Page:The Armed Forces Institute of Pathology-ItsFirstCentury.djvu/387

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
INTO THE SECOND CENTURY
375

Figure 127.—The Institute Organization, 1962.

during the year 1961; the Mail Room, which handled nearly 350,000 letters and 33,000 parcels, and mimeographed nearly 1,900,000 sheets in the year; the preparation of reports and forms, and the reception of foreign nationals, of whom 90, representing 34 countries, were at the Institute as trainees and 704, representing 79 countries, were there as visitors in the year 1961.[1]

Other administrative units reporting to the directorate through the Executive Officer are the Budget and Management Office (Cdr. Heyward E. Hall, MSC, USN), and the Personnel Division (Lt. Col. Walter F. Maybaum, MSC, USA); the Supply and Services Division (Maj. Bryce L. Moschel, MSC, USA), which reported that "shortage of funds for procurement of equipment plagued the Division during the entire year," to such an extent that the equipment replacement program was "practically nonexistent"; and the Technical Liaison Office (1st Lt. John L. Bryant, Jr., USAF, MSC). The Technical Liaison Office issued the monthly "AFIP Letter" to a mailing list of more than 2,300 members of the medical, dental, veterinary, and allied scientific professions, while the

  1. Annual Report, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, 1961, pp. 240-247.