xt7dv40jtf03 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dv40jtf03/data/mets.xml Lexington, Kentucky University of Kentucky 20060812 minutes English University of Kentucky Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. Minutes of the University of Kentucky Board of Trustees Minutes of the University of Kentucky Board of Trustees, 2006-08-dec12. text Minutes of the University of Kentucky Board of Trustees, 2006-08-dec12. 2006 2011 true xt7dv40jtf03 section xt7dv40jtf03 

AGENDA
Meeting of the Board of Trustees University of Kentucky
1:00 P.M.
December 12, 2006
18th Floor Patterson Office Tower
Roll Call
Approval of Minutes - (Consent)
Minutes - October 10, 2006 President's Report and Action Items
PR 1           President's Report to the Trustees
College of Engineering Report - Dean Tom Lester PR 2          Personnel Actions (Consent)
PR 3          Proposed Revision of University of Kentucky Governing Regulation
PR 4          Appointment of Executive Director of the University of Kentucky Research
Foundation PR 5          Appointment of Vice President for Commercialization and Economic
Development
Academic Affairs Committee Report
AACR 1    Candidates for Degrees
AACR2    Candidates for Degrees - Bluegrass Community and Technical College
AACR 3    Academic Degree Recommendation
Finance Committee Report
FCR 1       Bill and Susan Casner Gift (Consent)
FCR 2       Gifts and Pledges to the Hardin- Drnevich -Huang Professorship (Consent)
FCR 3       Michael P. Rankin Pledge (Consent)
FCR 4       Gifts and Pledges to the Women's Studies Graduate Research Endowment
(Consent)
FCR 5       Estate of Corrilla E. English Gift (Consent) FCR 6       Renaming of Children's Miracle Network Chair No. 1 FCR 7       Acceptance of Audit Report and the Report on Internal Control for the
University of Kentucky for 2005-06 FCR 8       Acceptance of Interim Financial Report for the University of Kentucky for the
Three Months Ended September 30, 2006


 

FCR9       Construct Biological/Pharmaceutical Complex - Update and Authorization Consolidation
FCR 10     Capital Projects
FCR 11     Authorization to Sell Approximately 16.8 Acres More or Less of Maine
Chance Farm for Fee Simple Right-of-Wav Purposes along Newtown Pike in Addition to Temporary Construction/Utility Easements of an Additional 10.6 Acres More or Less to Allow for a Kentucky Transportation Cabinet Newtown Pike Reconstruction Project from 1-75 North to Iron Works Pike
FCR 12     Authorization to Convey 14.89 Acres to the Center for Rural Development, Inc.
FCR 13     2006-07 Budget Revisions
FCR 14     Approval of the 2005-06 Endowment Match Program Annual Report
FCR 15     Patent Assignment Report
FCR 16     Capital Construction Report
Investment Committee Report Nominating Committee Report
NCR 1       Appointment to University of Kentucky Business Partnership Foundation,
Inc. NCR 2       Appointment to University of Kentucky Mining Engineering Foundation, Inc.
Student Affairs Committee Report University Hospital Committee Report
Other Business Adjourn


 

PR1
Office of the President December 12, 2006
1.         Ground Broken for New Student Health Building Near Kentucky Clinic
University of Kentucky President Lee T. Todd, Jr. and other officials broke ground November 15 for the new University Health Service (UHS) building, the preventive and primary health care facility for students. With more than 72,000 square feet, the new building will have more than five times the amount of space available in the current UHS location and will allow 120,000 patient visits annually. The facility is expected to open in March 2008. The projected $24 million facility will be located adjacent to Kentucky Clinic and the Charles T. Wethington Jr. Building. The 2005 budget passed by the Kentucky General Assembly authorized the university to sell bonds to pay for the facility. Those bonds are backed by student fees. The new facility will feature primary care, gynecology, mental health, and prevention clinics and other services. Currently, UHS is located in a 13,000 square foot space in Kentucky Clinic and conducts about 72,000 patient visits per year.
2.         President Bush's Cancer Panel Gathers Tobacco-control Information in Lexington
The President's Cancer Panel, including six-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong, visited Lexington in late October to gather information on tobacco control from invited experts and public participants. Among the presenters were Kiyoung Lee, assistant professor of environmental health, UK College of Public Health, and Richard Clayton, professor and associate dean for research, UK College of Public Health. The invited experts agreed that tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable death in the nation and that something must be done to solve the nation's problem with tobacco use. Speakers called for more money for tobacco prevention and control programs, as well as more comprehensive smoking bans across the country. The meeting was one of four across the nation that focused on healthy lifestyles that can reduce cancer risk. The Lexington meeting specifically focused on how policies about tobacco and indoor smoking can positively affect cancer rates.
3.         UK Faculty, Start-up Company Display Advances at IdeaFestival in Louisville
UK continued its leadership as a presenting sponsor of the international IdeaFestival (IF) held October 11-14, in Louisville. UK continued its partnership with the event through the leadership of David Mohney, 2006 IdeaFestival speaker and planning committee member and dean of UK's College of Design, a lead sponsor of IF. UK was also home to two other presenters, Buck Ryan and John Stempel, leaders in the fields of journalism and international diplomacy from the School of Journalism and Telecommunications and the Patterson School, respectively.


 

4.         UK Research Now Featured on the ResearchChannel
UK research is now reaching more than 22 million U.S. households on the ResearchChannel, a nonprofit media and technology organization that connects UK investigators with a global audience through cable TV and satellite distribution, and live Web streaming at www.researchchannel.org. Several scientists in UK's Center for Visualization and Virtual Environments have been featured recently, including Ruigang Yang, Computer Science, and Samson Cheung, Electrical and Computer Engineering. The College of Medicine Dean's Distinguished Lecture Series, sponsored by UK's new Center for Clinical and Translational Science, will be featured in coming months.
5.         Kentucky Kernel Wins College Journalism's Tulitzer Prize'
The Kentucky Kernel, UK's independent daily student newspaper, won the Pacemaker, often called the Pulitzer Prize of college journalism. The Kernel was the only college newspaper in Kentucky to win the prize. The Kernel's winning issues included stories about a UK medical student traveling to Africa to fight the spread of AIDS, a former UK professor suffering from Pick's disease, a student group that traveled to the Gulf Coast to help Hurricane Katrina victims repair their homes, and a special section commemorating the four seniors on the men's basketball team. In addition, the UK yearbook was a finalist for the Pacemaker for the first time.
6.         NIH Designates UK Hospital as Hub for Neurological Emergencies Treatment
UK has been selected by the National Institutes of Health as one of 11 academic medical centers designated as Neurological Emergencies Treatment Trials' Network Clinical Hub Sites, thanks to the efforts of the departments of Emergency Medicine, Neurology, and Neurosurgery. The program sets up academic medical centers as "hubs" with affiliated community hospitals as "spokes" that conduct trials focused on improving treatment for neurologic emergencies. UK's spokes include St. Claire Medical Center, Highlands Regional Medical Center, Ephram McDowell Medical Center, Rockcastle Hospital, Kentucky River Medical Center, and Hazard Appalachian Regional Hospital. UK was selected from 30 applications to be awarded funding for this five-year program.
7.         College of Nursing Expands Enrollment to Address Coming Nurse Shortage
To help alleviate an increasingly growing nursing shortage in Kentucky and across the nation, the UK College of Nursing will double admissions into its traditional four-year program beginning in fall 2007. The college currently admits 80 Bachelor of Science in Nursing students per academic year 40 for the fall semester and 40 for the spring. Next year, 160 students will enter the program. UK officials say the caliber of the nursing students will remain high. For each of the past three admission cycles at least 120 qualified applicants were turned away. The college will add eight full-time faculty over the next three years and a number of part-time clinical instructors in order to retain quality instruction for its undergraduates. The supply of nurses in the state is expected to fall short of demand beginning in 2012, and by 2020 Kentucky alone will need an


 

additional 6,800 nurses. There will be a national shortage of more than 1 million nurses by the year 2020, the National Center for Health Workforce Analysis reports.
8.         Astronaut Crippen Presents UK Student with Scholarship During Campus Visit
Astronaut Bob Crippen visited campus in mid-October to present a free public lecture and present a scholarship in an event coordinated by the UK Chellgren Center for Undergraduate Excellence and the UK Office of External Scholarships. Crippen was the pilot of the Space Shuttle Columbia's maiden voyage in 1981 and commanded three other shuttle missions over the next three and a half years. In the early 1990s, he served as director of NASA's Kennedy Space Center. Crippen currently serves as vice chairman of the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation (ASF). Each year, the ASF presents 18 scholarships to students nationwide who exhibit motivation, imagination, and exceptional performance in the science or engineering field of their major. Crippen presented UK Astronaut Scholar Ryan Fischer, a native of Hebron, Kentucky, with one of the 18 scholarship checks. Fischer is a UK senior majoring in biology and agricultural biotechnology and is one of only nine students have received a scholarship from an astronaut visiting his or her home campus.
9.         National EPSCoR Conference Discusses Latest Science and Technology Research
Kentucky hosted the 19th annual National Science Foundation Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) National Conference, which addressed recent science and technology research and explored ideas to bring new competitive innovation to EPSCoR jurisdictions. The 250 national and international participants included faculty, researchers, legislators, students, and economic development officers from all 27 EPSCoR-eligible U.S. states and territories. John Connolly, UK's director of the Center for Computational Sciences, is the NSF EPSCoR director for Kentucky.
10.       Patterson School Fall Conference Brings Key Policymakers to Lexington
Former U.S. Special Envoy Robert Gallucci (now dean of the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University) and diplomat Brady Kiesling were among more than a dozen key policymakers and academics who visited Lexington in October as part of a Patterson School of Diplomacy conference on "9/11  Five Years Later: Changing Realities." Kiesling, who gained notoriety as the first federal official to resign over the Iraq war, made a public presentation on America's current threat environment and discussed ethics, responsibility, and integrity with Patterson School students. Gallucci provided a sobering account of the nuclear proliferation threats now being posed by North Korea and Iran. Other participants included top officials from the National Intelligence Office, experts from Canada and the Central African Republic, and former Iran hostage U.S. Charge Bruce Laingen. The fall conference is one of the Patterson School's signature events.


 

11.       Two UK Performers Advance in Metropolitan Opera's District Auditions
The Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions district auditions were presented by the Lexington Opera Society (LOS) in cooperation with UK Opera Theatre. Three UK students were among the four award winners recognized at this year's district auditions. UK Opera Theatre students Christopher Conley and Brandy Lynn Hawkins took two of the three winning positions. Conley and Hawkins each received an $800 cash award and will advance to the regional round of Met Auditions scheduled for January 20 in Indianapolis, Indiana. UK Opera Theatre student Amanda Balltrip also received the Encouragement Award at this year's competition. Balltrip received a $200 cash award.
12.       West Virginia's Marshall University Joins UK's Math, Science Education Program
UK's Appalachian Math and Science Partnership gained a new partner in mid-November when Marshall University joined the program. Wimberly Royster, the father of the program that won a $22 million National Science Foundation grant in 2002, spoke at the event, along with Marshall President Steven Kopp. Marshall's program, which will offer enhanced training to K-12 teachers in five West Virginia counties, expanded the UK federal grant to $24.5 million. Also attending the news conference was John Yopp, UK's associate provost for educational partnerships.
13.       College of Medicine Notes 55 Percent Increase in Number of Applicants
The number of applicants seeking admission to the UK College of Medicine during the 2006-07 cycle increased by 55 percent over the previous year. When the final submission deadline passed November 1, the college had received 2,129 applications for the 2007 entering class, more than double the 1,002 applications received two years ago.
14.       First Amendment Center Renamed for Scripps Howard Foundation
The UK School of Journalism and Telecommunications has renamed its First Amendment Center in recognition of the support it receives from the Scripps Howard Foundation. Since the center was founded in 1987, the foundation has contributed nearly $250,000 to First Amendment-related programming at the school, and recently pledged another $250,000 over the next five years to support the center. A portion of the new gift designates Mike Farrell, director of the newly christened Scripps Howard First Amendment Center, as a Scripps Howard Fellow. Farrell is a former managing editor of The Kentucky Post, a Scripps Howard newspaper. At the event, Farrell presented the first James Madison Awards to recognize Kentuckians for Service to the First Amendment. Awards went to UK graduate Judy Clabes ('67), CEO of the Scripps Howard Foundation, and to Louisville media law attorney Jon Fleischaker.
15.       UK Art Department Holds Its 14th Annual Iron Pour Event


 

UK Department of Art hosted its 14th annual Iron Pour on November 4. The iron pour was one event during a week that celebrated the metal arts program at the university and introduced the art form to the community. UK highlighted its metal arts program with workshops, exhibits, the iron pour, and events with visiting artist and alumnus Charles E. Hook.
16.       College of Social Work to Develop University-community Partnership on Aging
The UK College of Social work is developing a university-community partnership designed to provide master of social work students (MSW) with rich field experiences in the area of aging. These experiences will cross a range of care methods. The partnership is funded through a three-year $75,000 grant from the Social Work Leadership Institute at the New York Academy of Medicine and a $75,000 match from the university. The program will be directed by Janet Ford, director of graduate studies and principal investigator for Project AGE, and Beth Mills, director of field education and project coordinator for the grant. Robynn Pease, adjunct faculty member and coordinator of Aging Services for the Lexington-Fayette County Urban Government, will assist Ford and Mills with curriculum development and teach a special field seminar for Project AGE students.
17.        Student Awards and Achievements
Jonica Burke, Martin School of Public Administration and Public Policy doctoral candidate, received second place from the Association for Budgeting and Financial Management for the Curro Student Paper Award.
Mario Garcia and Mark Huseth, Music doctoral students, have been selected as members of this year's prestigious 29-member Soldiers' Chorus of the U.S. Army Field Band. Also selected was Music alumna Staff Sergeant Charis Strange.
Sandi Winter, Martin School of Public Administration and Public Policy doctoral candidate, won first place in the graduate category for her poster "Improving the Quality of Health Care Delivery in a Corrections Setting" at the American Correctional Association 136th Congress of Correction in Charlotte, North Carolina.
18.       Faculty and Staff Awards and Achievements
Carmen Agouridis and Richard Warner, Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, and Christopher Barton, Forestry, received $1,070,000 from the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources for stream restoration of Guy Cove as part of the overall reforestation efforts being conducted by UK in Robinson Forest. The work conducted through this competitive award is an example of UK protecting and restoring the environment as part of its Commonwealth Collaboratives research initiative.
Glen Aiken, USDA-ARS Forage Animal Production Research Unit, was named a fellow of the American Society of Agronomy. His recognition was for outstanding service to the society, including his research that focuses on the plant-animal interface.


 

Mary C. Bolin-Reece, UK Counseling and Testing Center, was promoted to senior site visitor by the International Association of Counseling Services, for which she also serves as an elected member of the Board of Accreditation. This fall, she also was named a master trainer for the Question-Persuade-Refer Institute, which provides gatekeeper instructor certifications nationally for suicide prevention on college campuses and in the community.
Yvonne Cappe, Journalism and Telecommunications, attended the Scripps Howard Academic Leadership Academy in June in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Her book "Broadcast Basics" was published by Marion Street Press in September.
Donald Case, Library and Information Science, was named in an article in the July 2006 ASIST as one of the top 25 LIS faculty members by number of citations.
Carey Cavanaugh, Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce, was invited by the Armenian Foreign Ministry to detail U.S. interests in the Caucasus at a November Wilton Park Conference in Yerevan, Armenia. In October, Cavanaugh participated in a Ditchley Park Foundation Conference on the South Caucasus in Oxford, England. In September, Cavanaugh presented a paper on developing a global multilateral naval strategy at the International Institute for Strategic Studies' Global Security Review in Geneva, Switzerland.
Julie Cerel, Social Work, will serve as a grant evaluation director for the state's three-year $400,000 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration grant for suicide prevention.
Al Cross, Journalism and Telecommunications, has been chosen by the Kentucky Council of Teachers of English/Language Arts as the 2006 National Council of Teachers of English/Support for the Learning and Teaching of English (NCTE/SLATE) Affiliate Intellectual Freedom Award winner. The NCTE/SLATE Intellectual Freedom Awards recognize individuals, groups, or institutions that have advanced the cause of intellectual freedom.
Lance DeLong, Physics and Astronomy, has been elected to Fellowship in the American Physical Society for his contributions to the understanding of magnetic properties and interactions in superconducting and strongly correlated metallic crystals and films. Election to Fellowship in the APS is limited to no more than one-half of one percent of the membership.
Dennis Egli, Plant and Soil Sciences, earned the Crop Science Research Award from the Crop Science Society of America. Criteria used to determine recipients of the award include originality of basic and applied research, creative reasoning, and impact of contributions.
Robert Farley, Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce, participated in a major war game simulation at the U.S. Navy War College in Newport, Rhode Island.
Robert Fehr, Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, received $207,389 from the Kentucky Office of Energy Policy for deployment of enhanced energy efficiency technologies for buildings. This is the first phase of a total grant worth $485,731. As part of this effort, UK plans to work with the Kentucky Community and Technical College System to provide information and training to Kentuckians that emphasizes the importance of making homes and businesses more energy efficient.


 

Rich Fording, Political Science and Martin School of Public Administration and Public Policy, received the Policy Studies Best Paper Award at the American Political Science Association's annual meeting in Philadelphia for his paper, "The Color of Devolution: The Politics of Local Punishment in the New World of Welfare."
Jack Groppo and Tom Robl, Center for Applied Energy Research, each received a Special Recognition Award in Innovation from the Environmental Protection Agency for investigations of advanced coal by-product processing at the Ghent, Kentucky, power plant. Their work was supported by a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.
Don Gross, Political Science, was interviewed by news sources including Fox News cable channel, The New York Times, the Lexington Herald-Leader, and others during the 2006 election cycle.
Lenn Harrison, Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center, received $478,000 from the Kentucky Department of Agriculture for diagnostic laboratory services for farmers and agribusinesses.
John Hartman, Plant Pathology, was elected a fellow of the American Phytopathological Society. This prestigious honor recognizes distinguished contributions to plant pathology and the society.
Don Hershman, Plant Pathology, was among a national team of scientists recently honored by the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture for work on Asian soybean rust. The multi-agency team was recognized with a prestigious Secretary's Honor Award for planning, rapid response, and recovery of a potential disaster that was averted by using science-based strategies for mitigating risk associated with the disease.
Evan Hillebrand, Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce, was selected to be part of the National Intelligence Council's Global Expertise Reserve Program. In September, Hillebrand spoke at a conference in Washington, D.C., on the geopolitics of oil, along with participants from the World Economic Forum, Chatham House, and the Rand Corporation.
Kay Hoffman, dean of the College of Social Work, attended the 33rd World Congress of the International Association of Schools of Social Work (IASSW), held this fall in Santiago, Chile. Hoffman is a member of the governing board of IASSW and serves as the U.S. representative on the governing board as president of the Council on Social Work Education. At the event, she moderated a panel in Spanish on graduate education in Latin America.
Jim Hower, Center for Applied Energy Research, received the 2006 Gilbert H. Cady Award, presented by the Coal Geology Division of the Geological Society of America. This is the top award in the field of coal geology.
Everett McCorvey, UK Opera Theatre, recently was elected to serve on the board of directors for the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies by its membership. He will serve a three-year term on the board.
Robert Miller, Plant and Soil Sciences, received $2 million from Philip Morris Inc. for support of the burley tobacco breeding and genetics research program to develop disease-resistant varieties. This is a continuation of grant funding that began in 2002. Total funding to date exceeds $4 million. Miller directs the joint Kentucky-Tennessee Tobacco Improvement Initiative and has a joint appointment with UK and the University of Tennessee.


 

Karen Mingst, Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce, received the Best Book Written on International Organizations Award from the Academic Council on the United Nations System for her book International Organizations: the Politics and Processes of Global Governance. Mingst also participated in the 12th Annual Conference of the International Association of Peacekeeping Training Centres in Santiago, Chile.
Krish Muralidhar, Management, recently received a 2006 Distinguished Doctoral Alumni Award from Texas A&M University's Mays Business School.
Daniel Potter, Entomology, earned the Distinguished Achievement in Horticultural Entomology award from the Entomological Society of America.
Daniel Richardson, Physiology professor emeritus, has been named the 2006 Arthur C. Guyton Teacher of the Year by the American Physiological Society.
Jeff Rogers, German, received a grant from the Improving Educator Quality Program funded by the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 and administered by the Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education. Jeffs proposed project, Developing and Assessing World Language Competence in Kentucky Schools, has been funded at $115,000. The project will send up to 25 French, German, and Spanish teachers abroad to improve language skills and develop culturally authentic units of study.
Buck Ryan, Journalism and Telecommunications, was notified by Blackwell Publishing that his book, The Editor's Toolbox: A Reference Guide for Beginners and Professionals, with co-author Mike O'Donnell, has been translated for distribution in India.
Bill Schweri, Federal Relations, received the 2006 Society of Research Administrators (SRA) Excellence Award for his various presentations, his publication record, leadership, and years of training and mentoring activities in the SRA, an international organization with 4,000 members. Schweri has been in research administration at UK for 28 years.
William Turner, vice president for University Engagement and associate provost for Multicultural Affairs, has been appointed to serve on the Kentucky African-American Heritage Commission. His membership term continues through February 2010. In addition, Turner addressed the annual convention of the Statewide Chapters of the (Kentucky) NAACP in September at Fort Knox.
Chan Yun Yoo, Journalism and Telecommunications, presented a research paper, titled "Incidental Exposure to Web Advertising" in the 2006 American Academy of Advertising Conference, and presented two other research papers in the International Communication Association Conference. He received a Summer Faculty Research Award. He is currently working on a project investigating the effects of FTC advertising regulation on market value of firms.


 

PR 2
Office of the President December 12, 2006
Members, Board of Trustees:
PERSONNEL ACTIONS
Recommendation: that approval be given to the attached appointments, actions, and/or other staff changes which require Board action; and that the report relative to appointments and/or changes already approved by the administration be accepted.
Background: The attached recommended appointments and/or other staff changes require approval by the Board of Trustees in accordance with Part VIII-B of the Governing Regulations of the university. These recommendations are transmitted to the Board by the appropriate provost/executive vice president through the president and have the president's concurrence.
Under the Governing Regulations, the authority to make certain appointments and/or other staff changes is delegated to the president or other administrators who are required to report their actions to the Board. These items of report follow the recommendations requiring Board approval.
Action taken:         0 Approved        ? Disapproved          ? Other


 

PRESIDENT
AND EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT
FOR FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION
I.         BOARD ACTION
A.  RETIREMENTS
Executive Vice President for Finance and Administration
Baker, Barbara, Radiology Tech Senior, Employee Benefits, after 14 years, 4 months of consecutive service, under AR II-1.6-1 Section III.B, effective 11/30/06.
Reinfelder, Carolyn R., Extension County Clerk, Employee Benefits, after 38 years, 11 months of consecutive service, under AR II-1.6-1, Section III.B, effective 10/31/06.
B.   EARLY RETIREMENTS
Vice President for Facilities Management
Abney, William R., Grounds Worker II, Physical Plant Division, after 16 years, 5
months of consecutive service and 17 years of total years of service, under AR
II-1.6-1, Section III.A.2, effective 9/13/06. Graves, Ann E., Administrative Support Associate I, Auxiliary Services, after 22 years,
7 months of consecutive service, under AR II-1.6-1, Section III.A.2 , effective
1/8/07. Lowery, Pamela, Administrative Staff Officer III, Capital Project Management, after
27 years, 2 months of consecutive service and 31 years, 2 months of total years
of service, under AR II-1.6-1, Section III.A.2, effective 1/5/07. Rash, Robert, Housing Director Assistant, Conference Housing, after 36 years, 7
months of consecutive service, under AR II-1.6-1, Section III.A.2, effective
10/2/06.
Office of the Treasurer
Greiner, Brenda J., Administrative Staff Officer II, Office of the Treasurer, after 43 years, 6 months consecutive service, under AR II-1.6-1, Section III.A.2, effective 12/31/06.


 

-2-
Associate Vice President Human Resources
Kremer, Theresa, Wellness Specialist Senior., Health and Wellness, after 20 years, 11 months of consecutive service, under ARII-1.6-1, Section III.A.2, effective
1/2/07.
II.        ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIONS
A.  ADMINISTRATIVE APPOINTMENTS
Associate Vice President for Campus Services
Schlenker, Gerald L., Radiation Safety Director, Radiation Safety, effective 11/1/06.
B.  CHANGES
Vice President for Information Technology
Desai, Hima, from Network Specialist II, Information Technology/CNS, to
Information Technology Manager III, Information Technology/CNS,
effective 11/13/06. Brent B. Salisbury, from Senior Systems Programmer, Information
Technology/CNS, to Lead Systems Programmer, Information
Technology/CNS, effective 10/1/06. Donna J. Schultz, from Infrastructure Engineer Project Manager Senior,
Information Technology/CNS, to Engineer Senior, Information
Technology/CNS, effective 10/1/06. Robert F. Tudor, from Lead Systems Programmer, Information Technology/CNS,
to Information Technology Manager III, Information Technology/CNS,
effective 10/1/06.
* Special Title series


 

-3-PROVOST
I.   BOARD ACTION
A. ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS
Bueler, Hansruedi R., College of Medicine, Associate Professor (without tenure), Anatomy
and Neurobiology, 8/24/06 through 6/30/07.
Buss, Janice E., College of Pharmacy, Professor (with tenure), effective 9/1/06. Chan, Jane W., College of Medicine, Clinical Associate Professor, Neurology, and joint
appointment as Clinical Associate Professor, Ophthalmology and Visual
Sciences, 9/15/06 through 6/30/07. Chau, Destiny F., College of Medicine, Clinical Instructor, Anesthesiology, 12/2/06
through 6/30/07. Eyderman, Vladimir Y., College of Arts and Sciences, Professor (visiting), Mathematics,
8/16/06 through 5/15/07. Gal, Thomas J., College of Medicine, Associate Professor* (without tenure), Surgery,
8/7/06 through 6/30/07. Gibson, James, College of Design, Instructor (temporary), Architecture, appointed to the
AIA Kentucky Endowed Professorship, 8/16/06 through 6/30/07. McAllister, C. K., College of Medicine, Clinical Professor, Internal Medicine, 8/1/06
through 6/30/07.
Nau, David P., College of Pharmacy, Associate Professor (with tenure), effective 8/1/06. Popkin, Jeremy, College of Arts and Sciences, Professor (with tenure), History, appointed
to the T. Marshall Hahn, Jr. Professorship Fund in the College of Arts and
Sciences, 7/1/06 through 6/30/11. Randall, Marcus E., College of Medicine, Professor (with tenure), Radiation Medicine,
appointed to the Markey Cancer Foundation Chair in Radiation Medicine,
10/1/06 through 6/20/11. Randall, Marcus E., College of Medicine, Professor (with tenure), Radiation Medicine, and
joint appointment as Professor (without tenure), Clinical Sciences, College of
Health Sciences, effective 10/1/06. Schnoedt, Heinrich, College of Design, Lecturer, Architecture, appointed to the John
Russell Groves-Kentucky Housing Corporation Research Fund in Affordable
Housin