1692 will the Post Hi t of the iw p.m. H meet at 1 Building. HI meet at 3 and 3C at 5 Golf Clubhouse Nearly Finished Advancfn "'ill hear a ew and Hm ).ra. in the! ICY MCE >nal Loam 'ION 3708 other tjj Construction of A&M’s new '000-square-foot golf course lubhouse is “substantially com- ete,” announced university of- Icials. “We hope to start moving in ixt week and hopefully be in eration by the weekend,” noted uther A. (Luke) Harrison, urse manager. The clubhouse was constructed der an $83,337 contract by uddy Sledge Contractors of ryan. Included in the air-conditioned cility will be a golf shop, snack r, lounge area, locker rooms ir both men and women, cart ;orage and a physical educa- dn-golf classroom. Harrison said the main proj- :ts remaining include installa- on of snack bar equipment, her fixtures and furniture. The present clubhouse will be bm down to make room for a persons larking lot. Go Gt Girls The 18-hole course is owned y the university but open to the public. ★ ★ ★ 66,000 Grant Awarded To University A $65,950 National Science foundation grant for college eachers’ summer study in physics as been awarded the university, resident Earl Rudder announced. The 1970 summer institute in hysics will be directed by Dr. lonald F. Weekes, physics pro- The 12-week institute, designed to keep college, junior college and technical institute teachers current in the latest scientific developments, will appoint 30 par ticipants for the June 1- Aug. 21, 1970, program. Weekes, who will be directing his third institute, said courses participants will take are selected junior and senior level under graduate courses in physics. The physics institute has been con ducted at A&M eight years. Applications for participation will be accepted by the institute director through Feb. 15, an nounced C. M. Loyd, NSF pro grams coordinator at A&M. Ap pointments will be announced by March 15. The institute is one of 65 sup ported by NSF grants totaling $2.8 million. More than 1,750 teachers will participate, each receiving a stipend of not more than $100 a week plus suplemen- tary allowances for travel and dependents. A&M is one of two state uni versities receiving summer insti tute grants. Texas Woman’s Uni versity was awarded a $41,680 grant for a chemistry institute. ★ ★ ★ after 33 years of service to Tex as A&M. The scholarship is named in his honor. Whitten Receives $300 Scholarship William R. Whitten of Eldo rado, freshman animal science major, has received the $300 Dahlberg Scholarship in recogni tion of academic achievement and activities in high school. Presentation was made by F. I. Dahlberg, animal science profes sor who retired early this year hem Department egins Expansion 'k 'k ~k Coordinating Board OK’s History PhD The Coordinating Board, Texas College and University System, has authorized A&M to offer a Ph.D. in history and awarded the institution federal grants totaling $97,000. A&M also was recommended for four other federal grants, including $1 million for facilities for the Texas Maritime Academy at Galveston, but Coordinating Board officials emphasized funds for these projects are not cur rently available. The Coordinating Board stipu lated A&M’s Ph.D. in history con centrate on American history. Federal grants, awarded under the Community Service and Con tinuing Education Program of the Higher Education Act of 1965, included $35,000 for model cities agencies; $28,000 for program in transportation and $17,000 each for programs involving coun ty government officials and re- ciprocative education. Action involving the $1 million grant for TMA was primarily to establish a priority list in the event federal funds become avail able, a Coordinating Board of ficial explained. The funds have not been appropriated by Con gress. Other grants approved but not funded were $26,827 for regional recreational resources develop ment and $24,787 each for insti tutes for school tax assessors and a program for urban leaders. THE BATTALION Wednesday, October 22, 1969 College Station, Texas Page 3 Exes to Fete 550 Of A&M’s Backers The Association of Former Stu dents will honor 550 members of The Century Club Saturday dur ing a luncheon in Sbisa Dining Hall. The club is composed of sup porters of the university who have given a minimum of $100 to the association’s Annual Fund. A&M University System Vice President and Comptroller W. Clyde Freeman Jr. will be the guest speaker at the 11:30 affair. Freeman, a 1940 business grad uate of Texas A&M, will speak on “Texas A&M Tomorrow.” Association President Ford D. Albritton Jr. will give the wel come with A&M President Earl Rudder making pre-luncheon re marks. Civilian Chaplain Ed Donnell, a senior from Jones Creek, will give the invocation. Following the luncheon, Presi dent’s Endowed Scholarships Plaques will be presented to W. C. McGee Jr., from Houston, and Royce Wisenbaker, ’39, from Tyler. Five President’s Scholars will be introduced. They are Harold M. Johnstone of Lake Jackson, chemical engineering; Terry W. Conner of Houston, aerospace en gineering; William R. Davis of Houston, mathematics; Roy S. Paulson of San Antonio, chemis try, and Michael K. Lindsey of Houston, physics. Entertainment will be provided by the Singing Cadets. Former Students Director Rich ard (Buck) Weirus observed that over 1,000 persons are members of The Century Club. The club was organized by the Association of Former Students in 1965 to aid the university’s many programs. Freeman became vice president and comptroller in 1965 after serving as auditor since 1947. He was assistant state auditor from 1945-47, and worked for Bur roughs Corp. and the Texas Em ployment Commission prior to World War II. NOSING IN Like most caddies, Mini, a two-year-old Indian elephant, has a tip or two for British comedian Dickie Henderson as he tees off on a golf course at Surry, England. Hender son, who won Mini in a raffle in Bombay, was shooting a sequence for a television comedy. (AP Wirephoto) Read Classifieds Daily WEY (earn it easily) Sell Inflatable Furniture on your college campus. Our average sales representative earns $1000 for forty hours work. £lo selling experience necessary. If you’re aggressive write us. Be sure to give us your full address & specify your college. UNIVERSITY ENTERPRISES 203-334-4424 815 Clinton Ave. Bridgeport, Conn. 06604 > 9 A four-year development pro gram aided by a $560,000 Nation- il Science Foundation grant is jeing initiated by the Chemistry Jepartment. The program will emphasize new faculty, research equipment ind expansion of graduate stu- ent and post-doctoral enroll- lents, announced Dr. A. E. lartell, department head. “The grant in itself is recog- ition for the capability and otential that exists in the de- artment, in that it was the only rant of this type made this year jo any chemistry department in the United States,” Martell said. Though the departmental de- elopment program emphasizes graduate study, the undergradu ate curriculum has been exten sively revamped and modernized, he added. The freshman chemistry lab is being improved by adoption of station and tutorial systems, with increasing use of visual and audio aids. More advanced labs are be- ng revised into integrated labor atories, in which experiments overlapping several subdisciplines are emphasized. Upgrading of the graduate are on order. Research centers in molecular biochemistry, polymer and nuclear chemistry have been organized, in addition to the existing Thermodynamics Re search Center. Additional centers in catalysis, solid state chemistry, molecular beams and theoretical chemistry are projected. Each center will attain four to six staff members specializing in their areas. Martell said the centers will have as their mission the develop ment of basic knowledge in areas of chemical research relevant to the needs of industry and public health. “They will also aid in accom modating the projected increase in graduate students and post doctoral associates,” he indicated. Anticipated by 1972 are about 200 graduate students and 40 post-doctorals. There are current ly 124 and 13, respectively. In 1966, the department had 67 grad uate students and four post- doctorals. 0 / program is primarily by revised ' l curriculum and course content, potential, Martell 3 9 i gs. 3S. mil)' ■chu l explained. Eight new items of research quipment, valued at $220,000', TIME The longest word in the language? By letter count, the longest word may be pneumonoultra- microscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis, a rare lung disease. You won’t find it in Webster’s New World Dictionary, College Edition. But you will find more useful infor mation about words than in any other desk dictionary. Take the word time. In addi tion to its derivation and an illustration showing U.S. time zones, you’ll find 48 clear def initions of the different mean ings of time and 27 idiomatic uses, such as time of one’s life. In sum, everything you want to know about time. This dictionary is approved and used by more thna 1000 colleges and universities.. 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