84 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Feb., ’11 
Notes and News. 
ENTOMOLOGICAL GLEANINGS FROM ALL QUARTERS 
OF THE GLOBE. 
THE Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine has been able to offer 
Liverpool University $50,000 for the establishment of a chair in Tropi- 
cal entomology. At a meeting of the Council of the University it was 
resolved gratefully to accept the offer—Science, Jan. 6, IQIT. 
ANNOUNCEMENT of the Journal of Animal Behavior and the Animal 
Behavior Monograph Series.—In response to a widely felt and urgent 
need for a periodical in which studies of the behavior and mental life 
of organisms may satisfactorily be published a journal and a mono- 
graph series have been planned. The Journal of Animal Behavior will 
accept for publication field studies of the habits, instincts, social rela- 
tions, etc., of animals, as well as laboratory studies of animal behavior 
or animal psychology. It is hoped that the organ may serve to bring 
into more sympathetic and mutually helpful relations the “naturalists” 
and the “experimentalists” of America, that it may encourage the 
publication of many carefully made naturalistic observations which at 
present are not published, and that it may present to a wide circle of 
nature-loving readers accurate accounts of the lives of animals. Be- 
ginning with January, 1to11, the Journal will appear bi-monthly in 
numbers of approximately 75 pages. Each annual volume of six num- 
bers will consist of not less than 450 pages. The subscription price will 
be $3.00 per volume (foreign, $3.50). This low price to subscribers 
can be maintained only if those who are interested in the study of the 
behavior and psychology of animals promptly subscribe and work for 
the support of the Journal. The Journal is under the editorial direc- 
tion and management of I. Madison Bentley, Assistant Professor of 
Psychology, Cornell University; Harvey A. Carr, Assistant Professor 
of Psychology, University of Chicago; Samuel J. Holmes, Assistant 
Professor of Zoology, University of Wisconsin; Herbert S. Jennings, 
Henry Walters Professor of Zoology, Johns Hopkins University; Ed- 
ward L. Thorndike, Professor of Educational Psychology, Teachers’ 
College of Columbia University; Margaret F. Washburn, Professor of 
Psychology, Vassar College; John B. Watson, Professor of Experi- 
mental and Comparative Psychology, Johns Hopkins University; Wil- 
liam M. Wheeler, Professor of Economic Entomology, Harvard Uni- 
versity, and Robert M. Yerkes, Assistant Professor of Comparative 
Psychology, Harvard University. The Journal is not the property of 
any individual, and it is to be conducted solely in the interests of those 
branches of science which it represents. All income from subscrip- 
tions and other sources, above that necessary for the support of the pub- 
