“The Surface Science
Show of the Year”
Interest. in vacuum technology
has probably never been so well

Some of the nation’s leading
scientists in the field of vacuum

Chapter of the American Vacuum

than 200 attending the symposium,
during which more than 40 technical papers were presented.
Among 72 persons completing
the short course on vacuum tech-

plications for enrollment in the

technicians from the Laboratory,
an equal number from the Sandia
Corporation and two students from
Los Alamos High School.

35 classroom seats reserved for the

demonstrated to the New Mexico

Society (AVS) as it was recently in
Los Alamos when the chapter, for
the first time, combined its Annual

Meeting and Technical Symposium with a short course.

The event, co-sponsored by the

Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory,

was “the surface science show of
the year,” said Claude Winkleman,
K.-3, chairman of the New Mexico

chapter who was responsible for
the technical part of the program.
Surface science, as it applies to
vacuum equipment, is now included as a division of the AVS.
14

technology were among the more

nology were 35 staff members and

The course, the most elementary

of a series of three offered by the
Society, was directed by L. C.

Beavis, a recognized authority in

vacuum technology from Sandia,
who wasalso the principal lecturer.

Karl

Johnson,

CMB-II,

chatr-

man of the New Mexico chapter’s
Educational

Committee, said

ap-

short course far exceeded expecta-

tions. He noted that more than 250
personnel from LASL alone had

applied for enrollment. To resolve
the problem of who would fill the
Laboratory, enrollment was limited
to four employees from each di-

vision, based on the recommenda-

tions of division leaders. Winkleman and Johnson noted that the

possibility of offering the course
again later in the fall for LASL
employees only is being investi-

gated,

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