ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú Media Highlights Feb. 9-15
ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú Media Highlights Feb. 9-15
Artburst, Feb. 15:
The New World Symphony Festival is produced in partnership with Tammy Kernodle, University Distinguished Professor of Music, and premieres Feb. 18 at the New World Center in ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú Beach.
Dayton Daily News, Feb. 14:
Travis Steele, head coach of the ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú men’s basketball team, is quoted in this column on the team’s success. Additional coverage on this topic also appeared in the .
Journal-News, Feb. 12:
This article shares the recent success of the men’s and women’s basketball team, as well as ice hockey, as fans purchase ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú apparel. Alecia Lipton, director of media and public relations, is quoted.
American Heart Association, Feb. 10:
The American Heart Association and The Children’s Heart Foundation jointly fund new research into congenital heart disease. Jennifer Schumacher, assistant professor of Biological Sciences, received funding.
The Conversation, Feb. 10:
Robbyn Abbitt, associate director of the Geospatial Analysis Center, and her students developed a database of more than 5,000 headstones marking where over 6,000 individuals had been laid to rest. With old field methods, this would have taken over 1,200 hours. The new methods cut that time in half: just over 600 hours of work.
Columbia Journalism Review, Feb. 10:
The Oxford Free Press has benefited from a symbiotic relationship between an aging community that relies on a print newspaper and journalism students and recent graduates who need jobs and a place to practice their craft. Richard Campbell, professor emeritus from the Department of Media, Journalism, and Film, is quoted.
Hispanic Outlook on Education Magazine, Feb. 2026:
Jamie Bercaw Anzano, director of communications and research for Project Dragonfly, wrote this article on how Project Dragonfly’s Earth Expeditions program immerses graduate students in Latin American ecosystems through community-based conservation field courses in Mexico, Belize, Costa Rica, and Paraguay.
Cincinnati Business Courier, Feb. 9:
This article focuses on ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú’s RedHawk50 program, which celebrates the fastest-growing companies owned or led by its alumni.
Spectrum 1 News, Feb. 9:
Joseph Ransdell, assistant professor of Biology, is quoted in this story on how he and Samuel Brown ’19, doctoral candidate in Biology, learned to “rescue” malfunctioning brain cells linked to autism spectrum disorder by restoring the electrical signals that allow neurons to communicate.