170 YALE FOREST SCHOOL 

Luther B. Rogers, Jr. C.E. University of Maine; and three sisters: 
Mary H. Rogers, Annie L. Rogers and Ruth Rogers. 
He was prepared at Patten Academy, Patten, Maine, and in 1906 
received the degree of B.S. from the University of Maine, where he was 
a member of Kappa Sigma. 
He was married October 30, 1912, in Quincy, Calif., to Miss Edith 
Watson of Quincy, daughter of William and Mary Frances Watson. 
Rogers is forest supervisor in the United States Forest Ser- 
vice with headquarters in the Plumas National Forest, California. 
He was appointed forest assistant in the Service July 1, 1907, 
and later became deputy forest supervisor. 
In politics he is a Progressive. 
Robert Rosenbluth 
Business address, Conservation Commission, Albany, N. Y. 
Home address, 522 West 150th Street, New York City 
Robert Rosenbluth was born February 28, 1887, in New York City, 
the son of Selig Rosenbluth, superintendent of a large hospital, and 
Anna (Glantz) Rosenbluth. He is of Russian German ancestry on both 
sides of the family. 
In 1903 he graduated from Philadelphia High, after which he studied 
as a “special in agriculture’ at Pennsylvania State College. He after- 
ward attended the Forest Academy at Mount Alto, Pa. 
He is unmarried. 
Rosenbluth was employed as forest assistant in the United 
States Forest Service in 1907 and in the same year became for- 
ester in the Bureau of Forestry with headquarters in the Philip- 
pine Islands. In 1910-11 he was forest assistant in the Service 
and in I91I-12 was state forester for the Conservation Commis- 
sion of New York State. Since July 8, 1912, he has held the 
position of director of forest investigations for the Conservation 
Commission of New York State. 
He writes: “Travel since leaving Yale has embraced prac- 
tically all the states in this country; Hawaii; the Philippine 
Islands; China and Japan. Most interesting was the work in 
the Philippines, not only in exploration of new countries and 
under conditions entirely different from those at home, but in 
the scientific and practical value of the results. There was 


