NOTES 323 



New York Forester's Ceub 



The number of foresters who are now stationed in and around New 

 York City has grown to such a figure that a foresters' club has been 

 formed to hold monthly meetings the first Tuesday of each month. 

 No name has been selected, and it may go without a name, as the 

 group has been meeting informally for several months, and has just 

 decided that its conferences are so interesting that they will be made 

 slightly more formal. 



The plan of the group is to make the meetings so well known in the 

 profession that foresters who are planning trips to New York will 

 adjust their schedules to make attendance at the monthly luncheons 

 possible. 



The group is headed by E. A. Sterling as chairman, and Nelson C. 

 Brown as secretary. At the February meeting those present included 

 J. S. Kaplan, E. C. M. Richards, C. C. Lawrence, O. M. Porter, Dr. 

 Hugh P. Baker. W. E. Murchie, Barrington Moore, and Walter Spicer, 

 in addition to the two officers, the schools represented being Yale, 

 Cornell, and Syracuse. 



The meetings are arranged on a strictly "Dutch treat" basis, there 

 being no membership fee and no dues. All discussions will be devoted 

 to the latest developments in the forestry profession, and discussions 

 will be led, when possible, by speakers from outside of New York. 



New Book by Wooesey 



"American Forest Regulation" will be published shortly by T. S. 

 Woolsey, Jr. It will contain a review of the best European forest 

 regulation and also a constructive commentary on the application of 

 regulation to American forests by Prof. H. H. Chapman of Yale 

 University. Raphael Zon contributes a short chapter on "European 

 Regulation Ideals." On account of the high cost of publication the 

 book will be published with paper cover and will sell at $2 per copy, 

 the edition to be limited to 500. Advance orders should be sent to 

 T. S. Woolsey, Jr., 242 Prospect Street. New Haven. Conn. 



Research in Forest Pathology Not Duplicated 



Readers of the National Research Council Bulletin on "North Amer- 

 ican Forest Research" (Vol. 1, Part 9, No. 4) may have noticed an 



