12-2-94 News Advisory: Riffe Bldg. Dedication NEWS ADVISORY: RIFFE BUILDING TO BE DEDICATED FRIDAY, DEC. 9 The Ohio State University will dedicate the Vernal G. Riffe Jr. Building during a celebration from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9, at the building, located at 496 W. 12th Ave. just east of Cannon Drive. The $21 million, 10-story, 128,000-square-foot building connects the colleges of Biological Sciences and Pharmacy and is specifically designed to enhance collaborative research and to meet the laboratory needs of biomedical researchers well into the future. The building's flexibility, safety and cost-effectiveness have already attracted the attention of researchers and architects around the country. It is named in honor of outgoing Speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives Vern Riffe in recognition of his long support of the project and the university. Riffe will be the featured speaker at the ribbon-cutting ceremony, which will also include comments from Ohio State President E. Gordon Gee; Gary Floyd, dean of the College of Biological Sciences; and John Cassady, dean of the College of Pharmacy. There will be special exhibits and visuals and tours of the building. The formal program will begin at 3 p.m. in the reading area of the second floor of the library. A new Biological Sciences/Pharmacy Library, located on the first and second floors of the building, opened for use this autumn. Construction on the other parts of the building, which will house faculty and student researchers, is nearly complete with move-in expected to take place in early 1995. Special features include an 8,300-square-foot Biochemical Instrumentation Center, constructed to accommodate large magnetic instruments needed to analyze nucleic acids and proteins and other biomacromolecules. The Riffe Building will facilitate basic science research, which is a springboard for practical advances in medicine, agriculture and industry. Examples include studies to: learn more about how cancer cells are activated; design target-specific vaccines; stimulate bacteria to make better antibiotics; create drugs to treat breast cancer; develop simple screening for new drugs that affect the heart. For more information or to arrange for an advance tour or interviews with the deans or faculty members, contact Sandi Rutkowski at the College of Biological Sciences, (614) 292-4759. [Submitted by: REIDV (reidv@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 02 Dec 1994 10:52:54 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.