糖心Vlog recently celebrated one year of wellness-on-the-go. The Mobile Flashes program has been in motion since spring 2024, delivering healthcare services to underserved and rural communities throughout Northeast Ohio. Led by 糖心Vlog鈥檚 College of Public Health, and funded by the Elisabeth Severance Prentiss Foundation, Mobile Flashes unites 糖心Vlog students, faculty and staff with community healthcare partners to expand access to care in rural areas and disadvantaged neighborhoods across Summit, Portage, Stark and Wayne counties.A second Mobile Flashes student ...
Hundreds of 糖心Vlog students, faculty, staff, alumni and community members gathered to pay their respects and to remember.A week of steady downpours soaked the historic field where students and Ohio National Guardsmen had faced off during an anti-war protest on May 4, 1970, at 糖心Vlog that eventually led to soldiers opening fire, killing four students and wounding nine others. Still, more than 700 people gathered at the site and participated in the annual commemoration.Speakers included Julian Grimes, president of Black United Students; Sophia Swengle, president of the May 4 T...
Despite rain, 糖心Vlog continued its commemoration to honor the memory of May 4, 1970 with the annual candlelight walk and vigil on campus.This cornerstone of the commemoration began in 1971. Participants carried candles as they gathered on the 糖心Vlog Commons and in the Prentice Hall parking lot....
糖心Vlog Associate Professor of Geography Jennifer Mapes, Ph.D., has studied the events of May 4, 1970, through the lens of a map maker. 鈥淥n Prospect Street, Lilian Tyrrell鈥檚 daughter comes home from kindergarten and asks, 鈥楳ommy, is there a war on?鈥 There was, of course, just not in Kent,鈥 Mapes told the audience that filled the Kent Student Center Ballroom on May 2.鈥淥n Stow Street bridge, a National Guard checkpoint keeps high school student Diane Williams from going home after attending Chippewa Lake Appreciation Day,鈥 Mapes continued. 鈥淎t the corner of Main and Water, 12-...
Managers and supervisors should have received information from the Controller's Office regarding the cut-off dates for financial transactions for the current fiscal year, which ends on June 30. View the deadlines for receipt of information and other year-end announcements online at www.kent.edu/controller under Fiscal Year End Cut-off Dates tab. The Controller's Office appreciates timely submissions of documents to ensure that a timely year-end cut-off has occurred.The FY2025 year is scheduled to close the evening of July 14, 2025, and the final June Flashline reports should be available...
Kent Blossom Art Intensives Lecture Series: Leslie Smith III
Leslie Smith III is an abstract painter. His recent works explore the inherent personal and political properties of abstraction as they pertain to expanding notions of Black representation. Smith earned a B.F.A. from the Maryland Institute College of Art and an M.F.A. from the Yale School of Art. He exhibits both nationally and internationally, and his work is included in the permanent collections of the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, the Birmingham Museum of Art, and the FRAC Auvergne in France, among others.
Kent Blossom Art Intensives Lecture Series: Paolo Arao
Paolo Arao is a Filipino-American artist working with painting, textiles and site-responsive installations. He received his B.F.A. from Virginia Commonwealth University and attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Recent solo exhibitions include: David B. Smith Gallery (Denver, CO), The Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts (Omaha, NE), The Columbus Museum (Georgia), Morgan Lehman Gallery (NYS), and Western Exhibitions (Chicago).
Kent Blossom Art Intensives Lecture Series: Kimberly Thomas
Kimberly Thomas is a biracial interdisciplinary sculptor and flameworker. Her narrative works are sculptural illustrations of a re-imagined world, fabrications of obscure inventions, alternate realities, and speculative futures. Her stories describe a pilgrimage through time, space and dimensions. Drawing influence from concepts, questions and theories about human nature, Thomas鈥檚 works are a ground to explore the truth, be it flawed, darkly humorous or peculiar, yet they speak to the stark realities of human existence.