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Kent State Anthropology Professor Sails Around the Solomon Islands for United Nations Documentary Project

Kent State University Professor of Anthropology Richard Feinberg, Ph.D., joined a team from the Sedna Foundation, a Canadian nongovernmental organization, to work on a documentary that was shot in the Solomon Islands this past summer as part of a three-year international research project titled “1,000 Days for the Planet.”

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Kent State Earns Tree Campus USA Designation

Posted Jan. 27, 2014 | Hannah Hamner

Trees line a section of the Lester A. Lefton Esplanade, which connects the university to downtown.

Kent State University recently earned the Arbor Day Foundation’s Tree Campus USA designation for the sixth consecutive year. Founded in 2008, Tree Campus USA acknowledges colleges and universities nationwide for campus forest management and commitment to conservation goals.

The excitement of receiving this honor has not diminished for Heather White, grounds manager of University Facilities Management at Kent State.

“It means a lot, especially since we’re able to be successful year after year,” White says. “It shows our commitment to the campus green infrastructure.”

White worked with faculty and students to meet the five standards needed to be a Tree Campus USA: sustaining a tree advisory committee, developing a tree care plan, dedicating annual expenditures toward trees, educating the campus community through Arbor Day observances and completing student service learning projects.

White says most of the students participating in the service learning projects are members of Kent State’s urban forestry class. The students are expected to take an inventory of the trees on campus and share their findings with University Facilities Management.

“My theory is we’re getting them young and training them right,” White says. “They already have an interest in trees if they’re taking the class. We hope that they take what they’ve learned and share it among their friends.”

Kent State’s tree advisory committee board consists mainly of the required titles of professionals on and off campus. White is actively encouraging more student involvement, especially among biology students, though the board is open to anyone with an interest in trees on the campus grounds. The committee assists in providing guidance for a campus tree plan and the education of the benefits of trees on campus and in the community.

A beautiful campus scene, which showcases<BR> some of the trees on campus.
Students walk by snow-covered trees on campus.

“We are the first impression for perspective students,” she says. “We never lose that thought as we go about our business. Trees offer cleanliness and safety and contribute a great deal to the campus. The measures we take go a long way. We’re very proud.”

Find more benefits of a tree-friendly campus and the Tree Campus USA program.

Anyone interested in serving on the university’s tree advisory committee should contact White at hwhite1@kent.edu.