OHIO STATE BEGINS 121st ACADEMIC YEAR; HIGHLIGHTS NOTED COLUMBUS -- In September of 1873, 25 students enrolled in the first classes at the new Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College. A lot of things have changed over the past 120 years: the fledgling college was renamed The Ohio State University in 1878; enrollment has grown to more than 52,000 students on the Columbus campus; and the fields of study now include subjects beyond the imaginations of those first students and faculty. However, some things remain remarkably similar as classes begin Sept. 22 for the 121st academic year of the university. The Oval is still the emotional, if not geographical, center of campus. The university's mission and purpose are still guided by its Land-Grant heritage of accessability and the integration of teaching, research and service. And students are still greeted by the sounds of construction, as the campus continues to grow, renovate and adapt to contemporary needs. The following pages highlight some of the events and programs scheduled for the 1993-94 academic year at The Ohio State University, as well as some of the changes and trends on campus. For more information about any item, please call the person listed or Ruth Gerstner, assistant director of news services, at (614) 292-8424. Academic programs Students will see little direct impact of the $95 million in budget cutbacks the university has absorbed over the past two and a half years. Throughout the budgeting process, priority was given to academic programs, and additional funding was allocated to key areas such as the general education curriculum, student financial aid, reducing closed courses, and computing. Richard Sisson, provost, 292-5881. The university has allocated $1.75 million this year to add new sections of popular courses that have a history of "closing out." A similar program last year turned around the trend of increasing numbers of students failing to be admitted to the courses they requested. The Office of the Registrar predicts that, this fall, 80 percent of all students will have seats in all of the courses they requested. In a continuing effort to improve the situation, the registrar's office is working on a computerized "wait list" system for students who have been closed out of courses. It will give them priority status the next quarter. The registrar's office hopes to implement the wait-list feature in its telephone registration by spring quarter. Gene Schuster, registrar, 292-1556. Students will have greater access to personal computers. Extra capacity has been added to the 13 public computer laboratories used primarily by undergraduates. Board of Regents funding of $1.5 million allowed for the addition of 125 new computers and upgrading of 214 others already in place. Donald Dell, associate provost, 292-5881. The university will continue the new time schedule begun last spring. Daytime classes now run from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., with classes beginning on the half hour. By adding an hour to the daily schedule, the new system increases the number of classrooms available by 11 percent. Student response to the change has been positive, with good enrollments in the early morning sessions. Robert Arnold, associate provost, 292-5881. For the 11th consecutive year, enrollment has increased in the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences. Psychology is the largest program with nearly 1,200 majors. Also growing in each of the last five years are anthropology, criminology, economics, international studies, sociology, and speech and hearing sciences. The criminology, geography and sociology curricula have been streamlined and made more rigorous. Don Haurin, associate dean, 292-8448. The College of Agriculture's support group for minority students, MANRRS (Minorities in Agriculture, Natural Resources and Related Sciences), was selected as the best program of its kind in the country. L.H. Newcomb, associate dean, 292-6891. The College of Pharmacy has been selected as one of eight U.S. pharmacy schools to provide advanced training to faculty members of pharmacy programs in Thailand. The first two Thai faculty to participate will begin their graduate training at Ohio State this fall. College alumni have raised more than $500,000 for renovation of the professional practice laboratory. Construction of a model pharmacy will begin in 1994. John Cassady, dean, 292-2266. The School of Natural Resources has a new bachelor's degree program in urban forestry. It offers interdisciplinary study in forest ecology, horticulture, arboriculture, landscape architecture, city and regional planning, and social and policy sciences. There is a strong demand for urban foresters, who work for local governments, utility companies, state agencies, and businesses and industries. Trees offer many ecological benefits to urban areas -- producing oxygen, controlling dust, absorbing carbon dioxide, buffering noise, and moderating temperatures. Robert Roth, assistant director, 292-9832. University Libraries has developed The Gateway to Information to enable students to cope with the rapid expansion of available information. The Gateway is a computer system that allows students to identify, locate, evaluate and select the most relevant information, using hundreds of resources in both print and electronic forms. It requires no instruction, even for first-time users. The Gateway is very popular with students, 86 percent of whom have rated their information searches "completely" or "mostly" successful. William Studer, director of libraries, 292-6151. The Department of Slavic and East European Languages and Literatures will welcome Efim Etkind as Distinguished Visiting Professor this autumn. An internationally renowned scholar and leading figure in the Soviet dissident movement, he will share his expertise in Russian literature and translation theory with Ohio State students and faculty. The department offers language courses in Russian, Romanian, Czech, Bulgarian and Serbo- Croatian. It also offers several study-abroad and language immersion programs. Charles Gribble, chairperson, 292-6733. The College of Human Ecology has reopened admission to the Hospitality Management Program, which had been slated for abolishment. New admissions requirements include 400 hours of documented work experience in the hospitality industry. Designs have been approved for an addition to Campbell Hall, home of the college, and groundbreaking is expected early in 1994. Renovation of the Human Nutrition research laboratories is in progress. A study tour to Kenya will focus on family issues as they are resolved by urban and rural Kenyan families. Jerelyn Schultz, dean, 292-6761. The College of Optometry is proud to announce that for the second year its graduates have had extraordinary success in passing the national board examinations. As a group, the Ohio State students exceeded national averages in every category. Ohio State students had a 98 percent overall passing rate in basic sciences and a 100 percent passing rate in clinical sciences, as compared to 73 percent and 75 percent nationally. Arol Augsburger, professor, 292-2788. Physical Facilities/Business and Administration Campus bus service is back, but with a difference! The new Campus Area Bus Service (C.A.B.S.) will offer five different routes: a loop around the central campus with pick-ups every eight minutes, a route into the residential area east of campus, a route to Buckeye Village, a route to the west campus research area, and a route to the northwest with stops at Lane Avenue and Kingsdale shopping centers and the university golf course and airport. The central campus route operates every day, the others only on weekdays. Hours vary for each route. Cost is $20 per quarter for students, faculty or staff, or $50 for a full year. Single-ride tickets are available in books of 10 for $5. Beth Bame, transportation, 292-6122. Recent Columbus campus landscape improvements include new exterior lighting in the North Campus residence halls area and replacement of broken pavement stones in front of the main library. On the schedule for this fall is creation of a garden area between Cunz and Larkins Halls, to include repaving the footpaths, planting a rose garden, and eventually installing more flower beds, seating and a small fountain. James Stevens, associate vice president for physical facilities, 292-0257. Derby Hall, 154 N. Oval Mall, reopens this fall after extensive renovation. The original central atrium has been uncovered, creating a patio area in the middle of the building. A new glass entrance replaces the uninviting tunnel-like entrance of the past. The updating of Derby is the latest step in the university's ongoing process of concentrating academic functions in the central campus area. The bookstore, speech and hearing clinic, and other non-academic units previously located in Derby have been moved and the space turned over for classrooms and faculty offices. University Architect, 292-4458. The new Science and Engineering Library, opened last January, is open 24 hours a day, 360 days a year. Designed by prominent architect Philip Johnson, it is one of the largest science/engineering libraries in the country, with over 375,000 volumes and seating for 720 people. William Studer, director of libraries, 292-6151. Some entomology and plant biology faculty and staff will be moving into the new Biological Sciences Greenhouse complex this fall. A dedication ceremony is planned for later in the fall for the 30,000-square-foot greenhouse, which is located on top of the 12th Avenue parking garage. It will provide state-of-the-art climate control and research facilities for projects such as predator-prey studies of mites, breeding behavior of beetles, studies of vegetable garden pest management, tropical forest ecology, nectar-feeding mosquitoes, soil ecology and the effects of global warming and carbon dioxide increases on plants. In addition, the greenhouse complex houses the National Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center and the Insect Quarantine Facility. More than 3,000 persons -- faculty, graduate researchers and about 2,000 undergraduates -- use the greenhouse facilities each year. Sandi Rutkowski, dean's office, 292-4759. The OSU Child Care Center is the largest university- sponsored on-site child care facility in the United States. It is the 25th largest child care center of any kind in the nation. More than 300 children of students, faculty and staff members are cared for by a staff of 125. It operates 18 hours a day, from 6 a.m. to midnight, with the later hours accommodating second shift workers and students. Payment is on a sliding scale according to income level. Child Care Center, 292-4453. Because of increased demand, additional accommodations have been added to the university's pool of temporary housing for visiting faculty or other long-term guests. Begun about two years ago, the program has expanded to include studio and one- bedroom apartments on Lane Avenue, in Neilwood Gables on North Campus and, soon, on Pennsylvania Avenue near the medical center. Each unit is fully furnished, right down to coffeemakers and bath towels and offers on-site parking and laundry equipment. Maid service, cable television and telephone service are available. Ken Payne, Office of Property Management, 292-0770. The university's bookstore has produced a mail order catalog of exclusive official Ohio State merchandise. Called the Locker Room Collection, it includes a replica of the football jersey worn by the 1968 national champion team. Martha Estrada, 292- 7073. The Department of Reprographics has saved the university more than $451,000 through its Cost-per-Copy program instituted less than two years ago. This is a lease program for photocopiers, which combines the leverage of the university's buying power and copier industry competition to reduce office copying costs by 25 percent or more. Hundreds of Ohio State offices are participating in this program. Carolyn Yates, business management, 292-2000. Though every effort is being made to minimize inconvenience to students and faculy, some signs of renovation will be obvious as the new year begins. Three of the six footbridges which connect to Lincoln and Morrill towers are undergoing structural repairs which will be complete shortly after classes begin. Scaffolding will be up at Brown and Page halls where the roofs are being replaced. Traffic will be maintained on Cannon Drive as it is widened to four lanes between Herrick Drive and King Avenue, but congestion and inconvenience are to be expected throughout the project, which will begin soon. Entrances to Larkins Hall will be fenced off alternately as the building's exterior wall is replaced. Replacement of air conditioning units in the original 1949 portion of Smith Lab will also cause some disturbance. Major construction continues at Dreese Lab on Neil Avenue in the engineering area, Upham Hall at University Hospitals, and the Riffe Connector between the colleges of Biological Sciences and Pharmacy on West 12th Avenue. James Stevens, associate vice president for physical facilities, 292- 0257 Trademark and Licensing Services is commemorating the 25th anniversary of the 1968 national champion Ohio State football team. A commemorative logo was developed and offered to licensees. Some product promotions incorporating the logo are a limited edition of the little 8-oz. Coca-Cola bottles, a collector's drink cup offered at Columbus area 7-Eleven stores, and Bama strawberry preserves in a reusable tumbler. Anne Chasser, director, 292-1562. Student Services and Activities Homecoming will be celebrated Oct. 11 to 16, beginning with a kickoff carnival on the Oval on Monday, Oct. 11. Buckeye Bowl, a game of wits pitting faculty against students, will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 12. On Wednesday, Oct. 13, a fund-raiser involving setting a world record will be held at several locations. Thursday's activities include the Alpha Phi Alpha African American Homecoming Pageant and decorations judging at residence halls and greek houses. The homecoming parade begins at 6 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 15, with former basketball star Jerry Lucas as grand marshal, followed by a pep rally on the Oval at 8 p.m. The homecoming court will be introduced at the football game against Michigan State on Saturday, which will be followed by an evening of jazz and recreation at the Drake Union. Throughout the week, there will be charity fund-raisers and a book collection for the Literacy Council. Brenda Fields, 292-2324. Women's soccer is the the newest varsity sport at Ohio State and will begin intercollegiate play this fall. With the addition of soccer, coached by Lori Henry, Ohio State now offers 32 intercollegiate sports programs. Sports Information, 292-6861. Residence and Dining Halls will offer a new program, "First Year Experience," to help new students develop social skills, academic competence and an awareness of the array of resources available at the university. The program, which uses volunteer peer mentors, will be offered in Baker Hall on the South Campus. Begun at the University of South Carolina, it has been a big success at other universities around the country. Rebecca Parker, associate director, 292-3930 Student Health Services will sponsor a health and fitness fair on Oct. 19. Students will be able to participate in cholesterol screening; measure their cardiac fitness, body fat levels, lung capacity and stress levels; and get information on nutrition and self-exams. All participants will receive gifts and there will be drawings for prizes. The Student Health Service also has updated its human sexuality seminar to include the latest information on birth control and sexually transmitted diseases as well as information on developing healthy relationships through communication and decision making. Free help is available for students who wish to quit using tobacco products. Substance Education Evaluation Decision (SEED) offers counseling, education and follow-up support. Mary Ann Joseph, coordinator of nursing services, 292-0110. Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Student Services will hold a Resource Fair on Oct. 12 from 5 to 8 p.m. in the Faculty Club to welcome new gay, lesbian or bisexual faculty, staff and students. It will feature representatives from campus and Columbus organizations that offer resources to this community. Phil Martin, director, 292-6200. For the first time, the 1993-94 Student Directory (phone book) will include electronic mail addresses. Any student interested in obtaining an e-mail address may contact Academic Computing Services. With e-mail, students can communicate by computer with others on campus and around the world. Academic Computing Services, 292-4843. Regional Campuses The Ohio State University at Lima and the city of Lima are collaborating on a pilot program on race relations that is receiving national attention. "Can't We All Just Get Along" began last May when Lima Mayor David Berger called together area clergy to assist in controlling local reaction after the Rodney King verdict. Carol Fasig, director of continuing education at the Lima campus, advised the city in its efforts to bring the groups together and assisted in writing a grant proposal and training manual. The program uses the study circle technique to conduct sensitivity workshops between members of different religious and racial communities. The program has expanded to train-the- trainer sessions and now, via the clergy, to religious groups throughout the community. Several Lima campus faculty members in sociology, psychology and history are now evaluating the effectiveness of the study circles in reducing racial prejudice. The Lima campus is adding two new two-year programs this fall. Students can follow a business concentration in the already established Associate of Arts degree program or enroll in a new A.A. program with an emphasis in social work which qualifies them as certified activity professionals. Activity professionals work with older adults in day care, retirement living, nursing home and home health care settings. Also new are a graduate level course in women's literature, a student literary magazine, a new psychology laboratory with biofeedback equipment, and remodeled dining facilities. Deirdre O'Driscoll, director of communications, (419) 221-1641. The Ohio State University at Mansfield has experienced huge growth in the number of graduate students attending during summer quarter. From 85 students in 1991, to 182 in 1992, to 273 this summer, the number has increased steadily. Much of the increase has come as a result of special workshops for teachers, including a number sponsored by the North Central Ohio Consortium on Mathematics and Science Teaching. The Mansfield campus is launching a new program this fall for high-risk students. The Academic Success Program will be a contract-based program led by academic adviser Rick Stewart. Students will sign an agreement that requires regular meetings with their advisers and provides an individual prescription for work with various campus support services. Fifty new freshmen have volunteered to join the program, which is an attempt to encourage early identification of problems that lead to student failure. Charles Bird, associate dean, (419) 755-4011. It will soon be possible to commute to The Ohio State University at Newark by bicycle. The campus will be connected to a growing network of local bike paths that will eventually extend from Johnstown, through Newark and eastward into the Blackhand Gorge recreational area. The Newark campus recently graduated its first class of Master of Education students. The new one-year program enables individuals who have bachelor's degrees in areas other than education to earn a teaching certificate for grades 1-8. Seventeen students graduated in June, and another class began studies this summer. Grounds improvements include double reflecting ponds with a teakwood bridge connecting to the new amphitheatre, a new parking lot for the recently completed LeFevre Hall, and renovation of the popular Patio between Founders and Hopewell halls. Newark community leaders are completing a private $350,000 fund drive to provide an 82-foot belltower and scholarship endowment in memory of local banker and education supporter Everett Reese. The campus has announced its 26th annual Ten Evenings on Campus performing arts and travel film series. A schedule is available by calling 366-9375. Terry Blosser, college relations coordinator, 366-9355. Students at The Ohio State University Agricultural Technical Institute in Wooster can now complete an associate's degree entirely through part-time evening classes. The programs take four years and are offered in business management, fluid power and landscape/grounds maintenance. ATI emphasizes hands-on, practical experience in its programs, which is one factor contributing to the outstanding job placement rate. Within 120 days of graduation, 96 percent of ATI graduates have jobs in their fields. Liana Huff, (216) 264-3911. Secrest Arboretum at the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center in Wooster will offer a fantastic show of fall color later this month and into October. The 85-acre arboretum includes many collections with special autumn interest: a 15-acre deciduous tree evaluation plot, an extensive forest-type plantation, a holly display, crabapple trees, and a 2.7-acre Garden of Roses of Legend and Romance. Plantings have been made in the arboretum since 1909. It is open to the public at no charge year round during daylight hours. Over the summer, graduate students at OARDC formed the Association of Graduate Students at Wooster. The group seeks to increase interdisciplinary professional communication, to foster social interaction, and to provide a coordinated voice through representation on the OARDC Administrative Cabinet. Through interactive television faculty and students at Wooster and Columbus can teach and take courses from each other without commuting. This fall, one course each in veterinary preventive medicine, poultry science, horticulture, dairy science, and plant pathology will be taught on the microwave link. Various departmental and faculty meetings are conducted this way, too. Kurt Knebusch, (216) 263-3775. Programs Open to the Public The annual Homecoming Parade and Pep Rally will be held on Friday evening, Oct. 15. The parade, led by grand marshal Jerry Lucas, will begin at 6 p.m. and wind through the campus and High Street. It will be followed by a pep rally on the Oval at 8 p.m., featuring the football team and marching band. The homecoming game against Michigan State will be played at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday in Ohio Stadium. Brenda Fields, 292-2324. The School of Music offers more than 150 free recitals and concerts each year, featuring performances by students, faculty and visiting artists. Other highlights of the music season will include fully staged Opera/Music Theatre productions and these special events (admission charges for these): Men's Glee Club Alumni Reunion Concert on Nov. 13, the Marching Band's annual indoor concert on Nov. 6, and a special Musical Celebration showcase concert on Dec. 3 to wrap up the College of the Arts' 25th anniversary celebration. For tickets, call 292-2354. Other information, 292-6571. In recognition of the College of the Arts' 25th anniversary, Hopkins Hall Gallery will offer a series of exhibitions this fall focusing on the old and new, with current works of faculty and visiting artists as well as the work of alumni of the past 25 years. The first exhibiton, Sept. 22 to Oct. 1, will feature ceramics, painting and drawing, and glass by new and visiting faculty members. The Biennial Alumni Exhibition, Oct. 4-15, will present a chronology of works by graduates representing each of the past 25 academic years. This will be followed by the Department of Industrial Design Alumni Exhibition Oct. 18-29 featuring work by the department's alumni in visual communications, product design and interior space design. Hopkins Hall Gallery, 292-5072. The Department of Theatre will present six main-stage and three studio productions for the 1993-94 season. The mainstage productions are Reckless, a romantic satiric post-modern fable; Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare's classic look at young love and parental authority; Zora Neale Hurston, a loving, spiritual tribute to the queen of the Harlem Renaissance; You Can't Take It With You, the Pultizer-Prize winning screwball comedy about individualism and family loyalty; Mad Forest, an insightful portrayal of the collapse of Communism in Romania; and The Imaginary Invalid, Moliere's timeless farce skewering the medical profession, lawyers and opera. The studio season will include Oedipus at Home: A Work in Progress; Speed the Plow; and In Harme's Way. For ticket information, call 292-2295. The Department of Dance offers a wide-ranging selection of modern dance performances throughout the year. Coming highlights include the Resident and Visiting Artists Concert Nov. 18-20, the Goucher College Dance Co. on Dec. 4, and the University Dance Company Feb. 24-26 and March 3-5. For more information, call 292-7977. The Center for Interdisciplinary Studies in Art and Design has chosen the theme Technology and Postmodern Culture for its 1993-94 lecture series. Roundtable discussions will allow students and faculty to interact closely with visiting speakers. About 10 programs are planned, with the first two being held in October. On Oct. 13, Wayne Carlson, director of Ohio State's Advanced Computing Center for the Arts and Design, will present a video selection of recent computer graphics animation -- ranging from advanced scientific visualization to television commercials -- and discuss the technical development of this rapidly evolving medium. On Oct. 20, Richard Bolt, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will talk about interaction between computers and humans via speech, gesture and gaze. Lois Foreman- Wernet, 292-8050. The Wexner Center for the Arts has announced its 1993-94 Performing Arts Season. Eric Bogosian will open the season on Oct. 1 with Dog Show, a series of humorous monologues that lampoon the assumptions of polite society. Next will be Griot New York on Oct. 14, a multi-disciplinary celebration of life in the city with choreographer Garth Fagan and jazz legend Wynton Marsalas. Other dancers, musicians, singers and performance artists are scheduled throughout the year, including Twyla Tharp, Kronos Quartet, Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, and the popular Crosstown Traffic series. A 20 percent discount is available to those who purchase tickets to five or more events. Box office, 292-2354. Other information, Larry Larson or Darnell Lautt, 292- 0330. The Wexner Center also has a full schedule of exhibitions planned. Currently under way and continuing through Oct. 3 is Under Lock and Key by Beth B, a stark and gripping commentary on domestic violence and isolation that combines sculptural presence with audio and video, posters, photographs and paintings. Also on exhibit now and continuing through Oct. 10 are My Yard by Mary Jo Bole, an exuberant and life-affirming look at commemorative funerary monuments; Fragmented Memory: The Chinese Avant-Garde in Exile, contemporary art from the 1980s; and Traveler, a video installation by Richard Bloes. Dedication ceremonies will be held on Oct. 17 and 18 for Maya Lin's Groundswell, a new permanent installation built of recycled crumbled safety glass. Darnell Lautt, 292-0330. The Mershon Center, 1478 Pennsylvania Ave., is offering the Mershon World Affairs Seminar Series, a monthly luncheon meeting for members of the Ohio State community interested in world affairs research. The programs feature faculty presentations of research in progress or expert panels on topics of current interest. Registration is required. Papers are circulated in advance in an effort to maintain a high level of interaction. Josie Cohagen, Mershon Center, 292-3262. The 31st annual Farm Science Review will offer visitors a variety of educational programs in addition to more than 500 commercial exhibits and field demonstrations. The show will be held Sept. 21-23 at the Molly Caren Agricultural Center near London. Program topics include financial planning, international trade, conservation, crops, safety, home economics, and yard and gardent. Some 125,000 visitors are expected for this year's show. Stan Ernst, College of Agriculture, 292-2011. #