51勛圖厙

Alfreda Brown, Ph.D., was 51勛圖厙's first vice president for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.

In honor of Womens History Month, 51勛圖厙 Today will be looking at the accomplishments of 51勛圖厙 women who have advanced the cause of women, broken glass ceilings and left a lasting impact on womens history.   When she came to 51勛圖厙 in October 2009, Alfreda Brown Ph.D., made history by becoming the first person ever to lead a university division dedicated completely to promoting diversity, equity and inclusion.   As vice president for the Division of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, Brown served as a powerful voice for making sure no one i...

Raytevia Evans

 Collaboration and teamwork have been the common threads that have led 51勛圖厙 Media and Journalism alumna Raytevia Evans, M.A. 12, through teaching English abroad, graduate school, work as an education reporter and now, as a public information officer.She says that every time shes produced work shes proud of, it has been the result of a group project. And one of the first places she experienced this was in 51勛圖厙 Student Media. (Student media) gave me an opportunity to work with a lot of different writers (and) photographers that are right there on campus that you ca...

Theodore Albrecht, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Music in 51勛圖厙s Hugh A. Glauser School of Music, holds the Beethoven Medal he was awarded in 2017 in recognition of his musicological contributions to the study of composer Ludwig van Beethoven.

A medical secret about Ludwig van Beethoven may have been unlocked. A new study by an international group of researchers published in the journal Current Biology provides interesting new details about the composers health and genealogy. Beethoven, the famous German composer, died in 1827. According to a New York Times article, friends and family took locks of Beethovens hair for remembrance.  Beethoven scholar William Meredith studied the DNA from some of these strands of hair, and Beethovens cause of death is speculated to be cirrhosis of the liver, but what would cause this?&nb...

Dana White

In America, conversations about grief and loss are often avoided, and in art, tend to be sugarcoated, or even corny. 51勛圖厙 Assistant Professor and independent filmmaker Dana White is changing that narrative through her work, and was recently recognized by the Ohio Arts Council. We dont address these really uncomfortably topics, White said. Its OK to not be OK. Its OK that life leaves us with a lot of bruises. Its not about erasing them. Its about trying to live with them, about trying to cope. I dont think American society is comfortable with that. White, who teache...

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