North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC)

 - Class of 1983

Page 18 of 390

 

North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 18 of 390
Page 18 of 390



North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 17
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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 19
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Page 18 text:

from 70 countries in 1982-85. Qifted freshnnen can vie for the nnany scholarships established at 5tate. The Caldwell Scholarship, established in 1977, is awarded to 23 high-ranking students; the new Adopt a Scholar program will add 26. State seeks more fellowships to compete with other universities for the most brilliant graduate students. 1983. Mow part of the big story of State today will be told. It was an extraordinary year, to be sure. students must delegate their free time in college. First priority is to read that first chapter of physics before the test on Monday (below). With numerous campus wide parties during the year, the temptation is great to take off with friends and drink a few beers (far right). Pullen Park Is also a tempting respite from school work. It is the perfect place to watch time and people go by (right). ' Opening

Page 17 text:

Sporting events like football give the band and cheerleaders a chance to strut their stuff. A lot of pressure is put on these students to guarantee that every note is on key and every smile is to form. Professor Ellis B. Cowling inspects one of 125 field monitoring sites used to detect acid rain. Acid rain becomes international concern One of the ess obwiou5 results of mankind ' s industrial resolution of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is the way the earth ' s chemical climate has been changed 5ome of these changes have proven to accelerate the natural weathering of soil minerals and provide nutrients for growth of crops and forests: other changes have caused stress in plants and animals, altered water quality, aggravated nutrient deficiencies in soils and accelerated the natural weathering of buildings and statues. Almost everything man does on a large scale contributes to these chemical changes in the atmosphere: burning fossil fuels for heat, power or transportation, building cities, intensive farming and incinerating wastes. A national network of monitoring stations was set up in 19 76 to determine the damaging effect of these activities. Measurement of the acidity of rain is man ' s most useful statistic of earth ' s changing chemistry — thus the common jargon acid rain. State is the base of this network, called the national Mmospheric Deposition Program. By 1980 MDP was able to produce maps showing geographic gradients in the chemistry of rain and snow across theU.5. By 1 982 twelve federal agencies have collaborated on a total of 45 research areas. Public interest in acid rain research is at an all-time high in many parts of the world. The challenge for us is to satisfy that curiosity . ., explained Or. Ellis B. Cowling, associate dean for research in the School of Forest Resources and chairman oft1f DP h DP scientists found that acid rain problems are following the population shift to the southern states. 5ulfur and nitrogen compounds from utilities, industrial installations and automobiles were causing the most difficulties in the U.5. though adverse health effects are most easily seen rural areas (drop in water quality, fish kills, crop damage), acidic water can leach out lead from old water lines and cause ser ous health problems for city dwellers as well. The ability of the atmosphere to produce acid rain is relatively short lived compared to other forms of pollution: 50 percent falls out within 500 miles of the source and 90 percent within 1000 miles, reas upwind of the heavily industrialized Ohio [ alley receive some of the heaviest doses of acid rain. Lakes in upper hew York and Canada have become void of fish, but horth Carolina lakes grow in acidity more slowly. The effects are cumulative. hot until June 1985 have government and administration officials recognized the need for acid rain regulation. One official admitted cautiously that curbing emissions from Midwest power plants would reduce acid rain in hew England. But Cowling noted that the public will pay for the necessary emission controls -WJAW. Opening 13



Page 19 text:

-■r J ii - ' A-,..-? ' A cluster of buildings in Japanese style will house Center offices, classrooms and exhibit areas. Japan Center pronnotes international exchange center for Japanese studies has been created at state to sparH economic, academic and cultural e change between llortti Carolina and Japan. The Japan Center is a yisible commitment on behalf of the state to make the Japanese aware that north Carolina wants them — that we are willing to learn their culture and their language for trade — and that North Carolina is the ideal place for them to locate, explained Walter R, Johnson, the state ' s chief industrial recruiter. Contrary to the widespread belief that Japan is chiefly an exporter, the country is a huge importer of tobacco, apparel, electrical machinen and soybeans — products which North Carolina produces in abundance. The country is by far the largest purchaser of North Carolina tobacco. Of the Z 7 Japanese firms now in the state, e even are manufacturing facilities and many of the others specialize in selling state-of-the-art technology to the textile industry for increasing plant productivity. Japan is becoming increasingly important to the state economy. Seeing a need to bridge language and cultural barriers, James B. Hunt Jr. sought public and private funds to be used in appointing a director and establishing a Japanese language instruction program. This program, lihe the Japan Center, is an integral part of the University, but Its resources are available to citizens and companies who seefi to strengthen ties between North Carolina and Japan. State ' s Japanese language program is the larges, in the southeastern U.S. and serves both undergraduates and Japan Center f eilows. Four years of Japanese are offered through the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures. In order to build a base of specialized competence on Japan across a wide range of disciplines. Fellows are selected each year from a campus-wide competition among people in the sciences and the humanities. Group participants undergo 180 hours of Japanese instruction and a month of concentrated study at a school near Tokyo, then spend several months within the country working in collaboration with Japanese colleagues in their areas of specialization. Upon returning to North Carolina they share their experiences and participate in the activities of the center When they return, we will have developed a reserjoir of talent who know quite a lot about Japan. They will help facilitate the movement of Japanese investment and capital into North Carolina and at the same time help move North Carolina products to Japan, said Robert O. Tillman, dean of humanities and social sciences. -W.JW, Opening 15

Suggestions in the North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) collection:

North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 1

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1982 Edition, Page 1

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

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