The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 31, 1994, Image 4

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Thurs. Night - Penny Pitcher Night. 8-10 pm. $1.00 Shots of tequila all
night long. Doors open at 8, dance till lam. $3.00 Cover.
Fri. Night - 25^ Bar Drinks & Draft Beer 8-11 pm. $2 off with
current student/faculty/staff ID. Doors open at 8, dance
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Sat. Night - $1.50 Pitchers 8-10pm. $1 Zima & Firewater shots all
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5VvO'* |S Sept. 17 th E.T. Conley & Sept. 24' 1 ’ Rick Trevino
Page 4 • The Battalion
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Wednesday
Mostly cloudy with widely
scattered showers and
thunderstorms. High near 91. SE
winds 8-12 m.p.h.
Wednesday Night
Cloudy with scattered showers.
Low near 73. Light easterly winds.
* / / /
Thursday
Cloudy with scattered showers
and thunderstorms. High near
91. SE winds 8-1 2 m.p.h.
Thursday Night
Cloudy with scattered showers.
Low near 73.
Friday
Cloudy with numerous showers
and thunderstorms. High near
90.
Source - A&M Chapter of the American Meteorological Society
Su gg
822-2222
2309 FM 2818 South
Continued from Page 1
developed within the Physical
Plant.
‘Tve learned that Physical
Plant exists to meet the needs of
others," he said. “If you can’t do
your job then we are not doing
ours. I created an environment
where employees were allowed to
do their best.”
Sugg said he also made strides
in the quality of work life at the
plant.
“From a management perspec
tive, we have evolved into a work
ing environment where people are
no longer controlled and direct
ed,” he said. “I hope it continues.”
Sugg said his only regret in re
signing is leaving people who
work at the plant.
“These people are the jewels of
the University,” Sugg said.
This summer the A&M System
Board of Regents canceled a $120
million proposed power plant that
Sugg had worked on for two
years. In June, a University-
hired consulting firm determined
the project was a bad investment.
“I felt disappointed it was can
celed,” he said, ‘but I don’t chal
lenge the decision that was
made.”
He said that although the can
cellation of the plant did not
cause his decision to retire, but it
did have an effect on the timing.
Gaston said Sugg did not men
tion the canceled project in the
resignation letter, but Gaston
said he would not be surprised if
it was one reason he resigned.
“I know he’s worked hard on
that project,” he said. “I wouldn’t
be surprised if he is worn out.”
Sugg said he will not stay in
Bryan-College Station after he re-
Wednesday • August 31
mm
Crime Bill
Continued from Page 1
administration, and he kept if
Gruetzner said the critics;
this bill are the same people*:,
criticize everything the presiis-
does.
“It’s the same song by tit
same people,” he said. “It's apt
litical thing.”
Dr. Norman Luttbeg, a poll
cal science professor, said the ci
is a political public relations at
to assure the re-election
members of Congress.
“This bill will not have mutl
affect on crime,” he said. “Itisr
attempt to make the people thiii
Congress did something
them. It’s a public relations ar,
to get these people re-elected’
signs. He is planning to move to
the West Coast, possibly Oregon,
which he said is where his wife
has always wanted to live.
Sugg said he decided to leave
in January because he thought
four months was a sufficient peri
od of time to help Gaston.
L.R. Johnson, associate direc
tor for Physical Plant administra
tion and operations, has worked
with Sugg for the last four years.
“Joe Sugg is one of the best
people I’ve known,” Johnson said.
“He is a credible person and I be
lieve what he has done here is in
the best interest of the Universi
ty. I will miss him.”
Johnson said four different di
rectors have led the Physical
Plant since he came to the Uni
versity in 1963.
“I have worked with four direc
tors and I will accept the chal
lenge of working with an interim
and a new director,” he said.
“Physical Plant will continue
do its job.”
Sugg replaced Joe Estill as c)
rector of the Physical Plant
1990, after being hired by Rokj
Smith, A&M’s former vice
dent for finance and admlnktil
tion.
Estill now serves as the fac.|
ties construction division mi
er of the A&M System’s Faciltis
Construction and Planning,
Sugg received his bacheli
degree from the Air Force Acat
my in 1966 and his master’s
gree in civil engineering at I
University of Texas in Austin
1974.
The A&M Physical Plant B
partment employs over 1,10C
pie and is responsible for all
pus utilities, such as air c
tioning, water and phone sera
It is also in charge of camp;
landscaping, cleaning andrei
vating.
sary. For,
Collei
81
carpet & flo
Scholarship Opportunities
For Outstanding Undergraduates
The following scholarships are currently open for competition:
INTERNATIONAL SCHOLARSHIPS
Rhodes Scholarship
Terms: 32 awarded annually. Two years of full support
(tuition and fees and maintenance allowance) at one of
the Oxford Colleges with a possible extension for the
third year.
Eligibility: Unmarried citizens of the United States with
at least five years of residence. Must be between the ages
of 18 and 24 as of October 1, 1994; age restriction may
be relaxed for veterans. Must have attained at least senior
standing at the time of application. Selectors will
evaluate “literary and scholastic attainments;
truthfulness, courage, devotion to duty, empathy for and
protection of the weak, kindliness, unselfishness and
fellowship; exhibition of moral force of character and
instincts to lead and to take an interest in one’s
contemporaries; physical vigor, as shown by a fondness
for and success in sports.”
Application Procedure: By nomination of Texas A&M
University.
TAMU Deadline: September 19, 1994.
British Marshall Scholarship
Terms: Up to 30 awarded annually. Tenable at any
British University and covers two years of study in any
discipline at either undergraduate or graduate level
leading to the award of a British degree.
Eligibility: United States citizens under the age of 26.
Minimum GPA of 3.7 in courses taken after the
freshman year. Selectors look for distinction of intellect
and character as evidenced both by their scholastic
attainments and by their other activities and
achievement. Applicants are expected to present a
definite academic program designed to further their
intellectual interests and objectives which will assist
them in making a significant contribution to their
society.
Application Procedure: Application available in the
Study Abroad Office and the Office of Honors Programs
and Academic Scholarships.
Application Deadline: Mid October.
Fulbright Grants (Graduate Study Abroad)
Terms: Approximately 700 awards to over 70 countries,
“for graduate study or research abroad in academic fields
and for professional training in the creative and
performing arts; increase mutual understanding between
the people of the United States and other countries
through the exchange of person, knowledge and skills.”
Eligibility: Applicants “must be U.S. citizens at the time
of application, who will generally hold a bachelor’s
degree or its equivalent before the beginning date of the
grant and in most cases will be proficient in the language
of the host country.” The successful applicant devotes
several months to the development of his or her project.
Usually, the application process begins in the spring,
researching and drafting your proposal and curriculum
vitae.
Application Procedure: Applications are available from
the Study Abroad Office. Before receiving the Fulbright
application, the student must go through an interview
process with the Fulbright Program Advisor.
Application Deadline: Early September.
Alexander Von Humboldt Foundation-”Bundeskanzler
Scholarships for Germany”
Terms: Ten scholarships to prospective U.S. leaders in
the academic world, in business or politics in order to
strengthen transatlantic ties. The scholarship period is
for twelve months to study in Germany.
Eligibility: The scholarship offers outstanding young
U.S. citizens, (undergraduate, graduate and post
graduate students) the opportunity to continue or follow
up their studies/research preferably in the
humanities/social sciences, law and economics at a
German university and/or research institution; and to
gain insight into the political, economic, social and
cultural life of Germany. Scholarship holders determine
the location, institute and the focus of study or research.
Application Procedure: Nominations materials are
available in the Office of Honors Programs and
Academic Scholarships, 101 Academic Building.
Nomination will be made through Dr. M. Kemp,
Director of University Research, Office of Research and
Graduate Studies.
TAMU Application Deadline: End of September
NATIONAL SCHOLARSHIPS
Harry S. Truman Scholarship
Terms: 92' awarded annually. $3,000 for senior year*and
as much as $27,000 for graduate study.
Eligibility: Junior standing with a GPA of at least 3.5
and in the upper third of the class. A major that can lead
to graduate study or employment in public service or
government. An essay of 800 words or less on a public
policy issue. Also, evidence of leadership and public
service.
Application Procedure: By nomination of Texas A&M
University.
TAMU Application Deadline: Early October.
Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship
Terms: Approximately 250 awarded annually. Up to
$7,000 annually for tuition, fees, room, board, and
books, for both the junior and senior years. Seniors
selected for awards will receive approximately $3,500 for
their last year of undergraduate study.
Eligibility: Sophomore or junior standing. GPA of at
least 3.5 and top quarter of the class. A major that will
lead to a graduate study or a career in mathematics, the
natural sciences, or engineering. Helpful to have done
research or to have ideas that could lead to a research
proposal..
Application Procedure: By nomination of Texas A&M
University.
TAMU Application Deadline: Mid October.
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Graduate Fellowships
Terms: Approximately 950 fellowships awarded. NSF
Fellowships can be used at any non-profit United States
or foreign institution of higher learning. $14,000
annually plus tuition and fees; a $1,000 International
Research Travel Allowance may also be awarded.
Eligibility: College seniors pursuing graduate study in
mathematical, physical, medical, biological, engineering,
or social sciences and in the history or philosophy of
science.
Application Procedure: Applications available in the
Office of Honors Programs and Academic Scholarships
in early October of from: The Fellowship Office,
National Research Council, 2101 Constitution Avenue,
Washington, D.C. 20418.
Application Deadline: Early November.
National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH)
Younger Scholars Award
Terms: $2,400 for summer research and writing projects
(summer 1993) in the humanities, $400 of which is
allotted to the advisor of your project. All grants require
the student to work full-time for nine weeks during the
summer on a specific humanities project which results in
a substantial research paper. All projects require an
advisor qualified in an appropriate humanities discipline
who will work closely with the student and submit the
assignment to NEH. Grantees may not be enrolled in a
credited course during the grant period, and projects
may not be used for academic credit. The term
“humanities” includes but is not limited to the study of
the following disciplines: history; philosophy; languages;
linguistics; literature; archaeology; jurisprudence; the
history, theory, and criticism of the arts; ethics;
comparative religion; and those aspects of the social
sciences that employ historical or philosophical
approaches.
Eligibility: Freshman, sophomore or junior
classification.
Application Procedure: Applications available in the
Office of Honors Programs and Academic Scholarships
or from; Younger Scholars Guidelines, Room 316,
Division of Fellowships and Seminars, National
Endowment for the Humanities, 1100 Pennsylvania
Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20506.
Application Deadline: November 1, 1994
Mellon Fellowships in the Humanities
Terms: Approximately 100 aWarded annually. Tenable at
any United States or Canadian institution of higher
learning. $12,500 plus payment of tuition and fees the
first year. Fellowships renewed for a second year on
recommendation of the graduate school concerned.
Eligibility: Seniors or graduates who have not begun
graduate study and whose promise for teaching and
scholarship can be attested to as outstanding by a faculty
sponsor. Fields of study include: traditional humanistic
disciplines, American studies, other area studies and
interdisciplinary programs, but not the creative and
performing arts. The Mellon Fellowships seek to attract
promising students into preparation for careers of
humanistic teaching and research.
Application Procedure: Request application before
November 19 from: The Woodrow Wilson National
Fellowship Foundation, Mellon Fellowships, CN 5329,
Princeton, NJ 08543-5329.
Information available in the Office of Honors Programs
and Academic Scholarships.
Application Deadline: Early December.
USA Today — All USA Academic Team
Terms: One-time cash award of approximately $2,500.
Eligibility: Any full-time undergraduate student.
Selection is based on original work such as published
research, essay, poetry, art or music.
Application Procedure: Direct application by student.
Applications available in the Office of Honors and
Academic Scholarships in early October.
Application Deadline: Late November.
Smithsonian Internships
Terms: Stipends vary with program; positions are 3-4
summer months in duration.
Eligibility: Undergraduate and graduate students.
Positions available.-Hitshhoin Museum and Sculpture
Garden; National Air and Space Museum; National
Museum of African Art; National Museum of American
Art; National Zoological Park; Office of Architectural
History and Historical Preservation; Smithsonian
Environmental Research Center.
Application Procedure: Direct application by student.
Information is available in the Office of Honors
Programs and Academic Scholarships in early October.
Application Deadline: Varies according to position.
NA TIONAL MINORITY SCHOLARSHIPS
Woodrow Wilson Program in Public Policy and
International Affairs (Careers for Minorities)
Terms: Approximately 30 students are placed at 5
leading universities across the nation. Room and board,
transportation to and from paid and a $1,000 stipend
for any additional expenses.
Eligibility: College juniors and seniors of African
American, Hispanic, Native American, Asian American,
or Native Alaskan background. The Woodrow Wilson
Program has three major components: junior Year
Summer Institutes are held on the campuses of major
schools of public policy and international affairs. The
Summer Institutes last from 6 to 8 weeks. Senior Year
Summer Program includes language study, internships,
and additional academic preparation for students
planning to enter graduate school. One year Graduate
Fellowships are available for students who have
successfully completed a junior year institute.
Application Procedure: Direct application to the
Summer Institute of your choice. Information and
applications available in the Office of Honors Programs
and Academic Scholarships.
Application Deadline: Mid March
National Science Foundation Minority Fellowships
Terms: Approximately 150 awarded. Terms are identical
to National Science Foundation Fellowships.
Eligibility: College seniors of Native American, African
American, Hispanic, Native AlasLm or Native Pacific
Islander background, pursuing graduate study in
mathematics, physical, medical, biological, engineering,
or social sciences and in the history or philosophy of
science.
Application Procedure: Applications available in the
Office of Honors Programs and Academic Scholarships
in early October or from: The Fellowship Office,
National Research Council, 2101 Constitution Avenue,
Washington, D.C. 20418.
Application Deadline: Early November.
Smithsonian 10-Week Graduate Student Fellowships
Terms: Stipend of approximately $250 per week for 10
weeks. Travel to the Smithsonian Institution to conduct
research is required.
Ford Foundation Doctoral Fellowships for Minorities
TeT-mr: Approximately 55 Pre-doctoral Fellowships
awarded each year. Approximately $11,500 awarded
annually plus tuition and fees for up to three years.
Eligibility: College seniors of Native American, African
American, Mexican American, Native Alaskan or Native
Pacific Islander background, pursuing study in the
humanities, social and behavioral sciences, engineering,
mathematics or physical and biological sciences. Awards
will be made for study in research-sciences, and
biological sciences, or for the interdisciplinary programs
composed of two or more eligible disciplines. The Pre-
doctoral Fellowships are intended for students who plan to
TEXAS A&M SCHOLARSHIPS
Phi Kappa Phi Graduate Fellowship
Tirtwr. - Approximately 100 awarded annually on:::
national level and one awarded locally. $1,C
on the local level and up to $8,500 awarded on
national level for the first year of graduate study.
Eligibility: Seniors planning to attend graduate scWl:
Scholarship can be used for any field of study. Minimi
GPA of 3.75.
Application Procedure: Contact: Office of Hon:
Programs and Academic Scholarships, Acadtf
Building Room 101, 845-1957.
Application Deadline: Mid January.
Jordan Fellows Program (Travel grants for study almti
Terms: 10 students selected annually. The JoiJ:
Institute provides round trip air fare and housing will*
host family.
Eligibility: Undergraduate students who are poteiti
leaders in either the public or private sector and
planning international careers or have internatiotl
career interests. Selection for the travel grant is based
a proposal describing travel objectives. Asajont
Fellow, the student will be expected to attend moult
seminars and activities relating to international topics
Application Procedures: Direct application by stud®
Applications available at MSG Jordan Institute
International Awareness (Room 223 MSC).
Academic Incentive Award
Terms: Approximately 120 one-year scholarsti
awarded annually. $1,500 for study based onTAtf
school year. Student is also entitled to a $1,000 Stt
Abroad stipend which must be used during the yea:
the award and prior to graduation. Recipients music
be enrolled as a full-time student (12 hours).
Eligibility: Undergraduates who are beginning it
sophomore, junior or senior year at TAMU in the (at
1994.
Application Procedure:D\rccl application by stufc
Applications available in the Office of Honors Prop'
and Academic Scholarships beginning in early Januan
Application Deadline: March 1, 1995.
Distinguished Achievement Award
Terms: Approximately 50 one-year scholarships awat
annually. $1,500 for study based on TAMU school)*
Student is also entitled to a $1,000 Study Ab*
stipend which must be used during the year of thea' lf
and prior to graduation. Recipients must ab :
enrolled as a full-time student (12 hours).
Eligibility: High achieving African Americaa i:
Hispanic students who are beginning their sophof ■
Eligibility: Individuals formally enrolled in a graduate work toward the PhD - or are near the beginning of 'T° r °r sem ° r ^ at ™ vIU m th ' M of 1994 .
o J j o t ■ i . . t Atrh ir/itinn Hrocedurp: 1 hrerr arm trarmn hv stun
program and who will have completed one semester of
such prior to the appointment period.
Application Procedure: Direct application and faculty
evaluation of proposal. Information available in the
Office of Honors Programs and Academic Scholarships.
Application Deadline: Postmarked by Mid January
their graduate study.
Application Procedure: Applications available in the
Office of Honors Programs and Academic Scholarships
in early October or from: The Fellowship Office,
National Research Council, 2101 Constitution Avenue,
Washington, D.C. 20418.
Application Deadline: Early November.
TEXAS A &M SCHOLARSHIPS
Texas Aggie Bar Association Scholarship
Terms: Three awarded annually. A one-time stipend of
$500 that may be used at any law school in the United
States.
Eligibility: College senior who has completed at least 40
hours at TAMU with a minimum GPA of 3.0. Students
must provide LSAT scores.
Application Procedure: Direct application by student.
Applications available in mid-March in the Office of
Professional School Advising, 203 Academic Building.
Application Deadline: Early April.
Application Procedure: Direct application by stuf
Applications available in the Office of Honors Frog*'
and Academic Scholarships beginning in early Janur
Application Deadline: April 1, 1995
Academic Excellence Award
Terms: Approximately 600 one-year scholars!:
awarded annually. Scholarships range from
$2,500 per year.
Eligibility: Undergraduates who are beginning
sophomore, junior or senior year at TAMU in theft
1994. Student must be full-time, in a degree-g
course of study and have a satisfactory conduct
Eligibility for some awards is need-related and ref
the submission of the Free Application for Fob |
Student Aid. Minimum GPA of 2.75. |j
Application Procedure: Direct application by ‘i - •
Applications available in the Scholarship Section o!
Office of Student Financial Aid, Room 228. ;
Pavilion, beginning early January.
Application Deadline: March 1, 1995
r
Information and applications available from:
Office of Honors and Academic Scholarships
Room 101 Academic Building, 845-6774
Ask for E)r. Susanna Finnell