11-03-95 Trustees: Appointments & Misc. Business BATTE HOLDS VANBUREN PROFESSORSHIP IN FARM MANAGEMENT The board named Marvin T. Batte, associate professor of agricultural economics, to the Fred VanBuren Professorship in Farm Management, retroactive to Oct. 1 and continuing through September 1998. Batte has taught agricultural economics at Ohio State since 1980. He received his Bachelor of Science degree in agriculture from Eastern Kentucky University and his Master of Science degree in agricultural economics from the University of Kentucky. He earned his doctoral degree in agricultural economics from the University of Illinois. The VanBuren Professorship was established in November 1985 with a bequest from the estate of Fred VanBuren to support the work of professors in the area of farm management. MARRAS NAMED TO NCR CHAIR Trustees appointed William S. Marras, professor of industrial and systems engineering, to the NCR Designated Chair in Biodynamics retroactive to Oct. 1 and continuing through June 1996. Marras received his Bachelor of Science degree in systems engineering, Master of Science degree in industrial engineering, and doctoral degree from Wright State University. He has taught at Ohio State since 1982. The NCR Designated Chair in Biodynamics was established in April 1992 by NCR Corp. to provide support for a faculty member in industrial and systems engineering. CHAIRS, OTHER FACULTY APPOINTED The board appointed Georg Heimdal, associate professor of art, as chair of the Department of Art retroactive to Oct. 1 and continuing through June 1996. He will replace current chair Robert Shay, who retired June 30. A member of the faculty since 1980, Heimdal earned his bachelor's degree from San Francisco State University and his Master of Arts degree from the University of California at Davis. He earned his Master of Fine Arts degree from Washington State University. His work has been featured in numerous one-person shows and group exhibitions. It is included in the collections of the Columbus Metropolitan Library, Huntington Bank, the Columbus Museum of Art, McDonald's Corporation of Columbus, and the Eastern Washington State Historical Society. Trustees appointed James W. Hutchens, chair of the Department of Art at Appalachian State University, as chair of the Department of Art Education beginning Jan. 1 and continuing through December 1999. Hutchens earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from Western Carolina University, his Master of Visual Arts degree at Georgia State University and his doctoral degree from Florida State University. In other personnel actions, the board: -- Reappointed Glenn S. Daehn, associate professor of material science and engineering, to the Dr. Mars G. Fontana Professorship in Metallurgical Engineering, retroactive to Oct. 1 and continuing through June 1996. -- Appointed Howard W. Sprecher as acting chair of the Department of Medical Biochemistry, retroactive to July 1 and continuing through June 1996. -- Appointed Reuben Ahroni as acting chair of the Department of Near Eastern, Judaic and Hellenic Languages and Literatures, retroactive to Oct. 1 and continuing through September 1996. -- Appointed Beverly M. Gordon as acting chair of the Department of Educational Policy and Leadership, retroactive to Oct. 1 and continuing through June 1996. EMERITUS TITLES GRANTED Trustees granted emeritus titles to: -- Robert Shay, professor emeritus, Department of Art, retroactive to July 1. -- Judith A. Wessel, assistant professor emeritus, Department of Family Resource Management, retroactive to June 1. -- Frederic J. Cadora, chairperson and professor emeritus, Department of Near Eastern, Judaic and Hellenic Languages and Literatures. PROCESS TO SELECT STUDENT TRUSTEES AMENDED Trustees amended the student trustee selection process to reflect the following changes: -- Student government presidents will meet in November to determine the format, application deadline and other dates pertaining to the student trustee selection process. -- Each student government will appoint up to three members to serve on the student trustee selection committee and the vice president for student affairs will appoint one faculty member and one administrator who will serve as non-voting members. -- The committee will review all applications and select a group for interviews. After conducting interviews and evaluations, the committee will nominate a slate of five students to the governor by March 1. The governor annually appoints one student to a two-year term that begins May 14. BOARD ACCEPTS FOUR NEW NAMED ENDOWED FUNDS Trustees established four new named endowed funds with gifts totaling $436,861: -- The Joseph D. Blickle Educational Development Fund, $391,856 in educational program support for students in the College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. -- The John P. Apel Memorial Scholarship Fund in Civil Engineering, $15,005. -- The Ohio State Floriculture/Landscape Horticulture Alumni Association Fellowship Endowment Fund, $15,000 for undergraduate student stipends to fund faculty directed work experiences in the Department of Horticulture/Agronomy. -- The Van Wert County 4-H Endowment Fund, $15,000. TRUSTEES APPROVE RESEARCH CONTRACTS AND GRANTS The board accepted 220 research contracts and grants totaling $15,389,850. Singled out for special mention were: -- The acquisition of a 300kV FEG atomic resolution analytical transmission electron microscope. Hamish L. Fraser, professor of materials science and engineering, and Michael J. Mills, associate professor of materials science and engineering, received $436,000 from the Office of Naval Research. -- A first-phase study of new chemopreventive agents to characterize the toxicity of the compounds and to identify the maximum and minimum safe doses. Kenneth Chan, professor of pharmacy; William Hayton, chair of the Division of Pharmaceutics; Mark Morse, assistant professor of preventive medicine, and Gary Stoner, professor of preventive medicine, received $418,883 from The Cleveland Clinic Foundation. -- The application of site-specific agricultural management practices to nutrient and pesticide application. Thomas L. Krill of Ohio State University Extension received $250,000 from the Environmental Protection Agency. -- An evaluation of the Ohio Department of Education's Adult Basic Literacy Education Program to provide information for staff to use in program improvement and development activities. Emmalou Norland, associate professor of educational studies, is heading the evaluation, funded with $250,000 from the Ohio Division of Vocational and Adult Education. MEDICAL PLAN SAVES MONEY; PATIENTS EXPRESS SATISFACTION Ohio State is saving big money on its employee medical benefit plans, and faculty and staff remain happy with the services, reported Linda Tom, vice president for human resources. PrimeCare, a managed-care plan exclusively using the University Medical Center, was established in 1994 as the university's primary sponsored medical plan and now covers 51 percent of university employees. Through a partnership between the university and the University Medical Center, PrimeCare will use a budgeted plan of payment and a different philosophy of delivering health care services, Tom said. PrimeCare's delivery method is anticipated to substantially limit increases in costs. Further, the sponsored plan concept indexes employer contributions for all employee medical plan options at the same level as PrimeCare. As a result, five-year projections yield a total university savings of $30 million, with primary savings from a reduction in avoidable hospital days. Ohio State has implemented quality measures with the PrimeCare plan to ensure continued value for faculty and staff, Tom said. Each physician's services will be tracked, benchmarked with national standards, and reported back to physicians and the university. A 24-hour Personal Nurse Adviser hotline will increase communication and patient knowledge, and customer satisfaction will be measured annually. A recent member survey showed a high level of satisfaction overall, but also indicated areas for improvement, including facility locations, patient education and access to specialists, Tom noted. RESOLUTIONS IN MEMORIAM ADOPTED The board adopted resolutions in memoriam for: -- H. Richard Blackwell, professor emeritus in the College of Optometry, who died Sept. 20. -- John T. Davis, professor emeritus in the Department of Classics, who died Sept. 22. -- Carl R. Reese, professor emeritus in the Department of Zoology, who died Aug. 29. -- Mabel Spray, professor emeritus of Ohio State University Extension, who died Sept. 4. -- Robert G. Whiteus, assistant dean and professor emeritus in the Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, who died Sept. 26. -- Shimson Zimering, associate professor emeritus in the Department of Mathematics, who died Sept. 6. [Submitted by: Carolyn Glover (cglover@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 03 Nov 1995 16:20:31 -0500] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.