notre dame report · notre dame's third world relief fund, designed to support private...

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contents February 3, 1978 the university 237 'Campaign for ND' Gifts 237 Third Horld Relief Fund faculty notes 238 Appoiritments 238 Honors 238 Activities 239 Deaths office of advanced studies Information Circulars 240 ·The Japan-United. States Friendship Commi ssjon Programs for 1978-79 (No. FY78-122) 241 Kidney Foundation of .Indiana, Inc.-' Grant (No. FY78-i23) 241 The City of New York Urban Fe 11 ows Program (No. FY78-124) 241 Nationcil Science Foundation Service Sticnce Residencies and Internships (No. FY78-125) 242 243 243 243 244 246 National Science Foundation Science. for Citizens Forums; Conferences and Workshops (No. FY78-126) . Exxon Education Foundation Research and Development Program Grants (No. FY78-127) National Research Council Transportation Research Board Transportation Research Projects (No: . The Scripps-Howard Foundation Activities for (No. FY78-129) Current Publications ·And- Other. Scho 1 a rly Works Closing Dates. for Selected Sponsored Programs. documentation 249 Additions: NOR #4 University Committee. on Interdisciplinary Graduate Studies '77J78

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contents

February 3, 1978

the university

237 'Campaign for ND' Gifts 237 Third Horld Relief Fund

faculty notes

238 Appoiritments 238 Honors 238 Activities 239 Deaths

office of advanced studies

Information Circulars 240 ·The Japan-United. States

Friendship Commi ssjon Programs for 1978-79 (No. FY78-122)

241 Kidney Foundation of .Indiana, Inc.-' Grant Application~ (No. FY78-i23)

241 The City of New York Urban Fe 11 ows Program (No. FY78-124)

241 Nationcil Science Foundation ~ublic Service Sticnce Residencies and Internships (No. FY78-125)

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National Science Foundation Science. for Citizens Forums; Conferences and Workshops (No. FY78-126) . Exxon Education Foundation Research and Development Program Grants (No. FY78-127) National Research Council Transportation Research Board Transportation Research Projects (No: FY78~128) . The Scripps-Howard Foundation Activities for 1977~78 (No. FY78-129) Current Publications ·And­Other. Scho 1 a rly Works Closing Dates. for Selected Sponsored Programs.

documentation

249 Additions: NOR #4 University Committee. on Interdisciplinary Graduate Studies

'77J78

th u r

" 'Campaign for NO' Gifts

--A mill1on dollar gift to Notre Dame to establish the Oliver C. Carmichael Chair in Government and Internat-ional Studies was announced by Ernestine Carmichael Raclin. The chair will honor her late husband who was chairman of the board of the Associates Corporation of North America and national chairman of Notre Dame's $52 million SUMMA develop­ment campaign which ended in 1972. Carmichael died in 1976.

Raclin is the daughter of Ernest M. Morris, benefactor of the Morris Inn on campus. She is

· currently chairman of the board of. FTB Bancorp, a trustee of Notre Dame, and cochairman of the University's current $130 million fund:...raising program, "The Campaign for Notre Dame." She succeeded her mother as head of the Women's Advisory Council in 1968 and joined the Advisory Council for the College of Arts and Letters when the University became coeducational in 1972. · The Carmichael Chair is the 20th endowed professor­ship.to be set up at Notre Dame since the campaign started.

Third World Relief Fund

Notre Dame's Third World Relief Fund, designed to support private agencies assisting the poorest sections in Africa, Asia and Latin America, will kick off its 1978 campaign, announced Robert Rodes and Peter Walshe of the Third World Relief Fund Committee. Last year almost 200 members of the Notre Dame community contributed to the Catholic Relief Service, Church World Service, CARE, IFCO/ RAINS, Co-workers of Mother Teresa in America, OXFAM-Ameri.ca and UNICEF. Faculty and staff members will be receiving a description of these agencies and a pledge card. The committee hopes to help check the deteriorating conditions of the poorest 40 per cent of the third world's people through these agencies.

Vol. 7, No·.··1o.. . · ·.· .. ··Feb· ... g 1978 Notre. Dame Report is an official publication published fortnightly during the scho~l year monthly in summer, by the University of Notre Dame, Department. of Information Services. Second-class postage.paid at.Notre Danie,.Indiana. ©1978 by the University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556. .Ali" rights reserved~

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Appointments RobertS. Howley has b~en named a new regional director of the department of development.

Honors.· Joan Aldous, 'Kenan professor -of sociology, .. has. been named to the advisory editorial board of the International Journal of Family Therapy .. ·

Harvey'· Bender, professor of biology, has been appointed a consulting'editor for.Mental Retar­dation, the journal qf the American Association .on Mental Deficiency.

Do 1 ore~ Warwick Frese, assistant professor of English, has been elected Chairman of the. Elections Committee of the Modern Language Association of America. . .

Ruey-wen Li u; professor of e lectri ca 1 engfneer-ing, has been appointed chairman of the . Technical Committee on Nonlinear Circuits and Systems by the Institute of. Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE). C_ircuits and · Systems Society.

·Anthony M. Troz~olo, Huisking professor of chemistry, has been reappointed to the editorial

·advisory boards of Accounts of Chemical Research and Molecular Photochemistry ..

R. Brian Wal~h; director of the Computing Center, . was elected to .a one-:-year term as secretary/

treasure"r of CAUSE, a non-profit professional association for the.develop~ent,use and mahage­ment of information systems in higher education, at.the December meeting of the. board of dir.ectors. · · ·· ·

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Activities Hafiz Atassi, associate professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering, presented a ·paper entitled "Effect of Blade Loadihg and Thickness ~n the Aerodynamics of Osci 11 ati ng Cascades" coauthored with Terrence J, Akai at the annual meeting of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), Huntsville, Ala., Jan. 15-18.

Joseph P. Bauer, associate professor·of law, was a panelist in the International Legal Exchange Section meeting on Foreign Summer Law Prqgrams at the annual meeting of :the Association of American Law Schools held in Atlanta, Dec. 27-29.

Salvatore Bella, Jones professor of management, gave a talk entitled ... Contemporary Techniques forMore EffeCtive Communi~ation" to the Young Executives Forum sponsored-by the Material Handling Equipment Distributors Association, Notre Dame, on·Dec. 7;

Rev. Thomas E. .Bl antz, C. S.C.·, associ ate professor of history and University archivist, delivered the·key- · note address at the annual Province Meeting of th.e Priests of Holy Cross at Moreau Seminary on Jan. 13.

Donald P. Costello, professor of English, served on the National Reading Committee for the selection of Danforth Graduate Fellowships in St .. Louis, Jan. 11-14.

Michael J. Crowe, professor in the general program of liberal studies, organized a sessfon entitled, "The Extraterrestrial. Intelligent Life Debate" for the meeting of the History of .Science Society in Dallas, Tex. on Dec. 30. He. i;i_lso gave a paper in the session enthled "Astronoiliy.andthe Ell Debate 1700-1916." . . ~ .

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Dolores Warwick Frese, assistant professor of English, presented the paper "Chaucer & Humanism: The Cok Before the Dawn" at the Modern language AssoCiation Annual Convention, Chicago, Dec. 29. -

A.L. Gabriel, director of the Folsom Ambrosiana Collection, gave an illustrated lecture on Dec. 13 on the "Iconography of the Medieval Professor" in the Ontario Institute for Higher Education at the University of Toronto, Canada.

John Halloran, assistant professor of finance, was a discussant at the Market Efficiency and Capital Asset Pricing session of the Financial Management Association's national meeting held in Seattle, Wash., Oct. 13-15.

David Clark Isele, assistant professor of music, conducted the Notre Dame Chorale in concerts pre­sented during'their annual tour through Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York and Connecticut, Jan. 7-16.

John Kennedy; professor of marketing, presented a paper entitled "Transactional Analysis in Marketing-­A Theory" at the Indiana Bureau of Research Con­ference held Oct. 13 in Brown County, Ind.

G. D. Loescher, assistant dean of the College of Arts and Letters and concurrent assistant professor of government and international studies, visited-Cuba from Dec: 22-Jan. 2 to set up educational ex­changes between Cuba and the United States.

John Malone, professor of marketing, delivered a talk entitled "Salesmanship: The Road to New Business Development" to the Amusement and Music Operaters Association International Exposition and .Trade Show on Oct. 28 in Chicago. He presented a

~ talk entitled "The Plant Operator as the Client's Marketing and Advertisement Consultant" to the Outdoor Advertising Association of America seminar on Nov. 7 at Notre Dame. "Keys to Successful Operation Management" was the talk he presented to the Young Executives Forum at -the Materials ~andling Dealers Associ~tion -Conference, held Dec. 8-9 at Notre Dame.

Thomas J. Mueller, professor of_aerospace and_ mechanical engineering, presented a paper en­titled "Direct Method for Calculating the Tran­sonic Region of Propulsive Nozzles," at the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astro-­nautics (AIAA)_16th Aerospace Sciences Meeting in Huntsville, Ala., Jan. 16-18.

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bean A. Porter, director of the Art Gallery, presented testimony in support of House Joint Resolution 600 authorizing the President of the United States to call a White House Conference on the Arts at hearings held by the Select Education Sub-committee of the House of Representatives at the Art Center, Inc., South Bend on Jan. 14.

Wilhelm F. Stoll, professor of mathematics, gave the invited address "Strictly Parabolic Manifolds" at a session in Capacity on Several Complex Variables at the annual meeting of the American Mathematical Society in Atlanta, Jan. 3-7.

William G. Storey, professor of- theology, led a two-day seminar on the Christian use of the Psalms at the North American Academy of Liturgy at the University of San Francisco, Jan. 2-6.

Anthony M. Trozzolo, Huisking professor of chemistry, presenteda lecture entitled "Solid State Photochromi sm" before the Wabash Valley Section of the American Chemical Society at Indiana State University, Terre Haute, Ind., on Dec. 15.

Stephen T. Worland, associate professor of economics, presented the presidential address "The Uncertain Future of Social Economics" at the 36th annual meeting of the Association for Social Economics in New York, Dec. 29. He also served as commentator for the program on the "History of Economics Society."

Deaths Christopher James Fagan, 71, associate professor emeritus of economics, died in South Bend on Jan. 12.

John F. Healy, 77, donor of the Hayes-Healy Building, ~ied Jan~ 16 in Chicago.

Robert D. Murphy, 83, Laetare Medalist in 1959, died Jan. 9.

M~rshall T. Smelser, 65; p~ofessor emeritus of history.and former-chairman of the department 1960-63, died iri South Bend on Jan. 19.

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Information Circulars

Additional information on all circulars listed below may be obtained by calling Ext. 7378, 7432, 7433.

The Japan-United States Friendship Commission Programs for 1978-79

No. FY78-122

The Japan-United States Friendship Commission was established by the U.S. Congress in 1975 for the pro­motion of scholarly, cultural and artistic activities

-between Japan and the. United States.

Programs:

Japanese Studies:

1. Post-graduate training of the next generation of _ American academic and professional specialists on Japan.

2. Scholarly research and publication about Japan. 3. Intensive Japanese language study programs and

programs to develop teaching and testing methods. 4. Major collections of Japanese books and publica­

tions in appropriate libraries located ~hroughout the United States.

5. Professional School Programs. The Commission will give special consideration to proposals from pro­fessional· graduate schools of business, law, jour­nalism, architecture, education and urban planning for the seeding of new programs on Japan.

6. El enientary, secondary and teacher education pro­gra~s, including buf not limited to curriculum development related to Japan.

American Studies: The Commission will consider proposals from Japanese universities or·other appropriate organizations for support of teaching, research; seminars, publication

· and 1 i brary collections on Aineri can hi story .and ci vi 1 i­zation and oi the economic, social and·political in-stitutions of the United States. ·

The Arts: The Commission will support opportunities for American and Japanese individuals of creative talent and achievement in the visual,- performing and literary arts to study and observe or to -perform in the tradi­tional and modern art forms.

Cultural Communication and Public Affairs: To broaden American understanding of the culture, society, history and institutions of the Japanese peo­ple, the Commission will consider proposals for pro­grams in: 1. Museums, 2. Educational Television, 3. _Opportunities for Japanese participation in American intellectual activities, including conferences and seminars, publications, ·translations and joint research on common social, economic and political problems and 4. Opportunities for_American organizations in the fields of political, social, economic, educational; mass media and public affairs, to-develop on-going ex­change relationships with their Japanese counterparts.-

Oeadline: March 1, 1978 and September 1, 1978.

For further information write to:

Executive Director -Japan-United States Friendship Commission 1875 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Suite 709 Washington, D.C. 20009

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Kidney Foundation of Indiana, Inc. Grant Applications

No. FY78-123

The Following Items Must Be Followed As Application Is Prepared:

1. Applications must be postmarked no later than March 1, 1978.

2. All approved Grants or Fellowships 11ill be funded at the level of $5,000 or less. No recovery of indirect costs is permitted, but supplementation is permitted, within institutional policy. If ap­plicant is to receive funds from other sources, the sources and amounts must be indicated.

3. Eight copies must be submitted, including eight copies of all material; all supporting material must accompany the application.

4. Funds 1~ill be committed on a yearly basis. Appli­cations for continuing support for a second year will be considered competitively.

5. Curriculum vitae must be included on separate sheet.

6. At end of grant period a 300 word summary of pro­gram is required.

For further information write:

Douglas R. Maxwell, M.D. Kidney Foundation of Indiana 1010 East 86th Street Indianapolis, Indiana 46240

Types of Grants: Research, Fellowship, Equipment, Supplemental, etc.

Proposal Outline and Applications are available from the Office of Advanced Studies, Division of Research and Sponsored Programs, Extension 7433.

The City of New York Urban Fellows Program

No. FY78-124

The New York City Urban Fellows Program offers a unique experiential learning opportunity in urban government .. Each year twenty outstanding college seniors and grad­uate students are selected to serve as Urban Fellows for a full academic year; The Program affords students the opportunity to integrate academic theory with actualpractice while taking an active role in New York City government. The program runs for thirty-nine consecutive weeks~ from mid-Sept~mber 1978 to mid-Jtin~ 1979~ . . .. . .

Stipend: .... • A tax-free stipend of $4,800 is awarded:

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Eligibility:

* College seniors, graduate students or accepted can- 4llm dictates in a graduate program by September 1978.

* Have the academic endorsement of his or her college or university.

* Be prepared to participate on a full-time basis in the Program.

Deadline: Applications and supporting materials should be post­marked no later than February 15, 1978.

For further information write:

Mr. Dominick Cucinotta, Director New York City Urban Fellows Program 250 Broadway, 11th Floor New York, New York 10007

Application forms are available from the Office of Advanced Studies, Division of Research and Sponsored Programs.

National Science Foundation Public Service Science Residencies and Internships

No. FY78-125

The Science for Citizens program (SFC) will award 15 to 25 Public Service Science Residencies and 15 to 25 Public Service Science Internships in 1978. The awards in this experimental program are intended:

* to increase the knowledgeable participation of scientists and citizens in resolving major issues of public policy that involve science and technol­ogy;

* to make scientific and technical information and expertise _available to citizens and citizen groups, at the times and_ in the ways most useful to them; and

* to encourage scientists and engineers, and students of science and engineering, to· participate in ac­tivities of this kind as ari important adjunct or alternative to academic .training, teaching and re­search.

Applicants for residencies and internships may propose any of.a wide range of alternative uses of their aca­de~ic and professional knowledge, skills and interests. Appropriate projects include· .(but are not limited to)

·research, writing and expert advice addressed to the scientifit.needs:of citizens and their organizations and informal education activities for adults such as seminars, workshops~ pub 1 i c 1 ectures a·nd debates on science-re,lated policy issues: . . .

. . Applicants' proje-cts must be undertaken in the United States .. Priority of consideration will be given to applications in ~hich the· proposed activities are in­tended to reach groups that normally do not have ac- _· -cess to sci enti fie expertise and -i nforma ti on: mi nori.,. ty groups' the poor; those with 1 i ttl e forma 1 educa- -

' tion and the organizations that represent them and .J! work to meet their needs. · ·

Applicants must associate themselves with a host or­ganization that will provide a base for their proposed activities. Applications will not be accepted from persons proposing to continue their association with an office or program in which they are currently em­ployed. Any of a wide range of organizations may be appropriate, including citizen groups, professional or trade associations and trade unions, units of state and local government, educational institutions (such as a public library, museum or college with a commu­nity outreach program) or other organizations which: (1) are operated primarily for scientific, education­al, service, charitable or similar purposes in the public interest; (2) are not organized primarily for profit; and (3) use all income exceeding costs to maintain, improve and/or expand their operations.

Applications will be accepted only from individuals who have made satisfactory arrangements with an appro­priate host organization or institution. However, the initiative in setting up such arrangements may be taken by either party, and prospective hosts may seek out suitable residents and interns and encourage them to apply directly to the program. Applications must be accompanied by completed forms from the proposed host that clearly state how the proposed activities will contribute to its own programs (new or ongoing) that are intended to increase informed citizen parti­cipation in resolving public issues.

The closing date for submission of applications is March 15, 1978.

National Science Foundation Science for Citizens Forums, Conferences and Workshops

No. FY78-126

The goals of the Science for Citizens (SFC) program are:

* to make scientific and technical information and expertise available to citizens at the times and in the ways most useful to them, and

* to increase the knowledgeable participation of sci­entists and citizens in resolving major issues of public policy that involve science and technology.

Through the su~port of forums, conferences and work­Shops involving scientists and citizens, SFC encourages activities that:

* contribute to the development and public dissemina­tion of facts, issues and arguments about pol icy issues in whic~ science and technology play an im-portant part~ and · ·

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* help citi-iens to reach informed decjsions and par­ticipate. effectively in the .policy-making process on thes~ issu~s. The issues are expected to.be matters of public concern that may affect people's daily liv~s in their roles as consumers, workers, family members and community residents.

SFC forums, conferences and workshops should have the following characteristics:

* The proposed activity should meet the needs of citi­zens and citizen groups that normally lack access to scientific and technical expertise. We are par­ticularly interested in projects involving members of minority groups, the poor and those with little formal education.

* Representatives of citizen groups should be active­ly involved in the planning and execution of the project. They and their members should not be merely passive recipients of information provided by scientists and other outsiders.

* The project should be part of a continuing program of activities that reaches out to citizens and citizen groups normally lacking access to scientif­ic information, or should be intended to initiate continuing activities of this kind.

* The proposed activity should be focused on clearly defined policy issues in which science and technol­ogy play an important part. It should include spe­cific plans to bring relevant scientific and tech­nical information to bear on the discussion of those issues.

* The proposed activity should lead to practical ac­tivities and decisions on problems considered sig­nificant by the participants and their-communities.

* Procedures should be established to ensure that all important points of view about the issues will be represented and that a balanced exploration of the full range of scientific, technical, political and ethical views of the iss-ues ~1ill result. Mechanisms that can help to achieve this include co-sponsorship arrangements or representative advisory committees to help plan and execute the project.

* The proposed activity should involve new ways to achieve the constructive interaction of scientists and nonscientists in resolving issues of public concern.

* The project should be suitably publicized. Events and outcomes should be recorded, foll01·1-up activi­ties should be initiated so that the results or conclusions are widely distributed and measures should be taken to assess the success or failure of project activities.

Support from the SFC. program is for the purpose of better informing the public debate on policy issues involving science and technology. This purpose may

·require applicants to undertake: a wide range of attiv­ities to plan for and to follow up on actual forum, conference or workshop sessions. These ancillary ac­tivities are also eligible for SFC support, and should be fully described in the proposal.

ihe progra~ will not support activities to promdte · already-determined positions on policy issues, to promulgate specific dogmas or t.o market particular products or forms of technology.

The closing date.for formal pro~osals is May 1, 1978.

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Exxon Education Foundation Research and Development Program Grants

No. FY78-127

!-Ia rch 2 1978 is the first offici a 1 cut-off date in 1978 fo~ proposals submitted to the Exxon Foundation for its Research and Development Program grants.

Purpose: . _ . . To support projects that prom1se to lead to Wlde_lm­proveme~t in instruction, administration or phys1cal facilities utilization in higher education. Project activities may. include:

1.

2.

3.

4.

Pilot Projects - The design and testing of new methods or materials

Developmental Efforts - attempts to perfect, ex­pand upon or disseminate materials or methods of recognized merit

Evaluation Efforts - assessment by outside evalu­ators of the efficiency and effectiveness of in­structional or administrati.ve innovations· that have already concluded their development phase; and

Studies Examination - analysis of practices, trends and development~ in higher education and other investigations having direct practical value for institutions of higher education.

Categories of Support: Instruction, Administration and-Physical Facilities.

Amount of Support: Most grants are in amounts not to exceed $100,000.·

Proposal: . . Preliminary outline of proposed-proJect needs to be submitted in time to meet the March 1 deadline.

National Research Council _ TransportatiOn Research Board T~ansportation Research Projects

No. FY78-128

The National Cooperative Highway Research Program is supported on a ·continuing basis by funds from partici:.. pating member departments of the American Association of State High~1ay and Transportation-Officials (AASHTO), with ·the full cooperation and support of the Federal

. HighYiay Administration, U.S .. Department of' Transporta- · tion and is admiriis:tered by the Transportation-Research Board ~f the. National Research Council:. It is not a grant .. program, but one of appl iecj contract research .. totally committed to pro vi ding sol ut_ions for opera­tional problems facing highway and transportation ad­minis-trators and engineers.

The Program for fi sea 1 1979 ¢ons is ts of ten new prob- . lems within the NCHRP Research fields of ·transportation Planning, Design, .Materials and Construction, Soils and GeologY and Special Projects. .

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A proposal may be submitted following a self-appraisal of qualifications to determine whether or not an in­stitution possesses the requisites of capability ex­perience necessary to successful completion of the project. The specifications for preparing proposals are quite strict and are set forth in the January 1978 National Cooperative Highway Research Program brochure entitled, "Information and Instructions for Preparing Proposals." -

Problems Programmed - 1979:

* Transportation Planning -Guidelines for use of ridesharing as transportation system management technique.

* Transportation financing and energy conservation. * Fuel supply limitations and all travel demand. * Investigation of bituminous mixes as affected by

variable sources of asphalt. * Repair methods for damaged prestressed concrete

highway bridge beams. · * Determination of the relationship between ultrasonic

defect rating and flaw size. * Nondestructive testing through high resolution

radar techniques - void detection. * Development of a soils and subsurface investigations

manual. · -* Statewide freight demand forecasting procedures. * Analysis and evaluation of existing highway air

pollution dispersion models.

Deadline: Proposals will be due throughout May 1978.

For further information write:

Mr. K.W. Henderson, Jr., Program Director National Cooperative Highway Research Program Transportation Research Board 2101 Constitution Avenue, N.W.

-Washington, D.C. 20418

The Scripps-Howard Foundation Activities for 1977-78 ·

No. FY78-129

A. Scholarships: . . The Scripps-Howard Foundation sponsors a cont1nu1ng program designed _to encourage· ambitious and talented

· young men and women to prepare for careers in journal­ism and allied arts. The Foundation also supports -the academic careers of aspiring journalists through direct grants to_a number of colleges for use in their own aid programs.

Stipend: -$1,000.

Also, the Foundation, -in the name and memory of Ellen-··· · Browning Scripps, grants ten fellowships each year to -men and ~omen now working in the journalism profession who. wish J6 increase their. knowledge in any field_ through graduate studies.

Deadline: April 15, 1978; --~

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For further information contact:

The Scripps-Howard Foundation 200 Park Avenue Hew York, New York 10017

B. Awards: The Foundation each year honors achievement by news­papers, radio and television stations and individual journalists. Brief descriptions of each contest fol­low:

Roy W. Howard Public Service Awards: Two bronze plaques will be awarded, one to a newspaper and one to a radio or TV station, judged to have been outstanding in its public service efforts during 1977. A cash prize of $2,500 will accompany the plaques. "Public service" is defined as exposure and contribu-

·tion towards the alleviation of corruption, crime, health or other problems inimical to the general wel­fare.

Deadline: March 1, 1978.

For further information write to the same address above, c/o Roy W. Howard Awards.

C. Special Projects: The foundation funds selected special projects related to journalism and journalism education, includ~ng but not limited to seminars, minority student programs and internship programs. Requests must be made by April 15, 1978, with complete details of the program to be considered.

Current Publications And . Other Scholarly Works·

ARTS AND LETTERS HUMANISTIC AND SOCIAL STUDIES

Economics

Marsh, Lawrence C. M.E. Scovill a~d L. Marsh. 1977. The impact of

cost of living and population changes on the so­cial security system. Pages 219-226 ~. Proceed­ings of the 1977 Winter Simulation Conference.

English

Call ins, Carvel C. Collins. ·1977. Faulkner's Mayday. University

of Notre Dame Press .. Notre Dame, Indiana. 30 pp.

·General Program of Liberal. Studies

Lyon, john ;:]~ J.J, Lyon. 1977. ·Review of Frank Miller Turner's,

Between Science and Religion. The Reaction· to Scientific Naturalism in Late Victorian England. The Catholi~ Hi~torical· Review October:613-615.

J~J. Lyon. 1977.·· Review of Owen Chadwick's, The Seculariz~tion. of the E~ropean Mind in the Nine­teenth Century. The Virginia Seminary Journal 39(3):28.

Government and International Studies

Loescher, Gilburt D. G.D. Loescher. 1977. Menschenrechtspolitik als

Element der Amerikanischen Aussenpolitik. Europa Archiv 23:813-822.

History

Gleason, Philip P. Gleason. 1977. Blurring the line of separation:

Education, civil religion and teaching about reli­gion. Journal of Church and State 19:517-538.

Psychology

Kline, Donald W. D.W. Kline and C. Orme-Rogers. 1978. Examination

of stimulus persistence as the basis for superior visual identification performance among older adults. Journal of Gerontology 33(1):76-81.

Sociology and Anthropology

Press, Irwin I. Press. 1977. Historical dimensions of orienta­

tion to change in a Yucatec peasant community. Pages 275-288 in, G.D. Jones, ed. Anthropology and History in'fucatan. University of Texas Press, Austin, Texas.

Theology

Blenkinsopp, Joseph J. Blenkinsopp. 1977. Prophecy and Canon. Center

for the Study of Judaism and Christianity Studies. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame and London. xi + 206 pp. ·

SCIENCE

Chemistry

Basu, Subhash C: I. Concha-Slebe, K. Presper and S.C. Basu. 1977.

Purification and properties of a-L-fucosidase from Venus mercenaria. Proceedings International Symposium on Glycoconjugates 4:6.

Thomas, J. Kerry *K. Kalyanasundaram and J.K. Thomas. 1977. Solvent­

dependent fluorescence of pyrene-3-carboxaldehyde and its applications in the estimation of polarity at micelle - water interfaces. Journal of Physi­cal Chemistry 81(23):2176-2180.

* Under the Radiation Laboratory·

Mathematics

Stoll, Wilhelm. W. Stoll. 1977. Invariant forms on Grassman mani- ·

foJds .. Annals of Mathematics Studies. Princeton University Press and University of Tokyo Press, Princeton, New Jersey. 113 pp.

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Physics

Berners, Edgar D. E.D. Berners, C.P. Browne, P.R. Chagnon, J.~J. Kaiser

and W.C. Miller. 1977. Megavolt heavy ion injec­tor for a tandem accelerator. Revue de Physique Appliquee 12:1407-1411.

Browne, Cornelius P. E.D. Berners, C.P. Browne, P.R. Chagnon, J.W. Kaiser

and W.C. Miller. 1977. r~egavolt heavy ion lnJec­tor for a tandem accelerator. Revue de Physique Appliquee 12:1407-1411.

Chagnon, Paul R. E.D. Berners, C.P. Browne, P.R. Chagnon, J.W. Kaiser

arid W.C. t~iller. 1977. Megavolt heavy ion injec­tor for a tandem accelerator. Revue de Physique Appliquee 12:1407-1411.

Kaiser, James W. E.D. Berners, C.P. Browne, P.R. Chagnon, J.W. Kaiser

and W.C. Miller. 1977. Megavolt heavy ion injec­tor for a tandem accelerator.· Revue de Physique Appliquee 12:1407-1411.

Miller, Walter C. E.D. Berners, C.P. Browne, P.R. Chagnon, J.W. Kaiser

and W.C. Miller. 1977. Megavolt heavy ion injec­tor for a tandem accelerator. Revue de Physique Appliquee 12:1407-1411.

Shephard, William D. R. Blokzijl, J.C. Kluyver, G.F.· Wolters, S.N.

Gangul i, R.J. Her.1ingway, Ch. de la· Vaissiere, W. Metzger, E.W. Kittel and W.O. Shephard. 1977. Triple-reege analysis ofthe fragmentation proc-. esses pK+L:+ a11d K-£.L:+ at 4.2 GeV/c. Nuovo Cimento 40A:436-448.

ENGINEERING

Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering

Ariman, Teoman T. Ariman. .1977. A review of the earthquake re­

sponse and aseismic design of underground piping . systems. Pages 282-292 in, Proceedings of Current State of Knowledge of lifeline Earthquake Engineer­ing. ASCE/Los Angeles, California.

Chemical Engineering

Strieder, William A.L. DeVera, Jr. and W. Strieder. 1977. Upper and

1 ower bounds on the therma 1 conductivity of a ran­dom, two-phase material. ·Journal of Physical Chemistry 81:1783.

Varma, Arvind · A. Varma. 1977. ·sounds on the concentration and

temperature in a tubular reactor. Canadian Jour­nal of Chemical Engineering 55:629:632~ . . ..

A.L. DeVera and A. Varma. 1977. ·Reactor design for · complex reactions:. A case study .. Pages 1749'-1757. in, X.J.R. Avula, ed. Proceedings of the Fi.rst .

·Tii"ternational Conference on Mathematical Modeling; ·· ·st~ Louis, Misso~ri .. : · ·

. A. Varma: and R. Ari s .. 1977. Stirred pots and empty ··tubes. Pages 79-155 ·inj L. Lapidus·and N.R. ·

• 245

Amundson, ·eds. · Chemica 1 ·Reactor Theory - A Review~ Prentice-Hall ..

Electrical Engineering

Biles, William E. -W.J. Gadja, Jr. and W.E. Biles. 1978. Engineering:

Modeling and Computation. Houghton Mifflin Com­pany, Boston, Massachusetts. 426 pp. + Solutions Manual.

Gajda, Jr., Walter J. W.J. Gajda, Jr. and W.E. Biles. 1978. Engineering:

Modeling and Computation. Houghton Mifflin Com­pany, Boston, Massachusetts. 426 pp. + Solutions r~anual.

Hogan, Joseph C. W.H. Corcoran, R.M. Drake, Jr., R.E. Fadum, W.P.

Kimball, C.V. Kirkpatrick, R.J. Ungrodt, G.A. Hawkins and J.C. Hogan. 1977. Engineering & en­gineering technology education. A reassessment. Engineering Education 67(8):765-776.

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

Finance and Business Economics

Tavis, Lee A. L.J. Merville and L.A. Tavis. 1977. Financial

planning in a decentralized firm under conditions of competative.capital markets. Financial Manage­ment 6(3):17-23.

Johnson, James• M. J.M. Johnson and P.G. Weber. 1977. The impact of

the problem bank disclosure on bank share prices. Journal of Bank Research 8{3):179-182.

Management

Kartha, C.P. C.P. Kartha. 1977. Simulation study of a quality

control system. Modeling and Simulation 8(1):349-350.

C.P. Kartha and W.G. Hunter. 1977. Determining the most profitable target value of a production proc­ess. Journal of Quality Technology 9(4):176-181.

C.P. Kartha and M.D. Nasta. 1977. Time series modeling of admission records in a hospital sys­tem. Modeling and Simulation 3(2):629-630.

Thompson, Kenneth . R. Pitts and K. Thompson. 1977. Using chitchat for

good employee morale, Nations Business 65(12):66.

. Marketing Management

Pitts, Robert R. Pitts and K. Thompson. 1977. Using chitchat for

good employee morale. Nations Business 65{12):66. Stock, James R.

J. R. Stock. 1977. A Survey of Attitudes and Opin-. ions on Transportation Regulation; Transportation and Logistics Research Fund, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. 76 pp.

RADIATION LABORATORY Neta, Pedatsur

Fessenden, Richard W. R.W. Fessenden. 1977. Chemically induced electron

polarization of radiolytically produced radicals. Pages 119-150 ~. L.T. Muus et al eds. Chemically Induced Magnetic Polarization. D. Reidel Publish­ing Company, Dordrecht-Holland.

P. Neta and H. Levanon. 1977. Spectrophotometric study of the radicals produced by the r-eduction of syn- and anti-azobenzene. Journal of Physical Chemistry 81{24):2288-2292.

Scaiano, Jr., Juan C. R.D. Small, Jr. and J.C. Scaiano. 1977. Role of

biradical intermediates in the photochemistry of a-methyl acetophenone. Journa 1 of the Ameri ca·n Chemical Society 99:7713-7714.

Mozumder, Asokendu

Small, Jr., Richard D. A. Mozumder. 1977. Response to comment on proba­bility of escaping neutralization when the mobility is field dependent. The Journal of Chemical Phys­~ 67(10):4783-4784.

R.D. Small, Jr. and J.C. Scaiano. 1977. Role of biradical intermediates in the photochemistry of o-methylacetophenone. Journal of the American Chemical Society 99:7713-7714.

Closing Dates for Selected Sponsored Programs

Proposals must be submitted to the Office of Research and Sponsored Programs seven (7) calendar days prior to the deadline dates listed below.

Agency

Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Administration

American Cancer Society American Cancer Society American Cancer Society American Cancer Society American Diabetes Association, Inc. Damon Runyon-Walter Winchell Cancer

Fund Department of Justice Department of Labor Easter Seal Research Foundation Epilepsy Foundation of American

Research and Training Institute Fight for Sight Fight for Sight Food and Drug Administration Health Resources Administration Health Resources Administration Health Resources Administration Health Services Administration

Juvenile Diabetes Foundation National Cancer Institute

National Cancer Institute

National Cancer Institute

National Cancer Institute

Natio~al C~~cer Institute

Programs

Career-Teacher Training Centers

Faculty Research Awards Postdoctoral Fellowships Scholars in Cancer Research Special Postdoctoral Fellow Diabetes Research Cancer Fellowships

Law Enforcement Education Program Manpower-Related Doctoral Dissertation Gra~ts Handicapped and Physical Medicine Research Epilepsy Medical Stud~nt Fellowships

Opthamology Research Fellowships Opthamology Student Fellowships Research Support Developmental and Demonstration Projects Exploratory Research Grants Research Project Grants Research in Maternal and Child Health and

Crippled Children's Services Diabetes Research Development of Methods for in Vivo Destruction

of t~ononuclear Phagocytes Development of New Reagents for Characterization

of Subpopulations of Human Cells Important to the Immune Response

Examination of the Relative Sensitivity of Normal and Tumor Targets to Cytotoxic Activated Macrophages

Mechanisms that Operate in the Local Site of TumorDevelopment or Proliferation Whereby ,Tumor Cells Escape Destruction in the Face

. of Specific Immunity StudY of T-Cell Macrophage Cooperation Resulting

in Macrophage Activation

Application Closing Dates

March

March March March March March March

~1arch March Narch r~arch

March March Narch March ~1arch March March

March March

~1arch

March

March

March

1, 1978

1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978

15, 1978

3, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978

1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978

1, 1978 15, 1978

15, 1978

15, 1978

15, 1978

15, 1978

246

Agency

National Cancer Institute National Endowment for the Humanities National Endowment for the Humanities National Endowment for the Humanities National Eye Institute National Eye Institute

National Eye Institute National Eye Institute National Eye Institute

National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute

National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health ·

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

National Institute of AllergY and Infectious Diseases

National Institute of Dental Research National Institute of Dental Research National Institute of Dental Research National Institute· of Dental Research National Institute of Environmental

Health Sciences National Institute of Mental Health National Institute of Mental Health National Institute of Mental Health National Institute· of Mental Health National Institute of Mental Health National Institute of Mental Health National Institute of Mental Health­National Institute of Neurological and

Communicative Disorders and Stroke National Institute on Aging -

National Institute on Aging National Institute on AlcohoJ Abuse

and Alcoholism National Institute on Alcohol Abuse

and Alcoholism National Institute on Drug Abuse National Institute on Drug Abuse National Institutes of Health National Institutes of Health National Institutes of Health National Institutes of Health National Institutes of Health N~fional Institutes of Health National- Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

National Science Foundation

247

Programs

Young Investigators Research Consultant Grants General Research Grants Summer Seminars for College Teachers Academic Investigator A~1ard Animal Models of Visual Abnormalities and

Disorders Cataract Research Eye Diseases Associated with Diabetes Mellitus Eye Diseases Associated with Diabetes Mellitus

Research In-Vitro Responses of the Lung to Pathogenetic

Substances ~oung Investigator Research Grants

Occupational Safety and Health Research and Demonstrations

Occupational Safety and Health Training

Population-Based Case~Control Study of Respi-ratory Cancer and Employment History

Young Investigator Research Grant

Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV) Microbial Studies of Periodontal Diseases Nutrition Re~earch Recurrent Aphthous Stromatitis (RAS) Marine and Freshwater Biomedical Core Center

Grants Mental Health Epidemiology Metropolitan Problems t-linoritY Group Mental Health Problems Prevention and Control of Rape Project Grants Research Grants Studies of Crime and Delinquency Coma Research Grants

Nutrition in Relation to Health of the Aged and Aging Processes

Special Aging Research Research on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

Training in Prevention and Treatment of Alcohol Abdse and Alcoholism

Drug Abuse Prevention Education Projects Research on Narcotic Addiction and. Drug Abuse Biomedical Publication Grants Bi otechno 1 ogy Re-sources Medical Library Resources Medical Library Science Research Projects Projects to Support Animal Resources Research Project Grants Studies of Diabetes Mellitus and Related

~roblem_s _ Centrifuge Facility for Research in

Geotechnical Engineering Proposals· Continuing Education for Scientists and

Engin~irs Proposals

Application Closino Dates

r~arch t<larch March Narch March March

March t<larch March

March

March

~1arch

March

Narch

r~arch

March ~larch March t<larch March

March March March t<larch t<larch March t<1arch March -

r~arch

March March

March

- March March March March March r~arch March March ~1arch

~~_arch

March

1, 1978 15, 1978 1, 1978

15, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978

1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978

1, 1978

1, 1978

1, 1978

1, 1978

2, 1978

1, 1978

1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978

1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978

1, - 1978

1, 1978 1, 1978

1, 1978

1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978

.1, 1978 1, 1978 1, 1978

1, 1978

3. 1978

Application

f· - Agency

National Science Foundation National Science Foundation National Science Foundation National Science Foundation National Science Foundation

Programs Closing Dates

Earthquake Research Program March 1, 1978 Earth Sciences Research Proposals March 1, 1978 Instructional Scientific Equipment Proposals March 3, 1978 Metabolic Biology Proposals March 15, 1978 Proposals in Biochemistry, Biophysics, Cellular March 15, 1978

Biology, Developmental Biology, Genetic

National Science Foundation

National Science Foundation

National Science Foundation National Science Foundation

National Science Foundation National Science Foundation Office of Education Office of Education

Office of Educ~tion

Smithsonian Institution

Biology, Regulatory Biology Proposals in Economics; and Geography and March 1, 1978

Regional Science Science for Citizens Public Service Science March 15, 1978

Residencies and Internships Proposals Scientific Research Support (biology) March 15, 1978 Scientific Research Support (geophysics, March _1' 1978

engineering) . Scientific Research Support (social sciences) March 1, 1978 U.S.-India Exchange of Scientists Proposals ~1arch 15, 1978 Basic Educational Opportunity Grants ~1arch 15, 1978 Handicapped Children's Early Education March 1, 1978

Program - Outreach Projects Noncommerical Educational Broadcasting· March 6, 1978

Facilities Graduate Research Appointments March 1, 1978

---248

. . 249

:; .

::· .. ''· .....

m

Additions: NDR #4

University Committee on Interdisciplinary Graduate Studies

Chau T.M .. Le, Assistant Vice President for Advanced Studies, Chairman

Frank J. Bonello, Associate Professo~of.Economics Roger K .. Bretthauer, Director of Program in Biochemistry and Biophysics Edward M. Gaffney, Jr., Associate Professor.of Law Edward H: Jerger, Associate Dean pfthe College of Engineering James L Melsa, Chairman and Professor of Electrical Engineering (Ex Officio) Kenneth M. Sayre, Professor of Philosophy Hi 11 i am P .. Sexton, Associ ate Professor of Management

notre dame rep'ort

Valer.ie Zurblis, Editor

iDea:n .Tdsei>h c. Hogan · !'College o:f · Engin""'erirtg \Notre Dame; IN· 46556

·An official publication of the. University of Notre Dame;, Department of Information Services. Individual copies are avaifable in the Notre Dame Hammes Bookstore at 30 cents each. Mail subscriptions are $6 per year. Back copies are available through the mail at 50c cents each.- .

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