1268 THE BELL SYSTEM TECHNICAL JOURNAL, SEPTEMBER 1953 



number of military projects. Since then he has concentrated on pulse 

 code modulation and general transmission problems. Member of the 

 A.I.E.E., I.R.E., The American Physical Society, Tau Beta Pi, Eta 

 Kappa Nu and Sigma Xi. 



A. N. Gray, Bell Telephone Laboratories, 1922-1929; Western Elec- 

 tric Company, 1930-. Mr. Gray, Assistant Superintendent, Develop- 

 ment Engineering, Point Breeze since 1946, is engaged in the develop- 

 ment of new equipment and processes. He was Manufacturing Engineer, 

 Rubber Covered Wire, throughout the period of World War II when the 

 Western was heavily loaded with the manufacture of communications 

 items for the Armed Services. He is a member of the A.S.T.M., being 

 Western's representative from Point Breeze, and is assigned to Com- 

 mittee D-U on Rubber and Rubber Products. 



L. N. Hampton, Cooper Institute of Technology; Experimental De- 

 partment, Otis Elevator Company, Engineering Department; Western 

 Electric Company and Bell Telephone Laboratories, 1917-. In the 

 Western Electric Company's Apparatus Development Department, he 

 designed Signal Corps apparatus for the detection of airplanes and sub- 

 marines. Later, in Switching Apparatus Development, he was in charge 

 of the development of apparatus for use in the telephone plant. After 

 World War II and work on airborne radar and computing systems for 

 military projects, he was engaged in the development of train-dispatch- 

 ing apparatus, cameras for photographing subscribers' message registers 

 and the cam switching panels of the overseas radio privacy systems. He 

 also was responsible for the development of the trouble recorder used 

 in the 4 and 5 crossbar systems and the apparatus aspects of the card 

 translator. More recently he has been active in the development of com- 

 ponents for guided missiles. Member of the A.S.M.E. and the General 

 Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen of New York; secretary. Founda- 

 tion for Homeopathic Research. 



H. R. Huntley, B.S. in E.E., University of Wisconsin, 1921. Wiscon- 

 sin Telephone Co. 1917-1930, except for a leave of absence to complete 

 education l^egun earlier at Leland Stanford University and continued 

 at the University of Wisconsin. Leaving The Wisconsin Telephone Com- 

 pany where he was Transmission Engineer, Mr. Huntley came to the 

 Foreign Wire Relations Section of the Operating and Engineering De- 

 partment of American 'i^clcphone and Telegraph Company in 1930. In 

 1942 he transferred to the Transmission Section and has been Transmis- 

 sion Engineer since 1951. 



