92 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Feb., 14 
THE CONVOCATION WEEK MEETINGS. 
Entomological papers were presented to the American As- 
sociation of Economic Entomologists, the Entomological Soci- 
ety of America, Section K (Physiology and Experimental 
Medicine) of the American Association for the Advancement 
of Science, and the American Phytopathological Society, meet- 
ing in affiliation at Atlanta, Georgia, December 29, 1913, to 
January 3, 1914, and to the American Society of Zoologists 
meeting at Philadelphia December 29 to January 1. The fol- 
lowing list gives their titles and authors, although in a number 
of cases they were read by title only. Those unmarked are 
from the program of the Economic Entomologists, those star- 
red (*) from the Entomological Society of America, others 
are followed by an abbreviation of the respective society’s 
name. 
At Atlanta the entomological hosts were the State Ento- 
mologist, Mr. E. L. Worsham, and members of his staff, 
Messrs. Chase, Lewis and Spooner, who tendered the visitors 
a smoker on the evening of January I and in many ways added 
to the enjoyment of the sojourn in the southern city. The 
meetings were certainly a success in attendance and in the in- 
terest evoked by the papers read. 
GENERAL SUBJECTS.—J. CuestEr Brapiey, Cornell University. 
—Collecting insects in the Okefenoke swamp.* PuHiuip P. Catvert, 
University of Pennsylvania—The desirability of a bibliographical 
dictionary of entomologists.* The fauna of epiphytic bromeliads in 
Costa Rica.* E. P. Fett, State Entomologist of New York.—Gall In- 
sects, The Annual Public Address.* H. T. Frernaztp, Massachusetts 
Agricultural College—Notes on some old European collections.* L. O. 
Howarp, Washington, D. C_——The Education of the Entomologists in 
the Service of the United States Department of Agriculture. W. C. 
O’Kane, Durham, N. H.—Further Experience with an Insectary. (Some 
difficulties experienced, changes made, cost.) 
GENERAL MORPHOLOGY AND CYTOLOGY.—A. D. MacGir- 
LIVRAY, University of Illinois—The structure of the thorax in general- 
ized insects.* J. A. Netson, Bureau of Entomology—A pair of 
Tracheal Invaginations on the Second Maxillary Segment of the Em- 
bryo of the Honey Bee. (Amer. Soc. Zool.) W. A. Rizey, Cornell 
University—Some sources of error in the interpretation of insect 
