20 THEY AU DUB OON! (BOUL aie 
WORTHY OF IMITATION 
A red bird whistles just for fun 
Against a pewter sky. 
Putting Winter on the run, 
A red bird whistles just for tun 
And conjures up a bit of sun 
When sun’s in short supply — 
A red bird whistles just for fun 
Against a pewter sky. 
Emeline Ennis Kotula 
SCIENTIFIC PAPERS WANTED 
FIELD BIOLOGISTS, TEACHERS, and nature students in or out of school are in- 
vited to submit original articles based on original research and/or ob- 
servations in all fields of natural history to the Editor for publication in the 
Audubon Bulletin. Articles should be typed double space on one side of 
8¥%2 x11 paper and should include the author’s name and address, as well 
as a list of references cited, if any. 
Authors receive three complimentary copies of the Bulletin in which their 
article appears. If reprints are wanted, we can furnish 100 or more copies 
of the article at the printer's cost — currently about $16.00 for four pages 
or less. Requests for reprints must be made prior to printing of the Bulletin. 
Please send your articles to Paul H. Lobik, Editor, The Audubon Bulletin, 
22W681 Tamarack Drive, Glen Ellyn, Illinois. 
ft a ft 
ALONG CHICAGO’S LAKE FRONT 
ON NOVEMBER 27, 1960, Miss Vera P. Heatley and Miss Catherine Schaffer of 
the Evanston Bird Club saw a Black-bellied Plover north of Montrose Beach 
on the sand near the sea wall. On the same day Mrs. Marvin Ericson saw a 
bird of the same species, but with one leg, also on Montrose Beach. 
fl fA ia 
