LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN 507 '■ F4-5 19G2-G8 CENTRAL CIRCULATION BOOKSTACKS The person charging this material is re- sponsible for its renewal or its return to the library from which it was borrowed on or before the Latest Date stamped below. You may be charged a minimum fee of $75.00 for eacii lost boolc. Theft, mutllatlen, and underlining of books are reasons for disciplinary action and may result In dismissal from the University. TO RENEW CALL TELEPHONE CENTER, 333-8400 UNIVERSITY OF ItllNOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN MAY 1 5 1995 When renewing by phMJc, write new due date below previous due date. LI 62 Field Museum of Natural History Report 1967-1968 Report 1967 - 1968 waeiHliMArv-aMiMW .»»«>r«j»>iTJat»«K- Field Museum of Natural History PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY FIELD MUSEUM PRESS The period 1967-1968 encompasses the 75th year of the history of Field Museum and the 75th Anniversary of its founding. Anni- versaries invite retrospection, indeed almost demand it. Retrospec- tion recalls the building of one of the world's great museimis in a relatively short period. Those who built did so energetically and well. Great scientific collections, a distinguished research record, exhibits of a scope and quality approached only by a handful of the natural history museums are not random achievements. Talent, dedication, money and a receptive community sometimes combine in a symbiotic relationship that produces greatness such as was built in Chicago. We of the 1960 's, whether staff, public, or the scientific world would do well to pause for a moment of appreciation and re- spect for those who have built and bequeathed Field Museum to us. But anniversaries, if they are suitably observed, and if they are to be anything other than a sterile exercise, also call for a look ahead. For Field Museum, one of the few private (non-public owned) great museums remaining in the world, the last quarter of its first century will largely determine its course for the second century. Institu- tions, like individuals, live their lives in cycles — cycles of growth, and consolidation, and again of growth. Today Field Museum is in a period of change and growth in its contributions to the lay com- munity and to the world of science. There are opportunities ahead. Whether we shall realize them rests on how the almost overwhelming problems that face any great private institution, be it university, hospital, library, orchestra, opera, or museum are solved now and in the next few years. Those who think about the position of the non- governmental, non-profit institution in our society today have found in them a unique vitality, worthy of preservation. Alan Pifer, the distinguished President of the Carnegie Corpor- ation of New York, recently spoke of the private, non-profit institu- tions: "They have the capacity to move swiftly, flexibly and imaginatively into a new area of critical need; the power to arrive at a disinterested, objective appraisal of a situation free of political influence; freedom to engage in controversial activities; the ability to experiment in an unfettered manner — and, if need be, fail; and finally the capacity for sympathetic personal attention to the variety of human problems that beset our increasingly dehumanized world." It is precisely the capacities that Mr. Pifer cites that Field Museum today is most energetically dedicated to strengthening. The Mu- seum is changing. It is trying new approaches to old problems. The Staff is hard at work reviewing such diverse matter as scientific policy, exhibition, the library, publication policies and procedures, education, personnel practices, and space planning and usage. Mis- takes will, no doubt, be made, but out of the whole process will come new flexibility and creativity. But with all the dynamics, the sweep of change, and the oppor- tunities available, hard cold financial reality is always before us. Finances are the problem that all administrators live with con- stantly, with a very real sense of time running out. Speaking further on the subject, Mr. Pifer said, "The real issue is beginning to emerge clearly. Is the non-governmental organization of the future to be simply an auxiliary to the state, a kind of willing but not very re- sourceful handmaiden? Or is it to be a strong independent adjunct that provides government with a type of capability it cannot provide for itself? If it is to be the latter, and for most Americans the ques- tion is one that is likely to admit of no other answer, then we must face up to the difficult problem of how we are to finance these organi- zations." In recent years, a good portion of the time of the Board of Trustees and administration of Field Museum has been dedicated to solving the vexing problem of operating finances. Since 1964, a broad new base of support has been built through the annual and consistent contributions of both individuals and corporations. Much has been accomplished- — much remains yet to be done. We are con- fident that financial support from the community will continue and grow. But the financing of institutions today has become more than a single-source matter. Government increasingly finds itself in partnership with private givers. In Chicago, government support for private museums has for 75 years flowed through a tax levy of the Chicago Park District. But a surprisingly small proportion of the Chicago museums' operating income is so derived^ — far less than is enjoyed by the museums of almost any other city in the United States. It now seems time for Chicago to move progressively ahead in its tax support to more nearly match the support that has tradi- tionally, and today increasingly, come from the private sector. As noted above, individual and corporate giving to the Museum has increased markedly in recent years. Outstanding among the gifts of the two year period under review were those received from the following individuals- — Lester Armour, Joseph N. Field, Mrs. Anne Rickcords Gait, Henry P. Isham, John W. Leslie, H. Norris Love, William H. Mitchell, Mrs. Clarence C. Prentice, John A. & Zora Renn, Mrs. Clive Runnells, William L. Searle, John M. Simpson, Gerald A. Sivage, Hy Smoler, Herman Spertus, Joel Starrels, Mrs. David B. Stem, Jr., Mrs. David W. Stewart, Mr. & Mrs. William S. Street, Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Tieken, Mr. & Mrs. Chester Dudley Tripp, Mr. & Mrs. Philip K. Wrigley; corporations — Chicago Daily News, Chicago Sun-Times, Chicago Tribune Company, Common- wealth Edison Company, Foote, Cone & Belding, Illinois Bell Tele- phone Company, International Harvester Company, Marshall Field & Co. Foundation, The Northern Trust Company, Peoples Gas Company, Sears, Roebuck and Company, Standard Oil Company (Indiana); and foundations and bequests — Chicago Community Trust: John G. & Frances C. Searle Fund and Maria A. Parks Memorial Fund, Estate of Clarissa Donnelley Haffner, William K. Fellows Trust, Field Foundation of Illinois, Inc., Illinois Arts Council, Racing for Charities, Inc., Stella M. Rowley Estate, The Service Club of Chicago, The Shinner Foundation, Ruth & Vernon Taylor Foundation, Wenner Gren Foundation, The Woods Charitable Fund, Inc. Critical and generous financial grants for the research and educational functions of the Museum were received from a number of federal agencies — the National Science Foundation, Office of Naval Research, National Institutes of Health, United States Army Med- ical Research and Development Command, National Foundation for the Humanities, and the Smithsonian Institution. A very gratifying increase in the number of Museum Members, from 11,500 to 15,300 occurred during the two year period. A full list of those who con- tributed in addition to membership funds during 1967-1968 is carried on pages 37 to 53. Any program of increased financial support such as that developed by Field Museum in recent years must result in large measure from the dedicated efforts of the head of the institution. Those who are familiar with the Museum know the great debt of gratitude that is owed Mr. James L. Palmer, who during the four years of his Presi- dency instituted, and in large measure personally developed, the fi- nancial support program that has meant so much to Field Museum. In late 1968 Mr. Palmer indicated his wish to retire from the Presi- dency. Accordingly the Board of Trustees at its annual meeting in January of 1969 elected Mr. Remick McDowell President, and with deep appreciation, elected Mr. Palmer an Honorary Trustee for life. Three new trustees were elected during 1968. Thomas E. Don- nelley II, Nicholas Galitzine and John Runnells. Two trustees, Joseph Nash Field and Louis Ware, resigned because of absence from Chicago and were elected Honorary Trustees in appreciation of their long service on the Board. Field Museum is strong and active. The pages that follow will testify to the diversity of its service to the community and the nation. It has the staff, the collections, the physical plant, and the vitality to use the last quarter of its first century well — if the necessary fi- nancial resources come to it. The answer rests with all those who care enough to invest in the future. — E. Leiand Webber Director Women's Board The Women's Board, founded in 1966, carried out an extremely active program during 1967-1968. The highlight was a dinner dance held in honor of the Museum's 75th Anniversary, at which four hundred guests dined and danced in Stanley Field Hall. Other major dinners were given as previews to the Tibetan Hall and the Masada exhibit. These events offer an opportunity for the steadily increasing number of Museum contributors to preview new ex- hibits that have been made possible in large measure by their gen- erosity and, simultaneously, to express the Museum's appreciation, through the hospitality of the Women's Board, for their help. A number of luncheons were also held each year, each one of which presented some new facet of Field Museum to the Board members and their guests. Through their hospitality, their gifts, and their enthusiastic interest, the Women's Board members have quickly become a major element in the new vitality of Field Museum. Special Events A strong effort to involve Museum Membership in the activities of the Museum was begun during the period. Members' Night at- tendance reached new highs each year. Members' Night in 1967 featured "An Evening in Guatemala," with a number of events tied specifically to that country, including music and native dancing. The event was designed to signal another important innovation — Field Museum's new program of natural history tours. The first, designed by the Division of Public Relations with the cooperation of Museum scientists and other experts, was to Guatemala. It met with great success and later tours of Mexico and Brazil were con- ducted. Some measure of the success of the Tour Program is that each Tour has been oversubscribed, with a waiting list. The pro- gram not only enriches the national tours by using the knowledge and experience of Museum scientists, it also deepened the relationship of the Membership to the Museum. Members' Night 1968 saw the opening of a major traveling ex- hibit on "Masada, King Herod's Fortress," which told the story of the brave defense of a small group of Jewish Zealots against the Roman Army in 73 A. D. The exhibit also detailed the fascinating story of the dig at Masada, led by Professor Yigael Yadin, Professor of Archaeology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in which more than 5,000 volunteer workers from countries cooperated. Almost 100,000 visitors viewed "Masada" during its stay at Field Museum. Accelerated programming for Members and the general public was evident in several special lecture series — four lectures each by noted scholars coincident with the Masada exhibit and the American Indian Festival; an excellent 75th Anniversary Series, "Earth, Life, and Man," presented by members of the Museum Scientific Staff; and three lectures on meteorites given by Dr. Edward Olsen. Several short geological field trips and a one-week field trip to the Missouri Ozarks were conducted by Dr. Matthew Nitecki. The three-tiered palace of King Herod, at Masada. Educational Programs Center for Graduate Studies A major new educational program, the Center for Graduate Studies in Systematic Zoology and Paleontology, began in 1967. Financed in part by a grant from National Science Foundation, the Center is a joint undertaking of Field Museum, Northwestern Uni- versity and the University of Chicago. The Museum provides staff, laboratory space, library and, of course, its superb collections. The Universities provide the remainder of the training and instruction, and award the degrees. The general purpose of the center is to improve and increase the opportunities for professional training in systematic zoology and paleontology. It formalizes a long-time Museum commitment to work with graduate students. For many years. Curators have been deeply involved in the academic careers of graduate biologists in the area. Many Curators at the Museum are, in fact, products of similar informal studies in the past. Perhaps the most significant aspect of the Center is that it rep- resents a regional pooling of resources. No city, state or nation is so rich that it can afford to duplicate facilities endlessly. The Center is a formal acknowledgement of this fact by the founding institutions and National Science Foundation. Raymond Foundation Miss Miriam Wood, Chief of Raymond Foundation for 29 years, retired in 1968 after 38 years of service, a very important career con- tribution to Field Museum and to museum education nationally. Her dedication to the Museum and to the students it serves was complete. The programs and number of children served by Raymond Foundation under her direction are measurable by the statistics that have been reported here for years. But more important, and un- measured, is the stimulation these children have received from a creative and flexible approach to museum education. Many persons are deeply indebted to Miriam Wood. One of the most popular events of 1968 was the American Indian Festival, held in cooperation with American Indian Center of Chi- cago. This was the Museum's first effort at incorporating "live" \\^ demonstrations as a complement to the displays in the Exhibition halls and the result was very successful. More than 100,000 visitors crowded the Museum during the three- week festival, which included arts and crafts demonstrations, dances, lectures by experts on the American Indian, a photography exhibit about Indians in Chicago in 1968, film programs, and a climactic Pow-Wow. Indian dances were an im- portant part of the Paw Wow which was held on the Mu- seum grounds as a climax to the American Indian Festival. During 1967 and 1968, the number of school children visiting the Museum in organized groups and requesting lecture programs jumped a startling 30 per cent. The pressure on the Raymond Foundation staff lecturers was somewhat relieved by the institution of a volun- teer program in 1967, under the leadership of Miss Nora Chandler. Presently, 25 women have followed training sequences under the supervision of the Raymond Foundation staff and have progressed from "greeters," who orient arriving groups to various Museum areas, to leaders of brief introductory tours, to specialists who function as staff lecturers in providing complete tours in some of more than 50 topics related to Museum exhibits. Outstanding Chicago high school students continued to enjoy the benefits of the Holiday Lectures, co-sponsored by the Museum and the American Association for the Advancement of Science with finan- cial support from the National Science Foundation. Dr. Frank Press of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology gave a four- lecture series on "The Internal Constitution of the Earth," in 1967 and in 1968, Dr. James F. Crow of the University of Wisconsin, a specialist in human and population genetics, gave four lectures on "How We Inherit." Question and answer sessions are a feature of these lectures. Several educational programs are slanted toward special needs of both children and their teachers during the summer. The Summer Course in Anthropology for high-ability high school students was repeated in 1967 and 1968 under a grant from the National Science Foundation. This course offers guest lecturers from area colleges and universities, instruction from Museum staff members and the use of Museum facilities, and actual field experience on a local "dig." The program is so popular that the number of applicants was six times greater than the 27 who could be accepted. Teachers, too, were remembered in planning summer science pro- grams. Classes about rocks, minerals and fossils were designed to help teachers give more meaningful instruction in these areas. Ernest Roscoe, lecturer in Geology, also prepared two programs, "Down to Earth," and "Fish to Mammal," for New Trier Township Instruc- tional Television. The films were video-taped at the Museum and have been presented on educational closed-circuit television at several North Shore schools. Miss Harriet Smith, Raymond Foundation lecturer, was elected President of the Chicago Anthropological Society in 1968. One of many school groups to visit the American Indian Festival watches Ernest Naquayouma make Hopi Kachina dolls. 10 A n t h r o P o I o g y The opening of a bright, exciting, permanent exhibit on Tibet was a high point in the last several years for the Department of Anthropology. The exhibit, "Tibet, High Land of Monk and No- mad", is the result of four years of labor by Kenneth Starr, Curator of Asiatic Archaeology and Ethnology, and the artists and prepar- ators of the Exhibition Department. A key worker in the develop- ment of the exhibit was Anthropology Assistant Georgette Meredith, now on the faculty of the University of Wichita. Miss Meredith did much of the research and writing. The physical design of the exhibit, the work of artist Theodore Halkin, formerly of the Exhibition De- partment, introduces a number of departures in Field Museum ex- hibition. The uses of carpeting and color, particularly a rich Tibetan red, greatly enhances the attractiveness of the Hall. See- through cases are used for greater display of the materials. The most in- teresting innovation is a small theater in the Hall, in which a short film on life in Tibet is shown; the film was made in 1926 and 1927, and shows a traditional way of life which has since been disrupted by the Chinese occupation. The new Hall is a fitting showcase for Field Museum's remarkable Tibetan collections, most of which were gathered by former Chief Curator Berthold Laufer on the Mrs. T. B. Blackstone Expedition to China and Tibet, 1908-1910. His material, 11 ranging from toys and costumes to kitchen utensils and religious objects, enables the exhibit to give the "feel" of life in Tibet in the late nineteenth century. The diversity of specific interests and research programs of cur- ators during 1967 and 1968 provide an indication of the many con- cerns included in the single term anthropology. The study of man at Field Museum ranges from prehistoric cultural remains in East Africa to the impact of European ideas upon late 19th century Alaskan Eskimos^ — subjects thousands of years and thousands of miles apart, yet each essential to an imderstanding of the history of mankind. Dr. Glen Cole, Assistant Curator of Prehistory, began a two-year project, supported by the National Science Foundation, to make a computer analysis of 14,000 stone tools from his excavations at the Nsongezi site in Uganda. Coding, programing, and the preliminary computer work on a number of variables was done. The project is designed to establish an Upper Pleistocene cultural-stratigraphic se- quence for the locality and to determine the nature of the transition between the Acheulian and Sangoan industries. Dr. Cole also con- tinued his inventory of the Old World Prehistory collections. Dr. Stephan Gasser, Assistant Curator of Oceanic Archaeology and Ethnology, worked on the problems of a standardized system of classification of cultural elements to be used in historical research, and on computerization of data on anthropology collections in mu- seums. As part of these studies, he attended a session of the Com- mittee on Documentation of the International Committee of Mu- seums in Munich, and was named to the former committee. Dr. Phillip H. Lewis, Curator of Primitive Art and Melanesian Ethnology, proceeded toward his goal of returning to field work in New Ireland to continue his extensive studies in Variation in Art and Society in New Ireland. He carried out preliminary analysis of previously gathered data on New Ireland collections in American and European museums and completed a three-month study trip to see important New Ireland collections in Holland and the two Germanys, financed by a grant from the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. Archaeological research in Hay Hollow Valley continued, under the direction of Dr. Paul S. Martin, Chief Curator Emeritus. Sup- ported by grants from the National Science Foimdation and the Museum, the research goal is an explanation of human behavior and cultural change between 500 and 900 A.D. An educational program for undergraduate students, also supported by the National Science 12 Foundation, was continued in both 1967 and 1968. Twenty-four students were introduced to "New Perspectives in Archaeology," with emphasis placed on the philosophy of science and its application to archaeology and on research, with the primary goal at Hay Hollow being the discovery of cross-cultural regularities or "laws" concerning human behavior. Independent research projects of the students focused on testing hypotheses concerned with the transition from an essentially hunting-gathering society to one that was primarily agri- cultural, as occurred in Hay Hollow Valley between 500-900 A.D. Leon Siroto, Assistant Curator of African Ethnology, played a major role in the acquisition of the John Underwood collection of Yoruba Twin figures and in the preparation of a temporary exhibit of these figures in the summer of 1967. In the past two years, he has brought almost to completion his study of the use of masks and mask costumes among the BaKwele people of former French Equatorial Africa, the area which now includes Republic of the Congo (Braz- zaville) and Gabon. Dr. James VanStone, Associate Curator of North American Archaeology and Ethnology, continued an extensive long-range study aimed at a reconstruction of culture change among the Eskimos in the nineteenth century, through the combined use of ethnohistorical and archaeological data. In 1967, he made excavations in the Nushagak River region of southwestern Alaska, financed by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. An analysis of the materials from this excavation was begun in 1968. Preservation and maintenance of the Museum's valuable arti- facts is a most important part of the department's activities every year. Mrs. Christine Danziger, Conservator, devoted considerable time to the cleaning and preservation of a large and rare laquered screen from the K'ang-hsi period (1662-1722) which consisted of 12 panels, and treatment of materials for several temporary exhibits, including an extensive display of Javanese puppets. Mr. Raymond Wielgus, Restorer, worked on numerous ethno- graphic specimens from Africa and Oceania. His most spectacular project was thr cleaning and restoring of two Haida totem poles, 37 and 42 feet high, which were among the Museum's earliest acquisi- tions. These were installed in the strikingly redone Stanley Field Hall. Dr. Hoshien Tchen, Consultant on the East Asian Collection, completed the catalog of Museum rubbings of inscribed stelae from Shensi Province, China, and worked on the important collection of rubbings of Buddhist materials from the famous Lung-men caves, Honan Province. 13 Fern Tree by Eugene M. Shire, Wichita, Kansas. Winner of the INCC Medal Award for Best Plant Print in the 23rd Annual Chicago International Ex- hibition of Nature Photography, 1968. An emphasis on field expeditions has been traditional in the De- partment of Botany and the 1967-1968 period was no exception. Not only did the several expeditions produce additional specimens for the Museum's world-renowned Herbarium, but valuable infor- mation and experiences were gained in the Department's extensive researches in Central and South American Botany. Dr. William C. Burger, Assistant Curator of Vascular Plants, spent the early months in 1967 in field study in Costa Rica, and re- turned again in the spring of 1968. He was accompanied on the latter trip by Robert G. Stolze, Custodian of the Fern Herbarium. Dr. Donald R. Simpson, Assistant Curator of Penivian Botany, made two trips to Amazonian Peru with a side trip to the botanically unknown Tumbes region in Peru during 1967 and 1968. He was joined by Sr. Jose Schunke, Field Assistant, who remained in the field throughout the year. Field Associate Ing. Antonio Molina R. worked in the field in nearly all the Central American countries during 1967 and 1968, visiting the Museum for two months in 1967 to study the collections related to his work. Dr. Louis 0. Williams, Chief Curator of Botany, was also in Amazonian Peru and Nicaragua with staff at various times in 1967. Field work has been productive of both study and exchange materials. Total accessions for the two years were 57,329 specimens. Of these, 31,981 were obtained on Museum expeditions. A catalog of the Museum's type photograph collection of neo- tropical flowering plants was completed in 1968 and comprises a 14 complete list of negatives by plant families, with all genera and species listed alphabetically. The cooperative program with Escuela Agricola Panamericana in Honduras is providing a basis for much of the Flora of Guatemala series in Fieldiana. The Museum and EAP maintain a botanist in the field in Central America, Ing. Antonio Molina R., whose knowl- edge of Central American plants is very extensive. He provides undergraduate instruction, with an emphasis on field work, and is custodian of the school's Paul C. Standley Herbarium, named for the late Curator of the Herbarium at Field Museum. It is the best herbar- ium of native plants in all of Central America. Specimens collected by Molina and his students are processed and stored in the Standley Herbarium, with additional specimens being sent to Field Museum, From Molina's work has come material useful for much of the Central American floristic study undertaken by the Museum botanists. Mutually valuable research programs in cooperation with Servicio Forestal y de Caza in Peru and Museo Nacional de Costa Rica were also continued in 1967 and 1968. Preparation and publication of manuscripts related to the De- partment's primary interests, the botany of Central and South America, has progressed steadily. Dr. Gabriel Edwin, former Assis- tant Curator of Vascular Plants, and Mrs. Dorothy N. Gibson, Custodian of the Herbarium, contributed papers to the Fieldiana series. Flora of Peru. Dr. Patricio Ponce de Leon, Assistant Curator of the Cryptogamic Herbarium, prepared a monogi-aph on the family Geastraceae and a revision of the genus Vascellum, and reported the transfer of a series to the genus Morganella. Dr. Williams published various additions to the Flora of Guatemala. Mr. Stolze published his first scientific paper and Research Associate Dr. Sidney F. Glassman completed preparation of three papers on palms. Pursuing their own projects. Museum botanists worked in the herbaria of several other institutions during 1967 and 1968: Dr. Williams, at National Herbarium, Missouri Botanical Garden. Escuela Agricola Panamericana, and Museo de Historia Natural Xavier Prado in Lima; Dr. Burger, at Missouri Botanical Garden and Escuela Agricola Panamericana; Dr. Ponce de Leon, at New York Botanical Garden, National Fungus Collection, Farlow Herbar- ium, Harvard University; Dr. Simpson, at Museo de Historia Natural Xavier Prado in Lima; Mr, Stolze, Gray Herbarium; Mrs. Gibson, Gray Herbarium, and New York Botanical Garden, In 1967, Dr. Williams was appointed ad honorem Consul of Guatemala for the Midwestern Region. 15 Geology Dr. Rainer Zangerl, Chief Curator of Geology, with David Bardack, University of IlHnois, Circle Campus, and Research As- sociate, described and published on the first lamprey in the fossil record, from the Pit Eleven fauna of Illinois. With Eugene S. Gaffney, graduate student at Columbia University, he also worked on a study of the Late Cretaceous pelomedusid turtles of North America. During the summer of 1967, he spent three months at the Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique in Brussels studying its excellent fossil sea turtle collection, work sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Using material gathered on that trip. Dr. Zangerl completed a manuscript on toxochelyid turtles of Belgium. A particularly heavy amount of writing and editing was under- taken by Dr. Zangerl in 1967. He edited and proof-read a transla- tion of Comparative Odontology by Professor B. Peyer, recently pub- lished by the University of Chicago Press; prepared a contribution on "The Turtle Shell" to Biology of Reptilia for the Academic Press; wrote a histological study of the scales of two Pennsylvanian sharks, and in collaboration with Curators Woodland and Richardson and Mr. L. Zachry, Jr., formerly of the University of Texas, completed a manuscript on early biogeochemical phenomena in concretions, coprolites and cephalopods from the Fayetteville shale (Mississip- pian) of Arkansas. In 1967, together with Dr. Louis Fuchs of Argonne National Laboratory, Dr. Edward Olsen, Curator of Mineralogy, described a newly-discovered mineral, Krinovite, which has been accepted by the Mineral Name Committee of the International Mineralogical Society. Results of the study were presented at the International Symposium on Extraterrestrial Matter by Dr. Fuchs. Research on a group of iron meteorites containing silicate inclusions was also completed. These meteorites revealed abnormally high amounts of potassiimi, aluminum, sodium, and silicon. One of the meteorites has an absolute age of formation approximately 700 million years younger than other meteorites, which, combined with the unusual chemistry, indicates there was a continuous formation of solid bodies 16 Jeletzkya douglassae, from the Pennsylvanian fauna of the Mazon Creek area, is the earliest fossil squid known. It was featured on the cover of Science in 1967 and is in the Douglass collection. A group visits Kentland Quarry, Indiana, on a 1968 Members' field trip led by Dr. Matthew H. Nitecki, Assistant Curator of Fossil Invertebrates. This interesting area is considered to represent a supposed fossil meteorite crater. 17 in our solar system for a period of at least three-quarters of a billion years, as opposed to the previous idea that the system formed over a very short period of time about four or five billion years ago. Parts of this research were done in cooperation with Dr. Klaus Keil, Uni- versity of New Mexico, Dr. Ted Bunch, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Mr. Eugene Jarosewich, U. S. National Museum. Dr. William Tumbull, Associate Cui^ator of Fossil Mammals, de- voted most of 1967 and 1968 to the study of Australian fossils. In preparing a report on fossil rodents of the Wombeyan cave fauna of New South Wales, he and FVederick Schram, a University of Chicago graduate student, laboriously cleaned several thousand specimens belonging to the Australian Museum. In exchange for their efforts, half the specimens will come to Field Museum. His principal effort has been the study of the Pliocene, Hamilton Fauna, a joint project with Dr. Ernest Lundelius of the University of Texas. Dr. Robert Denison, Curator of Fossil Fishes, continued his work on ea^ly lungfishes, writing a paper on the evolution and relationship of the group and making a study of the histology and growth of their tooth plates. During 1968, his extensive researches included Middle Devonian fishes from Idaho, Lower Devonian fishes from Wyoming, Pennsylvanian lungfishes from the Illinois stripmines, the evolution and development of lungfish teeth, and the origin of vertebrates. In connection with these studies, he reached, by pack train, a remote Devonian outcrop in the mountains of British Columbia, where he collected fossil fishes discovered a few years ago by oil geologists. The intensive study of the fossil marine invertebrates from the Pennsylvanian of northern Illinois was continued by Dr. Eugene S. Richardson, Curator of Fossil Invertebrates, in cooperation with Dr. Ralph Johnson, Research Associate. They completed joint papers describing two species of fossil jellyfish and the first known Pennsyl- vanian squid. Their research has focused on the fauna of Pit Eleven, a project supported by a National Science Foundation gi^ant. One paper, Essex Fauna and Medusae, was published and a report on the morphology of Tullimonstrum was begun. Dr. Richardson also studied Pennsylvanian insects on a project with Dr. Frank Carpenter, Chairman of the Biology Department, Harvard University. In his completed study of receptaculitids^ — primitive, sessile organisms — Dr. Matthew H. Nitecki, Assistant Curator of Fossil Invertebrates, showed that these were actually primitive plants, rather than animals as had long been believed. He worked on two 1$ papers on these interesting organisms and collected specimens in the southern United States in 1967 and in Nevada, Utah, Colorado and Indiana in 1968. A National Science Foundation grant was received for prepara- tion of a catalog of type specimens of fossil invertebrates in Field Museum. The late Dr. Diana Handler joined the staff in 1967 and worked on this project until her death in 1968. Julia Golden was appointed Custodian of Types in 1968 and prepared a manuscript on trilobite type specimens with Dr. Nitecki. Dr. Bertram G. Woodland, Curator of Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology, in 1967 completed microscopic studies involving thousands of orientation measurements on minerals in metamorphic rocks of central Vermont. He also worked on a report on the deformation structures of metamorphic rocks from the Royalton area in Vermont, and continued study of the microstructures and deformational history of specimens collected in the metamorphic rocks of the central Black Hills, South Dakota. Many specimens of folded quartzites from a small area of deformed metamorphic rocks in the Front Range, near Boulder, Colorado, were collected for laboratory study. Summarizing his research of 30 years. Dr. John Clark, Associate Curator of Sedimentary Petrology, prepared his monograph on Oligocene sedimentation, stratigraphy, paleoecology, and paleo- climatology in the Bad Lands of South Dakota. He additionally prepared studies on a new family of fossil insectivores and a popula- tion problem in fossil deer. His present research is focused on fossil carnivores. Field work was a significant part of Dr. Clark's work in both years. He conducted paleographic studies in South Dakota, Nebraska, and southeastern Colorado, adding to the Museum's col- lection of Oligocene sedimentary rocks, now among the world's finest. Mr. Walter Kean, Associate in Mineralogy, won in 1967 the highest national award for his gem faceting work. He faceted a group of emeralds ranging from 49 carats downward, including a flawless 14-carat stone which he did for the Museum. A major project of the Paleontological Laboratory was the dis- articulation and moving of the dinosaurs Gorgosaurus and Lamheo- saurus to a new location as part of the renovation of Stanley Field Hall in 1968. The work was done by Chief Preparator Orville Gilpin and his assistant, Gwendolyn Hall. Dr. Zangerl was elected president of the North American Paleon- tological Convention for 1969, to be held at the Museum. Dr. Nitecki was elected a Fellow in the Geological Society of America in 1967 and Dr. Olsen a Fellow in the Meteoritical Society in 1968. 19 Zoology A specimen of the Coelacanth, a fish beheved until a few years ago to be extinct, and an adult ostrich and two young, the first of these birds to be recorded in Egypt in this century, were rare and im- portant additions to the collections of the Department of Zoology in 1967 and 1968. During those two years, a major expedition went to Iran, the second mammal survey of that country led by William S. and Janice K. Street in cooperation with the Iran Game and Fish Department. The majority of Department and Divisional activities, however, centered upon research projects and the vital maintenance of the collections. Intensive studies of African canaries for Peters' Check-list of Birds of the World was the major project of Dr. Austin L. Rand, Chief Curator of Zoology. DIVISION OF MAMMALS— The Street Expedition was in the field in Iran from June to December. Daniel R. Womochel and Anthony F. DeBlase, graduate students at Texas Technological University and Oklahoma State University respectively, and Richard Rust, an ecto- parasitologist from the University of California at Davis, joined Mr. and Mrs. Street after pre-expedition planning which included five months of work by Womochel and DeBlase in Chicago. Womochel concentrated on prey species, DeBlase on predators and Rust on ecto- parasites in an intensive collecting and ecological study schedule in the mountainous western provinces. The five-month expedition yielded 2,000 mammal specimens and many ectoparasites, plants, and incidental specimens, as well as vast amounts of field notes. Dr. Joseph Curtis Moore's research on characteristics of maturity in the whale, Mesoplodon layardi, was completed and written up in 1968 following a major work on beaked whales completed in 1967. The latter was the result of many years of study on relationships among the living genera of beaked whales. Research Curator Philip Hershkovitz continued research on various aspects of South American mammals. In recent years, Mr. Hershkovitz' studies have focused on New World monkeys. When completed, a monograph on these will prove especially valuable to people engaged in medical research with monkeys because it will enable them to identify the animals correctly and will provide com- prehensive information about the various species. As part of these 20 The Coelacanth, Latimeria chalumnae, caught 25 August, 1967 off the Comoro Islands, near Madagascar. studies he did some original work in the area of color evolution in monkeys specifically, and mammals generally. A treatment of this very complex subject was developed for inclusion in the Museum's 75th Anniversary Exhibit. Another scientist interested in coloration in monkeys, Asso- ciate Dr. Jack Fooden prepared a manuscript on color phase variation throughout the gibbons, a digression from his mono- graphic investigation of the macaque monkeys. These studies result from Dr. Fooden's 1969 field work in Thailand and trip to the U. S. National Museum to study additional material. Dr. Fooden was invited to participate in the Inter-disciplinary Con- ference on Old World Primates, sponsored by the Wenner-Gren Foundation, and the Study Group Conference on Systematics of Non-Human Primates, sponsored by the Smithsonian Institution. DIVISION OF BIRDS— During 1967 and 1968, Emmet R. Blake, Curator of Birds, completed manuscript on most of the families of birds scheduled for volume one of Manual of Neotropical Birds, a major work which will ultimately include taxonomic information, descriptions and distribution of more than 3,200 species of Central 21 and South American birds, and the characters, descriptions, distri- bution and measurements of more than 8,500 races or sub-species of birds. The final work is intended to be a source book for professional scientists, and will include more than 1,000 illustrations. It is the first attempt to put into one publication information that has either not previously been available, or has been found only in widely scat- tered reports. The work is being supported by the National Science Foundation. Curator Blake and Melvin A. Traylor, Associate Curator of Birds, both completed manuscripts for sections of Peters' Check-list of Birds of the World. DIVISION OF REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS— Returning from his appointment as program Director for Environment Biology at the National Science Foundation, Dr. Robert F. Inger, Curator of Rep- tiles and Amphibians, resumed his studies of amphibian and rep- tilian communities. Under provisions of a three-year grant to con- tinue this investigation. Dr. W. R. Heyer joined the Division of Reptiles staff with the prime responsibility of managing field work in Thailand. Two trends in the methodology of studying specimens have been increasingly utilized in the division. One is to measure a very large number of the anatomical features of the animal being studied and the other is the use of high-speed computers as an aid in analyzing the data. Without the use of the computer, the time in- volved in analysis of the data would be extremely costly. This methodology characterized the study of evolutionary relations of Eurasian toads completed by Dr. Inger in 1968 and the study of characters and species phylogenies of the poisonous viperine snakes and their relatives, jointly undertaken by Hymen Marx, Associate Curator of Reptiles, and Dr. George B. Rabb, Associate Director of the Chicago Zoological Society and a Museum Research Associate. The Division of Reptiles and Amphibians is actively involved in graduate education programs and five students did at least a portion of their graduate work in the Museum during 1968. A major addi- tion to the division's collections during 1967-1968 was the acquisition of the Edward H. Taylor Herpetological Collection, with more than 10,000 specimens, many of them rare or not previously represented in the Museum's collections. DIVISION OF FISHES— Loren P. Woods, Curator of Fishes, partici- pated by invitation in a 1967 training cruise of the Stanford Univer- sity Research Vessel, Te Vega. Objective of the cruise was investiga- 22 tion of the oxygen minimum layer in the 1,000 mile area between Acapulco and the Galapagos. Collections of shore fishes were made in four locations in the Galapagos Islands. Mr. Woods continued his study of the primitive spiny Berycoid order of fishes and completed a monograph on Berycoid fishes of West Africa and the Indian Ocean in 1968. He also began work on a descriptive catalog of the genus Adioryx, belonging to the family Holocentridae, order Beryciformes. Mrs. Angela Munoz de Lew awards the Order of Vasco Nunez de Balboa to Lt. Col. Vernon J. Tipton, center, and Dr. Rupert L. Wenzel, Curator of Insects for their work, Ectoparasites of Panama. DIVISION OF INSECTS— Dr. Rupert L. Wenzel, Curator of Insects, pursued studies begun in 1967 on the Streblid batflies of Venezuela. The research is part of a cooperative study of the results of an intensive four-year survey of ectoparasites and viruses of ver- tebrates in Venezuela. The project is headed by Dr. Charles O. Handley of Smithsonian Institution and Prof. Vernon J. Tipton of Brigham Young University. Dr. Wenzel attended the International Congress of Entomology in Russia in 1968 and while there had a rare opportunity to collect in the Chimgan Mountains of Uzbekistan, north of Afghanistan. He and Prof. Tipton, then Lt. Col., U. S. Army, were awarded the national decoration of Panama, the Order of Vasco Nunez de Balboa, in the grade of Caballero, for their publication. Ectoparasites of Panama'. Henry S. Dybas, Associate Curator of Insects, cooperated with Dr. Monte Lloyd, of the University of Chicago, on intensive studies of the periodical cicada. They analyzed field data gathered in pre- vious years, with special attention to the evolutionary aspects of the population biology of this insect. Dr. Wenzel is also contributing a section on the family Streblidae to the Catalogue of Diptera of the Americas south of the United States. This work, being written by many cooperating specialists, was initi- 23 ated and is being directed by the Departamento de Zoologia, Secre- taria da Agricultura, Sao Paulo, Brazil. DIVISION OF LOWER INVERTEBRATES— During the past two years, Dr. Alan Solem, Curator of Lower Invertebrates, completed ex- haustive studies which resulted in preparation of two monographs on Pacific Island Endodontid land snails, in which he describes 37 new genera and 151 new species. The results of work which indicated that the succineid land snails are advanced, rather than primitive, pulmonates, were presented at the 3rd European Malacological Con- gress in Vienna in 1968. Accessions added 23,000 specimens to the collection of mollusks. Notable were Tasmanian and New Caledonian land mollusks collected by Laurie Price, Colombian land snails col- lected by Borys Malkin, and gifts of Borneo and Gulf of Oman marine shells by the Chicago Shell Club. During 1968, Dr. Solem was elected vice-president of the American Malacological Union and a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. After a distinguished scientific career which spanned six decades, Fritz Haas, Curator Emeritus of Lower Invertebrates, retired in 1967. Dr. Haas' bibliography lists over 300 titles. He has described 385 new genera and species. DIVISION OF VERTEBRATE ANATOMY— Karel F. Liem, Associate Curator of Vertebrate Anatomy, concentrated in 1967 on the geo- graphical variations in the patterns of natural sex reversal in the circumtropical, eel-like fish order, Synbranchiformes. Most members of this order are bom as female and change sex later in life to become males. However, in some geographical areas, a second type of male that is bom as a male was discovered. In a cooperative effort, Liem, Dr. George Barlow of the University of California, and Dr. Wolfgang Wickler of the Max Planck Institute in Germany completed a study in which they proposed a new teleost fish family, Badidae, based on morphological, behavioral and em- bryological evidence. Continuing his evolutionary morphological studies of the predaceous fish family, Nandidae (leaf fishes). Dr. Liem found the morphological diversity in nandids has been caused by relatively minor genetic differences governing relative growth of bones and ossification centers which led to chain reactions of functionally coadaptive changes in other organs. Dr. Liem, Loren P. Woods, Curator of Fishes, and Jeffrey Klahn, University of California at Los Angeles, have started a large research project on the relevance of 24 gross brain anatomy to the systematics of teleost fishes. Dr. Liem is also continuing his studies on the comparative histology of the res- piratory organs and integument in the Synbranchiformes. Dr. Liem is also an Associate Professor of Anatomy at the Uni- versity of Illinois Medical Center and is chairman of the school's Committee on Graduate Studies. He was appointed in 1968 to the Committee on Latimeria of the National Academy of Sciences. Dr. Charles M. Oxnard, Associate Professor of Anatomy at the Univer- sity of Chicago, was named a division Research Associate in 1968. The late D. Dwight Davis, Field Museum's Curator of Ver- tebrate Anatomy for 35 years, was honored in 1968 by the estab- lishment of a prize in his name. The D. Dwight Davis Prize in Vertebrate Morphology will be given each year by the American Society of Zoologists for the outstanding paper presented by a graduate student at the annual meeting of the Society. Davis, who ranks among the foremost comparative anatomists of the 20th Century, is best known for his monumental work entitled "The Giant Panda," published by Field Museum Press in 1964. Siphonops annulatus, a worm-like amphibian. Members of this group, the Order Apoda, are among the least known vertebrates. They are well represented in the important collection acquired from Dr. Edward H. Taylor of the University of Kansas, in 1967. (Photo by Carl Gans). 25 Exhibition There was an important restructuring of the Department of Ex- hibition during 1968. Seven staff members joined the Department, including the new chief, Lothar P. Witteborg. The pace of the Special Exhibits program quickened greatly during the two years. 1967 saw, among others, an exhibit of Pre-Columbian Medical Miniatures, collected by Dr. Abner Weisman; a very interesting collection of Yoruba twin figures from Nigeria, now part of the Mu- seum's permanent collections, and an exhibit entitled "Silent Cities," a collection of architectural photographs of the Ancient Maya buildings of Mexico and Central America by Norman Carver, a Kalamazoo, Michigan, architect. Recurring annual exhibits, such as the Chicago Lapidary Club Exhibits, the Annual Exhibitions of Nature Photography, sponsored by the Chicago Nature Camera Club, and the Chicago Shell Club Exhibits, were well received. Field Museum observed the Sesquicentennial of the State of Illinois in 1968 with a special self-guided tour of the natural history of Illinois through the permanent exhibits of the Museum. 1968 be- gan with a small exhibit on the poisonous brown recluse spider, only recently described by scientists, and even more recently found in the Chicago area. In May, the major traveling exhibit, "Masada, King Herod's Fortress" opened. A collection of photographs by Dale Osborn, Museum Field Associate in Zoology, entitled "Egypt through a Biologists Eye" was shown in June. The thousands of visitors to the American Indian Festival saw exhibits of Indian artifacts and culture, and a fine photographic study of Indian life in Chicago, by Orlando Cabanban. The year ended with a lively exhibit of Javanese puppets, one of the earliest collec- tions acquired by the Museum. The puppets had not been on public exhibition since the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893. The Exhibit "Tibet— High Land of Monk and Nomad" was the major addition to the permanent exhibit halls. Work on other permanent halls was being planned. Perhaps the most dramatic change in Field Museum in 1968 was the revitalization of Stanley Field Hall, the great central hall of the Museum. The world famous elephants were moved off center, as were the two fine dinosaur speci- mens. Trees were added to the hall; fountains were installed. Best of all, two excellent Northwest Coast totem poles, both about forty feet tall, were placed in the Hall. The poles, which had been on dis- 26 play vertically, in sections, in Hall 10, are a fitting and vigorous addition. The public areas have been greatly improved by the installation of handsome carpeted lounges overlooking Stanley Field Hall at the North and South ends of the second floor gallery. Windows were cut through for both lounges, and the views of the lake, and the city from the North Lounge, are spectacular. Major financial assistance for the lounge project was received from the Service Club of Chicago. Two views of the new Stanley Field Hall. ■^".y ■ L ■ I b r a r y From William Huddesford's edition of Martin Lister's Historia Conchyliorum, a rare work on shells published in England in 1 770. Acquired by Field Museum in 1967. The Library has experienced another two years of increased use by the scientific staff, students and visitors, and of steady growth. The reference Division reported in 1967 a substantial 28 percent rise in the number of users (exclusive of staff) and a 27 percent increase in the number of volumes used. In 1968 a 12 percent rise in the number of users was reported, while the number of volumes called for declined slightly. These figures apply only to the Reading Room and do not reflect the growing usage of the departmental and di- visional libraries. The Library's ongoing acquisitions program has been strength- ened by the 1967 appointment of Mrs. Alfreda C. Rogowski as Order Librarian. Over 20,000 items were added to the collections during this two year period. The Cataloging Division reported substantial progress, par- ticularly in the reclassification of the Botany and Anthropology Libraries. 6,135 titles (12,422 volumes) were cataloged, including 3,744 reclassified titles (8,785 volumes). 6,308 analytics were pre- pared for articles and monographs in serial publications. 76,516 cards were prepared, a huge increase over previous years. Many valuable and important gifts were made to the Library by interested donors. Chief among these in 1967 was a fine collection of ornithological works from the library of the late Ormsby Annan, given by his wife. In 1968, we received two valuable works from the firm of Hamill and Barker: Lonnberg's Svenska Faglar and the first 60 parts of Geoffroy-Saint-Hilaire's Histoire Naturelle Des Mam- miferes. Donations of this kind greatly enrich the value of our collections. 28 The entire staff of the Museum was saddened by the illness and subsequent death, on August 31, 1968, of the Librarian, Meta P. Howell (Mrs. Frederick S. Howell), after 20 years of service. Her loss has been keenly felt. Public Information Very nearly three thousand pages of new scientific research were published by Field Museum Press during 1967 and 1968. The sub- jects were as varied as living whales and fossil jelly-fish. The Bulletin, increasing in both size and circulation, reflected the quickening pace of events in the Museum. By the end of 1968, the Printing Division was producing material at a rate 50% greater than in 1966. The Division of Public Relations, a part of the Department of Planning and Development, very successfully brought the events of the two years to the public. Coverage by all media, particularly the press and television, increased and a series of short spot announce- ments for television was produced. Phil Clark, Public Relations Counsel, initiated and developed the Field Museum Natural History Tours to Guatemala, Mexico and Brazil. The tours won immediate and enthusiastic acceptance. The Division was also deeply involved in Member's Nights and other public events. With attendance rising, the Museum Book Store saw its sales in- crease by 18%. The Divisions of Photography and Motion Pictures, which serve the public as well as the other Departments and Divisions in the Museum noted a considerable increase in activity. Building Operations The work of the Building Department accelerated greatly as a result of the exhibition, lounge, and other building projects pre- viously mentioned. Increased attendance put further strain on a building maintenance staff already hard pressed to meet the demands made upon it. Financial restrictions continue to prohibit the addi- tion of much needed personnel. Surveys of the Museum's physical requirements were made during 1967 and 1968 by Harry Weese and Associates, Architects, and John Dolio and Associates, Inc., Engineers. Their reports have been of great value in Field Museum's planning for the years to come. 29 FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Statement of Revenues and Expenditures Current Funds Years ended December 31, 1968 and 1967 OPERATING FUND revenues: 1968 1967 Endowment income (unrestricted) — From investments in securities $ 958,177 $ 936,415 From investments in real estate 112,000 112,000 $1,070,177 $1,068,415 Chicago Park District— tax collections 422,283 423,600 Annual and sustaining memberships 84,520 67,126 Admissions 50,033 51,502 Unrestricted contributions and sundry receipts . . . 528,107 409,439 Restricted funds transferred and expended through Operating Fund 724,202 404,711 $2,879,322 $2,424,793 expenditures: Scientific (anthropology, botany, geology and zoology) $1,056,972 $ 917,046 Education and exhibition 278,216 199,405 Publication, illustration and photography 166,841 159,086 Library 100,560 106,291 Building improvements, maintenance and security 828,073 627,774 Administration and general 462,259 420,015 $2,892,921 $2,429,617 deficit for year $ 13,599 $ 4,824 N. W. HARRIS PUBLIC SCHOOL EXTENSION FUND Endowment income $ 59,348 $ 57,097 Expenditures 42,626 45,959 excess OF revenues over EXPENDITURES $ 16,722 $ 11,138 continued on next page 30 OTHER RESTRICTED FUNDS 1968 1967 revenues: From restricted Endowment Fund investments . . $ 111,299 $ 111,662 Contributions and grants for specified purposes. . 441,399 389,526 Operating Fund provision for heating plant renewal 22,486 22,486 Gain on sale of restricted fund securities 2,750 $ 575,184 $ 526,424 Expenditures through Operating Fund 724,202 404,711 EXCESS (deficit) OF REVENUES OVER EXPENDITURES $ (149,018) $ 121,713 NOTES TO STATEMENT OF REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES - CURRENT FUNDS December 31, 1968 1. Accounting for Museum property and collections In accordance with common institutional practice, building alterations and renovations and acquisitions of collections, furniture and equipment are charged to expense as incurred. No depreciation is provided on the Museum building, but annual appropriations (not based on the cost or remaining lives of specific assets) are made for heating plant renewal. 2. Pension plan The Museum has a contributory trusteed pension plan covering substantially all employees. Pension expense under the plan, including amortization of past service cost over 15 years, amounted to $96,000 ($89,000 in 1967). The Museum follows a policy of funding pension costs as accrued. The unfunded past service lia- bility at December 31, 1968, as actuarially computed, was approximately $530,000. The Board of Trustees Field Museum of Natural History We have examined the accompanying statement of revenues and expendi- tures— current funds of the Field Museum of Natural History for the year ended December 31, 1968. Our examination was made in accordance with gen- erally accepted auditing standards, and accordingly included such tests of the accounting records and such other auditing procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. In our opinion, the statement mentioned above presents fairly the results of financial operations of the current funds of the Field Museum of Natural History for the year ended December 31, 1968, in conformity with generally accepted in- stitutional accounting principles applied on a basis consistent with that of the preceding year. Arthur Young & Company January 29, 1969 31 Use During 1968 and 1967 of Income from Special Purpose Endowment Funds 1968 1967 Edward E. Ayer Lecture Foundation Fund Cost of Museum Lecture Series $ 5,881 $ 5,562 Indian Art Festival Program 9,622 — ■ Frederick Reynolds and Abbey Kettle Babcock Fund Subsidy to Publication Program 2,885 2,868 William J. and Joan A. Chalmers Trust Fund Laboratory equipment 929 1,634 Mrs. Joan A. Chalmers Bequest Fund Purchase of specimens 644 1,413 Laboratory equipment 3,133 604 CoNOVER Game Bird Fund Expedition and study trips 1,400 1,887 Purchase of specimens 4,913 2,434 Emily Crane Chadbourne Zoological Fund Field trip 520 351 Thomas J. Dee Fellowship Fund Fellowship grants 2,590 4,650 Group Insurance Fund* — 5,112 N. W. Harris Public School Extension Fund Preparation, care and distribution of exhibits to Chicago schools 42,626 45,959 Library FuNof Purchase of books and periodicals 7,145 10,236 James A. Nelson and Anna Louise Raymond Public Schoool and Children's Lecture Fund Subsidy to public school and children's lecture program 46,052 46,254 Maurice L. Richardson Paleontological Fund Expeditions, field work and professional meetings 3,827 3,815 Purchase of specimens — 1,100 Karl P. Schmidt Fund Study grant 246 — These funds have been used in accordance with the stipulations under which they were accepted by the Museum. In addition, the income from more than $21,000,000 of unrestricted endowment funds was used in general Museum opera- tions for the years 1968 and 1967. * Established by Stanley Field t Established by Edward E. Ayer, Huntington W. Jackson, Arthur B. Jones, and Julius and Augusta N. Rosenwald 32 Contributions and Bequests The gifts of many individuals have built a great mu- seum. Contributions and bequests now and in the future will permit needed improvement of exhibits, expansion of the educational program, and increased support of scientific research. The following form is suggested to those who wish to provide for Field Museum of Natural History in their wills: Form of Bequest I do hereby give and bequeath to Field Museum of Natural History of the City of Chicago, State of Illinois: Cash contributions to Field Museum of Natural History are allowable as deductions in computing net income for federal income tax purposes. 33 DONORS TO THE COLLECTIONS OF THE MUSEUM 1967 - 1968 DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY Ernst Anspach The Aurora Historical Museum, Aurora, Illinois Wallis Austin Mrs. Edwin Hunt Badger Mrs. George W. Beadle Dr. Charles A. Beck Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Bent Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Blumberg Richard Boetel Robert W. Campbell Robert A. Carr Columbia University New York, New York Rene d'Harnoncourt Mrs. Lawrence Dreiman George Driver Victor D. Du Bois Allan Frumkin Edna H. Fulde Mrs. A. W. F. Fuller Dr. Julian R. Goldsmith Mrs. Sarah E. Granquist Dr. Edwin S. Hall, Jr. Mrs. Corwith Hamill Lloyd Harris E. D. Hester Mrs. G. C. Hodgson Mrs. Geneva Hunt Mrs. Henry Irvin Mrs. Gladys Jensen Mrs. Walter E. Kistner Mrs. George T. Lang- home Christopher C. Legge James E. Lockwood, Jr. Mrs. Walter B. Loewen- herz Arthur Markowitz Mrs. Margaret H. McLellan Kenneth G. McQuin Mr. and Mrs. D. Daniel Michael Mrs. Raymond Munoz National Monuments Commission — Zambia El Hadj Seidou N. Ndeya Constance Ohlinger Mrs. William F. Petersen Howard R. Peterson Miss Jessica Roza Arthur Rubloff Fred Runk Mrs. Dagmola Sakyapa Miss Margaret Schloemer Mrs. Robert Sherman Ed Stashinkski Mrs. Phyllis Stevens Robert A. Stough Mrs. William N. Sumer- well Sidney A. Teller David Tetenbaum Dr. William A. Thomas Mrs. William Thoresen Chester D. Tripp John Underwood Dr. James W. VanStone Mrs. Susan Vogel Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ware Wheaton College Gordon A. Wickstrom Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Wielgus Dr. Louis O. Williams Mrs. Dorothy K. Young Mrs. Claire Zeisler DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY University of Alabama Bailey Hortorium, Ithaca, N.Y. Charles Balser R. C. Barneby Dr. Robert O. Belcher Holly Reed Bennett Capt. Harold Benyovszky University of British Columbia Dr. George S. Bunting University of California Dr. Margery Carlson Prof. Chu-Ngoc-Thuy Phil Clark Dr. Temd R. Deason Dr. Angel Diaz Dudley Herbarium, Stanford, California Escuela Agricola Pan- americana, Costa Rica Dr. Paul A. Fryxell General Biological Supply House, Chicago, Illinois Dr. S. F. Classman Dr.''G. Guzman Harvard University Botanical Museum, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts Herbario Hatschbach A. H. Heller Frederick J. Hermann University of Illinois University of Indiana Instituto Botanico — Venezuela Dr. Oton Jimenez Kansas State University Dr. B. A. Krukoif C. H. Lankester Kendall Laughlin Earle F. Layser, Jr. Francis F. Lukas Dr. Robert Maxwell University of Minnesota Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Missouri Prof. Antonio Molina R. University of Agriculture — Netherlands New York Botanical Garden, New York, New York Olivet Nazarene College, Kankakee, Illinois Dr. Dale J. Osborn Palynologiska Labora- toriet — Sweden J. Parks Grant L. Pyrah Dr. Peter H. Raven Mrs. Alfrieda Rehling 34 (Department of Botany — Donations — continued) Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh, Scotland Dr. J. Rzedowski Dr. Rolf Singer Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Dr. William Randolph Taylor Unit«i States Forest Service Laboratory United States Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 University of Texas Universidad de Venezuela Dr. Louis O. Williams University of Wisconsin DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY Dr. A. A. Arata Ray Bandringa, Jr. Dr. David Bardack Dean Baxter Scott Bowman University of Chicago Dr. Glen Cole Glenn Commons David Cooper Robert Corso Walter Dabasinskas Kenneth Davenport Mrs. Leon Diamond Arthur Eadie Thomas Edes Dr. Margaret Elliott John F\ink Mr. and Mrs. Calvin George Stephen George Tom Gibbs Glen Lake Silver Mines, Ltd., Toronto, Canada D. N. Gregg Tom Guensburg Miss Gertrude Hannen Paul Harris Jerry Herdina William Heston Eugene Hildebrand, M.D. John Honan University of Illinois — Circle Campus Dr. C. G. Jackson Walter E. Johansen Walter Kean Mr. and Mrs. James Konecny Willard P. Leutze Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthies Mrs. Katherine Matthies Stephen May Harold Means Robert Metz Monmouth College, Monmouth, Illinois Lee Petersen Mr. and Mrs. Ted Piecko Dr. Leonard Radinsky Byram Reed Prof. Holmes A. Semken Glenn Smetana Chester Dudley Tripp Pvt. Grant M. Valentine Virginia Polytechnic Institution William Wilson University of Wisconsin Mr. and Mrs. Harry Witmer Mr. and Mrs. Francis A. Wolff Jay C. Wollin David Young DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY Phil Albrecht Brother Donald Allen CSC Miss Polly Scribner Ames Dr. N. MoUer Andersen Dr. E. Wyllys Andrews Mrs. Ormsby Annan Argonne National Laboratory Sana I. Atallah James M. Barker Dr. M. Basoglu Robert A. Behrstock Dr. Georg Benick Frederick H. Berry Dr. Rolf A. Brandt Dr. Branley A. Branson University of British Columbia Mr. and Mrs. John Q. Burch Mrs. Alice Burke Gene Cerf E. P. Chace Chicago Pet Shop Chicago Shell Club Chicago Zoological Society Dr. David Cook Dr. Earle A. Cross Philip Dart Dr. D. Dundee Dr. Louis Dupree Stanley J. Dvorak Henry Dybas Ralph M. Eisenmann Dr. Robert E. Elbel Dr. K. C. Emerson A. R. Emery Mr. and Mrs. George Engelmann Fred R. Fechtner Mrs. Faye Frost General Biological Supply House, Chicago, lUinois Murray O. Glenn Stanley W. Gorham David W. Greenfield Dr. Mel Reese Guttman Dr. Glenn E. Haas Lee Hanke Tom Harrisson K. Hartberg Richard Highton C. E. Hoger Dr. Harry Hoogstraal Dr. Henry Howden Dr. Zdenek Hruban Ijeslie Hubricht Illinois Conservation Department Illinois Natural History Survey 35 (Department of Zoology — Donations — continued) Ralph Jackson E. W. Jameson, Jr. Dr. Murray Johnson Tom R. Johnson Dr. David Kistner Dr. Erich Klinghammer Dr. N. L. H. Kraus.s Dr. Hugh C. Land Dr. Robert J. Lavenberg Dr. John Lawrence Emanuel Ledecky - Janacek Dr. E. F. Legner Pong Leng-EE Dr. Eleanor Isabel Leslie Dr. Robert E. Lewis Lirn Boo Liat Dr. Karel F. Liem Lincoln Park Zoological Society, Chicago, Illinois Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History Dr. K. H. Lulidry Dr. Ernest Lundelius, Jr. Robert Marshall David J. Martin J. I. Menzies University of Miami University of Michigan, Museum of Zoology Margaret A. Moran Museum d'Histoire Naturelle, Geneva, Switzerland Dr. Charles F. Nadler Natal Museum, Natal, South Africa National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases — Rocky Mountain Laboratory Norshore Pets North Dakota State University Northwestern State College, Natchitoches, Louisiana Thomas S. Olechowski Prof. Orlando Park Dr. J. J. Parodiz Jerry A. Payne Stewart Peck Laurie Price Michael Prokop Dr. George Rabb Dr. Charles A. Reed Dr. Kenneth W. Reid Charles Requa Arnold Richter Dr. K. Rhode San Diego Zoological Society G. A. Schad Mrs. Omar Schilling Jerry Schloemer Dr. Charles H. Seevers John G. Shedd Aquarium, Chicago, Illinois Smithsonian Institution Oceanographic Sorting Center, Wash., D.C. Harrison R. Steeves, Jr. Carol B. Stein Mr. and Mrs. William S. Street Ken Strong Dr. Walter Suter Dr. R. D. Suttkus Dr. G. K. Sweatman Mrs. Margaret M. Col. Robert Traub Dr. William D. Turnbull United States Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, Great Lakes Fisheries Institute United States Fish and Wildlife Service John Unziker University of Utah Dr. James VanStone John Visser Harold K. Voris Dr. David Wake Munroe L. Walton Dr. Yaskuaki Watanabe A. M. R. Wegner Dr. Louis 0. Williams Dr. Frank Young Dr. Willard Young Zoologisch Museum, Amsterdam Zoologisches Staatsinsti- tut und Zoologisches Museum, Hamburg, Germany Ormsby Annan W. Andrew Archer Banco de la Republica, Bogota, Colombia Dr. Al. Barash Commander and Mrs. G. E. Boone Francis Brenton Dr. John Clark David R. Cook C. H. Crickmay Mrs. A. W. F. Fuller Mrs. Dorothy Gibson Dr. Fritz Haas Hamill and Barker, Chicago Russell Hiebert Mrs. Geneva E. Hunt LIBRARY Sherman E. Lee Little, Brown and Company Cyrus Longworth Lundell University of Michigan, Museum of Art John R. Millar Dr. Joseph C. Moore Dr. Matthew H. Nitecki Dr. Edward J. Olsen Dr. Albert Eide Parr Dr. Paul J. Patchen Roger Podewell Dr. Austin L. Rand Dr. Charles A. Reed Senn High School Biology Laboratory, Chicago Leon Siroto Carl S. Spohr Dr. Kenneth Starr Mr. and Mrs. William S. Street Taylor Museum of the Colorado Fine Arts Center Mary Antonia Thomas Dr. James W. VanStone Charles Vesely Dr. Paul Voth Mrs. Cyril Ward Wenner-Gren Founda- tion for Anthropo- logical Research Dr. Rupert L. Wenzel Dr. Louis 0. Williams Dr. Rainer Zangerl 36 DONORS TO THE FUNDS OF THE MUSEUM 1967 - 1968 INDIVIDUALS DONATIONS OF $1000 OR MORE A YEAR Mr. & Mrs. A. Watson Armour III Mr. & Mrs. Lester Armour George A. Bates Mr. & Mrs. Harry 0. Bercher William McCormick Blair Mr. & Mrs. Leigh B. Block DeWitt Buchanan Margaret B. Conover Mrs. James A. Cook Dexter Cummings Mr. & Mrs. Wesley M. Dixon, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Elliott Donnelley Mr. & Mrs. Gaylord Donnelley Mr. & Mrs. T. E. Donnelley II William K. Fellows Trust The Field Foundation of Illinois, Inc. Joseph N. Field Mrs. Anne Rickcords Gait Mr. & Mrs. James R. Getz Estate of Clarissa Donnelley HafTner Hales Charitable Fund, Inc. Benjamin R. Harris Mrs. Robert Hixon Dr. Helen Holt Mr. & Mrs. Henry P. Isham Mr. & Mrs. Willard Jaques Mrs. Stanley Keith Mrs. John L. Kellogg David M. Kennedy Frederick K. Leisch Dr. Eleanor I. Leslie Mr. & Mrs. John W. Leslie H. N orris Love Mr. & Mrs. William H. Mitchell Mr. & Mrs. Remick McDowell Mr. & Mrs. James L. Palmer Maria A. Parks Memorial Fund — The Chicago Communitv Trust Mrs. Clarence C. Prentice John A. & Zora E. Renn William A. and Stella M. Rowley Fellowship Fund Mrs. Clive Runnells John S. Runnells Seabury-Western Theological Seminary William L. Searle John G. & Francis C. Searle — The Chicago Community Trust The Service Club of Chicago The Shinner Foundation John M. Simpson Gerald A. Sivage Mr. & Mrs. Edward Byron Smith Mr. & Mrs. Solomon Byron Smith Hy Smoler Mr. & Mrs. John V. Spachner Herman Spertus Mrs. & Mrs. Jack C. Staehle Joel Starrels Mrs. David B. Stern, Jr. Mrs. David M. Stewart Mr. & Mrs. William S. Street Mrs. Rov E. Sturtevant Mr. & Mrs. Phelps H. Swift Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Tieken Mr. & Mrs. Chester Dudley Tripp Mr. & Mrs. Louis Ware J. W. Watzek, Jr. M. W. Welch Wiebolt Foundation Woods Charitable Fund, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Philip K. Wrigley Mrs. Ernest Zeisler Kenneth V. Zweiner DONATIONS OF LESS THAN $1000 Anonymous (4) Mr. & Mrs. Ely M. Aaron Henry L. Abrahams Jules Abramson Laurence Acker Claude Adair Cyrus H. Adams III Walter Q. Adams Earl H. Addison Mr. & Mrs. John Ade Dr. Robert Adler Robert S. Adler Family Fund Mr. & Mrs. O. A. Akerlund Mr. & Mrs. Lee Winfield Alberts George Albiez Miss Barbara Albrecht O. O. Albritton Thomas W. Alder Edward Alexander William H. Alexander Charles A. Alfano William R. Alfini Arthur C. Allyn 37 (Individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Alschuler Miss Bonnie J. Andersen Marshall Andersen Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Anderson Carlyle E. Anderson Miss Corliss D. Anderson Dale Anderson Donald B. Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Helmer N. Anderson Robert W. Anderson Frederick B. Andrews Paul M. Andrews Vernon Annamunthodo H. E. Anning Stephen J. Antonik Arthur I. Appleton Donald L. Arends Harvey Arkin A. Watson Armour IV Laurance H. Armour, Jr. Mrs. Vernon Armour Leslie Arnett Herbert R. Arnold D. S. Arnot Mrs. Zelda G. Aronson George Arquilla, Jr. Carl E. Atwood Edwin C. Austin Arthur C. Averitt Burton Babetch Alex H. Bacci Mrs. Robert A. Baer George R. Bailey Reginald K. Bailey Miss Pat Bain John W. Baird Mrs. Harry Bairstow, Jr. Miss Rhea O. Baker Lawrence G. Balch Rosecrans Baldwin William R. Balkin Willard J. Ball Mrs. Ernest S. Ballard Dr. Sam W. Banks Clayton H. Banzhaf Edward Bara, Sr. Mrs. Leo Barazowski Franklin D. Barber H. A. Barber Elwood Barce Horace Barden Lillian D. Bargquist Oscar A. Barke Mrs. C. R. Barker James M. Barker W. Curtis Barkes Mrs. H. G. Barkhausen Mrs. Claude A. Barnett Eugene Barnett Mrs. George Barnett David H. Barnow Lyman Barr Mrs. A. M. Barrett Miss Nell Bartels Mrs. C. E. Barth William Bartholomay, Jr. Robert C. Bartlett George F. Bartoszek Charles Bass Emery Bass George A. Basta Donald C. Batalia Miss Faye E. Bates Dr. Donald J. Bauer Mark L. Baxter Mr. & Mrs. Michael Bayard Mrs. George R. Beach, Jr. Mrs. George W. Beadle Ross J. Beatty Robert C. Becherer Miss Edith Becher James H. Becker Dr. Helen R. Reiser Mr. & Mrs. John C. Bell John L. Bell, Sr. Mrs. Laird Bell Dr. Alfred Bellizzi Jerry F. Benes Alfred Benesch Mrs. Bertram W. Bennett Gail Bennett Mr. & Mrs. B. E. Bensinger Hugh Benson Mrs. Julian Bentley Mrs. Richard Bentley Lambert Bere David G. Berens Mr. & Mrs. Hal A. Bergdahl Garret L. Bergen Emery E. Bergfors Richard C. Berliner Jack Besser Beth Emet Synagogue Harry J. Bettendorf Miss Hermine Beukema Charles E. Bidwell Louis W. Biegler Dr. & Mrs. H. E. Bielinski Paul E. Birk Mrs. Frank J. Bittel Edward R. Bixby Harry Black Blake Blair Mr. & Mrs. Bowen Blair Edward F. Blettner W. R. Blew Mrs. Joseph L. Block Mr. & Mrs. Philip D. Block, Jr. Mrs. George W. Blossom, Jr. CM. Blumenschein Raymond S. Blunt, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. R. P. Boardman Mrs. George V. Bobrinskoy Earl C. Bodine Harold C. Bodine Paul J. Bodine, Jr. Robert E. Bodman W. S. Bodman Harold C. Boehme J. E. Boetcher Arthur H. Boettcher Ralph Bogan, Jr. William J. Bohman Edward F. Bokhof Gerald G. Bolotin Louis Bonhajo Mr. & Mrs. Frank H. Bopp Mrs. Bruce Borland Mrs. John Jay Borland II Fred P. Bosselman M. M. Botkin Jackson L. Boughner Miss Ann Elizabeth Bouvier Mrs. William J. Bowe Mrs. Clarence W. Bowen Dr. Robert Bowen Miss Violet J. Bowen Herman C. Bowersox Murray L. Box M. Boxenbaum Denman H. Boyd Mrs. T. Kenneth Boyd Mrs. Oma M. Bradley Dr. Lowell H. Brammer Ellis R. Brandt James A. Brandt Leslie A. Brandt William T. Branham David P. Brannin John J. Bransfield, Jr. E. L. Brashears Thomas Breen 38 (Individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) William E. Breitzke Dr. William C. Brennan Mrs. Adam A. Breuer Everett R. Brewer Miss Alice M. Bright Dr. Allan G. Brodie, Jr. Mrs. A. L. Brody Mrs. Louise K. Broman H. C. Brook Iver M. Brook Robert E. Brooker Robert V. Brost Baird Brown Bernard O. Brown Calvin 0. Brown Cameron Brown Charles L. Brown, Jr. Dr. Charles S. Brown Mrs. Gardner Brown H. Templeton Brown Isidore Brown Mrs. Murray C. Brown Robert C. Brown, Jr. Mrs. Roger O. Brown Aldis J. Browne, Jr. Richard H. Bruce Mrs. Aloys L. Bruckner Mrs. John Bryan Leo E. Bryant Eugene D. Buchanan Mrs. Walther Buchen Dr. R. A. Buckingham Dr. Paul C. Bucy Mrs. R. W. Buddington A. C. Buehler, Jr. Robert Buehler Dr. Richard Buenger Louis J. Buffardi Lewis E. Bulkeley Richard S. Bull, Jr. Richard Bullock Russell Bundesen Clayton B. Burch James E. Burd Patricia J. Burda F. E. Burgess Frank K. Burgess Herman Burgi, Jr. Mrs. Alfred L. Burke Leo Burnett Robert S. Burrows Mrs. Dorothy M. Bur well John C. Butler Louis H. Butterworth Edward J. Byrne Dr. Hyo Hyun Byun Louis F. Cainkar Mrs. Dean J. Call Daniel H. Callahan Eugene Callen Donald F. Campbell, Jr. George T. Campbell Hugh Campbell Irving B. Campbell Dr. Kenneth M. Campione Caleb H. Canby III Dr. Nicholas J. Capos Otto Frederick Carl Dr. Richard A. Carleton Arthur B. Carlson W. A. Carlson Walter C. D. Carlson Peter R. Carney WiUiam Roy Carney Mrs. Robert F. Carr Dr. Michael E. Carroll Miss Anne G. Carter Philip V. Carter Dr. Robert W. Carton F. Strother Gary, Jr. George W. Caspari Victor M. Cassidy James A. Cathcart Silas S. Cathcart J. Herbert Cattell Warren Cecil R. Stanley Cederlund Floyd D. Cerf Jerome Cerny Joe Cervenka Mr. & Mrs. Hammond E. Chaff etz Dr. Helen Challand Mrs. Henry T. Chandler Marvin Chandler H. W. Chapman Dr. Allan G. Charles Shepard Chartoc W. T. Chester Anthony R. Chiara Dr. Wayne S. Chilcote, Jr. Mrs. F. Newell Childs Peder A. Christensen Carlisle V. Christie, Jr. Dr. G. L. Christopher Miss Deborah Cicerchia Richard Claire Roy W. Clansky, Jr. Mrs. Edward S. Clark William N. Clark Mrs. Philip R. Clarke Miss Georgetta Clarkston Mrs. James M. Cleary Mrs. Thomas H. Cleavenger J. Benjamin Cleaver George L. Clements Howard P. Clements, Jr. Lloyd Y. Clemetsen Mr. & Mrs. William Z. Cline Mrs. Duane L. Clinton Kent S. Clow Miss Marion Clow William F. Coale, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert E, Coburn John L. Cochran Robert P. Coffin Milton Cohen Mrs. James C. Cohrs R. E. Cole Dr. Roger B. Cole Clarence L. & Lillian S. Coleman Foundation Mrs. John Coleman, Sr. John E. Coleman Marvin H. Coleman Miss Bernice Colen Ira Colitz JuHen Collins Dr. Frank H. Comstock Fairfax M. Cone Congregation Rodfei Zedek Congregation Solel Philip Conley Ronnoc Hill Connor Mrs. Thomas A. Connors Mr. & Mrs. Arthur W. Consoer Dr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Coogan Max Cooper Malcolm Corner Dr. WiUiam H. Cornog Mrs. Earl Cornwell Mr. & Mrs. Bertel G. Corsgreen Albert Cotsworth III Dr. Maurice H. Cottle James W. Coultrap Charles B. Coursen Richard N. Courtice Robert B. Courtney Mr. & Mrs. William S. Covington Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Cowen Alfred Cowles Knight C. Cowles Fred C. Cowley Clifford B. Cox WiUiam D. Cox Mrs. Sydney G. Craig Mrs. Norman L. Cram Harold E. Crane 39 (Individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) William F. Crawford Mrs. Bennett C. Creed W. C. Croft Stanley E. Cronwall Mrs. Henry Coleman Crowell Robert Crown Michael Cudahy, Sr. Tilden Cummings Percy W. Cump, Jr. R. John Cunningham Miss Gertrude Curtis Mrs. Austin T. Cushman Dr. Robert P. Cutler C. Suydam Cutting Arthur Dahlin Dr. Ulrich Danckers Mrs. Florence F. Dane Dr. William F. Danforth L. L. Daray William W. Darrow Leonard S. Davidow David W. Davidson Mrs. D. Dwight Davis De Forest P. Davis E. Byron Davis Mrs. Nathan S. Davis Ralph E. Davis Richard W. Davis Robert C. Davis J. C. Day Wesley H. Day Jack Deagan Bruce Dean Mrs. S. E. Dean, Jr. Thomas A. Dean Dr. Ann Decker Charles O. Decker Mrs. Emmett Dedmon Mrs. Donald Defrees Mrs. Ethel Dehlinger Louis H. T. Dehmlow Dr. Friedrich Deinhardt Charles E. DeLeuw Mrs. Charles S. DeLong Miss Sue DeLorenzi George L. De Ment William R. Demmert R. J. DeMotte Dr. & Mrs. V. L. Dennis Mrs. J. R. DePencier Gerald P. De Roe Joseph Desloge Gus C. Detlefsen Matthew L. Devine Edward B. De Vry Edward J. De Witt Mrs. Edison Dick Mrs. William R. Dickinson, Jr. 40 E. G. Dierks Robert Diller W. S. Dillon Mrs. Willard M. Dillon Edward C. Dimock Geoffrey Whitmore Disston Mrs. Arthur Dixon Mr. & Mrs. Wesley M. Dixon, Sr. George Dlesk Isidor Doctor Burtis J. Dolan, Jr. Tom Dolan John Luther Dole W. Fred Dolke Mr. & Mrs. John Dols James C. Domabyl Daniel A. Don Mrs. Stephen E. Donlon Miss Kathryn F. Donnelly Dr. Robert W. Donovan Mrs. Allen M. Dorfman Ernest Dorner Mr. & Mrs. Querin P. Dorschel James H. Douglas, Jr. William C. Douglas H. James Douglass Mrs. Helen James Douglass John F. Douglass Mr. & Mrs. George H. Dovenmuehle Lyman M. Drake, Jr. Robert T. Drake George Dreher Raymond C. Dreier Mrs. Barbara E. Dubberke Walter J. Ducey Homer R. Duffey Joel Dulin Steven J. Dulla Norman J. Dunbeck Charles Dunlop Dr. Paul J. Dunn William J. Dunn William E. Dunshee Robert L. Duntley Winfield T. Durbin B. L. Durling Bruce H. Dutton Robert T. Dyer Wilbur E. Dyer Carl J. Easterberg Carl H. Ebert Charles Echols Bernard Ecker Nate Eckstein D. L. Eddy Peter Edge Lawrence L. Edlund C. George Edmonds James A. Edmonds Marvin W. Ehlers Joseph S. Ehrman, Jr. Sam J. Eisenberg Sol Eisenstein Ernest A. Eklund William Elfenbaum Mrs. Elsie H. Elgin Robert W. Elich E. E. Ellies Miss Grace E. Elliott Dr. Margaret Elliott Mr. & Mrs. R. Winfield Ellis Dr. James P. Elmes Mrs. Winston Elting Emanuel Congregation C. R. Emanuelson John W. Embree III Miss M. Caroline Emich W. P. Engelking William L. English Robert A. Enlow E. Stanley Enlund John D. Entenza Donald Erickson Hyland B. Erickson Walter Erman Howard F. Erzinger Eliot H. Evans Mr. & Mrs. Raymond L. Evans William S. Everett Arthur T. Everham George B. Everitt Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Ewing A. L. Fader Mr. & Mrs. Abel E. Fagen Stanley W. Faierson S. J. Fairweather Walter E. Faithorn, Jr. Frank Falk Ralph Falk II Lloyd A. Fallers Dr. & Mrs. Arthur G. Falls Paul E. Fanta Newton Camp Farr Shirley Farr Mrs. Ernest H. Farrell Richard J. Farrell P. G. Farrow Albert D. Farwell (Individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Herbert R. Faulks William E. Fay, Jr. Louis Feinberg Charles R. Feldstein Mrs. John F. Fennelly Mrs. Calvin Fentress, Jr. Mrs. R. W. Ferguson Nello V. Ferrara Francis M. Ferris Armin F. Fick Marshall Field Meyer Field William Finkl Charles O. Finley Peter J. Fisher Morgan L. Fitch, Jr. W. A. Fitzgerald, Jr. Miss Grace S. Flagg Robert G. Flagg Donald T. Fletcher Joseph Fletcher Philip H. Flick James G. Flood Harold M. Florsheim Fred S. Floyd Charles W. Folds Dwight W. Follett Edwin S. Ford Alfred K. Foreman, Jr. H. E. Foreman, Jr. James B. Forgan Dr. Albert W. Forslev Hugh W. Foster Richard Foxwell Stanley Framburg Dr. Jerome Frankel Marshall Frankel Charles P. A. Frankenthal Dr. & Mrs. Lester E. Frankenthal, Jr. Edward S. Eraser Hermann Frauen Mrs. George E. Frazer Dr. Christabel H. Frederick Ernest E. Freeman Mr. & Mrs. Gaylord A. Freeman, Jr. Lee A. Freeman William M. Freeman George E. Frerichs Mrs. Silvia Freudenfeld Joseph R. Frey Herbert Fried Robert A. Fried Mrs. Herbert A. Friedlich Richard E. Friedman William J. Friedman E. Montford Fucik Frank M. Fucik R. Neal Fulk W. W. Fullagar Douglas R. Fuller Frank A. Furar Joseph M. Gabriel Lawrence N. Gabriel Rudolph R. Gabriel Miss Elsie Gadzinski Mrs. M. H. Gaines Nicholas Galitzine John P. Gallagher Dr. & Mrs. Stanford Gamm Mrs. James L. Garard F. Sewal Gardner Henry K. Gardner Mrs. Eleanor E. Garner Dr. & Mrs. Harry H. Garner George P. Garver W. H. Garvey, Jr. Charles V. Gary Kurt Gasser Dr. Carl L. Cast Alfred Gawthrop Alfred E. Gebhardt Dr. John E. Gedo James W. Gee Herbert Geist Wilbur R. Gemmel Robert S. Gentz Alan F. George Calvin M. George Fred W. German Louis Gershon Isak V. Gerson Edward J. Gessner Oscar Getz Dr. Charles A. Gianasi Frederick Z. Gifford Robert T. Gilchrist Mrs. James Gordon Gilkey, Jr. Joseph L. Gill Mrs. Bradley M. Glass Mr. & Mrs. James J. Glasser Mrs. Morris Glasser James J. Glassner Mrs. Albert H. Glos John P. Gnaedinger Paul O. Godley Louis H. Goebel Mr. & Mrs. Charles K. Goldberg Louis M. Goldman, Jr. S. M. Goldman Ted Goldman Fred L. Goldsby Dr. Abraham Goldstein Moe Goldstein August T. Gonia Frank W. Goodhue L. G. Goodlander Mrs. Howard Goodman Mr. & Mrs. Paul W. Goodrich Colin S. Gordon Herman J. Gordon Miss Marion G. Gordon Sidney S. Gorham, Jr. Miss Ruth Goshert Harold J. Graf Paul A. Graf William Grage Mr. & Mrs. A. R. Graham Donald M. Graham Robert I. Graham Dr. Gunars Graudins Eugene Gray Mr. & Mrs. William Scott Gray III Dr. John Grayhack Arthur L. Green Howard E. Green Aubrey J. Greenberg Mrs. Howard H. Greene Dr. Lois D. Greene Dr. Clifford C. Gregg Frank Gregor James J. Gregory Mrs. Stephen S. Gregory Miss Lorraine Greinke Dr. Dorothy Grey G. P. Grieve Bruce C. Griffith Mrs. Carroll L. Griffith George Griffith Douglas A. Grimes Mrs. John L. Gring Harold T. Griswold I. A. Grodzins Gordon A. Groebe Florian A. Groenwald Charles Grossberg Leonard H. Grosse Frank D. Grossman Mrs. W. F. Grote Mrs. Leon Grotowski Dr. John G. Gruhn Mr. & Mrs. Harold F. Grumhaus Mrs. Mary Jane Grunsfeld Paul W. Guenzel Miss Dora Gumbinger 41 (Individuals' Contributions of less than $^ 000— continued) Gunnar E. Gunderson Lewis O. Gunderson Mrs. Robert C. Gunness Miss Helen K. Gurley Miss Ruth E. Gustafson Dr. Edwin L. Gustus W. P. Gutekanst S. Ashley Guthrie Mrs. D. N. Gutmann H. C. Gwinn Mrs. Robert P. Gwinn Dr. F. V. Gwyer Ralph F. Haag Mrs. Leonard M. Haddad Thomas M. Haderlein Mrs. John W. B. Hadley Charles A. Hadlmair, Sr. W. W. Haerther Charles C. Haffner III Mrs. Charles C. Haffner, Jr. Mrs. James J. Haines Paul A. Hakanen Burton W. Hales, Jr. Edward Hall Edward W. Hallauer John W. Halm, Jr. Romaine M. Halverstadt Mrs. & Mrs. Corwith Hamill Mrs. Helen B. Hamilton Joseph W. Hancock Jack C. Hand The Very Rev. Dr. & Mrs. William O. Hanner Alfred T. Hansen Fred B. Hanson J. Russell Hanson Joseph F. Harant Charles L. Hardy Mrs. D. Foster Harland Chauncy D. Harris E. Newton Harris Gerald H. Harris Irving B. Harris Mr. & Mrs. Mortimer B. Harris Mrs. Augustin S. Hart Harry J. Hart Miss Elizabeth M. Hartung Daggett Harvey Mrs. William E. Haskell Mr. & Mrs. Sidney G. Haskins Frank M. Hatch Mrs. WilUam S. Hatten 42 Clarence Hauge Larry Havlicek Josephy B. Hawkes Walter Hawrysz Edward G. Hayes James F. Hayes John F. Hayward Dr. & Mrs. William H. Hazlett Myron A. Hecht Walter L. Hedin Mrs. Otto H. Hedrich Miss Helen Heggie Miss Catherine Ann Heifetz Mrs. Ben W. Heineman Mrs. Bernard Heinrich Walter W. Heinze Burn ell C. Helmich D. M. Hemb Dr. Elizabeth S. Hemmens William E. Henner Henry M. Henriksen Mrs. John A. Henry Paul G. Hensel, Jr. Martin K. Henslee Harold H. Hensold, Jr. H. L. Henson Jerry Herdina Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Heymann Mrs. James O. Heyworth Allan L. Hickox Allen M. Hicks Edgar J. Higgins Howard E. Hight Wilbur Hildebrandt G. T. Hilden Mrs. Marion Hilker Kimball Hill Victor H. Hinze Henry D. Hirsch Milton W. Hirsch Dr. Hyman J. Hirshfield Robert F, Hite Mrs. FVank P. Hixon George S. Hoban Mrs. G. C. Hodgson Dr. Dieter F. Hoffman Dr. Eugene Hoffman Raymond A. Hoffman Miss Marion Hoffmann M. H. Hofmeister Dr. Ned U. Hohman Marshall M. HoUeb Mrs. Letitia Baldrige HoUensteiner Thomas Hollingsworth Gerald Hollins V. V. Holmberg Dr. Edward C. Holmblad Carl Holzheimer H. E. Hoover Dr. M. B. Hopkins Stephen Y. Hord Floyd E. Horn Mrs. Helen H or ton Arnold Horween Kenneth G. Hosfield Charles F. Hough Richard W. Hough R. A. Houston Lee M. Howard Col. Ralph B. Howe Mrs. James E. Howie Mrs. John D. Hrdlicka Frank B. Hubachek Charles Hughes, Jr. Michael Hunt Mr. & Mrs. William O. Hunt Lemuel B. Hunter Mrs. Rebecca Hurwich George Hust John S. Hutchins Frank D. Huth Mrs. James L. Hvale D. P. Hynes Mrs. James A. Hynes Mary Louise Hynes Elizabeth Ickes Raymond W. Ickes Charles Iker Paul F. Ilg Mrs. George M. Illich, Sr. Robert S. Ingersoll Warren C. Ingersoll Melville H. Ireland Mrs. Spencer E. Irons Mr. & Mrs. George S. Isham Mr. & Mrs. Henry P. Isham, Jr. James L. Isham Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Isham Clifford E. Ives Robert A. Jablonski E. R. Jackson Robert F. Jackson Jesse A. Jacobs Mrs. Walter H. Jacobs Dr. Leon Jacobson Raphael Jacobson Andrew P. Jaeger Reinhardt H, Jahn (Individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Walter C. James Clarence W. Jameson Miss Barbara Jannusch Howard F. Janousek Mrs. Leonard Japp, Sr. Mrs. C. E. Jarchow Charles C. Jarchow Andrew O. Jaros Mr. & Mrs. Sidney F. Jarrow Robert W. Jay Dr. Thesle T. Job Lorentz A. Johanson Ralph S. Johns Calmer L. Johnson Carl A. Johnson Herbert M. Johnson Melvin O. Johnson Morris Johnson W. Allen Johnson Mrs. John Sills Jones C. R. Jonswold Robert J. Jordan Paul Jorgensen C. C. Jung K. A. M. Temple John Kadow William V. Kahler Mrs. Jean Kane Burton W. Kanter Alan H. Kaplan Lambert P. Karst Mr. & Mrs. Byron C. Karzas Stanley M. Katz M. G. Kaufman Benjamin Keach Donald S. Keare Miriam Hamilton Keare Dr. William H. Keehn Marshall W. Keig Elbridge Keith Miss Lelia E. Kelley Russell P. Kelley Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Kelly Dr. Frank B. Kelly Mrs. Margaret P. Kemel Wallace B. Kemp John F. Kendrick Charles F. Kennedy Robert J. Kennedy Clarence B. Kenney Dr. A. T. Kenyon Malcolm C. Ken- Charles C. Kerwin Edward M. Kerwin Mrs. E. Ogden Ketting Ferenc J. Kezdy Sam Kharasch Guy Kiddoo Alan R. Kidston Robert J. Kieckhefer, Jr. Miss Alberta R. Killie Dr. Lowell R. King W. S. Kinkead Mrs. Ansel M. Kinney John J. Kinsella Robert S. Kinsey Mrs. Weymouth Kirkland Clayton Kirkpatrick Miss Mixie Kitazaki Philip A. Klapman Sivert Klefstad Philip C. Klohr Kenneth D. Knoblock Mrs. Richard F. Knott Mrs. John Koch Raymond J. Koch Thaddeus Jude Kochanny George G. Kolar Allen Koplin Dr. Elizabeth Thompson Koppenaal N. F. Korhumel Thomas A. Korosacke Marshall Korshak Peter J. J. Kosiba Robert S. Kosin Robert Koslow Gabriel Kotin Robert Kotowski Dr. J. D. Koucky Igor Kovac Harry O. Kovats, Jr. Frank B. Kozlik James J. Kraml Dr. Arthur M. Kjause Dr. LeRoy Krbechek Dr. W. W. Kreft Dr. Bertram D. Kribben Delafield Kribben Miss Lucille Kriel Harry KroU Carl Krumhardt A. M. Kuechmann Miss Katherine A. Kuehn Eugene J. Kuhajek R. A. Kuhlmann Robert J. Kuhn Sigmund Kunstadter Mrs. Barbara P. Kuntz Commander John F. Kurfess, USN Mrs. Kenneth Kurtzon Kenji Kuwabara Frank C. Kyle George A. Laadt Dr. John R. Laadt Miss Clara R. Lacey David L. Ladd Mrs. Louis E. Laflin, Jr. Florence F. Laing J. Malcolm Landen F. Howard Lane George A. Lane William Noble Lane Mrs. Gordon Lang Jervis Langdon, Jr. L. E. Langdon Mrs. George Tayloe Langhorne Dr. Elma Lanterman Joseph B. Lanterman Fenton D. Lapham Arthur S. La Pine Mr. & Mrs. Earl D. Larsen R. E. Larsen Elmer W. Larson Mrs. Sarah G. Larson Dr. A. F. Lash Dr. Sidney Lash Miss Frances E. Latham Fred T. Lauerman Fred P. Lauth Gerald Lavey Dr. & Mrs. William R. Lawrence Gerard Lawson Gordon Leadbetter George J. Leahy Dr. Aaron Learner Jack T. Le Beau Dr. T. LeBoy Mrs. E. Fred Lechler George E. Leckie Bertram Z. Lee Robert O. Lehmann Frederick W. Leich Dr. Murray H. Leiffer John G. Leininger Edward L. Lembitz Mrs. Benjamin Lemer Robert L. Leopold William H. Lerch John F. Lesch John H. Leslie Stanley B. Levi Joseph M. Levine Dr. Elizabeth Levitin Mrs. Victor L. Lewis Richard B. Lewy 43 (individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Library of Medical Sciences — University of Illinois Medical Center Charles E. Lilien George Lill II James Lilly Terence Lilly Paul B. N. Lind Alfred H. Lindgren Howard Linn Mrs. K. T. Livezey Mr. & Mrs. Homer J. Livingston Mrs. Rose Llewellyn Carl S. Lloyd Glen A. Lloyd L. R. Lock R. M. Loeff Mrs. Richard J. Loewenthal Richard J. Loewenthal, Jr. W. A. Logelin Anthony A. Lopez, Jr. John S. Lord Albert E. M. Louer Mrs. Franklin Lounsbury William H. Lowe Maurice R. Lowenstine William H. Lowman Earle Ludgin Ralph J. Lueders Edmund Luff Miss Bernardine Lufkin Francis F. Lukas Mrs. H. J. Lund Mrs. Franklin J. Lunding Don T. Lutz, Jr. Miss Clare C. Lyden Mrs. Jeneva A. Lyon Dr. Shirley Lyon E. J. Lyons Mr. & Mrs. W. F. Maas William D. Mabie Donald Macarthur H. E. MacDonald Leslie MacDonald Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. MacDonald William G. Macias Joan Maclntire David O. MacKenzie Mrs. Wallace D. Mackenzie Mrs. John A. MacLean, Jr. J. DeNavarre Macomb Mrs. Albert F. Madlener, Jr. Otto Madlener Mrs. Irving H. Mages Mrs. William C. B. Magoun Paul Makray Alexander B. Maley Russell R. Malik Earle A. Malkin Miss Minnie Malunat Mrs. John F. Manierre John M. Mann John F. Mannion Barbara G. Mannon George L. Manta Alfred O. Manteuffel Eugene T. Mapp Dr. Richard E. Marcus John H. Maris Cyrus Mark John J. Markham R. Bailey Markham William H. Markle Sydney R. Marovitz E. S. Marsh Franklin Marshall Jay Marshall C. Virgil Martin A. A. Marzek Arnold D. K. Mason Mrs. George Allen Mason Marvin L. Mass Eugene W. Masters Keith Masters Miss Dorothy R. Matchett Selwyn R. Mather Thomas N. Mathers Walter J. Mattick John C. Maulding R. H. Maulin Augustus K. Maxwell, Jr. Robert E. Maxwell Mrs. David Mayer Mrs. Frank D. Mayer Harold M. Mayer John L. Means Dr. L. Steven Medgyesy Mr. & Mrs. Henry W. Meers Honorable John C. Melaniphy Miss Maragret Mellody W. G. Mendell Dr. Karl Menninger Paul H. Mesenbrink Gordon M. Metcalf Franklin L. Mettler Carl A. Metz Mrs. Carl Meyer Charles Z. Meyer Dr. Karl A. Meyer L. E. Meyer Allen C. Michaels Edward Michalko Weston Mickley Munroe Milavetz Mrs. C. Phillip Miller Creighton S. Miller Glenn R. Miller Homer L. Miller Dr. & Mrs. J. Roscoe Miller Leslie V. Miller Norman A. Miller Roger H. Miller Roland L. Miller Mrs. Thomas S. Miller John J. Milligan Mrs. Harold J. Mills Mrs. Florence J. Milnor Charles Minarik L. T. Moate Richard F. Mohr H. G. Mojonnier Mrs. Timothy Mojonnier Myron T. M onsen Dr. Clark Montgomery L. W. Moore Fred M. Morelli Albert A. Morey Dr. Freda Morgan G. Walker Morgan Samuel Morgan Harry E. Moroni, Jr. Mrs. Gertrude Morrison Mrs. John Morrow, Jr. Howard C. Morton Horace C. Moses, Jr. Walter H. Moses Edward A. Mosher Kenneth E. Motyka Mrs. Arthur T. Moulding Lester Mouscher Mrs. David G. Moyer Walter Mueller Wilfred A. Muller Carroll Dean Murphy Jr. Joseph D. Murphy 0. R. Murphy W. Richard Murphy Professor Gordon Nicholas Murray Victor Murray Robert Mustoe 44 (Individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Jeremiah D. McAuliffe Hughston M. McBain N. E. McCabe Mrs. L. H. McCain William B. McCain John H. McClellan Mrs. R. G. McClellan Mr. & Mrs. Brooks McCormick Dr. J. B. McCormick Roger McCormick Paul D. McCurry Mrs. Edward D. McDougal, Jr. Mrs. & Mrs. Robert McDougal, Jr. Dr. Ernest G. McEwen Risley B. McFeely, Jr. E. J. McGehee Andrew W. McGhee Charles S. McGill Warren C. McGovney Robert McHugh Mr. & Mrs. William B. Mcllvaine Lowrie W. Mcintosh Miss Mabel McKay Neil McKay Mr. & Mrs. Donald McKellar Dr. Charles H. McKenna William Wood McKittrick Mrs. Walker G. McLaury Dr. Franklin C. McLean Miss Shirley McMillen Frank McNair Mrs. Robert C. McNamara William H. McNeill Joseph M. McNulty Dr. D. J. McPherson Mrs. Charles F. Nadler Mrs. Walter H. Nadler Paul Nagel, Jr. Mrs. Jerome Naman Col. & Mrs. John B. Naser Mrs. Sylvia J. Nathan Harry E. Neander Mrs. Lloyd F. Neely Thomas E. Neely Robert F. Negele Arthur L. Nehls Mrs. Winifred L. Neil Willard K. Nelson Dr. Joseph G. Nemecek Dr. Glenway W. Nethercut Graham Netting Otto C. Neuman Dr. & Mrs. William E. Neville Mr. & Mrs. Albert H. Newman Maxwell E. Nickerson George Nielsen Walter P. Nietschmann Thomas M. Niles Jeremiah J. Nolan Mrs. Seymour Nordenbourg Theodore J. Nork Harold W. Norman Mrs. Lester Norris North Shore Congregation Israel Mrs. Carl R. Norton J. B. Novak FYancis J. Nudd Mrs. John Nuveen Oak Park Temple Kenneth E. Oakley James F. Gates, Jr. Robert O'Boyle Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. O'Brien Lawrence L. O'Connor Michael J. O'Connor Thomas B. O'Connor William R. Odell William W. Oelman James Offield Dr. George A. Olander Daniel J. O'Leary Mrs. Eric Oldberg Henry C. Oliver Dr. Marguerite Oliver S. C. Oliver William S. Oliver Wallace 0. Oilman C. Vern Olmstead Patrick L. O'Malley Norton O'Meara George M. O'Neill Seymour Oppenheimer Mr. & Mrs. John A. Orb Mrs. John S. Osborne W. Irving Osborne, Jr. Mrs. Gilbert H. Osgood J. Sanford Otis James Otis, Jr. Stuart Huntington Otis John Ekern Ott Wendel Fentress Ott Dr. George H. Otto Anderson A. Owen Mrs. Ralph W. Owen Harry J. Owens Mr. & Mrs. George A. Paddock, Jr. Mrs. Walter Paepcke Adrian B. Palmer Max J. Palmer Dr. Frank B. Papierniak Dominick Parisi Lee N. Parker Dr. Francis M. Parks Porter Parris John F. Partridge Lloyd C. Partridge The Honorable Judge Herbert C. Paschen Daniel E. Pasowicz Dr. Paul J. Patchen Dr. Philip Y. Paterson Marshall Patner Thomas A. Patterson Mr. & Mrs. W. A. Patterson John M. Patton Randolph Payson John H. Pay ton Donald W. Pazdur Charles D. Peacock III Mrs. E. S. Pearsoll Donald E. Pearson Roy E. Peavey Fred R. Pedrigi Dick Pelles Vernon J. Pellouchoud John S. Pennell Louis L. Penner Harry D. Perkins Mrs. John F. Perkins Harold L. Perlman William A. Perry Mrs. E. S. Person Howard R Peterson P. E. Petty Miss Roselyn Pfeiffer H. F. Philipsborn, Sr. Richard S. Phillips George E. Phoenix Miss Natalie Picchiotti Wilbert J. Pichler Albert Pick, Jr. Mrs. Robert Picken F. E. Pielsticker Allen E. Pierce J. Norman Pierce D. Robert Pierson Miss Gwendolyn Pike Mrs. C. S. Pillsburv Bert O. Pinch Mrs. Ira M. Pink Mrs. Gordon L. Pirie John T. Pirie, Jr. Charles E. Pitte, Jr. 45 (Individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Sherwood K. Piatt George M. Plews John William Pocock Mrs. Barbara Polikoff Dr. Mildred Polniaszek Abe L. Poncher Andrew L. Pontius E. J. Pool Mr. & Mrs. George A. Poole Mrs. Henry Pope, Jr. John W. Pope Sidney L. Port Edward C. Porter Mrs. Henry H. Porter Mrs. I. R. Post Mr. & Mrs. Albert Potts Charles C. Powell Bert R. Prall Wilfred C. Prather Max Pray Mr. & Mrs. Charles D. Preston Miss Rhoda R. Price Edward J. Prince Harry Prince Reverend Herbert W. Prince Frank W. Prindiville Robert A. Pritzker Mrs. John A. Prosser Alex Pruzan Dr. Charles B. Puestow Victor W. Purcey William J. Quinn John A. Quisenberry S. S. Raab Mrs. Otto J. Rabe Dr. G. J. Rabin Joseph Rada Richard J. Radebaugh Mrs. Arthur Raff Miss Frances Railton L. S. Raisch Norman Ramsden Dr. Charles Range Mr. & Mrs. George A. Ranney Robert Ransom Rudolph S. Rasin Miss Georgia C. Rawson Dr. Albert L. Raymond William M. Redfield Lawrence N. Redlin Miss Gertrude E. Reeb Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Reed Guy L. Reed 46 Mr. & Mrs. Howard C. Reeder Howard F. Reeves, Jr. Miss Lucy Regan Mrs. Robert G. Regan Miss Ruth Regenstein John A. Reich Bryan S. Reid, Jr. Dr. F. Theodore Reid, Jr. Mrs. T. H. Reidy Dr. Leonard Reiffel Vincent P. Reilly Glen Reiman Lester E. Rein Keith Reinhard Max L. Reisner Edward Rembert Miss Marie Katherine Remien Dr. Earl W. Renefroe Edward L. Renno Dr. Fred A. Replogle Mrs. Charles Howard ReQua, Jr. Mrs. Alexander H. Revell Miss Ada K. Rew Miss Irma L. Richards Dr. Maurice L. Richardson Elmer W. Rietz Mrs. Frances E. Riley J. H. Riley George G. Rinder Charles Ritter Mrs. Margaret H. Robb Reverend Hugh Robbins, CSV Harry V. Roberts S. M. Roberts William J. Roberts Hugh Robertson Scott Robertson C. Snelling Robinson Milton D. Robinson Rosemary Robinson Sanger P. Robinson Theodore W. Robinson, Jr. Burke B. Roche Mrs. T. Clifford Rodman Dr. Douglas D. Rodriquez Miss Virginia M. Roos Harry A. Root, Jr. Mrs. Philip Rootberg William A. Ropa Mrs. Evelyn Rose Ben L. Rosenberg Maurice Rosenfield Nathan Rosenstone Albert Jay Rosenthal Lillian Rosenthal Dr. Maurice J. Rosenthal Dr. & Mrs. Peter A. Rosi Earl Ross Robert C. Ross Dr. John P. Rossborough William R. Rostek L. J. Rothbauer, Jr. Albert B. Rothschild Melville N. & Mary F. Rothschild Fund Arthur Rubloff Mrs. Frank E. Rubovits George L. Ruch Miss Helen J. Ruch Richard C. Rudolphsen John W. Ruettinger Charles T. Rufener Dr. Charles J. Runner Mr. & Mrs. Eugene W. Rush Bron J. Rusin Mrs. Mary H. Russell Edward C. Rustigan Arthur Ryan Anthony M. Ryerson Mrs. Donald M. Ryerson Werner Ryser Robert W. Saigh Robert C. Sale Dr. Melvin R. Salk Mrs. E. D. Salmon J. A. Samartano H. R. Sampson Frank B. Sanders Henry T. Sanders Gerald Sanderson Miss Margaret H. Sanderson Chester F. Sargent Ainslie Y. Sawyer Mrs. Alvah L. Sawyer Leonard B. Sax Mrs. Henry Scarborough Bernard E. Schaar Miss Marion Schaffner Francis R. Schanck Ernest G. Schau A. Scheinfeld Miss Marion H. Schenk Mrs. Gerhart Schild Dr. A. L. Schiller William E. Schindler (Individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Harold W. Schloss Norman J. Schlossman Bernard J. Schluter Mrs. Margaret W. Schmidt P. J. Schneider J. T. Schriver Miss Gwendolyn Schroeder Walter E. Schuessler E. Charles Schuetz Miss Isabelle Schuh Miss Nanci Schulson William A. Schwab Robert S. Schwartz William B. Schweizer Dr. & Mrs. John S. Schweppe Harry Schwimmer Beverly C. Scott Mrs. Marion R. Scott Peter J. A. Scott Mrs. Willis H. Scott Seabury Foundation Irving Seaman, Jr. Miss Dorothy Sears R. V. Searson Mr. & Mrs. G. Leland Seaton George Seaverns G. E. Seavoy Jerome R. Sebastian Frank Sedlacek Nel M. Seeburg, Jr. Barry E. Semer Fred T. Semmer John G. Sevcik George S. Severance Fred P. Seymour, Jr. Everett E. Shafer James G. Shakman Joe Shamas Marc A. Shantz Arthur M. Shapiro Ludwig J. Sharlog Carl J. Sharp Donald H. Sharp Alfred P. Shaw Dr. Noel G. Shaw Mrs. Charles C. Shedd Jeffrey Shedd Mrs. Albert W. Sherer Mrs. Earl E. Sherff Mrs. Robert Sherman Saul S. Sherman William A. Sherwin David L. Shillinglaw Earle A. Shilton Nels Shoan Mr. & Mrs. DeVer Sholes J. R. Shoulberg Dr. Harry Sicher Richard W. Sielaff E. John Sierocinski Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Sigborn Hubert S. Silberman Mrs. C. W. Sills Herbert Silverman Harry Silverstein Mr. & Mrs. C. M. Silvestro Dr. Arnold B. Simon Ruth A. Simpson William A. Singer Mr. & Mrs. Thomas B. Singleton Ross D. Siragusa, Jr. Dr. Albert H. Slepyan Sam P. Sloan James Sloss Irwin H. Small Miss Jessie M. Small John H. Smalley Robert W. Smick C. W. Smith Curtis Smith Farwell Smith Mrs. George D. Smith Goff Smith Miss Grace Frances Smith H. Kellogg Smith Harold A. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Hermon Dunlap Smith Miss Ollie M. Smith Thom E. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Smith Walter H. Smith WiUiam S. Smith Dr. & Mrs. Daniel Snydacker Mr. & Mrs. J. U. Snydacker Edward C. Snyder James E. Snyder John C. Snyder Dr. Harold A. Sofield Mrs. Robert Sooy James P. Soper, Jr. Christ J. Sorensen Harold E. Sortor South Shore Temple Herbert A. Southwell Mrs. Giorgio Spadaro Mr. & Mrs. J. G. Speer Joseph S. Spencer William M. Spencer Mrs. Gatzert Spiegel Modie J. Spiegel Mrs. Robert E. Spiel Robert A. Spira Cranston Spray Richard A. Staat Miss Linda Stabile Miss Kate Staley Frederick K. Stamm Thomas Stanislawski Eugene J. Stankiewicz Frederick J. Stannard Wilford T. Stannard Robert L. Stanton C. B. Stateler Miss Edna A. Staudinger Mabel L. Staudinger Dr. Raymond W. Steblay Stephen S. Steel Earl F. SteflFens Albert Steg Mrs. Herbert Stein Karl E. Stein Francis J. Steinbrecher Julius P. Steindler Mrs. Halsey Steins Norman A. Stepelton John L. Stephens Dr. Natalie Stephens Gardner H. Stem Mrs, Joseph True Steuer Mrs. Clement D. Stevens Mr. & Mrs. Adlai E. Stevenson III Ben T. Stevenson Bernard F. Stewart Samuel R. Stiefel E. J. StoU Russell F. Stoll Edwin H. Stone Marvin N. Stone W. Clement & Jessie V. Stone Foundation William K. Stone Miss Phyllis A. Stout Mr. & Mrs. L. Byron Strandberg, Jr. Dr. Nels M. Strand jord Frederick W. Straus Mrs. Robert E. Straus Herbert R. Strauss Mrs. Herman A. Strauss Ivan G. Strauss Dr. WiUiam B. Stromberg, Jr. LaRhett L. Stuart 47 (Individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Mr. & Mrs. R. Douglas Stuart Allen P. Stults Sturgis Family Foundation Carroll H. Sudler, Jr. Edwin T. Sujack Bolton Sullivan Frank L. Sulzberger Wayne N. Summers Norvel E. Surbaugh Mrs. James L. Surpless Wm. Sutherland Mrs. James Swartchild Mr. & Mrs. William G. Swartchild, Jr. Thaddeus M. Swastek Miss Gayle Swenson Irving G. Swenson Israel Swett William O. Swett Arthur T. Swick George H. Swift, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Gustavus F. Swift, Jr. Miss Dorothy E. Symonds Stuart Talbot Dr. J. H. Talbott Miss Joyce S. Tani Mr. & Mrs. Arthur E. Tatham Mrs. Colleen Tatner Mr. & Mrs. Edward Hall Taylor Harold N. Taylor John W. Taylor III William L. Taylor, Jr. Temple Beth Israel Everett G. Temple Temple Israel Temple Menorah Temple Sholom Dean Terrill Ashley C. Thomas C. Harold Thompson Dr. John R. Thompson Joseph Thompson Warren H. Thon David H. Thorburn William E. Thoresen Mrs. Bruce Thorne Mr. & Mrs. Reuben Thorson Dr. Irving D. Thrasher Howard A. Thrun Douglas E. Tibbitts R. O. Tibbals George Tiberius S. N. Tideman, Jr. 48 Mrs. Albert H. Tippens Newton H. Tobey Victor Torsberg Mrs. Wilfred Tracy H. J. Trainor Arthur C. Trask George S. Trees R. B. Trentlage Ralph A. Trieschmann John C. Trindl, Jr. Dr. F. E. Trobaugh, Jr. William C. Trotter By ford E. Troutt John Truempy Joseph W. Tucker Dr. George C. Turnbull Mr. & Mrs. W. D. Turnbull Dr. Herbert A. Turner Mrs. Thomas S. Tyler George P. Tyson Edgar J. Uihlein Mr. & Mrs. Stuart E. Ullmann Norman A. Ulrich Gerard M. Ungaro Mrs. Frederick W. Upham Rolan R. Upton Nelson M. Utley Mrs. Derrick Vail Harrison VanAken, Jr. Dr. Graham A. Vance Edna V. Vanek Dr. Jack Van Elk Errett VanNice Mrs. Edward E. Varnum Dominick Varraveto, Jr. Herbert P. Veldenz D. J. Velo M. P. Venema Mrs. James T. Venerable Donald K. Vetterick Dr. Frank J. Veverka Charles H. Vial Mr. & Mrs. William Vincent Robert Vines Bohumil Vlach Dr. Anton J. Vlcek Mrs. Albert Vogt J. A. Volkober Thorley VonHolst Dr. Harold C. Voris Hamilton Vose, Jr. Omer G. Voss Miss Mary Ann Wacker Dr. Harry K. Waddington John Alexander Wagner Richard Wagner Orlin I. Wahl Louis J. Waitkus Arvid C. Walberg Edwin A. Walcher, Jr. C. R. Walgreen, Jr. F. Gale Walker, Jr. Frank Walker Malcolm M. Walker Dr. Lydia Walkowiak Richard Anthony Waller Dr. Eugene L. Walsh Thomas M. Walsh, Esquire Mrs. F. V. Walters Arthur K. Walton Dimitry Wanda Mrs. Cyril L. Ward Mrs. J. Harris Ward Paul G. Warren Dr. Kenneth C. Washburn Mrs. Hempstead Washburne, Jr. Mrs. Hempstead Washburne, Sr. Mrs. Isabel B. Wasson Donald O. Waterbury Mrs. George H. Watkins Mrs. Henry B. Watkins William A. P. Watkins Amos H. Watts George W. Watts Kline Weatherford Dr. Edward F. Webb Mr. & Mrs. E. Leiand Webber Mr. & Mrs. James E. Weber Robert B. Weber Frederick F. Webster Kenneth L. Weeks Dr. Henry G. Wehringer George N. Weiland Robert N. Weiner Paul Weir Carl J. Weitzel Mrs. Donald P. Welles Mrs. Edward K. Welles Mrs. John Paul Welling C. A. Wells Preston A. Wells Mr. & Mrs. Arthur D. Welton, Jr. Barrett Wendell F. Lee H. Wendell William C. Wenninger Reinald Werrenrath (Individuals' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Dr. Newton K. Wesley Richard Wessling Frederic W. West, Jr. Kent N. Westrate R. J. Wetterlund Sydney B. Wexler Mrs. Joseph P. Wharton, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Wheatley Henry P. Wheeler Linden E. Wheeler R. H. Wheeler Lewis F. Wheelock Jerome P. Whiston Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Whitaker Frank White John J. White Miss Naomi White Philip M. White Mr. & Mrs. Roland D. Whitman Miss Adele Whitney Miss Lois Whitney Raymond Wielgus Lawrence F. Wilkas Philip Will, Jr. Joseph R. Willens Albert D. Williams, Jr. Harry J. Williams Miss Irene Lois Williams Dr. Louis O. Williams Melville C. Williams Mrs. Philip C. Williams W. J. Williams Jack A. Williamson A. C. Wilson Christopher W. Wilson E. W. Wilson G. Rex Wilson Grant V. Wilson Mrs. Robert E. Wilson James R. Wimmer Edward Wimp, Jr. James G. Wing Elwyn C. Winland Winnetka Weeders Dr. I. C. Winter John McFaul Witte John B. Wolf Dr. Charles K. Wolfe Francis A. Wolff Robert E. Wolff Mrs. Marvin J. Wolfson Clifford Wolper Arthur M. Wood Mrs. J. Howard Wood Lloyd Wood Mr. & Mrs. R. Arthur Wood General Robert E. Wood Mrs. William J. Wood W. Lloyd Wood James Woodburn Daniel Woodhead, Jr. Mrs. Frank H. Woods Miss Mary H. Woodward Francis C. Woolard C. A. Wooten Otto R. Wormser C. G. Wright Kenneth Muir Wright Miss Margaret J. Wright Mrs. Eleanor M. Wurster Miss Frances Wyant Alex K. Wyatt Mr. & Mrs. Harry N. Wyatt Austin L. Wyman, Jr. Mrs. C. L Wynekoop Joseph E. Wyse Louis P. Yangas Theodore N. Yelich Mrs. Ray M. York Mrs. Bruce A. Young, Sr. Dr. & Mrs. Dennison Young J. L. Young J. William Zabor Leonard E. Zak Mrs. Charles Zeman Mrs. Liddy Zickman David Zimberoff CORPORATIONS DONATIONS OF $1000 OR MORE A YEAR Arthur Anderson & Co. Borg-Warner Corporation Carson Pirie Scott & Co. The Chicago Community Trust — John G. and Frances C. Searle Fund Chicago Daily News Chicago Sun-Times Chicago Title and Trust Company Chicago Tribune Company Chicago's American Columbia Pipe & Supply Co. Commerce Clearing House, Inc. Commonwealth Edison Company Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago The A. B. Dick Company The Reuben H. Donnelley Corporation Draper and Kramer, Incorporated Marshall Field & Company First National Bank of Chicago Foote, Cone & Belding General Biological Supply House, Inc. Harris Trust and Savings Bank Hi-Life Packing Company Illinois Arts Council Illinois Bell Telephone Company Illinois Central Industries Inland Steel-Ryerson Foundation, Inc. International Harvester Company Jewel Companies, Inc. M. S. Kaplan Company Kirkland, Ellis, Hodson, Chaffetz & Masters Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc. Link-Belt Company Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. John Mohr & Sons 49 (Corporations' Contributions of $1000 or more — continued) James McHugh Construction Company The Northern Trust Company The Peoples Gas Company Playboy Magazine — Hugh M. Hefner Foundation William A. Pope Company Pure Oil Company The Quaker Oats Company Racing for Charities, Inc. Rollins Burdick Hunter Co. S & C Electric Company Sahara Coal Company, Incorporated Sears, Roebuck & Co. Standard Oil (Indiana) Foundation, Inc. Sunbeam Corporation Texaco, Inc. Universal Oil Products Company Victor Comptometer Corporation Walgreen Drug Stores Wenner-Gren Foundation Arthur Young & Company The Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company E. W. Zimmerman Construction Products, Inc. DONATIONS OF LESS THAN $1000 Acme Barrel Company Acron Corrugated Box Co. Action Diamond Tool Co. Addo-X Sales Corporation Advance Heating & Air Conditioning Corp. Air Control, Inc. Alan Furniture Co., Inc. All American Life & Casualty Co. Allied Asphalt Paving Company Allied Mills, Inc. Allied Structural Steel Company Allstate Insurance Company Alnor Instrument Company The Harry Alter Co., Inc. Amazon Hose & Rubber Co. American Airlines American Gage and Machinery Co. American Linen Supply Company American National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago American SAB Company, Inc. American Telephone and Telegraph Company Amphenol-Borg Electronics Corporation Amsted Industries, Incorporated Anderson & Litwack Company Joseph Antognoli & Co. Apex Smelting Company Apollo Savings and Loan Assn. Appleton Electric Company Armour & Company Atlas Electric Devices Co. Autogas Company Automatic Electric Company The Bakery Barnes Ely Company, Inc. Bauer Engineering, Inc. Baxter Laboratories, Inc. Better Office Supply Company 50 Bigelow-Garvey Lumber Co. Harold S. Brady and Company Fred S. Bremer Company Bronson & Bratton, Inc. Martin Brower Corporation Brunswick Corporation Burgess Envelope Co. Leo Burnett Company, Inc. Burny Bros., Inc. Calumet & Hecla, Inc. Calumet Heat Treating Corporation Camera Exchange Cameras International Productions Castle & Associates, Inc. Cellu-Craft Products Corporation Central Fuel Corporation Central National Bank in Chicago Central Steel & Wire Company Century Engraving & Embossing Century Weaver Foundation Certified Burglar Alarm Systems, Inc. Chemetron Corporation Cherry Electrical Products Corporation Chesley & Company Chicago Bridge and Iron Company Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company Chicago Heights Steel Chicago Miniature Lamp Works Chicago Specialty Manufacturing Company Chicago White Metal Casting Company Christensen &. Olsen Foundry Citizens National Bank of Chicago City Products Corporation Civic Savings & Loan Association J. L. Clark Manufacturing Company Climate Control Corporation Clipper Carloading Company (Corporations' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) James B. Clow & Sons, Inc. Coca Cola Bottling Company of Chicago Combined Insurance Company of America Combustion Engineering, Inc. Commerce Industrial Chemical, Inc. Consolidated Foods Corporation Container Corporation of America Continental Air Lines, Inc. Continental Glass Company The Corey Steel Company Coronet Instructional Films Coverall Laundry Service, Inc. Crooks Terminal Warehouse, Inc. Cross Oil & Refining Company Crown Zellerbach Foundation Crush International, Inc. Cummings & Wyman Daubert Foundation Charles C. Davis & Co. J. N. Davis & Company Deboer Brothers Dominick's Finer Foods, Inc. Edward Don & Company R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company Duncan Industries, Inc. E T M Studios, Inc. Electro-Kinetics, Inc. Enco, Inc. Englewood Electrical Supply Co. Equipment Storage Corporation Ernst and Ernst Estate of Leander J. McCormick Faber Bros., Inc. Fabrico Manufacturing Corp. Federal-Bryant Machinery Company Feldkamp-M alloy, Inc. Felt Products Manufacturing Company Fer alloy Corporation J. G. Ferguson Publishing Company Ferrara Candy Company Fibers, Inc. File-Ad Service Company, Inc. First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Chicago First National Bank of Morton Grove Fischbach & Moore Electrical Contracting, Inc. Florsheim Shoe Company, Inc. Foley & Lavish Engineering Company Foundry Systems, Inc. Fox Furniture Co., Inc. Clinton E. Frank, Incorporated Otto Frankenbush, Inc. Fraser Stamp & Seal Company Freund Can Co. Frito-Lay, Inc. Fullerton Coal Co. Gaines & Gaines, Incorporated Gane Brothers & Lane, Inc. Garden City Electric Company The Gaylord Foundation, Inc. General American Transportation Corporation General Electric Company General Exhibits and Displays, Inc. General Mills, Inc. Joseph L. Gill & Company Globe Oil & Refining Co. Gordon Bros. Iron & Metal Co. John H. Grace Co. The Grainger Foundation Edward Gray Corp. Graymills Corporation Griswold & Bateman Company A. H. Gruetzmacher & Co. Guaranty Savings & Loan Association Hammond Corporation Hammond Warehouse Company Peter Hand Brewery Company Harding- Williams Corporation The Harmony Company Harris Hub Co., Inc. Hart, Schaffner & Marx Hautau & Otto, Inc. R, B. Hayward Company Health Food Jobbers, Inc. Heco Envelope Co. Helpmate, Inc. The W. W. Henry Company Hess-Stephenson Co. Hiram Electrical Contractors, Inc. Holabird & Root Harry Holland & Son, Inc. Hoobler & Schwartz R. W. Hosmer & Co. Household Finance Corporation T. N. Hubbard Scientific Company W. H. Hutchinson & Son, Inc. Ideal Personnel Illinois Railway Equipment Co. Illinois Tool Works, Inc. Illinois- Wisconsin Sand and Gravel Company The Industrial Fumigant Company Interlake Steel Corporation International Business Machines Corporation International Minerals & Chemical Corp. Jahn & Oilier Engraving Company Johns-Manville Corporation Jones and Brown Company, Inc. Jordan Paper Box Co. Kennedy & Kratzer, Inc. King Arthur's Pub A. M. Kinney Associates, Inc. Knapp & Tubbs, Inc. 51 (Corporations' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Lester B. Knight & Associates, Inc. Robert S. Knowles, Inc. Koppers Company, Incorporated Stanley Korshak, Inc. Krahl Construction Company Paul J. Krez Co. Paul Krone Die Casting Company Lakeside Bank F. Landon Cartage Company Lapham-Hickey Steel Corporation La Salle National Bank Lawson Products, Inc. Leavitt Tube Co., Inc. Harry Lee & Sons, Inc. D. Lelewer & Son Charles Levy Circulating Company Lichtenwald Iron Works Co. E. J. Liska & Company, Inc. Local Electric Company The Lockformer Co. Joe Louis Milk Company Low's Incorporated Luce Press Clippings, Inc. Earle Ludgin & Company Gerald H. Lurie Company M & K Sales Maclean-Fogg Lock Nut Company Magnaflux Corporation Malanco, Inc. Mandabach & Simms, Inc. Manpower, Inc. Marsh & McLennan, Incorporated Marsh and Truman Lumber Co. Marsteller, Inc. Matherson-Selig Company Oscar Mayer & Company Mayfair Molded Products Corporation Meadow Brook Products Co., Inc. Mehring & Hanson- Wendt, Inc. The Merchandise Mart Metal Box & Cabinet Corp. Metropolitan Structures Metz Train Olson & Youngren, Inc. Midland Paper Company Midwest Federation of Mineralogical and Geological Societies Miehle-Goss-Dexter, Inc. Frank Miller's Sons Fireproofing Co. Mohawk Electric Construction Company Mojonnier Bros. Company Monarch Hardwood Lumber Company Monarch Laundry Company Monon Railroad Morton International, Incorporated Moser Paper Company Murphy & Miller Corporation W. C. McCrone Associates, Inc. Hobart Mcintosh Paper Company 52 Nalco Chemical Company National Boulevard Bank of Chicago National Lacquer and Paint Co. National Steel Container Corporation National Tea Company Henry Newgard & Company Newman-Green, Inc. North American Car Corporation North American Service Company, Inc. Northwestern Photoengraving Company Northwest Screenprint Company Norton McMurray Manufacturing Company Nu Arc Company, Inc. John Nuveen & Co., Inc. Oak Brook Employment Bureau, Inc. B. Offen & Company, Inc. O'Malley Bros., Inc. Origin to Destination Container Corporation Ozite Corporation Page Engineering Company Palisade Roofing Company, Inc. Palmer Design Associates Panama Banana Distributing Co. CD. Peacock Jewelers Peat, Marwick and Mitchell Pella Windows and Doors, Inc. Pepper Construction Co. Perfection Tool and Metal H. F. Philipsborn & Co. Phoenix Printing Company Photomatic Corporation George Pick & Company Pioneer National Title Insurance Company Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company John Plain & Company The Plastic Contact Lens Co. Poor & Company The Prairie Farmer Publishing Company Precision Extrusions, Inc. Precision Steel Warehouse, Inc. R. W. Pressprich & Co Price Waterhouse & Company Producers Livestock Credit Corporation Productigear Co. Production Metal Products Company, Inc. Radio Steel & Manufacturing Company Rand McNally & Company Rapid Roller Company Real Estate Research Corporation The Regensteiner Publishing Enterprises, Inc. Resol Manufacturing Company, Inc. (Corporations' Contributions of less than $1000 — continued) Rickard Circular Folding Co. C. A. Riley Electric Construction Corporation Riley Printing Company Roberts and Porter, Inc. Robertson Advertising, Inc. Runzel Cord and Wire Co. Russell-Hampton Co., Inc. Santa Fe Foundation, Inc. Saxon Paint Stores K. Schlanger Co. The SchoU Manufacturing Company, Inc. J. Schonthal & Associates Schuessler Knitting Mills Schwinn Bicycle Company Sciaky Brothers, Inc. Scott, Foresman and Company Scribner & Co. Sealy Mattress Company Second Federal Savings and Loan Association of Chicago Walter E. Selck and Co. Seventy-fourth & Halsted Currency Exchange John Sexton & Co, John Sexton Sand and Gravel Corp. Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather & Geraldson Shure Brothers, Inc. Signode Corporation The Simoniz Company Sinclair Refining Company Skil Corporation Society for Visual Education, Inc. Son and Prins Co. Spaulding & Company Spector Freight Systems, Inc. The Sperry & Hutchinson Co. Standard Alliance Industries, Inc. Standard Car Truck Company Standard Forgings Corporation Standard Photo Supply Co. Standard Process Corporation Starbey Food Products Company Steel City Furniture Company Hess Stephenson Co. Charles A. Stevens & Company Stromberg Allen and Company The Stutz Company Sullivan's Law Directory Superior Silk Screen Industries, Inc. Sweetheart Cup Corporation Swett Realty Company Swift & Company Synchro-Start Products, Inc. Szabo Food Service, Inc. The Tablet & Ticket Co. Tee-Pak, Inc. F. D. Thompson Publications Thompson Refrigeration Corporation Thor-Shackel Horse Radish Company Thorton Cartage Company The Paper Mate Co. The Toni Company Arthur C. Trask Company Transilwrap Co. Truax-Traer Coal Company Twinplex Manufacturing Company Uniform Printing & Supply United Conveyor Corporation United-Greenfield Corporation United States Gypsum Company Universal Metal Hose Company Universal Screw Co. Universal Wire & Cable Company Urban Investment & Development Co. Vaco Products Co. Valve & Primer Corporation Vapor Corporation Ventfabrics, Inc. WBBM-TV Warwick Electronics, Inc. The Water Tower Hyatt House Watervliet Paper Company Wedron Silica Company The Welding Shop Western Community Salvage Company Westinghouse Electric Corporation Wilkens Anderson Company Winter-Kahn-Nielsen-Ross & Buckwalter, Inc. Winzeler Manufacturing & Tool Co. Wisconsin Tool & Stamping Co. Wolfberg & Kroll Woodbridge Ornamental Iron Co. Woodwork Corporation of America Young & Rubicam, Inc. The Zack Foundation 53 Museum Publications in 1967-1968 DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY Martin, Paul S., William A. Longacre and James M. Hill 1967. Chapters in the Prehistory of Eastern Arizona, III. Fieldiana: Anthro- pology, vol. 57, 179 pp., 107 illus., 6 tables. Reixman, Fred M. 1967. Fishing: An Aspect of Oceanic Economy, An Archaeological Approach. Fieldiana: Anthropology, vol. 56, no. 2, 110 pp., 11 illus., 3 tables. VanStone, James W. 1968. An Annotated Ethnohistorical Bibliography of The Nushagak River Region, Alaska. Fieldiana: Anthropology, vol. 54, no. 2, 44 pp. 1968. Tikchik Village, A Nineteenth Century Riverine Community in South- western Alaska. Fieldiana: Anthropology, vol. 56, no. 3, 158 pp., 32 illus., 4 tables. DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY Burger, William C. 1968. Notes on the Flora of Costa Rica, I. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 31, no. 11, 2 pp., 1 illus. Edwin, Gabriel 1967. Preliminary Notes on the Scrophulariaceae of Peru. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 31, no. 8, 7 pp. Gibson, Dorothy N. 1967. Flora of Peru. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 13, part V-A, no. 2, 30 pp. 1968. A New Guatemalan Spigelia. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 32, no. 1, 4 pp. 1968. Studies in American Plants. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 31, no. 15, 4 pp. Glassman, S. F. 1967. New Species of Palm Genus Syagrus Mart. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 31, no. 9, 11 pp., 7 illus. 1968. Syagrus oleraeaea (Mart.) Becc. and Closely Related Taxa. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 32, no. 3, 21 pp., 10 illus. 1968. Studies in the Palm Genus Syagrus Mart. Fieldiana: Botanv, vol. 31, no. 17, 34 pp., 20 illus. 1968. Neiv Species in the Palm Genus Syagrus Mart, II. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 31, no. 13, 17 pp., 15 illus. Heller, Alfonso H. 1968. A New Eurystyles /rom Nicaragua. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 31, no. 12, 5 pp., 1 illus. 1968. Three New Nicaraguan Epidendrums. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 32, no. 2, 5 pp., 2 illus. Molina R., Antonio 1968. Two New Nicaraguan Juglandaceae. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 31, no. 16, 5 pp. Ponce de Leon, Patricio 1968. -4 Rerision of the Family Geastraceae. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 31, no. 14, 49 pp., 20 illus. 54 Standley, Paul C. and Louis O. Williams 1967. Flora of Guatemala. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 24, part VIII, no. 3, 55 pp., 10 ill us. Williams, Louis O. 1967. Tropical American Plants, VIII. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 31, no. 10, 21 pp., 2 illus. 1968. Tropical American Plants, IX. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 31, no. 18, 27 pp., 2 illus. 1968. Tropical American Plants, X. Fieldiana: Botanv, vol. 32, no. 4, 27 pp., 2 illus. DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY Clark, John, James R. Beerbower and Kenneth K. Kietzke 1967. Oligocene Sedimentation, Stratigraphy, Paleoecology and Paleoclimatology in the Big Badlands of South Dakota. Fieldiana: Geology Memoirs, vol. 5, 158 pp., 56 illus. Clark, John 1968. Cymaprimadontidae, A New Family of Insectivores. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 16, no. 8, 14 pp., 5 illus., 1 table. DeMar, Robert E. 1967. Txvo New Species of Broiliellus (Amphibians) from the Permian of Texas. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 16, no. 5, 13 pp., 2 illus. Denison, Robert H. 1967. Ordovician Vertebrates from Western United States. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 16, no. 6, 61 pp., 26 illus. 1968. Middle Devonian Fishes from the Lemhi Range of Idaho. Fieldiana: Geol- ogy, vol. 16, no. 10, 20 pp., 12 illus. 1968. Early Devonian Lungfishes from Wyoming, Utah and Idaho. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 17, no. 4, 63 pp., 26 illus. Gaffney, Eugene S. and Rainer Zangerl 1968. A Revision of the Chelonian Genus Bothremys (Pleurodira: Pelomedusi- dae). Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 16, no. 7, 47 pp., 22 illus. Johnson, Ralph G. and Eugene S. Richardson, Jr. 1968. The Essex Fauna and Medusae. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 12, no. 7, 9 pp., 6 illus. Nigrini, Catherine and Matthew H. Nitecki 1968. Occurrence of Radiolaria in the Mississippian of Arkansas. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 16, no. 9, 14 pp., 11 illus. Nitecki, Matthew H. 1967. Bibliographic Index of North American Archaeocyathids. Fieldiana: Geol- ogy, vol. 17, no. 2, 117 pp., 1 fig., 1 table. 1968. On the Nature of the Holotype of Nipterella Paradoxica (Billings). Fieldi- ana: Geology, vol. 16, no. 11, 7 pp., 4 illus. and Diana Z. Handler 1968. Catalog of Type and Referred Specimens of Fossil Ostracodes in the Field Museum of Natural History. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 17, no. 5, 103 pp. and Eugene S. Richardson, Jr. 1967. Catalogue of Type Specimens of Conodonts in the Field Museum of Natural History. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 17, no. 1, 100 pp. 55 Olson, Everett C. 1968. The Family Caseidae. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 17, no. 3, 124 pp., 29 illus., 4 tables. RiGBY, J. Keith and Matthew H. Nitecki 1968. Annotated Bibliography of Lower Paleozoic Sponges of North America. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 18, no. 1, 146 pp. Index to Volume 13, Fieldiana: Geology, 44 pp. DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY Bacon, James P., Jr. 1967. Systematic Status of Three Scincid Lizards (Genus Sphenomorphus) from Borneo. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 51, no. 4, 14 pp., 4 illus., 2 tables. Broadley, Donald G. 1968. A New Species of Crotaphopeltis (Serpentes: Colubridae). Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 51, no. 10, 5 pp., 2 illus. Hassinger, Jerry D. 1968. Introduction to the Mammal Survey of the 1965 Street Expedition to Af- ghanistan. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 55, no. 1, 81 pp., 25 illus., 1 table. Inger, Robert F. 1967. A New Colubrid Snake of the Genus Stegonotus from Borneo. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 51, no. 5, 7 pp., 1 illus., 3 tables. Lay, Douglas M. 1967. A Study of the Mammals of Iran Resulting from the Street Expedition of 1962-63. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 54, 280 pp., 32 illus. Moore, Joseph Curtis 1968. Relationships Among the Living Genera of Beaked Whales, With Classifi- cations, Diagnoses and Keys. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 53, no. 4, 90 pp., 24 illus. Fleming, Robert L. and Melvin A. Traylor, Jr. 1968. Distributional Notes on Nepal Birds. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 53, no. 3, 59 pp. Rand, Austin L. 1967. The Flower-Adapted Tongue of a Timxiliinae Bird and Its Implications. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 51, no. 3, 8 pp., 2 illus. 1968. Geographical Variation in the Canary Serinus sulphuratus. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 51, no. 8, 6 pp. 1968. Intra-Relations of African Canaries, Genus Serinus. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 51, no. 9, 10 pp. and DioscoRO S. Rabor 1967. Neiv Birds from Luzon, Philippine Islands. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 51, no. 6, 5 pp. Solem, Alan 1967. New Molluscan Taxa and Scientific Writings of Fritz Haas. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 53, no. 2, 74 pp. Traylor, Melvin A., Jr. 1967. A Collection of Birds from Szechwan. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 53, no. 1, 65 pp. and Daniel A. Parelius 1967. A Collection of Birds from the Ivory Coast. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 51, no. 7, 27 pp. Index to Volume ^1, Fieldiana: Zoology, 46 pp. 56 Field Museum of Natural History Bulletin Blake, Emmet R. Guatemala Birds: Random Recollections of an Ornithologist, no. 3. Carver, Norman F., Jr. Silent Cities: An Architect's View of Ancient Mexico and the Maya, no. 10. Clark, Phil Vamonos a Mexico Amiga!, no. 10. Collier, Donald Pre-Columbian Isthmian Goldwork, no. 4. Recent acquisition — Anthropology: Pre-Columbian Mexican Art, no. 10. Fricke, George Animal Immigrants, no. 6. FucHS, Louis H. New Mineral Honors Stanley Field, no. 8. Grayson, Michelle B. Bird of the Mangrove Swamp, no. 5. Legge, Christopher C. and Patricia M. Williams Missionaries as Collectors, no. 5. and Edward G. Nash Tale of a Tiki, no. 8. Little, Judith Phelps Spring Journey on Africa Draws on Youthful Talent, no, 3. LuPTON, Keith Looking Over the Field, no. 1. Martin, Paul S. Hay Hollow Site, no. 5. Marx, Hymen Recent acquisition — Zoology: Little- known Caecilians Feature of New Collection, no. 11. VOL. 38, 1967 Mueller, Robert F. The Surface of Venus, no. 1. Nitecki, Matthew H. Underground Art, no. 9. Rand, Austin L. The Birds of New Guinea, no. 12. The Great Auk Comes to Chicago, no. 2. Picture Making by Apes and Its Evo- lutionary Significance, no. 1. RoscoE, Ernest J. Winter journey: Magic, Medicine and Minerals, no. 12. SiROTo, Leon The Twins of Yorubaland, no. 7. Solem, Alan Book review: Shell Collecting: An Il- lustrated History, by S. Peter Dance, no. 9. The Two Careers of Fritz Haas, no. 11. Turnbull, Priscilla Bones of Palegawra, no. 9. VanStone, James W. Eskimo Whaling Charms, no. 11. Williams, Louis 0. Cabbages and Kin, no. 8. The Calabash Tree, no. 4. Guatemala: An Appreciation, no. 2. Williams, Patricia M. Arts and Science: An Able Staff of Artists Use Their Talents to Aid the Museum Research Staff, no. 6. Wylie, Turrell V. Sectarianism in Tibetan Buddhism, no. 12. Zangerl, Rainer X-Rays Find Fossils, no. 7. Burger, William C. A Tropical Spring, no. 4, VOL.39, 1968 Clark, Phil The Many-Faceted Jewel: Brazil, no. 6. 57 Fawcett, W. Peyton England's Chiefest Herbarist, Master John Parkinson, no. 12. Fleming, Edith Fall Journey: Hunt With the Cavemen, no. 9. Hall, Gwendolyn Joseph — Story Told By a Fossil, no. 9. Inger, Robert F. New Graduate Center Opens, no. 2. Martin, Paul S. Lowry Pueblo, Then and Now, no. 4. Nash, Edward G. The Quest for the Dancing Worm, no. 4. Olsen, Edward J. Meterorites, no. 11. OsBORN, Dale J. Hyena Hunt, no. 3. Rackerby, Frank and Struever, Stuart The Horton Site, a Casebook in Urgent Archaeology, no. 3. Richardson, Eugene S., Jr. Jellyfish in Them Thar Hills, no. 10. RoscoE, Ernest Winter Journey: Ancient Sea Mon- sters, no. 12. Starr, Kenneth Chinese Typewriters: A Case of Stimu- lus Diffusion, no. 10. Rubinyi, Lois The American Indian Festival, no. 9. Tax, Sol They Built; They Did Not Destroy, A Remarkable Thing, no. 9. Thompson, Ida L. Cuttlefish Story, no. 2. TuRNBULL, William D. A Fossil Comes to Life, no. 1. White, Christopher, A. Summer Report, no. 6. Williams, Patricia M. The Museum Trademark, no. 1. The Bumham Plan and Field Museum, no. 5. The Other Time I Came On My Birth- day, no. 9. Turning Over an Old Leaf, no. 11. The Tanning Villas of Field Museum, no. 12. Williams, Louis O. The Vanishing Tropical Forests, no. 7. Yadin, Yigael Masada, no. 5. Other Publications of Staff Members DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY Cole, Glen H. 1967. "The later Acheulian and Sangoan of southern Uganda," Background to Evolution in Africa, edited by W. W. Bishop and J. D. Clark. University of Chicago Press, pp. 481-526. 1967 [1968]. "A re-investigation of Magosi and the Magosian," Quarternaria IX, pp. 153-168. Collier, Donald 1968. Review of Ecuador (by Betty J. Meggers). American Antiquity, vol. 33 pp. 269-71. 1968. (with Lois Rubinyi) "The American Indian Festival and the Chicago Indians: Indian Art and Indian Life Ways." In The American Indian Festi- val, (Field Museum of Natural History) American Indian Center, Chicago, pp. 1-4. 58 Lewis, Phillip H. 1967. "Primitive Art: Introduction," Encyclopedia Brifannica, vol. 18, pp. 519- 520. 1967. Review of Prehistoric and Primitive Man ("by Andreas Lommel). Amer- ican Biology Teacher, vol. 29, no. 3, pp. 234-235. 1967. Review of Prehistoric and Primitive Man (by Andreas Lommel). Amer- ican Anthropologist, vol. 69, no. 6. 1968. "Primitive Art." International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. The Macmillan Co. and the Free Press, N.' Y., vol. 12, pp. 477-480. 1968. Review of Versuch einer Stilanalyse der Aufhiingehaken torn Miitleren Sepik in Neu-Guinea (by Reimar Schefold). American Anthropologist, vol. 70, pp. 405-406. SiROTO, Leon 1967. Review of A Bibliography of African Art (L. J. P. Gaskin, compiler). American Anthropologist, vol. 69, no. 1, p. 109. 1967. Review of Industries et Cultures en Cote d'lvoire (by B. Holas). Amer- ican Anthropologist, vol. 69, no. 6, p. 756. 1968. "The Face of the Bwiiti." African Arts /Arts d'Afrique, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 22-27, 86-89, 96. 1968. Review of Der Wandel okonomischer Rollen bei den westlichen Dan in Liberia (by E. Fischer). Man, vol. 3, pp. 505-506. Starr, KENhfETH 1968. Review of New Light on Prehistoric China (by Cheng Te-k' un). Amer- ican Anthropologist, vol. 70, no. 2, pp. 414-415. VanStone, James W. 1967. Eskimos of the Nushagak River, An Ethnographic History. University of Washington Press, xv, 192 pp. 1967. (with W. H. Oswalt) The Ethnoarchaeology of Crow Village, Alaska. Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 199, 144 pp. 1967. Introduction to: Lieutenant Zagoskin's Travels in Russian America 1842- 1844. Edited by Henry N. Michael. University of Toronto Press. 1967. "Snowshoe." Encyclopedia Britannica, vol. 22, pp. 726-727. 1968. "Ethnohistorical research in Alaska." Proceedings of the Conference on Alaskan History, Alaska Methodist University Press, pp. 51-59. 1968. (with W. H. Oswalt) "Russkoe nasledie na Alyaske. Perspektivy etno- graficheskovo izucheniya." Sovetskaya Etnografiya, no. 2, pp. 128-131. 1968. Review of The Eskimo of St. Michael and Vicinity as Related by H. M. W. Edmonds. Edited by Dorothy Jean Ray. Pacific Northwest Quarterly, vol. 59, no. 3, pp. 165-166. 1968. Review of People of the Noatak (by Claire Fejos). American Anthro- pologist, vol. 70, no. 1, p. 114. DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY Burger, William C. 1967. Families of Flowering Plants in Ethiopia. Oklahoma State University Press, illus., 236 pp. Edwin, Gabriel 1967. "Aquifoliaceae of Panama," Flora of Panama. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, vol. 54, pp. 381-387. 1967. "Aquifoliaceae of Auyan Tepui" in "Flora of Auyan Tepui." Acta Bo- tanica Venezuelica, vol. 2, pp. 235-237. 1967. and Padre Raulino Reitz. "Aquifoliaceae of Santa Catarina" in Flora Illustrada Catarinense, part I, pp. 1-47, illus. 59 Singer, Rolf 1968. Nuevos hongos descubiertos en Chile. Biologica, vol. 41, pp. 69-71. 1968. Review of Les Russula d'Europe et d'Afrique du Nord (by Henri Romag- nesi). Mycologia, vol. 60, pp. 1127-1130. Stolze, Robert G. 1968. "A New Bolivian Collection of the Rare Elaphoglossum cardenasii." American Fern Journal, vol. 58, pp. 31-32. Williams, Louis O. 1968. "Notes on Asclepiadaceae of Panama." Annals of the Missouri Botanica Gardens, vol. 55, pp. 48-50. 1968. "A Beautiful Costa Rican Kohleria." Notes from the Royal Botanical Garden, Edinburgh, Scotland, vol. 28, no. 3, pp. 291-292. 1968. "The Role of Botany and Herbaria in Plant Introduction." Proceedings of the International Symposium on Plant Introduction, Escuela Agricola Pan- americana, Honduras, 1967, pp. 43-47. DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY Bardack, David and Rainer Zangerl 1968. "First Fossil Lamprey: A Record from the Pennsylvanian of Illinois." Science, vol. 162, no. 3859, 4 figs., pp. 1265-7. Denison, Robert H. 1967. "A New Protaspis from the Devonian of Utah, With Notes on the Classi- fication of Pteraspididae." Journal of the Linnean Society of London (Zoology), vol. 47, 2 figs., 2 pis., pp. 31-37. 1968. "The Evolutionary Significance of the Earliest Known Lungfish, Uranolo- phus." In Current Problems of Lower Vertebrate Phytogeny, edited by T. 0rvig. Proceedings of the Fourth Nobel Symposium, June 1967, Stockholm, Figs. 1-9, pp. 247-257. NiTECKi, Matthew H. 1967. "Receptaculites Deshayes, 1828 (Receptaculitids) : Proposed Validation under the Plenary Powers." Z. N. (S) 1787. Bulletin of Zoological Nomen- clature, vol. 24, part 2, pp. 119-120. 1967. "Systematic Position of Receptaculitids." Geological Society of America Annual Meeting (Abstr.), pp. 165-166. 1967. (with J. Kolb and J. Lemke) "A Search for Values." Chicago Today, vol. 4, no. 1, 7 figs., pp. 42-49. 1967. (with Keith Rigby) "New Mississippian Demosponge from Arkansas" (Abstr.). Geological Society of America Special Papers, vol. 87, p. 117. 1968. "Revision of North American Cyclocrinitids" (Abstr.). Geological Society of America Annual Meeting, North Central Section, p. 35. 1968. (with Walter Sadlick) "Notable Color Pattern in a Fossil Brachiopod." Journal of Paleontology, vol. 42, no. 2, pi. 58, pp. 404-405. 1968. (with Alan Solem) "Cyclospongia discus Miller, 1891: A Gastropod Operculum, Not a Sponge." Journal of Paleontology, vol. 42, no. 4, pi. 124, 2 figs., pp. 1007-1013. 1968. "The Nature and the Systematic Position of Receptaculitids." Inter- national Paleontological Union, Prague, pp. 19-20. Olsen, Edward 1967. "Amphibole: First Occurrence in a Meteorite." Science, vol. 156 (3771), pp. 61-62. 1967. (with L. Fuchs and E. Henderson) "On the Occurrence Brianite and Pane- thite, Two New Phosphate Minerals from the Dayton Meteorite." Geo- chimica et Cosmochimica Acta, vol. 31, pp. 1711-1719. 60 1967. (with L. Fuchs, Argonne National Laboratory) "The State of Oxidation of Some Iron Meteorites." Icarus, vol. 6, pp. 242-253. 1967. "A New Occurrence of Roedderite and Its Bearing on Osumilite-type Minerals." American Mineralogist, vol. 52, pp. 1519-1523. 1967. (with R. F. Mueller) "The Olivine, Pyroxene and Metal Content of Chondritic Meteorites as a Consequence of Prior's Rule." Mineralogist Maga- zine, vol. 36, pp. 311-318. 1968. Introduction to Gems and Precious Stones of North America (by George F. Kunz). Dover Publications, New York. 1968. Introduction and Addenda to Precious Stones (by Max Bauer). Dover Publications, New York. 1968. (with Dr. T. Bunch (NASA)) "Potassium Feldspar in the Weekeroo Sta- tion, Kodaikanal, and Colomera Iron Meteorites." Science, vol. 160, no. 3833, pp. 1123-1225. 1968. (with Dr. T. Bunch (NASA)) "Potassium Feldspar in the Weekero Sta- tion, Kodaikanal, and Colomera Iron Meteorites." Science, vol. 162, no. 3861, pp. 1507-1508. 1968. (with Louis Fuchs (Argonne National Laboratory)) "Krinovite, NaMg2 CrSisOio: A New Meteorite Mineral." Science, vol. 161, no. 3843, pp. 786-787. TuRNBULL, William D. 1967. (with E. L. Lundelius, Jr.) "Pliocene Mammals from Victoria, Austra- lia." Section C. Abstracts, 39th Congress, ANZAAS, Melbourne, p. K9. 1967. (with E. L. Lundelius, Jr.) "Fossil Vertebrate Potential at Smeaton, Victoria." Ibid, pp. KlO-11. 1967. (with C. A. Reed) "Pseudochrysochloris, A Specialized Burrowing Mam- mal from the Early Oligocene of North America." Journal of Paleontology, vol. 41, no. 3, figs. 1-5, pp. 623-631. 1967. "Tylopoda." Encyclopedia Britannica, pp. 434-435. Zangerl, Rainer 1968. "The Morphology and Developmental History of the Scales of the Paleo- zoic Sharks HolmeseUal sp. and Orodus." In Current Problems of Lower Verte- brate Phytogeny, edited by T. 0rvig. Fourth Nobel Symposium, Stockholm, 17 figs., pp. 399-412. 1968. Translated and Edited: Peyer, Bernhard, Comparative Odontology. Uni- versity of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, XIV and 347 pp., 220 figs., 88 pis., 8 col. pis. DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY Blake, Emmet R. 1968. "Icteridae" in Check-list of Birds of the World, vol. 14, pp. 138-202. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass. 1968. "Vireonidae" ,in Check-list of Birds of the World, vol. 14, pp. 103-138. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass. FooDEN, Jack 1967. "Macaca fuscata (Blyth, 1875) : Proposed Conservation as the Name for the Japanese Macaque (Mammalia)." Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature, vol. 24, pp. 250-251. 1967. "Complementary Specialization of Male and Female Reproductive Struc- tures in the Bear Macaque, Macaca arctoides." Nature, vol. 214, no. 5091, 4 figs., pp. 939-941. Hershkovitz, Philip 1967. "Dynamics of Rodent Molar Evolution, A Study Based on the New World Cricetinae, Family Muridae." Journal of Dental Research, vol. 46, no. 5, Suppl., 8 figs., pp. 829-842. 61 Nadler, Charles F. 1968. (with R. Hoffman) "Chromosomes and Systematics of Some North American Species of the Genus Marmota (Rodentia: Sciuridael." Experientia, vol. 24, pp. 740-742, 1 fig. 1968. "Serum Protein Electrophoresis of Oreamnos americanus (Mountain Goat) and Comparison of Sera from Canadian and Alaskan Alces alces (Moose) and Ovis dalli (Sheep)." Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, vol. 25, 2 figs., pp. 1121-1124. 1968. "The Chromosomes of Spermophilus townsendi (Rodentia: Sciuridae) and Report of a New Subspecies." Cytogenetics, vol. 7, 5 figs., 2 tables, pp. 144-157. 1968. "Chromosomes of the Ground Squirrel, Spermophilus richardsoni aureus (Davis)." Journal of Mammalogy, vol. 49, no. 2, 1 fig., pp. 312-314. 1968. "Serum proteins and transferrins of the Ground Squirrel Sub-genus Spermophilus." Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, vol. 27, p. 487. 1968. (with D. A. Sutton) "Chromosomes of North American Chipmunks Eutamias." Journal of Mammxilogy, vol. 49, no. 2, 1 fig., pp. 312-314. Rand, Austin L. 1967. "Family Nectariniidae." Check-list of Birds of the World, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, vol. 12, pp. 208-289. 1967. Ornithology: An Introduction, W. W. Norton & Co., 51 illus., 296 pp. 1967. (with E. Thomas Gilliard) Handbook of New Guinea Birds, George Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 76 illus., 5 color plates, 612 pp. 1967. "A Common Grackle Learning to Soak Bread," The Wilson Bulletin, vol. 79, no. 4, pp. 455-456. 1967. "The Bat Hawks." The North Queensland Naturalist, vol. 34, no. 143, p. 8. 1968. Review of Edward Wilson's Birds of the Antarctic. Edited by Brian Roberts. Science, vol. 159, Feb. 23, 1968, p. 866. 1968. "Symposium on Birds of Prey." Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Association News Letter No. UO, February 1968, p. 19. 1968. "What is Serinus flavigula." Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club, vol. 88, no. 7, pp. 116-119. 1968. "Family Carduelinae." Check-list of Birds of the World, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, vol. 14, pp. 207-306. Solem, Alan 1967. "Basic Distribution Patterns of Non-Marine Mollusks." Marine Bio- logical Association of India Symposium on Mollusca, Abstracts of Papers, p. 25. 1968. "Abundance, Local Variation and Brood Pouch Formation in Libera fratercula from Rarotonga, Cook Islands." Annual Report for 1968, The American Malacological Union, Inc., 3 figs., pp. 10-12. 1968. (with Matthew Nitecki) "Cyclospongia discus Miller, 1891 — a gastropod operculum, not a sponge." Journal of Paleontology, vol. 42, no. 4, 2 text figs., pp. 1007-1013. 1968. "Locomotion in Aporrhais and Haliotis." Annual Report for 1967, The American Malacological Union, Inc., p. 45. 1968. "Personality of the Month — Dr. Fritz Haas." Hawaiian Shell News, vol. 16, no. 12, fig., p. 8. 1968. " 'Ptychodon' misoolensis Adam & van Benthem Jutting, 1939, A New Guinea Strobilopsid Land Snail and Review of the Genus Enteroplax." The Veliger, vol. 11, no. 1, 1 fig., 1 map, 1 table, pp. 24-30. 1968. "The Subantarctic Land Snail, Notodisciis hookeri (Reeve, 1854) (Pul- monata, Endodontidae)." Proceedings of the Malacological Society of London, vol. 38, 8 figs., 1 table, pp. 251-266. 62 This page was inadvertently omitted from the Report. Please insert it between pp. 62 and 63. 1967. Review of Evolutionary and Genetic Biology of Primates, vol. 1. Edited by John Buettner-Janusch. The American Biology Teacher, Nov., pp. 664- 665. 1968. "Metachromism, the principle of evolutionary change in mammalian tegumentary colors." Evolution, vol. 22, no. 3, 13 figs., pp. 556-575. Inger, Robert F. 1967. "The Development of a Phylogeny of Frogs." Evolution, vol. 21, pp. 369-384. 1967. (with Bernard Greenberg) "Annual Reproductive Patterns of Lizards from a Bornean Rain Forest." Ecology, vol. 47, pp. 1007-1021. 1968. (with James P. Bacon) "Annual reproductive patterns and clutch size in frogs from the rain forest of Borneo." Copeia, 1968, pp. 602-606. LiEM, Karel F. 1967. "The Functional Morphology of the Respiratory, Digestive and Integu- mentary Systems of the Synbranchiform Fish Monopterus albus." Copeia, vol. 2, pp. 375-388. 1967. "Respiratory System." McGraw-Hill Yearbook of Science and Technol- ogy, pp. 340-341. 1967. "Functional Morphology of the Head of the Anabantoid Teleost Fish Helostoma temmincki." Journal of Morphology, vol. 121, pp. 135-156. 1967. "A Morphological Study of Luciocephalus pulcher, with Notes on Gular Plates in Other Recent Teleosts." Journal of Morphology, vol. 121, pp. 103- 134. 1967. Review of Modes of Reproduction in Fishes (by C. M. Breder and D. E. Rosen). American Biology Teacher, vol. 29, pp. 137-138. 1967. Review of Island Life (by Sherwin Carlquist). American Biology Teacher, vol. 29, pp. 315-318. 1968. "Geographic and Taxonomic Variation in the Pattern of Natural Sex Reversal in the Teleost Fish Order Synbranchiformes." Journal of Zoology (London), vol. 156, pp. 225-238. 1968. (with George W. Barlow and Wolfgang Wickler) "Badidae, a New Tele- ost Fish Family — Behavioral, Osteological, and Developmental Evidence." Journal of Zoology, vol. 156. 1968. Review of A Study of the Cat (by W. F. Walker, Jr.). American Biology Teacher, vol. 30, p. 770. 1968. "Comparative Functional Anatomy of the Feeding Apparatus of the Teleost Fish Family Nandidae." (Abstr.) American Zoologist, vol. 156, p. 415. Marx, Hymen 1967. (with A. Stanley Rand) "Running Speed of the Lizard Basiliscus basi- liscus on Water." Copeia, 1967, pp. 230-233. 1968. Checklist of the Reptiles and Amphibians of Egypt. Special Publication, United States Naval Medical Research Unit Number Three, Cairo, figs. 1-11, maps 1-31, pp. 1-84. Moore, Joseph Curtis 1967. Review of Mice All Over (by Peter Crowcroft). Journal of Mammalogy, vol. 48, no. 3, p. 500. 1968. Review of Checklist of Palearctic and Indian Mammals (by J. R. Eller- man and T. C. S. Morrison Scott, second edition, 1966; and The Terrestrial Mammals of Western Europe (by G. B. Corbet). Both books reviewed in Journal of Mammalogy, vol. 49, no. 1, pp. 168-170. 1968. "Sympatric Species of Tree Squirrels Mix in Mating Chase." Journal of Mammalogy, vol. 49, no. 3, pp. 531-532. 1 1968. "Endodontid Land Snails of Rapa Island: Patterns and Problems in Speciation." Annual Report for 1967, The American Malacological Union, Inc., pp. 33-34. Traylor, Melvin a. 1967. (with Richard K. Brooke) "Apus apus apus in the Cameroons." Bul- letin of the British Ornithologists' Club, vol. 87, pp. 124-125. 1967. "A Case of Dimorphic Juvenal Plum^e." Bulletin of the British Orni- thologists' Club, vol. 87, pp. 58-60. 1967. "A New Race of Cisticola galactotes." Bulletin of the British Ornitholo- gists' Club, vol. 87, p. 58. 1967. "A New Species of Cisticola." Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club, vol. 87, pp. 45-48. 1967. "A Spotted Breast Band in Apalis rufifrons." Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club, vol. 87, p. 112. 1967. "The Nomenclatural Standing of Clericus polydenominata." The Vanish- ing Press, Natural History References, no. 2, 11 pp. 1967. "Notes on Apalis cinerea and Apalis chariessa." Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club, vol. 87, pp. 95-96. 1968. (with Ernst Mayr and Raymond A. Paynter, Jr.) "Estrildidae." Check- list of Birds of the World, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., vol. 14, pp. 306-390. 1968. "Viduinae." Check-list of Birds of the World, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., vol. 14, pp. 390-397. 1968. "Winter Molt in the Acadian Flycatcher, Empidonax virescens." The Auk, vol. 85, p. 691. 1968. Review of The Bird Faunas of Africa and Its Islands (by R. E. Moreau). Bird-Banding, vol. 39, pp. 69-71. JAMES NELSON AND ANNA LOUISE RAYMOND FOUNDATION RoscoE, Ernest J. 1967. "An Experimental Course in Earth Science for Elementary Teachers." Journal of Geological Education, vol. 14, pp. 195-196. 1967. "Elementary Level Geology at Field Museum." Geotimes, vol. 12, no. 4, p. 7. 1967. "Let's Get the Kids Out of the Classroom and Into the Street — A Plea for Urban Natural History." Turtox News, vol. 45, pp. 20-21. 1967. "Ethnomalacology and Paleoecology of the Round Butte Archaeological Sites, Deschutes River Basin, Oregon." Museum of Natural History, Uni- versity of Oregon, Bulletin No. 6, 4 figs., 20 pp. 1967. Review of Rock, Time, and Landforms (by Jerome WyckofiF). Journal of Geological Education, vol. 15, pp. 122-123. 1967. Review of Pleistocene Mollusca of Ohio (by Aurele LaRocque). Geotimes, vol. 12, no. 6, p. 36, 63 OFFICERS Board of Trustees Remick McDowell, President (as of January 20, 1969) Harry O. Bercher, Vice-President BowEN Blair, Vice-President John M. Simpson, Vice-President Edward Byron Smith, Treasurer and Assistant Secretary E. Leland Webber, Secretary BOARD OF TRUSTEES Lester Armour Harry O. Bercher Bowen Blair WiLLLAM McCORMICK BLAIR William R. Dickinson, Jr. Thomas E. Donnelley II Marshall Field Nicholas Galitzine Paul W. Goodrich Clifford C, Gregg Samuel Insull, Jr. Henry P. Isham Hughston M. McBain Remick McDowell J. Roscoe Miller William H. Mitchell John T. Pirie, Jr. John Shedd Reed John S. Runnells John G. Searle John M. Simpson Gerald A. Sivage Edward Byron Smith William G. Swartchild, Jr. Louis Ware E. Leland Webber J. Howard Wood HONORARY TRUSTEES Walter J. Cummings Joseph N. Field William V. Kahler James L. Palmer 65 WOMEN'S BOARD, 1967-1968 OFFICERS Mrs. Hermon Dunlap Smith, President Mrs. Walter A. Krafft, First Vice-President Mrs, Claude A. Barnett, Second Vice-President Mrs. George H. Watkins, Secretary Mrs, Thomas M, Ware, Assistant Secretary Mrs, Austin T, Cushman, Treasurer Mrs. Thomas E, Donnelley II, Assistant Treasurer Mrs. James W, Alsdorf Mrs. Mrs, a. Watson Armour III Mrs. Mrs. Lester Armour Mrs, Mrs. Vernon Armour Mrs. Mrs. W. H. Arnold Mrs. Mrs. Russell M. Baird Mrs. Mrs. Ernest S. Ballard Mrs. Mrs. Claude A. Barnett Mrs. Mrs. George R. Beach, Jr. Mrs. Mrs. George W. Beadle Mrs. Mrs. Laird Bell Mrs. Mrs. Edward H. Bennett, Jr. Mrs. Mrs. B. E. Bensinger Mrs. Mrs. Richard Bentley Mrs. Mrs. Harry O. Bercher* Mrs. Mrs. Bowen Blair Mrs. Mrs. Edward McCormick Blair Mrs. Mrs. William McCormick Blair Mrs. Mrs. Joseph L. Block Mrs. Mrs. Leigh B. Block Mrs. Mrs. Philip D. Block, Jr. Mrs. Mrs. William J. Bowe Mrs. Mrs. Arthur S. Bowes Mrs. Mrs. T. Kenneth Boyd Mrs. Mrs. Gardner Brown Mrs. Mrs. Daniel C, Bryant Mrs, Mrs. Walther Buchen Mrs. Mrs. Thomas B. Burke Mrs. Mrs. Robert Wells Carton Mrs. Mrs. Henry T. Chandler Mrs. Miss Nora Chandler Mrs. Mrs. F. Newell Childs Mrs. Mrs. Robert E. Coburn Mrs. Mrs. Fairfax Cone Mrs, Mrs, Peter Fries Connor, Jr, Mrs, Mrs, Thomas J, Coogan Mrs, Mrs, James A, Cook Mrs. Mrs. William S. Covington Mrs. Mrs. Norman L. Cram Mrs. Mrs, Herschel H. Cudd Miss Austin T, Cushman Emmett Dedmon Charles S, DeLong Edison Dick William R. Dickinson, Jr. Arthur Dixon Wesley M. Dixon Wesley M. Dixon, Jr. Elliott Donnelley Gaylord Donnelley Thomas E. Donnelley II Querin p. Dorschel G. Corson Ellis R. WiNFiELD Ellis Winston Elting John V, Farwell III John F, Fennelly Calvin Fentress Joseph N, Field Marshall Field Gaylord A. Freeman, Jr. A. W. F. Fuller Nicholas Galitzine James Gordon Gilkey, Jr. Julian R. Goldsmith Howard Goodman Paul W. Goodrich Donald M. Graham Clifford C. Gregg Stephen S. Gregory Harold F. Grumhaus Robert C. Gunness Robert P. Gwinn Burton W. Hales C. Daggett Harvey Frederick Charles Hecht Ben W. Heineman Joseph W. Hibben W. Press Hodgkins Frances Hooper 66 Mrs. Samuel Insull, Jr. Mrs. Mrs, Spencer E, Irons Mrs. Mrs. George S. Isham Mrs. Mrs. Henry P. Isham Mrs. Mrs. Henry P. Isham, Jr. Mrs. Mrs. Byron C. Karzas Mrs, Mrs. Russell Kelley, Jr. Mrs. Mrs. Thomas Atkins Kelly Mrs. Mrs. John Payne Kellogg* Mrs. Mrs. Walter A. Krafft Mrs. Mrs. Louis E, Laflin, Jr. Mrs. Mrs. Gordon Lang Mrs. Mrs. Homer J. Livingston Mrs. Mrs. Franklin J. Lunding Mrs. Mrs. Wallace D. Mackenzie Mrs. Mrs. Richard D. Mason Mrs. Mrs. David Mayer Mrs. Mrs. Frank D. Mayer Mrs. Mrs. Brooks McCormick Mrs. Mrs. John T. McCutchbon Mrs. Mrs. John T. McCutcheon, Jr. Mrs. Mrs, Edward D. McDougal, Jr. Mrs. Mrs. Remick McDowell Mrs. Mrs. Henry W. Meers Mrs. Mrs. John R. Millar Mrs. Mrs. J. RoscoE Miller Mrs. Mrs. William H. Mitchell Mrs. Mrs. John T. Moss Mrs. Mrs. Charles F. Nadler Mrs, Mrs. Richard H. Needham Mrs. Mrs. John Nuveen Mrs. Mrs, Eric Oldberg* Mrs, Mrs, Walter Paepcke Mrs, Mrs, Donald H, Palmer Mrs. Mrs. James L. Palmer Mrs. Mrs. John T, Pirie, Jr, Mrs, Mrs, William Roe Polk Mrs. Mrs. William P. Pope Mrs. Mrs. Clarence C. Prentice Mrs. Mrs. Frederick Childs Pullman Mrs. Mrs. Austin L. Rand Mrs. Mrs. George A. Ranney Mrs. Mrs. John Shedd Reed Mrs. Mrs. Howard C. Reeder Mrs. Mrs. Joseph E. Rich Mrs. Mrs. T. Clifford Rodman Mrs. Mrs. Clive Runnells Mrs. Mrs. John S, Runnells Mrs. Harold Russell George W. Ryerson John G, Searle William L. Searle John M, Simpson Gerald A. Sivage Edward Byron Smith Farwbll Dunlap Smith Hermon Dunlap Smith Solomon Byron Smith Lyle M. Spencer Jack C, Staehle Gardner H, Stern Adlai E, Stevenson III Robert E. Straus William S, Street Roy E, Sturtevant William G, Swartchild, Jr, R, 0. Swearingen Edward F. Swift III GusTAvus F, Swift, Jr, Phelps H, Smith Bruce Thorne Theodore D, Tieken Chester D, Tripp Thomas S, Tyler Derrick Vail Cyril L. Ward J, Harris Ward Louis Ware Thomas M, Ware Hempstead Washburne Hempstead Washburne, Jr. George H. Watkins Morrison Waud E, Leland Webber Edward K, Welles John Paul Welling Frank O, Wetmore II Julian B, Wilkins Philip C. Williams Jack A. Williamson John P. Wilson J. Howard Wood Frank H. Woods Philip K. Wrigley Rainer Zangerl Ernest Zeisler ♦Deceased 67 Staff E. Leland Webber, B.B.Ad., C.P.A., Director DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY Donald Collier, Ph.D., Chief Curator Paul S. Martin, Ph.D., Chief Curator Emeritus Kenneth Starr, Ph.D., Curator, Asiatic Archaeology and Ethnology Phillip H. Lewis, Ph.D., Curator, Primitive Art and Melanesian Ethnology James W. VanStone, Ph.D., Associate Curator, North American Archaeology and Ethnology Stephan Gasser, Ph.D., Assistant Curator, Oceanic Archaeology and Ethnology Leon Siroto, M.A., Assistant Curator, African Ethnology Glen H. Cole, Ph.D., Assistant Curator, Prehistory Hoshien Tchen, Ph.D., Consultant, East Asian Collection Christopher C. Legge, M.A., Custodian of Collections Christine S. Danziger, M.S., Conservator Raymond Wielgus, Restorer, Anthropology Lillian Novak, Departmental Secretary Robert J. Braidwood, Ph.D., Research Associate, Old World Prehistory Philip J. C. Dark, Ph.D., Research Associate, African Ethnology Fred Eggan, Ph.D., Research Associate, Ethnology J. Eric Thompson, Dipl. Anth. Camb., Research Associate, Central American Archaeology George I. Quimby, M.S., Research Associate, North American Archaeology and Ethnology F. Clark Howeu., Ph.D., Research Associate, Old World Prehistory James R. Getz, Field Associate Evett D. Hester, M.S., Field Associate DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY Louis 0. Williams, Ph.D., Chief Curator William C. Burger, Ph.D., Assistant Curator, Vascular Plants Gabriel Edwin, Ph.D., Assistant Curator, Vascular Plants§ Patricio Ponce de Leon, Ph.D., Assistant Curator, Cryptogamic Herbarium Donald Ray Simpson, Ph.D., Assistant Curator, Peruvian Botany Dorothy Gibson, Supervisor, Herbaria Rolf Singer, Ph.D., Visiting Research Curator in Mycology Valerie C. Canty, Departmental Secretary and Librarian Margery C. Carlson, Ph.D., Research Associate, Phanerogamic Botany Sidney F. Glassman, Ph.D., Research Associate, Palms E. P. KiLLiP, A.B., Research Associate, Phanerogamic Botany Rogers McVaugh, Ph.D., Research Associate, Vascular Plants § Resigned 68 Donald Richards, Research Associate, Cryptogamic Botany Inc. Agr. Antonio Molina R,, Field Associate A. H. Heller, Associate DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY Rainer Zangerl, Ph.D., Chief Curator Edward J, Olsen, Ph.D., Curator, Mineralogy Bertram G. Woodland, Ph.D., Curator, Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology John Clark, Ph.D., Associate Curator, Sedimentary Petrology Robert H. Denison, Ph.D., Curator, Fossil Fishes William D. Turnbull, Ph.D., Associate Curator, Fossil Mammals Eugene S. Richardson, Jr., Ph.D., Curator, Fossil Invertebrates Matthew H. Nitecki, Ph.D., Assistant Curator, Fossil Invertebrates Orville L. Gilpin, Chief Preparator, Fossils Winifred Reinders, Departmental Secretary Ernst Antevs, Ph.D., Research Associate, Glacial Geology David Bardack, Ph.D., Research Associate, Vertebrate Paleontology Albert A. Dahlberg, D.D.S., Research Associate, Fossil Vertebrates Ralph G. Johnson, Ph.D., Research Associate, Paleoecology Walter Kean, Associate, Mineralogy Erik N. Kjellesvig-Waering, B.S., Research Associate, Fossil Invertebrates Robert F. Mueller, Ph.D., Research Associate, Mineralogy Everett C. Olson, Ph.D., Research Associate, Fossil Vertebrates Bryan Patterson, Research Associate, Fossil Vertebrates Joseph Y. Smith, Ph.D., Research Associate, Mineralogy Thomas N. Taylor, Ph.D., Research Associate, Paleobotany J. Marvin Weller, Ph.D., Research Associate, Stratigraphy R. H. Whitfield, D.D.S., Associate, Fossil Plants Violet Whitfield, B.A., Associate, Fossil Plants DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY Austin L. Rand, Ph.D., Sc. D., Chief Curator Joseph Curtis Moore, Ph.D., Curator, Mammals Philip Hershkovitz, M.S., Research Curator, Mammals Emmet R. Blake, M.S., D.Sc, Curator, Birds Melvin a. Traylor, A.B., Associate Curator, Birds M. Dianne Maurer, A.B., Assistant, Birds Robert F. Inger, Ph.D., Curator, Amphibians and Reptiles Hymen Marx, B.S., Associate Curator, Reptiles LoREN P. Woods, B.S., Curator, Fishes Rupert L. Wenzel, Ph.D., Curator, Insects Henry S. Dybas, B.S., Associate Curator, Insects August Ziemer, Assistant, Insects Alan Solem, Ph.D., Curator, Lower Invertebrates es Karel F. Liem, Ph.D., Assistant Curator, Vertebrate Anatomy Sophie Andris, Osteologist Mario Villa, Tanner Marilyn A. Kurland, Departmental Secretary RuDYERD BouLTON, B.S., Research Associate, Birds Alfred E. Emerson, Ph.D., Sc.D., Research Associate, Insects Harry Hoogstraal, Ph.D., Research Associate, Insects David Kistner, Ph.D., Research Associate, Insects Ch'eng-Chao Liu, Ph.D., Research Associate, Reptiles Charles Ernest Oxnard, Ph.D., Research Associate, Vertebrate Anatomy Orlando Park, Ph.D., Research Associate, Insects Clifford H. Pope, B.S,, Research Associate, Amphibians and Reptiles George B. Rabb, Ph.D., Research Associate, Amphibians and Reptiles Charles A. Reed, Ph.D., Research Associate, Vertebrate Anatomy Robert Traub, Ph.D., Research Associate, Insects Ronald Singer, D.Sc, Research Associate, Mammalian Anatomy Alex K. Wyatt, Research Associate, Insects Luis de la Torre, Ph.D., Associate, Mammals Jack Fooden, Ph.D., Associate, Mammals Waldemar Meister, M.D., Associate, Anatomy Edward M. Nelson, Ph.D., Associate, Fishes Charles F. Nadler, M.D., Associate, Mammals Harry G. Nelson, B.S., Associate, Insects Karl Plath, Associate, Birds DioscORO S. Rabor, M.S., Associate, Birds Lillian A. Ross, Ph.B., Associate, Insects Ellen T. Smith, Associate, Birds Robert L. Fleming, Ph.D., Field Associate Georg Haas, Ph.D., Field Associate Frederick J. Medem, Sc.D., Field Associate Dale J. Osborn, Field Associate, Mammals William S. Street, Field Associate Janice K. Street, Field Associate DEPARTMENT OF EXHIBITION Lothar p. Witteborg, M.A., Chief Harry E. Changnon, Chief, Coordination and Production Carl W. Cotton, Taxidermist Samuel H. Grove, Jr., Artist-Preparator Ben G. Kozak, B.F.A., Chief Exhibit Designer Tibor Perenyi, Ph.D., Artist Donald R. Skinner, M.F.A., Chief Graphics Designer Solomon A. Smith II, M.A., Coordinator of Special Exhibits 70 DEPARTMENT OF N. W. HARRIS PUBLIC SCHOOL EXTENSION Ronald Lambert, Preparator Bertha M. Parker, M.S., Research Associate JAMES NELSON AND ANNA LOUISE RAYMOND FOUNDATION FOR PUBLIC SCHOOL AND CHILDREN'S LECTURES Marie Svoboda, M.A., Acting Chief Harriet Smith, M.A. Edith Fleming, M.A. George B. Fricke, B.S. Ernest J, Roscoe, M.S. Mary Religa, Departmental Secretary THE LIBRARY OF THE MUSEUM Meta p. Howell, B.L.S., Librarian f W. Peyton Fawcett, B.A., Associate Librarian and Head Cataloger Chih-Wbi Pan, M.S., Cataloger Eugenia Jang, Serials Librarian Alfreda C. Rogowski, Order Librarian Bertha W. Gibes, B.A., B.S. in L.S., Reference and Interlibrary Loan Librarian FIELD MUSEUM PRESS Editorial Office Edward G. Nash, A.B., Editor Division of Printing Harold M. Grutzmacher, in charge DEPARTMENT OF PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT Robert E. Cob urn, Planning and Developmental Officer Phil Clark, B.A., Public Relations Counsel Dorothy M. Roder, Membership Secretary Virginia A. Straub, Secretary to the Women's Board ADMINISTRATION Norman W. Nelson, B.S., C.P.A., Business Manager GusTAV A. Noren, Assistant to the Business Manager SusANMARY C. YouNG, B.A., Secretary to the Director Mary A. Hagberg, L.L.B., Registrar Lyle a. Hanssen, B.S., Chief Accountant Robert E. Bruce, Purchasing Agent THE BOOK SHOP UNO M. Lake, A.B., Manager t Deceased 71 DIVISION OF PHOTOGRAPHY John Bayalis, Photographer Homer V. Holdren, Associate Ferdinand Huysmans, Dipl. A., Assistant Clarence B, Mitchell, B.A., Research Associate DIVISION OF MOTION PICTURES John W. Mover, in charge BUILDING OPERATIONS James R. Shouba, Building Superintendent Leonard Carrion, Chief Engineer Jacques L. Pulizzi, Superintendent of Maintenance Rudolph Dentino, Assistant Chief Engineer THE GUARD George R. Lamoureux, Captain VOLUNTEER WORKERS In 1967 and 1968 volunteer workers were an invaluable help to the Museum Staff. The Museum wishes to thank Miss Carol Acker- man, Mrs. Richard Bentley, Mrs. Thomas D. Burke, Jr., Miss Nora Chandler, Mrs. John Randolph Crews, Mr. John Douglass, Mrs. Henry Dry, Mr. Stanley Dvorak, Jr., Mrs. Robert 0. Elmore, Mrs. Winston Elting, Mrs. Wendy Farber, Miss Patricia Fujimoto, Mrs. Charles Fuller II, Mrs. Joseph B. Girardi, Mr. Lou Goldstein, Mrs. Robert C. Gunness, Mr. Sol Gurewitz, Mr. Richard Halvorsen, Miss Gertrude Hannen, Mr. C. C. Howard, Mr. Claxton E. Howard, Mrs. Robert C. Hyndman, Mrs. Dorothy Karall, Mrs. Clarence Kenny, Jr., Mrs. Robert T. Keppler, Mrs. Charles Kratz, Mrs. Donald Kropp, Mrs. Richard N. Lilleberg, Mrs. Judith Little, Mrs. W^allace Mackenzie, Mrs. Arthur MacQuilkin, Mrs. John Maris, Mrs. H. F. Matthies, Miss Mary McCutcheon, Mrs. Lawrence C. Morris, Jr., Mrs. Albert C. Mullen, Mrs. Seymour Nordenberg, Mrs. Ronald A. Orner, Mrs. Harry 0. Owen, Jr., Mrs. Philip Y. Paterson, Miss Mae Provus, Mrs. Hayes Robertson, Mrs. Harold M. Ross, Jr., Mr. Sol Sackheim, Mrs. A. R. Sarabia, Mrs. Alice K. Schneider, Mr. Wayne Severn, Mrs. C. W. Sidwell, Mrs. William E. Sidwell, Mrs. Henry Sincere, Mrs. Hermon Dunlap Smith, Mrs. James G. Speer, Mrs. Clement F. Springer, Jr., Mr. John Starkus, Mrs. John Stephens, Mrs. Philip Stone, Mrs. Henry Strotz, Mrs. John Swearingen, Mrs. Ruth Swenson, Mrs. Robert Unferth, Mrs. Alex B. White, Mrs. Carol S. Williams, Mrs. Philip C. Williams, Miss Mary Jo Wilson, Mrs. Marvin Wolfson, and Mrs. Rainer Zangerl for many hours of service. 72