Mark Satola
Host-Producer-
Holly Barkdoll, along with her husband, has been creating Holiday magic on stage for 29 years for Magical Theatre Company.
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David Schmoll thought he was leaving music behind years ago when he came to study at Kent, but improv hooked him and it's taken his life to interesting places.
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On Today's show, we speak with Dr. Eboni Pringle. Pringle is the Dean of University College at Kent State and oversees the Flashes Fighting Hunger program, previously called Campus Kitchen. The organization is run by students and reaches out to the food insecure in the community.
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Dr. Earl Miller of the Picower Institute of Learning and Memory at M.I.T. talks about how humans are incapable of actual multi-tasking.
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In this episode, Earl Miller Ph.D. sheds light on how the brain works and what inner processes happen to allow our mind to function correctly. He is a pioneering researcher into the brain's neural basis of executive control which includes working memory, attention, decision making, and learning.
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Dr. Michael Lehman talks about new facilities opening for the Brain Health Research Institute created by Kent State University, Akron Children's Hospital, NEOMED and Cleveland Clinic.
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Ruslanas Iržikevičius is the Distinguished Humphrey Fellowship Program, in the Kent State School of Media and Journalism. He is a renowned journalist, the founder of the Lithuanian Tribune, and BaltoScandia Media. While here at Kent, Dean Amy Reynolds spoke with him about what he hopes to accomplish here in the United States, and about the value of independent journalism.
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Covid-19 has been with us for more than a year and touched all aspects of public life, including that of students and staff at Kent State University. We spoke with Dr. Manfred Van Dulmen, an Associate Provost for Academic Affairs and the Dean of the Division of Graduate Studies at Kent State University to highlight the current safeguards and strategies that Kent State University has in place regarding the pandemic.
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After the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, WKSU's reporters and producers spoke with Northeast Ohioans about their reaction to the tragedy.
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A large cache of stone tools found in Ohio might be the largest found in North America