companied his travelogue with some one 

 hundred and fifty hand-colored stereop- 

 ticon views and motion pictures. 



At the business meeting of the Club 

 on January 7th, a new amendment to 

 the constitution, drawn up by the con- 

 stitutional committee with Murdock as 

 chairman, was passed. The amendment 

 changes Article XIV, striking out Sec- 

 tion 5 which reads as follows: "The 

 executive committee shall audit all Club 

 accounts." It also includes Article XVI, 

 concerning the auditing committee, 

 which reads: "(I)- The auditing com- 

 mittee shall 1)e composed of the members 

 of the executive committee, with the first 

 member elected acting as the chairman. 

 (2). It shall be the duty of the auditing 

 committee to audit all accounts of the 

 Club." 



The date for the annual Field Day 

 has been set as May 2nd, and everything 

 is in readiness for the affair. As has 

 been the custom in the past, the crowd 

 will march out to the Forestry Farm, 

 Friday afternoon, May 1st, and stay till 

 Monday morning. No water contests 

 will be staged this year on account of 

 the fatality of last year's celebration. 

 Ribot Valiton, '14, is general chairman 

 of the affair; Ernest Allmendinger, '14, 

 is chairman of the committee on dem- 

 onstration and sports; A. H. Muzzall, 

 '15, cooking; O. L. Lovejoy, '16, com- 

 missary; and S. R. Black, '16, exhibits. 



has been in charge of Alfred Voigt, P. 

 G., and Harold Crane, '14, and has been 

 on the hustle ever since the approach of 

 warm weather signs caused the thoughts 

 of the boys to turn to summer work. 



The Club received a hearty invitation 

 from the Forestry School at Cornell to 

 attend the dedicatory services of the 

 new Forestry Building of the New York 

 State College of Agriculture, to be held 

 at Ithaca May 15th. Just how many will 

 be able to attend is not known as yet. 



Professor Roth talked before the Tor- 

 onto University Forestry Club at Tor- 

 onto, on the evening of March 5th. 



Just as a sign that now and then the 

 undergraduates lay off from their Sur- 

 veying and Silviculture long enough to 

 take a little exercise and show a little 

 interest in the rest of the university, we 

 record the fact that the Senior Lit class 

 basket-ball team was composed this year 

 almost entirely of Senior Foresters, 

 Bond, Valiton, and Hammer "burning 

 up the gym floor," and Caron managing 

 the aggregation. The team was one of 

 four out of nineteen in the series to 

 win its "numerals." 



The employment committee this year 



The present Post Graduate class is 

 planning to leave to the Department a 

 large bust-photograph of Professor 

 Roth, as a memorial of the class. 



NEWS FROM THE FIELD. 



Alden ('11) and Mrs. Alden were in 

 on a flying trip. Mr. Alden is still on 

 those delightful fire trespasses, and this 

 time he is detailed to lend a hand to 

 Metcalf in the Ontario District. Not 

 much to burn on part of these areas, but 

 then the blackening of those magnificent 



"hardheads," a mile or two long and of 

 various other dimensions, is claimed to 

 lessen the chance of catching the suck- 

 er who comes there with the Mayfly, the 

 June bug and the "skeeter," (The en- 

 tomologist on the staff claims the "June 

 bug" part to be an error, as this bug has 



