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Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470....

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contents the university 513 Faculty Office Building Nearing Completion 513 Chief Justice Dedicates ND London Law Centre 513 Library Collection for Business Ethics Endowed 513 Tuition Increase faculty notes 514 Appointments 514 Honors 514 Activities 518 Deaths 518 Addendum to NDR #4 administrators' notes 520 Appointments 520 Honors 520 Activities documentation 521 Faculty Senate Journal May 4, 1983 advanced studies 528 Notes for Principal Investigators 528 --Fringe Benefits for Staff Employees 528 --New National Science Foundation Proposal Policy 528 Information Circulars 528 --Humanities 529 --Social Sciences 529 --Science 534 --General 535 Current Publications and Other Scholarly Works 539 Awards Received 540 Proposals Submitted 541 Summary of Awards Received and Proposals Submitted July 29, 1983
Transcript
Page 1: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

contents the university

513 Faculty Office Building Nearing Completion

513 Chief Justice Dedicates ND London Law Centre

513 Library Collection for Business Ethics Endowed

513 Tuition Increase

faculty notes

514 Appointments 514 Honors 514 Activities 518 Deaths 518 Addendum to NDR #4

administrators' notes

520 Appointments 520 Honors 520 Activities

documentation

521 Faculty Senate Journal May 4, 1983

advanced studies

528 Notes for Principal Investigators 528 --Fringe Benefits for Staff

Employees 528 --New National Science Foundation

Proposal Revie~l Policy 528 Information Circulars 528 --Humanities 529 --Social Sciences 529 --Science 534 --General 535 Current Publications and Other

Scholarly Works 539 Awards Received 540 Proposals Submitted 541 Summary of Awards Received

and Proposals Submitted

July 29, 1983

Page 2: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

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faculty office building nearing completion The completion of an Arts and Letters College faculty office building is the major physical change antici­pated as the University begins its 141st year. April occupancy is predicted for the new building, where exterior work is nearing completion. The three-tiered structure will contain 254 offices, six seminar rooms, t110 lounges, and office areas for the Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies.

T\10 famous landmarks, \~ashington Hall and LaFortune Student Center, are undergoing major renovations this summer, and additional updating of facilities in Fisher, Pangborn, Walsh and Sarin residence halls is a continuing summer project. Ground will also be broken for the addition of a natatorium to the Athletic and Convocation Center.

Former Old Chemistry Hall, now occupied by the Department of Art, Art History and Design, will be dedicated at a Mass and reception on Sept. 23.

chief justice dedicates nd london law centre The University's London Law Centre was dedicated on July 29, highlighted with an address by Chief Justice of the United States Warren E. Burger. Through the Centre, the Notre Dame Law School has offered the only opportunity for American students to study law abroad on an academic year basis. The Centre is home for the Concannon Programme of Inter­national Law, endowed by the late Mrs. Dagmar Con­cannon in memory of her husband, Matthias Concannon, a prominent Chicago attorney. Her $4 million bequest in 1980 also enabled the long-term lease of the Centre property at 7 Albemarle Street.

The London Law Centre attracts second-year students with strong interests in international and compara­tive law, giving them an opportunity to observe the American legal system against the background of its common-law origins, of the laws and practices of another nation, and of the law of nations. Courses in corporations, federal income taxation and inter­national taxation are taught by American faculty. Other courses, including those in the British legal system and jurisprudence, are taught by British law professors using American casebooks supplemented with articles and books on British law.

library collection for business ethics endowed The University has received a $100,000 gift to establish a special Memorial Library collection consisting of books on business ethics. The col­lection, which memorializes Michael P. and Lyle C. Williams, was made possible by their son Robert J. Williams, president of Cadillac Products, Inc., a manufacturer of automotive parts in Sterling Heights, Mich.

The Michael P. and Lyle C. Williams Library Collection in Ethics in Business and Society is the fifth endowed University Library collection at Notre Dame.

tuition increase The University's undergraduate tuition for the 1983-84 school year will go up 8.4 percent to $6,450, while room and board charges will be increased-? per­cent and average $2,160. The new Graduate School tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., cited a survey of 35 peer institutions in which Notre Dame's tuition ranked 30th from the top, room and board 35th and the total of both 32nd.

Vol. 12, No. 20 July 29, 1983 Notre Dame Report (USPS 707-080) is an official publication published fortnightly during the school year, monthly in the summer, by the University of Notre Dame, Department of Information Services. Second-class postage paid at Notre Dame, Ind. Postmaster: Please send address corrections to: Editor, Notre Dame Report, c/o Rm. 212, Administration Building, Notre Dame, IN 46556 © 1983 by the University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind. 46556. All rights reserved.

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Page 3: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

appointments James W. Frick has been named assistant to the presi­dent of'the University. Frick will be stepping down Sept. 1 as the University's vice president for public relations, alumni affairs and development.

James H. Powell has been appointed as director of graduate admissions at the University. The appointment is effective Sept. 1. Currently an assistant director of Notre Dame's Center for Con­tinuing Education, Powell has also served the last two years as a "core course" instructor in the College of Arts and Letter~. He has also been a teaching assistant in the Department of History and an instructor in the Collegiate Seminar. Powell succeeds Donald F. Castro.

honors J. Douglas Archer, staff librarian, was appointed to the Executive Committee of the Reference Division of the Indiana Library Association in May 1983. In June he was appointed co-editor of the American Library Association's Intellectual Freedom Round Table News­letter and liaison from the Round Table to the Free­dom to Read Foundation.

Alan Dowty, professor of government and international studies, was named project director for 1983-84 and 1984-85 academic years by Twentieth Century Fund, to write a book on contemporary emigration policies.

Robert J. Havlik, University engineering librarian, was appointed to the nominating committee for the Engineering Libraries Division Sessions of the American Society of Engineering Education's 91st Annual Conference at the Rochester Institute of Technology, June 19-23.

Stephen M. Hayes, associate librarian, was elected Government Documents Division District I Representa­tive of the Indiana Library Association on May 6. He was also elected Assistant Coordinator of the Federal Documents Task Force, American Library Associ­ation, in June 1983.

Patricia Bick Janicki, reference librarian, has been appointed for a three-year term to the Indiana Council for Approval of Providers by the Indiana Library and Historical Board.

John W. Lucey, associate professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering, has been elected chairman of the Education Division, American Nuclear Society. He will serve a one-year term.

James L. Melsa, professor and chairman of electrical engineering, has been elected Vice President for Member Activities of the IEEE Control System Society for 1984.

Kenneth F. Ripple, professor of law, 11as named a consultant on judicial administration to the Supreme Court of Alabama, May 1983. He was also appointed to a ne11 term on the Committee on the Federa 1 Con­stitution of the New York Bar Association, June 1983.

Robert C. Miller, director of Libraries, has been appointed Chairperson of the Association of Research Libraries Task Force on Collection Development.

activities Panos J. Antsaklis, assistant professor of electrical engineering, chaired the "Linear System Theory" session at the 1983 American Control Conference in San Francisco, Calif., on June 22-24.

J. Douglas Archer, staff librarian, attended the annual conference of the American Library Associa­tion in Los Angeles, Calif., June 24-29, and participated as a member of the Cognates Committee which produced the conference newsletter.

Thomas P. Bergin, dean of ~ontinuing education, was a presenter and panel chairman at a National Symposi­um on "Access to Cultural Programs" sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts at Indiana University, Bloomington, July 13-16.

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Page 4: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

David M. Betson, assistant professor of economics, presented a paper entitled "Labor Supply, Economic Well-being and the Structure of the Transfer System" at a conference on poverty research sponsored by the Institute on Research on Poverty, University of ~lis­cons in-Madison,. and the Department of Health and Human Services, June 14. He delivered a paper en­titled "Future Directions of Microeconomic Simulation Modelling of the Labor Market" and was a discussant of a paper entitled "A Micro Simulation Model for the German Federal Student Aid Program -- Principles and Experiences" by Dr. Herman Quinke at the Conference on Microanalytic Simulation Models to Support Social and Financial Policy sponsored by the Gesellschaft fur Mathematik and Datenverarbeitung in Bonn, West Germany, June 20-22. Betson gave a lecture entitled "Poverty Programs in the U.S." at the Department of Economics of the University of Innsbruck, Austria, June 24. He presented a paper entitled "The Impact of Increased Labor Force Participation of Married Women on the Distribution of Income in the U.S." at the University of Amsterdam, Holland, and the Dutch Social and Cultural Planning Office, June 28-29.

Joseph Blenkinsopp, professor of theology, was a Visiting Fe.llow at Wolfson College, University of Oxford, London, England, during the academic year 1982-83. He read a paper entitled "The Present State of Old Testament Theology" to the Theology Society, University of Cambridge, Oct. 18, and addressed the Oriental Seminar, University of Oxford, on the subject "The haredim of the Second Temple" on Oct. 20. He also took part in the annual meeting of the British Society for Old Testament Study in London, Jan. 5-7. Blenkinsopp read a paper entitled "Old Testament Theology and the Jewish-Christian Connection" at the University of Sheffield, Jan. 24, the University of Oxford, March 7, Lancaster University, April 18, the University of Newcastle, May 9, and Edinburgh University on May 10. He delivered two invited papers to the annual meeting of the Irish Biblical Association in Dublin, Ireland, April 29 to May 1, under the titles "The Servants of the Lord in Third Isaiah" and "The Servants and the Servant."

D'Arcy Chisholm, consul.tant for the Institute for Pastoral. and Social Ministry, Suzanne~, director of the Religious Leaders Program, and Teresa Godwin Phelps, assistant professor of law, conducted a work­shop entitled "Threats to the Family When Both Parents Work" at the Center for Social Concerns, Notre Dame, Ind., June 20.

Paritosh K. Das, assistant professional specialist in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper entitled "Probing Biradicals and Triplets by Energy Transfer to Carotenoids" at the Gordon Research Conference on Organic Photochemistry held at Andover, N.H., July 18-22.

Alan Do~1ty, professor of government and i nternati on a l studies, was the commencement speaker for the first graduating class of Weekend College, Shimer College, Waukegan, Ill., May 28.

William G. Dwyer, associate professor of mathematics, was an invited lecturer at the A.M.S. Summer Research Conference on Applications of Algebraic K-theory to ~lgebraic Geometry and Number Theory held in Boulder,

515

Colo., from June 12-18. He presented a talk entitled "Conjectural Calculations of General Linear Group Homology" on June 13 and a talk on "A Survey of Suslin's Recent Work on the Lichtenbaum Conjectures" ~ on June 15. ~~

Thomas Ebbesen, research associate in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper entitled "The Inter-ference of H2 in Photochemical Water Cleavage Systems" at the Seventh DOE Solar Photochemistry Research Con­ference held at Oakland, Calif., June 13-16.

G. Ferraudi, associate professional specialist in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper entitled "Photoredox Properties of the Lowest Lying 3mr* in Transition Metal Phthalocyanines" at the Seventh DOE Solar Photochemistry Research Conference held at Oakland, Calif., June 13-16.

R.W. Fessenden, professor of chemistry and associate director of the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper entitled "Methods for Time-Resolved Detection and Study. of Radicals" at the Seventh International Congress of Radiation Research held at Amsterdam, The Netherlands, July 3-8.

Elisabeth Schussler Fiorenza, professor of theology, presented a lecture on "Women and Feminist Biblical Interpretation" at Indiana University-South Bend on March 30. She delivered a paper entitled "Followers of the Lamb" at a Symposium on Discipleship in the New Testament at Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wise., April 15-17. Fiorenza gave a talk on her book, In Memory of Her, to the Women in Theology at Notre Dame, Ind., on April 18. She participated in the National Jewish-Christian Dialogue in Boston, Mass., April 25-28., and spoke on "The Future Genera­tion."

Rev. Mark J. Fitzgerald, C.S.C., professor emeritus of economics, directed the 26th Union-Management Conference sponsored by the Department of Economics at the University of Notre Dame, Ind., on June 10.

K.P. Funabashi, associate faculty fellow in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper entitled "A Comparative Study on the Size of the Hydrated Electron" at the Seventh International Congress of Radiation Research held at Amsterdam, The Netherlands, July 3-8.

Sonia G. Gernes, associate professor of English, gave a lecture entitled "Women Writers: Claiming and Re­claiming the Self" at the Indiana Library Association Conference at Century Center in South Bend, Ind., on May 5.

Alexander J. Hahn, associate professor of mathematics, gave an invited lecture to the Mathematics Department of the University of Gottingen, West Germany, entitled "Morita Theory and Unitary Groups" on April 29, and an invited lecture to the Mathematics Department of the University of Zurich, Switzerland, on "Category Equivalences and Linear Groups" on May 5.

John L. Hardwick, assistant professional specialist in the Radiation Laboratory, presented two papers entitled "The Near Ultraviolet Absorption Spectrum ( E Bands of 12c34s2)" and "Collisional Transfer

Page 5: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

of Rotational Energy in the 2B1 Electronic State of Nitrogen Dioxide and Improved Vibrational and Ro­tational Constants for the (0,2,0) and (0,3,0) States" at the 38th Annual Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy held at Columbus, Ohio, June 13-17.

Stephen M. Hayes, associate librarian, participated in a panel discussion entitled "Business and Econ­omics--Government Resources" at the annual conference of the Indiana Library Association in South Bend, Ind., May 6. He attended the annual conference of the American Library Association and chaired the meeting of the Acquisitions and Bibliographic Control Workgroup, Los Angeles, Calif., June 23-28.

Nai-Chien Huang, associate professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering, presented a paper entitled "Fracture of Ice under Compression with Constant Speed" at the International Conference on Application of Fracture Mechanics to Materials and Structures held in Freiburg, \>lest Germany, June 20-24.

Kenneth P. Jameson, associate professor of economics, presented a lecture on "Models of Development and Country Experiences" at the Development Studies Pro­gram of the Agency for International Development in Washington, D.C., on May 31.

·Aaron A. Jennings, assistant professor of civil engineering, delivered a short course lecture titled "Groundwater Solute Transport Modeling" at the 1983 Indiana Water Resources Association Symposium, "Topics in Hydrology Theory and Application," Marshall, Ind., June 22-24.

Edward A. Kline, associate professor and chairman of English and director of the Freshman Writing Program, delivered an address, "Computer-Aided Review Lessons of English Grammar and Spe 11 i ng," at the Sixth Inter­national Conference on Computers and the Humanities at North Carolina State University, Raleigh, June 6.

Douglas W. Kmiec, associate professor of law, met with President Ferdinand Marcos on June 16, in Manila in the Philippines. The meeting took place as part of Kmiec's official duties as a White House Fellow. Kmiec and the President discussed a wide variety of subjects, including church-state relations in the aftermath of a recent pastoral letter on social and economic conditions issued by Filipino clergy.

John J. Kozak, professor of chemistry and scientist in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper en­titled "Efficiency of Energy Transfer Processes and Chemical Reactions in Heterogeneous Systems" at the Seventh DOE Photochemistry Research Conference held at Oakland, Calif., June 13-16.

Rev. Robert Krieg, C.S.C., assistant professor of theology, presented a paper, "Jesus as Emmanue 1 : A Christological Proposal," to the College Theology Society, Lake Geneva, Wise., April 8.

Lawrence H.N. Lee, professor of aerospace and mech­anical engineering, presented a paper entitled "On Penny-Shaped Crack at an Ice-Substrate Interface" at the International Conference on Application of Fracture Mechanics to Materials and Structures held in Frei burg, West Germany, June 20-24. He presented

A. Eugene Livingston, assistant professor of physics, presented a paper entitled "Fine Structure of Hydro­genic Transitions in High-Z Four-Electron Ions," and coauthored three other papers at the annual meeting of the Division of Electron and Atomic Physics of the American Physical Society at Boulder, Colo., May 23-25. He presented two papers entitled "Fine Structure of Hydrogenic Transitions in Four-Electron Ions" and "The 2s-2p Fine Structure Transitions in High-Z Helium­like Ions" at the Gordon Conference on Atomic Physics at Colby-Sawyer College, New London, N.H., July 4-8.

yohn W. Lucey, associate professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering, chaired a session on "Inno­vations in Nuclear Engineering Education" at the Annual Meeting of the American Nuclear Society held in Detroit, Mich., June 13.

Asokendu Mozumder, associate faculty fellow in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper entitled "Electron Thermalization and Related Problems in Gaseous and Condensed Media" at the Seventh Inter­national Congress of Radiation Research held at Amsterdam, Holland, July 3-8.

Thomas J. Mueller, professor of aerospace and mech~nical engineering, presented a series of lectures entitled "Flow Visualization by Direct Injection" at the University of Minnesota short course on Fluid Mechanics Measurements in Minneapolis, Minn., June 14-15. He delivered a paper entitled "Experimental Studies of the Boundary Layer on an Airfoil at Lo~1 Reynolds Numbers" at the AIAA 16th Fluid and Plasma Dynamics Conference, July 12-14. He also presented a paper, "Boundary Layer Characteristics of the Miley Airfoil at Low Reynolds Numbers," at the AIAA Applied Aerodynamics Conference, July 13-15. Both conferences were held in Danvers, Mass.

Pedatsur Neta, associate faculty fellow in the Radia­tion Laboratory, presented a paper entitled "Pulse Radiolytic Studies of Intramolecular Electron Trans­fer Processes" at the Seventh International Congress of Radiation Research held at Amsterdam, The Nether­lands, July 3-8.

Thomas Nowak, associate professor of chemistry, pre­sented a paper, "Thiol Group Reactivity in Chicken Liver Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase," ~1ith A.L. Makinen, at the American Society of Biological Chemists, San Francisco, Calif., on June 7. He also gave an invited lecture, "Activation and Mechanism of Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase: A Regulatory Step in Gluconeogenesis," at the Medical School, University of Nevada at Reno, Department of Biochem­istry, June 13.

Mar1a Rosa Olivera-Williams, assistant professor of modern and classical languages, directed a colloquium between Mexican writers Jose Emilio Pacheco and Arturo Azuela entitled "Voces literarias de una sociedad en violenta transici6n," University of Notre Dame, Ind., Feb. 24. She presented a paper entitled "Cristina Peri Rossi's Short Narratives: A Literary Response to Uruguayan Repression" at the National Women's Studies Association Conference, held at Ohio State University, Columbus, June 27-30.

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Page 6: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

L.K. Patterson, assistant director of the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper entitled "Photoinduced Processes in Organized Molecular Assemblies. Effects of Monolayer Organization on Fluorescence Behavior" at the Seventh DOE Solar Photochemistry Research Con­ference held at Oakland, Calif., June 13-16. He pre­sented a paper entitled "Radiation Chemistry: Molecu­lar Systems of Biochemical Interest other than DNA" at the Seventh International Congress of Radiation Research held at Amsterdam, The Netherlands, July 3-8.

Morris Pollard, professor emeritus of microbiology ·and director of Lobund Laboratory, gave a presenta­tion on "Antitumor Agents in Rats with MAM-induced Intestinal Tumors" at an invited program on "A Decade of Achievements and Challenges in Large Bowel Cancer Research 1972-82" sponsored by the National Cancer Institute and the M.D. Anderson Hospital & Tumor Institute, Houston, Tex., June 23-26. He also pre­sented, ~lith B.S. l~ostman, a paper entitled "Effects of Germfree Status and Dietary Restriction on Life­span of Male Histar Rats" at the.21st Ann~al Mee~ing of the Association for Gnotobiot1cs held 1n Baltl­more, Md., June 27-29.

Kenneth F. Ripple, professor of law, was an in­vited participant at the meeting of the Standi~g. Committee on Practice and Procedure of the Jud1c1al Conference of the United States, Hashington, D.C., June 17. He presented a lecture on "The Military Justice Act of 1983," Regional Navy Law Center, Great Lakes, Ill., June 11. Ripple was a guest on the Channel 34 television program "Straight Talk," 1·1here he was intervie1·1ed on the 1983 Abortion Cases, May 20. He appeared on the same program to t~lk on the operations of the Supreme Court of the Un1ted States, May 27.

Gordon A. Sar~t, professor and chairman of metal­lUrgica~ngineering and materials science, was chairman of the Erosion Subcommittee G-02.2 at the meeting of the American Society for Testing of Materials held in Kansas City, Mo., June 22-24.

Howard J. Saz, professor of biology, gave an invited seminar entitled "Anaerobic Energy Generation in Hel­minth Mitochondria" to the Department of Microbiology, Georgetown University School of Medicine, June 8. He was an invited speaker at the Third John Jacob Abel Symposium on Drug Development held at the Johns Hop­kins University, Baltimore, Md., from June 11-21. He spoke on "Anaerobic Energy Yielding Reactions." He was also an invited participant at the Gordon Con­ference on Enzymes, Coenzymes and Metabolic Pathways, held at Kimble Union, N.H., on July 2-11. He spoke on "Energy Generation in the Anaerobically Function­ing Mitochondria of Parasitic Helminths."

Thomas J. Schlereth, professor of American Studies, delivered a paper, "U.S. 40: A Roadscape of the American Experience," at the annual spring meeting of the Indiana Historical Society at Spring Mill, Ind., on April 29. Schlereth also gave a paper, "Object Knowledge: Structuralist and Functionalist Approaches to Material Culture Research," at the national meeting of the American Association of Museums in San Diego, Calif., June 5.

Robert H. Schuler, professor of chemistry and director-or-the Radiation Laboratory, presented the

517

Ffrst Baxendale Memorial Lecture at the Miller Con­ference on Radiation Chemistry held at Hunfeld, Hest Germany, June 26-July 1. He spoke on "Pulse Radiolytic, Raman and ESR Studies of Transient ~ Radicals. " Schuler presented a paper entitled 91: "Intermediates in the Reduction of 5-Halouracils by eaq" at the Seventh International Congress of Radiation Research held at Amsterdam, The Nether­lands, July 3-8.

J. Eric Smithburn, professor of law, lectured on "The Lizzie Borden Murder Case" in Mini University at Indiana University-Bloomington, on June 20.

G.N.R. Tripathi, assistant professional specialist in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper entitled "Time Resolved Resonance Raman Spectroscopy of Phenoxyl Radicals" at the 38th Annual Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy held at Columbus, Ohio, June 13-17. He also was chairman of the Non-linear Raman Spectroscopy Session of this symposium.

Arvind Varma, professor and chairman of chemical engineering, coauthored a research paper presented at the Eighth North American Meeting of the Catalyst Society, held in Philadelphia, Pa., May 1-4. The paper, entitled "Complex Dynamic Behavior in the Case of the CO-N0-02-H2D Reaction System on Pt/'YA£203 Catalyst," was presented by B. Subramaniam, doctoral student in the department.

Akos Vertes, research associate in the Radiation Laboratory~ presented a paper entitled "Electron Mobility Calculations in Liquid Xenon" at the Colloque Hayl VI held at Asilomar Conference Center, Asilomar, Calif., June 27-July 1.

Jennifer Harlick, assistant professor of economics, presented a paper, "Labor Supply, Economic Hell­being, and Changes in SSDI and OASI" (coa~thor~d with Robert Haveman and Barbara Holfe, Un1vers1ty of Hisconsin), at the Institute for Research on Poverty ASPE Horkshop, Madison, Hisc., June 13-16.

Charles K. Hilber, professor of economics, gave the keynote address, "The U.S. Economy in 1984," t? the annual convention of the Graphic Arts Internat1onal Union in Cincinnati, Ohio, March 7. He also gave a talk on "The Tragedy of Unemployment" to the Sixth Annual Conference o~ the New England Catholic Council on Social Ministries in Springfield, Mass., May 26. He was interviewed on "Catholic Social Thought and the Economy" by For~bes magazine in the April 25, 1983 issue. He also was interviewed on the Bill Ayres Show, HPLJ, New York City, June 5. The topic for the two-hour program was his and Kenneth P. Jameson's new book, An Inquiry into th~ Poverty of Economics (University of Notre Dame Pre SST.

Daniel Hinicur, associate professor of chemistry and scientist i,-fhe Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper entitled "Spectroscopy of the He*(23s)-C2H2 Flame" at the 38th Annual Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy held at Columbus, Ohio, June 13-17.

Eduardo E. Half, associate professor of chemical engineering, spent one semester of sabbatical leave at the Exxon Research and Development Laboratories

Page 7: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

P1!1!i? a

deaths in Baton Rouge, La. During this period, he presented invited seminars on "FTIR Studies of Surface Dynamics on Supported Catalysts" at the Chemical Engineering Departments of the following universities: Univer­sity of California-Da.vis, Feb. 17; Texas A&M Univer­sity, College Station, Tex., March 11; Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, March 18. He co­authored a paper entitled "Surface Dynamics of CO Oxidation on a PT/SI02 Catalyst Studied by Tempera­ture and Concentration Programming and FTIR Spec­troscopy" presented by D. Kaul at the Sixth Spring Symposium of the Michigan Catalysis Society held at Michigan State University, East Lansing, June 6.

Rev. Frank O'Hara, C.S.C., a professor of psychology at the University from 1927 to 1930 and from 1956 to 1961, died June 23, at Holy Cross House after a lengthy illness. The 84-year old Holy Cross priest had lived in retirement on the campus since 1970. In addition to Notre Dame, Father O'Hara also taught at King's College, Wilkes Barre, Pa., Stone­hill College, Northeaston, Mass., and St. Edward's College of Austin, Tex., all operated by the Holy Cross priests.

addendum to ndr #4 The following faculty members taught in the spring semester, 1983, and were not previously included in the faculty listing in Notre Dame Report #4.

LAWRENCE J. BRADLEY, Visiting Associate Professor in the Law School. B.A., Siena College, 1957; J.D., Univ. of Notre Dame, 1960; M.A., ibid., 1962; Ph.D., ibid., 1971.

SAMUEL R. BUSCETTA, Adjunct Instructor in Management. B.A., Oakland Univ., 1968; M.A., Ball State Univ., 1972.

JOHN B. COCKSHOTT, Adjunct Assistant Professor in Psychology. B.S., Purdue Univ., 1965; M.S., ibid., 1969; Ph.D., ibid., 1971.

JOHN J. CONNORS, Adjunct Instructor in Accountancy. B.S., LaSalle College, 1976; J.D., Univ. of Notre Dame, 1980.

REV. CHARLES CORSO, C.S.C., Adjunct Instructor in the Program of Liberal Studies. A.B., Univ. of Notre Dame, 1968; M.M., Indiana Univ., 1983.

AUBREY L. DIAMOND, Adjunct Professor in the London Law Program. LL.B., London School of Economics, 1950; LL.M., ibid., 1956.

KENNETH DIAMOND, Adjunct Instructor in Psychology. B.A., Long Island Univ., 1971; M.A., Fairleigh Dickinson Univ., 1975.

JAVIER IGUINIZ ECHEVERRIA, Visiting Associate Professor of Economics. B.A., Univ. of Nac Ingenieria, 1968; M.Econ., Iowa State Univ., 1972; Ph.D., New School for S.R., 1979.

ANDRES FONTANA, Assistant Faculty Fellow in the Helen Kellogg Institute. M.A., Univ. of Buenos Aires, 1976; M.A., Univ. of Texas at Austin, 1981.

KATHLEEN GAFFNEY, Adjunct Instructor in Theology. Diplomes, Sorbonne, 1959; B.A., Univ. of Buffalo, 1965; M.A., Fordham Univ., 1970; M.Ed., Texas Southern Univ., 1973.

YAOZENG HUANG, Visiting Professor of Chemistry. B.S., National Central Univ., Nanjing, China, 1934.

HIROYUKI ISHIBASHI, Guest Assistant Professor of Mathematics. M.S., Tokyo Univ., 1970; Ph.D., Univ. of Tsukuba, 1979.

PAULO J. KRISCHKE, Faculty Fellow in the Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies. B.A., Univ. of Sao Paulo, 1969; M.A., York Univ., 1977; Ph.D., ibid., 1983.

ANN v. MAKLETZOFF, Guest Staff Professional Specialist in Arts and Letters. A.B., St. Joseph's College, Broo~lyn; B.L.S., Univ. of Toronto, 1960.

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OSCAR MUNOZ, Visiting Professor and Faculty Fellow in Economics and the Helen Kellogg In­stitute for International Studies. B.S.E., Univ. of Chile, 1961; M.A., Yale Univ., 1963; Ph.D., ibid., 1967.

VANILDA PEREIRA PAIVA, Adjunct Associate Professor of Sociology. B.Ed., Univ. of Brazil, 1965; M.A., Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universitat, 1972; Ph.D., ibid., 1978.

TERRENCE W. RETIG, Visiting Assistant Professor of Physics. B.A., Defiance College, 1968; M.S., Ball State Univ., 1970; M.A., Indiana Univ., 1972; Ph.D., ibid., 1976.

WILLIAM A. SENIOR, Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Freshman Writing Program. B.A., Colby College, 1975; M.A., Univ. of Connecticut, 1977; Ph.D., Univ. of Notre Dame, 1983.

C. DAVID STRUPECK, Visiting Assistant Professor of Accountancy. B.S., Quincy College, 1971; M.B.A., Southern Illinois Univ., 1974; Ph.D., ibid., 1981.

JAY R. TOMBAUGH, Adjunct Instructor in Management. B.S., Univ. of Houston, 1977; M.A.T., ibid., 1977; M.A., Bowling Green State Univ., 1981.

KENNETH WADE, Visiting Professor of Chemistry. B.Sc., Nottingham Univ., 1954; Ph.D., ibid., 1957.

GARY WElL, Part-time Staff Professional Specialist in Physical Education. State Univ., 1978; M.S., ibid., 1980.

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ad~nini ,trators~ ~ _________ o 'tjtes

appointments Larry Ratliff has been appointed associate.manager of the Hammes-Notre Dame Bookstore effective July 1.

honors Richard L. Farrell, assistant director of purchasing, and J. Michael Pinter, buyer in the purchasing department, were elected Second Vice President and Treasurer respectively of the Purchasing Management Association of South Bend, Inc., affiliated with the National Association of Purchasing Management.

activities G. Thomas Bull, director of Personnel, was an invited panelist for a conference, "Perspectives in Place­ment," sponsored by Region V of the Rehabilitation Services Administration, U.S. Department of Educa­tion, in Minneapolis, Minn., June 13-15. He dis­cussed the employer vie~ of placing handicapped workers in regular jobs under the Projects with Industry program, which is administered in South Bend by Goodwill Industries.

Jacqueline Lewellen, administrative assistant in the University Libraries, served on a panel of the com­bined Library Education/College and University Divisions program of the Indiana Library Association at Century Center in South Bend, Ind., on May 5. Her topic was "Public Relations: View from Friends (the value of a friends organization)."

David M. Morrissey, regional director of development, participated in the 1gs3 Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) Annual Assembly held in San Diego, Calif., June 20-23. He chaired a round­table in the management area titled "Staff Training Programs," June 21. He was also moderator for a presentation entitled "Organizational Behavior -­Beyond Theory Z: \.Jhere Do \.Je Go From Here?", June 23.

Donald J. Weldon, assistant director and manager of Hardware/Software Systems of the Computing Center, presented "The Evaluation of Training" for the local Chapter of the American Society for Training and Development (ASTD) in South Bend, Ind., on June 14.

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t '

.

faculty senate journal may 4, 1983 The meeting of the Faculty Senate was called to order at 7:35p.m. in Room 202 of the Center for Continuing Education by the chairman, Prof. Vaughn McKim. The opening prayer was offered by Sandra Harmatiuk.

McKim then introduced reelected and newly elected senators. He asked for approval of the minutes of the April meeting. Hearing no additions or corrections, the minutes were approved.

The next order of business 1·1as the Treasurer's report given by Prof. Peri Arnold. The report indicated that, as of March 31, $1,193 of the senate budget had been spent. There were some increases in the cost of duplicating materials. Although 33% of the budget is left, the Senate has not yet received the bill for use of the CCE.

In the chairman's report, McKim noted that in the campus-wide elections for new members to the Academic and Faculty Affairs Committee of the Board of Trustees, Rev. David Burrell and Prof. Michael Crowe were elected to three-year terms.

McKim then reported on the agreement reached between Notre Dame and the Early Childhood Development Center. Notre Dame has made a cash payment of about $3,500 to the Center to help meet its short-term income deficit. In addition, the Center will seek to increase enrollments by changing its Articles of Incorporation to enable staff at St. Joseph's Medical Center, WNDU and Holy Cross Junior College to enroll children in the Center's programs. St. Mary's 1·1i ll compensate the Center for the educational practi cum afforded to its undergrad­uates, and Notre Dame will create a scholarship fund for children of its eligible graduate students. Other forms of direct financial subsidization by St. Mary's and Notre Dame will be phased out by 1986. The Board of ECDC believes the Center can become essentially self­funding by that time.

McKim noted that the actions taken by all parties involved seem to have met the concerns raised in the senate recommendations to the administration regarding ECDC adopted at the February meetings. He commended the University officers for their prompt and forthright action on this matter. (A synopsis of the new ECDC support agreement is attached to these minutes as Appendix I.)

McKim then made a report on issues pending:

1. The decision on extension of expanded children's tuition benefit to non-T&R faculty will be forthcoming at the next meeting of the University officers.

2. A decision on the request that future chairmen of the senate be given released time during their tenure in office has been deferred by the Provost.

3. The request that the senate chairman be made an ex officio member of the Executive Committee of the Academic Council will be taken up by the Council_ in the fall.

4. Fr. Hesburgh has responded to the Financial Aid Report indicating that he has asked appropriate University officers to study the issues raised in the report and to give him their recommendations.

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5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

McKim also reported that he and Prof. Michael Crowe had presented the Senate's letter of appreciation to Jim Frick, and that a gracious note of thanks had been received in re­sponse. Add it ion ally, the senate presented Harriet Flowers, secretary to the senate, with a bouquet and a cash gift on her birthday this spring in recognition of her many years of outstanding service to the senate.

Reporting on the informal joint meeting between the senate and elected members of the Academic Council held April 21, McKim expressed disappointment with the limited turn­out. In spite of this, the discussion among those present from both groups was profit­able. The conversation was open and honest, and some probing concerns were voiced about the present operation of the Academic Council in particular.

McKim then referred to the five-year review of senate activities that he had prepared for the AFACBT meeting to be held later in the week, copies of which had been distrib~ted to all senators. He noted that the report clearly shows that the senate has a strong record of ongoing activities and accomplishments to its credit in recent years. It was suggested that it would be appropriate to share this report with the faculty as a whole early next fall. With that point in mind, McKim solicited from the membership any per­tinent comments, additions or corrections to the report they might have to offer.

,,

In lieu of presenting a final chairman's report on the work of the senate this year, McKim asked that the summary of this year's activities from the Five-Year Report be made a part of the minutes of this meeting. (See Appendix II.) He did note that he was extremely pleased with how much the senate had accomplished during the last nine months, in view of the fact that no major projects had been "in the pipeline" ~1hen this year began. This will not be a problem next year, he noted, as there are a host of serious efforts underway that will require continuing attention from the senate. In concluding, McKim expressed his thanks to the membership for their continuing support and cooperation.

As a final note McKim reported that the Executive Committee had concluded that there was little to be gained from attempting to draft a detailed senate response to the PACE Report. The consensus view was rather that the senate ought to articulate a positive statement of University priorities from the viewpoint of the faculty. He encouraged the senate to make this a high priority in the year ahead.

McKim then asked for the reports of the standing committees. Prof. Donald Barrett reported that the Faculty Affairs Committee is actively ~10rking on various issues relating to retire­ment. A report should be forthcoming in the fall.

McKim then asked Prof. Michael Crowe to report on the Committee for Administration. Crowe asked Prof. John Uhran to give a report on the work of the subcommittee which he chaired, the other members of which were Profs. Rudolph Bottei, Joseph Tihen and Robert Wegs. This subcommittee has been meeting during the semester to consider a proposal to establish.a new category of professorships at the University. Such professorships could carry a title such as University Professor, Distinguished Professor, or Distinguished Service Professor and ~10ul d be awarded to present Notre Dame faculty for such things as di st i ngui shed service, teaching, or research. Recently, it has been found that a number of peer institutions have

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such positions, though the conditions associated with them vary quite significantly. It is the desire of the committee to gather further data and to develop a model appropriate for Notre Dame. A formal proposal is planned for presentation early in the fall semester.

Prof. Carson Daly then reported on the Student Affairs Committee. Summarizing some of the highlights of the preliminary report of the joint Senate-Admissions Office survey of faculty perceptions of undergraduates, Daly pointed out that there had been a 60% return of the questionnaires distributed. The percentage of students taught by those responding which satisfied the faculty's concept of a "good student" was 50% (mean and median). In general, the survey indicated that faculty perceived Notre Dame students as too job-oriented/goal­oriented and too homogeneous. A final report on the survey will be released to all faculty in the fall.

The next order of business was a reconsideration of a motion tabled at the April meeting.

Be it reso 1 ved:

1. that the Faculty Senate Executive Committee take steps to seek a meeting of the Academic Council early in the fall semester;

2. that the agenda of that meeting will include consideration of the recommendations of Dean Castellino's committee on faculty grievance procedures and professional ethics. It will also in­clude a report and discussion of the work of the University Curriculum Committee;

3. that the senate chairman should strongly recommend to the provost that it is appropriate that the senate have an opportunity to discuss the Castellino committee report before the Academic Council takes action on it.

There was some discussion of the motion. A friendly amendment was proposed to change the 1~ording of item #2 in the motion to read "It will also seek to include a report ... " The motion was carried with the friendly amendment.

The next item on the agenda was the approval of two letters to be sent to Dr. Timothy O'Meara. The first letter raised concerns that have been voiced in the senate about the role played by a faculty member's religious preferences in renewal, tenure and appointment decisions. The issue has arisen this year because of PACE. Though there has been a general understanding among the faculty that the administration does not treat personal religious convictions as relevant in faculty renewal or advancement decisions, PACE does not explicitly reaffirm this policy in the context of its strong recommendation to increase the number of committed Catho­lics on the faculty. Is this a mere oversight or a shift in policy? The senate requests clarification of this issue. After some discussion, the letter was unanimously approved with some modifications in language. (The text appears as Appendix III.)

The second letter to O'Meara concerned the work of the Curriculum Committee appointed by O'Meara. The letter expresses senate concern about the manner in which the committee was constituted and about the fact that the objectives and priorities of the committee remain unclear. The letter also recommends some actions to be undertaken by the Curriculum Com­mittee. After a period of intense discussion, the senate voted unanimously to approve the substance of the letter with some minor revisions in its language. (The text as approved appears as Appendix IV.)

The next item of business was election of new officers for next year. The following slate of candidates for office was presented by the nominating committee:

Chairman: Vice Chairman: Treasurer: Secretary: Chairman

Mario Borelli (Sc) John Uhran (Eg) Michael Crowe (AL) Jean Rosenberg (Li)

Committee on Administration: John Yoder (AL) Donald Barrett (AL) · Teresa Phelps (Law)

Committee on Faculty Affairs: Committee on Student Affairs:

McKim opened the floor for additional nominations. that the slate proposed be elected by acclamation.

Hearing none, it was moved and seconded The motio~ carried.

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In view of the fact that McKim will be on leave next year, the Executive Committee has agreed that the previous past chairman (Prof. Robert Vacca) should fill the eighth position on the committee for the coming year.

Prof. Carson Daly then called on the senate to acknowledge McKim's efforts during his year as chairman.

McKim then turned the meeting over to the new chairman, Mario Borelli. Borelli made some brief remarks about his hopes for next year. He then reminded senate members to indicate their committee preferences for next year.

The meeting adjourned at 10:00 p.m. A reception for new members followed.

Absent but not excused: James Bellis, sociology; Bernard Doering, modern languages.

Absent but excused: Vincent DeSantis, history; David Dodge, sociology; Jay Dolan, history; Thomas Kosel, engineering; Niels Rasmussen, theology; John Rohrbough, ROTC; La1·1rence Simon, philosophy; Thomas Swartz, economics.

Respectfully submitted,

Sandra J. Harmatiuk

Appendix I

Policy of Notre Dame and Saint Mary's for Future Support of the Early Childhood Development Center

Saint Mary's College (SMC) and the University of Notre Dame (UND) after numerous discussions, have finalized their position concerning their future relationship to the Early Childhood Development Center (ECDC).

Let it be clearly stated at the outset that SMC and UND commend the quality developmental program offered by ECDC and are dedicated to its continuance and flourishing. It serves well the young children of faculty, administrators and staff of both institutions; it also provides an excellent educational practicum for students of both schools.

Still both SMC and UND are concerned about allocating funds over which they do not exercise direct control and which annually benefit only about 4% of UNO's faculty and about 3% of SMC's. The percentages of staff and administrators benefiting from such investments are even less. Both institutions feel that benefits should apply more equitably. We plan therefore to redesign the targets and the amounts of our contributions. We plan a three-year transition period during which current level subsidies would be gradually reduced by June of 1986.

By July 1, 1983, Saint Mary's College will reach an arrangement 1·1ith ECDC in order to compen­sate them for the educational practi cum afforded to undergraduates. In addition, SMC vti ll establish a scholarship fund of $2,000 available to children of their faculty, staff and students.

Effective July 1, 1983, the University of Notre Dame will create an annual fund of $5,000 available as scholarship monies for the children of its eligible graduate students.

The $50,000 endowment secured through Father Hesburgh currently realizes an interest of 5% per annum. If the Board of Directors wishes to assume the ongoing responsibility for and risk of investing this endowment in an effort to realize earnings about 5%, both institu­tions agree to its being segregated for such investment.

So as to provide for a realistic and orderly transition from the present subsidization to a healthy independence on the part of ECDC, SMC and UND will reduce their contributions in the following manner:

FY 83-84 84-85 85-86

·sMc Contribution

$15,000 10,000 5,000

UND Contribution

$7,000 4,500 2,000

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Appendix II

Activities of the Faculty Senate 1982-83

Investigations:

(a) Of classroom space problems and the need for a new classroom building.

(b) Of the bookstore, to explore ways in which it could provide more support for the academic mission of the University.

(c) Of the feasibility of establishing Distinguished Service Professorships at Notre Dame in a way that would complement the University's present emphasis on endowed chairs.

(d) Of ways of strengthening the role of faculty in University governance at Notre Dame, with emphasis on finding new ways to enhance cooperation and coordination between the Senate and Academic Council.

(e) Of the resources available at Notre Dame to support faculty research and faculty develop­ment and renewal projects. As part of this study, a survey of sabbatical leave, teaching load and faculty development policies at peer universities has been undertaken.

(f) Of the financial difficulties currently being experienced by the Notre Dame/Saint Mary's Early Childhood Development Center.

(g) Of the faculty's Blue Cross-Blue Shield health insurance coverage to explore faculty cost-sharing alternatives necessary to slow cost increases of this fringe benefit. (This study is being undertaken in collaboration with the faculty subco~nittee of the Budget Priorities Committee.)

(h) Of financial aid resources available to undergraduates, and of policies and priorities governing the distribution of financial aid to Notre Dame students.

(i) Of the recommendations and priorities contained in the PACE Report, with special emphasis on the ways in which the Catholic character of Notre Dame is represented in the Report.

Actions:

(a) Proposed to the officers of the University that the following goals and principles be adopted with respect to faculty compensation: (i) that a rank one AAUP salary rating be achieved by 1985; that salary increases will not be less than the annual rate of inflation; that the Senate will be consulted whenever major changes in faculty fringe benefits are to be made. (Acknowledged as "high priorities" by the administration.)

(b) Recommended to the Provost that the administration provide sufficient financial support to the Early Childhood Development Center to ensure its continuing viability. (Proposals accepted.)

(c) Proposed to the administration that steps be taken to sharply increase the number of scholarships available to undergraduates and that specific new approaches be adopted to fund such scholarships. (Proposals are pending.)

{d) Recommended to the Academic Council through the Provost that consideration be given to making the Senate chairman an ex officio member of the Council Executive Committee to facilitate coordination of thework of the b1o bodies. (Pending.)

(e) Recommended informally to the Provost that a position of Faculty Chaplain be created within the program of Campus Ministry. (Pending.)

(f) Recommended to the Provost that language be incorporated in the PACE Report reaffirming that faculty members' personal religious convictions will not be a factor in tenure or promotion decisions affecting them. (Pending.)

(g) Recommended to the Provost as chairman of the University Curriculum Committee that steps be taken to ensure much broader faculty and student participation in the curriculum review process presently underway. (Pending.)

(h) Sponsored three Faculty Forums during the academic year.

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Topics: "Faculty Participation in University Governance" "University Governance at Notre Dame" "Athletics at Notre Dame"

'\t Consul tat ions:

(a)

(b)

(c)

The Senate Executive Committee met by invitation with the Provost Review Committee.

The Senate sponsored an informal meeting of senators and elected members of the Academic Council to explore ways in which these bodies could be made to function more effectively.

The Senate is cooperating with the professional staff of the Center for Continuing Education to plan and implement an ongoing series of faculty seminars to be sponsored by the Center.

Reports:

University Governance at Notre Dame: Analysis and Critique (A Faculty Forum Perspective, October, 1982).

Faculty Compensation at Notre Dame (February, 1983).

Undergraduate Financial Aid at Notre Dame: Problems and Prospects (March, 1983).

Appendix III

Dear Dr. O'Meara:

Ever since the COUP Report a decade ago first made the Catholic character of the faculty a policy issue at Notre Dame, it has been widely understood that only research, teaching and service ~1ere relevant to a faculty member's prospects at the University once she or he had been invited to join the faculty. The fact that the PACE Report does not explicitly reaffirm this policy in the context of its renewed emphasis on the need to increase the number of com­mitted Catholics on the faculty thus raises a potentially serious question.

In a document which so forcefully stresses the need for a greater Catholic presence on the faculty, we believe it vital to offer explicit reassurances to non-Catholic faculty members that their chances for retention, promotion and tenure will not be affected by their religious commitments.

We strongly urge, therefore, that the following statement be appended to recommendation five on page 24 of the PACE Report in its final version:

The University's invitation to a Catholic· or non-Catholic to join the faculty is a recognition that that individual's concerns are compatible with those of the University, and is made with the understanding that the individual'·S personal religious commitments will not be a factor in his or her retention or advancement on th~ faculty at Notre Dame.

Appendix IV

Dear Dr. O'Meara:

In your appearance at the January 18 meeting of the Senate you indicated, "that the specific issues to be addressed and the procedures to be followed in any curriculum reform study should be developed by the faculty." We strongly concur with this opinion and therefore feel compelled to express our reservations about the way in which the curriculum study recommended in PACE has been implemented thus far.

(i) We are concerned that the Curriculum Committee appears to have been appointed quite precipitously without prior consultation with the Deans of the Colleges or with representative faculty bodies to ensure that the membership of the committee would be broadly representative and have the full confidence of the faculty. Since the committee is charged with formulating recommendations to be submitted to the Academic Council, we believe that at the very least the council should have been consulted in the constitution of the committee.

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(ii) He are concerned that the objectives and priorities of the Curriculum Committee remain unclear to the faculty at large. For example, the first and primary objective mentioned in the PACE recommendation on curriculum review, i.e., "an investigation of the overall structure of the undergraduate curriculum," has received no mention in the announcements by which the faculty was notified of the formation of the committee. Subsequent requests of departments to offer suggestions to the Curriculum Committee have been excessively vague and unspecific. Constructive contributions from the faculty will be possible only when a shared understanding of the sort of project in which we are engaged has been achieved.

In light of these concerns, we strongly recommend that the University Curriculum Committee undertake the following actions:

(1) That the members of the committee meet with the College Councils and appear before the Academic Council early in their deliberations (a) to sensitize themselves to faculty concerns and priorities, (b) to share with the faculty the committee's preliminary assessment of the specific curricular issues that need to be addressed and (c) to explore the advisability of creating faculty task forces to aid in carrying out various aspects of the review.

(2) That the committee devise ways to take into account student concerns and priorities on curricular matters through contact with the Student Government Cabinet and the under­graduate advisory councils in each of the Colleges.

(3) That as soon as possible following these consultations the committee prepare a statement to be published in Notre Dame Report specifying as precisely as possible:

(a) the various topics and issues the committee has agreed to address,

(b) an account of the procedures the committee proposes to follow in its investigations, with explicit reference to ways in which the various colleges and departments of the University will be asked to cooperate in various studies,

(c) a target date for making final recommendations to the Academic Council.

In sum, the Senate is specifically concerned that the faculty's primary responsibility for curriculum be clearly affirmed, and that a process involving the entire University community be established and promulgated.

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advaoced ------~studie~

notes for principal investigators Fringe Benefits for Staff Employees

This notice supercedes the notice on page 9, Notre Dame Report No. 1, 1982-1983.

The University provides partial Blue Cross -Blue Shield (BC-BS) group hospitalization for all full-time staff employees. Over a twelve-month period, the overall percentage rate c:an vary considerably among i ndi vi duals. Consequently, OAS-DRSP suggests that until further notice, an "exact" calculation be used for .staff employee benefits in proposal budgets. The following rates should be used for this calculation:

Socia 1 Security 7.0 percent of salary request up to

$35 '700 Blue Cross - Blue Shield

$57.92 per month for single coverage­for part-time employees who-work at least 30 hours per week and prorated for salary requested for full-time employees

$136.40 per month for family coverage -for part-time employees who work at least 30 hours per week and prorated for salary requested for full-time ·employees.

New National Science Foundation Proposal Review Policy

NSF is in the process of establishing a new proposal review policy which affects the entire spectrum of NSF programs. Due to administrative budget constraints, the agency's proposal review meetings 1~ill now take place twice a year, rather than three times a year, with the minimum time between the proposal and start date set at nine months. In the past, funds were awarded within six to nine months. New target dates are now being established in most major programs.

information circulars Additional information on all circulars listed may be obtained by calling Extension 7432. Please refer to the circular number.

humanities The Rockefeller Foundation Rockefeller Foundation Humanities Fellowships

No. FY83-562

Program: The Arts and Humanities Division of The Rockefeller Foundation particularly encour­ages for this year's competition applications from arts-based humanities disciplines: Musicology, art history, drama, and litera­ture in foreign languages. Because the number of applications from such fields has been low in the past, the Foundation urges the participation of these humanists in addi­tion to those from fields which have been well represented such as English and American literature, history, and philosophy. Human­istic projects in related fields such as political science, law, and anthropology are also eligible. The Foundation continues to encourage proposals in women's studies and minority studies. Awards are not made for the writing of fiction or poetry.

Tenure and Stipend: The fellowsh1ps will normally extend for one year. The ordinary grant will be in the range of $15,000 to $20,000, and will not exceed $25,000.

Procedures for Application: There are no standara-application forms. Contact the Office of Advanced Studies, Division of Research and Sponsored Programs, Extension 7432, for a copy of application guidelines.

Deadline: First-stage proposals must be received by October 14, 1983. Second-stage proposals, if requested, will be due in mid-January, 1984.

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social sciences March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation Social and Behavioral Sciences

No. FY83-555

Program: For the investigation of medical, psycholog­ical, social and familial factors affecting the psychosocial development of infants and children with birth defects for the first eight years of life. Proposals which are interdisciplinary, conducted through coin­vestigatorships of physicians and psycholo­gists, are preferred. Funding is not expected to exceed $25,000.

Deadline: September 1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation Vice President for Research 1275 Mamaroneck Avenue White Plains, NY 10605 (914) 428-7100

(From 1983 ARIS)

Reiss-Davis Child Study Center Training Programs

No. FY83-561

Program: Candidates with a Ph.D. degree in clinical psychology or a r~aster'.s degree in clinical social work are eligible for the Center's two-year training programs in child psychi­atry, clinical child psychology, psychiatric social work, and psychoanalytic child psy­chotherapy. Stipends are available to clini­cal fellows in the amount of $4,200 for the first clinical year and $4,800 for the second year. Application forms are available from the Center.

For Further Information Contact:

Reiss-Davis Child Study Center Coordinator of Graduate Studies 3200 Motor Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90034

(From 1983 ARIS)

529

0 science American Cancer Society Institutional Research Grants

No. FY83-540

Program: Institutional grants for up to a two-year initial period, with subsequent renewals to be applied for yearly, to enable qualified institutions to foster meritorious research on cancer that cannot be supported readily through other available types of support.

Deadline: October 1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

American Cancer Society Research Grants Dr. Stefano Vivona 777 Third Avenue New York, NY 10017 (202) 371-2900 x236

(From 1983 ARIS)

American Cancer Society Research and Clinical Investigation Grants

No. FY83-539

Program: Grants (normally for two years, renewable for one year) to fit a variety of needs in scientific investigations related to cancer.

Deadline: November 1, 1983 and April 1, 1984

For Further Information Contact:

American Cancer Society Research Grants Dr. Stefano Vivona 777 Third Avenue New York, NY 10017 (202) 371-2900 x236

(From 1983 ARIS)

American Cancer Society Research Development Program

No. FY83-541

Program: Institutional grants to provide rapid funding for a variety of critical and urgent needs in scientific investigations related to cancer which cannot be supported quickly through the

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Society's other grant programs. Grants are usually made for a period of twelve months and in amounts under $50,000.

For Further Information Contact:

American Cancer Society Frank J. Rauscher, Jr., Ph.D. Senior Vice President for Research 777 Third Avenue New York, NY 10017 (202) 371-2900

(From 1983 ARIS)

American Heart Association, Inc. Grants-in-Aid

No. FY83-542

Program: Awards (varying with needs; averaging $29,400) for one- to three-year research projects at nonprofit institutions to support research activities broadly related to cardiovascular function and disease, and to related fundamental problems.

Deadline: October ·1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

American Heart Association, Inc. Division of Research Awards 7320 Greenville Avenue Dallas, TX 75231 (214) 750-5300

(From 1983 ARIS)

American Lung Association Research Grants

No. FY83-545

Program: Research funds ($10,000-$15,000 per year for one to two years) for the support of young postgraduate investigators in the field of prevention and control of lung disease.

Deadline: November 1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

American Lung Association Director of Medical Affairs 1740 Broadway New York, NY 10019 (212) 245-8000

(From 1983 ARIS)

American Lung Association Research Training Fellowships

No. FY83-544

Program: These awards are offered to those completing the second year of the Training Fellowship who have an academic career goal that is research oriented so they may have the oppor­tunity for a third year of fellowship training devoted to pulmonary research.

Deadline: October 1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

American Lung Association Director of Medical Affairs 1740 Broadway New York, NY 10019 (212) 245-8000

(From 1983 ARIS)

American Lung Association Training Fellowships

No. FY83-543

Program: Awards ($15,000 for the first year, $16,000 for a second year) for those interested in careers in the prevention and control of lung diseases.

Deadline: October 1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

American Lung Association Director of Medical Affairs 1740 Broadway New York, NY 10019 (212) 245-8000

(From 1983 ARIS)

Easter Seal Research Foundation Research Grant Programs

No. FY83-548

Program: (;rants up to $15,000 for one to three years, preferably for projects for which matching funds are or will be available. The Founda­tion supports research on: 1) measures for enhancing the effectiveness of rehabilita­tion; 2) improving impaired functions or mitigating the effects of dysfunction; and 3)

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preventing physical disability. There are two types of awards:

- Grants-in-Aid: to underwrite partial or full costs of specific projects;

- Grants for Cooperative University-Easter Seal Rehabilitation Center Research Programs: for cooperative projects between a university and an Easter Seal treatment center.

Deadline: August 1, 1983 and March 1, 1984

For Further Information Contact:

Easter Seal Research Foundation William Gellman, Ph.D., Director 2023 West Ogden Avenue Chicago, II., 60612 (312) 243-8400

(From 1983 ARIS)

Foundation for Advanced Education in the Sciences Senior Research Fellowships

No. FY83-549

Program: The Burroughs Wellcome Fund, in collabora­tion with The Foundation for Advanced Education in th~ Sciences~ Inc.~.are .· soli citing candidates for Senror. Res:earcti Fellowships at the Nationa1 )nstitut~s of Health to begin July~1. 1984. An initial. stipend of $30,000 will be offered with ·a two year tenure and optional third year.· Applicants mus"t have completed a minimuni ·of three years of postdoctoral research training and be U.S. citizens or permanent residents.

Deadline: August 1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

Foundation for Advanced Education in the Sciences Lois Kochanski 9101 Old Georgetown Road Bethesda, MD 20814

(From 1983 ARIS)

Parker B. Francis Foundation Fellowships in Pulmonary Research

No. FY83-550

from all basic science and clinical depart­ments. The fellow should have at least 75% of his/her time available for pulmonary research. A letter of inquiry is the pre­ferred method of initial approach to the Foundation, to include a request for a state­ment of program policy and an application form. The grant year normally begins on July 1.

Deadline: September 15, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

Parker B. Francis Foundation c/o S. Marsh Tenney, M.D. Remsen Building, Room 621 Dartmouth Medical School Hanover, NH 03756 (603) 646-7730

(From 1983 ARIS)

International Union Against Cancer Cancer Research Campaign International Fellowships

No. FY83-551

Program: These fellowships are designed to enable investigators to work abroad to gain new experience in clinical or basic research in cancer. Applicants must fulfill the follow­ing criteria: 1) Applicants must devote themselves to the clinical or the experimen­tal aspects of cancer research or to the behavioral and social sciences related to cancer. They must have between two and ten years' postdoctoral experience (Ph.D., M.D., DVM) or equivalent. 2) Applicants must sub­mit a research plan which will serve as the primary criterion for evaluation. 3) Appli­cants must belong to the staff of a univer­sity, teaching hospital, research labor~tory or similar institution. They must prov1de a written assurance that they will have research facilities and opportunities after their return to their home country. Appli­cation forms can be obtained from the Union.

Deadline: October 1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

International Union Against Cancer 3 Rue de Conseil-General

Program: 1205 Geneva Awards to institutions to provide a stipend Switzerland plus travel allowance (maximum award $25,000 Telex: 289 724 per year) to one fellow (M.D. or Ph.D.) for

_____ o_ne __ t_o_t_h_r_e_e_y_e_a_r_s_. __ A_P_P_l,_·c_a_t_io_n_s __ a_re __ i_n_v_it_e_d ______________ (F_r_o_m_1_9_8_3_A_R_IS~)~--------------------------------

p .;;;.,.-_;;.;

531

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International Onion Against Cancer Eleanor Roosevelt International Cancer Fellowship

No. FY83-552

Program: Stipends (varying, dependent upon applicant's staff salary, number of dependents, etc.) and some travel allowance, to permit researchers to broaden their experience in the experimen­tal or clinical aspect of cancer research by studying at a single institution in another country. Fellowships normally last for one year. In addition to requirements 2) and 3) from FY83-551, applicants must show a demonstrated capacity for independent research with seven years of research experience beyond the doctorate. Average support per award is U.S. $20,000.

Deadline: October 1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

International Union Against Cancer 3 Rue de Conseil-General 1205 Geneva Switzerland Telex: 289 724

(From 1983 ARIS)

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation Basil O'Connor Starter Research Grants

No. FY83-557

Program: This program is designed for young M.D.:s or Ph.D.'s who are interested in embarking on independent careers involving a substantial commitment to birth defects research. Grants are for one to two years at a maximum of $25,000 per year.

For Further Information Contact:

March of Dimes Birth-Defects Foundation Vice President for Research 1275 Mamaroneck Avenue White Plains, NY 10605 (914) 428-7100

(From 1983 ARIS)

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation Basic Research Grants

No. FY83-556

Program: . For research into the etiology of birth defects in ·three main areas: 1) Hereditary

influence - the structure and function of chromosomes, their subunits, genes, their supporting structures; 2) Environmental Effects - drugs, radiation, infections and malnutrition as well as more subtle factors such as cytoplasmic influences; 3) Interaction between Heredity and Environment, e.g., enzy­matic feedback and an individual's resistance to disease. Research leading to an under­standing of human teratogenesis given pref­erence.

Deadline: October 1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation Vice President for Research 1275 Mamaroneck Avenue White Plains, NY 10605 (914) 428-7100

(From 1983 ARIS)

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation Clinical Research Grants

No. FY83-554

Program: For specific, well-defined research projects of rather limited size involving birth defects in humans only.

Deadline: August 1, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation Vice President for Research 1275 Mamaroneck Avenue White Plains, NY 10605 (914) 428-7100

(From 1983 ARIS)

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation Research Grant Program

No. FY83-553

Program: Grants are awarded to qualified institutions to support medical and scientific research in the field of birth defects. The usual request is for a two-year period. For all grant programs, a letter of inquiry, with a 300-word abstract of the proposal in birth defects, must be submitted before an applica­tion for a grant will be provided.

532

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For Further Information Contact:

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation Vice President for Research 1275 Mamaroneck Avenue White Plains, NY 10605 (914) 428-7100

(From 1983 ARIS)

National Science Foundation Mathematical Sciences Postdoctoral Research Fellowships (With Research Instructorship Option)

No. FY83-565

Program: The National Science Foundation has announced the sixth year of its r~athematical Sciences Postdoctoral Research Fellowship. About thirty applicants will be selected next Feb­ruary. The Fellowships are designed to per­mit recipients to choose research environments that will have maximal impact on their future scientific development. Awards will be made for appropriate research in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, and statistics.

Stipend:. The stipend will be paid at the rate of $2,300 per full-time month or $1,150 per half-time month, for a total of $55,200 for an eighteen academic-year months and six summer months.

El i gi b i 1 i ty : Applicants must be citizens or nationals of the United States as of January 1, 1984; will have earned by the beginning of their fellow­ship tenure a doctoral degree in one of the sciences listed above or have had research training and experience equivalent to that represented by a doctoral degree in one of those fields; will have held the doctorate for no more than five years as of January 1, 1984; and will not previously have held any other NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship.

The Foundation welcomes proposals on behalf of all qualified scientists and engineers, and strongly encourages women and minorities to compete.

For Agplication Forms and Additional Informa­tl on ontact:

533

Mathematical Sciences Postdoctoral Research Fello~1ships Mathematical Sciences Section National Science Foundation

·washington, D.C. 20550

Damon Runyon-Walter Winchell Cancer Fund Postdoctoral Fellowship Grants

No. FY83-558

Program: Grants to institutions to support a post­doctoral fellow to work on a specific project within the broad field of cancer-related research under the supervision of a sponsor. The award is normally reserved for those whose doctoral degrees were conferred not more than one year prior to submission of the application. The fund covers the fellow's salary (up to $15,500 in the first year; $16,500 in the second) and $1,500 for travel to scientific meetings, supplies, and health insurance.

Deadline: August 15, December 15, 1983 and March 15, 1984

For Further Information Contact:

Damon Runyon-Halter Winchell Cancer Fund Scientific Advisory Committee 33 West 56th Street New York, NY 10019 (212) 582-5400

(From 1983 ARIS)

Helen Hay Whitney Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Biomedical Sciences

No. FY83-560

Program: Postdoctoral support of $15,000 a year for three years, with allowances for travel and laboratory expenses for research training in basic biomedical sciences. Candidates must be beginning researchers (less than one year of postdoctoral laboratory experience), with the M.D. or Ph.D., 35 years or younger who plan careers in biological or medical research.

Deadline: AugUSTT5, 1983

For Further Information Contact: ---·-----Helen Hay Whitney Foundation Barbara M. Hugonnet Admintstrative Director 450 East 63rd Street New York, NY 10021 (212) 751-8228

(From 1983 ARIS)

&. "li)l'

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PR?YE zy ,,.

general Business and Professional Women's Foundation Scholarship Programs No. FY83-546

Program: The following scholarships of $200 to $1,000 are awarded for full-time or part-time programs of study:

- Career Advancement Scholarship Program: Awarded to women at least 25 years of age and citizens of the U.S. who are officially accepted into a program of study at an accredited U.S. institution. The applicant must demonstrate need for financial assis­tance and have a definite plan to use this training to improve chances for advance­ment, to train for a new career, or to enter or re-enter the job market. Clairol Loving Care Scholarship: Awarded to women at least 30 years of age with qualifications as above.

Deadline: September 15, 1983* and April 15, 1984

For Further Information Contact:

Business and Professional Women's Foundation 2012 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20036 (202) 293-1200

*Applications are available between July 1 -September 1 and again between February 1 -Apri 1 1 by sending a self-addressed, ·stamped (40 cents) business-size envelope to the address above.

(From 1983 ARIS)

Council for International Exchange of Scholars Fulbright Awards for Research on Inflation and Stabilization in Latin America in the 1970s

No. FY83-538

Program: The Fulbright Commission in Peru has received funds for support of a cooperative regional project on the study and comparative analysis of counterinflationary methods used in Latin America in the past decade and their effects. Proposals should focus on the experience of the country. .. in which the app-licant would hope to work. It is expected that attention would also be given to the causes and transmission mechanisms of inflation that may be common to the countries participating in the project. Proposals that involve collaboration with scholars in the host country are encouraged.

WXESZWZ

Participating countries are Peru, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Uruguay.

Eligibility: U.S. citizenship and Ph.D. at time of application.

Terms of Award: Stipend of $2,000 per month, plus round-trip international travel.

Deadline: September 15, 1983

Applications: Appl1cations are available by writing to:

Council for International Exchange of Scholars Eleven Dupont Circle, NW Washington, DC 20036 (202) 833-4955

Council for International Exchange of Scholars Occasional Lecturer Program

No. FY83-547

Program: Th1s program encourages the visits of Visiting Fulbright Scholars to colleges and universities other than their Fulbright affil­iation to give occasional lectures in their special fields or on general topics relating to the history and culture of their home

.countries. Academic fields of the Fulbright scholars include biological and medical sciences. For Further Information Contact:

Council for International Exchange of Scholars Eleven Dupont Circle, Suite 300 Washington, DC 20036 (202) 833-4983

(From 1983 ARIS)

Easter Seal Research Foundation Grants for Research in Treatment and Management of Disabilities

No. FY83-564

Program: The Easter Seal Research Foundation supports research to enable persons with disabilities to live independently, particularly through the use of technology. Research projects can be directed toward the development of assis­tive devices as well as "systems" such as those used in making transportation, buildings, and communications usable by persons with disabilities. Examples include: Sensory aids; computers in rehabilitation; home and building modifications; tools for independent living; prosthetics and orthotics; postural and mobility aids; speech and communications aids; functional electrical stimulation.

534

'T

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Grants are awarded in amounts not exceeding $25,000.

Deadline: Appl1cations filed before August 1, 1983 are considered in October. Applications filed before r~arch 1, 1984 are considered in May.

Application: Applicat1ons are available from the Office of Advanced Studies, Division of Research and Sponsored Programs, Extension 7432.

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Sloan Research Fellowships

No. FY83-559

Program: St1pends of approximately $25,000 for two years' research work for young (under 33 years of age) Ph.D. scientists in the fields of mathematics, chemistry, physics, econom­ics, neurosciences, or interdisciplinary related fields. Nominees must be members of the faculty of a U.S. or Canadian college or university; they usually must be below the level of associate professor; and they must be nominated by department chairpersons or other senior scientists. Direct applications are not accepted. The Foundation would like to make it clear that the particular subject of the prospective research project is not as important as its desire to identify young scientists showing outstanding promise of making contributions to new knowledge in their fields.

Deadline: September 15, 1983

For Further Information Contact:

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowships for Basic Research 630 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10111-0242 (212) 582-0450

(From 1983 ARIS)

The World Bank Robert S. McNamara Fellowships

No. FY83-563

Program: The World Bank has announced its second annual Robert S. McNamara Fellowships; a limited number of fellowships will be awarded for twelve-month periods for the academic year 1984, for full-time work at the post­graduate level in fields related to economic development and institution building. Appli­cations will be considered from small groups of up to five individuals at the same insti­tution for work on a joint project.

535

Basic Criteria: National of Bank member country. Normally 35 years of age or under. Holder of Master's degree or equivalent. Work must be carried out in a country other than the candidate's own.

The program is not intended to support work leading to an advanced degree.

Stipend: Stipend will cover subsistence and accommoda­tion, travel, and an allowance for books and cost of research.

Deadline: December 1, 1983.

Application Procedure: For 1nformation about the requirements and criteria of the fellowships program or about how to apply, contact the following:

J. Price Gittinger, Coordinator McNamara Fellowships Program Economic Development Institute World Bank 1818 H Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20433 (202) 477-1234

current publications and other scholarly works Current publications should be mailed to the Division of Research and Sponsored Programs, Room 314, Adm1n1strat1on Bu1ld1ng.

COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS

American Studies

Costello, Donald P. D.P. Costello. 1983. Fellini, Juliet,

and the Feminists, or: What Does Fellini Think About Women? Michigan Academician 15(2):293-300.

Schlereth, Thomas J. T.J. Schlereth. 1982. Mail-Order

Catalogues as Resources in American Cultural Studies. Prospects: The Annual of American Cultural Studies 7:141-162.

Art

Kinsey, Douglas D. Kinsey. 1982. Illustrations.

S. Kaplan and R. Kaplan's, Cognition and Environment: Functioning in an Uncertain World. Praeger, New York. Pages 127,128,139,225 and 226.

D. Kinsey. 1983. P. Walshe's, Dust Jacket Illustration. Church Versus State in South Africa: The Case

Page 25: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

of the Christian Institute. Orbis Books, Maryknoll, New York.

D. Kinsey. 1983. Four Nonotypes. Figure Drawing; Contemporary Life Drawing. University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida and Huntington College, Montgomery, Alabama.

D. Kinsey. 1983. Painting. Invitational 83 (Music). Community Center for the Arts, Michigan City, Indiana.

D. Kinsey. 1982. Twelve r~onotypes. One t~an Show. Artlink Artspace, Fort Wayne, Indiana.

D. Kinsey. 1982. Sixteen Monotypes. One Man Show. Memorial Hospital, South Bend, Indiana.

D. Kinsey. 1982. Two t~onotypes. Two Paintings. Faculty Exhibition. Snite r~useum of Art, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana.

D. Kinsey. 1982. One t·1onotype. One Painting. Regional Juried Art Exhibition Midwest Museum of American Art, Elkhart, Indiana.

D. Kinsey. 1982. Seven Paintings. Ten Monotypes. One Man Show. Portico­Gallery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

D. Kinsey. 1983. Six Monotypes. Kentucky State University, Frankfort, Kentucky.

D. Kinsey. 1983. Thirty t~onotypes. One Man Show. Southwestern Michigan College, Qowagiac, Michigan.

Economics

Jameson, Kenneth P. C.K. Wilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983.

Negotiating Society's New Social Contract. National Catholic Reporter 19(30) :2 and 2 .

C.K. Wilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983. Free-Market 'Revival' Seeks toRe­establish Lost Moral Legitimacy. National Catholic Reporter 19(29):8.

C.K. WilberarufK.P. Jameson. 1983. Economy Must Seek to Attain Social Goals. National Catholic Reporter 19(28) :8.

C.K. Wilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983. World Stewardship, National Planning .... National Catholic Reporter 19(31):22-23.

C.K. W1lber and K.P. Jameson. 1983. 'Ethic of Jubilee': An Income Guarantee. National Catholic Reporter 19(31):22.

C.K. Wilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983. The Bureaucratization of Economics. National Catholic Reporter 19(32):19.

C.K. Wilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983. An Inquiry into the Poverty of Economics. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Indiana. 289 pp.

Wilber, Charles K. C.K. Wilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983.

Negotiating Society's New Social Contract. National Catholic Reporter 19(30) :2 and 27.

C.K. Wilber and K.P. Ja~eson. 1983. Free-Market 'Revival' ·seeks toRe-

establish Lost Moral Legitimacy. National Catholic Reporter 19(29):8.

C.K. Wilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983. Economy Must Seek to Attain Social Goals. National Catholic Reporter 19(28) :8.

C.K. Wilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983. World Stewardship, National Planning .... National Catholic Reporter 19(31):22-23.

C.~ilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983. 'Ethic of Jubilee': An Income Guarantee. National Catholic Reporter 19(31) :22.

C.K. Wilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983. The Bureaucratization of Economics. National Catholic Reporter 19(32):19.

C.K. Wilber and K.P. Jameson. 1983. An Inquiry into the Poverty of Economics. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Indiana. 289 pp.

English

Dougherty, James P. J.P. Dougherty. 1983. Review of N.

Chaney's, Theodore Roethke: The Poetics of Wonder. Notre Dame English Journal 15(1):75-80.

Fredman, Stephen A. S.A. Fredman. 1983. Why American Poets

Write Prose. PN Review 9(6):10-11. S.A. Fredman. 1983. Not Understanding:

For Walter Benjamin. O.ARS 3(Experiments in ReadingT:f9-23.

Kline, Edward A. E.A. Kline. 1983. Computer-aided Review

Lessons in English Grammar and Spelling. Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Computers and the Auman1t1es. Pages 329-336.

O'Rourke, William A. W.A. O'Rourke. 1983.

Howard's, The Novels The Book Review, Los 29, Section C:5.

Vasta, Edward

Review ofT. of Charles Williams, Angeles Times, May

E. Vasta. 1983. How Chaucer's Reeve Succeeds. Criticism 25(1):1-12.

COLLEGE OF SCIENCE

Biology

Fish, Durland D. Fish (with G.B. Craig, Jr.). 1983.

Phytotelmata: Flora and Fauna. Pages 1-27 in, L.P. Lounibos and J.H. Frank, eds.,-vhytotelmata: Terrestrial Plants as Hosts for Aquatic Insect Communities. Plexus Publishing Company, Medford, New Jersey.

Munstermann, Leonard E. *R.S. Nasci, D.B. Taylor and L.E.

Munstermann. 1983. First Record of the Mosquitoes Aedes Dupre~i. Psorophora Horrida, and Ps~ora Matheson1 (Dlptera: Cul1cidae) in St. Joseph County, Indiana. The Great Lakes Entomologist 16(1):33.

536

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Nasci, Roger S. *R.S. Nasci, D.B. Taylor and L.E.

Munstermann. 1983. First Record of the Mosquitoes Aedes Dupreei, Psorophora Horrida, and Ps~ora Mathesoni (Dlptera: Cul1cidae) in St. Joseph County, Indiana. The Great Lakes Entomologist 16(1):33.

Taylor, Dav1d B. *R.S. Nasci, D.B. Taylor and L.E.

Munstermann. 1983. First Record of the Mosquitoes Aedes Dupreei, Psorophora Horrida, and Ps~ora Mathesoni (Dlptera: Culicidae) in St. Joseph County, Indiana. The Great Lakes Entomologist 16(1):33.

*Under the Vector Biology Laboratory

Chemistry

Castellino, Francis J. J.P. Morris and F.J. Castellino. 1983.

The Role of the Lysine Binding Sites of Human Plasmin in the Hydrolysis of Human Fibrinogen. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 744:99-1 4.

Creary, Xavier X. Creary, C.C. Geiger and K. Hilton.

1983. Mesylate Derivatives of a-Hydroxy Phosphonates. Formation of Carbocations Adjacent to the Diethyl Phosphonate Group. American Chemical Society 105 ( 9) : 2851-=zssB".

Danehy, James P. J.P. Danehy and B. Wolnak. 1983. Maillard

Technology: t4anufacturi ng Applications in Food Products. Pages 303-315 in, G.R. Waller and M.S. Feather, eds~ The Maillard Reactions in Foods and Nutrition. ACS Symposium Series No. 215.

Geiger, David K. W.R. Scheidt, D.K. Geiger, R.G. Hayes and

G. Lang. 1983. Control of Spin State in (Porphinato)iron(lll) Complexes. An Axial Ligand Orientation Effect Leading to an Intermediate-Spin Complex. Molecular Structure and Physical Characterization of the Monoclinic Form of Bis(3-chlorophyridine)(octaethylpor­phinato)iron(III) Perchlorate. Journal of the American Chemical Society 105(9): 2625-2632.

Hayes, Robert G. W.R. Scheidt, D.K. Geiger, R.G. Hayes and

G. Lang. 1983. Control of Spin State in (Porphinato)iron(III) Complexes.

537

An Axial Ligand Orientation Effect Leading to an Intermediate-Spin Complex. Molecular Structure and Physical Characterization of the Monoclinic Form of Bis(3-chlorophyridine)(octaethylpor­phinato)iron(III) Perchlorate. Journal of the American Chemical Society-ru5fgf: 2625-2632.

• < ' ' ~ • •

~~~~----~~----~~- ~- -- - -- --- - -- -

Morris, Joseph P. J.P. Morris and F.J. Castellino. 1983.

The Role of the Lysine Binding Sites of Human Plasmin in the Hydrolysis of Human Fibrinogen. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 744:99-104.

Mozumder, Asokendu *B.L. Tembe and A. Mozumder. 1983.

Electron Thermalization in Gas Mixtures. Physical Review A 27(6):3274-3278.

Neta, Pedatsur *S. Baral and P. Neta. 1983. Reduction

and Alkylation of Cobalt(!!) Tetrakis (4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin in Aqueous Solutions. A Kinetic Spectrophotometric Study. Journal of Physical Chemistry 87(9):1502-1509.

Scheidt, W. Robert W.R. Scheidt, D.K. Geiger, R.G. Hayes and

G. Lang. 1983. Control of Spin State in (Porphinato)iron(Ill) Complexes. An Axial Ligand Orientation Effect Leading to an Intermediate-Spin Complex. Molecular Structure and Physical Characterization of the Monoclinic Form of Bis(3-chlorophyridine)(octaethylpor­phinato)iron(III) Perchlorate. Journal of the American Chemical Society 105(9): 2625-2632.

*Under the Radiation Laboratory

Mathematics

Humphreys, John F. J.F. Humphreys. 1983. The Modular

Characters of the Higman-Sims Simple Group. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 92A:319-335.

COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING

Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering

Howland, Jr., Robert A. R.A. Howland, Jr. and D.L. Richardson.

1983. Considerations in Computer Imple­mentation of an Algorithm for the Quadratic Analytical Solution of Hamil­tonian Systems. Pages 279-286 in, W.F. Ames et al, eds., Modeling and Simulation in Engineering. IMACS/North-Holland Publishing Company.

Chemical Engineering

Strieder, William C. B. Jayaram and W.C. Strieder. 1983. An

Analysis of Substrate Heat Losses in Stefan's Problem with a Constant Flux. International Journal of Heat Mass lransfer 26(5):786-790.

Varma, Arv1nd B. Subramaniam and A. Varma. 1983.

Complex Dynamic Behavior in the Case of CO-N0-0 2-H 20 Reaction System on Pt/yA~203 Catalyst. Chemical Engineering Communications 21:221-233.

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Electrical Engineering

L i u, Ruey-wen C.S. Lin, Z.F. Huang and R. Liu. 1983.

Linear Analog Fault.Analysis - Theory and Implementation. Proceedings of the 1983 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems. Pages 1090-1093.

R. Liu, C.S. Lin, Z.F. Huang and L.Z. Hu. 1983. Analog Fault Diagnosis: A New Circuit Theory. Proceedings of the 1983 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems. Pages 931-939.

D. Li, R.S. Dighe and R. Liu. 1983. An Innovative Channel Identification Method for Automatic/Adaptive Equalizer. Proceedings of the 1983 IEEE Inter­national Symposium on Circuits and Systems. Pages 1381-1383.

R. Liu and C.H. Sung. 1983. Design of Nonlinear Feedback Systems: An Algebraic Theory. Proceedings of the 1983 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems. Pages 672-673.

Z.F. Huang, C.S. Lin and R. Liu. 1983. Node-Fault Diagnosis and A Design of Testability. IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems CAS-30(5):257-265.

R. Liu and C.H. Sung. 1983. Linear Feedback System Design. Circuits, Systems and Signal Processing 1(2): 35-44.

LAW SCHOOL

Phelps, Teresa G. T.G. Phelps. 1983. Problems and Cases

for Legal Writing. 2nd Edition. National Institute of Trial Advocacy, St. Paul, Minnesota. Volume 1, 679 pp.

RADIATION LABORATORY

Baral, Sanghamitra S. Baral and P. Neta. 1983. Reduction

and Alkylation of Cobalt(!!) Tetrakis (4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin in Aqueous Solutions. A Kinetic Spectrophotometric Study. Journal of Physical Chemistry 87(9) :1502-1509.

Chipman, Daniel M. D .14. Chipman. 1983. Comment on~ initio

Calculation of Spin Densities in Hydrocarbon Radicals. Journal of Chemical Physics 78(7):4785-4786.

Das, Paritosh K. T. Wismontski-Knittel, I. Sofer and P.K.

Das. 1983. Exciplex Processes Involving Trans Naphthylethylenes. Implications of Ground-State Conformeric Equilibria. Journal of Physical Chemistry 87(10): 1745-1752.

Ferraudi, Guillermo J. G.J. Ferraudi and s. Muralidharan. 1983.

Photochemistry of Transition-Metal Phthal'ocyanines. Analysis of the Photo-

chemical and Photophysical Properties of the Acido(phthalocyaninato)rhodium (Ill) Complexes. Inorganic Chemistry 22(9):1369-1374.

S. Muralidharan, G.J. Ferraudi, M.A. Green and K.G. Caulton. 1983. The Photo­chemistry of Rhenium Hydrides. A Flash Photolytic Investigation of the Transients in the Photochemistry of Tris(Dimethylphenylphosphine)Penta­hydridorhenium(V). Journal of Organometallic Chemistry 244:47-59.

Muralidharan, Subramaniam G.J. Ferraudi and S. Muralidharan. 1983.

Photochemistry of Transition-Metal Phthalocyanines. Analysis of the Photo­chemical and Photophysical Properties of the Acido(phthalocyaninato)rhodium (III) Complexes. Inorganic Chemistry 22(9):1369-1374.

S. Muralidharan, G.J. Ferraudi, M.A. Green and K.G. Caulton. 1983. The Photo­chemistry of Rhenium Hydrides. A Flash Photolytic Investigation of the Transients in the Photochemistry of Tris(Dimethylphenylphosphine)Penta­hydridorhenium(V). Journal of Organometallic Chemistry 244:47-59.

Safer, Irit T. Wismontski-Knittel, I. Safer and P.K.

Das. 1983. Exciplex Processes Involving Trans Naphthylethylenes. Implications of Ground-State Conformeric Equilibria. Journal of Physical Chemistry 87(10): 1745-1752.

Tembe, Bhalachandra L. B.L. Tembe and A. Mozumder. 1983.

Electron Thermalization in Gas Mixtures. Physical Review A 27(6):3274-3278.

Wismontsk1-Kn1ttel, Tmima T. Wismontski-Knittel, I. Safer and P.K.

Das. 1983. Exciplex Processes Involving Trans Naphthylethylenes. Implications of Ground-State Conformeric Equilibria. Journal of Physical Chemistry 87(10: 1745-1752.

VECTOR BIOLOGY LABORATORY

Haramis, Linn D. · L.D. Haramis. 1983. Increased Adult

Size Correlated with Parity in Aedes triseriatus. Mosquito News 43(~-79.

MEDIEVAL INSTITUTE

Mcinerny, Ralph M. R.M. Mcinerny. 1983. Flannery O'Connor,

Hillbilly Thomist. The American Spectator 16(7):22-2 .

R.M. Mcinerny. 1983. Chesterton as Peep­ing Thomist. Pages 7-20 in, R.W. Rauch, ed., A Chesterton Celebralfron. Univer­sity of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Indiana.

538

Page 28: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

awards received

Department or Office

Cent. Study ~1an

Mathematics

Mi crobi ol ogy

Microbiology

Principal

Early

Alvis

Kulpa

Kulpa

IN THE MONTH OF JUNE, 1983

Short title

AWARDS FOR RESEARCH

Middle East Reader

Sponsor Dollars Months

Natl. Endow. 52,824 Humanities 24

Generic Class Sums and Duality Natl. Sci. 24,350 for Finite Chevalley Groups Fdtn. 24

Microbiological Studies of a Occidental 1,500 Waste Treatment Facility Chemical Corp. 12

Bacterial Degradation, 2,3,7 ,8- Occidental 2,000 tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin Chemical Corp. 12

Cent. Study Scott Developmental Decisions Leading Rockefeller ~4,000 Man to Teenage Pregnancy Fdtn. 12

--------·--------~--~------------~-- -~~------------------------~----------~~~ Chemistry Castellino, Fibrinogen Antibodies Amer. Heart 12,000

Chemistry

Radiation Lab.

So.Bend Cent. Med. Educ.

Chemistry

Art

Chemistry

Microbiology

Chemical Eng.

Metallurgical Eng.

Microbiology

Civi 1 Eng.

Inst. Past. Soc. Min.

Inst. Past. Soc. t~in.

Inst. Past. Soc. Min.

Inst. Past. Soc. Min.

Inst. Past. Soc. Min.

Inst. Past. Soc. Min.

539

Greenlee Assocn.-Ind. 12

Castellino, Plasminogen Antibodies Amer. Heart 6,500 Cummings Assocn.-Ind. 12

Neta, Intergovernmental Personnel Natl. Bureau 1,400 Schuler Act Standards 12

01 son Microvasculature of Ind. 2,300

t~i 11 er

Geoffrion

Miller

Fennewald

Varma

All en

As a no

Ketchum

Pelton

Mell oh

Melloh

Kelly

McNeill

McNeill

Air Breathing Fish Univ. 12

Synthesis of S-Lactams Eli Lilly 18,930 from Hydroxamic Acids Co. 12

Ind1ana Sculptors - Ind. Arts 2,000 A Registry Comm. 12

Synthesis of S-Lactams Natl. Inst. 116,489 from Hydroxamic Acids Health 12

Biochemical Mechanism of Natl. Sci. 75,000 DNA Transposition Fdtn. 24

Optimal Catalyst Natl. Sci. 65,000 Pellet Design Fdtn. 12

Scientist-in-Residence Argonne 7,757 at Argonne Natl. Lab. 1.5

Experimental Carcinogenesis Natl. Inst. 79,281 by Dietary Nitrite Health 12

AWARDS FOR FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT

Engineering Research Equipment Grant

AWARDS FOR SERVICE PROGRAMS

Notre Dame Institute Clergy Education

Notre Dame Center Pastoral Liturgy

Notre Dame Center Pastoral Liturgy-Workshops

Religious Leaders Program

Center Social Concerns

Center Social Concerns (World Hunger)

Natl. Sci. Fdtn.

13,750 12

2,106

1,944

3,950

305

369

6 '759

~:

Page 29: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

~=-··---

Department Dollars or Office Principal Short title Sponsor Months i- Inst. Past. Pelton Notre Dame Institute 34,702 Soc. Min. Clergy Education

Inst. Past. Melloh Notre Dame Center 4,282 Soc. Min. Pastoral Liturgy

Inst. Past. McNei 11 Center Social 55 Soc. Min. Concerns

AWARDS FOR OTHER PROGRAMS

Cent. Study Samora Graduate and Professional Dept. 92,400 Man Fellowships for Hispanics Education 12

Cent. Educ. Smith Michiana Career and Michiana CETA 12,489 Oppor. Pre-employment Workshop Consortium 5

Cent. Educ. Broden, Smith, Upward Bound Dept. 181,591 Oppor. King Education 12

Financial Russo Indian Education Dept. 12,715 Aid Fellowship Program Education 12

Microbiology Kulpa Genetic Engineering in Occidental 2,650 Pollution Control Chemical Corp. 5

Advanced Gordon Arthur J. Schmitt A.J. Schmitt 37,500 Studies Fellowship Program Fdtn. 9

proposals submitted IN THE MONTH OF JUNE, 1983

Department Dollars or Office Principal Short title Sponsor Months

PROPOSALS FOR RESEARCH

Civi 1 Lauer Aggregate Absorption and Natl. Sci. 134,628 Eng. the Strength of Concrete Fdtn. 24

Biology Walker, Aedes triseriatus: Vector Natl. Inst. 16,380 Craig --capac1ty for La Crosse Virus Health 12

Cent. Study Schmuhl The Responsibilities Gannett 645,428 Man of Journalism Fdtn. 79

Civil Jennings Presidential Young Natl. Sci. 332,192 Eng. Investigator Award Fdtn. 60

Civil Bang Presidential Young Natl. Sci. 332,192 Eng. Investigator Award Fdtn. .60

Chemical Ivory Using Electric Fields to Amer. Chern. 121,589 Eng. Increase Transmembrane Fluxes Soc. 36

Marketing Kennedy Analysis of Award Fee Contract Dept. 29,969 Management Navy 18

Physics Dow Electronic States Associated Dept. . 52,600 with Disordered Semiconductors Army 8.2

Chemistry Fehlner Carbon-Rich Amer. Chern. 52,500 Metall acycl es Soc. 36

Civil Katona Presidential Young Natl. Sci. 332,192 Eng. Investigators Award Fdtn. 60

Biology Carpenter Presidential Young Natl. Sci. 332,192 Investigator Award Fdtn. 60

Philosophy Freddoso Molina on Foreknowledge: Natl. Endow. 34,456 Part IV of the Concordia Human. 6

- 540

Page 30: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

Department Dollars or Office Principal Short title Sponsor Months

Civil Taylor Highway Safety for Rural Cole Assoc., 53,555 Eng. and Small Urban Areas Inc. 16

Chemical McHugh Presidential Young Natl. Sci. 332,192 Eng. Investigator Award Fdtn. 60

Biology Duman, Proteins and Insect Cold Natl. Sci. 346,906 Castelli no Tolerance Fdtn. 36

Radiation Huo, Photodiagnostics of Combustion Natl. Aero. 67,035 Lab. Schuler Space Admin. 12

Geront. Educ. Mcintosh, Minority Elderly Life-Threatening Natl. In st. 56,542 Res., Serv. Santos Behavior Health 12

Aerospace Cain Presidential Young Natl. Sci. 332,192 Mech. Eng. Investigator Award Fdtn. 60

Cent. Study Ganey, Employer Response to Health Natl. Inst. 100,396 Man Johnson Promotion Activities Health 12

Electrical Antsak 1 is Presidential Young Natl. Sci. 332,192 Eng. Investigator Award Fdtn. 60

Chemistry Nowak NMR Studies of Metals in Natl. Inst. 93,269 Kinases and Related Enzymes Health 12

Microbiology Fennewald Investigation of Inhibitors of Natl. Inst. 108,763 Site-Specific Recombination Health 12

Physics Ruggiero Presidential Young Natl. Sci. 400,000 Investigator Award Fdtn. 60

Kellogg Inst. Rueschhoff, Agrarian Reform Cooperative: Agency Intl. 9,968 Intl. Studies Tavis Guanchias Cooperative, Honduras Devel • 3

So.Bend Cent. Olson Role of the Fish Gill Natl. Sci. 182,944 Med. Educ. Microcirculation Fdtn. 36

Aerospace Doligalski Presidential Young Natl. Sci. 332,192 Mech. Eng. Investigator Award Fdtn. 60

summary of awards received and proposals submitted

Category

Research Facilities and Equipment Instructional Programs Service Programs Other Programs

Category

Research Facilities and Equipment Instructional Programs Service Programs Other Programs

541

Total

Total

IN THE MONTH OF JUNE, 1983

AHARDS RECEIVED

Renewal No. Amount No. -r 2"TT;'JT!i7 ----g

0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 3 311,491 3

m 538,848 "2"2"

PROPOSALS SUBMITTED

Renewal No. Amount No. Lr 69u,154 22

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

4 -----o9D,T54 "2"2"

New Amount

20T,"974 13,750

0 54,472 27,854

360,050

New Amount

4,4T4,TIO 0 0 0 0

4,474,310

No. TO

1 0 9 6

JZ

No. 20

0 0 0 0

20

Total

Total

Amount 4"91,3JT

13,750 0

54,472 339,345 898,898

Amount 5,104,404

0 0 0 0

5,164,464

-

Page 31: Notre Dame Report · tuition is $6,270, regular M.B.A. program, $6,370, and the Law School, $6,470. In a letter to the parents of Notre Dame's 7,400 undergraduates, Rev. Theodore

notre dame report An official publication of the University of Notre Dame, Department of Information Services. Individual copies are available in the Notre Dame Hammes Bookstore at 50 cents each. Mail subscriptions are $10 per year. Back copies are available through the mail at 70 cents each.

Marianne Murphy Zarzana, Editor Diann Nelson, Layout Printing and Publications Office 415 Administration Building Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 (219) 239-5337


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