226 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL.84 



F. W. Urich, Trinidad. 



G. E. Bodkin, British Guiana. 

 Henry Tryon, Queensland. 



T. Harvey Johnston, Queensland. 



Robert Veitch, Fiji Islands. 



C. P. Lounsbury, South Africa. 



H. A. Ballou, Barbados. 



H. Maxwell Lcfroy, South Kensington, England. 



R. J. Tillyard, New Zealand. 



C. H. Gowdey, Jamaica. 



Philip Buckle, Armstrong College, England. 

 ,A. J. Nicholson, University of Sydney, Australia. 

 H. Hargreaves, Uganda. 

 W. F. Schlupp, South Africa. 

 G. S. Cotterel, West Africa. 

 J. G. Myers, New Zealand. 

 A. D. Imms, Rothamsted Station, England. 

 Alan P. Dodd, Queensland. 

 H. Bennett Johnston, Sudan. 

 L. F. Hitchcock, Australia. 



D. Morland, Rothamsted Station, England. 

 Stanley Garthside, Sydney, N. S. W. 

 Karl Jordan, Tring, England. 



F. G. Holdaway, Australia. 



W. H. Thorpe, Cambridge, England. 



F. P. Jepson, Ceylon. 



David Miller, New Zealand. 



The Entoniological Research Committee (Tropical Africa) was 

 appointed by the Colonial Secretary, with Lord Cromer at its head, 

 as early as 1909. It soon began to publish, under the title Bulletin 

 of Entomological Research, the results of some of the best research 

 work on agricultural and medical entomology. Volume i bears the 

 date 1910-11. After the founding of the Imperial Bureau of Ento- 

 mology in 1912, its imprint took the place of that of the Entomological 

 Research Committee, and the Bulletin of Entomological Research has 

 been published steadily ever since. It contains articles of the highest 

 value, and it goes into the problems of applied entomology from 

 every point of view. In a way, it takes the place of the Journal of 

 Economic Entomology and the Annals of the Entomological Society 

 of America, and every worker in any of the broader aspects of eco- 

 nomic entomology, no matter where situated, should have access to 

 this important work. 



England has, in fact, become one of the world centers of interest 

 in economic entomology. H. Maxwell Lefroy, after some experience 

 in the West Indies and a longer period of productive work in India, 



