AAS 202nd Meeting, May 2003
Session 5 The Sun and The Shapley Program
Poster, Monday, May 26, 2003, 9:20am-6:30pm, West Exhibit Hall

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[5.03] The AAS Visiting Professor Programs: Three Anniversaries

A. G. Davis Philip (ISO and Union College)

The AAS Program of Visiting Professors was started in 1958 with three astronomers as lecturers. They were Paul Merrill (Mt. Wilson and Palomar Observatories), Seth Nicholson (Mt. Wilson and Palomar Observatories) and Harlow Shapley (Harvard College Observatory). The program was run by a Committee on Visiting Professors from 1958 through 1963. The program was funded by grants from the National Science Foundation. The Executive Officer of the AAS, Paul Routley headed the program from the 1963 - 64 academic year through the 1968 - 69 academic year. Larry Fredrick headed the program for 1969 - 70 and then Hank Gurin headed it through 1973 -74, the last year of the program. At the end of this summer meeting, the combined Visiting Professors Program and the Shapley Program will be starting their 47th year. The Shapley Visiting Lectureships in Astronomy Program was started in the 1974 - 75 academic year under the leadership of Hank Gurin. The original funding came from the Perkin Fund and a three year grant from the Research Corporation. In 1975 the Shapley Endowment fund was set up to help pay the expenses of the program. In 1976 there was support from the Slipher fund which lasted through the 1978 - 79 academic year. From 1979 to the present the program is financed by the Shapley Endowment Fund and by the contributions made by institutions which host the visits. In the fall of 1998 the fee that Institutions pay to the AAS in support of their Shapley visits was reduced from 300 to 250 to make it easier for them to apply for visits. Members of the AAS have made contributions to the program over the years and we are very appreciative of this support. In 1974 there were 42 lecturers in the program, of whom four are still active giving lectures (George Carruthers, Larry Fredrick, Arlo Landolt and Davis Philip). After the summer meeting, the Shapley Program will be embarking on its 30th year. Now there are 82 astronomers in the program and we get from 40 to 60 requests a year. Shapley visits have been made to Canadian institutions since 1976 and to Mexican institutions since 1998. After the summer meeting it will be the start of the 10th year of my directing the program. On May 26 there will be a Shapley Dinner at Dyer Observatory in Nashville for the Shapley lecturers who are attending the AAS meeting and we will celebrate these three anniversaries.


The author(s) of this abstract have provided an email address for comments about the abstract: agdp@union.edu

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Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, 35 #3
© 2003. The American Astronomical Soceity.