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YSU establishes Centofanti School of Nursing

YOUNGSTOWN – Youngstown State University’s Nursing department is getting a new name – the James and Coralie Centofanti School of Nursing.

“With this naming, James and Coralie Centofanti’s hard work and generosity will live for generations through the countless students who come to YSU to pursue their dreams of a career in Nursing,” YSU President Jim Tressel said today.

“The naming is particularly noteworthy at this moment as we have all come to realize and better appreciate the vital importance and the tremendous dedication of frontline healthcare workers.”

The Centofanti Charitable Foundation has pledged $1 million to support the Nursing school and to establish a scholarship for minority nursing students.

“The university School of Nursing provides such an invaluable service for our community at large in the Mahoning Valley,” said Mark Graham, chair of the Centofanti Charitable Foundation’s distribution committee.

Joe Centofanti, a Foundation trustee, added: “My brother worked very hard to earn the money that he left in the Foundation to do things like this. He did the hard part – he earned the money; we’re kind of doing the easy part – we’re figuring out how to distribute it. We’re pleased to be able to do this, and I’m sure he’d be very pleased.”

James Centofanti of Canfield, a successful business owner, philanthropist and horseman, was a long-time member of the Board of Directors of Farmers National Bank in Canfield, a generous supporter of numerous educational and community-based activities in and around the Canfield area, and the recipient of numerous awards for his humanitarian efforts. He died in 2010. His wife, Coralie, died in 1999.

This is the Centofanti Foundation’s second $1 million gift to YSU. In 2012, the Foundation pledged $1 million to establish the James and Coralie Centofanti Center of Health and Welfare for Vulnerable Populations in YSU’s Bitonte College of Health and Human Services. And in 2017, the Foundation pledged $500,000 to help support the successful Centofanti Symposium, which has brought an array of nationally- and internationally recognized speakers to YSU over the past eight years.

“The Centofantis were widely known for their generosity and concern for the disadvantaged; we are honored to have their names on our Nursing school,” said Nancy Wagner, chair of the Nursing school. “In turn, we pledge to the Centofantis that all Nursing students will leave YSU with a keen awareness of and compassion for the health, social and emotional needs of the less fortunate in society.”

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