124 STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE 



Emshwiller, Marian Harper, Alberta Bates, Marion Stein, Lilian Lewton, 

 and Corlan Lyman. These yonng women engaged iji a dnal contest with 

 Western >State Normal, in which each institution won one debate. 



I wish to renew my recommendation that the personnel and courses 

 in modern languages be organized as a separate department. To what 

 I said in my last report I would add that, since both Trofessor Hughes 

 and Professor Lebel have been here ior a number of years, it seems to 

 me that they deserve the recognition of having their work separately 

 departmentalized. Furthermore the demand for the addition of secgnd- 

 year German, third-year French and second-year Spanish would indicate 

 that the time is near when the full time of three or four persons will 

 ibe needed to take care of the work in modern languages. 



On the whole the year has been an excellent one for the department. 

 The staff has been an able one and the morale excellent. We have been 

 seriously handicapped, and much of our time has l)een wasted, b.y the 

 crowding to which we have been subjected in our office and there have 

 been other conditions making our work difficult; but I look forward to a 

 speedy remedy of the most serious of our difficulties and believe that 

 the year of 192o-'2J: will be marked by substantial ]trogTess. 



Kespectfullv submitted, 



' W. W. JOHNSTON, 

 Professor of English and Modern Languages. 



REPORT OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ENTOMOLOGY 



To the President — 



Sir: — Following is a brief report of the Department of Entomology 

 for the year ending June 30, 1023 : — 



During the year the following changes in i)ersonnel have taken place 

 in the department: Mr. S. T. Flynn left during the summer of 1922 and 

 was succeeded in the fall l)y Mr. C. F. Jolley, Graduate Assistant, who 

 took his major in parasitology under the direction of Dr. Chandler. Mr. 

 Jolley will leave during the present summer. His successor has not yet 

 been appointed. At the beginning of the fall term Mr. J. C. Kremer was 

 appointed Instructor in Apiculture for Vocational students. Dr. 

 Chandler has been transferred to the Department of Bacteriology^ in the 

 new ^'eterinary Division, the transfer to take place July 1st. 



During the Summer of 1922 the following courses were given : 



Entomology I (Introductory). 



Entomology II (Fruit Insects). 



Entomology F3 (For Federal Vocational Training Students, running 



twelve weeks). 

 Entomology IXa (Option for seniors in Apiculture). 

 Also lecturers were given to Agricultural High School teachers. 



