For more information about Choose Ohio First, click here.

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Local extreme makeover to air Sunday

ABC TV’s Extreme Makeover Home Edition , featuring a Beavercreek family, is expected to air this Sunday at 8 p.m.

Wittenberg University is among dozens of local organizations and businesses that donated time and money to the project to construct a new home for the James Terpenning family.

During the Aug. 6 unveiling of the new house, Wittenberg officials presented four tuition waivers to the family’s children -Josselyn, 6, Jacob and Justin, 2 and Joshua,1. The scholarships, with a current value of $540,000, were the largest educational gifts awarded to date on the program.

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Cedarville geology prof presents controversial findings

The Coconio Sandstone at the Grand Canyon was formed in a water, not desert environment, according to research conducted by Cedarville University’s Associate Professor of Geology.

Professor John Whitmore, presented the results of his 10 years of research during last month’s annual meeting of the Geological Society of America.

The Coconino Sandstone is a rock layer near the top of the Grand Canyon. Many geologists believe it was formed in a wind-blown desert environment and the formation’s large sloping cross beds are the remains of ancient desert sand dunes.

Whitmore collected samples of this sandstone for microscopic examination of the sand grains. He found the sandstone contained dolomite ooliths, small ball-like structures that are only formed in marine settings. Other features such as grains of very soft mica were also evident under the microscope.

“We would not expect to see these minerals if this sandstone was formed in a desert,” Whitmore stated in a university release. “The blowing action of sand would quickly destroy these minerals; however they might survive if carried and deposited by water.”

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Central State to open $9.8 million Natural Sciences Department

Central State University will hold a ribbon-cutting on Thursday, Nov. 5, to open its Natural Sciences Department in the newly completed Center for Education and Natural Sciences.

The event will take place at 11 a.m. on the Central State campus in Wilberforce, Greene County.

The Center for Education and Natural Sciences (CENS) is the first new academic building on the Central State campus in more than 20 years, according to university officials.

Phase I of the project, which houses the 60,000-square-foot College of Education, was completed in the fall of 2006 at a cost of $13.9 million.

Phase II is the Natural Sciences Department, a 40,000-square-foot facility that houses the university’s biology, chemistry and physics areas, as well as a greenhouse. The cost of the new addition was $9.8 million, according to Central State officials.

“The completion of this state of the art Center for Education and Natural Sciences represents continued growth and advancement for the university,” said John W. Garland, Central State president. “Students and faculty have the opportunity to work and learn in one of the premier educational facilities in the state.”

Central State is Ohio’s only public, historically black university. It has record enrollment this fall of 2,436 students, according to university officials.

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UD to hold H1N1 flu clinic for students on Nov. 5

The University of Dayton Health Center has received its first supply of H1N1 flu vaccine for UD students, according to university officials.

This limited supply of vaccine will only be made available on Thursday, Nov. 5, to UD students age 24 and younger who have underlying medical conditions that might put them at high risk for complications from H1N1, also known as swine flu.

Those conditions include asthma, diabetes, heart disease and kidney disease, as well as pregnancy.

An immunization clinic for UD students with underlying medical conditions will be held from 4-6 p.m. Thursday in the MAC gym at the RecPlex.

Students who wish to receive the H1N1 flu vaccine must bring their UD student IDs and wear clothing that allows the upper arm to be easily exposed, according to university officials. Those without a student ID will not be allowed to receive the vaccine.

Students who receive the vaccine will be required to complete a registration form.

The Health Center expects to receive additional doses of the H1N1 vaccine in the near future, and all UD students age 24 and younger will be encouraged to get the vaccine at that time.

UD faculty and staff are instructed to contact their doctors regarding the H1N1 vaccine.

For UD H1N1 flu updates, click here.

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UD to hold ‘Kristallnacht’ vigil on Nov. 9

The University of Dayton will hold a candlelight vigil on Monday, Nov. 9, to remember the night that many historians view as the beginning of the Holocaust.

The public is invited to join UD faculty, staff and students at 9 p.m. Monday at Humanities Plaza for a ceremony to commemorate Kristallnacht — the “Night of Broken Glass.”

On Nov. 9, 1938, the Nazis launched a wave of pogroms — state-sanctioned, anti-Jewish riots — against Germany’s Jews.

Using the pretext of the assassination of a German diplomat in Paris, Joseph Goebbels urged Storm Troopers to stage violent reprisals. The night of rampages resulted in 91 Jewish dead, hundreds injured, and 7,500 businesses and 177 synagogues gutted, according to the Columbia Encyclopedia.

The name Kristallnacht is a reference to the broken glass that resulted from the riots, as countless windows in synagogues and Jewish-owned businesses were shattered.

The riots marked an intensification of Nazi anti-Jewish policy that would culminate in the Holocaust — the systematic, state-sponsored murder of Jews.

“We live in a world where ethnic and racial violence still exists, in places like Darfur, for example,” said Sister Laura Leming, a UD sociology professor.

“As a Catholic university that celebrates diversity and community and commemorates the martyrdom of Marianist priest Jakob Gapp in the Holocaust, it is fitting for us to stand together and say ‘never again,’ ” Leming said.

In the event of heavy rain, the vigil will be held in the Immaculate Conception Chapel on UD’s campus.

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