UIHistories Project: A History of the University of Illinois by Kalev Leetaru
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Repository: UIHistories Project: Board of Trustees Minutes - 1950 [PAGE 70]

Caption: Board of Trustees Minutes - 1950
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1948]

U N I V E R S I T Y OF I L L I N O I S

67

22. Beverly Hills Junior Women's Club, Chicago, $25 for the Orthopaedic Gift Fund for Children. 23. Dr. Maurice F. Snitman, Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology, $25 for the purchase of new books for the Library of Medical Sciences. H e plans to make a similar contribution annually. 24. Pharmacy Class of 1946, $6.01 to be added to the H a r r y Goldstine Emergency Student Loan Fund in the Chicago Colleges. 25. Chicago Collegiate Bureau, $630 for aiding women students, to be administered by the Dean of Women. Grants for Research 1. De Kalb Agricultural Association, Inc., $5,000 for the development of the Northern Illinois Experimental Field. 2. American Cyanamid Company, New York City, $600 for continued support of the study of the value of rock phosphate as a filler in complete fertilizers by the Agricultural Experiment Station. 3. Market Administrator, St. Louis Marketing Area, $2,000 for a study of formula pricing in the St. Louis milk markets, to be carried on by Dr. R. W . Bartlett of the Department of Agricultural Economics. 4. Middle West Soil Improvement Committee of Chicago, $600 in support of the fertilizer investigations in the Department of Agronomy. 5. A. E. Staley Manufacturing Company, Decatur, Illinois, $600 for a study of the dietary relations of inositol, choline, and methionine under the direction of Professors H . H. Mitchell and T. S. Hamilton of the Department of Animal Science. 6. National Research Council, Washington, D.C., $2,000 in support of studies of the problems of androgen secretion under the direction of Dr. A. V. Nalbandov of the Department of Animal Science. 7. Tennessee Corporation, $400 additional for spray research on copper fungicides by the Department of Horticulture. 8. Texas Gulf Sulphur Company, $3,600 for continuation during 1948-1949 of research in the Department of Chemistry on the mechanism of combustion of sulfur. 9. S. B. Penick & Company, New York City, $1,800 for continuation during 1948-1949 of a fellowship in chemistry. 10. Minnesota Alining and Manufacturing Company, St. Paul, $1,500 in support of a fellowship in chemistry during 1948-1949; $1,200 to be used as a stipend and $300 for tuition fees and for purchase of scientific equipment. 11. Standard Oil Company (Indiana), Chicago, $1,265 for a fellowship in chemistry and $1,265 for a fellowship in chemical engineering during 1948-1949; $1,000 in each case to be used as the stipend and the balance for expenses, including tuition, laboratory fees, supplies, and equipment. 12. The California Company, New Orleans, Louisiana, $1,250 for a fellowship in geology during 1948-1949. 13. Pan American Petroleum and Transport Company, New York City, $1,265 for continuation of a fellowship in chemical engineering during 1948-1949. 14. A. P. Green Fire Brick Company, Mexico, Missouri, $2,000 for a fellowship in Ceramic Engineering during 1947-1948; $1,800 to be used for the stipend and $200 for research expenses. 15. The Edward Orton, Jr., Ceramic Foundation, Columbus, Ohio, $1,200 for a fellowship in Ceramic Engineering during 1947-1948, $1,000 to be used as the stipend and $200 for miscellaneous expenses. This fellowship formerly carried a stipend of $675. 16. Motorola, Incorporated, Chicago, $750 for continuation during 1048-1949 of the Galvin Fellowship in Radio and Television Engineering Research. 17. Westinghouse Educational Foundation, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, $1,000 for a fellowship in electrical engineering during the period February 1, 1047, through August 31, 1947, and $1,000 for the same fellowship during 1948-1949. 18. National Advisory Cancer Council, United States Public Health Service, $23,250 for improvement of cancer teaching in the College of Medicine.