Thursday, November 20, 1986TThe Battalion/Page 7 1 Ocean research brings y World scientists to A&M mi a 2a tions ; § -*■ “Bail atlv e lol crowd 'tintlif By Curtis Culberson Reporter Top scientists from around the orld will meet at Texas A&M to iscuss Findings from ocean-drilling 0m ; cpedidons as an integral part of the icean Drilling Program, program Nation irector Dr. Philip Rabinowitz says. The program last week moved a( | )( itoja new $5 million facility in the ee j nirersity’s new research park. s He of the world’s foremost geosci- of J ex P erts nieet * n this new fa- ,i lity before and after a series of ^Hn-di illing cruises in an effort to nravel the history of the Earth s asltft ersiij, suppt, roir samples obtained below the irface of the ocean bottom. fj- u * J l fl Bie 60,000-square-foot facility is I ^'Hlargest and most sophisticated b°y”Bty in the world for storing and niching core samples from the cean floor, Rabinowitz says. The facility also will serve as world ' s eadquarters for the international 'P^Bram in which world scientists ^ ■take core samples from waters Dover the globe. ■■•.. A&M won the bid for the project ^^Hthe University of Miami and the III W ) P S l nst *tute of Oceanography University of Calif ornia at San The Scripps Institute for- (lerly headquartered a similar pro- jmaS^rani, called the Deep Sea Drilling ing •reject, which ccjnducted research co rom 1968-1983. tveo If Te Ocean Drilling Program is t In iy far the largest research program awd igTexas A&M,” Rabinowitz says, xv .[The 10-year program is the gem loycetiBhe university’s research pro- ;bu:l:®is, with expenditures reaching theroibont $30 million per year. A&M is ski anked 11th in the nation in re- ina eanh funding with $146.4 million, inikfl ODP takes about 30 percent of ip wflamount. ■he program receives interna- f Hal funding from the U.S. Na- iai ipnal Science Foundation, Canada, eS he Federal Republic of Germany, : 1 |apaii, the United Kingdom, and the ven Luropean Science Foundation lx 3cean Drilling Consortium, which ret insists of 12 other interested Euro- wo Kan countries. lemHach of these six members in- lef /oiled with the program contributes tier, (2.5 million per year to the pro- usf grain. ffilabinowitz says the Soviets will ere oin the program in January, auyv ;As science operator for the pro- (|. gram, A&M can provide a definite f , idvantage for undergraduate and graduate students studying the geo- c jit icjepces, Rabinowitz says. Hoi, 1 A&M is responsible for operating sea and staffing the drill ship and ensur- itig that adequate scientific analyses are performed on the core samples. 1( |A&M also must provide logistical n(f and technical support. P f 0ur responsibilities as science - A&M to open ODP facility. University research park By Curtis Culberson Reporter Texas A&M will dedicate the new world headquarters of the Ocean Drilling Program Friday at 4 p.m., officially opening the Uni versity’s new research park on Discovery Drive, located just west of the veterinary school. Board of Regents Chairman David Eller will present the $5 million facility to University Pres ident Dr. Frank E. Vandiver. Dr. Mark Money, vice chan cellor for research park and cor porate relations, will give a short address to open the 434-acre re search park which is designed to attract high-tech industry to the University community. Michel Halbouty, chairman of the Geosciences and Earth Re sources Advisory Council, and Dr. D. James Baker, president of Joint Oceanographic Institutions, Inc., also will speak at the dedica tion. Dr. Melvin Friedman, dean of the College of Geosciences, will preside over the program and ODP Director Philip Rabinowitz will speak on the presentation of the new program facility. The new 60,000-square-foot Ocean Drilling complex is the world’s largest and most sophis- cated facility of its kind, Rabino witz said, and the world’s best fa cility for studying core samples taken from below the ocean floor. Construction already has begun on a 40,000-square-foot office and laboratory facility for the re search park’s first corporate ten ant, Granada Genetics. A subsid iary of Granada Corp. water. All this allows the ship to han dle a rig which, in turn, can handle more than 30,000 feet of drill pipe. Rabinowitz says the ship has seven stories of laboratories, including a chemistry lab, an X-ray lab, a petrol ogy lab and a photography lab. Rabinowitz adds that the ship has two mainframe VAX-750 computers that communicate by satellite with two other mainframes stationed in the new program facility. “The two computer systems com pletely mirror each other, giving us vast computer capability,” he says. The ship already has completed 12 cruises, uncovering new informa tion about the causes of long-term- changes in the Earth’s atmosphere, its oceans, polar regions, biosphere and magnetic field as well as infor mation on climate and tectonic evo lution. Another 2-month cruise is planned for January to the Ant arctic, Rabinowitz says. After each expedition, the differ ent scientists who conduct research in these many different labs publish their findings in two volumes. The first volume is an on-site report and the second will be published several years later, after more in-depth re search has been conducted. “Of course, they’ll be bound in maroon,” he says. Rabinowitz says that since the sci entists will work on their articles at the new facility, the University will get worldwide exposure. “Many (scientists) are surprised when they see A&M,” he says. “There’s more down here than most people think.” operator give students a chance to go on drilling cruises and work first hand with the best geoscientists in the world,” Rabinowitz says. “We have a staff of about 160 peo ple and many are A&M students,” he says. A&M also is responsible for deter mining which scientists will go on each research cruise. “We try to get a good representa tion from all the countries involved,” Rabinowitz adds. The program is managed by the Joint Oceanographic Institutions Inc., a nonprofit group of 10 major U.S. oceanographic institutions, in cluding A&M’s oceanography de partment. But it is JOIDES, the Joint Ocean ographic Institutions for Deep Earth Sampling, that provides overall planning and program advice for the series of scientific cruises. The JOIDES Resolution, the ODP’s drilling vessel, is named after the international group of scientists and institutions overseeing the pro gram. The vessel was converted from a commercial drilling ship into a sophisticated floating experiment station. “The ship underwent many changes,” Rabinowitz says. “We have constructed a ship with experimen tal capabilities that can’t be matched on land or sea. “The ship is capable of drilling in depths over 25,000 ft. while most commercial drilling vessels can only go as far as 3,000 (ft.).” The drilling ship is 470 feet long and 70 feet wide, with a derrick that | towers more than 200 feet above the Harris County legislators offered oney to attend Metro parties ■ HOUSTON (AP) — Some legis lators and Common Cause are crit- j icizing an offer by a Houston Metro politan Transit Authority lobbyist to pay Harris County legislators for at tending Metro cocktail parties. “H.obbyist Sandy Sanford, hired to help influence legislators to preserve Mjetro’s 1-cent sales tax dedication, told the Houston Post in a copy righted story Wednesday he expects ■h lawmaker who attends to leave the meetings $500 richer. Sanford wrote in an invitation sent to 33 legislators that money raised at two upcoming receptions in Houston will be divided among their office-holder accounts, funds used to defray expenses associated with legislative business. State Rep. Randy Pennington, R- Houston, said he declined Sanford’s invitation and said his colleagues should be more than uneasy about it. “They should be incensed,” he said. “It’s such an outright attempt to buy special interest from the Leg islature.” Of seven legislators contacted Tuesday by the Post, only Rep. Tony Polumbo, D-Houston, was uncon cerned, saying he believes the meet ing is a crucial one. MTA board Chairman John King said he does not consider the money payment for attendance. The 300 to 400 invitations in cluded a request for a $500 gift. Gold Chains! Perfect gifts for Christmas at a full range of prices, sizes and styles. 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