OREGON STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 131 



The faculty are: Franklin Moon, Dean of the College and Pro- 

 fessor of Sylviculture; Maulsby Willett Blackman, Professor of 

 Forest Entomology; Nelson Courtlandt Brown, Professor of Forest 

 Utilization ; Leigh H. Pennington, Professor of Forest Botany ; John 

 Wallace Stephen, Professor of Sylviculture; Charles Christopher 

 Adams, Professor of Forest Zoology, Director Roosevelt Wild Life 

 Forest Experiment Station; Harry P. Brown, Professor of Wood 

 Technology; Laurie D. Cox, Professor of Landscape Engineering; 

 Henry R. Francis, Professor of Forest Recreation ; Louis E. Wise, 

 Professor of Forest Chemistry ; Reuben Parker Prichard, Professor 

 of Sylviculture; Clarence Earl Libby, Professor of Pulp and Paper 

 Manufacture ; James F. Dubuar, Director and Professor of Forestry, 

 Ranger School ; Earle S. Pierce, Director of Forest Extension ; Gurth 

 A. Whipple, Professor of Forest Extension; Gustav F. Lentz, Pro- 

 fessor of Forestry at Ranger School ; William C. Kendall, Ichthyolo- 

 gist, Roosevelt Wild Life Forest Experiment Station ; Hiram Leroy 

 Henderson, Assistant Professor of Forest Utilization ; Charles Ches- 

 well Forsaith, Assistant Professor of Wood Technology; Harold 

 Cahill Belyea, Assistant Professor of Forest Engineering; Alan F. 

 Arnold, Assistant Professor of Landscape Extension; Wilford E. 

 Sanderson, Assistant Professor of Forest Extension, Director of 

 Summer Camp; Alvin Goodnow Whitney, Assistant Director, 

 Roosevelt Wild Life Forest Experiment Station; William S. Knicker- 

 bocker, Assistant Professor of English and Registrar; Don M. 

 Benedict, Assistant Professor of Forest Botany; Edwin A. Hartley, 

 Assistant Professor of Forest Entomology. 



OREGON STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 

 School of Forestry 



Instruction in forestry is given at the School of Forestry of the 

 Oregon State Agricultural College to an enrolment of about 125 

 students. The school is situated in the Willamette Valley, 100 miles 

 south of Portland. It requires for entrance the standard secondary 

 school training demanded by the universities and colleges. 



The School is housed in a three-story building containing labora- 

 tory space for work in logging engineering, forest mensuration, 

 timber technology, sylviculture and dendrology. It includes a collec- 

 tion of manufactured wood products. Field work is carried on in 



