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Dr D. Grishin, Russian Mr L. R. Barklamb, M u s i c M r K. A . Lodewycks, Library

D r A. T. Casey, Organic Chemistry, attended the Seventh Hudson Sympo- s i u m on M a g n e t i s m at the State University of New York and the XIII In- ternational Conference on Co-ordination Chemistry at the University of T o r o n t o .

M r W. W. S. Charters, Mechanical Engineering, studied problems on the utilization of solar energy at the Universite' de Provence at Marseille and acted as Rapporteur at the multi-lingual International Congress Le Soleil au Service de L'Homme, held in Paris.

D r D. C h i s h o l m , M e d i c i n e , St V i n c e n t ' s , attended the International Diabetes Federation Congress in Brussels and visited various centres in Europe and North America to discuss recent medical research developments.

Professor G. S. Christie, Pathology, studied the effects on the teaching of pathology of recent experiments in c u r r i c u l u m alteration in the U.S.A. and U.K. medical schools, and observed trends in Pathology research overseas.

D r Patricia A. Clancy, French, gathered material in France for a French c o m - position book to be published later this year and w r o t e three articles f o r a D i c t i o n n a i r e des journalistes fran$ais.

D r S. D. Clark, Law, participated in research projects in Australia, Canada, United K i n g d o m , Rome, Bangkok and Port Moresby. He also delivered the opening paper at the University of British Columbia at the first public seminar concerning the regulation of shoreline uses. Later he undertook field w o r k as a consultant to the Department of Public W o r k s in Papua New Guinea.

M r M . Cooke, M u s i c , travelled through Spain and France and w o r k e d as a music teacher at an experimental high school in Bremen. He was also a part-time teacher at the Bremen Konservatorium.

D r D. B. Craven, Mathematics, spent the major part of his study leave en- gaged in lectures and research at the University of Sheffield.

M r P. V. Cubberley, Russian, surveyed material on Slavonic linguistics especially phonology, in libraries at O x f o r d .

D r J . F. G. Darby, Physics, R.A.A.F. A c a d e m y , studied methods of investiga- t i o n of low-speed aerodynamics and hydrodynamics at the University of Southampton.

Professor A. J . Day, Physiology, was involved in research programmes at the University of Heidelberg, West Germany, and M c M a s t e r University,

Ontario.

Professor A. E. D o y l e . M e d i c i n e , Austin Hospital, attended a meeting of the International Society on Hypertension in M i l a n and later participated in the 5th Asian-Pacific Congress of Cardiology in Singapore.

M r A . C. D u n k i n , A g r i c u l t u r e , studied current developments in teaching, research and technology of pig production in Britain and North A m e r i c a . M r D. G. Evans, Chemical Engineering, was a Temporary Research Officer w i t h the U.K. Central Electricity Generating Board and was engaged in assessing the usefulness of the computer as a t o o l f o r burner and furnace design in power station boilers.

M r s Barbara Falk, The Centre for the Study of Higher Education, v i s i t e d England, where she attended conferences and seminars to develop ideas on the desirability of an Open University for Australia. Mrs Falk attended

a UNESCO Conference in O x f o r d on 'Universities W i t h o u t WallsVan'dl looked at Open Universities in the U.K. i tnomqols-vsb Professor H. A. J . F o r d , Law, was a Visiting Professor at 'Queen .Mary College in the University of London. \oU\VA a'isov M r Jon Frederick, Student Counselling Service, investigated student!health and counselling services and methods in institutions in North America^anb"

Europe. ^ s r l f * °

Dr E. L. French, Education, studied the operation of the new s y s t e m s66 f secondary school examinations in Queensland and Western Australia1^ He also studied a d m i n i s t r a t i v e problems peculiar to Western Australia and^the Northern Territory and the present state and future prospects of religious instruction in State schools. ' -^ " ^ Dr D. B. Galloway, Veterinary Clinical Science, studied artificial breeding in cattle at French Institutes and on behalf of the C o m m o n w e a l t h Overseas' Professional Qualifications Committee, investigated four European VefefirP ary Schools. ^ " ^ Mr J . T. Gething, Meteorology, attended a Workshop on Atmospheric A c o u -

stics at Boulder, Colorado. i r n i

M i s s Eunice E. P. G i l l , Physical Education, spent the academic year at th*e University of Leeds reading in the fields of Psychological Study of Skilled Behaviour, Measurement in Physical Education and the Aesthetic Evalua^

tion of Human movement. * M r H. J . Glasbeek, Law, taught at Osgood Hall Law School, Y o r k University

as V i s i t i n g Professor, and later was Visiting Scholar at the London School of Economics and Political Science.'

Professor D. F. Gray, M i c r o b i o l o g y , Austin Hospital, attended medical congresses in Indonesia and Copenhagen and v i s i t e d several European research centres.

Dr H. ft. Graze, Civil Engineering, presented a paper at the First Inter- national Conference on Pressure Surges held at the University of Kent and attended an International Conference on Hydraulics at the University of Kalrsruhe, West Germany.

Professor S. B. H a m m o n d . Psychology, attended the 14th International

•Psychological Conference in Tokyo before travelling to London where he continued his studies on the development of intellectual capacities.

M r A. J . St J. Hannigan, Legal Studies, attended the Conference de ('Asso- ciation Internationale de Droit A f r i c a i n held in Bordeaux and later visited English polytechnics w h i c h grant degrees in business studies and law.

M r R. J . A. Harper, Economics, studied the latest developments in public finance, taxation p o l i c y , social security and social economics in the U.K.

He was also a V i s i t i n g Fellow at the University of Kent at Canterbury.

M r T. A. Hazell, Registrar's department, visited Italy to investigate prob- lems regarding Italian qualifications, before visiting the United Kingdom to call on the offices of the Association of Commonwealth Universities and various English universities.

Professor Alastair H e r o n , Psychology, spent three months as V i s i t i n g Pro- fessor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow. He also pursued research interests in Europe and Canada.

M r K. W. H i n c e , Economics, visited Fiji to continue research in the area of development of trade unionism in F i j i .

Dr A. K. H o l l a n d , French, visited France and began to edit the Abbe Pre- vost's Histoire d'une Grecque moderne, and took part in an investigation of the publishing history of M a n o n Lescaut.

Professor C. H o w a r d , Law, was a v i s i t i n g Fellow in the Department of law of the Research School of Social Sciences, A N U , where he conducted re- search in federal constitutional law.

D r A . H . Hughes, Political Science, v i s i t e d several European centres t o prepare a course in the comparative political sociology of Australia and the Federal Republic of Germany.

Dr ft. B. Johns, Organic Chemistry, visited the Division of Marine Biology at Scripps Institute of Oceanography in the University of California to i n - vestigate the integration of chemistry w i t h biology and to develop a possible Biological Chemistry course.

M r A. N. E. J o l l e y , Economics, w o r k e d in the Department of A p p l i e d Eco- nomics at Cambridge on a project concerned w i t h the economic impact of i m m i g r a t i o n in Britain.

Dr ft. L. G. Kirsner, Electrical Engineering, participated in the Biological Engineering Society Conference on Careers and Training in Biomedical Engineering in London and conducted research into the use of computer techniques in the analysis of biological control systems.

Dr L. P. Las Gourgues, French, spent three months in Paris and was able to establish the groundwork for a new research project on the aesthetics and dramatic theories of Houdar de la M o t t e .

D r J . 0 . Lavarack, A n a t o m y , investigated the movement of embryonic e p i - blast cells in relation to the primitive streak by culture of isolated pieces at the Strangeways Research Laboratory at Cambridge.

Dr K w o n g Lee D o w , The Centre for the Study of Higher Education, studied developments in university and medical teaching in the U.K.

Dr M . J . L i t t l e j o h n , Zoology, w o r k e d w i t h a group of ecologically and be- haviourally-oriented evolutionary biologists at the University of M i c h i g a n in re-evaluating some basic evolutionary concepts and processes.

Professor E. ft. Love, Mathematics, visited Cambridge where he completed- t w o research projects started five years ago.

Professor J . F. Lovering, Geology, was a Guest Worker w i t h the Max-Planck- Institute fur Kernphysik at Heidelberg before travelling to the United States where he set up a new Ion Microprobe Mass Analysis ( I M M A ) Laboratory in the National Bureau of Standards at W a s h i n g t o n , D.C.

D r D. A. M c C r e d i e , Paediatrics, w o r k e d as Research Boursier in a Paris hospital unit devoted to Metabolic Disorders of C h i l d h o o d .

D r H. M a c l e a n , Germanic Studies, w o r k e d in M u n i c h on his projected book.

The Drama of Frank E d e k i n d .

Dr J . ft. M c L e a n , Zoology, studied the autonomic innervation of the salt gland of the goose w h i l e at the Department of A p p l i e d Biology at the A.R.C.

Institute of A n i m a l Physiology, Cambridge.

M r s A. M . M c H a r d y , Social Studies, spent her leave in Britain examining methods of Field Teaching, particularly in Social W o r k Student Units.

Professor Bruce H. J . McKellar, Physics, presented papers at Physics con- ferences in Europe and A m e r i c a .

D r T. J. M a r t i n , M e d i c i n e , Austin Hospital, spent his study leave in the W e l l c o m e Unit of Endocrinology, Royal Postgraduate M e d i c a l School, Lon- don, where he was appointed as a Visiting Professor in the Department of Chemical Pathology.

M r J . fl. C. M a r t y n , Classical Studies, spent his leave in Holland and Eng- land where he w o r k e d on classical manuscripts and M o d e r n Greek sylla- buses.

M r ft. S. M o r r i s , Veterinary.Clinical Science, developed computer simula- t i o n models of animal health problems at the Department of A g r i c u l t u r e , University of Reading, and participated in the NATO International Sym- posium on the Use of Computers in A n i m a l Nutrition and Veterinary Medicine in Denmark.

M s E. M . M u r p h y , Physical Education, compared aspects of Physical Edu- cation and Recreation, and observed professional preparation in recreation in Europe and North A m e r i c a .

M r P. M . N i c k o l l s , Law, visited Law schools in North A m e r i c a , Great Britain and Europe to inspect Law school buildings and libraries and to study their a d m i n i s t r a t i o n .

D r H. J . Orams, Dental M e d i c i n e and Surgery, taught and conducted re- search at the University of Southern California Dental School, and visited other dental schools and research institutes in the U.S.A., England and Europe.

M r D. Peles, M i d d l e Eastern Studies, during leave in Israel, traced recent developments in M o d e r n Hebrew language and literature.

Professor D. G. Penington, M e d i c i n e , St V i n c e n t ' s Hospital, attended an in- ternational meeting concerned w i t h Blood Platelets in Boston; Massachu- setts and also visited the Council for Social W o r k Education in New York.

He then w e n t to McMaster University to participate in a meeting on prob- lems relating to drugs in the prevention and treatment of t h r o m b o t i c disease.

Professor J . O. N. Perkins, Economics, presented a paper on The Current Economic Situation in Australia and the Recent Change of Government, at the University of London. He also visited other universities and institutes in England and Europe.

M r J . B. Potter, Electrical Engineering, was an A c a d e m i c Visitor at the Im- perial College of Science and Technology where he continued his research into adaptive communication systems.

M r A. D. Pryor, Classical Studies, spent most of his leave in London at the British Museum and the Institute of Classical Studies where he wrote in final f o r m almost the whole of an edition of Juvenal before making a visit to Sicily.

M i s s J . R a d f o r d , Chemistry, conducted research into the History of the Chemistry department of the University of Melbourne in Australia and the United K i n g d o m .

D r U. Radok, Meteorology, attended meetings of the International Commis- sion on Snow and Ice in Paris, of the Kommission fur Glaziologie of the

Bavarian Academy of Science in M u n i c h , and of the Polex Panel of the U.S.

National Academy of Science in Boulder, Colorado.

M r ft. Rahni, Architecture and B u i l d i n g , investigated housing and architec- tural developments in Asia and Europe. He also studied f o r m s of student housing, especially in Sweden.

Professor M . J . Rand, Pharmacology, participated in the 4 5 t h Annual Meeting of the Japanese Pharmacological Society and attended meetings of various pharmacology societies throughout Europe.

M r S. Ray, Indian Studies, attended the 29th International Congress of Orientalists in Paris. He also completed arrangements for the publication of an Indian edition of M o d e r n Bengali poetry of w h i c h he is joint editor.

Dr fl. Robson, Inorganic Chemistry, participated in research projects at the Agricultural Research Council's Unit of Nitrogen Fixation, University of Sussex.

M i s s L. H. Semmens, Baillieu Library, was granted study leave to investi- gate current developments in the cataloguing processes in research libraries in America and the U n i t e d K i n g d o m .

Professor L. U. S i m o n , School of Architecture and B u i l d i n g , interviewed builders and educationists in tertiary institutions in Europe, Great Britain and Israel.

Dr J. T. J . Srzednicki, Philosophy, attended the Conference of Scholars of Polish Descent in W a r s a w and Krakow.

Dr G. V. Stanley, Psychology, was a visitor at the Centre f o r Human In- f o r m a t i o n Processing and a V i s i t i n g Professor in the Department of Psycho- logy at the University of California, San Diego.

M r M . H. Stannus, Education, travelled to Italy where he studied many aspects of Italian education. During this t i m e he also attended the annual conference of the Philosophy of Education Society of Great B r i t a i n .

Dr E. F. M . Stephenson, Science, conducted research at the University of London into the application of circular dichroism measurements to stereo- chemical and structural problems of optically-active organic compounds.

Professor L. K. Stevens, Civil Engineering, v i s i t e d engineering institutions in Asia, Europe and North A m e r i c a , and conducted research into stiffened plate structures at the University of Manchester.

Dr I. G. Stone, Botany, examined early collections of Australian mosses stored in the British M u s e u m of Natural History.

Professor D. ft. Stranks, Inorganic Chemistry, delivered a Plenary Lecture at the XVth International Co-ordination Chemistry Conference in M o s c o w . D r W. Strauss, Industrial Science, attended a conference on air pollution in the Southern Hemisphere held in Pretoria at the University of South A f r i c a .

D r M i c h a e l J . Studdert, Veterinary Paraclinical Sciences, conducted lectures and research in America on various animal diseases.

Professor Sir Sydney Sunderland, Experimental Neurology, took up a Fo- garty Scholarship in the Fogarty International Centre at the National In- stitutes of Health, Bethesda. He also visited several universities and hospi- tals in the United States as w e l l as England, South A f r i c a and M a u r i t i u s . Dr B. W. Thompson, Mathematics, conducted research into atmospheric

disturbances created by high speed spacecraft and the effects of electrostatic fields o n j e t s , at University College, London.

D r J . A. Thompson, Senior Lecturer, M i d d l e Eastern Studies, spent most of his leave in Israel studying methods of teaching M o d e r n Hebrew and v i s i t i n g archaeological sites.

D r F. J . T o l k m i t t , Psychology, v i s i t e d Psychology departments in America and West Germany and taught at the University of Kassel.

D r G. D. Watson, French, v i s i t e d Paris and completed an article on A n d r e ' Gide.

D r H. C. Watson, Mechanical Engineering, carried out t w o research pro- grammes at the Imperial College, London. They were The Study of Pollutant Formation in Flames and The Influence of Vehicle Driving Patterns on Urban Pollution.

Professor D. O. White, M i c r o b i o l o g y , spent his leave mainly in London. He completed a book on the biology of animal viruses and spent six months w o r k i n g in an i m m u n o l o g y laboratory in University College.

M r ft. H. Wilkinson, Physics, gained observational experience at the Basscha Observatory, situated near Bandung in West Java. He also lectured at the Institute Technologi Bandung.

D r J . H. Wilson, Agriculture, v i s i t e d universities and agricultural research centres in North A m e r i c a , the U.K. a n d New Zealand.

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