THE EDITOR'S WEB 347 



Dorothy Purdy Hillas is a lover of nature and has artistic 

 tastes and ability as well. She and her husband are both recent 

 graduates of Cornell and both are devoted to the life out-of- 

 doors and enjoy together what Mother Nature so gladly reveals to 

 their unsealed and sympathetic eyes. 



Dr. Leon Augustus Hausman is a zoologist; he has been an 

 instructor in zoology and biology at Cornell and now has a teaching 

 and research position in Rutgers College. He has already won a 

 name for excellent work among scientists and is an authority 

 upon the structure of the hair of mammals. His wife is Ethel 

 Hinckley Hausman, who has often contributed to the Review. 

 We wish that Dr. Hausman had more time to give to the writing 

 of poetry which in our opinion is of very high qualtiy. 



Miss Eva Marian Provost is the kind of teacher all too rare in 

 our public schools. She is a woman of refined and charming 

 personality and is intensely interested and devoted to her work 

 as a teacher. Her teaching subjects are wide in range including 

 English and art; but whatever she teaches she enriches with her 

 knowledge and love of nature. For years she led a volunteer bird 

 class consisting of her pupils, to the Brooklyn parks each Sat- 

 urday. The series of astronomy charts made by her pupils are 

 remarkable for their beauty, accuracy and workmanship. 



Gladys A. Harper is at home in Yardley, Pa. She is a teacher 

 of first grade pupils and believes there is nothing too good for her 

 little folks. Therefore she has prepared herself in nature-study so 

 that she may make their lives more interesting. 



