1974] 
Matthews — Cambridge Entomological Club 
25 
terfly often seeks shelter from the furious blasts which sweep over 
the summits even in midsummer. Beyond, from the depths of the 
Great Gulf, rise the slopes of the northern peaks, Mts. Jefferson, 
Adams, and Madison, with Mt. Washington suggested at the left. 
Over all float the summer clouds which often shroud the summit of 
Washington for days at a time even when the other peaks are free” 
[29]. The seal was used on the cover of Psyche for the next 37 
years, until 1959, and is reproduced on page 24 of the present issue. 
During the second decade o'f the Bussey meetings 62 members were 
elected — less than in the previous period but a clear indication of 
the continuing vitality of the Club. Some of these new members were 
to have an active part in the future of the Club. For example, 
George C. Wheeler, one of W. M. Wheeler’s students, was elected 
in 1920; still an active member of the Club, he is a frequent con- 
tributor to Psyche. F. M. Carpenter, a high school senior who had 
been attending some of the meetings since 1920 as a guest of F. W. 
Dodge, was elected in April, 1922; he became associate editor of 
Psyche eight years later and then editor after B rues’ retirement in 
1947. Dr. J. C. Bequaert, who had been a guest at several earlier 
meetings, was elected to membership in 1923, having been appointed 
in medical entomology in the Harvard Medical School ; later, he 
succeeded Banks as Curator of Insects at the Museum of Compara- 
tive Zoology and participated in the Club meetings until his retire- 
ment in 1956. At the meeting of January 8, 1924, P. J. Darlington, 
Jr., an undergraduate in the College, was elected to membership; he 
also took an active part in the Club’s affairs and followed Dr. 
Bequaert as Curator of Insects at the Museum. That particular 
meeting, incidentally, was the 50th anniversary of the founding of 
the Club, although the minutes refer to it only as the 50th annual 
meeting. J. H. Emerton, still regularly attending the meetings, gave 
a brief account of the history of the Club from 1874 to 1910 [30] 
and W. L. W. Field spoke about the Harris Club and read letters 
from two of the original members of the Cambridge Club — B. 
Pickman Mann and E. A. Schwarz. 
Return to Cambridge 
Towards the end of the twenties, plans were made by the Harvard 
Administration to terminate the Bussey Institution as a graduate 
school and to centralize biological instruction and research in a com- 
plex of buildings near the Museum of Comparative Zoology. The 
