The programs provide the opportunity to study golf course design with one of the world's best-known course designers, study the intricacies of human-animal interaction, operate a flight simulator, or put on a stage show.
The courses are being offered through Elderhostel, a nonprofit educational organization that offers inexpensive, short-term academic programs at 1,800 institutions throughout the United States and in 45 other countries.
Participants must be 55 or older, and the registration fee for each session is $360, with reduced rates for those who don't require lodging.
The courses being offered at Purdue this summer are:
The course is being offered in conjunction with the redesign of Purdue's North Course.
Purdue faculty from the departments of agronomy, horticulture, forestry, entomology and botany who are participating in the golf course construction will make presentations. One day of the program will be spent touring the construction site with Tim Liddy, an associate of Dye's.
According to Rita McKenzie, urban forester and organizer of the program, there will be a special emphasis on how golf courses can fit into an overall environmental plan. This is especially critical at Purdue, where the new golf course borders a wetland.
"One day will be spent looking at how the golf course fits into the environment," McKenzie says. "We won't be looking just at the trees and grass, but also insects, wildlife, water runoff, and nearby habitats." The day will feature new technologies that enable golf course designers to make courses environmentally positive additions to communities.
Participants will also have the opportunity to play a round of golf on the existing Ackerman Course (formerly the Purdue South Course).
Each day of this course will present a day-long mini-course, with topics that will include companion or pet animals; animals in agriculture with tours of the Purdue ag research facilities; veterinary medicine; wildlife problems and solutions; and animals used in biomedical research.
The registration fee for each six-day session is $360, and a $75 deposit is required. Reduced rates for those who don't require lodging are: $75 for the session; $105 for the session plus lunch each day; $140 for the session plus two meals; and $155 for the session and three meals per day.
Participants must be 55 or older; younger spouses may enroll with them. The courses are not offered for credit, and there are no exams or grades.
To register for the Elderhostel programs at Purdue, contact Purdue Continuing Education at (800) 359-2968, extension 916. For information about the session on golf course design, contact Rita McKenzie at (765) 494-3625.
A catalog of 1997 Elderhostel offerings at universities around the world can be obtained from Elderhostel, 75 Federal Street, Boston, Mass. 02110-1941, or by calling (617) 426-8056. (For the hearing impaired, a TDD line is available at [617] 426-5437.)
Sources: Rita McKenzie, (765) 494-3625
Mary Gardner, (765) 494-5760
Writer: Steve Tally, (765) 494-9809; e-mail, tally@ecn.purdue.edu
Purdue News Service: (765) 494-2096; e-mail, purduenews@purdue.edu