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Great recipes from the Homeplate crew: Page 17-19
Lamb foundation donates $100,000 to Jambar TV
Kent Trumbull adding solar panels to buildings
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he Youngstown State University Foundation is announcing the donation of a $100,000 gift from The Jane F. Lamb Charitable Foundation to benefit Youngstown State University’s student-run news program, Jambar TV. The donation will allow YSU to expand upon and improve the capabilities of Jambar TV with the addition of a new multiplatform software system for the newsroom. The updated system will enable students to gain experience in an environment that mirrors the professional news setting that many will enter after graduation. The multi-platform system will also provide the opportunity to add a television studio to the Jambar newsroom located adjacent to the food court in Kilcawley Center. Jambar TV will acknowledge the support from the Foundation during each broadcast. Lamb’s distinguished career in journalism makes the acknowledgment of the Foundation’s support even more significant. Jambar TV was launched in August 2019 to provide YSU students with more opportunities to access news about campus activities and provide additional real-world experience for media students. The show is produced by the same editorial staff that publishes the print edition of The Jambar and the digital version at thejambar.com. During its first year of existence, Jambar TV was awarded first place by the Society for Collegiate Journalists in the category of “Television News Show, Overall Excellence.” “Jane would be pleased to assist YSU students with careers in journalism. Education was important to her,” said James H. Sisek, a lifelong friend, and the trustee of the Jane F. Lamb Charitable Foundation.
A $100,000 gift from The Jane F. Lamb Charitable Foundation will benefit YSU’s student-run news program, Jambar TV.
The updated system will enable students to gain experience in an environment that mirrors the professional news setting that many will enter after graduation. Lamb was one of two daughters of Helen and Howard Lamb. She graduated from The Rayen School and also graduated from the University of Michigan and the Katharine Gibbs School in New York City. Jane was a well-respected columnist and reporter for the Youngstown Vindicator her entire career. She was prominent in charitable and civic pride throughout the community, especially covering children’s activities. Lamb’s father, Howard, was an engineer and the inventor of the cold rolling process for cold rolling steel. She lived in the family
YSU
home on Fifth Avenue for 70 years. Her sister Margaret was an opera singer in New York City and then an intensive care nurse at Northside Hospital. The Jane F. Lamb Charitable Foundation supports many charities in the Youngstown area and recently contributed the first gift of $50,000 to the United Way in March as the COVID-19 pandemic struck, to provide food for area school children. The Youngstown State University Foundation focuses on supporting the advancement of Youngstown State University. The Foundation is the designated philanthropic entity for the University and is the largest public university foundation in Northeast Ohio. To learn more about how the Foundation supports YSU and its students, visit http://ysufoundation.com/.
Kent State University at Trumbull is one of six Kent State regional campuses adding solar panels this fall. The Trumbull solar array will provide clean energy representing about 65 percent of campus use. It is enough energy to power 197 homes and eliminate 1,284 tons of CO2 per year. Last fall, Kent State University and Ten Nine Energy agreed to a power purchase agreement over 25 years. In return for purchasing solar power, Kent State campuses pay no out-of-pocket expenses for the panels and installation. It is estimated that the campus will save over $24,000 the first year and more than $1.3 million over 25 years. Kent State University will save more than $6.3 million over 25 years. “This is a win-win for the campus and the community,” said Kent State Trumbull spokesperson, Bill Burgess. “We will save money, help improve air quality, and possibly add some educational opportunities.” Pollinator prairie flowers will be planted throughout the solar array, yielding both a natural beauty and a refuge for native honeybees, butterflies and other pollinators that will help restore balance to the ecosystem. This area of native perennial plants has the potential to become a living laboratory for further environmental, biological, and botanical study. Similar projects are underway at Ashtabula, East Liverpool, Geauga, Kent, Salem, and Stark. Project completion is estimated for spring 2021.
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