Pittsburg State University - Pittsburg, Kansas
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News @ PSU

News and information from Pittsburg State University, Pittsburg, Kansas.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

University prepares for holiday break

As the year comes to a close, most of the staff at Pittsburg State University are getting ready to take a short break. Academic and administrative offices will close at the end of the day on Wednesday, Dec. 21, and will reopen at 8 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 3. During that time, the heat will be reduced significantly in most campus buildings to conserve energy.

The Overman Student Center and the University Bookstore, located in the student center, will observe reduced hours over the break. Sodexho retail food service in the student center closed on Dec. 15 and will reopen on Jan. 18.

Not everyone at PSU takes a holiday during semester break. Dean of Learning Resources Robert Walter said Axe Library will be open most days during the break on a slightly reduced schedule. Regular library hours will resume on Jan. 19.

Walter said that Axe Library is open to all persons throughout the community year round, but that many non-campus library users find the holiday break an attractive time to use the many services the library offers.

“It is a quiet time and parking is much easier,” Walter said. “Many people in the community seem to enjoy a relaxing afternoon in the library during the time that the rest of the campus is closed.”

Some campus employees, including a small number of persons in the Physical Plant and the University Police, will worth through the break.

University Closings:

Academic and administrative offices
Closed Dec. 21 – Jan. 2

Residence Halls
Closed Dec. 17 – Jan. 15

Axe Library
8 a.m. – 4:30 p.m., Mon.-Fri.
Closed on Dec. 26 & Jan. 2
Regular hours resume Jan. 19

Student Center
9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Dec. 19-22
9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Dec. 23
9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Dec. 27-29
9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Dec. 30
6 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. M-F, Jan. 3 -16

PSU Bookstore
9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Dec. 19-22
9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Dec. 23
9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Dec. 27-29
9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Dec. 30
9 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Jan. 3 -5
9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Jan. 6
9 a.m.-4:30 p.m., M-F, Jan. 7-16

---Pitt State---

Thursday, December 15, 2005

PSU looks back at '05 and ahead to '06

As another calendar year comes to a close, individuals and institutions take stock of the 12 months just past and look forward to the year ahead. For Pittsburg State, it has been an eventful year. In a letter to faculty and staff, President Tom Bryant listed some of the highlights of 2005 and looked ahead to some of the challenges the university will face in 2006.

“The campus should feel good about what we accomplished during the past 12 months,” Bryant said, “and we can look forward to a promising 2006.”

Bryant noted that in the year ahead, higher education will continue to face challenges in the state legislature. Funding and tuition, he said, will once again be topics of discussion.

“We must continue to balance the need to maintain quality academic programs while keeping our tuition increases as small as possible,” Bryant said.

The president told faculty and staff that while he couldn’t promise the coming months would always be easy, he could promise “that we will make every attempt to keep what is best for students at the forefront as we make decisions in 2006.”

The major events OF 2005 that the president cited include:

Enrollment
Enrollment continued to climb at PSU, reaching 6,628 for the fall semester. In looking at the university’s growth over recent semesters, two things stand out: a moderate, managed pace and the unusually high percentage of on-campus, full-time students. “We continue to be a very traditional campus,” President Tom Bryant said. “The great majority of the hours we teach are taught here on our campus and most of our students are full-time students. That’s good news for a community so closely tied to the university.”

Private support
Pittsburg State recorded another record year for raising private money. At the end of the fiscal year in June, Dr. James AuBuchon, vice president for University Advancement, reported to the PSU Foundation, Inc., that the university had just concluded a record year for private giving, raising a total of $11,200,276 in the fiscal year that ended June 30. According to AuBuchon, that was a 25 percent increase over the previous year. Last year, the university received $7.2 million.

The PSU Foundation, Inc., with assets of approximately $44 million, receives and manages private support for the university. In addition to scholarships, the foundation also supports faculty development, academic programs and special projects at the university such as the Veterans Memorial and certain building projects.

AuBuchon reported that the PSU Foundation awarded $1.7 million in scholarships in FY 05, which was an 18 percent increase over the previous year.

In July, at the beginning of the new fiscal year, the university received a $1.7 million gift from the estate of Theodore and Faery Loveridge. Mr. Loveridge died in 1998 and Mrs. Loveridge died in May of 2005. That gift was earmarked for the Leonard H. Axe Library. The Loveridges specified that the gift should be used to endow a fund that will be used to “enrich the library’s information resources through accessing electronic information systems...” The money generated each year, which is estimated to be around $80,000 to $85,000, can be used by the library for “other technical advances in the dissemination of knowledge...” and to provide support of electronic books and journals.

• Princeton Review picks Pitt State one of the ‘Best in the Midwest’
Pittsburg State University is one of the “Best in the Midwest,” according to the Review’s rankings of American colleges and universities. The Princeton Review’s annual ranking lists are online and in the new 2006 edition of its book “The Best 361 Colleges” (Random House / Princeton Review, $21.95).

The Review based its rankings on student surveys, which asked students to rate their schools on several topics and report on their experiences at them. Topics include: academics/administration, life at the school, their fellow students, and themselves.
When the Review surveyed Pitt State students, they gave high marks to the close, caring relationships they have with faculty and to the quality of the academic programs on campus.

• PSU completes wireless network
Early in 2005, Pittsburg State University completed its wireless transformation when the Office of Information Systems announced that every university building, with the exception of the residence halls, is covered by the university’s wireless network. Students can even log onto the Internet from their laptops while sitting outside on the campus Oval.

The 110 wireless access points across campus began in March 2004 and ended in February 2005. Now, instead of going to labs, students with wireless laptops can get their work done just about anywhere at any time with the comfort of using their own computers. Faculty and staff can bring their wireless laptops to meetings and stay connected with access to the Web, e-mail, and scheduling system.

• Bricks and Mortar
Bryant noted that the university was successful this past year in laying the groundwork for three major building projects, which should move along swiftly in 2006. Those are the $2.5 million expansion of the west stands of Carnie Smith Stadium, the $4 million Kansas Polymer Research Center and the $14.4 million Student Recreation Center, classroom building and Army National Guard Readiness Center.

Work on the stadium expansion began this week and is expected to be complete before the Kansas Shrine Bowl football game is held in the stadium on July 29. That project includes the addition of eight corporate skyboxes, an elevator, additional stairs and other structural changes to improve accessibility. The project is funded by private gifts and skybox leases.

Many elements came together in 2005 on the Kansas Polymer Research facility. The City of Pittsburg donated land in the city-owned research and development park. PSU alumnus Robert D. Taylor, president of Winfield Consumer Products of Winfield, Kan., made a $2 million gift to help fund construction of the facility; and the State of Kansas, through the University Research and Development Enhancement Corporation, made $2 million in revenue bonds available to complete the funding package. Construction on the polymer research facility, located just sought of the Bicknell Sports Complex, should get underway in the spring.

Funding for the largest project, a combination student fitness center, classroom building and Army National Guard readiness center, came together this fall. The Kansas delegation worked together to include the project in the FY 2006 Military Construction Appropriations bill for projects across the country and President Bush signed the bill, which includes $5.683 million for the PSU project. The $14.4 million project, which will be located between the PSU Veterans Memorial and the Bicknell Sports Complex, will be completed with a mixture of federal, state and private funds. Groundbreaking for the facility will be held in the spring.

• Administrative & staff changes
This year, two vice presidents announced their plans to retire in 2006. Dr. Robert Ratzlaff, vice president for Academic Affairs, and Dr. James AuBuchon, vice president for University Advancement, have served the university for many years. These two high-profile positions will be filled after national searches in the coming months.

• Planning for the future
The Second Century Task Force completed a study and submitted a report to the president early in the fall 2005 semester. President Bryant said he would use the task force report as a springboard for development of the university’s 2005-2010 strategic plan. Some of the task force’s recommendations, he said, are already being implemented and others were in the process.

“Pittsburg State University is strong as 2005 comes to a close,” Bryant said. “While there are challenges ahead, we believe we are in a good position to meet them. We have every reason to look forward to 2006 and the opportunities it brings for our students, our staff and our faculty and the university as a whole.”

---Pitt State---

Monday, December 12, 2005

Group offers massage, stress management tips

It’s finals week at Pittsburg State and to help students who have been putting in lots of extra hours to prepare for this week’s exams and projects, Gorillas in Your Midst, a peer health education group, will sponsor free year-end ‘stress-buster’ neck and shoulder massages today in the Overman Student Center. The messages, performed by licensed massage therapist Lorraine Achey, will take place from 1-3 p.m. today in the lower level of the student center.

From 8 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. today through Wednesday, Gorillas in Your Midst will also distribute free handouts on stress reduction techniques and ways for students to manage test anxiety.

For more information, please contact J.T. Knoll, coordinator of student prevention and wellness, at 620-235-4062, jknoll@pittstate.edu

---Pitt State---

---Pitt State---

Friday, December 09, 2005

Santa's sleigh is a Wal-Mart truck

Boxes of brightly colored board games will are headed for children affected by Hurricane Katrina thanks to the efforts of faculty, staff and students at Pittsburg State University. Santa (A.K.A. Dr. Chuck Killingsworth), with the help of Dr. Dan Ferguson and students in the Department of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, loaded the games on a Wal-Mart truck on Dec. 7 and sent them on their way.

Killingsworth, a member of the faculty in HPER, said the unusual collection grew out of an e-mail message he received from a southern colleague following the hurricane.

“The collection of Board Games for Bored Kids began at an elementary school in Mobile, Ala.,” Killingsworth said. “The thought was that all of these displaced children needed some activities that would be fun and would brighten their lives just a bit.”

Killingsworth said the idea appealed to him and he offered it to the students and the wider campus community. Several large boxes of games, stuffed animals, puzzles and other toys were collected, Killingsworth said, and Wal-Mart agreed to deliver the lot for free. The games are going to the Baton Rouge, La., Parks and Recreation Commission. Killingsworth said that Baton Rouge has large numbers of hurricane evacuees and the games can be put to good use there.

“It may not be a large thing,” Killingsworth said, “but it is just one more small thing we can do to help people who have such great need.”

---Pitt State---

Students turn war refuse into lasting memories

While it’s not exactly beating swords into plowshares, some Pittsburg State University students are using the debris of war to create lasting images of an American icon.

This week, students in the PSU College of Technology melted down brass rods salvaged from the war in Iraq and cast them into miniature Liberty Bells. The finished bells will be displayed in the home armories of units that comprise the 891st Engineering Battalion, which is returning this week from the war.

Russ Rosmait, an engineering technology professor at PSU, said he was contacted recently by 1st Sgt. Donald Splechter, with the 891st, about the project. Splechter is employed at the Acme Foundry in Coffeyville in civilian life and had met Rosmait at a conference.

Rosmait said Splechter suggested using brass metal rods that were used in repair kits in Iraq. The excess rods are normally discarded, but Splechter arranged to have more than 40 pounds of the material sent back to Pittsburg.

Rosmait said he was eager to do the project because it was educational for students in the KTC Casting Lab and was a way to honor the members of the 891st for their service in Iraq.

“This is a great project,” Rosmait said. “The students are learning and at the same time they get a good feeling about doing something to honor our men and women in uniform.”

---Pitt State---

Thursday, December 08, 2005

Pittsburg State honors three alumni for achievement

Pittsburg State University will honor three alumni with its Meritorious Achievement Awards during commencement activities at 7:30 p.m. on Dec. 16. The PSU Alumni Association established the Meritorious Achievement Award in 1958. It is the highest award presented by the association. The Meritorious Achievement Award is based on career achievement. Candidates for the award must have demonstrated substantial professional growth and advancement over an extended period of time. The candidate’s activities, including participation and leadership in civic and professional organizations at the local, state, and national levels, is also considered by the awards committee in selecting the recipients.

The December recipients of the award are: Kenneth E. Bean, a retired researcher and engineer with Eagle Picher and Texas Instruments; Connie (Scavezze) Stilwell, who retired earlier this year after a 35-year career as an elementary school teacher in USD 512 in Shawnee Mission, Kan.; and Sandra K. Willsie, executive vice president of academic affairs, provost and dean of the College of Osteopathic Medicine at the Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences (KCUMB) in Kansas City, Mo.

Kenneth E. (Ken) Bean, BSED 1950, retired in 1989 after a long career as a researcher and engineer with Eagle Picher and Texas Instruments. Since retiring, he has continued as a consultant on semiconductor materials processing, defect analysis and troubleshooting. He has served for more than 30 years as a continuing education lecturer in Europe on physics, chemistry and crystallography of the semiconductor process and has served as a reviewer of articles in several professional journals.

The son of an Englevale, Kan., coal miner, Bean began his career in 1953 as a high school teacher and coach in Galena, Kan. He changed his career path, however, when he became a research engineer for Eagle Picher, working there from 1953 to 1962. At Eagle Picher, he developed the process for the first production of electronic grade silicon and he synthesized the first electronic grade elemental boron. He served as a member of the technical staff and a research engineer with Texas Instruments from 1962 until his retirement in 1989. He was promoted to a TI Fellow, Texas Instrument’s highest technical ranking, and earned many other honors during his career. He has had 38 articles published and has more than 40 U.S. patents and more than 100 international patents, some now archived in the Smithsonian Institute.

Bean attended college under the provisions of the GI Bill and graduated from Pittsburg State University in 1950 with a bachelor of science in education degree. He was married for 57 years to Helen Dawson Bean, now deceased, and has three children, eight grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. He lives on a farm near Celina, Texas.

Connie K. (Scavezze) Stilwell, BSED 1970, retired earlier this year after a 35-year career as an elementary school teacher in Unified School District 512 in Shawnee Mission, Kan. Since retiring, she and her husband, Richard, have developed a company called Bluestem Learning, LLC., which provides tutoring, staff development, instructional coaching and parent-school involvement programs. Twenty-two retired and active teachers are involved in Bluestem, working to assist students, teachers and school districts in meeting Kansas’ educational standards.

In addition to years in the elementary school classroom, Stilwell has taught both undergraduate and graduate level university classes. She has been extensively involved in curriculum development and staff development to implement new curriculum and teaching strategies.

Stilwell was named Shawnee Mission Teacher of the Year in 2001-2002. She was a semi-finalist for Kansas Teacher of the Year in 2002-2003. She was a state finalist for the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science and Mathematics Teaching in 1990. She received the Kansas City Star and The Learning Exchange “Excellence in Teaching Award” in 1989.

A former member of the PSU College of Education Alumni Advisory Board, Stilwell has been active at the school district, state and national level in numerous professional organizations and conferences.

Stilwell graduated from Pittsburg State University in 1970 with a bachelor of science in education degree in 1970, with a major in elementary education. She earned a master of science degree in curriculum and instruction from the University of Kansas. Her husband, Richard, is a 1970 graduate of the PSU College of Business. Their son, John, is a manager at Marketsphere Consulting. Connie and Rick Stilwell live in Prairie Village, Kan.

Sandra K. Willsie, BSMT 1975, is executive vice president of academic affairs/provost and dean for the College of Osteopathic Medicine at the Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences (KCUMB) in Kansas City, Mo. As the chief academic officer, Dr. Willsie supervises budgetary, personnel, and mission/vision for all academic programs, including undergraduate, graduate and postgraduate programs.

Willsie, D.O., FACP, FCCP, received her medical degree in 1983 and served as an instructor of medicine at KCUMB while completing a rotating internship. She then completed an internal medicine residency and fellowship in pulmonary medicine/critical care medicine at the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s School of Medicine. She was a member of UMKC’s faculty (1988-2000), and served as assistant dean (1994-2000) and interim chairperson for the Department of Medicine (1998-2000).

In 2000, Willsie was named KCUMB’s vice-dean of academic affairs, administration and medical affairs. She was promoted to vice president for academic affairs and dean at KCUMB in 2002. In 2004, she was promoted to university provost. She has served as a principal investigator or co-investigator on numerous grant-funded research projects. Willsie holds board certification with the American Board of Internal Medicine, in internal medicine, pulmonary diseases with special qualifications in critical care medicine. She also holds board certification with the American Board of Osteopathic Internists.

Willsie has published extensively and made many numerous national and international presentations. She graduated from Pittsburg State University in 1975 with a bachelor of science degree in medical technology (Magna Cum Laude) with a major in biology (medical technology). She has received numerous honors including being named Researcher of the Year in 2004 by the American College of Osteopathic Internists and was asked to serve on the faculty for Harvard University’s Macy Institute’s program for health science educators (2001-2006).

She and her husband, Thomas E. Syverson, live in Overland Park, Kan.

---Pitt State---

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

Board games for Katrina's young victims

Boxes of brightly colored board games will soon be headed for children affected by Hurricane Katrina thanks to the efforts of faculty, staff and students at Pittsburg State University. A Wal-Mart truck is scheduled to pick the games up at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 7, at the Weede Physical Education Building on the PSU campus.

Dr. Chuck Killingsworth, a member of the faculty in PSU’s Department of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, said the unusual collection grew out of an e-mail message he received from a southern colleague following the hurricane.

“As I understand it,” Killingsworth said, “the collection of Board Games for Bored Kids began at an elementary school in Mobile, Ala. The thought was that all of these displaced children needed some activities that would be fun and would brighten their lives just a bit.”

Killingsworth said the idea appealed to him and he offered it to the students and the wider campus community. Several large boxes of games have been collected, Killingsworth said, and Wal-Mart agreed to deliver the games for free. The games are going to the Baton Rouge, La., Parks and Recreation Department. Killingsworth said that Baton Rouge has large numbers of hurricane evacuees and the games can be put to good use there.

“It may not be a large thing,” Killingsworth said, “but it is just one more small thing we can do to help people who have such great need.”

For information, please contact Dr. Killingsworth at 620-235-4670, ckilling@pittstate.edu.

---Pitt State---

Presentation focuses on truth

The Greek orator and philosopher Demosthenes said that, “Nothing is easier than self-deceit. For what each man wishes, that he also believes to be true.”

More than 2,300 years later, the world still struggles with defining truth. At 3 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 9, philosopher and Kansas State University assistant professor Douglas Patterson, will offer his thoughts on the subject in a presentation at Pittsburg State University on “Issues in the Definition of Truth.” Patterson’s presentation, sponsored by the PSU Philosophical Society, will be in Room 307 of Russ Hall. It is free and open to the public.

Patterson earned a bachelor of arts degree at Reed College and a Ph.D. at the University of Pittsburgh. He has been at Kansas State University since 2002. Patterson’s research is centered on the philosophy of language. He has published numerous papers on truth and related subjects and is a frequent presenter and lecturer on language and truth theories.

For more information, please contact professor Don Viney in the PSU Department of Social Sciences at 620-235-4326, .

Friday, December 02, 2005

Group honors PSU for memorial

The Topeka Chapter of the Military Order of World Wars has presented the Patrick Henry Award to Pittsburg State University in recognition of the outstanding patriotic activities offered at the PSU Veterans Memorial Amphitheater.

Col. (Ret.) Robert Tindall presented the award to James AuBuchon, PSU Vice President for University Advancement, during a ceremony in Topeka.

According to the association’s web site, the Military Order is a patriotic, nonpartisan organization, which holds that it is nobler to serve than to be served. The Order was established in 1919 to promote the welfare of the nation. The Military Order provides an opportunity for officers of all of the uniformed services to unite in a strong program to promote national security, patriotism, good citizenship and service to country.

The order is comprised of more than 155 Chapters across the nation, with chapters in Kansas City and Topeka.

---Pitt State---