UA notebook

Architect outlines library renovation

FAYETTEVILLE -- An approximately $16.5 million renovation to the main campus library will focus on the building's top two floors as the majority of books are moved to an off-campus storage facility, a project architect said Friday.

"In the renovation of level three and level four, we're providing more seats in the library than currently exist," said Todd Shafer, associate principal with Perry Dean Rogers architecture of Boston. He said the space will allow for more study areas and greater collaboration between faculty members and students.

Shafer spoke to faculty and staff members about early design concepts for renovating the Mullins Library. Up to three-quarters of books and other printed materials now housed in the library will begin to be moved as soon as this summer, library officials have said.

Design concepts include a reading room for graduate students and also a separate reading room for faculty members. Remaining books in the library would be used as a "buffer" between student group study areas and open study areas, Shafer said.

Renovation work also involves removing asbestos. Carolyn Henderson Allen, dean of libraries, said another $20 million is needed for a full renovation.

Top bidder named for gear-sales pact

FAYETTEVILLE -- An intent-to-award letter dated Thursday from the university has named Dyehard Fan Supply as the choice to manage licensed merchandise sales at athletic events and online.

No deal has been signed; contract negotiations are the next step, university spokesman Kevin Trainor said in an email.

The company was created last year by private-equity firm Teall Capital, according to a December statement. Teall Capital describes itself as based in three cities: Winston-Salem, N.C.; Atlanta; and San Francisco.

Dyehard Fan Supply was chosen over bids from Fanatics, which Trainor said currently manages the retail sales, and GameDay Holdings.

In its request for bids, the university listed $1.21 million in 2016-17 sales for retail shops at athletic venues. The university also listed net online sales of $899,939 for the same year, with the online sales made via a link from the main athletics Web page.

Goals in seeking bids included "substantial merchandise revenue growth for the University," the bid request document stated.

$300,000 received for heart research

FAYETTEVILLE -- A pair of biomedical engineering researchers studying the human heart have received grants totaling more than $300,000 from the American Heart Association.

Morten Jensen will use the association's $154,000 Institutional Research Enhancement Award to study ways to create a new type of stent for use in coronary blood vessels. Collaborators Barry Uretsky at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and Lucas Timmins at the University of Utah are working with Jensen to study stents that could be used in the spots where vessels branch.

Kartik Balachandran is using a $154,000 grant from the association to study the progression of a certain type of disease known as calcific aortic valve disease.

The American Heart Association program aims to fund "small-scale research projects related to cardiovascular diseases and stroke," according to its website, with the grants directed toward projects at schools that have not been major recipients of National Institutes of Health support.

Ex-law school dean in line for bar honor

FAYETTEVILLE -- Cynthia Nance, a former dean of the law school, is being honored with a national award from the American Bar Association.

Nance, a law professor at UA, is one of five women honored this year as Margaret Brent Women Lawyers of Achievement.

The award honors women for excelling in their field and helping lead a path to success for other women lawyers. Nance was the first woman and first black law dean in Arkansas, serving as dean from 2006-11.

More than 75 nominations are received each year for the honor, according to the American Bar Association.

Rice-watering study nets $500,199 grant

FAYETTEVILLE -- A $500,199 National Science Foundation grant will help a university researcher study irrigation strategies for rice production.

Benjamin Runkle, an assistant professor of biological and agriculture engineering, has received the Faculty Early Career Development award.

His work involves studying ways to save water without reducing rice production. Arkansas is the top producer of rice among all states, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

NW News on 04/10/2018

Upcoming Events