ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 
[The Conductors of ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS solicit and will thank- 
fully receive items of news likely to interest its readers from any source. 
The author’s name will be given in each case, for the information of 
ecataloguers and bibliographers.] 
TO CONTRIBUTORS.—AII contributions will be considered and passed 
upon at our earliest convenience, and, as far as may be, will be published 
according to date of reception. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS has reached 
a circulation, both in numbers and circumference, as to make it neces- 
sary to put ‘‘copy’”’ into the hands of the printer, for each number, four 
weeks before date of issue. This should be remembered in sending special 
or important matter for a certain issue. Twenty-five ‘‘extras,’’ without 
change in form and without covers, will be given free, when they are 
wanted; if more than twenty-five copies are desired, this should be stated 
on the MS. The receipt of all papers will be acknowledged. Proof will 
be sent to authors for correction only when specially requested.—Ed. 
PHILADELPHIA, PA., JUNE, I912. 
Up to the date of reading the second proofs of the present 
number of the NEws (May 22), 84 North American entomol- 
ogists have sent in their ballots that the law of priority in no- 
menclature should be strictly applied in all cases. On the other 
hand 173 North American Entomologists have informed us 
that they vote against the strict application of the law of pri- 
ority in all cases and express the desire that the most important 
and generally used names should be protected against any 
change on nomenclatural grounds.* 
In our July number we propose to print the names of those 
in favor of each one of these alternatives. In the meantime 
we hope to receive votes from others who have not yet re- 
sponded to our invitations to take part in this “preferential bal- 
lot.” Some additional contributions to the discussion of the 
nomenclature question will be found under the caption “Notes 
and News,” on another page. 
As the Editor expects to be away from Philadelphia during 
the summer, part of the time in attendance on the International 
Congress of Entomology at Oxford (where he hopes to see 
many of his American colleagues), all communications re- 
specting the News should be addressed to the Associate Edi- 
tor, at the Academy of Natural Sciences, from June 15 to 
October 4, TOI: 
*The Zoologischer Anzeiger for April 10, 1912, page 365, announces 
the result of the votes of the German Zoologists (see the News for 
May, p. 227) as II for, and 115 against, strict priority. 
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