334 



AM ERIC AX FORESTRY 



OPEN TANK PRESERVATION PEANT 



MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY 



The courses in the auxiliary sciences 

 and other subjects are presented by the 

 faculties of the departments of the 

 University under which the respective 

 subjects naturally fall. In most cases 

 it is now possible to present these sub- 

 jects in courses especially arranged for 

 forestry students. The faculty of for- 

 estry consists of Frank G. Miller, M. 

 F. Yale, Dean ; Hugo Winkenwerder, 

 M. F. Yale, Associate Professor; E. 

 T. Clark, M. F. Yale, Assistant Pro- 

 fessor; Bror L. Grondal, A.B. Beth- 

 any, Graduate Assistant ; Bert P. Kirk- 

 land, Yale, Su])ervis()r Snoqualmie Na- 

 tional Forest, Lecturer on Forest ]Man- 

 agement ; O. P. M. Goss, C. E. Purdue, 

 in charge Timber Physics; William T. 

 Andrews, Instructor in Mensuration 

 and Lumbering. The work given by 

 Messrs. Kirkland. Goss and Andrews 

 is equivalent to that ordinarily given by 

 one instructor on full time. In addi- 



tion 10 officials of District G of the 

 Forest Service annually give a total of 

 SO lectures in their respective lines. 

 These lectures and a course in Veter- 

 inary Science by D. W. Harrington, 

 D.V.M., are arranged more especially 

 to meet the needs of the Short Course 

 Students. 



The forests about Seattle give the 

 students every opportunity for study 

 and practice. There are magnificent 

 forests of virgin timber and smaller 

 areas of second growth forests, both of 

 which are invaluable for demonstra- 

 tions in silviculture and practice in 

 cruising. Much of the timber is now 

 being logged. This gives the student 

 not only a chance to study the old as 

 well as the most improved methods of 

 logging, but also the location and con- 

 struction of camps and roads ; it fur- 

 thermore gives him logs to scale, it 

 gives him felled trees to make volume 

 and growth studies ; and it allows him 



