04-08-94 Trustees: Personnel & Other Business ACTIONS OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES ON APRIL 8: PERSONNEL, ENDOWMENT FUNDS, RESEARCH CONTRACTS Floriculture Professor COLUMBUS -- James D. Metzger, former research plant physiologist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, has joined The Ohio State University Department of Horticulture. The Board of Trustees on Friday (4/8) named Metzger to the D.C. Kiplinger Chair in Floriculture, retroactive to March 14. Metzger served 13 years at the Agricultural Research Service's Biosciences Research Laboratory at Fargo, N.D. There he studied how environmental factors such as day length and temperature control the onset of flowering. According to Metzger, understanding these regulators in plants could lead scientists to learn how to better manipulate timing of bloom to benefit growers and purchasers and reduce production costs. Examples might include delaying budding in fruit trees to make them less susceptible to a killing frost, synchronizing flowering to produce a uniform crop of tomatoes; and producing Easter lilies or poinsettias that flower closer to the holidays. The Kiplinger Chair was established in 1977 by friends of alumnus D.C. Kiplinger and by members of the Ohio Florists Association and the Ohio State Floriculture/Landscape Horticulture Alumni Association. Income from the endowment supports the work of a scholar and researcher in the area of floriculture, the science of growing herbaceous ornamental flowering plants. Metzger received his Bachelor of Arts degree in biology from Millersville University in Pennsylvania and his doctorate from Michigan State in botany in 1980. Director of University Recreation and Intramural Sports Trustees also named J. Michael Dunn, former director of intramural-recreational sports at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, as director of university recreation and intramural sports. That appointment is retroactive to March 21. Dunn succeeds Frederic Beekman of UPPER ARLINGTON as director of university recreation and intramural sports. Beekman recently retired after a 47-year career. Dunn had been at Southern Illinois since 1978 and had been director of the recreation and intramurals program since 1986. He also served as an adjunct faculty member and coordinator of intramural-recreational sports facilities. Previously he had as a YMCA adult program director and director of men's intramurals at Marquette University. Dunn has a Bachelor of Physical Education degree from Purdue University and a Master of Science degree in recreation from Southern Illinois University. Chairpersons and Emeritus Appointments, Memoriams Trustees appointed David L. Denlinger of WORTHINGTON as chairperson of entomology, for four years beginning Oct. 1. He succeeds David Horn of COLUMBUS (43214). Denlinger, a professor of entomology, has taught at Ohio State since 1976. He also has worked at Harvard University, the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology in Nairobi, Kenya, and at the Agricultural University, Wageningen, the Netherlands. He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and various other professional organizations. Denlinger has taught courses and conducted research in the area of insect physiology. His studies have included the regulation of metamorphosis behavior in the tsetse fly, hormone regulators in development of the gypsy moth, and insect cold-hardiness and diapause. The board named Robert E. Roth of WORTHINGTON as acting director of the School of Natural Resources, through June; and Mary M. O'Sullivan as acting director of the School of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation, through August. Reappointed to four-year terms, starting July 1, were: =FE George A. Marzluf of UPPER ARLINGTON as chairperson of the Department of Biochemistry. =FE Lee F. Johnson of UPPER ARLINGTON as chairperson of the Department of Molecular Genetics. =FE Ralph E. J. Boerner UPPER ARLINGTON as chairperson of the Department of Plant Biology. =FE Russell Eugene Schuster of WORTHINGTON as university registrar. David Hothersall of UPPER ARLINGTON was reappointed director of the University Honors Center for four years beginning Sept. 1. Trustees awarded emeritus titles to: =FE Ronald G. Corwin of UPPER ARLINGTON, Department of Sociology, professor emeritus, retroactive to April 1. =FE Ichiko T. Morita, University Libraries, retroactive to March 1. =FE Walter E. Carey, COLUMBUS (43235), Department of Mechanical Engineering, associate professor emeritus, retroactive to Feb. 1. Resolutions in memoriam were passed for Gertrude Adams, instructor emeritus in Ohio State University Extension and from 1951 to 1970 the home demonstration agent in Darke County, who died Jan. 4 at age 91; Ralph L. Baker, professor emeritus in the Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, who died March 2 at age 80; Yvonne Cook, associate professor emeritus in Ohio State University Extension and from 1957 to 1975, the home economics agent in Wayne County, who died Dec. 24 at age 85; and Fred P. Hapke, professor emeritus in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, who died Feb. 10. Named Endowed Funds The board established the following 19 new named endowed funds: =FE The Edith M. Slabaugh Scholarship Fund in the College of Human Ecology, $500,000. =FE The Dance Preservation Fund to further the recording of dance, $300,747.18. =FE The Sue Ann Dowell Schott Farm Science Review Fund, $100,327.50. =FE The W. Arthur Cullman Professorship in Marketing Fund in the Fisher College of Business, $69,600. =FE The Zendell Family Scholarship Fund in the College of Law, $49,506. =FE The Dorothy H. Suerdieck Medical Scholarship, $30,000. =FE The Theodore Suie Jr. Scholarship Fund in the College of Biological Sciences, $27,059.23. =FE The David V. Perry and Isabel H. Perry Research Scholarship Fund for undergraduate research and scholarship, $25,000. =FE The Elwood W. "Red" Woodling Family Swimming Scholarship Fund in the Department of Athletics, $20,544. =FE The James McFarling Endowed Scholarship Fund for an undergraduate student majoring in chemistry, $20,000. =FE The John Franklin Lyman Nutritional Biochemistry and Food Science Scholarships for graduate students in the College of Agriculture, $19,037.50. =FE The Mary Jacquelyn Ebinger Breast Cancer Research Endowment Fund at the Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Research Institute, $16,175. =FE The Doctor Theodore Suie Jr. Scholarship Fund to provide fellowships in the College of Medicine, $15,490.23. =FE The Geauga County 4-H Endowment Fund, $15,285. =FE The Franklin B. and Jane Walter Scholarship for students seeking advanced degrees in school administration in the College of Education, $15,000. =FE The James L. Nichols Endowment Fund, $15,000. =FE The L.C. Chadwick Endowment Fund to support the Chadwick Arboretum, $15,000. =FE The Eileen Brown Cole Graduate Scholarship Fund for female graduate or professional students, $15,000. =FE The Georgianna L. Barr Medical Scholarship, $10,000. Research Grants and Contracts Trustees approved 143 research contracts totaling $11,887,165.28. Those singled out for special mention include: =FE A study to develop a new residential treatment program for pregnant and postpartum women who are homeless and drug users and their children. Elizabeth M. Burns of the Department of Psychiatry is the principal investigator for the study, funded with $673,137 from the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services. =FE An evaluation of a reduced modulus bone cement to produce more durable joint replacements. Alan S. Litsky of the Department of Surgery and the Biomedical Engineering Center is principal investigator for the study, funded with $255,093 from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. =FE A three-week summer institute that focuses on potential careers in science and agriculture for high-ability eighth and ninth grade students. Clyde E. Opliger of the Agricultural Technical Institute is heading the project, funded with $71,967 =66rom the National Science Foundation. =FE A study to look at the design and functioning of the national airspace system in the United States to overcome weaknesses that may result in safety hazards, poor airspace and facilities use, excessive cost, and failure to transport passengers and cargo in a timely manner, according to Philip J. Smith of the Center for Cognitive Science and the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering. The study is funded with $66,150 from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. # Contact: Tom Spring, University Communications, (614) 292-8309. [Submitted by: GERSTNER (gerstner@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 08 Apr 1994 14:24:26 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.