150 PROCEEDINGS OJF THE PACIEIC COAST SECTION 



MEMBERS-ELECT 



Walter A. Bell, 8 Prospect Place, New Haven, Conn. 



E'ritz Berckheimer, Department of Paleontology, Columbia University, New 



York City. 

 William L. Bryant, Buffalo Society of Natural History, Buffalo, N. Y. 

 John T. Doneghy, Jr., 963 Yale Station, New Haven, Cbnn. 

 C'l^RENCE E. Gordon, Massachusetts x\gricultural College, Amherst, Mass. 

 Thomas C. Brown, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pa. 

 Mahjorie O'Connell, Adelphi College, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 Earl L. Packard, 1522 Grove Street, Berkeley, Cal. 

 Alexander Petrunkevitch, 266 Livingston Street, New Haven, Conn. 

 Chester Stock, 492 Seventh Street, San Francisco, Cal. 

 Edward L. Troxell, Amherst College, Amherst, Mass. 

 Claude W. Unger, Pottsville, Pa. 

 Francis M. Van Tuyl, Department of Paleontology, Columbia University, New 



York. 

 Clarence A. Waring, Box 162, Mayfield, Cal. 



Minutes of the Fourth Annual Meeting of the Pacific Coast 

 Section of the Paleontological Society 



EoY E. DicKERSON, Secretary 



The fourth annual meeting of the Pacific Coast Section of the Paleon- 

 tological Society of America was called to order by the President, F. M. 

 Anderson, at 10 o^clock, April 8, 1913, in Bacon Hall, room 203, Uni- 

 versity of California. The minutes of the last business meeting were 

 read, and it was suggested that the Secretary strike out the part desig- 

 nating that the next meeting be held during the spring recess of Stan- 

 ford University for the reason that the present meetings were not being 

 held at the time so designated. 



A letter was read from the Committee on the Conservation of Wild 

 Life in California. The Secretary was asked to send a representative to 

 a meeting of the California Fish and Game Protective Association, and 

 that the Society might be counted as a member of this association. The 

 Secretary acted, as no meeting of the Paleontological Society was to be 

 held before this meeting of the Fish and Came Protective Association. 

 Mr. Bruce Martin was appointed representative for the Society. The 

 Secretary asked for approval of this action, and after some discussion the 

 Society unanimously voted to approve the action of the Secretary, and 

 ^'-nressed sympathy for the movement for the prevention of the destruc- 

 ' ' ' f w'lrl life of California. 



