RECORDS OF MEETINGS. 655 



Not more than forty Resident Associates shall be chosen in any one 

 Class. 



The election of Resident Associates shall be for a term of three years 

 with eligibility for reelection. 



Resident Associates shall be entitled to the same privileges as Fel- 

 lows, in the use of the Academy building, may attend meetings and 

 present papers, but they shall not have the right to vote. They shall 

 pay no Admission Fee, and their Annual Dues shall be one-half that 

 of Fellows residing within fifty miles of Boston. 



The Council and Committees of the Academy may ask one or more 

 Resident Associates to act with them in an advisory or assistant ca- 

 pacity. 



The following communications were given: — 



"The Relation of Samaji to the Normal Waking Consciousness." 

 By W. S. Bigelow. 



" A Note on the Life of Victor Schumann, with some account of 

 recent progress in the Extreme Ultra Violet." By Professor Theodore 

 Lyman. 



The following paper was presented by title : — 



"Types of Abnormal Color Vision." By Dr. Louis Bell. 



One thousand and thirty-first Meeting. 



February 25, 1914. 



The Academy met in conjunction with the Lawrence Scientific 

 Association in the Testing-room of the Submarine Signal Company, 

 25 Atlantic Avenue, Boston. 



The President in the chair. 



There were sixteen Fellows and many members and guests of the 

 Lawrence Scientific Association present. 



The following communication was given : — 



"Long Distance Submarine Signalling by Dynamo-Electric Ma- 

 chinery." By Mr. Reginald A. Fessenden. 



It was 



J^otcd, To express the thanks of the Academy to the Submarine 

 Signal Co. for the great privilege extended to them of witnessing at 

 their works the remarkable experiments of Mr. Fessenden. 



