226 



SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL SOCIETIES 



History: Founded 1951. 



Purpose: To provide avenues of direct com- 

 munication among behavioral scientists in North 

 and South America, and to promote development 

 of behavioral sciences in this hemisphere. 



Membership: Active members, must have 

 academic or professional doctorates, or equiv- 

 alent in training or experience ; Associate, must 

 have minimum of one year's graduate study in 

 psychology or closely related fields. Total 

 membership approximately 400. 



Meetings: Annual. 



Professional aetivitics: Professional literature 

 exchange service. 



Publications: News-Bulletin, quarterly, free 

 to members. Editor : Victor D. Sanua. 



795. Intermountain Association of Petroleum 

 Geologists. President: W'illard C. Gere. Term 

 expires October 1960. Secretary: Alan C. 

 Dille, P. O. Box 1346, Salt Lake City, Utah. 

 Term expires October 1960. 



History: Organized 1949 as affiliate of 

 American Association of Petroleum Geologists. 



Purpose: To increase and disseminate geo- 

 logical knowledge, especially as it relates to 

 petroleum and natural gas. 



Membership: Full membership is limited to 

 persons who are members or associate members 

 of American Association of Petroleum Geolo- 

 gists ; Associate membership is open to any 

 person actively interested in petroleum and 

 petroleum geology. Total membership 160. 



Meetings: Weekly. 



Publications: Newsletter, bimonthly, free to 

 members. 



796. Intermountain Psychiatric Association. 



President: John K. Tor reus, 3220 Silver 

 Street, Albuquerque, N. Mex. Term expires 

 May 1961. Secretary-Treasurer : H. Edward 

 Beaghler, Utah State Hospital, Provo, Utah. 

 Term expires May 1961. 



History: Organized 1951 ; became District 

 Branch, American Psychiatric Association, 1958. 



Purpose: To foster progress in psychiatry in 

 Arizona, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, 

 Utah, and \A'yoming. 



Membership: Physicians who have specialized 

 in psychiatry for three or more years and are 

 members of American Psychiatric Association. 

 Total membership 82. 



Meetings: Annual. 



Publications: Newsletter, irregular, free to 

 members. Editor : Rudolph Keene. 



797. Inter-Society Color Council, Inc. Presi- 

 dent: G. L. Erikson, Braden-Sutphin Ink Co., 

 3650 East 93rd Street, Cleveland 5, Ohio. 

 Term expires December 31, 1961. Secretary: 

 Ralph M. Evans, Eastman Kodak Company, 

 Color Technology Division, Building 65, 

 Rochester 4, N. Y. Term expires December 

 31, 1961. 



History: Organized 1931 ; incorporated in 

 New York 1953. 



Purpose: To stimulate and coordinate work 

 being done by various societies, organizations, 

 and associations leading to the standardization, 

 description, and specification of color, and to 

 promote practical application of these results to 

 color problems arising in science, art, and 

 industry ; to provide a meeting ground for all 

 groups having color as a common point of 

 interest. 



Membership: Members-Bodies, open to any 

 society, association, or organization of national 

 scope operating on a non-profit basis ; Individual 

 Members, open to any person interested in color 

 and desirous of participating in the activities of 

 this Council. Member-Bodies, 27, with 215 

 appointed delegates ; Individual Members, 375. 



Meetings: Annual. 



Publications: News Letter, bimonthly, $4, 

 free to members. Editor : Warren L. Rhodes, 

 Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester 

 8, N. Y. 



798. Inter-Society Corrosion Committee. 1061 

 M and M Building, Houston 2, Tex. Presi- 

 dent: R. R. Pierce, Pennsalt Chemicals Cor- 

 poration, Natrona, Pa. Term expires March 

 1962. Secretary: T. J. Hull. Term indefinite. 



History: Organized 1939 as Advisory Com- 

 mittee on Corrosion of American Society for 

 Testing Materials ; separated from that Society 

 and changed name to American Coordinating 

 Committee on Corrosion 1940; name changed 

 to present title, under sponsorship. National 

 Association of Corrosion Engineers, 1948. 



Purpose: To promote cooperation among 

 technical societies working in field of corrosion ; 

 to act in advisory capacity to various technical 

 societies interested ; to recommend societies for 

 carrying out of proposed new activities ; to 

 stimulate publication of corrosion data ; to dis- 

 seminate corrosion information ; to promote 

 standardization of definitions and terminology 

 in field of corrosion. 



Membership: Limited to two representatives 

 from any technical society and one representative 

 from any governmental agency formerly repre- 

 sented on American Coordinating Committee 

 on Corrosion or any other major governmental 

 agency of the United States or Canada actively 



