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contents the university
Engineering Department Is 4th ND Fundraising Ranks 18th Review Committees Named
faculty notes
2 Appointments 2 Honors 2 Activities
administrators' notes
6 Appointments 6 Honors
documentation
7 1986-87 Notre Dame Report Publication Schedule
8 Notre Dame Report Submission Information 9 Official University Academic Calendar
for 1987-88
.
advanced studies
11
13 14 15
Current Publications and Other Scholarly Works
Awards Received Proposals Submitted Summary of Awards Received and Proposals
Submitted
7 September 12, 1986 .
engineering deparbnent is 4th The University's chemical engineering department has been ranked fourth in the nation in the number of doctoral degrees awarded per faculty member, according to a recent survey by the American Chemical Society.
The survey, covering the academic period from July 1, 1984 to June 30, 1985, reported one faculty member for each chemical engineering doctoral candidate at Notre Dame, the same ratio as reported at Stanford University. In the overall number of Ph.D. graduates in the department, Notre Dame and Purdue University shared the 12th ranking, each having awarded 10 doctorates in 1985. Ranked first in faculty-student ratio for chemical engineering Ph.D.s was the University of Illinois-Urbana at 2.20. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology was ranked first in the overall number of Ph.D.s awarded in the field with 27.
nd fundraising ranks 18th Notre Dame is 18th among the nation's private universities in the amount of money raised in 1984-85, according to a report of the Council for Financial Aid to Education (CFAE).
The University raised $33.8 million, a school record, in voluntary support from individuals, foundations, and corporations. That total is more than any institution of higher learning in Indiana and more than any American Catholic college or university. Harvard ($145.6 million), Stanford ($125.5 million), and Columbia ($93.4 million) led all schools.
In other areas measured by the report, Notre Dame was first in giving by parents ($3.6 million). It was 14th in the percentage of alumni giving to the annual fund (37 percent) and 15th in the amount
given overall by alumni ($10.2 million). The University was 15th in corporate giving ($9.7 million) and 10th in the amount of that support in the form of matching gifts ($1.1 million). In support from foundations, Notre Dame ranked 20th ($6.1 million).
Notre Dame ranked 27th in the nation among private universities with $24.2 million in the 1983-84 CFA"E study.
review committees formed Five faculty have been elected to form a committee to review the Dean of the Freshman Year of Studies, Dr. Emil T. Hofman. A six-person committee will review the Dean of the College of Engineering, Dr. Roger A. Schmitz. The five-year review is mandated by the Academic Articles, and the committees are elected by the Academic Council and the Engineering College Council, respectively.
The members of the Freshman Year review committee are John Derwent, College of Science, committee chairman; Edward Kline, Colle_ge of Arts and Letters; Jerry Marley, College of Engineering; Thomas swartz, College of Arts and Letters; and James Wittenbach, College of Business Administration. A student representative will be elected in the fall.
The faculty members of the Engineering review committee are Raymond M. Brach, Aerospace/Mechanical Engineering; David L. Cohn, Electrical and Computer Engineering, committee chairman; Robert L. Irvine, Civil Engineering; Thomas H. Kosel, Materials Science and Engineering; and William C. Strieder, Chemical Engineering. Brian J. Cox, a senior in the College of Engineering, is the student member of the committee.
Vol. 16, No. 1 September 12, 1986 Notre Dame Report (OSPS 7070-8000) is an official publication published fortnightly during the school year, monthly in the summer, by the University of Notre Dame, Department of Public Relations and Information. 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 © 1986 by the University of Notre Dame, Ind. 46556. All rights reserved.
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honors J. Douglas Archer, associate librarian, has been reappointed for a two-year term on the Measurement and Evaluation of Services Committee, Machine Assisted Reference section, Reference and Adult Services Division, American Library Association, beginning July, 1986.
Robert W. Clausen, guest associate professor of biological sciences, was recently elected to the Lutheran Academy for Scholarship.
Stephen M. Hayes, associate librarian, has been elected co-coordinator/coordinator elect of the Government Documents Round Table of the American Library Association for 1986-88.
Edward W. Jerger, professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering, has been awarded a Federal Emergency Management Agency Certificate of Appreciation for his outstanding service on the development of disaster mitigation concepts in the multiprotection design of buildings and for advancing FEMA's mission of protecting the public from major hazards.
Jeffrey c. Kantor, associate professor of chemical engineering, has been appointed to the CACHE Corporation (Computer Aids for Chemical Engineering) task force on Expert Systems in Chemical Engineering Education that was organized at Massachusetts Institute of Technology on July 21.
Rev. Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C., associate provost, has been appointed to the Indiana Organ Transplantation Task Force by Governor Robert D. orr.
John L. Mcintosh, research associate in the GERAS center, has been invited to serve as consulting editor for the American Association of Suicidology journal, •suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior.•
Anthony M. Messina, assistant professor of government and international studies, has been appointed to the Academic Advisory Board for the 1986-87 edition of "Annual Editions: Comparative Politics,• published by the Dushkin Publishing Group.
Nancy K. Stanton, professor of mathematics, has been appointed chairman of the Committee to Select Hour Speakers for the Central Sectional Meetings of the American Mathematical Society. She has also been appointed to the Committee on Research Fellowships of the American Mathematical Society.
Eduardo E. Wolf, professor of chemical engineering, has been invited to join the editorial board of •catalysis Reviews- Science and Engineering.•
activities J. Douglas Archer, associate librarian, was a
Ingemar P.E. Kinnmark, assistant professor of civil member of the Indiana Library Association engineering, has been appointed organizer of Intellectual Freedom Committee which received the
~ Technical Committee #10: •ordinary Differential American Library Association, Intellectual Freedom W' Equations" of the International Association for Round Table, State Program Award for 1985-86 given
Mathematics and Computers in Simulation (IMACS). at the ALA Annual Meeting in New York City, July 1.
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Harvey A. Bender, professor of biological sciences, presented an invited testimony on Newborn Genetic Screening at Indiana State Health Department, Indianapolis, Ind., and two lecture presentations at the University of Tennessee Governor's School, Knoxville, Tenn., June 25 and June 28.
Robert W. Clausen, guest assistant professor of biological sciences, recently presented a lecture titled •stinging Insect Allergy-Prevention and Treatment• at the Indiana-Michigan Regional Beekeepers Association meeting at Notre Dame, July 12'
Charles Craypo, professor of economics, delivered talks on "Union Adaptations to Changing Technology in the Workplace• and "Trends in Relative UnionManagement Bargaining Power,• at the Labor Relations summer School, New York state School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., July 14 and 16.
P. K. Das, associate professional specialist in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper titled "Physical Aspects of Sydnone Photochemistry. Spectral and Kinetic Behaviors of Photogenerated Nitrile Imines" at the XI IUPAC Symposium on Photochemistry, Lisbon, Portugal, July 27-Aug. 1.
Fabio B. Dasilva, professor of sociology, organized a session on "The Notions of Post-Modernism, PostIndustrialism, and Advanced Capitalism• for the international meeting of the International Institute of Sociology, in Albufeira, Portugal, June 16-23. He was also a presenter and a session discussant at those meetings.
Peter Diffley, assistant professor of biological sciences, made a presentation titled "VSG-pulsed Macrophages Induce Polyclonal Activation of Lymphocytes During African Trypanosomiasis" at a poster session and workshop at the Sixth International Congress of Immunology held in Toronto, Ontario, canada, July 7-11.
Patrick F. Dunn, associate professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering, presented a paper titled, "Characteristics of Aerosols Generated During Source Term Experiments Project (STEP) InPile Tests: Preliminary Results" at the 17th annual meeting of the Fine Particle Society, held in san Francisco, Calif., July 29-Aug. 2.
William G. Dwyer, professor of mathematics, was an invited speaker at the International Conference on Algebraic Topology held at Humboldt State University, Arcata; Calif., July 28-Aug. 1. On July 30 he gave a plenary lecture titled "Sullivan's Conjecture and Classifying Spaces.•
Malcolm J. Fraser. Jr., assistant professor of biological sciences, presented an invited lecture titled "The FP mutation of Baculoviruses: A Novel System for Studying Transposon Mutagenesis" at the annual meetings of the American society for Virology, Santa Barbara, Calif., June 22-26.
Studies Abroad attached to the American university in cairo, Egypt, enabling him to do intensive work on certain issues and texts connected with his ongoing research on contemporary Islamic institutions and problems of religion and politics in Egypt and other Muslim nations.
Santosh K. Gupta, visiting professor of chemical engineering, gave an invited seminar titled "Simulation and Optimization of Condensation of Polymerization Reactors• at Allied Corporation, Morristown, N.J., July 22.
Patrick Horsbruqh, professor emeritus of architecture, represented the American society of Landscape Architects at a conference of the coalition of the National Water Alliance, Natural Water Resource Association, American Society of Public Administration, sponsored by the Engineering Foundation, to draft proposals for "Coordination of Water Resource Planning and Management in the u.s. Federal System: Future Options and Guides for Research," at New England College, New Hampshire, July 6-11.
Robert A. Howland, assistant professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering, presented a graduate seminar on "A survey of Perturbation Techniques, Linear and Quadratic, in Periodic Systems" and a departmental colloquium on "A New Approach to the Librational Solution in the Ideal Resonance Problem• to the Department of Aerospace Engineering at the University of Cincinnati on July 21-22.
Gordon Hug, associate professional specialist in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper titled "Photophysics of Heteroatom-Substituted Radicals" at the 11th IUPAC Symposium on Photochemistry, Lisbon, Portugal, July 27-Aug. 1.
Edward W. Jerger, professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering, served as the Academic Director of the 1986 Federal Emergency Management Agency, National Science Foundation and U.S. Geological Survey Summer Institute for Architecture and Engineering Faculty on "Multiprotection Design of Buildings to Mitigate Hazards.• The Institute was held July 7-18 at the National Emergency Training Center in Emmitsburg, Md.
James F. Johnson, assistant professional specialist of chemistry, presented a paper titled •comparing the Instructional Effectiveness of CAI with Traditional Methods in the Freshman Chemistry Laboratory• at the 1986 National Educational Computing Conference, held at the university of San Diego, June 4-6.
Gerald L. Jones, professor of physics, presented a paper titled "Elastic constants in Density Functional Theory" at the 16th International Union of Pure and Applied Physics meeting on Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics at Boston University, Aug. 10-16.
Lloyd H. Ketchum. Jr., associate professor of civil engineering, presented a paper titled "Anaerobic
Patrick Daniel Gaffney, assistant professor of Sequencing Batch Reactor Treatment of Coal ~ anthropology, has received a fellowship for two Conversion Wastewaters• at the •contractor's Review 'I'' months of summer work at the center for Arabic Meeting of the University coal Research Projects,"
---------------------------------------------'-3.
sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, Pittsburgh, Pa., July 14-16.
Ingemar P.E. Kinnmark, assistant professor of civil engineering, made a presentation titled 'Maximum Stability Explicit One step Methods for Mixed Hyperbolic/Parabolic Problems" at the 1986 MexicanAmerican Workshop on Numerical Methods in Avandaro, Mexico, July 24.
Haim Levanon, research associate in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a seminar titled "Energy Transfer in Covalently Linked Porphyrin Dimers. Time Resolved EPR Spectroscopy• at the Argonne (Ill.) National Laboratory, July 17.
A. Eugene Livingston, associate professor of physics, presented a paper titled 'Structure of Perturbed Rydberg States in Highly Ionized 4-Electron Atoms• at the Workshop on Rydberg States of Highly-Charged Systems at Argonne (Ill.) National Laboratory, July 10-11. He also presented three papers, "The 2s-2p Fine Structure Transitions in High-Z Helium-like Ions," "Quartet State Fine Structure in Lithium-like Si XII," and "Structure of Hydrogenic Transitions in High-Z Four-Electron Ions" at the Conference on Atomic Spectra and Oscillator Strengths for Astrophysics and Fusion Research Research at the University of Toledo, Ohio, Aug. 11-13.
David M. Lodge, assistant professor of biological sciences, presented "Diet as a Reflection of Morphology: A Comparison of Chrosomus eos and .L_ neogaeus" at the 66th annual meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, second annual meeting American Elasmobranch Society, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, June 15-21.
Rev. Michael D. McCafferty, c.s.c., associate professor of law, delivered invited testimony before the United States Senate Banking Committee, Subcommittee on Housing and Urban Affairs, on "The Liability Insurance Crisis and the Need for Tort Reform," washington, D.C., May 15.
Leonard E. Munstermann, associate faculty fellow in biology, gave a poster presentation titled "Q-banding and Detection of Polymorphism in the Mosquito, Orthopodornyia pulcripalpis" (jointly with Dr. A. Marchi) at the Ninth International Chromosome Conference, Marseilles, France, June 18. He also served as a consultant on electrophoretic studies on Anopheles mosquitoes to the Department of Biology, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand, from May 1-June 30, and gave a departmental seminar on "Electrophoresis as a Diagnostic Tool in Separating Sibling Species of Anopheles mosquitoes" for the department of biochemistry at Mahidol University, June 28. He was a consultant at the National Academy of Science (BOSTID) on training personnel in electrophoretic techniques, to the Tropical Disease Research Center, Department of Medical Services, Kota Kinabulu, Sabah, Malaysia, July 1-15.
Institute's Summer Conference at the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, wash., July 17. She also led a workshop on "Teaching Legal Writing at Your School," July 18.
Mark C. Pilkinton, associate professor of communication and theatre, presented an invited paper titled "Richard III and Dramatic Precedent• for the Theatre in the Mind Series at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Montgomery, Ala., July 12.
G. Margaret Porter, assistant librarian, presented a paper titled "Expanding the Online Search Service: Common Sense and Cost Considerations" at the annual conference of the American Library Association, New York City, June 28-July 2.
Irwin Press, professor of anthropology, presented two workshops titled "Patient versus Hospital Culture: Prescription for Dissatisfaction,• to the third annual American Hospital Association Medical Staff Leadership Forum, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Aug. 2.
Paul A. Rathburn, associate professor of English, presented a paper to the seminar, 'Stage Images in Shakespeare," at the meeting of the World Shakespeare Congress in Berlin, West Germany, April 1-6. He also presented a paper titled "Shakespeare's Foolish Wisdom in Lear,• to the American Association of University Women, LaPorte, Ind., May 19. He presented a series of lectures titled "Macbeth: Shakespeare's Vision of Evil" to the Notre Dame Elderhostel Program, June 15-22.
Alberta B. Ross, professional specialist in the Radiation Laboratory, presented two papers titled, "Numeric Databases for Radical Processes in Aqueous Solution' and "Numeric Databases for Photochemical and Photophysical Processes in Solution" at the 10th International CODATA conference, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, July 14-17.
Jonathan R. Sapirstein, assistant profesor of physics, gave an invited talk titled 'Present Status of QED" at the Second Conference on the Intersections Between Particle and Nuclear Physics held at Lake Louise, Canada, May 26-31. He also presented "Theory of Parity Violation in CS and TL" at the DEAP-DCP meeting, Eugene, Ore., June 18-20, and gave a talk titled "QED of Many Electron Atoms" at the Adriatico Research conference on Relativistic Many Body Problems, Trieste, Italy, June 30-July 4.
Daniel Sheerin, associate professor of modern and classical languages, read a paper titled "Lines as Colors: Painting as Analogue to Typology in Greek Patristic Literature' at The 17th International Byzantine Congress, washington, D.C., Aug. 4.
Andrew Sommese, professor of mathematics, gave an invited lecture, "New Results on Hyperplane Sections" at the Complex Geometry Conference held by C.I.M.E. in Trento, Italy, May 19-23. He was a guest professor at the University of Genova, Italy, from May 24-June 18. He gave a series of six
~ Teresa Godwin Phelps, assistant professor of law, lectures "On the Adjunition Theoretic Structure of ..., gave a major presentation titled "Designing Projective Varieties• while at the university. He ~-~---E_f_f_e_c_t_i_v_e __ w_r1-·t_1_·n_g __ A_s_s_i_g_n_m_e_n_t_s_" __ a_t_t_h_e __ L_e_g_a_l __ w_r_i_t_i_n_g __________ a_l_so __ g_a_v_e __ t_w_o __ c_o_l_l_o_q_u_ia ___ ·o_n __ H_y_p_e_r_p_l_a_n_e __ s_e_c_t1-·o_n_s_'_' ______ _
4
and •on 1Pk Bundle as Ample Divisors• at the University of Milan on June 19-20.
Nancy K. Stanton, professor of mathematics, gave a talk on 'The Heat Equation for the a -Neumann Problem• at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Ind., June 23.
William Strieder, professor of chemical engineering, gave a talk titled 'Characterization of Magnetron Sputtering Processes• at the CTS corporation, Elkhart, Ind., June 12.
Hitoshi Taniguchi, research associate in the Radiation Laboratory, presented a paper titled "Time Resolved in situ Radiolysis ESR Studies of Spin Trapping• at the Ninth International EPR Symposium, Denver, Colo., Aug. 4-7.
Lee A. Tavis, C.R. Smith professor of business administration, presented a Hesburgh Lecture on the 'Role of Multinational Firms in Third World Development: Issues and Viewpoints• for the Houston, Tex., Alumni Club, April 25.
J. Kerry Thomas, Nieuwland professor of chemistry, presented an invited plenary talk titled •surface Effects on Photo Induced Charged Separation" at the International Solar Energy Research meeting in Paris, France, July 18-25. He also gave an invited talk in, and acted as chairman of a panel
discussion group on "Photochemical Reactions in Organized Media' at the International Union of Physics and Chemistry photochemistry meeting in Lisbon, Portugal, July 26 - August 2.
Anthony M. Trozzolo, Huisking professor of chemistry, served as session chairman of a panel discussion on "Mechanisms• at the 11th I.U.P.A.C. Symposium on Photochemistry, Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon, Portugal, July 27- August 1.
Robert P. Vecchio, Schurz professor of management, gave an invited lecture titled "Recent Investigations into Leadership: Searching and Researching," at the Department of Psychology, Texas A&M University, Feb. 18.
Eduardo E. Wolf, professor of chemical engineering, was invited by the Chinese Academy of Science to present five lectures on "Characterization of Catalytic Surfaces• at the Graduate School, University of Science and Technology of China, Beijing, May 26-30. He was also invited to attend an International Symposium on c1 Reactions at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, canada.
Warren J. Wong, professor of mathematics, delivered an invited address on "Maps on Spaces of Linear Transformations" at the American Mathematical Society's Summer Institute on Representations of Finite Groups and Related Topics at Arcata, Calif., July 7.
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appointments Marie s. Gerencher has been named director of alumni reunions for the Notre Dame Alumni Association. She came to the University in 1958, joined the Alumni Association in 1977 as assistant to the executive director and became an assistant director in 1979. She is the recipient of a Notre Dame Presidential Award for distinguished service, and her past reunion involvement was honored by an award from the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education.
Maria T. Miceli and Lawrence R. cunningham have been named assistant directors of alumni clubs, serving as liaisons with Notre Dame's 182 clubs in the United States and abroad. Miceli is a 1983 graduate of Notre Dame who joined the Alumni Association staff a year later after being an assistant buyer and sales manager for R.H. Macy Company in Missouri and Kansas. cunningham, who joined the Alumni Association after his Notre Dame graduation in 1984, previously was a staff accountant for Deloitte, Haskins and Sells in Atlanta, Ga.
Paul J. Reynolds has been named associate director of the Career and Placement services office. Reynolds has been an assistant director of that office since 1978. He holds a bachelor's degree in economics from Villanova University, an MBA
~ from Eastern Illinois University, and a master's
Jeffrey D. Rice has been named assistant director of the Career and Placement Services office. He was most recently director of counseling and staff development at Aquinas College, Grand Rapids, Mich. Rice holds a B.A. in religious studies from the College of Wooster and an M.A. in college student personnel from Michigan State University.
Rev. Peter D. Rocca, C.S.C., has been appointed assistant vice president for student services by Rev. David Tyson, C.S.C., vice president for student affairs. Father Rocca was graduated from Notre Dame in 1970 and received a master's degree in theology from the University in 1973. He also holds master's degrees in liturgical music and liturgical studies from Catholic University of America. His new responsibilities include supervision of the student health services, the University counseling center, the career and Placement center, and various student media and government organizations. He succeeds ~ Francis Cafarelli. c.s.c., who resigned his post to pursue studies at St. John's College, Annapolis, Md.
honors Kitty Arnold, director of career and placement services, has been elected Treasurer of the ._., degree in college student personnel administration
from Indiana State University, Terre Haute, Ind.
-L· --------------------------------------Midwest College Placement Association.
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1986-87 notre dame report publication schedule The following is the publication schedule for Volume 16 of the 1986-87 NOTRE DAME REPORT. Please note that all copy deadlines are on Wednesdays, except for Tuesday, Dec. 23, 1986. We suggest that you retain this schedule and the guidelines that follow for future reference.
1 2 3
*4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Index
Copy Deadline
Aug. 20, 1986 Sept. 3, 1986 Sept. 17, 1986 Oct. 1, 1986 Oct. 22, 1986 Nov. 5, 1986 Nov. 19, 1986 Dec. 3, 1986 Dec. 23, 1986 Jan. 14, 1987 Jan. 28, 1987 Feb. 11, 1987 Feb. 25, 1987 March 18, 1987 April 1, 1987 April 15, 1987 April 29, 1987 May 20, 1987 June 17, 1987 July 15, 1987
Publication Date
Sept. 5, 1986 Sept . 1 9 , 19 8 6 Oct. 3, 1986 Oct. 24, 1986 Nov. 7, 1986 Nov. 21, 1986 Dec. 5, 1986 Dec. 19, 1986 Jan. 16, 1987 Jan. 30, 1987 Feb. 13, 1987 Feb. 27, 1987 March 13, 1987 April 3, 1987 April 17, 1987 May 1, 1987 May 15, 1987 June 12, 1987 July 10, 1987 Aug. 7, 1987
Aug. 21, 1987
Number 1. Volume 17 of the 1987-88 NOTRE DAME REPORT will have a copy deadline of Aug. 19, 1ia2 and a publication date of Sept. 4. 1987.
*No. 4 will be an updated version of the annual listing of University administrators, committees, and the official faculty roster.
7
notre dame report submission information Items for the NOR Faculty Notes section are accepted from: faculty (all classes), professional specialists, and postdoctoral research candidates who teach at Notre Dame.
Appointments include only those University appointments such as deans, department heads, heads of committees, public relations and development professionals, and advisory council members. This does not include appointments to faculty positions.
Honors is comprised of non-University appointments in one's field and outright honors. It does not include fellowships, grants, etc. Any grants not published in the Awards Received section (listed in the Advanced Studies section of NOR) should be noted in the Activities section.
Activities must be of a professional and public nature (such as invited lectures and papers read) and should be related to the person's work at the University. Lectures given on campus are only acceptable if they are of a special nature and/or if they are presented to a broader audience than the Notre Dame community. Merely attending a meeting does not meet this requirement. Information required for each activity submitted includes: name, rank, title of presentation, title of meeting, place, and date. Standardized cards (yellow) must be used for submissions and are available by contacting Notre Dame Report (239-5337). No activities are printed ahead of the date, only after the fact. Also, activities will not be printed over six months out of date.
Items for NDR Administrators' Notes section are accepted from administrative staff and follow the same guidelines as Faculty Notes. Standardized cards (blue) are available by contacting NOR as noted above.
All Appointments, Honors, and Activities should be sent to Notre Dame Report, 415 Administration Building.
Current Publications and Other Scholarly Works should be sent to the Office of Advanced studies, 314 Administration Building, c/o King w. Pfeiffer. Submissions of current publications are due on the Friday prior to the copy deadlines stated on the preceding page. Standardized cards (green) must be used for submissions and are available by contacting Research and Sponsored Programs (239-7432).
The only meeting minutes printed in the Documentation section are from the Academic Council, Faculty Committee on university Libraries, Faculty Senate, Graduate Council, Board of Trustees, and Committee on Research and Sponsored Programs.
8
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official university academic calendar for 1987-88 Aug. 21 Friday
Aug. 21-23 Fri thru sun
Aug. 24 Monday
Aug. 25 Tuesday
Sept. 2 Wednesday
Sept. 13 sunday
Oct. 15 Thursday
Oct. 17-25 Sat thru sun
Oct. 26 Monday
Oct. 29 Thursday
Nov. 12-19 Th thru Th
Nov. 25-29 Wed thru Sun
Nov. 30 Monday
Dec. 11 Friday
Dec. 12-13 Sat & sun
Dec. 14-18 Mon thru Fri
Dec. 26 Saturday
CLASS MEETINGS
MWF MW TT
42 28 29
Orientation, Enrollment, and Registration for New Upperclass and Graduate Students
Orientation and Counseling for Freshmen
Enrollment for all Continuing Students and Freshmen
Classes begin at 8:00 a.m.
Last date for all class changes
Mass. Formal Opening of school year (subject to change)
Midsemester Deficiency Reports due in Registrar's Office
Midsemester Break
Classes resume at 8:00 a.m.
Last day for course discontinuance
Advance Registration for Spring Semester 1988
Thanksgiving holiday
Classes resume at 8:00 a.m.
Last Class Day
Study Days (no examinations)
Final Examinations
Absolute deadline for delivery of all grades to Registrar
NUMBER OF CLASS DAYS
__MQ!L Tues Wed Thurs Fri Total Aug __ 1_ __ 1_ 1 1 1 5 :2eet __ 4 _ __ s_ 5 4 ~ 22 O!;t __ 3 _ __ 3_ 3 4 4 17 Nov __ s _ __ 4_ 3 3 3 18 Dec __ 1 _ __ 2_ ~ 2 2 __9_ Total 14 15 14 14 14 71
Home games: Michigan State- Sept. 19; USC- Oct. 24; Navy- Oct. 31; Boston College- Nov. 7; Alabama - Nov. 14.
tl --------------------------------------------~
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Jan. 11 Monday
Jan. 12 Tuesday
Jan. 13 Wednesday
Jan. 21 Thursday
Feb. 24-Mar. 2 Wed thru Wed
Mar. 3 Thursday
Mar. 12-20 Sat thru sun
Mar. 21 Monday
Mar. 24 Thursday
Apr. 1-4 Fri thru Mon
April 5 Tuesday
Apr. 21-28 Th thru Th
Apr. 27-29 Wed thru Fri
Apr. 29 Friday
Apr. 30,May Sat & sun
May 2- 6 Mon thru Fri
May 10 Tuesday
May 13 15 Fri thru sun
May 13 Friday
CLASS MEETINGS
MWF 42 MW 28 TT 29
Orientation, Enrollment, and Registration for all New Students
Enrollment for all Continuing Students
Classes begin at 8:00 a.m.
Last date for all class changes
Enrollment reservations for the Fall 1988-89 Semester
Midsemester Deficiency Reports due in Registrar's Office
Midsemester Break
Classes resume at 8:00 a.m.
Last day for course discontinuance
Easter holiday begins at 4:00 p.m. Thursday, March 31
Classes resume at 8:00 a.m.
Advance Registration for Fall 1988-89 Semester and for the 1988 Summer Session
Room Reservations for the Fall 1988-89 Semester
Last Class Day
study Days (no examinations)
Final Examinations
Absolute deadline for delivery to the Registrar of grades for students who are graduating
Commencement Weekend
Absolute deadline for delivery of all grades to Registrar
NUMBER OF CLASS DAYS
.l1lliL Tues Wed Thurs Fri ;ran ---'-- __ 2_· 3 3 ~ Feb __ 5 _ __ 4_ 4 4 4 Mar __ 3_ __ 4 _ 4 4 3 Aer ~
__ 4_ 4 ~ 4 M~:t
__ o_ 0 0 0 Total 13 14 15 15 14
Total __ 13_ __ 21_ __ 18_ _1.L __ o_
71
U.N.D. SUMMER SESSION CALENDAR DATES
Registration Commencement
1988 June 20 Aug. 5
10
current publications and other scholarly works Current publications should be mailed to the Division of Research and Sponsored Programs, Room 314, Administration Building
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS
American Studies
Weber, H. Ronald H.R. Weber. 1986. The New Importance of
Being Ernest. Notre Dame Magazine. 14(1) :35-38.
H.R. Weber. 1986. My ~liddle West. Notre Dame Magazine. 14(3):28-31
H.R. Weber. 1986. Newspaper Days. Virginia Quarterly Review. 62(1):142-151.
H.R. Weber. 1986. Company Spook. St. Martin's Press, New York, NY. 134 pp.
H.R. Weber. 1986. Adventures in Creative Journalism. The Journalist. 3(3):10-16.
Orr, Leonard L. Ort'. 1986.
Eire-Ireland L. Orr. 1986.
Troubadours. 19:21-42.
English
Yeats's Theories of Fiction. 21(2):152-158. Towards the Aesthetics of the
Concerning Poe~
Government and Internat~onal Studie~
Mainwaring, Scott P. s.P. Mainwaring and n. Share., 1986.
Modern and Classical Languages
MacKenzie, Jr., Louis, A. L.A. MacKenzie, .Jr. 1986. Review of J.
Green's, Paris. French Review 59(5):830-831.
Sheerin, Daniel D. Sheerin. 1986. Review of Liturgie et
musique (Ixe-xives) (=Cahiers de Fanjeaux 17). Catholic Historical Review 71:258-259.
Mcinerny, Ralph R.M. Mcinerny.
Omnipotence. 440-444.
Philosophy
M. 1986. Aquinas on Divine Philosphes Medievaux 26:
R.M. Mcinerny. 1986. Being and Predication. The Catholic University of America, Washington. 323 pp.
R.M. Mcinerny. 1986. Leave of Absence. Atheneum, New York. 210 PP•
R.M. Mcinerny. 1986. Analogy and Foundationalism in Thomas Aquinas. Pages 271-288 in, Rationality, Religious Belief, and Mora~Commitment. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York.
Sociology
i i' B il E - a A.J. Weigert. 1986. The Social Production Translclones via transaccion: La demo- Weigert, Andrew .J. f), ~~~~s~:cd~ne=~ud~~: Poii~~co:pan • of Identity. The Sociological Quarterly -'
______ 4_9_:_87_-_13_5_. _____________________________________ z_7_<2_)_:_16_5_-_I8_3_. ___________________________ ~
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COLLEGE OF SCIENCE
Biological Sciences
Danehy, James P. J.P. Danehy. 1986. Study of the Nitro
prusside-Sulphydryl Test for Aromatic Thiols. Analyst 111:723.
Eigenbrot, Jr., Charles w. J. Vites, C.E. Housecroft, c.w. Eigenbrot,
M.L. Buhl, G.J. Long and T.P. Fehlner. 1986. Structrue and Properties of HFe3 (C0)9BH3R and the Conjugate Bases [HFe3(C0)9BH2RJ- (R = H and CH3). Inorganometallic Analogues of Hydrocarbyltriiron Clusters. Journal of the American Chemical Society 108(12): 3304-3310.
Fehlner, Thomas P. C.E. Housecroft and T.P. Fehlner. 1986.
Electronic Charge Control of Stable Sites and Mobilities of Hydrogen Atoms on a Main-Ground-Transition-Metal Cluster Surface. A Comparison of [HFe~(CO)l2-n (PPhMe2)nBH]PPN(n =1,2) and HFe~(C0)12CH.
See under Eigenbrot, Jr., Charles lv. 1986. Journal of the American Chemical Society 108(12):3304-3310.
George, Manapurathu V. See under RADIATION LABORATORY; Das,
Paritosh K. 1986. Journal of Organic Chemistry 51:1967-1972.
See under RADIATION LABRATORY; Das, Paritosh K. 1986. Journal of Organic Chemistry 51:1972-1976.
Housecroft, Catherine E. See under Fehlner, Thomas F. 1986. Organ
metallics 5(6):1279-1281. See under Eigenbrot, Jr., Charles w. 1986.
Journal of the American Chemical Society 108(12):3304-3310.
Kozak, John J. P.A. Politowicz and J.J. Kozak. 1986.
Relative Importance of Lattice Valency Versus System Dimesionality in Markovian Models of Diffusion-Controlled Processes. Chemical Physics Letters 127:257,'
Miller, Marvin J, H. Iwagami, S.R. Woulfe and M.J. Miller.
1986. Reactions of (2-0X0-1-Azetidinyl)Thiophthalimides with Nucleophiles.
'"'*
Tetrahedron Letters 27(27):3095-3098. Mozumder, Asokendu
See under RADIATION LABORATORY; LaVerne, Jay A. 1986. Journal of Physical Chemistry 90:3242.
Pasto, Daniel J. D.J. Pasto, S.E. Warren and T. Weyenberg.
1986. Analysis of the Factors Contributing to the Large Changes in the Product Distributions Observed in Radical-Chain Addition and Cycloaddition Reactions of Ethylallene and Ethyallene-3,3-d 2• Journal of Organic Chemistry 51(11):2106-2110.
D.J. Pasto. 1986. Reevaluation of Orbital Interactions in Substituted Radicals. Transfer of Radical Properties to the Substituent Atom. Tetrahedron Letters 27(26):2941-2944.
Schuler, Robert H. J.A. LaVerne, R.H. Schuler and W.G. Burns.
1986. Track Effects in Radiation Chemistry: Production of H0 2 within the Track Core in the Heavy-Particle Radiolysis of Water. Journal of Physical Chemistry 90:3238.
Mathematics
Dwyer, William G. W.G. Dwyer and E.M. Friedlander. 1986.
Some Remarks on the K-Theory of Fields. Volume 55, Pages 149-158 in, Applications of Algebraic K-Theory to Algebraic Geometry and Number Theory. Proceedings of a Summer Conference an Algebraic K-Theory. American Mathematical Society, Boulder, Colorado.
W.G. Dwyer and E.M. Friedlander. 1986. Conjectural Calculations of General Liniar Group Homology. Vo1ume 55, Pages 135-147 in, Applications of Algebraic K-Theory~o Algeberiac Geometry and Number Theory, Contemporary ~~thematics. Proceedings of a Summer Conference an Algebraic K-Theory. American Mathematical Society, Boulder, Colorado.
12
I '· il
t:
i,;
Physics
Arnold, Gerald B. See under Ruggiero, Steven T. 1986.
Physical Review B 34:217. Ruggiero, Steven T. S.T. Ruggiero, S. Schwarzbek, R.E. Howard
and E. Track. 1986. Low-noise ac/dc Current Source with Continuous Zero Crossing. Review of Scientific Instruments 57:1444.
S.T. Ruggiero, E.K. Track, D.E. Prober, G.B. Arnold and M.J. DeWeert. 1986. Electron Tunneling in Tantalum Surface Layers on Niobium. Physical Review B 34:217.
RADIATION LABORATORY
Bhattacharyya, Kankan See under Das, Paritosh K. 1986. Journal
of Organic Chemistry 51:1972-1976. See under Das, Paritosh K. 1986. Journal
of Organic Chemistry 51:1967-1972. See under Das, Paritosh K. 1986. Journal
of Physical Chemistry 90:2646. Das, Paritosh K. c.v. Kuman, K.R. Gopidas, K. Bhattacharyya
P.K. Das and M.V., George. 1986. Photoinduced Ring Enlargement Reactions of 2H-1,2,4-Benzothiadiazine 1,1-Dioxides. Steady-State and Laser Flash Photolysis
awards received
Studies. Journal of Organic Chemistry 51:1967-1972.
K. Bhattacharyya, S.K. Chattopadhyay, S. Baral-Tosh and P.K. Das. 1986. ExcitedState Properties of trans-(9-Anthryl) ethylenes. Effects of Geometric Distortion About Single Bond. Journal of Physical Chemistry 90:2646.
Das, Paritosh K. s. Pratapan, P.M. Scaria, K. Bhattacharyya,
P.K. Das and M.V. George. 1986. Photochemical Transformations of (E)-l-(2 1Arylidene-l-'phenylhydrazinyl)-1,2-dibenzoylalkenes. Journal of Organic Chemistry 51: 1972-1976.
LaVerne, Jay A. See under Schuler, Robert H. 1986.
Journal of Physical Chemistry 90:3238. J.A. LaVerne and A. Mozumder. 1986. Effect
of Phase on the Stopping and Range Distribution of Low-Energy Electrons in Water. Journal of Physical Chemistry 90:3242.
Levanon, Haim 0. Gonen and H. Levanon. 1986. Energy
Transfer and Fine Structure Axes Determination in a Hybrid Porphyrin Dimer Oriented in a Liquid Crystal. Time Resolved Triplet EPR Spectroscopy. Journal of Chemical Physics 84:4132.
IN THE MONTH OF JULY, 1986
Department or Office Principal
Theology E. Ulrich
Physics u. Garg
So.Bend Cent. K. Olson Med. Educ.
Mathematics L. Talyor, w. Dwyer
Civil N. Carpenter Eng.
Physics Shephard, Cason, Ruchti
Physics Kenney, Biswas, LoSecco
Civil s. Silliman Eng.
Chemistry M. Miller
Physics A. Livingston
13
Short title
AWARDS FOR RESEARCH
Dead Sea Scrolls
BGO Detector System
Fish Gill Metabolism
Algebraic and Geometric Topology
Presidential Young Investigator Award, 1986-87
Experimental Elementary Particle Physics Research
REP Hadron-Hadron Colliding Beams/ Non-Accelerator Physics
Permeability of Dolomite
Chemical Synthesis of Beta-lactam Antibiotics
Spectroscopy of Highly-Ionized Atoms
Sponsor
Natl. Endow. Humanities
Dept. Energy
Natl. Sci. Fdtn
Natl. Sci. Fdtn.
Natl. Sci. Fdtn.
Natl. Sci. Fdtn.
Natl. Sci. Fdtn.
u.s. Geological Survey
Eli Lilly Co.
Natl. Sci. Fdtn.
Dollars Months
100,000 26
14,725 24
53,450 12
48,700 12
25,000 12
295,000 10
220,000 12
4,500 3.5
38,883 12
144,908 12 --
e -
e e
e
rrm
Physics s. Lundeen Fast Beam Atomic Physics
Chemistry M. Miller Synthesis of Beta-Lactams from Hydroxamic Acids
Chemistry M. Miller New Approaches to Beta-Lactams and Other Natural Products
Physics w. Johnson, Weak Interactions in Heavy J. Sapirstein Atoms
Physics Dow, Jaklevic, Scanning Tunneling Microscopy Kaiser
AWARDS FOR INSTRUCTIONAL PROGRAMS
Inst. Urban T. Broden Upward Bound Stud.
Core A. Gutting Plan to Improve the Course Interdisciplinary Core Course
Psychology J. Santos, Postdoctoral Training in s. McCabe Geriatric Mental Health
Psychology J. Santos, A Geriatric Training Model: s. McCabe Gerontological Counseling
AWARDS FOR SERVICE PROGRAMS
Inst. Past. R. Pelton ND Center for Continuing Soc. Min. Formation in Ministry
Inst. Past. E. Bernstein ND Center for Pastoral Soc. Min. Liturgy
Inst. Past. E. Bernstein NO Center for Pastoral Soc. Min. Liturgy-Publications
Inst. Past. s. Kelly Programs for Church Leaders Soc. Min.
Inst. Past. s. Kelly IPSM Third Age Conference Soc. Min.
Inst. Past. J. Gremillion IPSM - Parish Study Soc. Min. Phase III
Inst. Past. J. Gremillion IPSM - Healing Visions Soc. Min.
proposals submitted
Department or Office
Biological Sciences
Chemical Eng.
Physics
Elect. Comp. Eng.
Principal
H. Bender
M. McCready
u. Garg
w. Porod
IN THE MONTH OF JULY, 1986
Short title
PROPOSALS FOR RESEARCH
Regional Genetics Center Support Grant
Characterization of a Cocurrent Flow Biochemical Reactor
BGO Detector
A Theoretical Study of Deep Traps and Sidegating in GaAs Devices
Natl. Sci. Fdtn.
Natl. Inst. Health
Natl. Inst. Health
Natl. Sci. Fdtn.
Dept. Army
Dept. Education
Na tl. Endow. Humanities
Natl. Inst. Health
Natl. Inst. Health
Sponsor
Ind. St. Bd. Health
Natl. Sc:i.. Fdtn.
Dept. Energy
Dept. Army
108,511 12
72,353 12
50,112 12
75,000 12
142,000 12
203,648 12
50,000 41
64,462 12
36,540 12
8,768
3,357
1,194
3,000
2,400
458
4,600
Dollars Months
19,606 12
184,669 24
105,158 14
168,479 36
'
~· Sociology M. Hallinan Organizational Differentiation Office Educ. 130,892
6t· of Students Res. Improve. 12
Civil w. Gray, Simulation of Surface Nat!. Sci. 318,512 Eng. I. Kinnmark Flow Hydraulics Fdtn. 36
So. Bend Cent. D. Christ Pharmacology of Muscle in World Health 168,167 Med. Educ. Diviteae Organ. 36
Biological H. Bender Human Genetics Program Grant Ind. St. 19,712 Sciences Bd. Health 12
Aerospace N. Huang Fatigue Theory Nat!. Sci. 163,585 Mech. Eng. Fdtn. 24
Biological G. Craig, Factors Affecting Transmission Natl. Inst. * Sciences w. Hawley of LAC Virus - NRSA Fellowship Health 12
School N. Crowe Case Studies for Sources of Rockefeller 2,430 Architecture Architecture Fdtn. 1
Aerospace R. Howland Comparison of Linear and Accel- Natl. Sci. 123,021 Mech. Eng. erated Perturbation Techniques Fdtn. 24
PROPOSALS FOR FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT
College Ketchum, Leighton, Request for Special Dept. 373,610 Eng. McCready Research Equipment Education 12
PROPOSALS FOR OTHER PROGRAMS
Law T. Broden Battered Women and Cooperative Legal Services 128,382 School Clinical Program Corp. 12
So. Bend Cent. K. Olson Ecophysiology of Air-breathing Nat!. Sci. 4,900 Med. Educ. Fish Fdtn. 24
tr· tJ'.
*Dollar amount to be determined.
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
Total
IN THE MONTH OF JULY, 1986
AWARDS RECEIVED
Renewal No. Amount No. -8- 777,942 -7-
0 0 0 2 240,188 2 1 8,768 6 0 0 0
IT 1,026,898 IT
PROPOSALS SUBMITTED
Renewal No. Amount No. -4- 144,476 -8-
0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
New Amount
615,200 0
114,462 15,009
0 744,671
New Amount
1,259,755 373,610
0 0
133,282
No. 15
0 4 7 0
26
Total Amount
1,393,142 0
354,650 23,777
0 1,771,569
Total No. Amount ~ 1,404,231
1 373,610 0 0
4 144,476 IT 1,766,647 ~ 133,28~ ~·
_________________________ T_o_t_a_l----------------------------------------------------1_5 _______ 1_,_91_1_,_1_2_3 _______ .~
15
notre dame report An official publication of the University of Notre Dame, Department of Public Relations and Information. 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. Darlene Cutrona, Editor Tara Walter, Layout Publications and Graphic Services 415 Administration Building Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 (219) 239-5337
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