I 



498 EXPERIMENT STATION RECORD. I Vol. 43 



A home economics building of modern design is to be ei'ected immediately. 



E. H. Hug+ies, superintendent of sliort courses and assistant to the de;in and 

 director, has accepted a position as professor of animal husl):iiidry at the Uni- 

 versity of California. Samuel Brody has been appointed professor of dairy- 

 chemistry, chiefly for research woric in connection with the Adams project on 

 factors influencing the comix)sition of milk. J. C. Wooley, professor of agricul- 

 tural engineering at the Idaho University and Station, has been appointed 

 professor of agricultural engineering vice E. W. Lehmann, resigned. 



Montana College and Station. — C. N. Arnett has returned as head of the 

 animal husbandry department, beginning July 1. H. E. Selby, instructor in 

 farm management at the Oregon College, has been appointed assistant in farm 

 management -investigations in the station. 

 . Nebraska University and Station. — The resignations on September 1 are jt 

 noted of John W. Calvin as professor of chemistry and associate chemist in the 1 

 station to become chemist in the experiment station of the Dominican Tlepublic; 

 P. L. Gaddi.s»as professor of agronomy and station agronomist to take charge 

 of a farm in Custer County; and C. K. Shedd as professor of agricultural 

 engineering to engage in commercial work. g 



Nevada Station. — The station is endeavoring to develop suitable pasturagej 

 or other feeds to enable the holding of immature lambs for four to sis weeks 

 later in the fall. At present these lambs are marketed in September when driven 

 out of the mountains by early snows, although those reared in eastern Nevada 

 are still too young for slaughter. Studies of desirable mixtures of grains and 

 clover for pasturage and other pasturage problems are also under way. 



New Hampshire College and Station. — Science notes the appointment of: 

 Dr. H. R. Kraybill of the Office of Horticultural and Poraological Investigations, \ 

 Bureau of Plant Industry, U. S. Department of Agriculture, as professor of 

 agricultural chemistry and head of the department. J. H. Gourley, professor 

 of horticulture and vice director and horticulturist in the station, has resigned 

 to bec'ome head of the horticultural department of the University of Westj 

 Virginia. 



New York State Station. ^Harold L. AVinston, assistant chemist, resigned"! 

 August 1 to accept a commercial position. Guy F. MacLeod has been appointed 

 assistant in research (entomology), beginning July 1. 



Oklahoma College and Station. — The resignations September 1 are reported 

 of Dean H. W. Moorhouse of the School of Commerce and Marketing, and of 

 W. C. Rapp, assistant horticulturist, the latter becoming assistant horticulturist i 

 at the University of Arkansas. C. E. Sanborn, professor of entomology andj 

 entomologist, is to spend the coming year in California on special entomological 

 investigations. 



Pennsylvania College and Institute of Animal Nutrition. — The college has* 

 recently received from the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research a grant 

 of $5,000 for the current fi.scal year in aid of the researches in animal nutrition 

 which have been carried on for the past twenty years by the Institute of Animal 

 Nutrition. W. J. Sweeney has resigned as assistant in animal nutrition to 

 take effect September 1, and has been succeeded by R. M. Meredith, a 1920 

 graduate of the college. 



Recent resignations in the college department of agronomy include Dr. D. S. 

 Fox, assistant professor of farm management, to become farm adviser in San 

 Bernardino, Calif. ; D. C. Wimer, assistant professor of soil technology, to 

 accept a position in soil technology at the University of Illinois : and F. O. 

 Bamer, assistant in agronomy, to engage in commercial work. 



Utah College and Station. — A new 20-acre irrigated experimental farm has 

 been established at Farmington In Davis County. The county furnishes the 



