10-07-94 Trustees: Presonnel & Miscellaneous ACTIONS OF THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY BOARD OF TRUSTEES CLEVELAND -- The Ohio State University Board of Trustees met Friday at the Cleveland Clinic. Trustees heard reports on the three-year-old partnership between Ohio State and the Cleveland Clinic Foundation's Health Sciences Center. Through the partnership, the two institutions strengthen their research and academic programs, broaden options for clinical training of medical students, and consolidate resources. Actions of the board are summarized below. Jenson appointed to accounting professorship Trustees appointed Daniel L. Jensen of UPPER ARLINGTON to hold the Deloitte and Touche Accounting Professorship in the Max M. Fisher College of Business. Jensen, a professor in the Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems, was appointed through September 1999. Jensen joined Ohio State in 1980 when trustees appointed him to the Ernst and Whinney Professorship in accounting. He has taught courses in cost accounting, managerial control, advanced financial accounting and a seminar in managerial accounting. Jensen received the Ohio Outstanding Accounting Educator Award in 1991. He is one of the authors of Advanced Accounting, now in its third edition and Financial Accounting, now in its fourth edition. A certified public accountant, Jensen has taught at the University of Illinois and at Purdue and Indiana universities. He earned bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Minnesota and his doctorate at Ohio State. Pernell appointed vice provost Trustees appointed LeRoy Pernell of COLUMBUS (43209) as vice provost for minority affairs, retroactive to Sept. 1. A professor of law, Pernell had been the interim vice provost for minority affairs for the past year. As vice provost, Pernell has responsibilities for the Office of Minority Affairs, the Young Scholars Program, and the Frank W. Hale Jr. Black Cultural Center as well as for minority student recruitment and retention, affirmative action plans, and the Faculty Hiring Assistance Program. The Office of Minority Affairs coordinates all activities aimed at recruiting, counseling, aiding and promoting minority students, faculty and staff. The office has an annual budget of more than $4.5 million and a staff of 65. A 1974 graduate of Ohio State's College of Law, Pernell joined the law faculty in 1975. His teaching areas include criminal procedure, juvenile law, torts, product liability, and various clinics and seminars. He has been involved in a series of legislative reform projects at the state and national level, mostly related to juvenile justice. Pernell directed four six-week institutes sponsored by the Council on Legal Educational Opportunity, which provided study and orientation for 30 economically disadvantaged minority law school applicants. He is a past member and chair of the university's Athletic Council, a hearing officer for the University Faculty Review Panel, a member of the Law Professors Advisory Committee of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and faculty advisor to the Black Law Student Association. Department chairs appointed in Engineering and Education The board appointed R. Allen Miller and Keith W. Bedford to chair two new academic departments in the College of Engineering through June 1998: =FE Miller, of JOHNSTOWN, will head a yet-to-be-named department that combines the former departments of Industrial and Systems Engineering and of Welding Engineering. A professor of industrial and systems engineering, Miller's research interests are in the areas of design for manufacture, particularly die casting and injection molding; die/mold design; and the development of environments to support part and die/mold design. He is the director of the Center for Die Casting and the new Practice-Oriented Manufacturing Engineering Program, and a participant in the Engineering Research Center for Net Shape Manufacturing. Miller received the MacQuigg Award for Excellence in Teching in 1975 and the College of Engineering Research Award in 1982. He earned his doctorate in control and systems engineering from Case Western Reserve University in 1971, the year he joined the Ohio State faculty. Miller has two degrees in mechanical engineering, a bachelor's from Union College and a master's from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. =FE Bedford, of UPPER ARLINGTON, will head another department combining old departments of Civil Engineering and Engineering Graphics. He joined Ohio State in 1974, the year he earned his doctorate from the Cornell University School of Civil and Environmental Engineering. He has bachelor's and master's degrees in mechanical engineering from Union College in New York. A professor of civil engineering, Bedford is one of three authors of the ninth edition of Fluid Mechanics. He is a recipient of the Huber and Hilgard prizes from the American Society of Civil Engineers. Trustees also named Stuart H. Zweben of DUBLIN as chairperson of the Department of Computer and Information Science through June 1998. Zweben recently began a two-year term as president of the Association for Computing Machinery, the oldest educational and scientific society in the computing field. A faculty member since 1974, Zweben specializes in computer software engineering, evaluation and reuse. He has a bachelor's degree in math from City College of New York, a master's degree in statistics and computer science and a doctorate in computer sciences, both from Purdue University. In addition, Beverly M. Gordon of WORTHINGTON was appointed acting chairperson of the Department of Educational Policy and Leadership through September 1995. Faculty given emeritus status Trustees granted titles of professor emeritus to: =FE Virginia G. Allen, COLUMBUS (43214), Department of Educational Theory and Practice, Marion Campus, retroactive to Sept. 1. =FE Franklin D. Demana, COLUMBUS (43229), Department of Mathematics, retroactive to Oct. 1. =FE Hans-Erich Keller, UPPER ARLINGTON, Department of French and Italian, retroactive to July 1. =FE Leopold Liss, UPPER ARLINGTON, Department of Pathology, retroactive to Sept. 1. =FE Carl H. Popelar, Department of Engineering Mechanics, retroactive to July 1. Resolutions in memoriam The board passed resolutions in memoriam for: =FE Richard R. Davis, professor emeritus, Department of Agronomy and former assistant director, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, who died Feb. 20 at age 70. =FE Allen W. Hall, associate dean and professor emeritus, College of Dentistry, and first dentist of the Ohio State football team, who died July 30. =FE Philip B. Hardymon, clinical professor emeritus, Department of Surgery, who died Aug. 31. =FE Gilman D. Kirk, assistant professor emeritus, Department of Surgery, who died Sept. 3. =FE John R. Knoderer, assistant professor emeritus, College of Dentistry, who died Aug. 17. =FE Harold E. Reynard, professor emeritus, Department of Educational Services and Research, who died July 5. =FE Donald B. Robinson, professor emeritus, Department of Agricultural Education and Ohio State University Extension, who died Aug. 17. =FE Rudolph Speiser, professor emeritus, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, who died Feb. 4. Park named in honor of Ernest Johnson Trustees named a park next to Dodd Hall on the Columbus campus as The Ernest W. Johnson Park. The park, at Ninth Avenue and Cannon Drive, was designed to enhance the therapeutic rehabilitation of and improve the quality of life for patients in Dodd Hall. The park is accessible by wheelchair and contains vegetable and flower gardens, wide graded paths, a rubberized asphalt basketball court and playfield, and a rubberized two-lane wheelchair relay track. The park was named after Ernest W. Johnson, associate dean of the College of Medicine, to reflect his role as an advocate for the physically challenged. Johnson, of UPPER ARLINGTON, was chairperson of the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation for 25 years, and helped mold Dodd Hall into one of the top 10 rehabilitation hospitals in the nation. Trustees waived a requirement in the bylaws that buildings and structures not be named for university employees until they have been retired for three years. 12 endowed funds approved Trustees established the following named endowed funds: =FE The Lane Avenue Horticulture Farm Endowment to support program and operational needs of the Lane Avenue Horticultural Farm, $173,932 in proceeds from the sale of the Overlook Farm. =FE The Bernard F. Master Athletic Scholarship Fund to provide graint-in-aid scholarships to members of the men's varsity basketball team, $130,750. =FE The OSU Mansfield Faculty Development Endowment Fund to support research, programs, materials, and travel for Mansfield faculty, $114,227. =FE The Gladys Foster Anderson Early Literacy Fund in the College of Education, $75,000. =FE The Joseph J. and Nina Mae Mattus Scholarship in the College of Human Ecology, $53,680. =FE The Joseph J. and Nina Mae Mattus Scholarship in the College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, $53,680. =FE The John Howard Jr. Memorial in Aviation Fund in the Department of Aviation, $35,192. =FE The David M. Scott Memorial Scholarship Fund for students in science and engineering at the Mansfield Campus, $15,527. =FE The Donald Collins Physical Therapy Memorial Scholarship Fund in the School of Allied Medical Professions, $15,000. =FE The Dr. Henry E. Wilson Medical Scholarship Fund in the College of Medicine, $15,000. =FE The Critical Difference Re-Entry Scholarship Endowment Fund to provide financial aid to women who have interrupted their university education to meet other responsibilities, $187,500. =FE The Elizabeth D. Gee Endowment Fund for Research on Women, to provide grants for the Center for Women's Studies, $62,500. Research contracts approved Trustees approved an agreement between the university and the university's Research Foundation for 198 contracts and grants totaling $16.2 million in August. Projects singled out for special mention were: =FE Research on stress, aging, and neuroendocrine-immune changes. The National Institute of Aging is providing $985,780 to M. Ronald Glaser of the Departemnt of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, and Janice Kiecolt-Glaser and Robert C. Maccallum of the Department of Psychiatry. =FE Study of the significance of lymphocytic alveolitis with respect to lung injury and cytokine production. The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute is providing $213,647 to Mark D. Wewers, Philip T. Diaz, and James E. Gadek of the Department of Internal Medicine. =FE A three-year study of reactive transport of contaminants in variable density groundwater flow systems. The Environmental Protection Agency is providing $161,165 to Franklin W. Schwartz in the Department of Geological Sciences. =FE A three-year study of the structure and properties of high-paaladium dental alloys, which are used by dentists for metal-ceramic restorations of teeth. The National Institute of Dental Research is providing $153,771 to William A. Brantley of the College of Dentistry. For the fiscal year that ended July 30, Ohio State received $208 million in research funds from government, industry and other sources. The largest amounts came from the Department of Health and Human Services, 23.4 percent; the State of Ohio, 17.7 percent, and industry, 9.5 percent. The largest percentage of funds went to the College of Medicine and university health services, 25 percent; the College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and agricultural administration, 20.2 percent, and the College of Engineering, 15.2 percent. Miscellaneous actions In other matters, trustees: =FE Authorized the university to enter into agreements to provide for shared use of the Edison Joining Technology Center by the Edison Welding Institute and the College of Engineering. The center is to be built along Lane Avenue on West Campus. Under the resolution, Ohio State may not spend more than $365,000 in current dollars per year to support the costs of university use of the facility. =FE Authorized officials to select architectural, engineering and project management firms to work on the arena project. The arena, estimated to cost $75 million, will seat some 20,000 people and will be built north of Lane Avenue between Olentangy River and Fyffe roads. =FE Approved a contract with Otis Elevator of Columbus to renovate four elevators in Doan Hall and install a new one in Rhodes Hall. The contract is for $1,082,407. The total project cost of $1,380,600, is being funded from bond proceeds. The work is to be done by January 1996. =FE Voted to sell 16.198 acres of unimproved land at the Piketon Research and Extension Center for at least $24,770 to the State of Ohio. The Ohio Department of Transportation will use the land, east of Shyville Road, to improve the Appalachian Highway (Ohio 32). ODOT already has a perpetual easement on 3.198 acres of the strip. Net proceeds from the sale will go to the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, which operates the Piketon facility. =FE Discussed Ohio State's lease of floor space in Riverwatch Tower, 364 W. Lane Ave. The first floor houses the offices of the Treasurer and Equipment Inventory. =20 # =20 Contact: Tom Spring, University Communications, (614) 292-8309. [Submitted by: REIDV (reidv@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 07 Oct 1994 15:34:44 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.