08-31-94 Trustees: Miscellaneous Actions ACTIONS OF THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY BOARD OF TRUSTEES COLUMBUS -- The Ohio State University Board of Trustees on Wednesday (8/31) created a new endowed chair and other funds, approved research contracts, and conducted other business as follows: Annual gift giving reaches nearly $95 million Jerry May, vice president for development, reported that gifts to the university's Endowment Fund increased 6 percent during the fiscal year ending June 30. Ohio State received gifts totaling $94,884,179, up from 89,200,327 in fiscal 1993. The largest increase in funds by category, 28 percent, came as gifts for buildings and equipment, while the largest dollar amount of funds, $55,414,083, was specified by donors for program support. Endowed chair created in Medicine; other funds established Trustees created The Gilbert and Kathryn Mitchell Chair in the College of Medicine, and named M. Ronald Glaser, associate vice president for health sciences, to the post. The chair was established with gifts totaling $1,657,273.09. The fund was established in 1979 by Gilbert and Kathryn Mitchell, of Columbus to support the work of a scholar conducting research on cancer and diseases of the heart, kidney and eyes. In addition to the Mitchell Chair, the board established four other funds in the health sciences: =FE The Melvin L. Schottenstein Cancer Research Endowment Fund, $39,003. =FE The Penny and Ray Karlsberger Fund for Endocrine Cancer Research, $16,490. =FE The Edith Crowley Blessing Scholarship Fund in the College of Nursing, $40,000. =FE The H. Ward and Sara Ewalt Permanent Endowed Scholarship Fund in the College of Optometry, $15,000. Lectures and student scholarships will be funded from endowments established as: =FE The Alma Herbst Memorial Lecture Fund for lectures in labor economics in the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, $20,000. =FE The Charles H. Ingraham Scholarship Fund for scholarships in agricultural economics, $17,212. =FE The Nathan Fechheimer Memorial Lecture Series in Animal Breeding and Production, Department of Animal, Dairy and Poultry Science, $16,964. =FE The Jeanne Bonnet McCoy Presidential Scholarship Fund in the University Honors Center, $400,000. Board approves research contracts Trustees accepted 308 contracts for research projects totaling $27,617,863.60. Special mention was given to: =FE Enhancing the competitiveness of the U.S. die casting industry by examining the feasibility of plasma surface modification, developing sensors and systems for improved die casting, and determining the cause of die soldering in zinc die castings. The Department of Energy has awarded $538,704 to R. Allen Miller of the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering and Carroll E. Mobley Jr. of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. =FE Phase II trials of new anticancer drugs and treatments funded with $238,440 from the National Cancer Institute. The drugs are topotecan in ovarian cancer, clomesone in breast cancer, and cyclosporin A in acute leukemia. The research is being conducted by a consortium involving Ohio State's Comprehensive Cancer Center, Mount Carmel, Grant, Riverside, and Park hospitals in Columbus; Christ in Cincinnati; Shadyside in Pittsburgh; and Greenville, in Greenville, S.C. Stanley P. Balcerzak of the Department of Internal Medicine is the principal researcher at Ohio State. Development of a decision support system for maintaining and rehabilitating roads in the state. The system would help engineers select treatment processes for minor rehabilitations, establish criteria and guidelines for their use and estimated service life of each process. The research is to be conducted by Fabian C. Hadipriono of the Department of Civil Engineering with $137,324 provided by the Ohio Department of Transportation. =FE Establishment of a summer institute for minority undergraduate students in computational science to encourage them to conduct graduate work in the discipline. James C. Turner Jr. of the Department of Mathematics is leading the project, funded with $106,085 from Central State University. Resolutions in memoriam adopted The board passed resolutions in memoriam for: =FE Robert L. Bates, professor emeritus in the Department of Geological Sciences, who died June 21. =FE Patricia E. Blosser, professor in the Department of Educational Studies: Humanities, Science, Technological, and Vocational, who died March 17. =FE Gordon E. Gatherum, professor emeritus and former director of the School of Natural Resources and former associate dean of the College of Agriculture and Home Economics, who died Feb. 7. =FE Roy M. Kottman, vice president and executive dean emeritus of the former College of Agriculture and Home Economics, who died June 4. =FE James W. Long, assistant professor emeritus, Department of Ophthalmology, and former associate dean of the College of Biological Sciences, who died Nov. 1. =FE Richard O. Moore, professor emeritus in the Department of Biochemistry, who died June 8. =FE Merton D. Oyler, professor emeritus in the Department of Sociology, who died Jan. 14. =FE Duane R. Skidmore, professor emeritus in the Department of Chemical Engineering, who died April 15. =FE T. Scott Sutton, associate dean emeritus of the former College of Agriculture and Home Economics and professor emeritus of the Department of Animal Science, who died July 17. =FE Robert J. Stull, professor emeritus and former chairperson of the Department of Art and former associate dean of the College of the Arts, who died July 7. =FE I. Keith Tyler, professor emeritus in the Department of Educational Policy and Leadership, who died April 4. =FE Margaret Carey Tyler, assistant professor emeritus in the Department of Educational Policy and Leadership, who died April 21. MISCELLANEOUS ACTIONS AND REPORTS In other matters, trustees: =FE Heard reports about university restructuring, the 1994-95 academic agenda of the Office of Academic Affairs, and funding of computer information systems projects. =FE Heard presentations about characteristics and activities of the Max M. Fisher College of Business and The Ohio State University Alumni Association. =FE Heard a report on four changes being made to improve campus safety by Ron Michalec, police chief. They are: (1) a new communications center that will consolidate the 16 different radio systems currently in use by police, Traffic and Parking, Physical Facilities and other safety-related departments; (2) renovation of the 36 "blue-light" campus emergency phones and installation of 40 additional such phones along High Street, at parking garages and bus stops and along 11th and 12th avenues; (3) a new 911 system that will direct all 911 calls from campus pay phones to University Police rather than Columbus; (4) expansion of the community policing programs. The community policing programs include working with Columbus Police, the Office of Residence and Dining Halls and area bar owners on alternatives to alcohol consumption. Michalec said University Police headquarters will be the new home of the Crimewatch Escort Service operated by the Undergraduate Student Government. Police will be helping to make the popular service more efficient and effective. The Crimewatch Escort Service provides free van rides or walking escorts to campus and near off-campus locations during the evenings. =FE Gave permission to establish and fund a captive insurance company in Bermuda to expand the university's liability insurance program. The move allows Ohio State, through the captive company, to negotiate and purchase insurance directly from a reinsurer, rather than through an intermediary. It also allows payment of premium to the captive firm instead of the intermediary. According to Ohio State officials, the premium can then be used to build capital in the captive company, thereby strengthening the financial position of the hospitals' risk financing program. =FE Reviewed a proposal to acquire University Reference Lab, a for-profit corporation owned by 28 Ohio State employees. University officials said the lab has operated with a small profit margin for several years. The lab processes toxicology and histology tests and collects specimens from various locations and conveys them to other labs for testing. Acquiring the lab will give University Hospitals a well-regarded toxicology testing program along with marketing presence and expertise, the officials reported. =FE Discussed a memorandum of understanding for delegating purchasing authority to University Hospitals. =FE Approved 66 waivers of competitive bidding requirements for purchases totaling $13,618,500. Fifty-two waivers were for purchases from sole-source suppliers, two for emergency reasons and 21 for economic reasons. =FE Approved a 5 percent salary increase for President E. Gordon Gee, bringing his annual salary to $168,504. Because of the university's budget constraints in recent years, the president along with other top administrators, had not had a salary increase since July 1991, when it was set at $160,476. # =20 Contact: Tom Spring, University Communications, (614) 292-8309. [Submitted by: REIDV (reidv@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Wed, 31 Aug 1994 13:56:59 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.