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Kent State Student’s Project Draws Attention to Endangered Irish Language

Anna Hoffman, a Kent State University global communication studies and political science major from Kent, Ohio, traveled to Ireland this summer to study the country’s efforts to save its national language.

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Grand Opening of Kent State Stark Science and Nursing Building Celebrated on Aug. 27

Posted Aug. 31, 2015 | Cynthia Williams
enter photo description
Kent State University at Stark’s new Science and Nursing
Building supports the science programs and houses
teaching and research laboratories for biology, physics,
geology and nursing.

An opening celebration to formally introduce Kent State University at Stark’s Science and Nursing Building, the campus’s seventh major structure, was held on Thursday, Aug. 27.

The 41,140-square-foot building is Kent State Stark’s anchor for its science and health-related disciplines. Faculty members and classes from nursing, biological sciences, physics and geology departments are housed in the new facility. The festive event also celebrated the renovation of 5,250 square feet of chemistry laboratory space in the existing Main Hall building that connects to the Science and Nursing Building through a second-floor lounge and walkway.

The state-of-the-art building includes numerous environmental features, which earned it a LEED® (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Gold Certification. The sustainability-focused design elements include a solar-generated hot water system, a green roof, light-harvesting system in classrooms, energy-saving heat recovery chiller and a storm water management system, among others. Adjacent to the Science and Nursing Building is a vertical wind turbine that produces on-site renewable energy for the building.

Kent State Stark Interim Dean Denise Seachrist, Kent State President Beverly Warren and Stark Campus Advisory Board Chairman Dr. John Humphrey Jr. made brief remarks to welcome the crowd of nearly 200 community leaders, Kent State administrators, faculty and staff. At the end of the program, Seachrist presented Warren with a framed artist’s concept of the campus’s newly installed sundial, which is prominently placed north of the building, announcing that the structure has been dedicated in her honor.

enter photo description
(From left to right) Dr. John Humphrey Jr., chair of the Stark
Campus Advisory Board, Kent State President Beverly
Warren
and Kent State Stark Interim Dean Denise
Seachrist
gather around the new sundial, dedicated along
with the Science and Nursing Building on the Stark Campus.

“It is our distinct pleasure to dedicate this beautiful work of art as a tribute to you,” Seachrist said. “As the sunburst represents the bright spot that is Kent State University, let this sundial remind our students that they are the bright spot in all that we do at Kent State Stark and that they have arrived at Stark County’s destination for education.”

The attendees were encouraged to explore the building at their leisure, learning about laboratory space and the technologically advanced equipment firsthand from the faculty members and lab assistants who will be teaching and supporting these academic areas.

The new building is a part of Kent State’s Foundations of Excellence: Building the Future initiative, which involves the construction of new buildings, facility upgrades and establishment of dynamic and new spaces. The goal of this initiative is to create the most outstanding academic experience for students, faculty, staff, alumni and the greater community enriched by the university.

For more information about Kent State Stark’s Science and Nursing Building, visit www.kent.edu/stark/science-nursing-building.

For more information about Kent State’s Foundations of Excellence initiative, visit www.kent.edu/foundations.