|
By KEVIN FRYLING Reporter Staff Writer
 |  BERTUCA
|
Ten UB faculty members, five professional staff members and three
librarians have received 2008 SUNY Chancellor’s Awards for
Excellence. The Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in
Scholarship and Creative Activities recognizes the work of those who
engage actively in scholarly and creative pursuits beyond their teaching
responsibilities. Recipients are Mary Ann Jezewski, professor,
School of Nursing; Frank Scannapieco, professor and chair,
Department of Oral Biology, School of Dental Medicine; and
 |  BLAIR
|
Robert Straubinger, professor, Department of Pharmaceutical
Sciences, School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences. The
Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Teaching honors those who
consistently demonstrate superb teaching at the undergraduate, graduate
or professional level. Recipients are Sampson Blair, associate
professor and undergraduate program director, Department of Sociology,
College of Arts and Sciences (CAS); Robert Cohen, professor and
program director, Department of Periodontics and Endodontics, School of
Dental Medicine; Kenneth Kim, associate professor, Department of
Finance and Managerial Economics, School of Management; Kate
Rittenhouse-Olson, associate professor and director of the
biotechnology program, Department of Biotechnical and Clinical
Laboratory Sciences, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences; Yvonne Krall Scherer, associate professor and adjunct associate professor of
rehabilitation sciences, School of Nursing; and Troy Wood,
associate professor, Department of Chemistry, CAS.
 |  BORST
|
The Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Faculty Service recognizes
consistently superior service sustained over a multiple-year period to
the local campus, the State University or the community, or the award
winner's service contributions to discipline-related professional
organizations or to faculty governance. This year's recipient is
Gayle Brazeau, associate dean for academic affairs, School of
Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences. The Chancellor’s
Award for Excellence in Professional Service honors performance
excellence “both within and beyond the position.” Recipients
are Randall Borst, director of disability services; Priscilla
Clarke, laboratory director, Department of Chemistry; Andrea
Costantino, director of student life; Ellen Dussourd, director of
international student and scholar services; and Walter Simpson,
UB energy officer.
 |  BRAZEAU
|
The Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Librarianship
recognizes “skill in librarianship; service to the campus, the
university and to the field; scholarship and professional growth; and
major professional achievements.” Recipients are Cynthia
Bertuca, associate director of access services for document
delivery, University Libraries; Cynthia Tysick, associate
librarian, University Libraries; and Daisy Waters, electronic
periodicals management specialist, University Libraries. Promoted
to her current position in 2007, Cynthia Bertuca previously
served 22 years within the Health Sciences Library. As head of
information delivery and access services during her last 13 years at the
HSL, she was instrumental in the library’s transition toward
automated systems of document transfer within and outside the
institution.
 |  CLARKE
|
For nearly 10 years, Bertuca has been a trustee of the Western New
York Library Resources Council, including terms as vice president and
president of the council, and is a member of the Electronic Funds
Transfer System National Advisory Committee. She has been recognized
since 1995 as a Distinguished Member of the National Academy of Health
Information Professionals. An authority on the sociology of the
family, Sampson Blair has published articles on the gendered
division of labor within families and social relations between parents
and children in some of the field’s most respected journals. He
serves on the editorial boards of several major journals, including
Sociological Inquiry, Social Justice Research, the Journal of
Family Issues and Marriage and Family Review, as well as the
committees of several national organizations, including the American
Sociological Association and the National Council on Family
Relations.
 |  COHEN
|
Blair also has played a key role in attracting and retaining students
in the Department of Sociology, partly through his service as director
of undergraduate studies, but also through their experience in his
classroom. Both undergraduate and graduate students praise him as a
teacher, mentor and adviser, and many credit him with their own decision
to become teachers and scholars in the field. As UB’s
director of disability services, Randall Borst responds to the
needs of approximately 500 individuals with disabilities each year and
oversees disability awareness training and education efforts
campus-wide. He has introduced a number of highly effective initiatives
to enhance access to university resources and better accommodate the
needs of the disabled, including a collaborative project with the Center
for Assistive Technology to better serve disabled patrons in public
computing labs.
 |  COSTANTINO
|
The former president of the Association for Higher Education and
Disability and a current member of its curriculum advisory committee,
Borst is a member of the board of directors of the Independent Living
Project of Western New York, and has served on the New York State Task
Force on People with Disabilities in Higher Education and as co-chair of
the SUNY-wide Task Force on Students with Disabilities. In
addition to serving as faculty advisor to a number of student
organizations, Gayle Brazeau has spearheaded the expansion and
revitalization of many student professional organizations on campus,
particularly those focusing on the promotion of women in the pharmacy
profession, as well as chartering a new local chapter of Phi Lambda
Sigma, the national pharmacy leadership society.
 |  DUSSOURD
|
A member of numerous time-intensive university service committees,
she also serves as an officer and member of the board of directors of
the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy and chairs numerous
committees in the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists.
Brazeau’s research has garnered numerous fellowships and
grants, including the Gustavus A. Pfeiffer Faculty Development Research
Fellowship from the American Foundation for Pharmaceutical Education.
As laboratory director for the Department of Chemistry for the
past 30 years, Priscilla Clarke serves more than 2,000 students
each semester, including those enrolled in nine different lecture
sections and more than 70 separate laboratory and recitation sections.
Her duties include administering a $100,000 operating budget;
supervising approximately 50 graduate teaching assistants, as well as a
number of undergraduate student assistants; managing a rigorous
laboratory safety program; and overseeing an extensive program of
laboratory experiments, training sessions and recitations.
 |  JEZEWSKI
|
In addition, Clarke was principal investigator on a grant that was
used to introduce a classroom response system—in which students
can respond immediately to questions asked during lectures via personal
remote controls or “clickers”—in the general chemistry
program. A nationally recognized expert on salivary
immunochemistry, Robert Cohen is the director of the Advanced
Education Program in Periodontics in the School of Dental Medicine.
 |  KIM
|
Selected as a diplomate of the American Board of Periodontology,
Cohen is the recipient of a 2005 Educator Award from the American
Academy of Periodontology for outstanding teaching and mentoring, and
one of only a few dentists to have been recognized by the Dental Society
of the State of New York with its 1,000 Hour Continuing Education
Award. Cohen also has served as a scientist consultant to the
Scientific Review Office of the National Institute of Dental Research
since 1994; as a peer reviewer on the Research, Science and Therapy
Committee of the American Academy of Periodontology; and on the
editorial boards of several of the top-flight journals in his field.
As director of student life, Andrea Costantino is
responsible for a broad range of student services and activities,
including student government, student outreach activities, student
organizations and student relations.
 |  RITTENHOUSE-OLSON
|
Her accomplishments at UB include the expansion of the Office of
Student Multicultural Affairs into the Intercultural and Diversity
Center and the transformation of student leadership and outreach
services into a comprehensive Center for Student Leadership and
Community Engagement that offers a rich array of resources, training
programs, internship and workshop opportunities, and peer-mentoring
programs. She frequently plays a leadership role in major university
initiatives that lie outside the scope of her assigned duties, including
recruiting and helping to train more than 800 volunteers for the
three-day campus visit in 2006 by His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama.
As the university officer with chief responsibility for serving the
needs of UB’s large and diverse international community, Ellen
Dussourd plays a vital role in maintaining the university’s
leadership position in the international education arena. Her
responsibilities include oversight of immigration services for
international students, visiting scholars, and employees; ensuring the
university’s implementation of federal and international
regulations regarding visa processing and border-crossing; and assisting
international faculty and researchers in obtaining work authorization
and permanent residency status.
 |  SCANNAPIECO
|
Under her leadership, UB became one of the first U.S. universities
with a large international enrollment to achieve full compliance with
the Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS), a federally
mandated system implemented after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. She
also established and oversees UB’s annual campus celebration of
“International Education Week,” a rich program of exhibits,
performances, films and other cultural experiences. Associate
dean for research and director of the Center for Nursing Research,
Mary Ann Jezewski is an expert on the culture of patient-care and
patient-provider interactions during end-of-life decision-making and
rehabilitation. She is best known for her development of the
“culture brokering model,” a theoretical framework for
understanding the health care system “as a unique culture in which
the uninitiated patient/consumer needs the help of a broker/advocate to
effectively manage cultural intricacies.”
 |  SCHERER
|
Her work has served as the basis for numerous research projects,
including providing a platform for the UB Center for International
Rehabilitation Research Information and Exchange in the School of Public
Health and Health Professions, a major project funded by the National
Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research. An
authority on foreign financial markets with a particular expertise in
Pacific-basin capital markets, Kenneth Kim is coordinator of the
Ph.D. program in finance and managerial economics in the School of
Management and academic director of a certificate program in
international finance organized jointly by UB and the Levin Institute.
He also is a member of UB’s Asian Studies faculty.
 |  SIMPSON
|
A research associate at the Pacific-Basin Capital Markets Research
Center in Kingston, R.I., Kim serves in a number of prominent consulting
roles with capital management groups and banking organizations across
the U.S. and Malaysia. In addition to being on the editorial boards of
several leading business and management journals, he is the author of
two widely used textbooks on corporate finance and corporate
governance. Kate Rittenhouse-Olson helped to found the
undergraduate biotechnology program, earning a Dean’s Award for
her pivotal contributions during the planning and implementation stages.
 |  STRAUBINGER
|
Certified by the American Society of Clinical Pathology as a
specialist in immunology research, Rittenhouse-Olsen is a distinguished
scholar known for her work on carbohydrate antigens, foreign substances
that produce antibodies when introduced in a living organism that have
important implications for the treatment of cancer and infectious
disease. She is the recipient of the Teaching Award from the 2006
graduating class of the Biotechnology Program and a Certificate of
Excellence from the class of 2005. An internationally renowned
authority on the mechanisms for dental plaque formation, Frank
Scannapieco is a leader in translational research whose
achievements are relevant within the laboratory, the classroom and the
clinic. His groundbreaking research has had a significant and direct
impact on public health, oral health care, and business and industry. He
is perhaps best known for demonstrating that amylase—the most
common enzyme found in saliva—often binds to a protein that
indicates the presence of the bacteria that causes periodontal disease.
 |  TYSICK
|
Scannapieco has been among UB’s top 100 federal grant
recipients since 2003, and his research currently attracts more than
$1.6 million annually in external support. A faculty member in
the School of Nursing for nearly 30 years, Yvonne Krall Scherer
is an expert in adult and critical patient care, with a particular focus
on respiratory care of patients with pulmonary disease. During
the past decade, Scherer has led a school-wide initiative to incorporate
a computer-assisted simulation component into the Adult Nurse
Practitioner and Acute Care Practitioner programs, making UB one of the
first universities in the nation to introduce full-body simulation in
its advanced practice curriculum. She recently was appointed chair of
UB’s Simulation Center Committee, which is charged with designing
a multidisciplinary simulation center that focuses on teaching and
research.
 |  WATERS
|
The recipient of 2007 Dean’s Award for Excellence in Teaching,
Scherer has published significantly on the pedagogical and clinical
implications of technology and secured considerable support to advance
educational technology within the nursing curriculum, an endeavor that
has brought in millions of dollars in funding to the university.
Appointed UB energy officer in 1982, Walter Simpson has played
a leading role in UB’s history of environmental leadership through
his development and oversight of an extensive campus energy-conservation
program that has become a model of “green” campus building
and operations for colleges and universities across the country.
Under his leadership, the UB Green office has engaged in energy
saving and alternative energy programs that have saved the campus $10
million a year. He helped to negotiate wind-energy purchases that have
made UB the largest purchaser of wind power in New York state, developed
SUNY’s first campus recycling program, created a
“green” computing program that is a model for campuses
across the nation and spearheaded an innovative project that uses energy
cost savings to pay for capital improvements—a project recognized
by the American Association of Energy Engineers as the best of the year.
 |  WOOD
|
Among his accolades are recognition as Energy Manager of the Year by
the New York chapter of the Association of Energy Engineers; the Harry
Jay Kord Recognition Award from the regional chapter of the Audubon
Society; three awards from the Association of Higher Education
Facilities Officers; and numerous UB Service Excellence awards
throughout the course of his career. Robert Straubinger,
director of the Pharmaceutical Sciences Instrumentation Facility and the
Proteomics/Mass Spectrometry Facility at UB’a New York State Center of
Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences, is internationally
recognized for his research in the area of proteomics—the study of
the role of proteins in various physiological and pathological
processes—and of protein-based drug-delivery systems.
Through the innovative use of mass spectrometry, Straubinger has been
able to quantify the interaction between proteins and peptide drugs in
complex biological environments, leading to the creation of a core mass
spectrometry facility at UB, the first in Western New York. A
fellow of the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists,
Straubinger has received external funding on 17 research projects during
his tenure at UB and holds multiple patents and disclosures, one of
which earned him the title of 2002 Niagara Frontier Inventor of the
Year. He also has held a faculty position at Roswell Park Cancer
Institute since 1994. An associate librarian specializing in the
social sciences and an adjunct faculty member in the Department of
Library and Information Studies, Cynthia Tysick is the primary
liaison for the UB Libraries to the departments of Anthropology,
Classics, Communication and Library and Information Studies. A
member of the Faculty Senate Executive Committee, Tysick has contributed
to several major university initiatives, including the 21st Century
Library Committee formed in conjunction with the Building UB
comprehensive physical planning process. Nationally, she has served as
chair of the American Libraries Association’s (ALA) Asian, African
and Middle Eastern Section and contributed to the ALA’s Office of
Diversity Spectrum Initiative Longitudinal Study. As an
electronic periodicals management specialist with Central Technical
Services, Daisy Waters serves as a liaison to publishers and
vendors of electronic scholarly materials and clarifies licensing issues
related to electronic resources employed by UB’s libraries.
She is a member of the advisory board and the planning steering
committee of the Department of Library and Information Studies, and
helps mentor and recruit new students to the program, including
underrepresented candidates as part of a federally funded initiative
conducted in partnership with the school districts of the cities of
Buffalo and Rochester. She also chairs the serials section of the
ALA’s Association for Library Collections and Technical Services,
and has served on the ALA’s Committee on the Status of Women in
Librarianship. An authority in bioanalytical mass spectrometry,
Troy Wood has received substantial funding from the National
Science Foundation, the NIH and NASA. The recipient of
SUNY’s Entrepreneur Award and the American Society for Mass
Spectrometry Research Award, Troy holds two patents for developing
nano-electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. He serves on the
editorial boards and as a peer reviewer for some of the top journals in
his field, among them Analytical Chemistry, Analytical
Biochemistry and Environmental Science and Technology.
|