- Business, engineering to offer new master's degree
- Foster named coach of year, Davenport top player
- Ohio State research investigates alternative diabetes treatment
- High-powered computer network to boost education, business
- University Hospital wins nursing award
- Ohio Senate recognizes book award recipient
- Surgeons perform first heart-lung transplant
- New center integrates mainstream and alternative therapies
- Less funding forces delay in library renovation
- Vet prof to co-direct $5 million USDA avian flu project
 |
|
Glenn Institute dedicates new home at Page Hall
Page Hall, the new home of the John Glenn Institute for Public Service and Public Policy and the School of Public Policy and Management, was officially dedicated March 3. The program featured remarks
by Senator John Glenn, Ohio State President Karen Holbrook, Board of Trustees Chair Tami Longaberger, Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer, and Columbus Mayor Michael Coleman. Many different offices
have used Page Hall over the years: the State Health Department (prior to 1919), the old College of Commerce and Journalism (1916-24), Music (1940s), and the College of Law (until 1959). READ
MORE >
|
Business, engineering to offer new master’s degree
The Fisher College of Business and the College of Engineering are partnering on a Master of Business logistics engineering degree, one of the few programs of its kind in the United States. The
new program will begin autumn quarter 2005. The 9-to-15 month degree is offered jointly by the Fisher College of Business’ Department of Marketing and Logistics and the College of Engineering’s
Department of Industrial, Welding, and Systems Engineering, which were recently named as top-20 programs according to U.S. News and World Report. READ
MORE >
back to top
Foster named coach of year, Davenport top player
Ohio State women’s basketball player Jessica Davenport was named the 2005 Big Ten Player of the Year by both the coaches and media, and head coach Jim Foster was the coaches’ selection for coach
of the year, the Big Ten Conference announced March 2. Caity Matter was named to the coaches and media second teams, and Brandie Hoskins garnered coach and media third-team honors. The Big Ten co-champs
Ohio State Buckeyes (27-3, 14-2 Big Ten) earned the top seed in the 2005 Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament (3/3-3/7) for the first
time in school history. READ MORE >
back to top
Ohio State research investigates alternative diabetes treatment
An Ohio State University researcher has found that an herb used in traditional Indian medicine to treat diabetes seems to lower blood sugar and insulin levels in a manner similar to prescription drugs.
When researchers gave extracts of the herb Salacia oblonga (native to regions of India and Sri Lanka) to 39 healthy adults, a 1,000 mg. dose of the herb extract decreased insulin levels in healthy
adults by 29 percent and blood glucose levels by 23 percent. READ MORE >
back to top
High-powered computer network to boost education, business
Ohio State and other Ohio universities are joining with the Ohio Supercomputer Center to harness the power of the Third Frontier Network, a new high-powered computer network connecting Ohio’s
public and private universities, and eventually many high-tech companies; medical centers; and elementary, middle, and high schools. The network is unique in the nation, giving Ohio opportunities
that few other states can match: new ways to reach primary- and secondary-school students, improved health care, and stimulus for economic development. READ
MORE >
back to top
University Hospital wins nursing award
The American Nurses Association awarded its coveted “Magnet” designation this week to the OSU Hospital's nursing department, an achievement on par with winning an Olympic gold medal. Fewer
than 3 percent of the hospitals in the United States—just 140 hospitals nationwide—have received the Magnet designation, which recognizes the high-caliber nursing staff in addition to nursing education
and research achievements. READ MORE >
back to top
Ohio Senate recognizes book award recipient
The Ohio Senate recognized Associate Professor of History Kevin Boyle’s 2004 National Book Award for nonfiction March 1 in the Senate Chambers for his book Arc of Justice: A Saga of Race, Civil
Rights, and Murder in the Jazz Age. More than 200 publishers submitted a record 1,074 books for the award. READ MORE >
back to top
Surgeons perform first heart-lung transplant
A 33-year-old woman has ended years of illness associated with a congenital heart defect after undergoing central Ohio’s first heart-lung transplant February 8 at the Richard M. Ross Heart
Hospital. A team of surgeons from the OSU Comprehensive Transplant Center pooled their expertise in a transplantation option available to patients at fewer than 50 centers in the country. The patient,
Michelle Vulhop of Ironton, Ohio, was doing “very well” after the surgery, said Benjamin Sun, chief of cardiothoracic surgery and the lead surgeon during the operation. READ MORE >
back to top
New center integrates mainstream and alternative therapies
The University Medical Center has opened a Center for Integrative Medicine designed to combine mainstream medicine with complementary therapies and to enhance overall well being. Patient care
in the center will integrate the conventional treatments of family medicine with therapies ranging from acupuncture and chiropractic to massage and yoga. The center also is expected to enhance
resident physician training, expand curriculum options for students in medicine and related health fields, broaden the medical center’s research capabilities, and open new areas of scholarship. READ
MORE >
back to top
Less funding forces delay in library renovation
Due to a 20 percent reduction by the state in the amount approved for capital projects at the Columbus campus, the start of construction for the renovation of the William Oxley Thompson Library (Main Library)
has been delayed until the summer of 2006. Other projects that are already under construction—including the Robinson Lab replacement, Psychology Building replacement, and Larkins rehabilitation—will
continue uninterrupted.
back to top
Vet prof to co-direct $5 million USDA avian flu project
Richard Slemons, associate professor of veterinary preventive medicine, has been selected as the co-director of a USDA National Research Initiative research and education project to help prevent and control
avian influenza. This project was awarded the largest single grant ever made by the USDA NRI for a single animal health disease or zoonotic threat (disease passed from animals to humans) and involves investigators
from 17 states.
back to top
|