Professor Phillip V. Tobias, B.Sc. Dr. Bertram A. Bradlow, M.B., B.Ch. 1964, B.Sc. Hons., 1947, M.B., B.Ch. 1938, M.D. 1949, who became a Member 1950, Ph. D. 1953, Head of Department of the Royal College of Physicians in of Anatomy at the University, has been Edinburgh in 1953, has been elected a chosen as one of Junior Chamber Fellow of the College. Dr. Bradlow ’s four outstanding young was awarded a fellowship of the men of 1966. American College of Cardiology in 1965. Earlier this year he received the He is also a Member of the Royal Simon Biesheuvel Medal for 1966 for his College of Physicians of London. contribution to the knowledge of man ★ in Africa, in the fields of palaentology, Professor Harold Jenkins, D. Litt. anthropology, genetics and evolution. 1945, has been appointed Regius Profes­ The medal is awarded by the S.A. Asso­ sor of Rhetoric and English Literature ciation for the Advancement of Science. at Edinburgh University. Professor Tobias spent several months He was lecturer in English at Wits this year studying ancient man-like from 1936 till 1945 when he returned fossils excavated by Dr. L. S. B. Leakey to the University College, London, as from the Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. He Reader in English. Since 1954 he has received a grant from the National Dr. B. Bradlow. been Professor of English Language and Science Foundation of Washington, D.C. ★ Literature at Westfield College, London. to undertake this research. Dr. K. Somers, M.B., B.Ch. 1949. has ★ Professor S. S. Israelstam, M.Sc. 1932, In September Professor Tobias repre­ been appointed as Reader in Medicine Ph.D. 1950, Associate Professor in the sented South Africa at the annual con­ at Makerere University College Medical Department of Chemistry, including Bio­ ference of the British Association for the School, Kampala, Uganda. She will Advancement of Science at Nottingham. represent the Medical School at the chemistry, has been re-elected a member He also studied fossil hominids from world congress on medical education in of the Council of the S.A. Chemical Institute. He is a Past President and three continents in museums in France, New Delhi in November. Holland, England, Greece and Hungary. an honorary member of the Institute and ★ ★ has served on its Council since 1939. Mr. Walter Hess, B.A. 1960. has been He was re-appointed Honorary Direc­ Dr. Louis Franklin Freed, M.D. 1951, appointed Vice-Principal of King David tor of Alumni Affairs of Convocation in a part-time lecturer in the Department Primary School, Victory Park, Johannes­ of Psychiatry of the University, has April. burg, from January 1967. ★ been awarded the degree of D.Litt. et Mr. Hess obtained his Transvaal Phil, in philosophy by the University of Dr. D. K. Craig, B.Sc. 1950, M.Sc. Teachers’ Higher Diploma at the 1960, of the Division of Radiation and South Africa. College of Education and Isotopes, Atomic Energy Board, attended Dr. Freed’s thesis analysed the con­ taught at the Roosevelt High School. three international conferences recently tribution to philosophy of Professor and presented a paper at the first con­ R. F. A. Hoernle, who was Head of the ★ gress of the International Radiation Department of Philosophy of the Uni­ Mr. K. C. Gilson, B.Sc. (Eng.) 1965, versity from 1922 to 1943, and at one has been admitted to the Harvard Association in Rome. time President of Convocaion. Graduate School of Business Adminis­ ★ ★ tration for the two-year master’s degree course. Mr. Alfred Hoffman, B.A. 1946, LLB. 1952, has played one of the main roles ★ in “Kilroy Was,” a new play by Chris­ Dr. E. W. C. Emms, M.B., B.Ch. 1951, topher Gilmore staged at the Little has received one of the two SKF Theatre Club, Garrick Yard, St. Martin's Laboratories Awards to general prac­ Lane, London. titioners for post-graduate study in 1966. ★ He will attend a course in the Depart­ ment of Gynaecology and Obstetrics at Mr. Christopher Ballantine, B.Mus. Baragwanath Hospital, Johannesburg. 1965, B.Mus. Hons. 1966, of Johannes­ burg, has been awarded the Julius ★ Robinson Scholarship to take his Mr. Angus R. Morris, B.Sc. (Eng.) Master’s degree in music at Cambridge. 1954, M.Sc. (Eng.) 1959, Chief Civil Engineer of Superconcrete Pipes (S.A.) Ltd., and Mr. A. L. Ochse, B.Sc. (Eng.) I960, Production Manager, attended the international congress of the precast concrete industry in London during May. They visited concrete industries in M r. P. H. Levick, B.Sc. (Eng.) Britain and Europe studying latest 1950, formerly Divisional Man­ production 'and development methods. ager of the Pipes Division of Mr. Morris also attended a congress Superconcrete Pipes (S.A.) Ltd., of the F.I.P. (Fédération Internationale who has been appointed General M r. Osche M r. Morris de la Précontrainte) in Paris during June. Manager.

36 OBITUARY

Mr. Harry Colman, B.A. 1936, Professor J. M . Edelstein, one o f LL.B. 1938, a Johannesburg advocate South Africa’s leading orthopaedic and a part-time lecturer in civil surgeons and a former Professor of procedure in the Department of Law Orthopaedic Surgery at the University, at Wits since 1956, died after a died in Johannesburg on August 18, heart attack on July 6, aged 52. aged 69. He practised for some years as an Professor Edelstein held the Chair attorney before joining the Johannes­ of Orthopaedic Surgery from its burg Bar in 1945. There he built establishment in 1962 until his re­ up a large practice. tirement in 1964. His association Mr. Colman was recognised as an with, the University began before it expert on court procedure, and con­ was proclaimed in 1922. He was tributed considerably behind the the first Lecturer and Demonstrator scenes to its improvement. He was in Anatomy at the Medical School always deeply interested in the wel­ (inaugurated in 1921). fare of the University and of the For many years he was head of Faculty of Law in particular. the Orthopaedic Department at the Prof. J. M. Edelstein He leaves a w idow , Mrs. Pearl Johannesburg General Hospital and he Colman, B.Com. 1937, B.A. 1959, was also consultant surgeon to the ★ B.A. Hons. 1960, M.A. 1963, Chamber of Mines. Assistant Student Counsellor at W its Professor Edelstein graduated from and three sons, one of whom, Dr. Edinburgh University in 1918 and Dr. A. W . Rowe, B.Sc. (Eng.) Martin Colman, is also a graduate o f received his F.R.C.S. (E din.) in 1931 1923, M.Sc. (Eng.) 1937, former Wits (M.B., B.Ch. 1964). and his Master of Surgery, Ortho­ Director of the Witwatersrand Tech­ paedics, at Liverpool in 1933. nical College in Johannesburg, died In South Africa, as a specialist in Durban in October, aged 64. surgeon, he pioneered orthopaedics, After graduating, Dr. Rowe worked devoting much of his time and energy on the Railways and then spent two to improving the lot of crippled years at the University of London, children. where he did research into diesel For many years he served the Hope fuel-injection phenomena and the Convalescent Home, the Hope Train­ development of a cathode ray pressure ing Home for Crippled Children and indicator. For this work he received the Cripple Care Association. an M.Sc. from Wits and a Ph.D. from From 1942 to 1946 Professor the University of London. Edelstein was orthopaedic specialist On his return to South Africa in to the Union Defence Force. He 1937 he was appointed Headmaster founded the Orthopaedic Association of the Technical Day School of the of South Africa, of which he was Natal Technical College and later of made Hon. Life President. the Maritzburg Technical College. He leaves two daughters. He played a leading part in the ★ development of the Witwatersrand Mr. H. Colman Mr. John Janies Smith, B.A. 1 934, Technical College, and retired in Rector of the Transvaal College of June last year after 20 years as Professor Ellison Kahn, of the Education for Asiatics, died at his Director. Department of Law, writes this home in Johannesburg recently, aged trib u te : 56. Mr. Smith taught at several I was an intimate friend of Harry schools before being appointed Rector Colman’s for more than 20 years. of the college in 1961. He leaves He was not cast in the common a wife and son. mould. There are qualities that one ★ looks for in a man: sincerity, probity, Dr. Ralph Metlitzky, B.Sc. 1960, compassion, kindness, tolerance, M.B., B.Ch. 1963, who was pediatric modesty, humour and wisdom. Few registrar at Baragwanath Hospital, have them all, and Harry Colman Johannesburg, died in a motor was one of these few. accident on August 7. In his personal and professional ★ life his innate goodness shone out Dr. Max Joffe, M.B., B.Ch. 1930, of his every act. His example will died on June 29 in London, where live in the memory of the many he had practised as a psychologist who knew him and by whom he was since qualifying in 1952. Dr. A. W. Rowe beloved.

37 Huge development at A E & CI creating many opportunities for engineers (all types) and chemists; also for mathematicians, physicists, arts and commerce graduates. A E&C I interests so vast, always looking for top-notch staff for variety of interesting jobs. Benefits highly un-microscopic; in fact easily discernable to naked eye. Approach-formula very simple; just write to: The Personnel Manager, African Explosives and Chemical Industries Limited, P.O. Box 1122, Johannesburg. AFRICAN EXPLOSIVES AND CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES LIMITED

C al. 4845

38 OBITUARY (continued)

Mr. F. R. Chamberlain, B.A. 1935, Mr. F. B. Williamson, B.Com. Principal of the John Orr Technical 1932, Managing Director of the High School from 1958 till his Johannesburg Board of Executors, retirement in April, died of a heart died on June 5. He was also a direc­ attack on September 9. tor of the C.N.A. and the Automobile Mr. Chamberlain was President of Association and of other companies. the S.R.C. at Wits in 1933 and He was Chairman of the Board of 1934 and also o f the S.R.C. at the Roedean Girls’ School for a number Johannesburg Teachers’ Training of years and served on the Council College in 1933. of St. Martin’s-in-the-Veld Anglican In 1937 he was appointed a tutor Church, Rosebank. in English at the Witwatersrand Technical College and in 1944 he

Mr. F. B. Williamson became Senior Lecturer in English at the Johannesburg Technical High and Trades School. He was President of the Federation of Technical Col­ leges Teaching Staffs’ Association in 1956. During the Second World War he served as a captain in charge of Mr. Douglas G. Wishart, B.Sc. cadet training in the Witwatersrand, (Eng.) 1922, who died on Mr. F. R. Chamberlain Eastern Province and Natal A ugust 13. Commands.

UNDERGRADS ARE OVERJOYED DONS ARE DELIGHTED

They invariably find at the University Bookshop just the educational, scienti­ fic and technical books they want. We have a staff of specialists who know more about books of this kind than the people who wrote them. Almost. And if you aren’t within scooter screech of our shop, we can send the books by post. We have brought the Mail Order business to such a fine art that we deal with every request immediately. So come in and see us, or drop us a line, or open fire on the telephone. Acti labores jucundi.

UNIVERSITY BOOKSHOP 23 Bertha Street, Braamfontein, Johannesburg Phone: 724-8541 Central News Agency Limited BRAAMFONTEIN

39 COOKE, TROUGHTON & SIMMS SOUTH AFRICA (PTY.) LTD.

M.B.S. BUILDING, 16, WOLMARANS STREET, BRAAMFONTEIN, JOHANNESBURG. • ®ox ^^1 Telephone 22-1394/5

MICROSCOPES AND LABORATORY BALANCES

------fo r ------STUDENTS METALLURGISTS LABORATORY TECHNICIANS RESEARCH INSTITUTES

AGENTS FOR BARR & STROUD SCIENTIFIC EQUIPMENT

FOR THE BEST IN . . . CONVOCATION BLAZERS, TIES AND WEARING APPAREL

McCULLAGH & BOTHWELL'S 44, RISSIK STREET — JOHANNESBURG P-O- Box 1601 Phone 22-7287

40 Mr. Noel G. Garson, B.A. 1952, B.A. Hons. 1953, M.A. 1956, Senior Lecturer in history at the University, has been IXeir professors appointed appointed to the Chair of History from physician at the Transvaal Memorial Dr. Derek S. Henderson, Director of January next year. Hospital for Children. He then spent the Computer Centre of the University He succeeds Professor J. S. Marais, two years as a medical officer on the of the Witwatersrand, has been appointed the eminent South African historian, staff of the Chamber of Mines. Professor of Computer Science in the who is retiring after 22 years at the In 1957 he was admitted to member­ Department of Electrical Engineering University. ship of the Royal College of Physicians from January 1. Mr. Garson, who is 34, obtained his of Edinburgh after attending post­ This is the first Chair in computer B.A. with several first-class passes, and graduate courses in medicine in Britain. science to be established in Africa. his B.A. Hons, degree in history in the He then returned to South Africa where The University has led the way in first class. As the holder of the Herbert he was appointed a medical registrar at computer science in this country. It Ainsworth Scholarship in Modern the Johannesburg General Hospital. He became the first university in the country History, he had the degree of Master was registered as a specialist physician to own an instrument in 1962 and a of Arts conferred upon him with in 1961 and was appointed to his second more powerful one was installed distinction. present post at the University in the in 1964. From 1955 to 1956 Mr. Garson read same year. Dr. Henderson holds degrees from the history at Cambridge where he obtained Universities of Oxford, Cambridge. the degree of Bachelor of Arts with a ★ Harvard and Rhodes and has attended first-class in Part II of the Historical several international conferences on com­ Tripos. In 1957 he returned to Wits, Mr. Philip Segal, Senior Lecturer at puters in America. He has also visited where he lectured in history and the University of , has been Britain, the Continent and Australia to economic history before being appointed appointed to one of two professorships study computer developments. to the permanent staff of the Department in the Department of English from From 1960 to 1962 he was one of a of History in 1960. He was appointed next January. small American team responsible for the Senior Lecturer in 1964. The vacancy has been caused by the architecture of a computer, which From 1962 to 1964 Mr. Garson con­ retirement of Professor A. C. Partridge changed the entire concept of computers tinued his researches in England as after 12 years’ service. Professor A. G. by introducing the idea of a family of the holder of a Nuffield Dominion Woodward, who is already in the de­ compatible and open-ended machines. Travelling Fellowship. partment, will succeed Professor Part­ Dr. Henderson graduated in science The author of several publications, he ridge as its head. from Rhodes University in 1949, and is working on a study of party politics Mr. Segal, who holds the degrees of then went to Lincoln College, Oxford, in South Africa from 1910 to 1924. Master of Arts of the University of Cape as a Rhodes Scholar. He gained a first He is vice-chairman of the University’s Town and the University College, in the Honours School of Mathematics Academic Staff Association. London, has had 25 years’ experience of in 1951. He then spent two years at lecturing. His main field of research is St. John’s College, Cambridge, where he ★ in 16th-century English literature and he read for the Logic Section of the Moral Dr. Robert W. Charlton, B.Sc. 1948, has lectured on a variety of topics, in Sciences Tripos. M.B., B.Ch. 1952, Tutorial Physician in particular on Shakespeare and Eliza­ After a brief period of lecturing in the Department of Medicine at the bethan drama, on modern poetry and mathematics at Wits he went to Harvard University has been appointed to the the modern novel and on history of and in 1960 he received the degree of Chair of Experimental and Clinical criticism. . He spent two Pharmacology from January next year. He has acted in productions in Cape years as a systems planner with a com­ Dr. Charlton, 36, who holds the Town’s Little Theatre, and been chair­ puter corporation at Poughkeepsie, in degree of Doctor of Medicine, is the man of the Cape Literary Society, the the United States. author of many publications, several of English Association of Cape Town and In 1962 he was appointed Senior Lec­ them dealing with iron metabolism. His the Friends of Italy. He is fluent in turer in the Department of Electrical work has attracted considerable attention French, German and Italian and has a Engineering at Wits. He was appointed overseas, and in August he attended an close knowledge of their literature. Director of its Computer Centre in 1964. international congress of pharmacology The author of several publications, he Dr. Henderson’s wife, Mrs. Thelma in Sydney. is a foundation member of the editorial Henderson, who is a graduate of Wits After qualifying at Wits, Dr. Charlton board of Contrast, a South African (B.A. Hons. 1957), is Dean of the served for a year as a senior house quarterly. Women’s Residence.

41 UNIVERSITY OF THE WITWATERSRAND, JOHANNESBURG FACULTY OF ENGINEERING POSTGRADUATE DIPLOMA COURSES 1967

Postgraduate courses leading to the Graduate Diploma in Engineering (G.D.E.) are being offered in the Faculty of Engineering, commencing February 1967.

The basic entrance requirement is either the degree of Bachelor of Science in Engineering or the degree of Bachelor of Science with Elonours with an appropriate grouping of subjects.

While some of the courses require full-time study at the University opportunities are available to engineers in employment to pursue courses by part-time attendance.

Details of the syllabuses, conditions of admission and application forms are ob­ tainable from the Assistant Registrar, Faculty of Engineering, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.

42 Professor B. J. S. Wimble, Dean of the Faculty of Commerce and Head of Two new Associate Professors the Department of Accounting, has been given an award by the Port Elizabeth Chartered Accountants (S.A.) Students’ Mr. J. W. Brommert, Senior Lecturer Dr. S. Shippel, M B. B.Ch. 1940, M.D. Society. In the society’s opinion, he in the Department of Physics, has been 1956, Senior Lecturer in the Department contributed most to the profession of appointed an Associate Professor from of Pathology and Microbiology, has been accountancy in this country in 1965. January 1967, in recognition of his long appointed an Associate Professor from The society said the award was made and meritorius service on the staff of January 1, in recognition of his long for his contribution to the profession the University. There are seven other and meritorius service on the staff of both in published articles and through holders of the title at Wits. the University. the high standard of the training which Mr. Brommert, who has been a mem­ After qualifying in medicine Dr. Ship- the Department of Accounting at the ber of the staff since 1945, was born in pel joined the Department of Obstetrics University offers prospective accountants. Holland and came to South Africa in and Gynaecology as a lecturer. He was Of the 76 candidates who were 1933. After matriculating at Grey appointed Assistant Obstetrician and awarded the Certificate in the Theory College, Bloemfontein, he received his Gynaecologist on the joint staff of the of Accountancy of the University in 1964 B.Sc. degree at the University College Johannesburg General Hospital and the and who wrote the qualifying examin­ of the Orange Free State in 1941. He University in 1961. In that year, how­ ation conducted by the Public Ac­ then came to Wits, where the degree of ever, Dr. Shippel, who had decided to countants’ and Auditors’ Board last year B.Sc. Hons, was conferred upon him obtain a specialist qualification in path­ only one failed. The society considers in 1944. ology, was appointed Senior Lecturer in this a remarkable achievement. Appointed a graduate assistant in the the Department of Pathology and Micro­ following year, Mr. Brommert was made biology at the University. a temporary full-time lecturer in 1946 Dr. Shippel was awarded the degree ★ and was appointed to the permanent of M.D. by he University for a thesis staff a year later. In 1951 Mr. Brom­ on “The ovarian theca cell.” Professor L. A. Hurst, Head of the mert went to Cambridge, where he Department of Psychiatry and Mental Hygiene, flew to the United States in worked in the Cavendish Laboratory. ★ Mr. Brommert was appointed Senior September to read a paper at the inter­ national congress of human genetics in Lecturer in 1957 and in 1964 and 1965 Professor Karl Tober, Head of the Chicago. he was seconded to the S.A. Institute of Department of German, has helped to Physics to write a textbook on physics He visited centres of psychiatric and found the South African Association of of human genetical interest in America, for high schools. German Studies (Siidafrikanische Ger- Britain and Austria. ★ manistenverban — S.A.G.V.). The con­ stitution has been signed by members of Professor F. Sebba, Professor of all the German Departments of the ★ Physical and Inorganic Chemistry and South African universities and university Head of the Department of Chemistry, colleges — with the exception of Rhodes Dr. C. Wallace, lecturer in the Depart­ including Biochemistry, visited Australia, University — and a representative ment of Pathology and Microbiology, the United States and Iceland in August. committee has been elected. also attended the world congress of He lectured in Melbourne and took part It is proposed to establish the first human genetics in Chicago. in a research conference in New Hamp­ periodical in Africa for German Studies. shire. After lecturing in several Prof. Tober will be the editor, assisted ★ institutions in America he flew to Ice­ by Prof. J. Rosteutscher (U.C.T), Prof. land to discuss ion flotation there. W. Boeddinghaus (O.F.S) and Dr. Haller Mr. J. A. van Zyl, a lecturer in the ★ (Stellenbosch). Department of English, has taken up an Miss Margaret Marks, clinical tutor appointment as Visiting Assistant Profes­ and supervisor at the Speech, Voice and ★ sor of English at Moorhead State Col­ Hearing Clinic of the University, read lege, Minnesota. He is a former Rhodes a paper at an international seminar on Scholar. stuttering in Monterey, California, early in November. ★ She will also read a paper at the convention of the American Speech and Professor H. R. Hahlo of the Depart­ Hearing Council at Washington, D.C. ment of Law, and Mrs. Hahlo visited later this month. Canada and the United States from January to May and Britain in May and ★ June. Professor G. L. Isaacs, Head of the He lectured for the first term of the Department of Mathematics at Wits year at the University of McGill, Mon­ since 1960, leaves the University in treal, and also at the Universities of January for an 18-month appointment Tulane, Cornell, Louisiana State, Johns as Visiting Professor in Mathematics at Hopkins and London. He did research the State University of New York. He at the Institute of Advance Studies, joined the staff of Wits in 1952. Prof. H. R. Hahlo London.

43 J \.N Y member who knows the address of any of the following is asked to advise Convocation Office: ADDRESSES Miss H. L. Acutt, B.A., 1964; Miss K. Alexander, B.A., 1924; L. Anderson, B.Sc. (Min. Eng.), 1965; D. J. Andrew, B.Sc (Civil Eng), 1960; R. A. Andrews, B.Sc. (Civil Eng.), 1955; Miss PLEASE! T. G. Assael, B.A.. 1963; E. L. Atkinson, B.Sc. (Eng.), 1943; 1941; Miss S. De Burbure, B.Sc (Mech. Eng.), 1957; Miss H. M. W. Atkinson, B.Sc. (Civil Eng.), 1958. De Groof, B.Mus., 1957; S. D. Dickens, B.Sc. (Elec. Eng.), Miss J. S. R. Bacharach, B.A., 1966; D. M. Baillie, B.Sc. 1950; R. T. Doepel, B. A. (F.A.), 1964; H. H. Doeg, B.Sc. (Civil Eng.), 1964; T. A. Balfour, B.Sc. (Chem. Eng.), 1949; (Metall. Eng.), 1955; B. J. Drysdale, B.Sc. (Eng.), 1941; Miss A. J. Ball, B.Sc. (Mech. Eng.), 1962; L. A. Barac, B.Arch., M. T. G. P. Duarte, B.Sc. Hons., 1963; V. W. A. Duke, B.Sc. 1960; Miss S. Baran, M.A., 1963; W. R. Barker, B.Sc. (Civil (Eng.), 1939; P. S. Dymott, B.Sc. (Chem. Eng.), 1958. Eng.), 1957; K. J. Barnard, M.Sc. (Eng.), 1960; Miss S. J. H. Eckstein, B.Mus., 1956; R. F. Edwards, B.Sc. (Mech. Barrett, B.Sc. Hons., 1959; Miss A. Bass, B.A., 1965; Mrs. Eng.), 1954; R. Ehrlich, B.Sc. (Civil Eng.), 1948; G. H. H. L. Wiggill (nee Bax), B.Sc. (Physio.), 1958; T. B. Bean, Elferink, B.Sc. (Q.S.), 1960; P. M. Elk, B.Arch., 1956; W. J. B. Com., 1963; Z. M. Beattie, B.A., 1965; J. G. A. Becker, Ellis, B.Sc., 1959; J. A. Eloff, B.Sc. (Mech. Eng.), 1951; Miss M.Sc. (Elec. Eng.), 1961; J. M. Bremner, B.Sc., 1961; P. B. L. Engleitner, B.Sc., 1960; B. J. Erasmus, B.Sc. (Eng.), 1934; Brine, B.Com., 1948; A. L. Brown, B.Com., 1954; G. A. V. D. Ernst, B.Mus., B.A., 1952; Miss Esme Esterhuizen, Brown, M.Sc. (Mech. Eng.), 1964; C. F. Brugman, B.Sc. B.A., 1964. (Eng.), 1950; N. W. Bulling. C.T.A., 1964; P. J. Burman, Dr. A. H. Fabian, PhD., 1964; G. M. Fallows, B.A., 1963; M.Sc., 1962. R. A. Featherstone, B.Sc. (Metall. Eng.), 1963; C. S. Fein- G. A. Campbell, B.Arch., 1952; D. D. Cannell, B.Sc., berg, B.Sc. (Elec. Eng.), 1960; M. Feldman, B.Sc. (Mech. 1963; G. Cawood, B.Sc. (Eng.) 1953; W. M. Chambers, Eng.), 1959; P. U. Fischer, B.Arch., 1943; W. R. Flook, B.Sc. B.Sc. (Eng.), 1950; Miss M. E. Chapman, B.Sc. (Physio.), (Metall. Eng.), 1950; R. A. Flowerday, B.Sc. (Min. Eng.), I960; P. C. H. Cloete, B.Sc. (Min. Eng.), 1965; Miss J. A. 1961; R. A. Forbes, B.Sc. (Elec. Eng.), 1957; B. G. Fordyce, Coetzee, M.Sc., 1945; B. J. Cohen, B.Arch., 1956; P. S. Cohen, B.Sc. (Min., Metall. Eng.), 1955; Miss D. B. H. B. Frames, B.Com., 1948; Miss R. L. G. Collett, B.A., 1965; C. A. B.Arch., 1963; P. N. France-Brotherton, B.Sc. (Mech. Eng.), Conchie, B.Sc. (Q.S.), 1960; R. J. Conn, B.Com., 1956; D. A. 1965; Miss M. F. Freed, B.A., 1964; Miss H. E. Friedman, Crombie, B.Sc. (Eng.), 1940; P. A. Croxon, B.Arch., 1961. B.A. (Log.), 1960; R. K. Frost, B.Sc. (Eng.). 1927; Miss N. C. O. Davel, B.Sc. (Min. Eng.), 1954; R. V. Davis, B.A., Furman, B.Com., 1955.

'ÉP

kitchen '71 means a well run home ltd Food kept perfectly, cooked perfectly. Constant hot water and a convenient place for everything. Fuchs- ware appliances and kitchen fitments are beautifully finished and full of practical features. Yet they are so reasonably priced. Ask to see them at your electrical dealer's.

- c^>

J ) )

Made bv C. J. F u ch s Ltd. Alberton, Transvaal South Africa's leading domestic appliance manufacturers Cal. 5896/96

44 DEEP-LEVEL MINING 10 DEEP-SEA TRAWLING

• f

Anglovaal is as much a part of our tains, labourers, chemists, geologists, country as the golden veld, the ageless typists and untold other categories. baobab, the kopjie, the kranz and kloof. The Anglovaal group embraces such The Anglovaal group is truly a South diverse fields as canning and collieries, Africa in miniature—in its past, its pre­ deep-level mining and deep-sea fish­ sent-day activities and its plans for the ing, manganese and metallurgy—an in­ future. Anglovaal employs over 84,000 tricate complex of companies working peopleandthis numberincludes miners, for the greater good of South Africa doctors, skilled technicians, sea cap­ and every segment of her population.

M ANGLOVAAL V A GREAT SOUTH AFRICAN ENTERPRISE

ANGLO-TRANSVAAL CONSOLIDATED INVESTMENT COMPANY, LIMITED Anglovaal House, Johannesburg, South Africa. Telephone: 838-8011. P.O. Box 7727

LPE 3517/R BLAZER

★ IN SUPER QUALITY ALL WOOL ENGLISH 16/17 oz. BARATHEA MATERIAL, SUPERBLY TAILORED COMPLETE WITH WIRE BADGE AND CRESTED BUTTON:

price R28.00

★ SEND FOR PATTERN OF THIS MATERIAL AND FEEL THIS MATERIAL FOR YOURSELF. ALSO EASY-TO-FOLLOW SELF MEASUREMENT FORM.

MARKHAMS l t d . ELOFF STREET JOHANNESBURG P.O. Box 1786, Johannesburg. Telephone 22-3127

PRINTED BY PALLAD IU M STATIONERS, 51 COMMISSIONER STREET, JOHANNESBURG

Collection Number: A1132 Collection Name: Patrick LEWIS Papers, 1949-1987

PUBLISHER:

Publisher: Historical Papers Research Archive, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa Location: Johannesburg ©2016

LEGAL NOTICES:

Copyright Notice: All materials on the Historical Papers website are protected by South African copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, or otherwise published in any format, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

Disclaimer and Terms of Use: Provided that you maintain all copyright and other notices contained therein, you may download material (one machine readable copy and one print copy per page) for your personal and/or educational non-commercial use only.

This collection forms part of a collection, held at the Historical Papers Research Archive, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.