CAMPUS REPORT
DATE: March 20, 2001
TO: Board of Regents
FROM: W. Franklin Gilmore
Chancellor, Montana Tech
of The University of Montana
RE: Campus Report for the March
22-23, 2001 Board of Regents’ Meeting
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·
Kumar Ganesan of
Montana Tech and Mike Telling of Butte High School received an M.J. Murdock
Charitable Trust grant for the Partners in Science Program for a research
project on “Fate and Transport of
Mercury in Abandoned Mine Tailings.”
·
Researchers at
Montana Tech have submitted grant applications totaling over $10 million during
the first seven months of this fiscal year.
Awards received to date are in excess of $1,300,000 with a current
success rate of 50%.
·
The campus has been
notified by the U.S. Department of State that a third award for its
International Exchange Program has been approved, bringing the total to
$300,000. Montana Tech academic
departments now have 19 active research and graduate exchange programs underway
with 19 university partners in 14 countries.
·
Professor of PTC, Pat
Munday, is publishing Montana’s Last Best
River: The Big Hole and Its People”
with Lyons Press. Profits from the
first 2,500 copies will go to the Big Hole Foundation to support other
activities.
·
The PTC Department
has completed the Upper Clark Fork Basin Multimedia Project. The presentations will be used in schools
located in the Upper Clark Fork Basin.
The project was funded by the Natural Resource Damage Program.
·
Montana Tech received
a $25,000 grant from Burlington Resources Co. to fund scholarships and update
laboratory equipment within the Petroleum Engineering Department. The Petroleum Engineering Department at Tech
is one of the largest energy programs in the nation with over 168 undergraduate
students.
·
Annie Niemi, a
sophomore in Mining Engineering, was one of four students nationwide to receive
one of the prestigious Copper Club, Inc. Scholarships. These prized $10,000 scholarships are
presented annually by the mining and extractive metals industries.
·
A group of local
people and businesses have banded together to form a partnership with Montana
Tech to help the college recruit new students.
Folks Advancing Butte (FAB) feels that growth of the college can serve
as a springboard for Butte’s future economic expansion, strength, and business
diversity.
·
Dr. Susan Patton,
Professor of Mining Engineering, was named the Professor of the Year by the
National Stone Association.
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