Page:Journal of the Optical Society of America, volume 30, number 12.pdf/2

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The Optical Society of America

Officers of the Society

K. S. Gibson, President
National Bureau of Standards
Washington, D. C.
A. G. Worthing, Vice President
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Artuur C. Hardy, Secretary
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Henry F. Kurtz, Treasurer
Bausch & Lomb Optical Company
Rochester, New York

The Board of Directors consists of the above officers; the Editor of the Journal; the Past President; and five directors-at-large.

R. C. Gibbs, Past President
Cornell University
Ithaca, New York
George Harrison, Editor
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, Massachusetts

Directors-at-Large

J. W. Beams
University of Virginia
Charlottesville, Virginia
H. P. Gage
Corning Glass Works
Corning, New York
Rupert Kingslake
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, New York
William F. Meggers
National Bureau of Standards
Washington, D. C.
Brian O’Brien
University of Rochester
Rochester, New York

Rochester, New York, Section of the Optical Society of America

B. O’Brien, President R. B. Horsfall, Jr., Vice President D. L. MacAdam, Secretary J. W. Gillon, Treasurer

Councillors: H. F. Kurtz, J. H. McLeod, C. J. Staud, T. R. Wilkins, R. E. Burroughs (ex officio)


Corporation Members of the Optical Society of America

American Optical Company, Southbridge, Massachusetts Gaertner Scientific Corporation, Chicago, Illinois
Bausch & Lomb Optical Company, Rochester, New York W. & L. E. Gurley, Troy, New York
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., New York, New

York

Interchemical Corporation, New York, New York
Keuffel & Esser Company, Hoboken, New Jersey
Corning Glass Works, Corning, New York Spencer Lens Company, Buffalo, New York
Arthur H. Thomas Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The Optical Society OF America was organized in 1916 “to increase and diffuse the knowledge of optics in all its branches, pure and applied, to promote the mutual interests of investigators of optical problems, of designers, manufacturers and users of optical instruments and apparatus of all kinds and to encourage cooperation among them.” It aims to serve the interests of all who are engaged in any branch of optics from fundamental research to the manufacture of optical goods.

Membership

Regular Members: “Any person who has contributed materially to the advancement of optics is eligible for regular membership.”

Associate Members: “Any person who is interested in optics is eligible for associate membership.”

Corporate Members: “Any corporation desirous of encouraging the work of the Society is eligible for corporation membership ”

The Society cordially invites to membership all who are interested in any branch of optics, either in research, in instruction, in optical or illuminating engineering, in the manufacture and distribution of optical goods of all kinds or in physiological and medical optics.

Annual Dues

Regular members, $7.50; Associate members, $5.00; Corporate members, $50.00. These dues include subscription to the Society’s official journal, the Journal of the Optical Society of America.

Meetings

The Society holds two meetings per year: An annual meeting in the autumn and a midwinter meeting, usually with the American Physical Society.


All changes of address of members of the Optical Society of America should be communicated to the Secretary, Professor Arthur C. Hardy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

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