5-19-98 WILLIAM BAESLACK NAMED INTERIM VICE PRESIDENT FOR RESEARCH COLUMBUS -- William A. "Bud" Baeslack III, an associate dean of The Ohio State University College of Engineering, has been named interim vice president for research at Ohio State. The appointment, announced Tuesday (5/19) by Interim President Richard Sisson, follows the March 20 death of Edward F. Hayes, who served as Ohio State's vice president for research for seven years. Subject to Board of Trustees approval, the appointment is effective immediately. Baeslack, 46, has served as associate dean for research and college development in the College of Engineering since 1994. Also a professor of industrial, welding and systems engineering, he joined the faculty in 1982. He chaired the Department of Welding Engineering from 1991 to 1994 and was director of the National Excellence in Materials Joining Education and Training Program at Ohio State during the 1994-95 academic year. Baeslack and his staff have initiated or facilitated development of several major research-related activities at Ohio State, including a collaborative effort with the Edison Welding Institute to establish the Edison Joining Technology Center. Other partnership initiatives include the Gas Turbine Research Center, several National Science Foundation centers, the Ergonomics Institute and, most recently, a Federal Aviation Administration Center of Airworthiness Assurance. "Bud Baeslack is an internationally recognized expert in materials engineering and is an administrator of outstanding skill and achievement," Sisson said. "He has received numerous national awards for excellence in teaching and research, and has been awarded his department's outstanding teaching award four separate times, as well as the college's prestigious Lumley Research Award three times." President-designate William E. Kirwan said, "I have met with Professor Baeslack and was impressed by his commitment to the highest-quality research, to the work of the Research Commission of which he is a member, and by his administrative experience, as well as his understanding of the workings of the Office of Research." Baeslack's other appointments have included a year as a visiting scientist at The Welding Institute in Cambridge, England, in 1989-90, and service as an ASEE visiting faculty research fellow at the David Taylor Naval Ship Research and Development Center in Annapolis, Md., in 1985. After four years of service at the Air Force Materials Laboratory at Wright- Patterson Air Force Base, Baeslack has continued service as a project engineer and senior materials scientist for the Air Force Reserves since 1983. "I am pleased and honored to have the opportunity to serve the university in this important capacity, to build upon the many accomplishments of the late Dr. Hayes, and to support Interim President Sisson and incoming President Kirwan during this critical period of institutional transition," Baeslack said. Baeslack is recognized as an authority on the materials science and engineering aspects of joining advanced materials, including titanium, aluminum and nickel-based alloys, intermetallics and metal-matrix composites. He has received more than $6 million in grants from federal and state agencies and industry, and is a consultant for several aerospace and manufacturing companies. He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees in welding engineering from Ohio State in 1973 and 1974, and his Ph.D. in materials engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1978. His national awards include the Comfort A. Adams Lecture Award, the American Welding Society's highest award for significant lifetime research contributions to the field of materials joining. An active member of several professional societies, he also is a Fellow of The Welding Institute, ASM International and the American Welding Society. Baeslack noted that as the university's chief research officer, he will emphasize that research and scholarship are key components of the educational mission at Ohio State. "High- quality research enhances the quality and relevance of our teaching, attracts outstanding undergraduate and graduate students to our academic programs, and brings top-notch faculty to our campus, all of which are among the important concerns raised by the university's Research Commission," he said. "Furthermore, our performance of cutting-edge research is critical to Ohio State meeting its land-grant responsibility through its impact on the quality of life of Ohio's and the nation's citizens, and the economic competitiveness of our business and industries." # Contact: William Baeslack, (614) 292-2986