(J2 ENTOMOLOGICAL, NEWS. [Feb., 'l6 



ence, The Fruits, Prospects, and Lessons of Recent Biological Science. 

 GLENN W. HERRICK, Ithaca, N. Y., annual address of the President 

 of the Amer. Ass. Econ. Ent, The Need of a Broad Liberal Training 

 for the Economic Entomologist ANTHONY ZELENY, University of 

 Minnesota, The Dependence of Progress in Science upon the Develop- 

 ment of Instruments, (Vice-Presidential Address before Section 



B.J Symposium on The Basis of Individuality in Organisms, C. M. 



CHILD, E. G. CONKLIN, O. C. GLASER, C. E. McCLUNG and H. V. NEAL 

 (Amer. Soc. Zool.) F. E. CLEMENTS, Climaxes and climates of West- 

 ern North America (Bot. Soc. Amer.). DR. C. GORDON HEWITT, Do- 

 minion Entomologist, Ottawa, Canada, A Review of Applied Ento- 

 mology in the British Empire.* W. H. LONGLEY, Goucher College, The 

 Doubtful Validity of the Hypothesis of Warning and Immunity Col- 

 or (Amer. Soc. Zool.). F. M. WEBSTER, U. S. Bureau of Entomology, 

 Ethnoentomology.* 



CYTOLOGY. DR. FRANK R. LILLIE, The History of the Fertiliza- 

 tion Problem. (Address as president of the Naturalists and as vice- 

 president of Section F, A. A. A. S.) F. PAYNE, Indiana University, 

 The Mitochondria in the Germ Cells of the Male of Cryllotalpa 

 borealis. (Amer. Soc. Zool.) CHAS. W. METZ, Carnegie Institution of 

 Washington, Pairing of Chromosomes in the Diptera, and Sections 

 Showing Pairing of Chromosomes in the Diptera. (Exhibit, Amer. 

 Soc. Zool.) 



PHYSIOLOGY. WM. L. DOLLEY, JR., Randolph Macon College. 

 Negative Orientation in Vanessa antiopa. (Amer. Soc. Zool.) BRAD- 

 LEY M. PATTON, Western Reserve Medical School, The Change of the 

 Blowfly Larva's Photosensitivity with Age. (Amer. Soc. Zool.) C. H. 

 RICHARDSON, New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, The At- 

 traction of Diptera to Ammonia.* N. E. MC!NDOO, U. S. Bureau of 

 Entomology, The Olfactory-Gustatory Sense of the Honey Bee,* and 

 The Olfactory Organs of Lepidoptera. (Amer. Soc. Zool.) F. E. 

 CHIDESTER, New Jersey Agric. Exper. Station, The Influence of Sa- 

 linity upon the Development of the Salt Marsh Mosquito.* E. P. 

 FELT, Albany, N. Y., Climate and Variations in the Habits of the Cod- 

 ling Moth. (This paper is concerned chiefly in recording variations 

 observed in New York State and attempts to explain these by local 

 variations in temperature.) A. FRANKLIN SHULL, University of Mich- 

 igan, Parthenogenesis and Sex in Anthothrips rcrbasci* W. MOORE, 

 University of Minnesota, How Gases enter Insects.* S. I. KORN- 

 HAUSER, Northwestern University, Changes in Thclia bimacnlata (Fab- 

 ricius) Induced by Insect Parasites. (Amer. Soc. Zool.) A. C. BUR- 

 RILL, University of Wisconsin, House-Ant Trails and Their Bearing 

 on Economic Control.* RALPH R. PARKER, Bozeman, Mont., Disper- 

 sion of Musca domestica Linnaeus Under City Conditions. (An ac- 

 count of dispersion experiments conducted on a large scale.) 



