224 



SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL SOCIETIES 



special occasions, to outstanding leaders in 

 communications and electronics fields; Morris 

 Liebmann Memorial Prize, for important con- 

 tribution to radio art; Browder J. Thompson 

 Memorial Prize, for published paper constituting 

 best combination of technical contribution and 

 presentation of subject; Harry Diamond Me- 

 morial Award, to a person in government 

 service for outstanding contribution in field of 

 radio or electronics ; Vladimir K. Zworykin 

 Television Prize Award, for important tech- 

 nical contribution to electronic television. 



Publications: Proceedings, monthly, current 

 volume : 48, $18, free to members. Editor : F. 

 Hamburger, Jr., Johns Hopkins University, 

 Baltimore, Md. 



789. Institute of Sanitation Management. 101 



West 30th Street, New York 1, N. Y. Presi- 

 dent: Albert J. Burner, Port of New York 

 Authority, 111 8th Avenue, New York, N. Y. 

 Term expires October 24, 1960. Executive 

 Secretary: Gerard J. Riley. Term indefinite. 



History: Organized October, 1957; incorpo- 

 rated in New York, through merger of three 

 former associations : Association of Food In- 

 dustry Sanitarians; Industrial Sanitation 

 Management Association ; National Association 

 of Bakery Sanitarians. Chapters: Boston, 

 Chicago, Cleveland, Connecticut, Detroit, Los 

 Angeles, Minneapolis, New York, Philadelphia, 

 Pittsburgh, St. Louis, San Francisco, and 

 Washington, D. C. 



Purpose: To maintain and improve the stan- 

 dards of industrial sanitation, including building 

 maintenance ; to promote industrial sanitation 

 as a managed function in its application to 

 work environment ; to foster and engage in 

 research and educational activities ; to dissem- 

 inate information pertaining to methods and 

 costs. 



Membership: Active, 815, persons of accepta- 

 ble character, education, and experience who are 

 employed as industrial or food sanitarians, or 

 have supervisory or executive responsibility for 

 industrial sanitation, including safety and indus- 

 trial hygiene, or are engaged in building or 

 institutional management and maintenance, or 

 are responsibly engaged in educational research 

 or publication activities in the field of sanitation, 

 or are consulting sanitarians ; Sustaining, 98, 

 individuals, firms, or corporations engaged in 

 manufacture or marketing of machinery, equip- 

 ment and materials, or commercially supplying 

 goods and services used in industrial sanitation. 



Meetings: Annual. 



790. Institute of the Aerospace Sciences, Inc. 



2 East 64th Street, New York 21, N. Y. 



Executive Secretary: Robert R. Dexter. Term 

 indefinite. 



Plistory: Incorporated in New York October 

 15, 1932. Geographic Sections: Antelope 

 Valley, Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Central 

 Florida, Chicago, Cleveland-Akron, Columbus, 

 Connecticut, Dayton-Cincinnati, Detroit, Great 

 Salt Lake, Hagerstown, Hampton Roads, Indi- 

 anapolis, Kansas City, Los Angeles, New 

 Mexico, New York, Niagara Frontier, Omaha, 

 Philadelphia, Rocky Mountain, Sacramento, San 

 Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, St. 

 Louis, South Florida, Texas, TuUahoma, Tulsa, 

 Twin Cities, Washington, D. C, Wichita. Stu- 

 dent branches in seventy-eight colleges, uni- 

 versities, and aeronautical schools. 



Purpose: To advance the arts and sciences of 

 aero-space technology. 



Membership: Honorary Members, 20; Honor- 

 ary Fellows, 35; Fellows, 228; Associate Fel- 

 lows, 1,725, twelve years' professional practice, 

 important work, responsible charge, outstanding 

 contribution; Members, 7,075, eight years' pro- 

 fessional work; Associate Members, 6,860, 

 scientific or engineering work in aeronautics or 

 allied field, or recognized standing in application, 

 administrative, or other related positions; 

 Corporate Members, 150; Student Members, 

 4,506. Total membership 15,943. 

 Meetings: Annual. 



Professional activities: Octave Chanute 

 Award, for notable contribution by a pilot to 

 aeronautical sciences; Flight Test Engineering 

 Fellowship, value $7,800; John JefYries Award, 

 to recognize importance to aviation of scientific 

 endeavor in medicine ; Louis W. Hill Space 

 Transportation Award, in recognition of re- 

 search in sciences relating to space travel or 

 technology, $5,000 for individual, or up to 

 $10,000 for team contribution; Robert M. Losey 

 Award, to recognize outstanding contributions 

 to the science of meteorology as applied to aero- 

 nautics ; Minta Martin National Awards, for 

 best graduate and undergraduate papers in 

 aeronautical engineering ; Sylvanus Albert Reed 

 Award, for notable contribution to aeronautical 

 sciences resulting from experimental or theoreti- 

 cal investigations ; Lawrence Sperry Award, for 

 notable contribution by a young man to advance- 

 ment of aeronautics; Water-based Aviation 

 Award; Wright Brothers Lecture. 



Publications: Aero Space Engineering, 

 monthly, current volume : 19, $5. Editor : Allan 

 Bernhardt. Journal of the Aero Space Sciences, 

 monthly, current volume: 27, $15. Editor: W. 

 R. Sears. Aero Space Engineering Catalog, 

 annual, current volume: 16, $7.50. Editor: 

 Beverly A. Dodge. Aero Space Engineering 

 Index, annual, $15, members $10. Editor: John 

 J. Glennon. 



