CONGRESS PROGRAMME
CONGRESS PROGRAMME
Below are reproduced the principal parts of the programme issued to
participants at the Congress.
Contents
Frontispiece — H.R.H. The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, K.G.
Page 3 Contents.
4 * The National Society for Photogrammetry. (Council, Hon. Members, Member Societies, Technical
Commissions).
5 President's Welcome.
6 & 7 Ninth Congress. (Patronage, Organising & Aiding Bodies, Officials and Services).
8-10 * General Information.
11 * Summary of Excursions, Tours, and the Ladies’ Programme.
12-18 Technical Commissions, Composition with Lists of Invited Papers, Reports and Presented Papers, in
alphabetical order of authors.
19 Film Programme.
20-37 Congress Time-Tables:
38 -39 Congress Exhibitions.
40 * Map: “Congress Neighbourhood”, scale : 0,560.
* Inside Back Cover: Map: “Congress Precincts”, scale : 3,520.
* Cover: back and front — Reproduction of Vertical Air Photograph of the Congress neighbourhood, scale
about 1 : 10,000.
This brief Programme tries to tell you everything about Congress activities that you will want to know, but there may be
some errors or omissions. Important changes will be notified by Bulletins or Notices, and supplementary information
may be got from the Information Bureau in Macmillan Hall.
* Not here reproduced
A Welcome from the President
I bid you a friendly welcome to London. Welcome on behalf of the Congress Board who
have undertaken the task of organizing your congress.
I know that however much thought and work we may have put into making the arrangements
for your reception and for your activities, those arrangements can never quite reach the
ideal of being at all times in all ways what all of you might desire. Nevertheless, we hope
you will find them adequate and will make full and profitable use of them.
A congress affords certain opportunities that are exceptional, perhaps unique, amongst
those afforded by other available means of exchanging thoughts and experiences. The
fact of actually meeting men of like profession from distant lands, working with them,
discussing with them, and relaxing with them, even for so short a period as a fortnight,
can strike the spark which sets off new exchanges or stimulates current ones. It has been
amongst our aims to provide conditions favourable for such personal contacts and the
meeting of minds across thefrontiers of language and of outlook which too often keep us apart.
I thank you for supporting the Congress with your presence. I thank also the presidents and
boards of the commissions for preparing the technical programme. And I thank the
exhibitors for their valuable support.
You are welcome to London, and may you leave it well satisfied.