Thirty-fourth Annual Meeting 315 
The following is a list of those elected to fellowship: 
Rarpu V. BANGHAM LAWRENCE L. HuBER 
Joun W. BARINGER Tuomas G. PHILiips 
SAMUEL Woop CHASE EDMUND SECREST 
Guy W. ConrEY ERNEST RICE SMITH 
FLtoyp CARLTON DOCKERAY Paris B. STOCKDALE 
H. A. Gossarp HERBERT ANDERSON Toops 
Roy GRAHAM HoskINs CHARLES J. WILLARD 
Resolutions. 
The following resolutions were unanimously adopted by the 
Academy : 
1. The Academy wishes to thank the members of the Local Com- 
mittee and the officers of the Ohio State University for the efforts 
they have made and the courtesies they have extended toward making 
the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Ohio Academy of Science a 
success. 
2. The Academy wishes to express to Dr. Albert P. Mathews, 
Professor of Biochemistry at the University of Cincinnati, its apprecia- 
tion of the special lecture on ‘‘How Shall We Measure the Quantity 
of Life?”’ 
3. The Academy wishes to express its endorsement of the resolu- 
tions submitted to the United States Congress by the American Eco- 
logical Society, to set aside the Glacier Bay region as a National 
Monument. 
Report of the Committee on Necrology. 
The following report of the Committee on Necrology was 
adopted by the Academy and ordered filed: 
MEMORIAL TO Dr. THOMAS CORWIN MENDENHALL. 
The Ohio Academy of Science mourns today a trusted leader and 
former president, Thomas Corwin Mendenhall. He was eminent in 
Physical Science as an investigator, a teacher, an expositor and an 
organizer. The Franklin Institute of Philadelphia in granting to him in 
1918 the Franklin medal, ‘‘founded for the recognition of those workers 
in physical science, * * * * * whose efforts have done most to 
advance a knowledge of physical science”’ made their award “‘in recog- 
nition of his fruitful and indefatigable labors in phsycial research, 
particularly his contribution to our knowledge of physical constants 
and electrical standards.”’ This was one of a long series of similar 
awards, crowning his fifty years of leadership in Science. 
Born at Hanoverton, Ohio, October 4, 1841, and living till March 22, 
1924, his life covered one of the most eventful periods of human history 
and his scientific career was coincident with many of the most striking 
developments of modern science.’ 
