61 



Dr. Stratton is a director of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey and the 

 Westinghouse Electric Corporation, and a trustee of Pine Manor Junior College 

 and Vassar College. 



He is a memher of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy 

 of Engineering, the American Philosophical Society, and a Fellow of the Ameri- 

 can Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics 

 Engineers, and the American Physical Society. 



He received the Medal for Merit from the Secretary of War in 1946, the Certifi- 

 cate of Award of the United States Navy (1957), the Medal of Honor of the In- 

 stitute of Radio Engineers (1957), and the Faraday Medal of the British Insti- 

 tution of Electrical Engineers (1961) . 



RICHARD A. GEYER 



Dr. Geyer is presently Head of the Department of Oceanography at Texas 

 A&M University where he has been since 1966. Previously, from 196S-1966, 

 he was Technical Director for Oceanography for Texas Instruments, Inc. From 

 1959-1963. he was a manager of Gravity and Magnetic Department of Texas 

 Instruments, and from 1954-1959, he was Chief Geophysicist for the Gravity 

 Department, Geophysics Services, Inc., of Texas Instruments. From 1945-1954, 

 he was associated with Humble Oil and Refining Company, first as Senior Re- 

 search Greophysicist and then Head of the Oceanographlc Section from 1949-1954. 



During World War II, Dr. Geyer served as Physicist in Charge of the De- 

 gaussing Range for the US Navy, Bureau of Ordnance, in Newport, Rhode Island, 

 and as Senior Field Instructor at Woods Hole Oceanographlc Institution at 

 Woods Hole, Massachusetts. Before the war, from 1939-1942, he was an in- 

 structor at Princeton, and from 1938-1942, he did research in geophysics and 

 geology for the Standard Oil Company in New Jersey. 



Dr. Geyer was born on October 27, 1914, in New YoTk City. In 1937, he re- 

 ceived his BS from New York University ; in 1940, he received his MS, also from 

 New York University ; and in 1950, he received his MA, and in 1951, his PhD 

 from Princeton University. 



Dr. Geyer is presently a member of the National Academy of Sciences Com- 

 mittee on Oceanography — Ocean Wide Surveys Panel and a member of the 

 Board of the American Society for Oceanography and of its National Oceano- 

 graphlc Society. He was a consultant with the US Coast and Geodetic Survey 

 and was formerly an editor of Geophysics. 



DAVID A. ADAJIS 



Dr. Adams has served as Commissioner of the Division of Commercial Fisheries 

 of North Carolina since 1963. Before that he was curator of the North Carolina 

 State Museum from 1962-1968, chief Park Naturalist of the North Carolina 

 Division of State Parks from 1957-1959, and a waterfowl biologist for the North 

 Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission in 1957. 



Dr. Adams was born in Lakewood, Ohio, on November 26, 1931. He attended 

 the North Carolina State College where he received his BS in Wildlife Con- 

 servation and Management in 1953, his MS in Wildlife Management in 1957. and 

 his PhD in Plant Ecology in 1962. He is the author of numerous professional pub- 

 lications and a member of several professional and honorary societies. 



Currently, Dr. Adams is a member of the North Carolina Academy of Sciences, 

 the Ecological Society of America, the American Institute of Biological Sciences, 

 the American Fisheries Society, and Chairman of the South Atlantic Section 

 of the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission and Vice Chairman of the 

 Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission. 



CARL A. AUEBBACH 



Professor Auerbach has been a Professor of Law since 1947, serving at the 

 University of Minnesota Law School since 1961, and before that at the University 

 of Wisconsin Law School. In 1965, 1966 and 1967. he served as a visiting Pro- 

 fessor at Columbia Law School, Utah Law School and Iowa Law School 

 respectively. 



Professor Auerbach received his BA degree in 1935 from long Island Uni- 

 versity and his LLB from Harvard University Law School in 1938. Upon 

 graduation from law school, he took a position as attomev in the US Depart- 

 ment of Labor, where he served until 1940 when he moved to the Office of Price 

 Administration as Assistant General Counsel. He served with the US Army in 



