Wednesday, August 4, 2004 THE BATH! I by Will Uoy showed that students value grab! go food and convenience all-you-ean-eat cafeteria. Southside students wantafoodt similar to the Underground,wliii located near the Northside don ries. Beard said. Fire safety codes also the decision to move upstairs, It would have cost $1 more than it cost to renovateS therapy to redo the Commons Dining 0 Floyd said. Tran two-da) ual assa fierce 1 includii by the chances onanu Dist Ruckrii out of June 2 ing in rape-sh “If it come n prosecu re-evah its chan Ford Continued from page 1 spark new insights and collaborations.” Ford studies the adsorption and transport of micro- porous materials. This knowledge helps create optimal adsorbent materials for separation and reaction pro cesses in the chemical industry. Primarily, he builds models of systems on a small scale. Based on how the molecules interact, he makes predictions about how material will behave on a visible scale, Ford said. “In lay terms, he is modeling physical phenomena and chemical processes at the most basic level,” said Dr. M. Sam Mannan, director of Mary Kay O’Conner Process Safety Center. “To be able to look at how things behave and understand it at the molecular level is really a frontier of research.” Ford’s work is noteworthy because he combines scientific work, research and theory to develop research tools that will advance the scientific enter prise, Ford said. Ford is also the third chemical engineer to receive the prestigious P.E.C.A.S.E. award in 2000 after receiv ing the Career Award in that year as well. Only a hand ful of engineers receive the P.E.C.A.S.E. award from the White House, which is selected by the president’s science adviser, Mannan said. Ford graduated from the State University of New York at Buffalo in 1991 with a degree in chemical engineering. He later obtained his master’s degree and doctorate in chemical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. Ford has been at Texas A&M since 1997. “At the symposium, (Ford) will be able to give the fruits of his research to the people who need it out there,” Mannan said. “People of his caliber from all over the nation are coming, and it’s a big recognition issue for A&M. Things are happening there, and for A&M to be at that table is a good thing.” Crash Continued from page 1 “It was devastating, to actually see it hap pen and know that there probably would not be a survivor,” he said. “I suppose he was having engine problems. I think that’s what it was. He just couldn’t gain the altitude.” Ann Lowe, 19, who lives across the fair way from where the plane crashed said she heard the plane fly low over her house and then saw it disappear below the treeline. She ran outside, heard screams and then noticed her neighbor’s house. “I felt the heat and heard windows explod ing in the house,” she said. Five bodies were recovered from the wreckage, but emergency crews were still working Tuesday afternoon to get the sixth from the smoldering home, Mange said The plane hit a 3- to 4-foot retaining between the home and the golf course, plowed into the home’s back patio area! plane’s cockpit is lodged in the blackened rear of the house and smallp of it litter the yard. Todd Moore, who lives about from the house, was golfing whenthep crashed. He said he ran to the house! seeing a plume of smoke to see if them couple who lived there was OK. He dec! to name the couple, but Brown ideni them as Laurence and Jacqueline Ellioi He said neighbors told him Elliottsa" plane approaching as he stood onani? patio, and he ran to his wife in thetf grabbed her and ran out of the I® Apparently an appliance repairmanwat in the home, witnesses said. 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