Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2016
The Forty-Fifth Wilbur Wright Memorial Lecture, “Advanced Education and Academic Research in Aeronautics” was given before the Society by Dr. Clark B. Millikan, Hon.F.I.A.S., F.R.Ae.S., on 13th September 1957, at the Institution of Civil Engineers, Great George St., London, before a large and distinguished audience which included H.R.H. The Prince of the Netherlands and a number of the Americans who had attended the Sixth Anglo-American Aeronautical Conference. Sir George Edwards, C.B.E., B.Sc, F.R.Ae.S., President of the Society, presided. As has now become customary the principal awards of the Society awarded by the Council for the year were presented before the lecture (see July and October 1957 Journals). This year they included Honorary Fellowship of the Society which was accepted by His Royal Highness, The Prince of the Netherlands.
Introducing the Lecturer, Sir George Edwards said:–Dr. Millikan was born in Chicago in 1903, he graduated from Yale University in 1924 with the degree of Ph.B. and received a Ph.D. degree in physics and mathematics at the California Institute of Technology in 1928. In that year he was appointed Assistant Professor at the California Institute, in 1934 he became Assistant Professor, and since 1940 he has been a full Professor in the Aeronautics Department. He was a member of the Executive Committee of the Institute from 1945 to 1947 and was appointed Director of the Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory in 1949. He has been Director of Wind Tunnel Testing at the California Institute since 1935, and Director of the Southern California Cooperative Wind Tunnel since it began operations in 1945. He is Chairman of the C.I.T. Trustees Jet Propulsion Laboratory Committee.
A Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society and an Honorary Fellow of the Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences, of which he was President in 1937, he is also a member of a number of other Societies. In 1948 the British Government awarded him the King's Medal for Service in the Cause of Freedom, and in 1949 he received the United States Medal for Merit.
Dr. Millikan is currently serving as Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Committee to the U.S. Secretary of Defense and as Chairman of the Aircraft and Guided Missiles Panel of the U.S.A.F. Scientific Advisory Board. He is also a member of the Army's Ballistic Research Laboratories' Scientific Advisory Committee, Chairman of the Sub- Committee on Fluid Mechanics and a member of the Aerodynamics Committee of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics.
Note on page 797 * In this connection, I must express my deep gratitude to the scientific directors of the major government agencies involved who most kindly, and I am afraid, at the expense of considerable trouble, made available most of the data on which this survey rests.
Note on page 800 * In the Introduction to a report “Basic Research in Electronics” prepared for the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Research and Development) in May 1956.
Note on page 809 * Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society, August 1957.