Kent State University-trumbull Campus News

Browse past news stories for Kent State University-trumbull Campus in Warren, OH:

  • Gifts give boost to animal shelter (Tribune Chronicle)
    posted on August 26, 2009 at 04:11:19 am
    LORDSTOWN - Gifts from two local philanthropic families will help the Animal Welfare League of Trumbull County move into new facilities in Champion. The Welfare League announced that the Covelli family and Cafaro Foundation each donated $250,000 toward relocation to the proposed $6.6 million Animal Welfare Care and Education Center in Champion.
  • Friends stunned by death (Tribune Chronicle)
    posted on August 5, 2009 at 04:42:23 am
    SOUTHINGTON - Just months after pinning on flowers at their junior prom, the friends of Christie Manchester, 17, were taking flowers to a makeshift memorial at the site of the car crash that killed her Monday. "She was such an intelligent person," said fellow Southington schools classmate Brandon Shafer. "She was really a great person.
  • Proposal: $6 million animal shelter (Tribune Chronicle)
    posted on July 2, 2009 at 04:32:05 am
    CHAMPION - A proposed $6 million Animal Welfare Care & Education Center next to the Trumbull Career and Technical Center not only would be a boon to stray animals, it also would encourage training programs to attract new veterinarians to the area.
  • One of 20 pass test of promotion (Tribune Chronicle)
    posted on May 29, 2009 at 04:46:55 am
    WARREN - Trumbull County Sheriff Tom Altiere said he still has to wait until deputies challenge certain questions on a recent promotion exam to see if anyone can lobby for enough additional points. But for the time being, of the 17 deputies who tested to become sergeants and three sergeants who tested to become lieutenants, only one person passed the test. Sgt.
  • Officials, educators want high-tech workers (Tribune Chronicle)
    posted on April 14, 2009 at 04:09:37 am
    CHAMPION - While fear about the future of the area's largest employers persists, local elected leaders and educators are looking to retrain workers for the high-tech jobs of the future.