6-5-98 AU, PETTY NAMED DISTINGUISHED UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS COLUMBUS -- The Ohio State University has honored two of its most outstanding faculty members with the Distinguished University Professorship. The 1998 honorees are Jessie L.-S. Au of DUBLIN and Richard Petty of HILLIARD. At the university's Board of Trustees meeting Friday (6/5), Acting Senior Vice President and Provost Edward J. Ray granted each recipient the title and $30,000 over three years to support academic work. "Professor Au and Professor Petty are among our most accomplished scholars and teachers. Both have contributed enormously to our university, to their respective academic programs and to the international scientific community," Ray said. "Our students benefit greatly, both in the classroom and the laboratory, from studying with such eminent scientist." Distinguished University Professors continue their regular program of teaching; research, scholarly or creative work; and service. They are nominated by their colleagues both at Ohio State and internationally. Evaluators from outside the university are invited to assess the quality and significance of each nominee's academic accomplishments. The selections this year were made by a committee that included Deborah J. Merritt, professor of law; Brian Joseph, professor of linguistics and Slavic and East European languages and literatures; and three Distinguished University Professors: Larry Brown, geography; Bruce Bursten, chemistry; and L.S. Fan, chemical engineering. The 1998 honorees' careers reflect their seniority and status as faculty leaders: JESSIE L.-S. AU Au, a professor of pharmacy and medicine, holds the Dorothy M. Davis Chair in Cancer Research. Her research interests include preclinical and clinical pharmacology, particularly in the development of new cancer therapies. She is leading a four- year international study to improve treatment of superficial bladder cancer. The project is the first to be funded by the National Cancer Institute's new Interactive Research Project Grants for Cancer, and it is the first Ohio State-led prospective multi-center clinical trial of an anti-cancer drug. "All of her activities in scholarship, teaching and service are characterized by the quest for excellence that one expects in a Distinguished University Professor," her nominator wrote. "Jessie Au is, quite simply, a spectacular researcher. Her research is very fundamental and basic in nature, but has an extremely important applied goal: the cure of cancer in humans." A member of the Ohio State faculty since 1983, Au also is past deputy director of the Comprehensive Cancer Center, a former co-director of its Head and Neck Oncology and Urologic Oncology programs, and former director of Translational Research at the center. Au is a scientific adviser to the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute and the Roswell Park Memorial Institute in Buffalo, N.Y. She also was a member of the Cancer Pharmacology Program at the Institute of Biomedical Sciences Academic Sinica in Taipei, Taiwan, from 1988 to 1993. Au has received many awards, including the National Institutes of Health (NIH) MERIT Award in 1992, the NIH Research Career Development Award in 1990 and Ohio State's Distinguished Scholar Award in 1992. She is a Fellow of the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists, served as a Frank Duckworth Visiting Scholar at the University of Florida in 1993 and was a distinguished lecturer at the University of Kentucky in 1997. Au's teaching is marked by her commitment to exposing young scientists to the "excitement and challenges of the research experience," her nominator wrote. "Jessie is truly a shining light at OSU." Au earned her Pharm.D. and her Ph.D. in pharmaceutics from the University of California, San Francisco, and was a postdoctoral fellow in biochemical pharmacology at the Roswell Park Memorial Institute Department of Experimental Therapeutics. RICHARD PETTY Petty is chair of Ohio State's Department of Psychology and also is a 1995 recipient of the university's Distinguished Scholar Award. His research focuses broadly on the situational and individual difference factors responsible for changes in beliefs, attitudes and behaviors. Much of his current work is aimed at examining the implications of the Elaboration Likelihood Model of persuasion for understanding prejudice, consumer choices, political and legal decisions, and health behaviors. This work has resulted in seven books and more than 150 journal articles and chapters. Petty's nominators for the professorship noted his scholarly peers consider him a major contributor to the study of attitude and behavior change, and added that he is one of the most highly cited social psychologists in the world. "Professor Petty has been a methodological and conceptual pioneer in one of the oldest and most important areas of social psychology -- understanding attitude formation and change," his nominators wrote. In addition to his empirical work on basic processes in persuasion, Petty has served as a consultant and panelist for federal agencies such as the National Academy of Sciences committee on Dietary Guidelines Implementation to Improve the Health of Americans, the National Institute on Drug Abuse panel on Using Persuasive Communication to Prevent Drug Abuse, and the National Science Foundation panel on the Human Dimensions of Global Change. He recently served as chair of the National Institute of Mental Health grant review panel on Social and Group Processes. His nominators described Petty as a "model teacher both at the undergraduate and graduate levels. His graduate mentoring skills in particular are truly outstanding and his students have achieved impressive success." Petty graduated from the University of Virginia in 1973 and received his Ph.D. in social psychology from Ohio State University in 1977. He began his academic career at the University of Missouri and in 1985 was named the Frederick A. Middlebush Professor of Psychology. After a sabbatical at Yale University, he returned to Ohio State in 1987 as professor of psychology and director of the Social Psychology Doctoral Program; his nominators note that under his leadership, the program is widely considered the top graduate program in social psychology in the world. In 1995, he was a visiting professor of psychology at Princeton University. # Contact: Edward Ray, Academic Affairs, (614) 292-5881 Jessie Au, Pharmacy, (614) 292-4244 Richard Petty, Psychology, (614) 292-1640