The text below is grayed out because it is not intended to be read. It is a necessarily imperfect OCR of the original and is only used by a search engine.
166
Brown: Speedlight for Photography Vol.7, nos.5-6
A unit in which the good features of the "Photronic" and "Quick-clix" were combined would be a truly automatic recording device for the magnifications for which these units are designed.
Useful Literature
Anonymous. 1951. Kodak Master Photoguide. Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester. Anonymous. 1952. Photography through the microscope. Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester. Berkowitz, George J. 1951. A complete guide to the Exakta V. Exakta Camera Co.,
New York. Berkowitz, George J. 1952. Hyperclose-up photography with the Exakta. Exakta Camera
Co., New York. Gibson, H. L. 1951. Give insects a buzz, too. The Camera Magazine 74:88-97, 111-112. Greenleaf, A. R. 1950. Photographic optics. Macmillan Company, New York. Kingslake, Rudolph. 1939. The optics of photographic lenses. Chapter 2 in Handbook
of photography edited by Keith Henney and Beverly Dudley. McGraw-Hill
Book Co., New York. Kingslake, Rudolph. 1951. Lenses in photography. Garden City Books, Garden
City, N. Y. Lipton, Norman C. 1953. Electronic flash today. Photography 32:46-55, 78-88. Moore, H. W. 1950. Ultra close-up photography. The Camera Magazine 73:92-118. Pence, Roy J. 1947. A simple device to increase background contrast in photomicrography. Science 105:503-Van Riper, Walker, Robt. J. Niedrach, & A. M. Bailey. 1952. Nature photography with
the high-speed flash. Museum Pictorial'Series (Denver Museum of Natural
History) 5.
Dept. of Entomology, University of California, Los Angeles 24, Calif., U. S. A.
PERSONALIA
The death of Society member S. LeM ARCH AND, of Paris, in November 1953, at the age of 77 years, has been reported by P. E. L. Viette. M. LeMarchand was a disciple of JOANNIS (see Lepid. News 3: p. 77) and specialized on the Microlepidoptera oi the French fauna. He described several new species of Lithocolletis, Scythris, and Stigmella (= Nepticula) and took a large part in the Lhomme Catalogue des Lepi-dopteres de France et de Belgique. The collection was given by his family to the Paris Museum; it contains large series of French Microlepidoptera. with 13 LeMarchand types and 1 Meyrick type.
On 7 February 1953, MASAMI W ATARI, a lifelong amateur lepidopterist, and a member of The Lepidopterists' Society, died in Tokyo, Japan. He was born there on 5 September 1897. Having finished the law course at the Tokyo Imperial University, he was commissioned to various government posts. Everywhere he was stationed he collected butterflies enthusiastically and named many forms, mostly aberrations.
At least one Hairstreak, from Formosa, was named after him: Strymonidia watarii ( Matsumura ), 1927.
Tar6 IWASE, 345 Komachi Kamakura, Kanagawa-Ken, JAPAN