GRADUATES CLASS OF to11 267 

Before entering the Forest School he had spent four winters in a 
lumber camp and three summers surveying. In 1910 he received the 
degree of B.S. from the Michigan Agricultural College, where he was a 
member of Phi Delta and of the varsity track team and filled all positions 
up to and including that of major in the cadet school. 
_ He is unmarried. 
Since graduation from the Yale Forest School Bushnell has 
been an assistant in the United States Forest Service with head- 
quarters in Washington, D. C. 
He is a member of the Baptist church and in politics is a Pro- 
gressive. At Yale he was elected to Acacia Fraternity and he is 
also a member of Mystic Lodge, 41, Free and Accepted Masons, 
, and of Siroc Chapter, 46, Royal Arch Masons, both of Bronson, 
Mich. 
Norman C. Case 
Business address, Silver City, N. Mex. 
Home address, Highland, Kans. 
Albuquerque, N. Mex. 
Norman Curtis Case was born April 1, 1885, in Highland, Kans., the 
son of Norman Case, who has held the positions of trustee of Highland 
College, mayor and postmaster of Highland, and Harriet Allice (Moll) 
Case. On his father’s side he is of English and Scotch ancestry, being 
the grandson of Edward Case and Ann Walk (Curtis) Case; and on his 
mother’s side of German and Swiss descent, the grandson of Eli Moll 
and Elizabeth (Schock) Moll. He has a brother, William Moll Case, 
B.A. Highland College ’o2, Yale ex-’04, and a graduate of Auburn Theo- 
logical Seminary. in 1908; and a sister, Helen Lillian Case, B.A. Highland 
College *10, who also did graduate work at Northwestern University. 
He received the degree of B.S. from Highland College in 1908 and - 
afterward did graduate work at Kansas University. 
He is unmarried. 
Case entered the United States Forest Service on July 1, 1909, 
as forest agent and from that time until October 1, 1909, worked 
on reconnaissance on Helena and Gallatin National forests, Mon- 
tana. From October 1 to December 31, 1909, he was engaged in 
reconnaissance on Sioux National Forest, North and South 
Dakotas; from January 1 to April I, 1910, in timber sales on 
Bitterroot National Forest, Montana; and from July 1 to Sep- 
tember, 1910, in surveying on Flathead National Forest, Montana. 
