674 JOURNAL OF FORESTRY 



charge of the educational and investigative work in dendrology and 

 wood technology. 



Ernest G. Dudley, who has an A. B. degree from Leland Stanford, 

 Jr., University, and who took one year at the Yale Forest School, has 

 just resigned his position as forest examiner in District 5 to take 

 the position of assistant professor of forest extension at the New 

 York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University. He has 

 recently been in charge of the U. S. Forest Service exhibit at the 

 l*anama-California Exposition in San Diego. As Mr. Dudley was 

 brought up in Connecticut and had very considerable experience in 

 woodlot work before going West, he comes into the work in New 

 York especially well qualified. 



At the meeting of the Yale Corporation on March 19, Assistant 

 Professors R. C. Hawley and S. J. Record were elected to full pro- 

 fessorships. 



Barrington Moore is associate curator of woods and forestry at 

 the American Museum of Natural History in New York. 



The Department of Forestry at Cornell has already (April 15) 

 lost the following professional students through enlistment in the 

 land and naval forces of the United States or in the American Ambu- 

 lance Field Service in France: Seniors: J. S. Everitt, E. Frey, S. C. 

 Garman, H. O. Johnson, G. S. Kephart, E. I. Kilbourne, A. A. Man- 

 chester, E. Myers, R. E. Perry, Jr., L. R. Skinner, S. H. Sisson, E. I. 

 Tinkham, R. A. Wheeler — 13 out of a class of 20. Juniors: I. H. 

 Bernhardt, W. D. Comings, C. W. Comstock, B. D. Dain, D. K. 

 Hendee, W. B. McGrew, A. C. Shaw— 7 out of a class of 35. Sopho- 

 mores: A. A. Baker, F. E. Forbes, A. D. Honeywell, E. C. Hunt, W. 

 W. Jeffrey, T. Roberts and W. E. Wright— T out of a class of 25. 

 Freshmen: G. B. Moffett, Walker Smith— 2 out of a class of 29. 

 Total, 29 out of 99. It is desired to secure similar lists from the 

 other schools in order that the very active participation in national 

 defense these neophytes in forestry may be on record. Not to be out- 

 done by their students, the Cornell faculty has organized a company 

 which meets for weekly drill under the direction of regular army 

 officers. Bentley, Hosmer, Recknagel, and Spring are members of 

 this company. 



G. Harris Collingwood has been on leave of absence from Cornell 

 this spring and is doing graduate work at the University of Michigan 

 for an M. A. degree in June. 



