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1966

50. Geology of the Deep Basin of Lake Superior (abstract), 9th Conference on Great Lakes Research, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, March 1966, p. 6 (with Wm. Farrand, J. Parker).

51.

52.

Review: Principles of Structural Glaciology, by P.A. Schumskii, translated by David Kraus, American Mineralogist, Vol. 51, No. 5 and 6, pp. 944-945.

New Bathymetric map of Lake Superior and some geological implications (abstract), Twelfth Annual Institute on Lake Superior Geology, May 6-7, 1966, p. 6 and back cover (with W. Farrand, J. Parker).

53. Review:

54. Review:

55.

Guidebooks for the 7th International Association for Quaternary Research
(INQUA), Nebraska Academy of Sciences, Lincoln, Neb. (1965),
Geotimes, Vol. 11, No. 2, Sept. 1966, pp. 36-37.

A Continent for Science: The Antarctic Adventure, by Richard S. Lewis,
Arctic, Journal of the Arctic Institute of N.A., Vol. 19, lio. 3,
Sept. 1966, pp. 280-281.

Report on Ross Ice Shelf Survey II (RISS II) 1965-66, Antarctic Journal of the United States, July-August 1966 issue, Washington, D.C., p. 138.

56. Geomorphology of the Floor of Lake Superior (abstract), Program 1556 Annual Meeting. Geological Soc. America, San Francisco, California, p. 66 (with Wm. Farrand).

57.

58.

1967

Laboratory Manual for Physical Geology, Third Edition, W.C. Brown Co.,
Dubuque, 74 pp., 43 figs. & diags.

Today's College Crisis and Grand Valley, The Torch, Vol. 40, No. 3, pp. 28-31.

1968

59. Lobes, Lobations, Rheinhold Encyclopedia of the Earth Sciences Series, Vol. III, Geomorphology (ed. Rhodes Fairbridge), pp. 672-674.

60.

61.

The Michigan Academy Time for a Change, Seventy-Second Annual Report, The
Michigan Acad. of Sci. Arts & Letters, ed. Robert Martin,
Ann Arbor, Mich., p. 41-44.

The Ice Regine of the Eastern Part of the Ross Ice Shelf Drainage Syston,
International Assoc. of Scientific Hydrology, General Assembly
of Bern 1967, Pub. No. 79, p. 255-266 (with Mario Giovinetto).

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Les Glaciers, by Louis Agassiz (English translation by
Albert V. Carozzi, Hafner, H.Y., 1967, Journal Geol. Education,
Vol. 16 (Oct. 1968), pp. 149-150.

1969

63.

64.

65.

66.

Grand Valley State College: Its developmental years. Allendale,
Michigan, March 1969, 172 p.

Ross Ice Shelf Studies, 1969, Antarctic Journal, Vol. IV, No. 5, Sept. -
Oct. 1969, p. 215-216 (with B. M. E. Smith and Anne Fuzesy).

A Mid-Wisconsin Peat in Michigan, U. S. A., Polen et Spores, Vol.
11, No. 3, 1969, p. 585-601 (with W. S. Benninghoff).

Memorial to Edward Willard Berry (1900-1968), GSA Proceedings
Volume for 1968, November 1969.

1970

67.

68.

69.

70.

Memorial to Reynolds McConnell Denning (1916-1967), GSA Proceedings Volume for 1967, January 1970, p. 193-196 (with James T. Wilson).

Review: New Media and College Teaching, edited by James W.
Thornton, Jr., and James W. Brown, The Journal of Higher
Education, May 1970, p. 417-419.

Ross Ice Shelf Studies, 1970, Antarctic Journal of the U.S.. Vol.
V, No. 5, Sept. -Oct. 1970, p. 153-154.

The Need for Environmental Planning: An Overview, Proceedings,
Western Agricultural Economics Association, Corvallis, Ore.,
p. 263-267.

1971

71.

72.

Fission or Fusion, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Transactions on Education, Vol. E-14, No. 1, February 1971,
p. 24-26.

Review: International Symposium on Antarctic Glaciological Exploration
(ISAGE) by A. J. Gow, C. Keeler, C. C. Langway and W. F. Weeks
(eds.), Science, v. 171, no. 3969, Jan. 29, 1971, p. 369-370.

73.

The Ross Ice Shelf Project (RISP), Antarctic Journal, v. 6, no. 6
6 p. 258-263.

1972

74. Report on the Ross Ice Shelf Project (RISP), SCAR BULLETIN No.
40, p. 840-844; The Polar Record, v. 16, no. 100, p. 190-194.

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Review: Research in the Antarctic, Louts Quam and Horace D.
Porter (eds.), 1971, AAAS, Pub. No. 93, Washington, D. C.
768 p., OS Transactions Amer. Geophysical Union, v. 53,
no. 4, pp. 299-301

76. Elements of Geology, 3rd ed., John Wiley and Sons, New York
(with C. A. Nelson), 431 p.

1973

77. Laboratory Manual for Physical Geology, 4th ed., Wm. C. Brown
Co., Dubuque, Iowa.

78.

The Report of the National Water Commissior. and Its Significance
for Irrigated Agriculture in Nebraska, Nebraska Resources,
Winter 1973, No. 10, pp. 10-11.

1974

79.

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Glaciation Landforms Produced by, Encyclopaedia Britannica 15th
Edition, Macropaedia, vol. 8, p. 164-177.

Antarctic Journal of the U. S. May-June

issue, 1974.

80. Camp Michigan, 1957-1972.

81.

The Fortunes of Agriculture and the University, Farm, Ranch, and
Home Quarterly, Summer 1974. -

The CHAIRMAN. Doctor Murray.

STATEMENT OF GROVER E. MURRAY, PH. D., OF TEXAS, TO BE A MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE BOARD (Reappointment)

Dr. MURRAY. Mr. Chairman, Senator Kennedy. I would echo most strongly the words of Dr. Hackerman, my fellow Texan, who has also been renominated, and another member of this group, sitting on my left, Dr. Zumberge.

At the request of Senator Kennedy's office, I provided his office with

a statement regarding my attitudes about a national science policy and activities in that regard. I would ask, with the Senator's permission, that that statement be entered into the record.

The CHAIRMAN. It will be.

[The statement referred to follows:]

STATEMENT RE NATIONAL SCIENCE POLICY BY GROVER E. MURRAY, PH. D.

I am a firm and strong supporter of the continued development and the clarification of a National Science Policy. I believe that the National Science Board should be charged with assisting the Congress in developing this national policy. I am an advocate of Federal Government support for both basic scientific research and applied research. The United States has grown strong and has maintained its position in world leadership because of its strong universities. Faculties and students have developed extensive research capaliblities in the various scientific and engineering disciplines. At this critical period in world history, the United States cannot afford to decelerate its efforts in scientific research.

I believe that basic scientific and applied research should be conducted both in universities and in industry. Our Nation needs to place special emphasis on basic and applied research in all sources of energy, in food, in the social sciences, and in the medical sciences. But we must remember that this should not be done at the exclusion of research in the basic scientific disciplines, since they undergird all scientific knowledge.

To ensure continued leadership in international research and education, the strength of the universities in the United States must be maintained. The Nation needs to continue its obvious on-going commitment to the education and training of scientists and engineers in numbers necessary to maintain its world position. The Congress, I believe, should provide guidance, leadership, and the support vital for scientific growth.

Dr. MURRAY. Thank you, sir.

Briefly, I might say that I serve both as president of Texas Tech University and as president of the Texas Tech University School of Medicine. Therefore my vistas have been broadened far beyond the fields of the Earth sciences.

I believe the National Science Board has responsibility to work with the Congress to develop a national science policy to insure continued leadership of our United States in science and technology in the world.

I believe we must place great emphasis on basic research in food and fiber, energy, oceanography, materials, the social sciences, and the medical sciences. We must insure, through cooperation and work with industry, that advances resulting from basic research are put into practice.

It is a great pleasure for me to be renominated to the National Science Board, and I would assure the committee that I shall do everything within my power to work with Senators, with Congressmen, and with the Director of the Foundation, to insure success of the National Science Foundation.

The CHAIRMAN. Thank you, Dr. Murray.

A copy of Dr. Murray's biographical sketch along with other information will be included at this point in the record. [The information referred to follows:]

GROVER E. MURRAY

President and Professor of Geosciences, Texas Tech University
President, Texas Tech University School of Medicine at Lubbock

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1950-1953

1949-1966

Chairman of Department of Geology, Louisiana State University
Consulting Geologist (part-time)

1949-1951,

1961

1949-1951

1951-1960

1953-1954

1955-1966

1956-1960, 1966

1959-1960

Director of geology field courses for Louisiana State
University and the University of Texas in Louisiana,
Texas, Colorado

Visiting Professor of Geology, University of Texas (summers)
Technical Advisor to Arkansas Fuel Oil Corporation
Consultant to Houston Oil Company of Texas

Boyd Professor of Geology, Louisiana State University
Director, National Science Foundation field studies in
Sierra Madre Oriental and adjacent areas and Parras
Basin in northeastern Mexico

Visiting Geoscience Lecturer with the American Geological
Institute

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