William G. Pearcy 



Nelson C. Ross 



George Seeburger 



Evelyn Shaw 



Isadore L. Sonnier 



Robert E. Strecker 



Manual Vegas 



Department of Oceanography, 

 Oregon State University. Corval- 

 lis, Oreg. (September 1967 to 

 June 1968-Schooling behavior 

 of pelagic Crustacea) 



National Oceanography Data 

 Center, Washington, D.C. (No- 

 vember 1967 to April 1968- 

 Development of quality control 

 methods for STD data logger 

 tapes) 



Hisconsin State University, White- 

 water, Wis. (July and August 

 1967-Galvanic responses of ma- 

 rine fishes in relation to the de- 

 sign of electro-fishing gear) 



American Museum of Natural 

 History, New York, NY. (June 

 to August 1967- Schooling of 

 larval fish and net avoidance) 



Western State College of Colo- 

 rado, Gunnison, Colo. (July and 

 August 1967-Analysis of ocean- 

 ographic data) 



San Diego City College San Die- 

 go, Calif. (June to August 1967 

 — Locomotory behavior of cala- 

 noid copepods) 



Faculty of Fisheries, Universidad 

 Agraria, Lima, Peru (November 

 1967— Taxonomy of larval fish) 



Mention must also be made of the people who visit 

 the Fishery -Oceanography Center for training, because 

 during their stay they participate actively in the research 

 work of the Center; during the period of tliis review 

 two trainees have been accommodated: Mario Carreno R. 

 of Chile, sponsored by the Food and Agriculture Orga- 

 nization of the United Nations, Rome, who spent 6 

 months in 1968 under the supervision of P.E. Smith, 

 Leader of the Population Dynamics Program and Vincent 

 Price, Fisheries Department, Kenya, sponsored by the 

 African-American Institute, who spent the summer of 

 1967 under the supervision of R.E. Green of the Opera- 

 tions Research Program. 



The Fishery-Oceanography Center has cooperated 

 with SIO in the National Science Foundation Summer 

 Program since 1960 by providing high school students 

 with the opportunity to work with Bureau scientists. In 

 1967, the Center accepted 5 such students from various 



areas in the United States; and in 1968, 12 students 

 have begun work. 



Many members of the scientific community at large 

 visit the Fishery-Oceanography Center. Among many 

 others, we have been pleased to welcome the following: 



June 1967 Edward L. Dillon, National CouncU on 



Marine Resources and Engineering. 

 Washington, D.C. 



Edward Wenk, National Council on Ma- 

 rine Resources and Engineering, Wash- 

 ington, D.C. 



July 1967 Manuel Flores V. and associates, Insti- 



tuto Nacional de Investigaciones, El 

 Sauzal, Baja California, Mexico 



September 1967 Bui Thi Lang, Faculty of Science, Uni- 

 versity of Saigon, South Viet Nam 



October 1967 John R. Hendrickson, Oceanic Insti- 

 tute. Honolulu. Hawaii 



Milner B. Schaefer, Science Adviser to 

 the Secretary of the Interior, Washing- 

 ton, D.C. 



November 1967 Henry M. Stommel, Massachusetts In- 

 stitute of Technology and Woods Hole 

 Oceanographic Institution, WoodsHole, 

 Mass. 



December 1967 Karl F. Lagler, Department of Fisheries, 

 FAO, Rome, Italy 



January 1%8 C. Maurice Yonge, Department of 

 Zoology, University of Glasgow, Glas- 

 gow, Scotland 



February 1968 George D. Grice. Woods Hole Ocean- 

 ographic Institution, Woods Hole, Mass. 



March 1968 Jean Y. Lee, Co-Director, FAO/UNSF 



Project, Ivory Coast 



May 1968 Raoul Serene, UNESCO, Singapore 



James E. Shelbourne. White Fish Au- 

 thority. Isle of Man 



H. Steinitz, Hebrew University of 

 Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel 



June 1968 Brian McK. Bary, University of Brit- 



ish Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. 



R. I. Currie, Scottish Marine Biological 

 Association, Argyle, Scotland 



