BOSTON PUET-'C LIBRiu-Y ■ J HI! „, / ' SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Smithsonian Year 1965 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION FOR THE YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 1965, INCLUDING THE FINANCIAL REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF REGENTS SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION Washington 1965 With this, the first issue of the Annual Report of the Secretary of the Smith- sonian Institution to appear under the general title THE SMITHSONIAN YEAR, certain changes have been instituted in the procedures pertaining to Smithsonian annual reports: 1. The Annual Report of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution (now THE SMITHSONIAN YEAR) will no longer be followed by the green- bound volume containing the General Appendix of articles in the sciences and the arts. The last of the old series is that for 1 964. 2. The objectives of the General Appendix, according to present plans, will be met by an annual volume in the nature of a Smithsonian yearbook, an anthology of distinguished and important contributions to the sciences and the arts written by authorities in their fields and presented for the general reader. The first of these yearbooks will appear in the spring of 1966 and may be purchased. It will contain the eleven addresses delivered at the scholarly sessions of the Smithson Bicentennial Celebration held in Wash- ington in September 1965. 3. The Report of the United States National Museum will no longer be issued initially as a separate document but incorporated in THE SMITH- SONIAN YEAR together with the reports of the other branches of the Smithsonian. Reprints of each of the agency reports will be available. SMITHSONIAN PUBLICATION 4648 Contents Page The Establishment iv The Smithsonian Institution v Statement by the Secretary 1 United States National Museum 19 Museum of Natural History 23 Research and Publications 31 The Collections 86 Exhibits 98 Museum of History and Technology 105 Research and Publications 110 The Collections 124 Exhibits 135 Visitor Services 140 International Exchange Service 145 National Zoological Park 159 Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory 211 National Collection of Fine Arts 245 Freer Gallery of Art 265 National Gallery of Art 287 Canal Zone Biological Area 307 National Air Museum 315 John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts 327 National Portrait Gallery 345 Radiation Biology Laboratory 353 Science Information Exchange 361 National Armed Forces Museum Advisory Board 367 Smithsonian Museum Service 371 Smithsonian Institution Library 377 Publications and Information 389 Report of the Executive Committee of the Board of Regents 403 Staff of the Smithsonian Institution 429 The Establishment Lyndon B. Johnson, President of the United States Hubert H. Humphrey, Vice President of the United States Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States Dean Rusk, Secretary of State Henry H. Fowler, Secretary of the Treasury Robert S. McNamara, Secretary of Defense Nicholas de B. Katzenbach, Attorney General John A. Gronouski, Postmaster General Stewart L. Udall, Secretary of the Interior Orville L. Freeman, Secretary of Agriculture John T. Connor, Secretary of Commerce W. Willard Wirtz, Secretary of Labor Anthony J. Celebrezze, Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare The Smithsonian Institution was created by act of Congress in 1846, in accordance with the terms of the will of James Smithson, of England, who in 1 826 bequeathed his property to the United States of America "to found at Washington, under the name of the Smithsonian Institution, an establishment for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men." In receiving the property and accepting the trust, Congress determined that the Federal Government was without authority to administer the trust directly, and, therefore, constituted an "establishment," whose statutory members are "the President, the Vice President, the Chief Justice, and the heads of the executive departments." The Smithsonian Institution June 30, 1965 Presiding officer ex officio Chancellor Regents of the Institution Executive Committee Secretary Assistant Secretaries Lyndon B. Johnson, President of the United States Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States, Chancellor Hubert H. Humphrey, Vice President of the United States Clinton P. Anderson, Member of the Senate J. William Fulbright, Member of the Senate Leverett Saltonstall, Member of the Senate Frank T. Bow, Member of the House of Representatives Michael J. Kirwan, Member of the House of Representatives George H. Mahon, Member of the House of Representatives John Nicholas Brown, citizen of Rhode Island William A. M. Burden, citizen of New York Robert V. Fleming, citizen of Washington, D.C. Crawford H. Greenewalt, citizen of Dela- ware Caryl P. Haskins, citizen of Washington, D.C. Jerome C. Hunsaker, citizen of Massachusetts Robert V. Fleming, Chairman, Clinton P. Anderson, Caryl P. Haskins S. Dillon Ripley James Bradley, Assistant Secretary (Admin- istration) T. Dale Stewart, Acting Assistant Secretary (Science) Statement by the Secretary Music on the Mall for summer visitors to Washington and the Smithsonian is heralded by tower music — trumpets playing on the north portico of the Smithsonian Building. An audience of 12,000 at a Music on the Mall concert in summer 1965 heard the National Symphony Orchestra, under Howard Mitchell, play Aaron Copeland's Lincoln Portrait. The late Ambassador to the United Nations, Adlai E. Stevenson, was narrator. Statement by the Secretary S. Dillon Ripley In presenting this report in the year 1965, which marks the two- hundredth anniversary of the birth of James Smithson, it is appropriate to turn back to some of the thoughts of Joseph Henry, the first Secretary, who labored to make the Institution truly a center for "enlarging the bounds of human thought." This year it has been my privilege, representing the Institution, to testify before a Congressional Subcommittee on Science, Research, and Development on the subject of the National Science Foundation. One of the topics of that testimony was the increasing need for supporting basic rather than applied research. In 1854 Professor Henry was much concerned about the state of the increase of knowledge in America, one of the foundation stones of James Smithson's famous will. Joseph Henry felt that comparatively little encouragement was being given to the "increase" of knowledge. As he wrote: "As soon as any branch of science can be brought to bear on the neces- sities, conveniences, or luxuries of life, it meets with encourage- ment and reward. Not so with the discovery of the incipient principles of science. The investigations which lead to these receive no fostering care from government, and are considered by the superficial observer as trifles unworthy the attention of those who place the supreme good in that which immediately administers to the physical necessities or luxuries of life." As he further stated, the Institution has "two fundamental maxims ... to do nothing with its funds which can equally well be done by other means; and, second, to produce results which, as far as possible, will benefit mankind in general" (hence our interest in basic research). What then are the ac- tivities with which the Smithsonian staff feels it can primarily concern itself and what have been some of the results in the past year? 1 789-427—66 3 2 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 In the science field noteworthy activities of the Museum of Natural History staff included the following : In a paper to be published in a forthcoming issue of Deep Sea Research the first occurrence of a deepwater coral structure out- side of the North Atlantic is recorded. This structure was dis- covered by Dr. Donald F. Squires in the Sub-Antarctic Islands of New Zealand while he was cooperating with the New Zealand Oceanographic Institute's oceanographic program in that region. Coupling his knowledge of living coral structures of the eastern coast of the United States with study of the deepwater fossil structure in New Zealand, Dr. Squires was able to postulate sequences in the development of the coral structure. Stages of development lead from a colony of coral up to several meters in diameter through the accumulation of dead skeletal material and living animals in distinctive communities to form a coral bank several kilometers in diameter and as high as 50-60 meters. Intermediate stages of development, termed "thicket" and "coppice," have been identified in the fossil record. Several important scientific discoveries were made by the department of mineral sciences during the past year. These include the discovery by Dr. Kurt Fredriksson, division of meteorites, of a glass with inclusions of metallic nickel-iron in the Chainpur chondrite. This discovery, which was studied in detail with the division's new electron microprobe, is of funda- mental importance in determining the origin of chondrules and of chondritic meteorities in general. As part of a cooperative study with Woods Hole and Scripps Oceanographic Institutions, Dr. William G. Melson of the divi- sion of petrology discovered metabasalts in ocean dredge samples from the Mid- Atlantic Ridge. Such rocks may require modifications of existing theories about the origin of the Mid- Atlantic Ridge, and about processes of rock formation beneath the sea floor. While participating in the Bredin-Archbold-Smithsonian Biological Survey of Dominica, entomologist Paul Spangler dis- covered for the first time the presence on the island of the snail Planorbina glabrata (Say), the intermediate host of the principal helminthic disease of man, schistosomiasis. STATEMENT BY THE SECRETARY 3 In a study of yucca moths, Dr. Donald R. Davis has proved beyond doubt the close relationship between agave and yucca through the habits of the moths. The two genera of plants have always been placed in two families, but the evidence concerning the moths suggests that the two genera of plants should be associated in one. In a study of material collected on the mid-Pacific Island of Rapa, Dr. J. F. Gates Clarke has found that an ancient connec- tion between the fauna of Rapa with those of Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa is apparent. In the area of anthropology Dr. K. V. Flannery's preliminary research in the Valley of Oaxaca, southern Mexico, has verified the presence in many of the caves and rockshelters of abundant perishable remains of human occupation, and has determined that the corn cobs, cactus fruits, fragments of squash, etc., and associated artifacts came from the period 6500-2500 B.C. During this time the development of domesticated plants and of techniques for growing them provided the basis of the all important change to settled village life, rapid population growth, and increasingly complex socioeconomic and religious systems. Thus Oaxaca joins a few other localities in Mexico in developing the prerequisities of civilization as we presently are inclined to describe it. Dr. W. H. Crocker continued his field work among the Canela Indians of Brazil. He found that under the pressure of expand- ing non-Indian settlement and the destruction of their simple way of life, they were experiencing a messianic movement, led by a prophetess whom he was able to study at first hand. Rarely has a social scientist been able to observe at close quarters the social, psychological, and ecological revolution that a people undergoes with the impact of shattering external contacts — a microcosm of much of the upheaval today throughout the world's developing nations. For more than 19 years the Smithsonian has administered the Panama Canal Zone Biological area, whose scientists are engaged primarily in behavioral and ecological studies. Four Smith- sonian staff members are currently employed. Dr. Martin Moynihan is investigating the evolution of behavior in New World primates and passerines, particularly the evolution of 4 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 social signal systems. Dr. Robert Dressier is continuing his work on the pollination relationships among the New World orchids. Dr. Neal Smith is studying the evolution and genetics of egg-mimicry in parasitic cuckoos, and has initiated a study of avian species diversity in tropical grasslands. The newest member of the staff, Dr. Stanley Rand, is continuing his studies on the ecology of iguanid lizards and has begun investigating the role of vocalizations in the social organization of certain neotropical frogs. The Institution's Radiation Biology Laboratory investigates the direct effects upon, or the indirect control of the functions of, living organisms by radiation. One of the significant achieve- ments has been the development of instrumentation to measure the spectral quality of sunlight, in 1 00-millimicron bands, from sunrise to sunset throughout the year. The data that are being accumulated by means of this instrumentation have been cited as urgently needed by biologists who deal with light as an environmental factor. Advances have been made in other areas of the research program, such as additional information toward determining the chemical structure of polyphosphate com- pounds in marine organisms and algae, the light-stimulated metabolism of sugars in plant development, and improved techniques for removing radioactive radon from carbon-dating samples so that samples may be counted without the 30-day delay previously necessary. During the past year's work at the Smithsonian's Astrophysical Observatory satellite-tracking data from the Baker-Nunn cameras at the 12 astrophysical observing stations were used to make more accurate determinations of the gravitational poten- tial of the earth, and of the station positions. Analyses of atmospheric drag on satellites and the atmospheric variations deduced from it have been completed for half a solar cycle from the maximum of solar activity during the International Geo- physical Year through the minimum during the International Year of the Quiet Sun. Baker-Nunn photographs of comets are being reduced in studies of tail motions and brightness as a function of solar activity. The camera network also continues to observe flare stars. The Prairie Network of automatic cameras for simultaneous photography of very bright meteors went into STATEMENT BY THE SECRETARY 5 full operation this year and has already collected significant data. The Harvard-Smithsonian Meteor Radar Network has been improved to achieve greater sensitivity and accuracy. Observations of artificial meteors launched from Wallops Island have been made, and the data are being reduced. New measurements of radioactive and stable isotopes in meteorites and in dust samples from the Greenland Ice-Cap and elsewhere have been carried out. In theoretical astrophysics, studies of stellar atmospheres and of very massive and very dense systems continue. Of the observatory's flight experiments, the proto- type of Project Celescope is undergoing environmental testing while flight hardware is being constructed, a spark-chamber for detection of gamma rays during balloon flights has been fabri- cated and is now being tested and calibrated. In American studies, a wide variety of techniques were employed in field, laboratory, and library to advance the research program of the Museum of History and Technology. Among the year's accomplishments have been the perfection of underwater surveying and measuring methods by Mendel L. Peterson in exploring a late 16th-century shipwreck off Bermuda; the use of tape recorder and camera by Mr. and Mrs. C. Malcolm Watkins in recording the survival of folk potterymaking in Moore County, North Carolina; and the completion of a 700- page manuscript, The Origins of Chemistry, based upon studies of archival and printed sources, by Dr. Robert P. Multhauf. In addition, John C. Ewers has prepared a book, Artists of the Old West, profusely illustrated with reproductions in black-and-white and color of historically significant drawings and paintings from museum collections of the United States, Canada, and Europe. A hallmark of the Smithsonian's research enterprise is that it draws upon a highly diverse community of scholars whose con- certed efforts can transcend narrow disciplinary approaches to learning. It undertakes to pursue those courses of investigation uniquely suited to its institutional character, especially those which illuminate the ways in which diverse areas of knowledge are interdependent. An example of this lies in the character and collections of the Freer Gallery of Art. As always, research has been the primary activity. Man's history and culture; the 6 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 organization of life ; the nature of the universe : these are time- less questions. For more than a century they have been the central concerns of Smithsonian research. The major joint effort this past year, occupying three Freer staff members, has been devoted to the final stages of the cata- logue of Chinese ceremonial bronzes which has been in prepara- tion for some time. Individual projects range through such diverse fields as History of Pigments and Coloring Materials, Biographical Studies of Chinese Painters, Buddhist Wall Paint- ings in Afghanistan, Yamatoe Painting and Design in Japan, Dionysiac Elements in Sasanian Art, and Early Distribution of Chinese and Japanese Porcelain in World Trade. The traditional close collaboration with the University of Michigan in the teaching of oriental art has been maintained; and two curators have taught regularly scheduled courses at the New York University and Johns Hopkins University. A Freer staff member has been active on the American committee planning the great exhibition to be sent to this country by the Japanese Govern- ment in the coming year and has also supervised the preparation of the catalogue. The preceding are all examples of research in which part of the staff happen to be concerning themselves. Much of this research depends upon collections of objects which already belong to the Smithsonian, those 57 million objects so often referred to, that vast accretion. Some, like the original Wilkes Exploring Expedition collections arrived fortuitously and were thrust upon the Institution. Some, like insects from the Island of Dominica recently collected, have been eagerly sought after by Smithsonian scientists as evidence of the principles of evolution. It should never be forgotten that the collections of the Institution are intended for original investigation. The Nation has no need of an attic as such, nor should any curator be charged simply with housekeeping or janitorial tasks. In our efforts to maintain the levels of excellence to which the Smithsonian justly lays claim we must demonstrate to the Nation and to international scholarship our valid and continuing stew- ardship of these collections through research. The technical and learned staff of the Smithsonian cannot perform this notable task alone. This is why this year we have issued the first "Re- STATEMENT BY THE SECRETARY 7 search Opportunities" pamphlet, listing some of the many pos- sibilities in undergraduate and summer programs, in graduate studies, and in postdoctoral research available to the Nation's students and scholars for study here. In this cause we are selfish. We wish to replicate ourselves, to exhibit to others how many and how intriguing are the avenues to the increase of knowledge which lie within our doors. What greater pleasure could we as scholars afford than to exhibit our collections, our objects as source material for study? To open avenues to this study should be our primary objective. To study objects is to return to the original wellsprings, like the documents and manu- scripts preserved in a library. The objects are our archives. From them we can construct concepts about the very nature of man himself and that "invisible wall which bounds the prison of our knowledge." Without such a positive attitude toward our collections not only will we never be through curating them but we will never have properly evoked the knowledge which lies within our grasp in their constructive study. Anthropologists know this. The dwindling realms of primitive peoples, people who live on a different scale and time from ourselves, have yielded up vast storehouses of ethnography, some of which has revealed truths about patterns of human life to students from the days of Powell and Morgan to the more contemporary, Boas, Malinowski, and Mead. Present-day anthropology is in a quandary about peoples and social organization. How right were some of the earlier theorists? Should the theories not be reexamined? One way to do it, one way to reillumine the scene with vigor and new intellectual clarity would be to reexamine the objects themselves. The objects at least still exist, and most of the documents, journals, and accounts that go with them. Social anthropolo- gists of the future will be derelict in their duty to the whole realm of social psychology and cultural evolution if they do not turn again to the objects, the life formulae, which can speak to them as surely as to any artist or sculptor. There is a relation, not tenuous, between the objects and the thoughts they evoke and the most basic principles of education. Somewhere in this unrealized, metaphysical half-world there 8 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 may lie a key to the present baffling phenomenon to educators, the problems of how to interest anyone in anything. Today, with our national hopes and goals in education, there is a sense of urgency in this. As part of the President's war on poverty and the Youth Opportunity and United Planning Or- ganization campaigns, the Smithsonian has taken on over 100 youths in various summer programs of training opportunities. In addition we have undertaken a voluntary Teacher Institute for 50 social science instructors from a poverty area in order to train these instructors in how to use the museums as teaching tools. These are the areas of interest with which the Smith- sonian should experiment. It may be that the Institution, as well as museums in general, is especially qualified to develop interests and technical skills in many young people who do not respond to more conventional educational techniques. We hope that this year of the observance of the bicentennial of James Smithson's birth will mark a reawakening of under- standing of the role and the utility of the Smithsonian Institu- tion in many areas little known to our people, in areas of re- search, of the study of conservation, of knowledge of nature and the atmosphere, of those dwindling populations of men whose adjustment to their environment is radically different from our own, of those dwindling populations of species of animals and plants the world around that are becoming extinct often because of relentless pressures unleashed by man himself. Finally, in the world of creative art and expression the Smithsonian plays a role in which historical studies become one, with recurring pat- terns, with those which help to lay bare the mysteries of the universe, and the life processes which make it up. The Smith- sonian as it has grown and as it exists lays open a simple present truth. There are no "two cultures." We are all, scientists and historians, concerned with a common intellectual process, not merely with concepts of it, involving a morphology of forms and in the end a similar testimony to "the increase of knowledge." The Board of Regents The membership of the Board of Regents remained unchanged except for the new Vice President of the United States, the Honorable Hubert H. Humphrey, who became an ex officio STATEMENT BY THE SECRETARY 9 member on January 20, 1965, filling the seat formerly occupied by President Lyndon B. Johnson. The roll of Regents at the close of the fiscal year was as follows: Chief Justice of the United States Earl Warren, Chancellor; members from the Senate: Clinton P. Anderson, J. William Fulbright, Leverett Saltonstall ; members from the House of Representatives : Frank T. Bow, Michael J. Kirwan, George H. Mahon; citizen mem- bers: John Nicholas Brown, William A. M. Burden, Robert V. Fleming, Crawford H. Greenewalt, Caryl P. Haskins, Jerome C. Hunsaker. The customary informal dinner meeting, preceding the annual meeting, was held on January 27, 1965, in the reception room of the Museum of History and Technology. Dr. Richard S. Cowan spoke on "The Smithsonian Institution's Bredin-Arch- bold Biological Survey of Dominica"; Mendel L. Peterson on "New Methods of Surveying Ancient Shipwrecks" ; and Dr. I. E. Wallen on "Oceanography in the Smithsonian." The annual meeting was held on January 28, 1965, in the conference room of the Museum of History and Technology. The Secretary presented his published annual report on the activities of the Institution. The chairman of the Executive and Permanent Committees of the Board, Dr. Robert V. Fleming, gave the financial report for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1964. The spring meeting of the Board of Regents was held on May 19 in the conference room of the Smithsonian building. An informal dinner followed in the newly decorated Regents' room. Finances A statement of finances, dealing particularly with Smithsonian private funds, will be found in the report of the Executive Com- mittee of the Board of Regents, page 401. Funds appropriated to the Institution for its regular operations for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1965, totaled $15,540,000 and were obligated as follows : Astrophysical Observatory $1, 247, 610 Bureau of American Ethnology 114, 648 10 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Canal Zone Biological Area SI 79, 640 International Exchange Service 113, 330 National Air Museum 319, 601 National Armed Forces Museum Advisory Board 75, 302 National Collection of Fine Arts 158, 971 National Portrait Gallery 75, 004 United States National Museum 5, 838, 639 Office of the Secretary 395, 052 Buildings Management Department 5, 322, 564 Administrative Services 1, 677, 888 Unobligated 21, 751 Besides this direct appropriation, the Institution received funds by transfer from other Government agencies as follows: from the District of Columbia for the National Zoological Park, $1,738,565; from the National Park Service, Department of the Interior, for the River Basin Surveys, $237,000. Lectures Stella Mary Newton, formerly consultant on historic dress and adviser to the Restoration Department of the National Gallery, London, England, delivered an illustrated lecture, "Social Implications in the Costumes in Hogarth's Paintings," in the auditorium of the Museum of History and Technology on the afternoon of October 27, 1964. Vice Admiral Friedrich O. Ruge, GN (Ret.), gave an illus- trated lecture on "Rommel and the Invasion of Western Europe in 1944" in the auditorium of the Museum of Natural History on the evening of November 23, 1964. This lecture was spon- sored jointly by the Smithsonian Institution and the Naval Historical Foundation. Paul MacKendrick, professor of classics at the University of Wisconsin, lectured on "Athenian Aristocracy: Archaeological Evidence," in the auditorium of the Museum of History and Technology on the evening of February 11, 1965. This illus- trated lecture was sponsored jointly by the Smithsonian Institu- tion and the Archaeological Institute of America. Scott Symons, assistant curator-in-charge of the Canadiana collections, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada, gave an STATEMENT BY THE SECRETARY 11 illustrated lecture, "French Ganadiana Versus the American Dream," in the auditorium of the Museum of History and Technology on the evening of February 16, 1965. The second Edwin A. Link Lecture, "The United States and the Oceans," was delivered by Lt. Cmdr. Don Walsh, U.S.N., in the auditorium of the Museum of Natural History on the eve- ning of February 17, 1965. This series of lectures, made possible by a grant from the Link Foundation, is administered by the Smithsonian Institution in cooperation with the U.S. Office of Education. Dr. A. G. W. Cameron, senior scientist, Goddard Institute for Space Studies, Columbia University, gave the 30th Annual James Arthur Lecture on the Sun on the evening of March 10, 1965, in the auditorium of the Freer Gallery of Art. His subject was "The Early History of the Sun." Several lectures sponsored by the Freer Gallery of Art and the National Gallery of Art are listed in the reports of these bureaus. Visitors Visitors to the six buildings comprising the Smithsonian com- plex on the Mall this year again surpassed all preceding records with a total of 13,153,713, which was 2,340,518 more than in fiscal 1964. August 1964, with 2,517,672, was the month of largest attendance, and July 1964 was second with 2,250,105. The greatest number of visitors for a single day was 109,839 on April 19, 1965. The tabulation on page 12 gives a summary of attendance records for the six buildings. The National Zoological Park had an estimated 4,536,256 visitors during the year. This figure, added to the attendance in the Institution's buildings on the Mall, and to the 1,253,102 recorded at the National Gallery of Art, brings the total Smithsonian attendance for fiscal 1965 to 18,943,071. New Offices Mindful of the widening horizons and varied opportunities facing the Institution, the Smithsonian established three new offices in the past year: 12 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 o o ▼"•vo^OrHTj-r-vocNoo^fNt^- ©"r-^pTcCto'i-rcrcvfcrcCi-rin m *-i r- t^ i— a in » Tt i- o ^ >1§> .N«(OOOCOifl*ON>ONO c'so ooorinw + >oiflonooN - ^o ©r~c\Cv|«noo'<*-c\i-ivomi>» t-i-ir-^vo>oiooo»-i«-ic<->T-i c\ [^ 00CMflNNrHHnNiOin>O O 3,« <1 ONOOO'^-OOOCOLO'^-vOdT-i ONNtinrtO^wmMO co" o" w « o" t~-" ^o" r->" o" oT w" « 3 W ^ r-SiS!'\Oir>0'^-r^^-'t^-0c\oov©CNOo r^ .„ a "a i/f i-T' oC cT cf «-T in" t-T *-T ■«s-> oc? c? U JO .(a^ooor-~r^-^-cn»nsoo»0'-i W £ 'i5N tf) M W TH <*«;'*''-l°°'''-°or-r^''--vomo\\o o <^rK^oir>vommcNoococovooco CO o "■) •* to »-< *-< 1-1 n N (<1 Cl Cl >- a-S-s o\cor^vomvoT-ir~-mr^cor- U* ii §?2 „ „ ,. .. * * w H* ^ 00000(NmoU->vOt^T-ivOfO ""S Sen ooiT-or-iotvor^vsr-f^ •H^^'-|'s»fses»votsO(on Ph S-SosO^HOCscOOO'-it^vOir) ^■coT-ioor^'r-iincNOiocM „R^T-«T-l Tl TH 1-1 O to cd o S3 S) >, o -2 »- .Q is >» *T H i §i el & N- STATEMENT BY THE SECRETARY 13 Smithsonian Office of Anthropology. — On February 1, 1965, the Bureau of American Ethnology and the Department of Anthropology of the Museum of Natural History were com- bined to form the new Smithsonian Office of Anthropology under the Museum of Natural History. This consolidation unites the efforts and resources of the Institution in modern programs in ethnology, linquistics, archeology, and physical anthropology. Dr. Richard B. Woodbury was appointed its acting head. Activities of the new office as well as the bureau's accomplishments in the past year are given on pages 39-53 of this report. Division of Education and Training. — Recognition of the Smithsonian's responsibilities and opportunities in research and higher education led to the establishment in October 1964 of the Division of Education and Training. Effective July 1, 1965, Dr. Charles Blitzer was appointed its director. The objective of this new division is to bring about the fullest use of the Insti- tution's resources — both its collections and its distinguished staff of scientists and scholars — and to make these resources available to the scientific and scholarly community at large. This objec- tive is being pursued through a variety of programs. Under one of these programs the Smithsonian entered into agreements with a number of universities for cooperation in postgraduate education. Typically, such agreements contem- plate use of the Smithsonian collections by Ph. D. candidates with the supervision of Smithsonian staff members ; often, closer ties are developed between Smithsonian scholars and the universities' graduate departments. During the year under review, cooperative programs were established with the Uni- versity of Kansas for graduate training in botany and pale- ontology, with the University of Pennsylvania for graduate training in the history and philosophy of science, and with the George Washington University for graduate training in American Studies, in museum techniques, and in sedimentology. At the end of the year negotiations were in progress for similar cooperative programs in anthropology, botany, field biology, the fine arts, the history of art, and marine science. The results of these programs — already measurable in those that have been operating for some time — will be the develop- 14 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 ment of highly trained specialists in areas of the sciences, the humanities, and the arts in which the Smithsonian traditionally has been involved, as well as the enhancement of research activities by the Institution's permanent staff as it is brought into closer contact with colleagues in the academic world. The Division of Education and Training also conducted two programs through which undergraduates and beginning grad- uate students are brought to the Smithsonian during the summer as junior research associates. Of the 53 students appointed under this program, 16 were supported by a grant to the Smith- sonian from the National Science Foundation's Undergraduate Research Participation Program. Appointments were based on academic achievement and potential for research, and con- siderable care was taken to ensure that each student's experi- ence would contribute significantly to his education. With a view toward extending the Smithsonian's services to the local research community, the Division of Education and Training conducted a survey of the educational activities of Federal research centers, private research centers, and uni- versities in and around the District of Columbia. Results of this study were made available to those concerned with the development of the area's potential for higher education. The division also arranged for the holding of a special summer institute for 50 social science teachers from the public schools of the District of Columbia. The purpose of the institute was to develop with the teachers ways of using the museums on the Mall as major educational resources for their classes. Throughout its history the Smithsonian has welcomed scien- tists and scholars from colleges, universities, and other research institutions in this country and abroad. Their use of the Smith- sonian's collections, and their association with its professional staff, clearly contribute to the purposes for which the Institution exists. Their presence testifies to the importance of the Smith- sonian's resources for research and, at the same time, serves lo enliven the scholarly atmosphere of the Institution. To encourage the use of the Smithsonian's resources by out- side investigators, and to ensure that their visits will prove as fruitful as possible both from the point of view of advancing human knowledge and from the point of view of the special STATEMENT BY THE SECRETARY 15 concerns of the Smithsonian, the Division of Education and Training is developing a number of programs for visiting re- search associates. Funds, both public and private, are being sought for these programs. Office of Special Projects. — The Office of Special Projects was established this year with Robert N. Cunningham in charge. The primary concern of the office thus far has been the detailed and thorough preparation for the formal commemoration of the birth of the Institution's founder, James Smithson. The year 1965 marks the 200th anniversary of his birth, and Congress designated September 17 and 18 as special days to honor Smith- son's memory. In addition to honoring the Institution's founder, the stated aims of the Bicentennial Celebration are : 1. To pay tribute to the distinguished past of the Smith- sonian and affirm to its members and Regents, to scholars, scientists, and kindred institutions, and to the general public, the Smithsonian's intent to fulfill a vital and useful role in society; and 2. To examine the nature of knowledge and creative dis- covery as conceived by Smithson and as understood today. The Office of Special Projects has also been laying the ground- work for the establishment of a Smithsonian Society of Associates, an organization seen as a national association with several types of membership, which would seek to diffuse knowledge of the Institution as widely as possible in order to enlarge understand- ing and support of its activities — thereby increasing the scope and depth of the Smithsonian's scientific, cultural, and educa- tional contributions to mankind. New flight cage at National Zoological Park was shown to distinguished guests by Secretary and Mrs. S. Dillon Ripley at formal opening in February 1965. United States National Museum 789-427—66 4 United States National Museum Frank A. Taylor, Director The annual reporting procedures of the U.S. National Museum have been changed to take cognizance of the broadening scholarly horizons of the Smithsonian Institution and of the enlarged scope of the Museum of History and Technology resulting from the move to its new building. In order that its message reach a wider audience, the full report of the U.S. National Museum, rather than the condensed version pre- viously given, will be carried in Smithsonian Tear. Within the Museum Report, henceforth, the work of the component Museums of Natural History and of History and Technology will be treated separately. Furthermore, the contents of each report are rearranged to emphasize the fact that research and publication are the foundations from which arise the other activities and services of the Museum. To this end, also, a bibliography of staff publications is appended to the research report of each office and department. A full list of the publications issued by the Museum appears in the report on publications, on pages 392-395. Those activities heretofore found under the Bureau of American Ethnology in the Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution are reported by the Museum on pages 39-53, under the Smithsonian Office of Anthropology, into which office the Bureau has been merged. The consolidated Annual Report formerly issued by the U.S. National Museum is discontinued. Instead, separates of the reports of its com- ponent Museums appearing in Smithsonian Tear will be available for those accustomed to receive the consolidated Annual Report. To each separate report will be appended a full list of the donors to that Museum. Conservation To serve the various museums of the Smithsonian Institution, a con- servation research laboratory has been established under the United States National Museum. Directed by Charles H. Olin, its offices are located in the Museum of History and Technology. The conservation research laboratory began the installation of equipment for physical and chemical analysis. This includes in- 19 20 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 strumentation for x-ray spectrography and x-ray diffraction, equipment for preparing, examining, and photographing cross-sections of metals, an infrared spectrophotometer, and accessory equipment. In the area of x-ray spectrography, qualitative spectra were used to identify the composition of metal alloys in objects from the Freer Gallery and from the divisions of archeology, numismatics, mechanical and civil engineering, medical sciences, and physical sciences of the Museum of History and Technology. Approximately one-fourth of the time devoted to x-ray analyses involved the establishment of sampling methods and standards. In quantitative analysis, an in- vestigation was begun into the method of sampling whereby drillings of the sample are pressed into a pellet. X-ray diffraction was used for the identification of corrosion products and pigments for the National Collection of Fine Arts and for the divisions of cultural history and archeology. Of 134 requests for analyses and conservation received, the laboratory completed 52 analyses and furnished the services required in 54 of the conservation requests. Advice was furnished on requirements for collection preservation involving air conditioning and the control of light and dust. Conservation treatment was performed on objects of bronze, glass, hide, ceramics, and wood; and also on paintings, prints, feathers, photographs, and archival materials, even though the facilities of the laboratory are designed for analysis and conservation research and not for treatment. The problem of providing an abstracting service for the fields of conservation and archeological chemistry was studied for the laboratory by Dr. Seymour Lewin, Conservation Center, New York University. His report, which evaluated the problem and outlined a program, is now being used to secure support for a proposed abstract journal. Professor Cyril Smith, who visited the laboratory for one week, prepared reports on the organization of the laboratory and on the metallographic examination of objects from Ecuador. Museum of Natural History Museum of Natural History T. Dale Stewart, Director The trend toward specialization in science has reached the point where few museum curators can be considered broad naturalists in the sense of some of their predecessors. Botanists more than ever concentrate on a portion of one plant family and disclaim anything but a general knowl- edge of other families. Vertebrate paleontologists work with larger assemblages, such as groups of reptiles, fishes, or mammals, but often in a single geographical area or geological epoch. Anthropologists study man from the standpoint either of some part of his physique or of his culture, and the latter only in its historic or its prehistoric aspect. And much the same holds for other specialties. For this reason, and also because more money is available for research than ever before, research projects in which many people from a number of disciplines participate have become customary. The Museum of Natural History finds itself involved in some large- scale projects of this sort. Mention has been made in previous reports, for example, of the Bredin-Archbold-Smithsonian Biological Survey of Dominica. Since January 1964 when it was initiated, 24 specialists representing 10 disciplines have spent varying periods of time on this Caribbean island. The Smithsonian African Mammal Project has had altogether about 15 collectors in the field since 1961, giving attention not only to the mammals but to their ectoparasites. Also, the International Indian Ocean Expedition has included in its numerous cruises 11 specialists from the Museum representing 6 different fields, with a large back-up group in the Museum's Sorting Center hastening the preparation of the resulting collections. But the project which surpasses all others in number of personnel and size of the geographical area covered is the Pacific Ocean Biological Survey Program, described in the following section by its principal investigator. 23 24 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 An Ecological Survey of the Central Pacific The Smithsonian Institution is engaged in an ecological survey of a central Pacific area comprising some four and a third million square miles of open ocean, dotted here and there with clusters and strings of islands and atolls. The major goals of this survey are to learn what plants and animals occur on the islands in this vast region and the seasonal variations in their numbers and reproductive activities, and in addition to learn more about the factors which determine the distribution and abundance of the birds of the open ocean in that environment. The survey is designed to accumulate in a few years sufficient data on the plants and animals, on the pelagic birds at sea, and on climatic and oceanographic variables, to permit broad ecological conclusions to be drawn. To initiate the survey, the Smithsonian sent several small field parties to the Hawaiian Leeward and Phoenix Islands. As the survey grew in scope, other institutions and government agencies joined the effort, and today the Smithsonian alone has a combined field and laboratory staff of about 40 intensively studying the plants and animals of 33 islands. The main area of interest (see map), which represents only a small fraction of the total Pacific Ocean, was more or less arbitrarily delimited to include a wide variety of island groups and oceanic conditions. It spans the Equator, extending from latitudes 30° N. to 10° S., and it includes islands and island groups from longitudes 150° to 180° W. Most of the islands are products of coral construction on worn-off volcanic upheavals— the tops of the submarine mountain ranges which spring up from the ocean floor 15,000 to 18,000 feet below. The Hawaiian Islands stretch for 1,578 miles across the northern end of the study area. Johnston Atoll, an isolated surface indication of the vast mid-Pacific mountain range, lies 450 miles south of the Hawaiian ridge. Farther south and to the east, the Line Islands stretch in a long chain across the Equator. In the southwestern corner of the study area Howland and Baker lie just north of the Equator, the Phoenix Islands are clustered 3° to 5° south of it, and the Tokelaus lie 5° farther south. Except for the main Hawaiian Islands and certain of the Line and Phoenix Islands, this whole area is characterized by low rainfall. The majority of the low-lying coral islands have desert climates. Their sparse vegetation consists of a few grasses, herbs, and dwarf shrubs. A few species of terrestrial mammals and reptiles, some of them introduced by man, occur on several of the islands, but across this vast central-Pacific area, oceanic birds are the dominant terrestrial verte- r Pacific Ocean Biological Survey party landing on Lisianski Island, Hawaii. Below: Campsite on Phoenix Island. ' • .". Banding a blue-faced booby at Gardiner pinnacles, Hawaiian Islands. Below: Sooty-tern colony on Laysan Island. Background vegetation is bunch grass (Eragrostis variabilis) and escaped cultivated tobacco. (See pp. 26-27.) MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY — INTRODUCTION 25 «ft- H 4 H' 4/ /V ^v: * JOHNSTON-SAND «k_ o A/ r-v. J1 . HOWLAND O ^\X I 5LA/VD SLAA/0 Area of Pacific Ocean Biological Survey spans the Equator, extending from latitudes 30° N. to 10° S. and from longitudes 150° to 180° W. (See p. 24.) 789^27—^66 6 26 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 brates. Apart from the endemic and introduced birds on the main Hawaiians and certain of the Hawaiian Leeward and Line Islands, about 90 species occur as migrants, accidentals, or nesting birds. On islands of the area, 28 species of oceanic birds are known to nest, and an additional 21 species occur as regular migrants or accidentals. The ecology of oceanic birds is a curious hybrid between the ter- restrial ecology of islands and the ecology of the sea (more often called oceanography), in that the surrounding ocean provides food for the island avifauna and affects the climate of the island as well. The ecology of the oceanic birds under study, moreover, is affected not only by conditions on and around the islands, but by conditions in regions remote from the central Pacific. Present conditions on these islands reflect the introduction of many species of plants and animals over the years by man, who has also made major changes in the distribution and abundance of soils and other surface materials by his guano mining during the latter part of the 19th century. Hence, to understand, the disturbed conditions on many of the islands, it has been necessary to delve deeply into the history of man's activities in the central Pacific. Fortunately, the extensive file of published and unpublished reports, diaries, and other records pertaining to the area, organized by Edwin H. Bryan, Jr., manager of the Pacific Scientific Information Center at the Bernice P. Bishop Museum, and the extensive files of Dr. F. Ray- mond Fosberg of the U.S. Geological Survey have been placed at the service of the Smithsonian. From these and other sources can be learned the extent to which man has disturbed the ecology of some of these Pacific islands. For example, over a period of about two decades during the latter part of the 19th century, approximately 125,000 tons of guano were removed from Howland, a remote desert island only eight-tenths of a square mile in area. In the 1930's this island was colonized, and three airplane runways, each 150 feet wide, were built, preempting 7 percent of its total area. And in the early years of World War II it was shelled or bombed at various times. On islands of the nearby Phoenix group from which the human popu- lations have been moved out, a legacy remains of introduced plants and mammals, of which the domestic cat is surely the most destructive influence. Phoenix and McKean Islands are free of cats and support 16 species of nesting birds including petrels, shearwaters, boobies, frigatebirds, tropicbirds, and terns. Howland and Baker Islands both had cat populations. At that time Howland supported only 5 nesting species of birds, numbering fewer than 3,000 individuals, and Baker MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY INTRODUCTION 27 but one nesting species, the noddy tern, with a population of fewer than 100. One year later all cats on Howland and Baker were finally extermi- nated. Almost immediately the number of species present and nesting increased. Coincidentally, on Baker Island the house mouse became superabundant, with its population estimated to number in the hun- dreds of thousands, where in the previous year it had been extremely rare. Thus, even though man's actions have drastically modified many of the islands, changing the vegetation and in some cases exterminating some of the animals, the sea-bird populations are able to recover swiftly when predators are eliminated through effective conservation. Although the ecology of plants and animals of all kinds is the concern of the Smithsonian survey, most of the field effort has been devoted to the birds and arthropods, which are the most abundant terrestrial organisms in the central Pacific. In the two and one-half years that the survey has been under way, enormous quantities of data have been collected and are being organized, but as yet any attempt at synthesis would be premature. New data and new ideas are appearing at such a rapid rate that it will be some time before a first level of organization and synthesis is completed and ecological conclusions can be drawn. An example of the survey's data-collecting efforts is the study of bird distribution in the central Pacific by means of banding. This banding program is designed to provide answers to such questions as: What contribution do the bird populations of each island make to the avifauna of the open sea? What is the pattern of dispersal of birds from any given island — where do they go after the nesting season? It is also designed to provide new facts concerning the biology and behavior of the population of birds on any given island, and on the origins of the migratory birds which pass through or winter in the area. To provide this information enormous numbers of birds must be banded. Up to April 1965, Smithsonian field parties had attached U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service bands to the legs of over 425,000 birds of 44 species. Although most of these birds were banded on islands in the area of interest, programs were also undertaken in the Marshalls and Gilberts, on Wake Island, and on St. George Island in the Pribilofs. For most of the resident species in the area of interest, it is the hope to band over 50 percent of entire populations. For species such as the sooty tern, the populations of which number in the millions, this is clearly impossible, but for species with populations numbering in the tens of thousands, the Smithsonian has been able to band over half the entire breeding population. The blue -faced booby illustrates this point: over 25,000 individuals have been banded in the study area, and 28 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 of this number more than 500 have been recaptured at sea or at other islands. The data from interisland returns of banded birds now make it possible to state in quantitative terms the differences between age groups and nesting and nonnesting birds in their amount of wandering at different times of the year. As additional data of these kinds ac- cumulate, it will be possible to determine the amount of interisland mixing, the composition of roosting flocks, age at first nesting, longev- ity, mortality curves, and so on. The effectiveness of the Smithsonian banding program in the central Pacific has been largely due to the enthusiastic cooperation of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Bird Banding Laboratory. Without this organization and its system of maintaining and processing data, the program could never have gotten underway. In order to increase the rate of recovery of banded birds throughout the Pacific world, the Smithsonian has sent out thousands of copies of a notice soliciting reports of banded or color-marked birds. Printed in five languages, these have been distributed to 19 countries and 21 major island groups, where the notice has been further translated into Korean, Malay, Samoan, Gilbertese, Ponapean, and other languages, and has been reprinted in newspapers, magazines, and vari- ous commercial and official or semiofficial government reports. The notice has formed the basis for lectures to school children, clubs, and professional groups, and it has been distributed to vessels in various commercial fishing fleets and shipping lines, and to the U.S. Navy, Merchant Marine, and Coast Guard. The Smithsonian also issues a newsletter which is sent to all cooperators in the Pacific-wide bird banding program. This publicity effort, in addition to increasing the recovery of banded birds, heightens public interest in problems of conservation in the Pacific area. Although most of the field work in the central Pacific is being under- taken by a Smithsonian field staff under director Charles A. Ely, whose offices are in Honolulu, the success of the program depends most heavily on the generous cooperation of numerous collaborating institutions and individuals. An agreement between the Institution and the U.S. Department of the Interior has resulted in a free exchange of information and services, particularly with respect to the Hawaiian Leeward Islands, where mutual interest and exchange of information further enhances the status of these islands as wildlife refuges or sanctuaries. The Smith- sonian has received enthusiastic cooperation from the State of Hawaii Division of Fish and Game, which represents the interest of the State in ecology, management, and conservation. MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY INTRODUCTION 29 BLACK- FOOTED ALBATROSS LESSER FRIGATEBIRDS RUDDY TURNSTONES Recoveries of birds banded under Pacific Ocean Biological Survey Program r-T'are shown by hatched areas. (See p. 28.) The effectiveness of Smithsonian studies of the distribution of pelagic birds at sea is almost entirely dependent upon the Department of the Interior, Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, in Honolulu. This agency has generously provided not only ship support for bird censuses, but also a body of oceanographic data which, when combined with the ornithological data, will make a unique contribution to our understand- ing of the oceanographic factors affecting their distribution. Modern transportation and communication facilities are essential for the coordination of a large-scale biological survey over such a vast region. The Smithsonian maintains permanent field parties on two islands through the courtesy of the U.S. Coast Guard, which also, from time to time, very kindly grants opportunities for Smithsonian personnel to visit various islands during the course of regular Coast Guard trips. In addition, the U.S. Navy has generously permitted Smithsonian personnel to carry out at-sea observations on its vessels. Never before has it been feasible to visit most of the islands in this area three or four times a year, or to carry out monthly at-sea surveys over a period of years to collect data on pelagic bird distribution and on various physical oceanographic factors. 30 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Studies of the distribution and ecology of terrestrial plants on islands of the central Pacific, in which Dr. Charles Lamoureaux and Mr. Robert Long, of the University of Hawaii, are collaborating with the Smithsonian Institution, are important not only in developing an inventory of plants on each of the islands and a history of plant intro- ductions, but also to an understanding of the factors affecting the distribution and abundance of terrestrial animals. Perhaps the most important practical accomplishment of the Smith- sonian survey will be the delineation of the environment over a relatively short period of time. This will provide a baseline of comparison for biologists concerned, 10 or 20 years from now, with measuring the effects of man-made modifications of the environment on natural populations of organisms. The need for such a baseline is most urgent today, when man, in his struggle to advance himself, is changing the face of the earth at an appallingly rapid rate, and is subjecting the total environment — water, atmosphere, and living tissues — to physical and chemical influences which need to be measure^ g)w and in the future. For unless these fundamental changes in his environ- ment are properly assessed, man himself, through ignorance, may fall victim to his own progress. Philip S. Humphrey Chairman, Department of Vertebrate ^oology Research and Publications SYSTEMATICS The Office of Systematics was established early in 1965 to provide a focal point for systematic interests both within the Museum of Natural History and outside it. Although nearly all the professional staff engage in systematic research, interdisciplinary needs increasingly occur which can be met best by a non-discipline-oriented office. Typical of these needs are research problems requiring joint attack by several disciplines. In long-range terms, the most important project which transects all disciplinary lines involves data processing by computer. As the number of specimens in natural history collections increases, a stage is reached at which the specimen-attached data become difficult or impossible to organize and recover by "manual" methods. A central file of such data from our own millions of specimens, and ultimately including those of other museums, will provide the means by which many permutations of these data can be performed almost instantly. Moreover, bibliographic, karyologic, genetic, ecologic, and biochemi- cal data can be inserted in such a data bank and retrieved in various new combinations with other data. Such a facility will provide the researcher with a means by which an almost limitless number of data configurations can be programed to meet his needs. Such vast files of information require any available device which facilitates their organization into retrievable form; the binomial borne by each species of plant or animal is the means by which the most diverse sort of information can be organized, stored, and retrieved. But 30 million names are difficult and prohibitively expensive to use directly in an information system. Under way is the development of a code to express names in machine-readable form, free of hierarchical implications and completely open-ended. Support from several sources is being sought to complete the code and begin the accumulation of data. The International Biological Program will begin field operations in January 1967, and those studying the biota of Africa will have in hand a field guide to the mammals. This is the objective of a project receiving Institutional support through the Office of Systematics. One of the foremost mammalogists in southern Africa is writing various parts of the manual, and he is securing the contributions of mammal specialists over the world. The National Institutes of Health have provided contractual support for a project to search among our collections for tumors of invertebrates 31 32 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY and cold-blooded vertebrates. There is reasonable hope that the phylogeny of some of the animal groups, as well as that of tumor diseases, may be elucidated by this project. An ad hoc committee consisting of representatives from archeology, paleobotany, and modern plant systematics has participated in present- ing the need for a pollen laboratory and staff. Pollen grains are highly resistant to destruction and are so distinctive as to permit the specialist to reconstruct reasonably accurately the former vegetation of an area and the environmental conditions under which the plants grew. Likewise, the pollens of primitive man's crop plants persist in the refuse of his habitations and reveal much about the kinds of things he grew and under what conditions. The student of recent plants uses paly- nological data to reconstruct the evolutionary history of plant groups and to clarify phylogenetic relationships. Funds have been set aside for the equipping of the laboratory, and it is hoped that a research palynologist can be employed by the end of the next fiscal year. A new publication, "Smithsonia," planned for next year, is dis- tinctive in that it is a series of which each unit is devoted to the descrip- tion of a new species or redescription of an old one. Such a format will permit progressive revision of genera and other taxa by the pub- lication of groups of descriptions. Initial planning has begun toward convening at the Smithsonian in 1966 an international symposium on systematics, jointly sponsored by the National Science Foundation, the National Academy of Sciences, and the Smithsonian Institution. Outstanding systematists from abroad will participate with prominent American ones in a one-day session on principles of systematics and a second day on methodologies. It is hoped that future conferences can be held on important questions related to the training of both technical researchers and scientific aides for systematics. Such meetings satisfy an important responsibility of the Office — to represent systematics at all levels, to urge the incorpora- tion of taxonomic data in otherwise non-systematic studies, and to broaden the base of current systematics to include information from as many ancillary sources as possible. ECOLOGY Man has learned, to a very large extent, how to escape, through control of his environment, the pangs of hunger, the rigors of un- favorable weather, and the anxieties of individual preservation, as op- posed to group protection. In the process, however, man has so greatly modified his surroundings that the human species, as its popula- RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS ECOLOGY 33 tions expand apace, stands in very real danger of losing control over its own destiny. To focus research effort, while there is yet time, on important problems of environmental biology, plans were completed for establishing, on July 1, 1965, an Office of Ecology. Selected as its head, and assistant director for ecology, is Helmut Buechner, who will continue his own researches in the behavior of certain ungulate mammals. Since the systematic research produced by the professional staff has generally included ecological data, the program represents not a beginning of Institutional interest but a means to focus staff attention on the subject and to facilitate cooperation between the Smithsonian and other Federal agencies and educational organizations. In January an informal conference of outstanding biologists discussed research trends and opportunities in environmental biology, including ecology, genetics, behavior, and the study of wild populations under natural conditions. Participants were requested specifically to con- sider (1) what contributions might be made by environmental studies in the New World Tropics, (2) the desirability of undertaking studies of soil ecology, and (3) the projected field stations on Chesapeake Bay. Several planning sessions were devoted to organizing the Center for Field Biology, on land at the head of Chesapeake Bay, in summer of 1965. As its first director, Kyle Barbehenn will be in charge of the Center and its program development. Sharing the Center with Smithsonian research personnel will be biologists from the Johns Hopkins University, the University of Maryland, and, to a limited extent, from the National Institutes of Health, who will study captive animals, as well as native and migrating ones, and their possible inter- action with the environment. Consideration has been given to undertaking a research program on soil biology in which will be investigated the nature of the inter- actions of soil organisms on each other and with their environment. Although applied studies of soil organisms are under way in various research laboratories, little or no attention has been devoted to the ecological aspects of this problem. Since the International Biological Program is strongly oriented toward environmental biology, the Office of Ecology will also be a focal point for staff participation in this program. OCEANOGRAPHY Although the Smithsonian Institution has been engaged in studies of marine organisms since Spencer F. Baird joined its staff more than 34 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY 100 years ago, the active involvement of the Institution in a National Oceanography Program has made it necessary for the Institution to reexamine its interests and capabilities for studying the world ocean. This reexamination has rested comfortably within the context of the traditional operations of the Museum of Natural History; that is to say, the Smithsonian's marine operations are principally concerned with collecting marine natural-history objects in order to determine the kinds, distributions, and populations of organisms and sediments in the world ocean. These studies are oriented toward systematics; the available data are exploited, however, for additional information concerning the ecology, biogeography, and evolution of the specimens collected. Because proper study of these specimens is not feasible without an active program to gather material from areas not repre- sented in the national collections, Smithsonian scientists continue to seek collections from chartered vessels and from ships of many public and private agencies. In addition to these research responsibilities, the Smithsonian has always provided limited service to other governmental and non- governmental scientists by making identifications of natural-history objects. As a part of its expansion in the National Oceanography Program, the Institution has now developed an increased capability for the accomplishment of such service by establishing the Smithsonian Oceanographic Sorting Center for the separation of bulk collections into groups which may be studied effectively by individual scientists. The magnitude of effort required for this involvement in the National Oceanography Program is evidenced by the nearly 80 U.S. oceano- graphic vessels of assorted sizes that are gathering marine specimens, many of which may end up at the Smithsonian Institution: 10 private U.S. oceanographic institutions use 22 ships for oceanographic col- lection of data and specimens; 22 Coast Guard vessels collect data and specimens on ocean stations; and many large and small vessels of the Navy, the Coast and Geodetic Survey, the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, and other government agencies obtain data and collections from the ocean. Impetus recently has been given to a so-called "ships of opportunity" effort which could use for biological collections many of the estimated 6,000 civilian and military ships which may be at sea on any one day in the North Atlantic alone. The backlog of biological research information waiting to be uncovered is scarcely realized, even within the Museum. The oceanography plans of the Institution have been developed in continuous consultation with scientists of the United States in all fields of biological oceanography. Hence, a large portion of this RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS OCEANOGRAPHY 35 program involves cooperation with many other agencies. Since 1962 the Institution has maintained membership in the Interagency Committee on Oceanography (ICO), and the assistant director for oceanography of the Museum of Natural History is chairman of its research panel. In addition to support from Congress, joint research projects, with funds from both organizations, have been undertaken by the Smithsonian and each of the Atomic Energy Commission, the Office of Naval Research, the Department of State, the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, the National Science Foundation, the Naval Oceanographic Office, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Interagency Committee on Oceanography, and one state agency — the Maryland Fisheries Commission. Also, joint research projects have been undertaken by staff members of the Institution with support from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the Lamont Geological Observatory, the Marine Biological Laboratory of Woods Hole, the University of Maryland, Duke University, the University of Kansas, Johns Hopkins University, the University of Michigan, the University of Minnesota, the University of Miami, the University of Southern California, Yale University, Florida State University, the University of Washington, and others. Regional industrial and professional groups, foundations, and in- dividuals also have provided support and specimens to the Institution's oceanography program. These include International Business Ma- chines, Inc., the American Institute of Biological Sciences, the Link Foundation, the National Geographic Society, the American Chemical Society, the Guggenheim Foundation, the Hong Kong Fisheries Research Station, the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission, the Guinean Trawling Survey, the Indian Ocean Biological Center, the National Oceanographic Data Center, General Ed Schwengel, Jeanne Schwengel, and Edwin A. Link. Specimens have been identified for the Naval Oceanographic Office, the Coast and Geodetic Survey, the Coastal Engineering Research Center, the Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife, the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, the National Science Foundation's Antarctic Research Program, and a large number of other Federal and private organizations. Field support has been provided to members of the oceanography staff by ships of the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the Coast and Geodetic Survey, the National Science Foundation, Stanford University, the University of Southern California, the Marine Biological Laboratory of Woods Hole, Mass., the University of Miami, and the National Aeronautics 36 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY and Space Administration. Vessels also have been chartered specifi- cally for use by the Institution. Projects that have been supported by other agencies have been in the areas of marine systematics and ecology, the processing of specimens, the keeping of records of natural-history specimens, and the publication of appropriate documents, as well as the establishment of an oceano- graphic exhibit in the Museum of Natural History. In doing research on the biological and geological natural history of the oceans, members of the staff of the Smithsonian Institution have functioned to study existing collections of the Museum of Natural History and other museums; to take additional collections in unique areas; to describe organisms in relation to their environment; to report unusual natural history features, such as the presence of cancer and other abnormalities, in order that biological and physiological studies might be pursued elsewhere; to formulate theories with regard to the evolution of organisms; to provide explanations of the intra- and inter- relationships of organisms; to develop field guides for the easy identifica- tion of marine specimens; to develop and test basic collecting gear for use in studying marine organisms; to provide an urgently needed identification service; to assemble, maintain, and provide access to the national collections; to provide a collecting staff for use in unique areas; to develop curating and preservation techniques, and other handling advice and experience; and to provide for proper storage of collections in appropriate facilities. A natural outgrowth of the National Oceanography Program has been an ever-broadening involvement of the Institution in collections from the routine operations as a part of the world ocean survey, from research cruises and expeditions of other agencies, and from special international programs such as the International Indian Ocean Expe- dition and the International Cooperative Investigations of the Tropical Atlantic. The Institution has found it desirable to be involved as closely as possible in the planning of various expeditions and has en- deavored to produce labels and specimen-handling information on a continuing basis, so that collections can be maintained in better con- dition for ultimate study and so that adequate environmental infor- mation is available to provide broad interpretation of the biological data resulting from the studies. Perhaps the most obvious of the changes in the first three years of the Smithsonian's research effort in oceanography has been a large increase in staff involvement in biological and geological oceanography activi- ties. Not only has the number of scientists involved in the oceanog- raphy program tripled in these three years, but the number of organi- Photomicrography of phytoplankton samples at the Smithsonian Oceano- graphic Sorting Center. Below: Zooplankton laboratory houses many activities, including recording and verifying data, splitting and relabeling samples, sorting aliquots to 52 taxonomic categories, and packaging and shipping invoiced specimens to specialists. (See pp. 37-39.) Top, left: Bird stomach, received at the Sorting Center from Pacific Ocean Biological Survey, is opened for examination of contents; right: small bottom invertebrates are separated and retrieved by sieving. Below: Tagged grouper being placed in monel-lined tank containing 75% ethyl alcohol. (See pp. 37-39.) RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS — OCEANOGRAPHY 37 zational units included in the program also has tripled. Whereas before, the Institution had extremely restricted capability to treat the nearly 100 major groups of marine organisms, selective recruiting has resulted in the addition of capabilities to examine and carry out research on groups which could not be included in earlier oceanographic efforts. The expansion of staff within the Museum of Natural History has been almost entirely in the systematics area. Additional groups of marine organisms may now be studied, and in this fiscal year, capabili- ties have been added to carry out research in such marine groups as ostracodes, amphipods, nematodes, macroalgae, coralline algae, and plankton. New personnel include a senior electron microscopist, a sedimentologist, and a petrologist interested in marine rocks. The principal new activity within the oceanography program is the Smithsonian Oceanographic Sorting Center, conceived by A. G. Smith, former Assistant Secretary for Science, and organized in January 1963 to receive bulk samples from governmental and private sources; to separate them into appropriate taxa for identification by specialists; to obtain and coordinate the station data to provide maximum environ- mental information with the specimens; to experiment with preserva- tion, labeling, accessioning, shipping, and storage of specimens; to train technicians for all aspects of specimen handling; and to provide information and forms helpful to oceanographic investigations by insuring that consideration be given to the maximum collection of environmental data. More than five million specimens have been sorted by the Center, and more than three million of these have been shipped to specialists for study. In spite of this productivity, the Center has a tremendous back- log of specimens which have been given it for processing, and a sub- stantial expansion in its staff is needed to work on the specimens. The Sorting Center uses a series of seven advisory groups, each con- sisting of five members with differing research specialties. The advice of these committees is sought with regard to the assignment for study of specimens processed by the Center and for recommendations of permanent depositories of identified specimens. In addition to these continuing groups, the Center has sought specific advice from John Wickstead of the British Plymouth Laboratory; from Ruth Patrick of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences; from Allan Be of the Lamont Geological Observatory; from E. C. Jones of the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries Laboratory in Hawaii; from Saul Saila of the University of Rhode Island; and from Isabel Farfantes Canet. In addition, assistance and advice is given by the several hundred sci- entists visiting the Center. Such guidance is continually sought through correspondence with the above and other persons. 7S9^27— 66 7 38 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Of special note is project support for strong involvement of the Sort- ing Center in the U.S. Antarctic Research Program of the National Science Foundation (NSF). With NSF support, the Center lists specimens taken from all past U.S. efforts in the Antarctic, and it sorts and maintains records of specimens now being taken from the Ant- arctic. In addition, the photographs of the ocean bottom taken from the NSF research vessel Eltanin are duplicated and distributed to scientists. Also noteworthy are collections made available for study by the Na- tional Science Foundation through the International Indian Ocean Expedition, by the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, and by the Inter- governmental Oceanographic Commission's International Cooperative Investigations of the Tropical Atlantic. Other collections have come to the Sorting Center from the Pacific Halibut Commission, the Inter- American Tropical Tuna Commission, the Guinean Trawling Survey, the Geological Survey, the Coast Guard, the Naval Oceanographic Office, the Coast and Geodetic Survey, the Coastal Engineering Re- search Center, the Laboratory of Radiation Biology of the University of Washington, the University of Michigan, the Atomic Energy Commission, and the Government of Chile. Through the Sorting Center, technician Jack Rudloe was employed to make special collections as a professional collector during the Inter- national Indian Ocean Expedition; T. Peter Lowe worked as a tech- nician in lieu of a scientist on the Anton Bruun; and Mrs. LaNelle Peter- son and Mrs. Cynthia Stoertz participated as professional collectors in a cruise of the Eltanin in the Antarctic in early 1965. Special labels and other collecting materials and forms were devel- oped for, and provided to, the International Indian Ocean Expedition, the International Cooperative Investigations of the Tropical Atlantic, and the U.S. Antarctic Research Program. Duplication and distribu- tion of these labels, as well as the provision of a central receiving and processing facility, have resulted in increasing the effective results of natural history expeditions by providing for better maintenance of more collections for study. The Sorting Center has served as a unifying influence in the system- atics of marine organisms by providing specimens and information con- ing the stages of their processing, together with information on the commitments of specialists scattered throughout the world. Visiting scientists may find working space in the Center. As a result of the activities of the Center, an increasing number of the individual speci- mens from multiple bulk collections are being processed for their re- search value, and the results may be fitted together more effectively. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS OCEANOGRAPHY 39 It is anticipated that this flourishing activity will go on from its healthy beginning to do much to meet the challenge of man's expansion into the ocean. As the most recent new effort of the Smithsonian, an oceanographic vessel has been acquired from Navy surplus and modified slightly for use in an investigation of coralline algae of the North Atlantic Ocean. This vessel, the Phykos, is a converted small freighter, 133'9" length, 30' beam, 650-ton displacement, which will be used principally as a platform for SCUBA diving and for the operation of a small undersea vehicle. It is anticipated that a crew of six or seven will be able to operate the vessel for a scientist to collect these algae from shallow depths around the margin of the North Atlantic. The Phykos began operation during this year and will operate throughout the next. ANTHROPOLOGY The Smithsonian Office of Anthropology was created on February 1, 1965, to renew and expand the Smithsonian's role in anthro- pology. Uniting the separate activities of the Bureau of American Ethnology and of the Department of Anthropology of the Museum of Natural History, it includes all the personnel of both former units, and its head is also an assistant director of the Museum of Natural History. The Office consists of a division of cultural anthropology and a division of physical anthropology, and it administers the Smith- sonian River Basin Surveys. It also includes the archives and library of the Bureau of American Ethnology, a conservation laboratory, and a section for illustrations. It maintains the only set, in the vicinity of Washington, of the Human Relations Area Files, a comprehensive, systematic inventory of data on a worldwide sample of cultural groups. Renovation of its office space, work areas, and storage sections in the Museum of Natural History provides excellent space for SOA's activ- ities, and offices for the newly merged professional and subprofessional staffs. Thus, for the first time since the 19th century, all the anthro- pological personnel of the Institution is under one roof, and the foun- dation has been laid for carrying on past activities efficiently and initiating new anthropological programs of several types. Publication of the Bulletins of the Bureau of American Ethnology, which began in 1887, will cease with Bulletin 200, and henceforth anthropological papers and monographs will appear in the new series "Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology," which has a new format and increased page size that present more effectively such material as illustrations, tables, and maps. Unlike the Bulletins, the new series 40 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY will include material dealing with the Old World as well as the New. Research in the Old World was conducted in a few widely scattered areas. Olga Linares de Sapir, who was appointed a collaborator in January 1965, began archeological research in Senegal with a post- doctoral fellowship from the National Science Foundation. This portion of Africa is one of the least-known archeologically of any part of the world, and the establishment of a firm sequence of prehistoric events will be of great importance. In June, J. Lawrence Angel left for an extended investigation of human skeletons excavated from Neolithic and other sites in Greece and Turkey. His work, supported by the American Philosophical Society and the Wenner-Gren Foundation, continues research in physi- cal anthropology in Greece, carried on for many years, into the social biology of culture change. Field work in the Far East was carried out by William C. Sturtevant, who from October 1963 to October 1964 was in Burma investigating the forms, functions, and symbolism of modern Burmese dress. Prior to returning he visited London to examine archival material on Burmese dress. From August 29 to October 30, Richard B. Woodbury examined in Spain, Libya, Egypt, Pakistan, and Israel a great variety of ancient and modern water-control systems, especially cisterns, irrigation ditches, and terraces, for comparison with the New World techniques studied in the Western United States and in Mexico. The trip, supported by the National Science Foundation, included visits to abandoned Roman irrigation works in Libya, modern farms in the Fayum using traditional water systems, Mohenjo-Daro, a center of intensive irrigation in the Indus Valley five millennia ago, and the restored Nabatean terraced farms of the Negev in Israel. Eugene I. Knez continued research on several aspects of Korean and Japanese culture, working particularly on a bibliography of Korean anthropology with emphasis on Asian literature, and on a study of Japanese ceramic materials in this Institution. He is seeking to relate the ceramics chronologically to traditional kiln sites in Japan. Knez also visited several museums to study material aspects of Korean culture in connection both with future exhibits and a monograph on Korean village life that he is preparing. William H. Crocker continued field work with the Canela of Brazil, with whom he worked in 1963. This small tribe, living in relative isolation and supporting themselves by a simple pattern of hunting, gathering, and rudimentary farming, is now undergoing rapid changes due to the pressure from Brazilian settlers in adjacent areas. Prior to RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS — ANTHROPOLOGY 41 his arrival in the field in July 1964, the Canela had been moved from their savannah habitat to a forested reservation, providing radically different surroundings, different resources, and a serious challenge to the continuation of their way of life. Six months before this, a Canela woman had announced that she was receiving messages transmitted by the motions of her unborn child. These messages were thought to be instructions from the Canela culture hero who announced in this way that when the child was born he would transform the Canela world into a city with all the comforts and machines necessary to make life easy. In accordance with his directions, this prophetess proceeded to bring together several scattered villages, create a new pattern of danc- ing, order the selling of personal belongings to buy goods, and direct the stealing of cattle from neighboring settlers for consumption during festivals. Although her child was stillborn in May, she managed to redirect the movement into new rites adopting Catholic elements. Shortly after this the Canela were attacked, and several were killed and others wounded by the settlers whose cattle they had been stealing. The prophetess, Maria, had predicted the enemy bullets would all miss their mark because the culture hero would protect them. With the total failure of her predictions and the death of several Canela, her power and her cult movement became discredited. In 1963 the Canela had been resettled, and when Crocker and his wife arrived in the field they were able to study firsthand the effects of this drastic sequence of events to which the Canela had been subjected. He is analyzing his data in terms of three approaches: social, psychological, and ecological. Socially, the Canela have been little affected by this traumatic move, since their social system continues to function in their new external social environment, to which they have adjusted with their usual and remarkable flexibility. Psychologically, however, there is evidence of a great deal of suppressed hostility which is likely to find an oudet in the near future, both against themselves and against neighbors. So far this hostility has affected in only minor ways their motivations and outlook, but some Canela already are preferring helplessness and an admission of failure to the creating of a new life. They blame their predicament on civilization and not themselves. Ecologically the problems are much greater: because they have not adjusted to the necessities of forest living and its greater need for sani- tation, disease rates, especially tuberculosis, have risen sharply; having failed to learn to hunt in the forest, they suffer from a scarcity of meat and considerable undernourishment; and because many materials available in the savannah, and needed to carry out their customary practices or to keep certain taboos, are unavailable in the forest, a 42 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY number of practices and related beliefs are rapidly being lost and con- fidence and faith in their old traditions are being weakened. Crocker has supplemented these field observations with extensive linguistic work and kinship analysis, and a substantial series of photographs. His field work, supported by the National Science Foundation and the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, is expected to result in a major monograph. The opportunity for Crocker to make on-the-spot observations of these rapid and traumatic changes is almost unique, as anthropologists have so often been forced by circumstances to rely on secondhand accounts or on interviews with survivors of such rapid changes, made years after the events took place. His results will be of importance far beyond any interest we have in the fate of this small group of Brazilian Indians, as they will make clearer the processes by which human groups respond to, adjust to, or break down under the impact of sudden, overwhelming changes imposed from outside sources. Since much of the world today is in the midst of rapid and unprecedented change, any of his conclusions will have very wide significance. A very different type of field work is represented by the trip of Clifford Evans and Betty J. Meggers to Brazil from October 5 to November 22, 1964. The teaching aspects of this trip, supported by the Fulbright Commission, are described on page 50. In addition, they were able to make an extensive inspection tour of departments of anthropology at various universities and museums throughout Brazil in order to determine needs and potentials for archeological research programs. By becoming familiar at firsthand with the collections and facilities, and, even more importantly, with the personnel, of Brazilian institutions, they were able to lay a groundwork for a long-term cooperative program in Brazilian archeology in which they will have the support and co- operation of a large proportion of the promising younger Brazilian scholars. Such a coordinated program will make possible the securing of data under carefully planned conditions, strictly comparable and useful to scholars elsewhere in Brazil and throughout the world. During the Brazilian trip, Evans and Meggers worked with Mario Simoes at the Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi, Belem, Para, on sherds from stratigraphic excavations at a locality on Marajo Island, not investigated by them in their 1948-49 excavations there. The new material could be interdigitated into the previously published sequence, and they extended it back to earlier time periods with a substantial amount of material. This new work is of special importance because carbon samples were secured by Simoes and his coworker Napoleao Figueiredo, to be tested at the carbon-dating laboratory of the Smith- sonian's Radiation Biology Laboratory. The results, it is hoped, will RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS ANTHROPOLOGY 43 provide the first absolute dates for the archeology of Marajo Island, a key locality in the prehistory of the entire South American lowlands. A pre-doctoral fellowship from the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research made it possible for Yoshio Onuki, of the University of Tokyo Andes Expedition, to spend six months at the Museum analyzing and studying a large collection of potsherds, received from the University of Tokyo Andes Expedition through the courtesy of its director, Professor Seiichi Izumi. It includes type specimens for the entire range of Formative Period materials from the site of Kotosh in the Department of Huanuco, Peru, and is of particular importance for comparative purposes in view of the interest of Meggers, Evans, and Flannery in the Formative Period of Mesoamerica and South America. From January to April 1965, Robert M. Laughlin was in Zinacantan, Chiapas, Mexico, with support from the National Institute of Mental Health, continuing his study of the Tzotzil Indians, one of the surviving Maya-speaking descendants of the famous prehistoric Maya Indians of Central America. He has concentrated on the elicitation, through systematic procedures, of the entire vocabulary of the Tzotzil language, both as a basis for a Tzotzil dictionary and, even more important, as a means of determining the ideas, concepts, and attitudes that lie behind the more visible and material segments of Tzotzil culture. Prior to this field work, he continued the analysis of myth and dream material previously collected, as a means of determining the values implicit in Tzotzil culture. Both of these approaches are significant means of securing data on the more intangible and frequently ignored aspects of a primitive culture. Kent V. Flannery, who joined the staff on July 8, 1964, continued research on both the Old and the New World with parallel programs dealing with the beginnings of domestic plants and animals in two key localities — southwestern Iran and central and southern Mexico. From July through September he was at Rice University studying more than 10,000 identifiable bone fragments from prehistoric caves and villages in the Deh Luran valley, Khuzistan, Iran. Shedding light on the important problem of the beginnings of domestication of sheep, goat, cattle, and the dog, these came from three archeological sites which spanned the time from about 7900 B.C. through the beginnings of town life about 4500 B.C. to the threshold of urban civilization about 3800 B.C. Among the important conclusions he reached is that agriculture began in this region with the very small-scale, almost incidental, growing of wheat and barley in forms closely related to their wild ances- tors, and that only later were the techniques added by which farming became the mainstay of life. He also concluded that goats were domes- 44 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY ticated substantially earlier than sheep, the latter apparently being imported from distant areas after their domestication there. The botanist Hans Helbaek, working with the expedition, has shown through the study of details of the flax seeds that irrigation of at least this crop, and presumably of wheat and other crops as well, began some six millennia before the Christian era in this region — much earlier than had heretofore been suspected. In December 1964, with the cooperation of Mexican authorities, and particularly of Ignacio Bernal, director of the Museo de Antro- pologia in Mexico City, Flannery was able to visit many of the 200 already-located sites in the valley of Oaxaca. These will provide the basis for a major archeological study of the beginnings of agriculture in this area and of prehistoric human ecology during the centuries which span the beginnings of village life and the growth of villages into towns, and which led to the foundation of civilization in Mexico. Numerous caves or rock shelters, appearing to cover the period from 6500-2500 B.C., were found. These assure abundant perishable archeological materials such as corncobs, fragments of squash, cactus fruits, twine, and so on. When plans now complete are carried out next year, the study will parallel the important Tehuacan Project in which Flannery and Richard B. Woodbury have both participated in previous years. The intensive archeological study of key areas in such regions as Middle America, through cooperative programs with botanists, zoologists, archeologists, and others, is providing far fuller and more meaningful data than have heretofore been available. Both in Flannery 's Iranian work, now nearing completion, and in the contemplated work in Oaxaca, close collaboration with other specialists within the Museum of Natural History is proving extremely rewarding, as a result of the generosity with which they make available their particular talents in a variety of fields. Gus W. Van Beek made substantial progress on his study of South Arabic ceramic technology and architecture in conjunction with the preparation of his final report on the excavations at Jahar Bin Humeid. Before and after the meeting of the 7th International Congress of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences which he attended in Moscow, August 3-10, Henry B. Collins studied museum collections in Copenhagen, Stockholm, Helsinki, Moscow, Leningrad, and Tblissi. Saul H. Riesenberg, who attended the same meetings, also studied Pacific collections in several of the same museums. As part of a larger genetical study in conjunction with blood-group researches on Pacific populations by the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the Australian Commonwealth Serum Laboratories, Ethnologist William Crocker in the field with an adopted Canela Indian brother. (See pp. 40-42.) Below: Work and study room, divi- sion of cultural anthropology. On table in foreground are ethnological and archeological specimens being cataloged into the permanent records of the Museum of Natural History. Exhibits dealing with political authority, music, and signaling were among those added to the African section of the hall of cultures of Africa and Asia. Others treated such subjects as weapons, clothing, control of the super- natural, various hand-skills, and special ethnic groups. (See p. 98.) Sfc River Basin Surveys party screening debris at Bottleneck Cave, a small rock shelter in the upper Yellowtail Reservoir, Bighorn River, Montana. (See p. 47.) Below: The remains of two circular earth lodges excavated by a RBS field party at Fort George Village, an 18th-century site in the Big Bend Reservoir of central South Dakota. (See pp. 46-49.) «'<^M^H RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS ANTHROPOLOGY 45 Riesenberg completed his research on migrations and movements of people in Micronesia. He also carried forward his research projects on Ponapean political organization and folklore. Gordon D. Gibson continued his researches on African material culture as part of the preparation of new exhibits in the hall of African cultures. J. Lawrence Angel continued, for the third and final year, his re- study of senior medical students whom he first studied as freshmen at the Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. Changes in body composition, blood serum make-up, body measurements, and external appearance recorded in this study will clarify the process of differential aging in man. Lucile E. Hoyme visited the Department of Anatomy, Washington University Medical School, St. Louis, in November and December 1964, to make observations on about 175 human pelves of known age and sex, to supplement data already recorded on U.S. Negro pelves at Howard University and American Indian and Eskimo specimens at the Museum of Natural History. Waldo R. Wedel continued research in the Plains during July and August 1964, with support from a National Science Foundation grant. Accompanied in the field by George S. Metcalf and Edgar W. Dodd, his survey had two objectives: to clarify the relationships among several late prehistoric and early historic Indian groups — those defined for the Central Plains, for the upper Rio Grande area of New Mexico, and the southern plains of Oklahoma; and to assess the nature of ecological adjustments made by pre-white peoples in the transitional zone where the subhumid eastern prairie plains environment gives way to a semiarid short-grass or steppe environment on the west. The area of study was selected because hitherto it has been little ex- amined but is adjacent to better known areas providing material for comparative study and cross dating. From a base camp in Kansas at the Meade County State Game Farm, dune and blowout localities along the Cimarron River and its tributaries as far west as the Colorado line were checked. Visits were also made to the Crooked Creek Valley and to localities on the Medicine Lodge River and on the Salt Fork of the Arkansas River. In the western part of this area, where the Cimarron crosses the High Plains, pottery-bearing sites were small and scarce, often with little but a few sherds and flints. Grinding stones, however, and some of the many chipped-stone tools suggest aboriginal occupation ranging in time from the Archaic period of several thousand years ago to his- toric times, the latter represented by iron arrow points. Fluted or 46 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY lanceolate blades, indicative of Clovis and Folsom or of the Eden and Scotts bluff complexes, respectively, were extremely scarce. Non-pottery sites, marked by quantities of stone artifacts and refuse and by clusters of hearth stones, were, however, surprisingly numerous, apparently coming to light wherever the sandy soils along the Cimarron have been blown away to expose former ground surfaces. Farther east, pottery-bearing sites with an inferred semihorticultural subsistence basis included several that merit further study. These had pottery identifiable as belonging to the Woodland period before about A.D. 900, to the Central Plains complex of about 1000-1450, and to the Dismal River complex of about 1650-1750. Pottery-bearing sites tended to occur in the immediate vicinity of springs or other depend- able surface water supplies, some of which have almost totally dried up in the past 50 years, thus materially changing the appearance of the landscape and its apparent potential for farming occupants. Potsherds originating from the Pueblo settlements on the upper Rio Grande were seen in local collections and were collected from a number of sites visited; these are being examined by experts in New Mexico for identification and dating. The general impression from the summer's work is that semiseden- tary, probably horticultural settlements, more closely related to late prehistoric cultures of central Oklahoma than to the Central Plains cultures north of the Arkansas River, occurred at least as far west as Meade County. Farther west were more transient economies based primarily on seasonal hunting and gathering, with springs and ponds as foci of human interest and with winter residence elsewhere than in these treeless, windswept, inhospitable steppe lands. Special attention by aerial and ground reconnaissance was given to the vicinity of Englewood, Kans., where traces remain of fairly extensive irrigation systems no longer in use. Persistent local traditions and archeological reports of the 1930's specify that these are, in part, of prehistoric Indian origin. No evidence was found, however, either in the remaining ditches themselves or in the scanty archeological sites of the locality, to support the view that there was ever a prewhite popu- lation sufficiently numerous, settled, or advanced technologically, to have constructed such irrigation works as are now visible. River Basin Surveys As in previous years, by far the most extensive field activities in archeology for the Smithsonian Institution were carried on by the River Basin Surveys in the Missouri River Basin. This was their 19th RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS — ANTHROPOLOGY 47 year of continuous operation and again included large-scale excavation, surveys of lesser known areas, processing and analysis of specimens from excavations, and the preparation of reports of results. During the year 23 field parties worked within the Missouri Basin, of which 11 were in the field in July, August, or September 1964, in the following places: 1. The Sommers Site, Upper Big Bend Reservoir, S. Dak., one of the largest in the reservoir area, with at least 50 house depressions but unfortunately with heavy overburden, requiring the use of drag line and bulldozer to reach house floors. 2. The Fort George Site, a small fortified earth-lodge village near Pierre, S. Dak. Both the pottery and the objects of glass, iron, and brass suggested occupation in the first half of the 1 8th century, probably by the protohistoric Arikara. 3. The Ghapelle Creek Site, 20 miles downstream from Pierre, where previous disturbance by amateur excavators and the rise of water resulting in waterlogging, limited severely the extent of excavation. 4. A number of sites on the right bank of the Missouri in the Upper Big Bend Reservoir in which extensive test excavations suggested occu- pation from the Middle Missouri period through the time of the modern Dakota Indians. 5. The Davis Site and the Larson Site near Mobridge, S. Dak. At the latter, skeletons on the floors of the most recently occupied houses and associated musket balls and copper arrow points indicated clearly that occupation extended from prehistoric times into historic. 6. The Stelzer Site, near Mobridge, the largest known Woodland burial and occupation site along the middle Missouri. 7. Calamity Village, also near Mobridge, a small site protected by moats and palisades and located on a small spur of land overlooking the river. 8. Some 30 sites, either newly found or tested in accordance with recommendations from previous years, in the Yellowtail Reservoir on the Big Horn in southern Montana and northern Wyoming. The most important of these was Bottleneck Cave, a deep rock shelter containing at least five prehistoric occupations extending back to the paleo-Indian time level. 9. Several new sites were found on a shoreline survey of the west bank of the Fort Randall Reservoir, S. Dak. The degree of damage to surviving archeological sites by bank erosion was evaluated, and the need for additional testing or excavation was determined. 10. A survey in the Rathbun Reservoir on the Chariton River, Iowa, with emphasis on the revisiting of previously known sites, par- ticularly six major mound groups overlooking the flood plain. Exten- 48 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY sive tests yielded stratigraphic information but no cultural material serving to identify the mounds with a known complex or to date them. 1 1 . A brief reconnaissance of sites in the Upper Oahe Reservoir to assess the needs for future excavation. In April, May, and June, 1965, 12 additional field parties undertook field work, as follows: 1. Survey of three reservoirs in eastern Kansas: the Onaga Reser- voir on the Vermillion River, the Hillsdale Reservoir on the Osage River, and the Garnett Reservoir on Pottawatomie Creek. 2. A short reconnaissance of several Missouri River mainstem reser- voirs: Gavins Point, Fort Randall, and Oahe, with special attention to sites being actively eroded. 3. The beginning of test excavation and large-scale work at a site near Fort Yates in the Oahe Reservoir area. 4. A 1965 continuation of work at the Sommers Site designed especially to clear additional long rectangular houses, to test non- residential areas, and to examine possible evidence of a defensive perimeter. 5. Excavations in the Upper Oahe Reservoir at another site with large, long, rectangular houses. 6. Work at Fort Manuel, an important fur-trade post in northern- most South Dakota. 7. A continuation in the Rathbun Reservoir, Iowa, of work begun in the fall of 1964. 8. Further work in the Upper Big Bend Reservoir where sites had been damaged by recent construction or threatened by recreational development of the area. 9. Work in the Garrison Diversion Project of North Dakota, begun late in the fiscal year to survey and test selected sites. 10. A revisit to the Upper Yellowtail Reservoir to obtain palyno- logical and soil samples from selected locations. 1 1 . Work at the Aycock Site in the Oahe Reservoir. 12. Work in the Upper Big Bend Reservoir. In addition to the field parties from the Lincoln office of the River Basin Surveys, a number of institutions cooperated in 1964 in carrying out significant field work in the Missouri Basin; these included Iowa State University, Kansas State Historical Society, the University of Missouri, the University of Nebraska, the Science Museum of the St. Paul Institute, Minnesota, the State Historical Society of North Dakota, and the State University of South Dakota. Each of these had field parties carrying on salvage excavations or survey work in areas of immediate concern to them. At the end of the fiscal year five cooper- RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS ANTHROPOLOGY 49 ating institutions again had field parties in the Missouri Basin: the University of Nebraska excavating in the Glen Elder and Milford Reservoirs of Kansas; the University of Kansas working in the Perry, Clinton, and Kirwin Reservoirs of Kansas; the Kansas State Historical Society, also excavating in the Perry Reservoir; the University of Mis- souri, continuing work in the Kaysinger Bluff and Stockton Reservoirs of Missouri; and the State Historical Society of North Dakota, excavating at the Shermer Site in the Oahe Reservoir. One of the important undertakings of the River Basin Surveys has been the Missouri Basin Chronology Program which recently has in- cluded, by cooperative agreement with the U.S. National Park Service, a review of dendrochronological data on the Plains area, being carried out by the Tree Ring Laboratory of the University of Arizona. Initial indications are encouraging for the future development of dendro- chronology in the Plains as a supplement to other less precise chrono- logical systems. Other Scientific Activities Henry B. Collins continued to serve as a member of the Board of Governors of the Arctic Institute of North America, which he helped to found in 1945, and as chairman of the directing committee of its comprehensive "Arctic Bibliography," in which are indexed and sum- marized the contents of publications in all fields of science and all lan- guages pertaining to the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions of the world. Volume 12, prepared for publication during the year, will contain ab- stracts in English of 7,270 papers and monographs, 94 percent of which were published between 1960 and 1962. Of these, approximately half are in English, almost as many in Russian, and the majority of the re- mainder are Scandinavian, German, and French. Collins also con- tinued as chairman of the advisory committee of the Institute's Rus- sian Translation Project, which he organized in 1960. With a grant from the National Science Foundation, the editing of the fifth volume of the series, "The Archeology and Geomorphology of Northern Asia: Selected Papers," was completed for publication by the Univer- sity of Toronto Press in 1964; and a sixth volume, consisting of papers on Siberian archeology, was expected before the end of 1965. Prior to the merger of the Bureau of American Ethnology into the Smith- sonian Office of Anthropology, Collins served for a year and a half as Acting Director of the Bureau. W. H. Crocker continued as a contributing editor for South Amer- ican ethnology for "The Handbook of Latin American Studies" of 50 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY the Hispanic Foundation of the Library of Congress. In that capacity he surveyed about 800 articles or books published from 1960 to 1964 in this particular field and prepared critical abstracts of over 400 of the items for use in the Handbook. At the invitation of the Fulbright Commission of Brazil, C. Evans and B. J. Meggers received travel grants in order to give in Brazil an intensive training course on archeological method and interpre- tation to a select group of Brazilian archeologists at the University of Parana. This program, conducted October 5-30, 1964, was held at the Museu Paranaguense de Arqueologia e Artes Populares in Paranagua and at the Department of Anthropology at the Univer- sity of Parana in Curitiba. It was held in seminar form, six days a week. Mornings were devoted to lectures on archeological theory and a review of the latest information on New World archeology. After- noons were devoted to practical workshop sessions with specimens in order to show methods of classifying pottery, of seriating sequences, of writing pottery type descriptions, of reconstructing regional se- quences, and of determining the cultural history of aboriginal Brazil. Evenings were devoted to discussions of general problems in Brazilian archeology, the planning of field research, and the or- ganizing of common themes for study and presentation at the 1966 International Congress of Americanists to be held in Argentina. The seminar was highly successful, both in training and developing the interest of a group of able young Brazilian archeologists, and in providing the Smithsonian Institution with new contacts and an aware- ness of current research in this region. The seminar also made possible the planning of a comprehensive, long-range research program for key areas of Brazil hitherto neglected or investigated only by outmoded, inadequate methods that produce results not comparable with those of other areas. The young scholars participating, it is hoped, will be able to collaborate with Smithsonian archeologists in this program, both carrying on their own research in Brazil and visiting the Museum of Natural History for short periods for conferences and additional training programs, and for comparative study of collections not avail- able in Brazil. Publications by the Staff July 1964 through June 1965 Angel, J. Lawrence. Prehistoric man. In S. H. Engle, ed., New perspectives in world history. 34th Yearbook, National Council for the Social Studies, Washington, D.C., ch. 6, pp. 96-117, 1964. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS ANTHROPOLOGY 51 . Osteoporosis: thalassemia? Amer. Journ. Phys. Anthrop., n.s., Vol. 22, no. 3, pp. 369-374, 1 pi., September 1964. Baker, Paul T., and Angel, J. Lawrence. Old age changes in bone density: Sex and race factors in the United States. Human Biology, vol. 37, pp. 104-121, 1965. Coe, Michael D., and Flannery, Kent V. The pre-Columbian obsidian industry of El Chayal, Guatemala. Amer. Antiquity, vol. 30, no. 1, pp. 43-49, 3 figs., July 1964. Collins, Henry B. Recent trends and developments in Arctic archae- ology. Actes du VI Congres International des Sciences Anthro- pologiques et Ethnologiques, Paris, 1960. Tome II (premier volume), pp. 373-377, 1963. . Paleo-Indian artifacts in Alaska: An example of cultural retardation in the Arctic. Anthrop. Pap. Univ. Alaska, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 13-18, 1963. . Man in the Arctic. In The Arctic basin. Arctic Inst. North America, pp. 191-195, 1963. . The Arctic and Subarctic. In Jesse D. Jennings and Edward Norbeck, eds., Prehistoric man in the New World. Univ. Chicago Press, pp. 85-114, 1964. . Introduction. In Franz Boas, The Central Eskimo. Bison Book Ed., Univ. Nebraska Press, pp. v-xi, 1964. . James Louis Giddings (1909-1964) [Obituary]. Arctic, vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 66-67, 1965. Crocker, William H. Conservatism among the Canela: an analysis of contributing factors. In Actas y Memorias, XXXV Congreso Internacional de Americanistas, Mexico, 1962, vol. 3, pp. 341-346, 1964. Estrada, Emilio; Meggers, Betty J.; and Evans, Clifford. The Jambeli culture of south coastal Ecuador. Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 115, no. 3492, pp. 483-558, 1964. Evans, Clifford, and Meggers, Betty J. British Guiana archaeol- ogy: A return to the original interpretations. Amer. Antiquity, vol. 30, no. 1, pp. 83-84, 1964. Flannery, Kent V. The middle formative of the Tehuacan valley: its pattern and place in Mesoamerican prehistory. 224 pp. -j- appendices (128 pp.), 34 illus., Univ. Chicago Microfilms, 1964. . The ecology of early food production in Mesopotamia. Science, vol. 147, no. 3663, pp. 1247-1256, March 12, 1965. Hole, Frank; Flannery, Kent V.; and Neely, James. Early agri- culture and animal husbandry in Deh Luran, Iran. Current Anthrop., vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 105-106, February 1965. 52 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Meggers, Betty J., and Evans, Clifford. Especulaciones sobre rutas tempranas de difusion de la ceramica entre Sur y Mesoamerica. In Hombre y Cultura, Revista del Centro de Investigaciones Antropologicas de la Universidad Nacional, tomo I, no. 3, pp. 1-15, December 1964. Stephenson, Robert L. Quaternary human occupation of the plains. In Quaternary of the U.S., eds. H. E. Wright and David G. Frey. Princeton Univ. Press, pp. 685-696, 1965. Stewart, T. D. Shanidar skeletons IV and VI. Sumer, vol. 19, nos. 1-2, pp. 8-26, 14 pp. of figs., 1963. . Ales Hrdlicka, pioneer American physical anthropologist. In The Czechoslovak Contribution to World Culture, ed. Miloslav Rechcigl, Jr. Mouton & Co., The Hague, pp. 505-509, 1964. Sturtevant, William C. Studies in ethnoscience. In Transcultural studies in cognition, eds. A. K. Romney and R. G. D'Andrade. Amer. Anthrop., vol. 66, no. 3, part 2, pp. 99-131, 1964 (spec, publ.). . Mutilations and deformations. Encyclopaedia Britannica, vol. 16, pp. 1106-1107, 1965. . Tattooing. Encyclopaedia Britannica, vol. 21, p. 834, 1965. , Diamond, Stanley, and Fenton, W. N. Memorandum submitted to subcommittees on Indian affairs of the Senate and House of Representatives. Amer. Anthrop., vol. 66, no. 3, pp' 631-633. {Also in "Kinzua dam," 88th Cong., 1st Sess., H.R., Comm. on Int. and Ins. Affairs, Comm. print ser. 6, pp. 504-505, 1964, and "Kinzua dam," 88th Cong., 2d Sess., Senate, Comm. on Int. and Ins. Affairs, Comm. print, pp. 109-111, 1964.) -, Fairbanks, Charles H., and Rouse, Irving, eds. Indian and Spanish: Selected writings by John M. Goggin. Univ. Miami Press, Coral Gables, 329 pp., 1964. Van Beek, Gus W. Frankincense and myrrh. In The Bibilical Archae- ologist Reader 2. Anchor Book A250b, pp. 99-126, 1964. (Re- printed from Biblical Archaeologist, vol. 23, no. 3, 1960.) , Cole, Glen H., and Jamme, A. An archeological reconnais- sance in Hadhramaut, South Arabia — a preliminary report. In Ann. Rep. of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution, 1963, pp. 521-545, 1964. Wedel, Waldo R. Primitive man. In Hugo G. Rodeck, ed., Natural history of the Boulder area. Univ. Colorado Museum, leaflet no. 13, pp. 90-96, 1964. . Visit to Caribou, 1963. Colorado Magazine, vol. 41, no. 3, pp. 247-252, 1964. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS VERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY 53 Woodbury, Richard B., and Woodbury, Nathalie F. S. The chang- ing pattern of Papago land use. In Actas y Memorias, XXXV Congreso International de Americanistas, Mexico, 1962, vol. 2, pp. 181-186, 1964. . [Review]. Handbook of Middle American Indians, vol. 1, ed. Robert G. West. Science, vol. 148, pp. 798-800, 1965. VERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY Although the horizons of research in vertebrate zoology are con- tinually expanding, this does not reduce the importance of taxonomic studies at the "alpha" level in many groups, nor does it eliminate the continuing need for field collecting, particularly in less well-known parts of the world, such as the tropics. Fishes are taxonomically the least well-known vertebrates, and re- search on this group involves to a great extent the description of new forms and revisions at the generic and higher levels. Victor G. Springer is carrying out revisionary studies of blennioid fishes and re- cently completed the examination of material for a world revision of the genus Entomacrodus. This work is one of the few intensive studies of a circumglobal genus of marine shore fishes based on abundant material. William R. Taylor is studying speciation, relationships, morphology, and distribution of several families of marine and freshwater catfishes. Stanley H. Weitzman's current and projected research includes studies on the morphology and evolution of stomiatoid fishes, especially the deep-sea fish families Astronesthidae, Melanostomiatidae, and Gonostomatidae. He is also continuing work on the morphology, evolution, and classification of the large South American and African suborder of freshwater characi fishes, Characoidei. Robert H. Gibbs, Jr., and several colleagues are studying the bathy- pelagic fishes collected on two north-south transects in the western Indian Ocean during two cruises of the International Indian Ocean Expedition. The relationship of the distribution of species to physico- chemical and biological properties of the oceans is receiving much attention. Gibbs also neared completion of an ecological analysis of pelagic oceanic fishes, collected 1956-1960 from the M/V Delaware, and continued study of Atlantic Ocean flyingfishes. Ernest A. Lachner recently completed a study of certain North American barbel minnows. Robert E. Jenkins, graduate student, Cornell University, and Robert Ross, professor at Virginia Polytechnic Institute, over the past several years have amassed thousands of speci- 789-427—66 9 54 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY mens from central Appalachia using electric shocking devices. Jenkins and Lachner have analyzed the river populations of these nest-building chubs (genus Hybopsis, subgenus Nocomis). Their studies concern the ecology, distribution, origin, and dispersal of the several species and their infraspecific populations in relation to preglacial and postglacial stream captures and avenues of dispersal. In the division of reptiles and amphibians a major manuscript on the frogs of Colombia was completed by Doris M. Cochran in collabo- ration with Coleman J. Goin of the University of Florida. James A. Peters is studying the systematics and ecology of the reptiles and amphibians of Ecuador, including analysis of the results of six ecological transects made through the Subalpine, Transition, Cloud Forest, Subtropical, and Tropical Zones of the eastern slopes of the Andes. The area, almost totally unknown ecologically, is an evolution- ary microcosm, with striking examples of barrier formation and accom- panying speciation, altitudinal zonation, ecological indicator species, population al and community differentiation, and micro-faunules. Field studies in Ecuador of comparative cardiac physiology (with Robert Mullen, supported by the National Institutes of Health) re- sulted in the first known electrocardiograms of caecilians, the rare legless amphibians, and a large series of electrocardiograph records of Ecuadorian snakes and lizards, which will ultimately provide a contri- bution to physio-ecological studies of phylogenetic relationships. Peters also published a dictionary which contains over 3500 words and terms descriptive of the biology of the reptiles and amphibians, including material drawn from such other disciplines as behavior, genetics, ecology, physiology, and pathology, as well as systematics and morphology. Research on birds has a strong ecological orientation, with empha- sis on sea birds in four of the world's oceans and land birds in Latin America. George E. Watson has developed a cooperative research program with the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries to study the distribution, abundance, and behavior of sea birds in association with fish schools in the tropical Atlantic Ocean. He participated in a cruise aboard the Bureau ship Geronimo in the Gulf of Guinea in August and aboard the Woods Hole research vessel Atlantis II off northern South America from October to December. These resulted in the production of an illus- trated preliminary identification manual designed to facilitate collection of reliable data on the distribution of pelagic birds. With J. Phillip Angle as assistant, Watson is working on a similar manual for Antarctic birds on a grant from the National Science Foundation. They gathered RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS VERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY 55 data aboard the aircraft carrier Croaton, used as a mobile launch facility by NASA, off the west coast of South America in April. Frank B. Gill, research assistant, returned to the United States after 1 5 months on the International Indian Ocean Expedition. The Pacific Ocean Biological Survey Program, of which Philip S. Humphrey is the principal investigator, reached the end of its first phase of general survey work at the end of June 1965. An inventory of the terrestrial organisms and seasonal variations in their distribution and abundance has been made in the study area, and preparation has begun for a series of survey reports on an island-by-island basis. Humphrey's other research activities during the year mostly con- cerned studies of the distribution and ecology of Latin American birds. He continued field studies of the ecological and seasonal distribution of birds and arboviruses in the tropical rain forest in cooperation with Robert E. Shope of the Belem Virus Laboratory in Brazil under a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. During the dry season they gathered comparative ecological data in the same study area used during the rainy season in 1963. Humphrey also continued his research on Patagonian birds, assisted by David Bridge. Paul Slud, a specialist in tropical ecology, joined the staff in July 1964 and left almost immediately for a year of field work in Costa Rica. He is part of a team working on a bioecological classification for mili- tary environments supported by the Army Research Office. An im- portant objective has been to study a variety of habitats in detail in order to classify and predict plant formations and the distribution of birds. Alexander Wetmore continued his studies of birds of the Isthmus of Panama and was in the field from January through March. Richard L. Zusi made considerable research progress in functional anatomy and adaptation, completing in collaboration with Robert W. Storer of the University of Michigan one manuscript comparing head and neck anatomy in the pied-billed grebe with that of the rare giant pied- bill, and another on the mechanism of kinetics in the bird skull. His other studies in progress include adaptive radiation in shorebirds, for which he obtained useful data and motion pictures during field work in Kansas and Florida. He is working on a joint study of the evolution of the woodhewers, a group of tropical American tree-trunk climbing birds, with Paul Slud, who has contributed specimens and field observations from Costa Rica. In mammals, research is oriented mostly toward studies of tropical faunas which are far less well-known than those of temperate areas. Much of this work is done in cooperation with specialists of other 56 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY disciplines. For example, Henry W. Setzer works extensively with parasitologists in his faunal studies, supported by the Office of the Surgeon General, Department of the Army. This year he conducted field work in Mozambique in July and August, and throughout the year he supervised a field team working in Iran and Pakistan and two others working in Mozambique and Bechuanaland, each including entomologists as well as mammalogists. In cooperation with Vernon Tipton, Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Tex., Charles O. Handley, Jr., began work on a study of the distribution and ecology of mammalian ectoparasites, arboviruses, and their hosts in Venezuela, with support by the Office of the Surgeon General. On the project staff are 11 parasitologists, a virologist, and an ecologist. With support from the National Science Foundation, Handley also directed field work in Panama and in the southeastern United States. David H. Johnson is studying some of the Far Eastern species of the genus Rattus as a part of a comprehensive study of the mammals of southeastern Asia. Publications by the Staff July 7964 through June 1965 Cochran, Doris M., and Goin, Coleman J. Description of a new frog of the genus Phyllobates from Colombia (Amphibia, Ranidae, Den- drobatinae). Senck. Biol., vol. 45, pp. 255-257, 1 fig., December 1, 1964. Collette, Bruce B., and Gibbs, Robert H., Jr. Thunnus South, 1845 (Pisces): proposed validation under the plenary powers. Z.N.(S.) 1652. Bull. Zool. Nomencl., vol. 21, no. 6, pp. 442-443, 1964. Deignan, Herbert G. A new race of the Alpine accentor, Prunella collaris, from Formosa. NAMRU-II Res. Rep. MR005.09- 1601.3.26, 3 pp., June 1964. . Birds of the Arnhem Land expedition. In Records of the American-Australian scientific expedition to Arnhem Land, vol. 4 (zoology), pp. 345-425, October 1964. Parrotbill (1). In A new dictionary of birds, ed. Sir A. Lans- borough Thomson. Nelson, London, pp. 602-603, 1964. Notes on the nomenclature of the whistling-thrushes. Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, vol. 85, pp. 3-4, January 1965. Friedmann, Herbert. Evolutionary trends in the avian genus Clamator. Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 146, no. 4, pp. 1-127, October 30, 1964. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS — VERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY 57 Garrick, J. A. F.; Backus, Richard H.; and Gibbs, Robert H., Jr. Carcharinus floridanus, the silky shark, a synonym of C. falciformis. Gopeia, 1964, no. 2, pp. 369-375, 5 figs., 1964. Gibbs, Robert H., Jr. Family Astronesthidae. In Fishes of the western North Atlantic. Sears Found. Mar. Res., Mem. I, part 4, pp. 311-350, 15 figs., 1964. . Family Idiacanthidae. In Fishes of the western North Atlantic. Sears Found. Mar. Res., Mem. I, part 4, pp. 512-522, 4 figs., 1964. Humphrey, Philip S. The swallows. In Song and garden birds of North America, by Alexander Wetmore and other ornithologists, National Geographic Society, Washington, pp. 121-130, 1964. Jenkins, Robert E., and Lachner, Ernest A. The distribution and dispersal of the cyprinid fishes of the subgenus Nocomis (genus Hybopsis) in the central Atlantic states. Abstr. Pap. Pres. 44th Ann. Meet. Amer. Soc. Ichthy. and Herp., p. 20, 1964. Johnson, David H. Mammals of the Arnhem Land expedition. In Records of the American-Australian scientific expedition to Arn- hem Land, vol. 4 (zoology), pp. 427-515, pis. 3-16, October 1964. Jones, J. Knox, Jr., and Johnson, David H. Synopsis of the lago- morphs and rodents of Korea. Univ. Kansas Publ., Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 16, no. 2, pp. 357-407, February 12, 1965. Lachner, Ernest A., and Jenkins, Robert E. New cyprinid fishes (genus Hybopsis, subgenus Nocomis) of eastern United States. Abstr. Pap. pres. 44th Ann. Meet. Amer. Soc. Ichthy. and Herp., p. 23, 1964. Morrow, James E., Jr., and Gibbs, Robert H., Jr. Family Melano- stomiatidae. In Fishes of the western North Atlantic. Sears Found. Mar. Res., Mem. I, part 4, pp. 351-511, 45 figs., 1964. Peters, James A. Dictionary of herpetology. Hafner Publ. Co., New York and London, pp. xi and 292, 30 figs., 1964. . The lizard genus Ameiva in Ecuador. Bull. Southern California Acad. Sci., vol. 63, part 3, pp. 57-67, 1964. Supplemental notes on snakes of the subfamily Dipsadinae (Reptilia: Colubridae). Beitr. zur Neotropischen Fauna, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 45-50, 1964. Schultz, Leonard P. Three new species of frogfishes from the Indian and Pacific oceans with notes on other species (family Antennariidae) . Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 116, no. 3500, pp. 171-182, pis. 1-3, September 1, 1964. . Family Sternoptychidae. In Fishes of the western North Atlantic. Sears Found. Mar. Res., Mem. I, part 4, pp. 241-273, 1964. 58 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Short, Lester L., Jr., and Banks, R. G. Louisiana waterthrush in Baja California. Condor, vol. 67, p. 188, 1965. Slud, Paul. The birds of Costa Rica. Distribution and ecology. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 128, pp. 1-430, 3 maps, 1964. — ■ . [Review]. Seasonal activity and ecology of the avifauna of an American equatorial cloud forest, by Alden H. Miller. Auk, vol. 81, pp. 444-446, 1964. Springer, Victor G. A revision of the carcharhinid shark genera Scoliodon, Loxodon, and Rhizoprionodon. Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 115, no. 3493, pp. 559-632, 1964. . [Review]. Revised classification of the blennioid fishes of the American family Chaenopsidae, by J. S. Stephens, Jr. Copeia, 1964, no. 3, pp. 591-593, 1964. and Garrick, J. A. F. A survey of vertebral numbers in sharks. Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 116, no. 3496, pp. 73-96, 1964. and Rosenblatt, Richard H. A new blennioid fish of the genus Labrisomus from Ecuador, with notes on the Caribbean species L. filamentosus. Copeia, 1965, no. 1, pp. 25-27, 1965. Taylor, William R. Comment on the proposed rejection of Curimata Walbaum, 1792. Bull. Zool. Nomencl., vol. 21, pp. 260-261, 1964. . Fishes of Arnhem Land. In Records of the American- Australian scientific expedition to Arnhem Land, vol. 4 (zoology), pp. 45-307, 73 figs., October 1964. Watson, George E. Preliminary Smithsonian identification man- ual: seabirds of the tropical Atlantic Ocean. Smithsonian Insti- tution, xxvii -f- 108 pp., 12 pis., 1965. Weitzman, Stanley H. One new species and two redescriptions of catfishes of the South American callichthyid genus Corydoras. Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 116, no. 3498, pp. 115-126, 1964. . Fishes of subfamilies Lebiasininae and Erythrininae with special reference to subtribe Mannostomina. Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 116, no. 3499, pp. 127-170, 1964. Wetmore, Alexander, with other ornithologists. Song and garden birds of North America. National Geographic Society, Washing- ton, pp. 1-400, 550 illus., 1964. . Aves. In New Paris No. 4: A Pleistocene cave deposit in Bedford County, Pennsylvania, John E. Guilday, Paul S. Martin, and Allen D. McCrady. Bull. Nat. Speleol. Soc, vol. 26, p. 134, October 1964. . Screamer. In A new dictionary of birds, ed. Sir A. Lans- borough Thomson. Nelson, London, pp. 718-719, 1 fig., 1964. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS INVERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY 59 -. Seriema. In A new dictionary of birds, ed. Sir A. Lans- borough Thomson. Nelson, London, p. 724, 1964. . Tody. In A new dictionary of birds, ed. Sir A. Lansborough Thomson. Nelson, London, pp. 824-825, 1 fig., 1964. . Aves. In L. S. B. Leakey, Olduvai gorge 1951-61, vol. 1, pp. 71-72, 1965. INVERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY Invertebrate animals are still so little known with respect to their kinds and diversity, their distributions, and the mechanisms that control these distributions, that much research in invertebrate zoology is necessarily fundamental and exploratory. It is still preoccupied with "alpha" taxonomy — the exploratory phases of systematics. The range of this research exploration extends from the Antarctic to the Arctic and includes all of the oceans of the world. Some of the activities de- scribed below illustrate the nature of the department's research and predict the far-reaching conclusions which someday may follow these preliminary studies. The International Indian Ocean Expedition, concluded this year, has provided a unique opportunity for American zoologists to cooperate in a full-time biological effort in one of the least known areas of the world. Many members of the department have participated. Joseph Rose- water completed a study of the tridacnid clams of the Indo-Pacific, in part based upon the collections made during participation in Te Vega Cruise A and earlier observations made at Eniwetok Atoll. He is now considering the littorinid snails of the Indo-Pacific region, using these same collections and others from western Malaysia, Thailand, and the islands south of Sumatra. Charles E. Cutress, Jr., who collected exten- sively along the Indian coast in 1963, has been describing certain of the sea anemones. Louis S. Kornicker, aboard Te Vega for Cruise B during early 1964, collected from Ceylon to the Maldive Islands. He returned in Novem- ber and December to cruise the East African coast and the coral reefs of the western Indian Ocean aboard Anton Bruun on Cruise 9. The myodocopid ostracods he obtained will provide the nucleus for study of these little-known forms in the Indian Ocean. To provide com- parative materials for his studies, Kornicker also collected from the Bahamas and other areas from which few reference materials exist in most museum collections. Museum technician T. Peter Lowe made important and significant collections of deep-water corals from south of the Malagasy Republic. 60 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY These specimens provide an index to the northern boundary of the Southern Ocean fauna under study by Donald F. Squires. Although temperatures at great depths in the ocean are quite low, there appears to be a clear-cut faunal demarcation between a "deep-water tropical fauna" and the deep-water corals of the Southern Ocean. Lowe also collected reef corals from some of the more southerly coral reefs during stops at ports in the Malagasy Republic. Among the many intriguing studies of marine invertebrates are those concerned with planktonic faunas, for these organisms live throughout their lives in a medium in motion and therefore are dynamic both spatially and temporally. Thomas E. Bowman, in his analysis of the planktonic copepod crustaceans, has been considering the striking zona- tion of species which occurs in an inshore-offshore progression. The zones appear to represent a series of communities which replace each other from shallow neritic to deeper oceanic waters. Each of these faunas inhabits water masses having potentially definable physical characteristics; therefore, they are indicators of these water bodies. Studies made on the distribution of two species of a genus of planktonic shrimp indicate that these striking and easily identifiable forms could be used for very rapid identification of some of these water bodies. The results of this study have potential importance in understanding the ecological basis of the fisheries off the southeastern coast of the United States. Incidental to this research, Bowman has been con- sidering the distribution of certain aquatic cave isopods from various regions of the Americas, and he presented a paper on the evolution of these forms to the Society of Systematic Zoology. Western Atlantic stomatopods, which may become important as a food source, were subjected to further study by Raymond B. Manning, who is concluding his monographic treatment of this group. An ex- tension of these studies to the eastern Atlantic was made possible by his participation, both this year and last year, in cruises to the Gulf of Guinea aboard the University of Miami research vessel Pillsbury. His studies include investigations of the planktonic larvae of the stomato- pods. In conjunction with his field-based studies, Manning completed a revision of the Australian and New Zealand stomatopods. Other studies of the invertebrates of the eastern United States region were carried out by Meredith L. Jones, Marian H. Pettibone, and W. Duane Hope. Jones, who continues his long-range program of research upon the tropical polychaete faunas, engaged in field work in the area of Margarita Island, Venezuela, and off Key West, Fla. He also com- pleted an analysis of the spatial distribution of some marine benthic invertebrates in San Francisco Bay, Calif. Such an analysis, made Specimens lent for study by other scientists in the United States and abroad are either sealed in cans or placed in plastic bags before being boxed. Below: Well-illuminated, accessible shelves for storage of wet collections of marine invertebrates have white vinyl lining to increase effective illumination at all levels. (See p. 88.) In Tonga, members of the biology class of Tonga College were recruited by Curator Harald Rehder to collect mollusks from the flat behind the raised Ha'ateiho Reef on Tongatapu. Below: In the laboratory, Rehder makes initial identifications of mollusks collected in the Pacific islands. (See p. 62.) RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS INVERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY 61 upon collections taken with a special sampling device, permits a better understanding of the community structure of small organisms and may ultimately give us insight into some aspects of their behavior, but it can be carried out only in those areas where the organisms are sufficiently well known to permit identifications. It is toward this higher level of understanding that research such as that of Pettibone is directed. She continues her detailed studies of the polychaetes of the New England region, extending from Nova Scotia south to Cape Hatteras, and is preparing another in her series of mono- graphs on this fauna. Polychaete worms, which constitute a large pro- portion, by mass, of animals in many marine environments, are poorly known and difficult to study. It is only through long-range projects resulting in monographic taxonomic treatments for the identification of these animals that other biological studies can progress. Revisional studies are often possible only after long experience with the fauna of a region or with a smaller group of organisms with which one has had vast experience. The summary of a lifetime of work with such a group is the objective of research associate Waldo L. Schmitt, who is studying the New World species of pinnotherid crabs. This study, in which Schmitt brings together what is known of the diversity and distribution of these crabs, will permit a better understanding of their position in the evolution of the Crustacea and make possible mean- ingful studies of their ecology and their role in the marine environment. The work of systematics often extends beyond descriptive analyses of species. W. Duane Hope has been considering seasonal distribution of marine nematode worms in the Woods Hole, Mass., region. The nema- tode fauna reflects the variable seasonal environments, as well as local, stable habitats which might be due to a single aberrant ecological parameter, such as the sediment type. A description of a fauna such as the nematodes, in this region, requires, therefore, a knowledge of distribution mechanisms, as well as of the methods by which the indi- vidual species may be recognized. This program of research has been underway since September, when Hope joined the departmental staff, and is being conducted in cooperation with the Systematics-Ecology Program of the Marine Biological Laboratory of Woods Hole. J. Laurens Barnard, whose association with the Smithsonian began in August, has continued his studies of the benthic amphipods of the California coast, particularly those of the intertidal zone from Monterey Bay, Calif., to Bahia de los Angeles in Baja California. Upon comple- tion of this study, which is expected early next year, Barnard will commence investigations of the benthic Antarctic amphipods. Broad-scale zoogeographic studies such as that to be commenced by Barnard are already underway in the Antarctic region, or more 789-427—66 11 62 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY properly in the Southern Ocean (the southern portions of the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans), by David L. Pawson and Donald F. Squires. Pawson has been concerned with the systematics and distri- bution of holothuroids (sea cucumbers) and echinoids (sea urchins), particularly those of the New Zealand and Australian regions. Squires' long-range program on Southern Ocean corals likewise has been con- centrated in the above regions. But both investigators expect to ex- tend their area of interest into the Southern Pacific, which is virtually unknown biologically. The emphasis on the New Zealand and Aus- tralian regions is not accidental, for New Zealand lies athwart the boundary between the subtropical and sub-Antarctic faunas, and the relationship between the faunas of New Zealand and those of the Antarctic sheds light on the paths of migration of these faunas and on their history. It is well known that faunas are most diverse toward the center of their distribution but become attenuated or less diverse near the periph- ery. Only the more hardy species can live in the often marginal ecological conditions which exist in peripheral regions. The applica- tion of this principle to the molluscan faunas of the marginal tropical Pacific areas is the subject of research by Harald A. Rehder. The immensely diverse molluscan faunas found in the tropical coral reefs of the Pacific Ocean become less diverse in the island groups on the edge of the coral-reef area. The diminution of these faunas reflects their isolation, as well as their more severe environments; knowledge of the diversity and composition of the faunas is essential for an under- standing of the causes of such diminution. To accumulate the data for his studies, Rehder spent four months in southeastern Polynesia and supervises a continuing program of field collection. Although the major interest of the department is in the marine forms of life, there has been some activity toward better understanding of freshwater and terrestrial species. Horton H. Hobbs, Jr., who has been engaged in studies of the evolutionary history of crayfish and their commensal entocytherid ostracods, has engaged in a project on the freshwater and terrestrial decapods of the Antillean Islands. A report being prepared jointly with Fenner A. Chace, Jr., deals with the fauna of Dominica, surveyed as a part of the Bredin-Archbold-Smithsonian biological survey of Dominica. This work is a continuation of studies of the North American crayfishes and those of the Mexican region which have doubled the known species of these important organisms, used frequently in experimental and behavioral studies. In connection with his taxonomic studies, Hobbs conducted field work in the south- eastern United States, particularly in Louisiana. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS INVERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY 63 Joseph P. E. Morrison, who continues work upon brackish-water mollusks, also collected in the southeastern United States and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Mrs. Mildred Stratton Wilson, who has been mono- graphing the freshwater calanoid copepod crustaceans of North Amer- ica, in an attempt to develop a geographic and physiographic index to the faunal composition of individual bodies of water, had her work delayed as a result of damage to her laboratory and library in the Alaskan earthquake of 1964. Publications by the Staff July 1964 through June 1965 Bowman, Thomas E. Mysidopsis almyra, a new estuarine mysid crus- tacean from Louisiana and Florida. Tulane Studies in Zool., vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 15-18, 1964. . Antrolana lira, a new genus and species of troglobitic cirolanid isopod from Madison Cave, Virginia. Internat. Journ. Speleol., vol. 1, parts 1-2, pp. 229-236, pis. 50-57, 1964. . An arostrate population of the copepod Acartia lilljeborgii Giesbrecht (Calanoida: Acartiidae) from St. Lucia, West Indies. Crustaceana, vol. 8, part 2, pp. 149-152, 1965. -. A bloom of the planktonic blue-green alga, Trichodesmium crythraeum, in the Tonga Islands. Limnology and Oceanography, vol. 10, pp. 291-293, 1965. Clark, Ailsa M. On the identity of Clypeaster rosaceus (Linnaeus). . . . Bull. Zool. Nomencl., vol. 21, pp. 297-302, 1964. Hobbs, Horton H., Jr. A new cave-dwelling crayfish from the Green- brier drainage system, West Virginia (Decapoda, Astacidae). Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 77, pp. 189-194, 10 figs., 1964. and Bedinger, M. S. A new troglobitic crayfish of the genus Cambarus (Decapoda, Astacidae) from Arkansas with a note on the range of Cambarus cryptodytes Hobbs. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washing- ton, vol. 77, pp. 9-15, 11 figs., 1964. and Villalobos, Alejandro. Los cambarinos de Cuba. Ann. Inst. Biol. Univ. Nac. Mexico, vol. 34, nos. 1-2, pp. 307-366, 5 maps, 50 figs., 1964. Kornicker, Louis S. A seasonal study of living Ostracoda in a Texas bay adjoining the Gulf of Mexico. In Publ. Zool. Stat. Naples, 1965, vol. 33, suppl., pp. 45-60, 1965. . Ecology of Ostracoda in the northwestern part of the Great Bahama Bank. In Publ. Zool. Stat. Naples, 1965, vol. 33, suppl., pp. 345-360, 1965. 64 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Kornicker, Louis S. and King, Charles E. A new species of lumi- nescent Ostracoda from Jamaica, West Indies. Micropaleontology, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 105-110, 1965. Northcote, T. G.; Wilson, Mildred S.; and Hurn, D. R. Some characteristics of Nitinat Lake, an inlet on Vancouver Island, British Columbia. Journ. Fish. Res. Board Canada, vol. 21, no. 5, pp. 1069-1081, 3 figs., September 1964. Pawson, D. L. The Holothuroidea collected by the Royal Society expedition to southern Chile, 1958-1959. Pacific Sci., vol. 18, no. 4, pp. 453-470, 1964. . The echinoid genus Caenopedina in New Zealand. Trans. Roy. Soc. New Zealand (zool.), vol. 5, no. 5, pp. 63-66, 1 pi., 5 figs., 1964. . A new cidaroid from New Zealand waters. Trans. Roy. Soc. New Zealand (zool.), vol. 5, no. 6, pp. 67-70, 1 pi., 4 figs., 1964. . New sea-cucumbers from New Zealand waters. Rec. Do- minion Mus. Wellington, vol. 5, no. 11, pp. 75-82, 19 figs., 1965. . Some echinozoans from north of New Zealand. Trans. Roy. Soc. New Zealand (zool.), vol. 5, no. 15, pp. 197-224, 1965. and Fell, H. Barraclough. A revised classification of the dendrochirote holothurians. Breviora, no. 214, pp. 1-7, 1965. Rehder, Harald A. A further note on Homalocantha. Hawaiian Shell News, vol. 12, no. 10, p. 2, 1964. Rosewater, Joseph. The family Tridacnidae in the Indo-Pacific. Indo-Pacific Mollusca, vol. 1, no. 6, pp. 347-396, pis. 263-293, 1965. Squires, Donald F. Biological results of the Chatham Islands 1954 ex- pedition. Part 6. Scleractinia. New Zealand Dept. Sci. and Industr. Res. Bull., vol. 139, no. 6, 29 pp., 4 pis., 1964. . Deep water corals as fish food. Nature, vol. 203, no. 4995, pp. 663-664, 1964. . Fossil coral thickets in Wairarapa, New Zealand. Journ. Paleont., vol. 38, no. 5, pp. 904-915, pis. 147-148, 1964. . New stony corals (Scleractinia) from northeastern New Zea- land. Rec. Auckland Inst, and Mus., vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 1-9, 1 pi., 1964. . The Southern Ocean: A potential for coral studies. Ann. Rep. Smithsonian Inst., 1963, pp. 447-459, 4 pis., 1964. . A new species of Pliobothrus, a hydrocoral, from the Oli- gocene of New Zealand. Trans. Roy. Soc. New Zealand (geol.), vol. 3, no. 3, pp. 23-25, pi. 1, 1965. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS ENTOMOLOGY 65 Squires, Donald F. Neoplasia in a coral? Science, vol. 148, no. 3669, pp. 503-505, 1965. Stevens, Belle A., and Chace, Fenner A., Jr. The mesopelagic caridean shrimp Notostomusjaponicus Bate in the northeastern Pacific. Crustaceana, vol. 8, part 3, pp. 277-284, 4 figs., May 1965. ENTOMOLOGY Throughout the department there has been marked activity in the field and in basic research this year. Paul J. Spangler completed his study of Peruvian water beetles for the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Both larvae and adults were included in this work, which included the description of two new genera and 12 new species, all represented by 129 illustrations. Spangler also continued his studies toward a revision of the important water-beetle genus Tropi- sternas. Members of this Western Hemisphere genus have been shown to be intermediate hosts of several important internal parasites, notably a tapeworm cysticercoid and the thorny-headed worm, both affecting swine in Puerto Rico. Certain species are implicated in the trans- mission of botulism to waterfowl. Other species of Tropisternus are host to many species of fungi being studied by mycologists. One of the most significant of Spangler's accomplishments was his discovery of the snail Planorbina glabrata (Say) — the intermediate host of the principal helminthic diseases of man, schistosomiaisis — on the island of Dominica while he was participating in the Bredin-Archbold-Smith- sonian biological survey of Dominica. Oscar L. Gartwright is continuing his research on the scarab-beetle genus Ataenius, which consists of about 300 described species; he spent two months studying types in the British Museum (Natural History) and the Museum d'Histoire naturelle, Paris. Research associate Doris H. Blake continued her study of the Chrys- omelidae of the Western Hemisphere. She completed two papers and is presently revising the genus Glyptoscelis. Mrs. Blake devoted five weeks to research at the Science Museum, Institute of Jamaica, and on several field trips there she acquired new material for the national collection. Richard C. Froeschner completed a revision of the cactus plant bugs (family Miridae) which makes available names to be used in ecological studies of insects important to the culture and control of cacti. Clarification of the nomenclature of the burrower bugs (Cyd- nidae) was accomplished by the fixation of correct names. 66 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Research associate Carl J. Drake continued his investigations of the lacebugs (Tingidae) of Madagascar, the Congo, and the Americas, but the publication of his 634-page catalog, Lacebugs of the World, is the most significant contribution to the knowledge of this group of insects that has ever appeared and is the culmination of a lifetime of research and investigation. [Active to the last, Carl J. Drake died October 2, 1965.] Donald R. Davis conducted biological investigations of yucca and agave moths, emphasizing differences in life histories, host specificity, and other factors. His published work will be replete with illustrations demonstrating his findings. Davis is also engaged in a study of the New World Incurvariidae, small moths belonging to the superfamily Tineoidea. In April 1965 he joined the Bredin-Archbold-Smithsonian biological survey of Dominica for field work which will emphasize investigations of the Tineoidea. W. Donald Duckworth has made significant progress with his research on the New World Stenomidae. Particularly important in this con- nection have been the field investigations carried on in El Salvador, Costa Rica, and Panama. These investigations have resulted in the accumulation of much material which will contribute to our knowledge of the ecology and zoogeography of the group. Further advances in the research on the Stenomidae were made by his study of the extensive collections of typical and ordinary material at the British Museum (Natural History); also the type material from the Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna. William D. Field continued his research on the butterflies of the genera Thecla and Vanessa and initiated studies of the butterflies and larger moths of Dominica. The latter project will include the moth families Arctiidae, Ctenuchidae, and Sphingidae. J. F. Gates Clarke furthered his long-term project of elucidating the Meyrick types of Micro lepidoptera. Volume 5 of this series appeared in March 1965. The solutions to several problems and the revision of several groups of Neotropical Microlepidoptera have been accom- plished. The research on the moths of this area is another long-term project greatly facilitated by a grant from the National Science Founda- tion. Concurrently, Clarke is continuing research on the Micro- lepidoptera of Rapa, Micronesia, and other Pacific Islands. Oliver S. Flint, Jr., in his research on the Trichoptera (caddisflies) of the Nearctic and Neotropical regions, has concentrated on those of the West Indies, with the result that major papers on the Trichoptera of Jamaica and the Lesser Antilles are nearly complete. Research associate Thomas E. Snyder continued work on the second supplement to his notable "Annotated, Subject-Heading Bibliography of the Termites." RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS ENTOMOLOGY 67 Research associate K. C. Emerson completed several projects on the taxonomy of the Mallophaga or biting lice. In the course of his investigations he has studied major collections of lice from birds from Uruguay, New Guinea, the Congo, and the Pacific Ocean. Ralph E. Crabill, Jr., is continuing several projects, mostly begun several years ago. Among them are a monograph of the New Zealand chilopods, a revision of the genus Strigamia, and a revision of the Mecistocephalidae. He is also preparing several articles on the dolicho- cephalic Geophilomorpha. Work on two projects, a monograph and a checklist of North American Chilopoda, is suspended because of the unavailability of certain type specimens. From May 18 to September 8, 1964, Crabill studied critical collections in London, Munich, Vienna, Hamburg, and Frankfurt. In order to augment our material, Crabill undertook several field trips in north, central, and southern Germany and in the Tirol and Vorarlberg areas of Austria. Publications by the Staff July 1964 through June 1965 Blake, Doris H. Twelve new species of chrysomelid beetles from the West Indies (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae). Amer. Mus. Novit., no. 2217, pp. 1-13, 14 figs., March 1965. Carriker, M. A., Jr. Mallophaga de Mexico y Centro America (Insecta). Rev. Soc. Mexicana Hist. Nat., vol. 24, pp. 49-67, 18 figs., December 1963. — . On the genera "Cinconiphilus" and " Ardeiphilus" with descrip- tions of six new species (Mallophaga, Menoponidae). Rev. Brasi- leira Biol., vol. 24, pp. 95-108, 27 figs., June 1964. Cartwright, O. L. Lectotype designations and new synonymy in the genus Ataenius (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae). Coleopterists' Bull., vol. 18, pp. 101-104, December 1964. Clarke, J. F. Gates. A new genus and species from the Juan Fernan- dez Islands (Lepidoptera: Blastodacnidae). Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash- ington, vol. 77, pp. 125-126, June 1964. -. Neotropical Microlepidoptera, VI. Genera Orsotricha Mey- rick and Palinorsa Meyrick (Gelechiidae, Oecophoridae). Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 116, no. 3502, pp. 197-204, 4 figs., 1 pi., November 1964. . Catalogue of the type specimens of Microlepidoptera in the British Museum (Natural History) described by Edward Meyrick, vol. 5, pp. 1-581, 283 pis., March 1965. 68 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Grabill, Ralph E., Jr. A revised interpretation of the primitive mecistocephalid genus, Arrup, with redescription of its type-species. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 77, pp. 161-170, October 1964. . Untersuchung iiber die Charaktere und Verwandtschaft von Turkophilus. Opuscula Zoologica, nr. 76, pp. 1-6, December 1964. Drake, Carl J. The Australian genus Euaulana Drake (Hemiptera: Tingidae). Proc. Roy. Soc. Queensland, vol. 75, pp. 37-38, 1 fig., October 1964. and Catley, A. An unreported gall-producing lacebug in New Guinea (Papua) (Hemiptera: Tingidae). Pacific Insects, vol. 6, pp. 229-230, 4 figs., August 1964. ■ and Herring, Jon L. The genus Nidicola (Hemiptera: Antho- coridae). Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 77, pp. 53-64, 5 figs., June 1964. and Hill, B. G. Some Ethiopian lacebugs (Hemiptera: Tingidae). Great Basin Naturalist, vol. 24, pp. 83-92, 3 figs., December 1964. and Quadri, M. A new species of lacebug from Pakistan (Hemiptera: Tingidae). Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 77, pp. 247-250, 1 fig., December 1964. and Ruhoff, Florence A. Genus Plerochila (Hemiptera: Heteroptera, family Tingidae). Institut Pares Nat. du Congo et Rwanda, fasc. 44, pp. 101-113, 3 figs., December 1964. Lacebugs of the world: a catalog (Hemiptera: Tingidae). U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 243, pp. 1-634, 57 pis., March 1965. Duckworth, W. D. Neotropical Microlepidoptera, IV. A new genus of Stenomidae with descriptions of four new species (Lepidoptera: Gelechioidea). Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 116, no. 3497, pp. 97-114, 8 figs., September 1964. . North American Stenomidae (Lepidoptera: Gelechioidea). Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 116, no. 3495, pp. 23-72, October 1964. North American moths of the genus Swammerdamia (Lepi- doptera: Yponomeutidae) . Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 116, no. 3507, pp. 549-556, 3 figs., May 1965. Emerson, K. C. A new species of Mallophaga from Natal. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 13, vol. 6, no. 72, pp. 717-718, 3 figs., Decem- ber 1963. . A new species of Mallophaga from the Philippine Islands. Journ. Kansas Ent. Soc, vol. 38, pp. 68-69, 4 figs., January 1965. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS BOTANY 69 Emerson, K. G. The Vernon L. Kellogg Mallophaga type material in the Cornell University collection. Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington, vol. 67, pp. 46-50, April 1965. and Stojanovich, C. J. A new species of Mallophaga from the Mikado pheasant. Ent. News, vol. 75, pp. 256-258, 4 figs., December 1964. Flint, Oliver S., Jr. The caddisflies (Trichoptera) of Puerto Rico. Univ. Puerto Rico Agr. Exp. Sta. Techn. Pap. 40, pp. 1-80, 19 figs., December 1964. Froeschner, Richard C. Larinocerus balius, a new genus and new species of plant bug from the United States (Hemiptera: Miridae). Ent. News, vol. 76, pp. 85-89, 1 fig., April 1965. BOTANY The vast forests, plains, tablelands, and islands of the New World tropics are a reservoir of countless species of plants still to be understood and described. For over 75 years botanists of the U.S. National Herbarium have spent a large share of their research time exploring for plants in these regions and in making them understood to the scientific community through their publications. This tradition of specialization in the New World tropics has con- tinued into the present time. During the past year Lyman B. Smith spent six months collecting plants in Santa Catarina and adjoining States of Brazil in preparation for a flora of the former area. This work is being pursued in collaboration with Brazilian botanists Padre Raulino Reitz and Roberto M. Klein of the Herbario "Barbosa Rodrigues," Itajai, Santa Catarina. The grasslands of Brazil's Mato Grosso and other parts of the planalto were explored by Thomas R. Soderstrom in association with his studies on the grasses of Brazil. Soderstrom accompanied botanists of the New York Botanical Garden and first collected plants around Brasilia, an area surprisingly unknown botanically. Later, poorly known parts of the States of Mato Grosso and Goias were visited, including a wide variety of habitats on the Serra do Caiapo which support a rich and varied flora and made for collections of excitingly different plants. Antillean plants were sampled by Dan H. Nicolson, who spent six weeks on Dominica in conjunction with the Bredin-Archbold-Smithsonian biological survey of that Carib- bean island. Keen interest has prompted the Smithsonian Institution to participate actively in an international program for the preparation of a "Flora Neotropica." To this end, research associate Jose Cuatrecasas was 70 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY appointed by the "Organization for a Flora Neotropica" as one of two scientific directors. For his work with the Organization, the Smith- sonian has given him laboratory and office space to help him carry out his responsibilities. Besides continuing his own investigations of New World plants, Cuatrecasas will act as liaison officer, especially with Latin American botanists, to stimulate research clarifying the taxonomic complexities occurring in the Western Hemisphere tropics. Production of a tropical flora for the New World is a Herculean undertaking because of the great number of species, the shortage of sufficiently trained botanists, and the still difficult access to many outlying regions. It will be the labor of generations of botanists; the present hope is to lay a sound foundation for the research of years to come. A smaller, but nonetheless significant, project also begun this year is the production of a flora for the Island of Dominica. Actually, this island falls within the range of the "Flora Neotropica," of which the information set forth will form a fragment. The scientific aspects of this venture are under the direction of Dan H. Nicolson, who is being aided by fellow Smithsonian scientists as well as those from other botanical institutions in the United States and abroad. Mason E. Hale, Jr., carried his research on the cosmopolitan lichen genus Parmelia to the Far East this past year under the auspices of the National Science Foundation and the Government of Japan. He made extensive general collections of lichens in Hawaii, Sabah, Sarawak, the Philippines, and Japan; and through his work the Museum will have the world's most extensive Malaysian and Philippine lichen collections. Hale was based at the National Science Museum in Tokyo for the greater part of his studies abroad, collaborating there with Syo Kurokawa. As the facts accumulated by intensive study of plants become over- powering in their numbers and increasingly more difficult to consult, it becomes evident that means must be found for the rapid storage and retrieval of these data so that they can conveniently be used for further investigations. Presently, searches for data are subject to the vagaries of abstracting and indexing journals and to human shortcomings, and therefore a large body of pertinent data relative to current research projects might easily be overlooked. Machine storing of data does not automatically confer accuracy or reliability, since the system is only as good as the confirmed data stored in it; but the data are always re- trievable in their entirety, and automatic data processing, moreover, provides ways objectively to manipulate facts in a manner not pre- viously possible. Botanists are realizing that data processing devices and computers may be important tools in the treatment of botanical facts; thus, David RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS BOTANY 71 B. Lellinger has completed research on the generic relationships of the fern subfamily Adiantoideae, a taxon of 45 genera. The study was the first of its kind to use a large digital computer to apply neo-typologi- cal methods to evolutionary classification. The computer employed models of character-state distributions, and chose those characters which were most probably important to an evolutionary classification of the taxa in Adiantoideae. Machine-made computations enabled Lellinger to construct dendrograms illustrating the most probable evolution of the genera. Among the resultant taxonomic conclusions which he drew were the division of the subfamily into six tribes and the segrega- tion of several genera. These separations were made on the basis of probability, rather than intuition. The computer proved to be a val- uable adjunct to, but not a replacement for, conventional taxonomic methods. In taxonomic studies it is important to consider all evidence which may assist in elucidating problems in plant classification and evolution and to be concerned with all parts of the plant body, with the influence of environment, and with pertinent chemical processes. Accordingly, it is noteworthy that Richard H. Eyde is continuing his investigations into the anatomy and morphology of the genus Corokia which has been allied to the Cornaceae in most taxonomic treatments. Eyde's data, based partially on specimens of Corokia gathered by Smithsonian ento- mologist J. F. Gates Clarke from the remote South Pacific island of Rapa, permit the confident exclusion of the genus from Cornaceae. Research on the cytology and pollen morphology of Campanula ameri- cana has been completed by Stanwyn G. Shetler. He is preparing a paper in collaboration with James Matthews of the University of North Carolina on the taxonomic affinities of this species within the genus Campanula. Along a similar vein, Wallace R. Ernst began a cytotax- onomic survey of selected West Indian plants. This will be the first study of its kind on many of these tropical plants. Although associated studies such as those described above may never completely replace traditional morphological taxonomic research, they provide new win- dows through which plant systematics can be viewed, and they present other methods of approach to taxonomic problems. Publications by the Staff July 7964 through June 7965 Ayensu, Edward S., and Stern, William L. Systematic anatomy and ontogeny of the stem in Passifloraceae. Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb., vol. 34, part 3, pp. 45-73, August 1964. 72 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Conger, Paul S. A new species of marine pennate diatom from Hono- lulu Harbor. Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 146, no. 7, pp. 1-5, 10 figs., October 1964. Cuatregasas, Jose. Cacao and its allies — a taxonomic revision of the genus Theobroma. Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb., vol. 35, part 6, pp. 379- 614, 11 maps, 12 pis., 44 figs., August 1964. . Miscelanea sobre flora neotropica I. Ciencia (Mexico), vol. 23, pp. 137-151, 4 figs., October 1964. Studies on Andean Compositae VI. Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash- ington, vol. 77, pp. 127-158, 8 figs., October 1964. Theobroma. In A. Robyns, Sterculiaceae, Flora of Panama. Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard., vol. 51, pp. 89-97, November 1964. Culberson, William L., and Hale, Mason E., Jr. Pyxine caesio- pruinosa in the United States. Bryologist, vol. 68, no. 1, pp. 113- 116, 1965. Ernst, Wallace R. The genus Eschscholzia in the South Coast Ranges of California. Madrono, vol. 17, no. 8, pp. 281-294, 4 figs., October 1964. Eusebio, Mario A., and Stern, William L. Preservation of herbarium specimens in the humid tropics. Philippine Agriculturist, vol. 48, pp. 16-20, 1964. Eyde, Richard H. Inferior ovary and generic affinities of Garrya. Amer. Journ. Bot., vol. 51, no. 10, pp. 1083-1092, November- December 1964. Hale, Mason E., Jr. The Parmelia conspersa group in North America and Europe. Bryologist, vol. 67, no. 4, pp. 462-473, 1964. . A monograph of Parmelia subgenus Amphigymnia. Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb., vol. 36, part 5, pp. 193-358, April 1965. and Kurokawa, Syo. Studies on Parmelia subgenus Parmelia. Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb., vol. 36, part 4, pp. 121-191, August 1964. Leonard, E. C, and Smith, Lyman B. Sanchezia and related American Acanthaceae. Rhodora, vol. 66, no. 768, pp. 313-343, 5 figs., January 1965. Morton, C. V. The nomenclature of a Madagascarian Platycerium. Baileya, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 36-38, June 1964. ■ . New combinations in Lycopodium. Amer. Fern Journ., vol. 54, no. 2, pp. 71-73, June 1964. A new Jamaican Cyathea. Amer. Fern Journ., vol. 55, no. 1, pp. 30-32, March 1965. Nicolson, Dan H. Proposal to conserve the generic name Montri- chardia Criiger (1854) against Pleurospa Rafinesque (1838). Regn. Veg., vol. 34, p. 55, 1964. The scrubby vegetation of the Brazilian planalto provides a variety of plant species new to science. Top left: A native collector gathers material of a leguminous shrub for preservation. Right: Members of a Smithsonian-New York Botanical Garden expedition arrange newly collected plants in papers prior to drying. Below: An important step in successful plant collecting in the humid tropics is the prevention of specimen deterioration through rapid drying. Plant presses are filled and arranged over drying racks, heated by gasoline stoves placed under them. Hot air passing through the presses carries off the moisture of the succulent plant parts. (See p. 69.) Modern stacks of fireproof and pest- proof cabinets are used at the Lamont Street quarters of the department of entomology. Below: Fragile speci- mens are restored by introducing a relaxing agent into the vial. Tri- sodium phosphate is used on such arthropods as ticks, millipedes, and spiders. (See p. 89.) RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS BOTANY 73 . Collecting Araceae. Regn. Veg., vol. 39, pp. 123-126, 1965. Robinson, Harold E. A small collection of bryophytes from upper Assam, India. Journ. Hattori Bot. Lab., no. 27, pp. 124-130, 1964. . A synopsis of the Dolichopodidae (Diptera) of the south- eastern United States and adjacent regions. Misc. Publ. Ent. Soc. Amer., vol. 4, no. 4, pp. 103-192, 1964. . Two new genera of Dolichopodidae from Mexico (Diptera). Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington, vol. 66, no. 4, pp. 245-252, 1964. . New taxa and new records of bryophytes from Mexico and Central America. Bryologist, vol. 67, no. 4, pp. 446-458, 1964. . Notes on Leucobryaceae in Central America. Bryologist, vol. 68, no. 1, pp. 89-93, 1965. — . A new species of Plagiochila from Venezuela. Bryologist, vol. 68, no. 1, pp. 93-94, 1965. Discopygiella, a new genus of Dolichopodidae from Mexico (Diptera). Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington, vol. 67, no. 1, pp. 51-55, 1965. and Hermann, Frederick J. Notes on American Grimmias. Bryologist, vol. 67, no. 2, pp. 170-174, 1964. Rudd, Velva E. Nomenclatural problems in the Acacia cornigera complex. Madrono, vol. 17, pp. 198-201, April 1964. Shetler, Stanwyn G. Plants in the arctic-alpine environment. Ann. Rep. Smithsonian Inst, 1963, pp. 473-497, 12 pis., 1964. •. Komarov Botanical Institute, Leningrad. Plant Sci. Bull., vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 1-3, April 1965. Smith, Lyman B. Bromeliadata of the month, no. 8: Abromeitiella. Bromeliana (Greater New York Chapt. Bromel. Soc), vol. 1, no. 8, pp. 2-4, 1 fig., June 1964. ■. Bromeliaceas nuevas o criticas del Peru — I. Publ. Mus. Hist. Nat. "Javier Prado," ser. B (Bot.), no. 16, pp. 1-6, 11 figs., 1964. . Notes on Bromeliaceae, XXII. Phytologia, vol. 10, no. 6, pp. 454-488, 2 pis., October 1964. ■. Vriesea marnier-lapostollci. Bromel. Soc. Bull., vol. 14, no. 6, pp. 108 and 109, 2 figs., 1964. . Letter. Bromeliana (Greater New York Chapt. Bromel. Soc), vol. 1, no 11, pp. 2-5, 10 figs., December 1964. . Letter. Bromeliana (Greater New York Chapt. Bromel. Soc), vol. 2, no. 5, pp. 26-29, 16 figs., May 1965. . Restoration of two Domingan Tillandsias. Bromel. Soc. Bull., vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 3, 4, 2 figs., 1965. 74 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY and Downs, Robert J. Notes on the Solanaceae of southern Brazil. Phytologia, vol. 10, no. 6, pp. 422-453, 12 pis., October 1964. and Downs, Robert J. Kleinodendron, novo genero de euforbiareas. Sellowia, no. 16, pp. 175-1 78, 1 fig., December 1964. and Schubert, Bernice G. Nuevas especies peruanas de la familia Begoniaceae. Publ. Mus. Hist. Nat. "Javier Prado," ser. B (Bot.), no. 17, pp. 1-11, 4 pis., 1964. Soderstrom, Thomas R., and Decker, Henry F. Reederochloa, a new genus of dioecious grasses from Mexico. Brittonia, vol. 16, no. 3, pp. 334-339, 13 figs., July 1964. Stern, William L., and Zamuco, Isidro T. Identity of "tiaong" (Dipterocarpaceae) . Brittonia, vol. 17, pp. 35-46, January 1965. Swallen, Jason R. Species of Ichnanthus in South America related to I. ichnodes (Griseb.) Hitchc. & Chase. Phytologia, vol. 11, no. 2, pp. 73-80, December 1964. . New South American Ichnanthus. Phytologia, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 145-151, December 1964. . Two new genera of Olyreae from South America. Phyto- logia, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 152-154, December 1964. and Tovar, Oscar. The grass genus Dissanthelium. Phyto- logia, vol. 11, no. 6, pp. 361-376, March 1965. Wurdack, John J. Melastomataceas novas do Estado do Parana. Papeis Avulsos Herbario Hatschbach, no. 4, 3 pp. (unnumbered), 1 fig., December 1963. . Melastomataceas nuevas Venezolanas. Bol. Soc. Vene- zolana Cienc. Nat., vol. 25, no. 107, pp. 211-216, 1 fig., June 1964. . Botanical exploration of the Marafion rainforests. Gard. Journ. New York Bot. Gard., vol. 14, no. 4, pp. 143-146, 8 figs., July-August 1964. . A Peruvian bromeliad trove. Bromel. Soc. Bull., vol. 14, no. 6, pp. 110-116, 7 figs., November-December 1964. . Certamen Melastomataceis IX. Phytologia, vol. 11, no. 6, pp. 377-400, March 1965. PALEOBIOLOGY Continuing his studies of the Permian Brachiopoda of West Texas, G. Arthur Cooper, in collaboration with Richard E. Grant of the U.S. Geological Survey, completed a manuscript of 4000 pages. The illus- trations are yet to be made. With J. T. Dutro of the U.S. Geological Survey, Cooper spent a month in New Mexico completing a study of the stratigraphy of the Devonian of that State. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS — PALEOBIOLOGY 75 Investigation of the Lower Devonian fossil flora of eastern Canada by Francis M. Hueber is demonstrating that this is a more diversified flora than previously anticipated. Hueber visited nine European museums and universities to obtain data, for comparison with the Canadian flora, from their collections of Devonian plants from classic European local- ities. He observed a striking similarity of occurrence and composition between the western European and Canadian floras. His paper "New data on the morphology of Devonian Psilopsida and Lycopsida," em- bodying much of the new information gained from his studies of the Canadian Lower Devonian flora, was presented at the Symposium on Earliest Records of Plant Life, during the Tenth International Botanical Congress at Edinburgh, Scotland. Walter H. Adey extended his studies of crustose coralline algae northward from the Gulf of Maine along the coasts of Nova Scotia, the Gulf of St. Lawrence, to Newfoundland and Labrador. His northern- most station was at latitude 60°6'N. A collection of 3010 specimens was assembled. Preparation and examination proceeded as the col- lecting schedule progressed during summer, and was completed during winter and spring with the help of museum aide Mary Cochran. Through a rare opportunity, the sexual development of a species of the coralline Lithothamnium was recorded and worked out. Work has pro- ceeded in plotting of the bathymetric and geographic distribution of the crustose coralline species in the regions where collections were obtained. C. Lewis Gazin is investigating the morphology of the Eocene con- dylarthran mammal Hyopsodus. He completed a study of a "fossil brain" of the middle Eocene primate Smilodectes, the first well-preserved endocranial cast of a Tertiary primate reported from this country. He also completed a study of a series of early Eocene mammalian faunas and their environments in the vicinity of the Rock Springs uplift. Field work last summer by Gazin and Franklin L. Pearce of the laboratory of vertebrate paleontology yielded rare Paleocene mammals from the Puerco and Torrejon horizons of the San Juan Basin in New Mexico, and early Eocene and Oligocene mammals from the Wind River Basin in central Wyoming. David H. Dunkle continued studies of new and poorly known fossil fishes from Middle and Upper Devonian strata of Ohio, Ontario, and Michigan. Accompanied by museum technician Gladwyn B. Sullivan, he made a second trip to Tijeras, Bernalillo County, N. Mex., where in 1963 a unique assemblage of marine fishes was discovered in the Late Paleozoic Madera Formation. There, two types of sharks, a paleoniscoid, an osteolepid, and a probable lungfish were collected. Nicholas Hotton III, starting in September 1963, spent a year in a field study of the stratigraphy and environment of the Permo-Triassic 76 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Beaufort Series of South Africa, 10,000 feet thick. Preliminary study- indicates more overlap between supposedly distinct faunal zones than hitherto suspected, and suggests that some of the lower zones may rep- resent contemporaneous environmental facies rather than temporal sequences. A collection of the abundant mammal-like reptile fauna of the Beau- fort was also made, with emphasis on the herbivorous suborder Anomo- dontia. Knowledge of the anomodonts is vital to understanding of Beaufort stratigraphy and paleoecology because of their abundance and variety and because of their basic position in the food pyramid of Permo-Triassic times. Publication of Clayton E. Ray's research on later Cenozoic mammals included three papers on Antillean faunas. A survey of fossil walruses of the eastern states is in progress. With museum specialist John E. Ott, Ray spent two weeks in Florida collecting a partial skeleton of a mammoth discovered by a Boy Scout troop. The specimen was donated to the Institution by Explorer Post 410 of Wauchula, Fla. Ray is also studying Pleistocene musk oxen referred to him by Virginia Polytechnic Institute. Research associate Remington Kellogg continued investigating the developmental history of the Cetacea with special reference to the Mysticeti. A study of a Calvert Miocene sirenian was completed. Richard S. Boardman and research associate John Utgaard completed a major restudy of some genera of Paleozoic Bryozoa. Their paper includes an interpretative section on the budding of most incrusting forms, illustrated by 3-dimensional cutaway drawings by scientific illustrator Lawrence B. Isham. Boardman has begun an investigation of living species of cyclostome Bryozoa considered closely related to Paleozoic forms. Microstructure of the calcareous walls of individuals in the colonies is being studied jointly with Kenneth M. Towe, using the electron microscope. In other research on Bryozoa, museum specialist Frederick J. Collier finished a detailed taxonomic study of two Devonian genera that will be the nucleus for a larger publication on rhomboporoid genera. Richard H. Benson, professor of geology at the University of Kansas, joined the staff in July 1964 to work on Recent and fossil ostracodes. He spent his first five months in the western Indian Ocean as a member of the scientific party on the R/V Anton Bruun. He collected thousands of specimens off Africa and Madagascar and has begun to sort and de- scribe them. Benson is also completing a survey of the effects of the formation of Bering Strait on the ostracodes of the North Pacific and Arctic Oceans. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS PALEOBIOLOGY 77 Martin A. Buzas completed a manuscript on a multivariate analysis of some species of Elphidium. He is currently applying the same ca- nonical analysis to the distribution and abundance of Foraminifera off Texas. In addition, he has been surveying the Foraminifera in Chesa- peake Bay as part of a preliminary sampling program which will be followed by an ecological study of the Foraminifera in the Bay. In cooperation with the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, Mass., Buzas has also been studying the distribution and abundance of Foraminifera in Hadley Harbor, Mass. Richard Cifelli continues his studies of planktonic Foraminifera from the north and equatorial Atlantic in a cooperative program with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution that includes the detailed sur- vey and sampling of portions of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Last year the R/V Chain surveyed around latitude 22° N., and many cores, bottom samples, and dredges were collected from the crest and flank of the Ridge. Several samples yielded chunks of cemented foraminif- eral oozes associated with basalt and basaltic weathering products. The oozes are all late Tertiary, but represent at least two and possibly three distinct ages. From the relationships between the oozes and the basalts, it appears that the latter were deposited during the late Miocene or early Pliocene. Erie G. Kauffman continues to study the Mesozoic pelecypod groups Inoceramidae, Ostreidae, and Thyasira. A morphologic and supra- specific taxonomic revision of the Inoceramidae and a study of the Caribbean Cretaceous inoceramids were completed. Significant prog- ress was made on study of the Upper Cretaceous Inoceramidae of North America. A study of American Cretaceous Thyasira and three studies dealing with the Ostreidae are completed or in progress. Work was initiated on a major revision of early Upper Cretaceous stratigraphy in Colorado and Kansas, and several local biostratigraphic studies in Colorado and New Mexico are in progress. Kauffman was in the field for three months' work on Cretaceous paleontology and stratigraphy of the Rocky Mountains, and he conducted two weeks of research in Trinidad. In an effort to understand the living habits of fossil echinoids, Porter M. Kier three years ago started a study of the echinoids living off the Florida Keys. Using scuba gear, he and Richard E. Grant of the U.S. Geological Survey mapped the distribution of 17 species found between the shore and a depth of 1 10 feet seaward of the reef. Particular atten- tion was paid to the relationship of the echinoids to the bottom, vegeta- tion, depth, and nearness to shore. Most species were restricted to a 78 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY narrow depth range and to a particular type of bottom. The species living on sand were only rarely found on rock or coral. Kenneth M. Towe, who joined the staff on October 1, 1964, is in process of setting up a laboratory for research with the electron micro- scope. His principal interests include calcification and shell structure, and clay and colloid mineralogy. Research associate Wendell P. Woodring spent two months in Central America collecting Tertiary mollusks for a continued study of the paleontology and stratigraphy of Panama, Costa Rica, and adjacent areas. He is currently in the field collecting faunas from the classical Tertiary localities of Italy and France. Research associate Franco Rasetti completed one phase of study on a new Lower Cambrian tri- lobite fauna from the Taconic region of New York. And research associate Axel A. Olsson continues his studies of South American Tertiary Mollusca. Publications by the Staff July 1964 through June 1965 Adey, Walter H. The genus Phymatolithon in the Gulf of Maine. Hydrobiologia, vol. 24, nos. 1-3, pp. 377-420, September 1964. Benson, Richard H. Recent cytheracean ostracodes from McMurdo Sound and the Ross Sea, Antarctica. Univ. Kansas Paleont. Contr., art. 6, pp. 1-36, pis. 1-4, figs. 1-25, 1964. . Photography of microfossils. In Handbook of paleontological techniques, eds. B. Kummel and D. Raup, sect. F, pp. 433-446, 1965. . Recent podocopid and platycopid ostracodes of the Pacific. In Ostracods as ecological and paleoecological indicators. Publ. Staz. Zool. Napoli, suppl. 33, 40 pp., 1965. and Maddocks, R. F. Recent ostracodes of Knysha estuary, Cape Province, Union of South Africa. Univ. Kansas Paleont. Contr., art. 5, pp.1-39, pis. 1-6, figs. 1-22, 1964. and Tatro, J. O. Faunal description of Ostracoda of the Marlbrook Marl (Campanian), Arkansas. Univ. Kansas Paleont. Contr., art. 7, pp. 1-32, pis. 1-6, figs. 1-15, 1964. Boardman, Richard S., and Utgaard, John. Modifications of study methods for Paleozoic Bryozoa. Journ. Paleont., vol. 38, no. 4, pp. 768-770, 1964. Buzas, Martin A. Foraminifera from late Pleistocene clay near Waterville, Maine. Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 145, no. 8, 30 pp., 5 pis., 1965. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS PALEOBIOLOGY 79 Cifelli, Richard. Planktonic Foraminifera from the western North Atlantic. Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 148, no. 4, 36 pp., 9 pis., 1965. , Sachs, K. N., Jr., and Bowen, V. T. Ignition to concen- trate shelled organisms in plankton samples. Deep-Sea Res., vol. 11, pp. 621-622, 1964. Cooper, G. Arthur, and Grant, Richard E. New Permian strat- igraphic units in Glass Mountains, West Texas. Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol. Bull., vol. 48, no. 9, pp. 1581-1588, 2 figs., September 1964. Dunkle, David H. Preliminary description of a paleoniscoid fish from the Upper Devonian of Ohio. Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., n.s., vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 1-16, 3 pis., 5 figs., October 1964. . The presumed holocephalan fish Pseadodontichthys whitei Skeels. Scient. Publ. Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., n.s., vol. 3, no. 3, pp. 1-10, 1 pi., 2 figs., May 1965. Gazin, C. Lewis. A study of the early Tertiary condylarthran mammal Meniscotherium. Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 149, no. 2, 98 pp. 11 pis., 9 figs., 1965. Hooijer, D. A., and Ray, Clayton E. A metapodial of Acratocnus (Edentata: Megalonychidae) from a cave in Hispaniola. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 77, pp. 253-258, December 1964. Hotton, Nicholas, III. Tetrapods. In: Handbook of paleontological techniques, eds. B. Kummel and D. Raup, 1965. Hueber, Francis M. The Psilophytes and their relationship to the origin of ferns. Mem. Torrey Bot. Club, vol. 21, no. 5, pp. 5-9, November 1964. Johnson, J. H., and Adey, Walter H. Studies of Lithophyllum and related algal genera. Quart. Colorado Sch. Mines, vol. 60, no. 2, 97 pp., 21 pis., April 1965. Kauffman, Erle G. Costellacesta, a new subgenus of Lima from the Cretaceous of the Gulf and Atlantic Coast Province. Tulane Stud. Geol., vol. 2, no. 3, pp. 89-101, 1 pi., 3 figs., 1964. . The Upper Cretaceous Inoceramus of Puerto Rico (published abstract and 30-page mimeographed copy of manuscript). Abstr. 4th Caribbean Geol. Conf., Trinidad, p. 1, 1965. . Collecting in concretions, nodules, and septaria. Handb. Paleont. Techn., sect. A, pp. 175-184, 1965. Kier, Porter M. Fossil echinoids from the Marshall Islands, U.S. Geol. Surv. Prof. Pap. 260-GG, pp. 1121-1127, pi. 32, figs. 328- 331, 1964. 80 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY , Grant, Richard E., and Yochelson, Ellis L. Whitening fossils. Handb. Paleont. Techn., sect. F., pp. 453-456, 1965. McAlester, A. L.; Speden, I. G.; and Buz as, Martin A. Ecology of Pleistocene molluscs from Martha's Vineyard — A reconsideration. Journ. Paleont., vol. 38, pp. 985-991, 1964. Rasetti, Franco. New Lower Cambrian trilobite faunas of north- eastern Tennessee. Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 148, no. 3, 127 pp., 21 pi., 1965. Ray, Clayton E. A small assemblage of vertebrate fossils from Spring Bay, Barbados. Journ. Barbados Mus. and Hist. Soc, vol. 31, no. 1, pp. 11-22, November 1964. . The relationships of Quemisia gravis (Rodentia: ?Heptaxo- dontidae). Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 149, no. 3, 12 pp., 1 pi., April 1965. and Lipps, Lewis. An assemblage of Pleistocene vertebrates and mollusks from Bartow County, Georgia (abstr.). Bull. Georgia Acad. Sci., vol. 23, no. 2, p. 67, April 1965. Sohl, Norman F., and Kauffman, Erle G. Giant Upper Cretaceous oysters from the Gulf coast and Caribbean. U.S. Geol. Surv. Prof. Pap. 483-H, 22 pp., 5 pis., 3 figs., 1964. MINERAL SCIENCES The department of mineral sciences completed its first full year as a separate department on October 15, 1964. Kurt Fredriksson joined the staff in July 1 964 to head the division of meteorites and to implement a research program supported by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Later in the year Brian Mason joined the meteorite group, and in August 1964 William G. Melson joined the staff to head the division of petrology. The division of meteorites now operates a modern and complete elec- tron microprobe laboratory. Emission and x-ray fluorescence spec- troscopy and x-ray diffraction facilities have also been added. The optical microscopy and photographic equipment has been upgraded and extended. The chemical laboratory has obtained modernized equipment for sample preparation and spectrophotometry. The electron microprobe is an instrument for nondestructive ele- mental analysis of extremely small (~ 1 micron) particles of material or areas. In operation, a polished sample, such as a petrographic thin section, is bombarded with a finely focused electron beam. The elements present in the sample then emit their characteristic x-ray Electron probe x-ray microanalyzer in the division of mete- orites. To the right are high-voltage and electron-lens power supplies and vacuum controls. The main tank has the electron gun (top), a microscope, sample chamber with access door and sample stage, and three spectrometers. To the left of the operator are beam-scanning controls and display oscilloscopes with camera. The recording unit at the left contains detector and control-voltage supplies, strip-chart recorders, and x-ray counting devices (scalers) connected to the automatic typewriter (far left). The instrument was obtained under a grant (NsG- 688) from the National Aero- nautics and Space Administration for meteorite research now in progress. (See p. 80-81.) Uncut diamond crystal of extraordinary size (253.7 carats) and unusually perfect form was taken from the Dutoitspan mine, near Kimberley, South Africa. Given by Harry Winston, Inc., in memory of Sir Ernest Oppen- heimer, Chairman of the Board of De Beers Consolidated Mines, Ltd., from 1929 until his death in 1957. (See p. 97.) RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS — MINERAL SCIENCES 81 spectra that are analyzed with three focusing spectrometers, and the elements determined. Quantitative analysis is obtained by comparing the intensity of a specific spectral line emitted by the sample to a standard of known composition. The sensitivity of the method is usually better than 0.1 percent, and since the sample weight can be of the order of 10~12 grams, it may be possible to detect 10~15 grams of an element. The electron beam can be made to sweep the area of the sample synchronously with an oscilloscope on which the light intensity is modified by the x-rays emitted from the sample. By means of this technique a "map" can be obtained illustrating semiquantita- tively the distribution of all elements heavier than lithium in areas from about 10 x 10 to 500 x 500 microns. The acquisition of an x-ray diffraction unit, used for identifying and estimating abundances of different phases in meteorites, has filled a long-time deficiency in the department's facilities. Also acquired was an x-ray fluorescence unit which attaches to the diffractometer. This is used for routine survey analyses of meteorites and rocks before deciding if more costly wet-chemical analysis is warranted. Newly acquired emission spectrographic equipment makes it possible to perform semiquantitative spectrographic analyses, particularly for the first survey of an unknown sample when only a small amount, a milligram or less, is available. Although the new laboratory has been operating for only six months, an intensive program of meteorite research has been pursued, the scope and variety of which is indicated by the publications that have ensued. Edward P. Henderson and Brian Mason collected tektites and meteorites in the interior of Australia for approximately six weeks. A number of fine specimens, including one unique form, were found, and the material is presently being studied in detail as to morphology and material loss during the flight through the atmosphere. This work is being carried out in cooperation with scientists from the NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. Significant evidence for the fall of tektites in defined "streaks" was obtained. Henderson's study of hexahedrites shows that the world-wide dis- tribution is suggestive of showers rather than individual falls. Mason published a fundamental study of the distribution of plagi- oclase in chondrites. The presence or absence of this mineral is related to the olivine composition and the type of pyroxene present. From these observations it was concluded that most chondrites have under- gone solid-state recrystallization and that the amount of plagioclase and orthopyroxene may be a measure of the intensity of this metamorphism. 789-127—66 13 82 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY With H. B. Wiik, Mason published new descriptions of four meteorites, and he was also coauthor of a paper describing a peculiar new mineral "sinoite," silico oxynitride (Si2N20), found in several enstatite chondrites. Another new mineral was described by Fredriksson and Henderson (1965). It was first found in enstatite chondrites but is also present in a stony-iron (Mount Egerton) and an iron meteorite (Horse Creek). The findings indicate a close relationship between these different classes of meteorites. Together with K. Keil of the Ames Research Center, Fredriksson published a microprobe analysis of olivine and pyroxene of 90 chondrites, and also a detailed study of the Murray carbonaceous chondrite. These data, as well as the discovery of glass enclosing metallic nickel-iron in the Chainpur chondrite by Fredriksson and Reid, make it possible to set rather rigid boundary conditions for the formation of chondrules and chondrites. There is exceedingly strong evidence for the supposition that chondrules are quenched droplets and that the nickel-iron in chondrites is cogenetic with the main part of the silicates olivine and pyroxene. . From an investigation of the mineral phases in the Orgueil carbona- ceous meteorite and their equilibrium relations, completed by Fredriks- son and Kurt Bostrom, University of California, San Diego, it could be shown that the minerals in Orgueil are not in equilibrium but represent at least three different temperature stages. The last formed minerals indicate the presence of an external source of oxidation, possibly water dissociated by ultraviolet radiation. E. Olsen and Fredriksson described iron phosphates from iron meteorites. Thermodynamic calculations of the system metallic iron, iron phosphide, and iron phosphate indicate that the degree of oxida- tion of fine octahedrites is approximately the same as in ordinary chondrites and considerably higher than in enstatite chondrites. Roy S. Clarke, Jr., completed analyses of two iron meteorites, Bogou and Angelica, and one stony meteorite, Harleton. Eugene Jarosewich analyzed the Bonita Springs chondrite and is working on two of the unequilibrated chondrites, Semarkona and Sharps. An investigation of the distribution of gallium and germanium in iron meteorites and stony-irons is in progress. Tektite studies, particularly relating to the Martha's Vineyard and Georgia tektites, are continuing. Clarke is working on this project cooperatively with colleagues at the Corning Glass Works and the U.S. Geological Survey. He also continues cooperative work with Rutherford J. Gettens of the Freer Gallery on iron-oxide corrosion products associated with antique bronze objects. Paul Ramdohr, professor emeritus, University of Heidelberg, and temporarily on the staff of the Geophysical Laboratory, made micro- RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS MINERAL SCIENCES 83 scopical investigations of a large number of polished sections of meteorites. In the division of mineralogy, George S. Switzer worked on a group of rare ammonium-sulfate minerals, and on a description of one of these, letovicite, from the Geysers, Sonoma County, Calif. He found that published composition of letovicite is given correctly as (NH4)3H(S04)2, but that the crystallo graphic data for letovicite given in standard reference works are for the artificial compound NH4HS04, not known as a mineral. Work on this poorly described group of minerals is continuing. In spring of 1965 Switzer spent several weeks in South Africa visiting diamond mines. Of particular interest were the "pipe" mines where diamonds are found in their original matrix of the ultramafic rock kimberlite. Collections were made of kimberlite from several mines in the Republic of South Africa and in Tanzania, and of the eclogite inclusions in these pipes. A detailed mineralogical study of these collections has been started, an extension of work done some time ago on similar rocks occurring in California. A closely related long-range study underway is the composition of garnet from rocks of all types, and in particular from eclogite, as a first phase of the study. Paul E. Desautels continued work on a suite of radioactive minerals from a new occurrence in Mexico. John S. White, Jr., continued work on a first description of the crystallography of natural crystals of platt- nerite. During the year Desautels and White spent two weeks in Oaxaca, Mexico, examining an area of pegmatites containing an in- teresting suite of minerals, including scapolite crystals of very large (up to two feet) size. The origin of the ocean basins is a subject of speculation largely because very little is known concerning the rocks which compose them. The geologic contrast between the igneous and metamorphic rocks of the continents and ocean basins is only poorly known. Rocks obtained during recent deep-sea dredgings have demonstrated particularly that important modifications are required in current theories about the origin of the ocean basins and about processes of rock formation be- neath the sea floor. During the past year in the division of petrology W. G. Melson began a cooperative study with Vaughan T. Bowen and Tjeerd van Andel of the Woods Hole and Scripps Oceanographic Institutions, respectively, concerning rocks from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. This study, which began when Melson visited Woods Hole in March, resulted in the discovery of metabasalts in the Mid- Atlantic Ridge. Such rocks may require modification of existing theories about the origin ot the Ridge. 84 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY The study of these rocks, nearly completed during the past year, is scheduled for completion before December 1965. In conjunction with Bowen, Melson began a second study, con- cerning a large group of ultramafic rocks collected from St. Pauls Rocks and from the surrounding sea floor. St. Pauls Rocks, situated on the central portion of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, is believed by many petrologists to be an upthrusted portion of the earth's mantle and is thus particularly worthy of a detailed petrologic study. This study to date has resulted in electron microprobe analyses of an amphi- bole which has a composition approximating basalts, and is of interest in connection with the origin of basalts. A preliminary publication on this amphibole and associated rocks should be completed by the end of 1965. Melson has manuscripts in press on phase equilibria in calc-silicate hornfels, Lewis and Clark County, Mont., and on plagioclase-spinel- graphite zenoliths in metallic iron-bearing basalts, Disko Island, Greenland, and he has completed a manuscript on the geology and mineral deposits of the Lincoln area, Lewis and Clark County, Mont. Additional field and laboratory studies of the latter topic are planned. He also began a long-term study of the igneous and metamorphic rocks of west central Montana. Short-term studies begun during the past year include: (1) high- magnesium chlorites, Natural Bridge, N.Y. (cooperatively with Mar- garet Foster of the U.S. Geological Survey); (2) corundum-bearing gneisses, Montana (cooperatively with George S. Switzer); (3) pumice from the South Pacific Ocean (with George E. Watson of the division of birds); and (4) magnetic particles from the Red Sea floor (with Sidney Knott, of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and Charles Fiori). Publications by the Staff July 1964 through June 1965 Andersen, C. A.; Keil, K.; and Mason, Brian. Silicon oxynitride : a meteorite mineral. Science, vol. 146, pp. 256-257, 1964. Desautels, Paul E. The gemstone collection of the U.S. National Museum. Lapidary Journ., vol. 19, no. 1, pp. 4-11, 14, 18, 22, and 26-28, April 1965. Fredriksson, K., and Andersen, C. A. Electronprobe analysis of copper in meneghinite. Amer. Mineral., vol. 49, pp. 1467-1469, September-October 1964. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS — MINERAL SCIENCES 85 ; De Carli, P. S.; Pepin, R. O.; Turner, G.; and Reynolds, J. H. Shock emplaced argon in a stony meteorite. Journ. Geophys. Res., vol. 69, no. 7, pp. 1403-1411, 1964. and Henderson, E. P. The Horse Creek, Baca County, Colorado, meteorite (abstr.). Trans. Amer. Geophys. Union, vol. 46, p. 121, 1965. and Keil, K. The Fe, Mg, Ca and Ni distribution in co- existing minerals in the Murray carbonaceous chondrite. Meteor- itics, vol. 2, pp. 201-207, 1964. Henderson, E. P. Hexahedrites. Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 148, no. 5, 41 pp., 1965. and Dole, H. M. The Port Orford meteorite. Ore Bin, vol. 26, no. 7, pp. 113-130, 1964. Keil, K., and Fredriksson, K. The iron, magnesium, and calcium distribution in coexisting olivines and rhombic pyroxenes of chon- drites. Journ. Geophys. Res., vol. 69, pp. 3487-3515, 1964. ; Mason, B.; Wiik, H. B.; and Fredriksson, K. The Chainpur meteorite. Amer. Mus. Novitates, no. 2173, 28 pp., 1964. Mason, Brian. The meteorite and tektite collection of the American Museum of Natural History. Amer. Mus. Novitates, no. 2190, 40 pp., 1964. . Meteority [Russian transl. of Meteorites (Wiley, 1962)]. Mir Publ., Moscow, 305 pp., 1965. . Feldspar in chondrites. Science, vol. 148, p. 943, 1965. . The chemical composition of olivine-bronzite and olivine- hypersthene chondrites. Amer. Mus. Novitates, no. 2223, 38 pp., 1965. — ■ and Wiik, H. B. The composition of the Forest City, Tenn- asilm, Weston, and Geidam meteorites. Amer. Mus. Novitates, no. 2220, 20 pp., 1965. Olsen, E., and Fredriksson, K. Iron phosphates in iron meteorites (abstr.). Trans. Amer. Geophys. Union, vol. 46, pp. 121-122, 1965. Switzer, G. Thirty-ninth annual report on the diamond industry 1963. Jewelers' Circular-Keystone, Philadelphia, 70 pp., 1964. ; Clarke, Roy S., Jr.; Sinkankas, John; and Worthing, Helen W. Fluorine in hambergite. Amer. Mineral., vol. 50, pp. 85-95, January-February 1965. The Collections CARE AND CONSERVATION SPECIMENS ACCESSIONED, IDENTIFIED, AND DISTRIBUTED- FISCAL YEAR 1965 Departments Accessions (transac- tions) 1965 (new) Received on loan Exchanged with other institutions Trans- ferred to other Gov- ernment agencies Lentjor study to investigators and other institutions Specimens identified Anthropology . . 108 18 81 84 3,637 4,139 Invertebrate Zool- ogy 368 661 1,544 0 16,158 32, 625 Vertebrate Zool- ogy 210 6,748 1,120 1 10, 545 20, 834 Entomology . . . 523 0 3,908 57 65, 220 9,107 315 439 20, 209 1,811 28, 534 12,641 Paleobiology . . 156 853 2,373 0 6,412 45, 890 Mineral Sciences . 289 6 1,907 244 1,444 1,115 Total 1,969 8,725 31,142 2,197 131,950 126,351 ANTHROPOLOGY Physical renovation of office and storage space in the Office of Anthro- pology, and the administrative reorganization of the Office, have both necessitated and made possible extensive rearrangements and improve- ments in storage facilities and in procedures for processing, accessioning, and cataloging new specimens. The 5000 drawers of skeletal material were placed in an alphabetical arrangement of states and foreign countries, with a special placing of the Huntington collection of early 20th-century Americans (largely born abroad). This work was skill- fully supervised by Donald Ortner. The African collections were placed in a systematic, geographical arrangement, and within each major area many objects formerly arranged by type were rearranged by tribe. The Old World archeological collections were rearranged. And the Smithsonian's sizable collection of Japanese ceramics was classified according to geographic regions and to the kilns of Japan. Objects resulting from acculturation, whether made for export or for sophisticated local use, were placed apart from the traditional specimens. Rearrangement and reidentification of the Japanese ceramics were greatly facilitated by the assistance of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hauge. The American Foundation for the Study of Man has loaned the Museum all its archeological material from southern Arabia, the finest and largest such collection in the world, and except for selected specimens to be used in the new hall of Old World archeology, this will be maintained as a separate study collection. 86 THE COLLECTIONS CARE AND CONSERVATION 87 All the paintings that were made by Europeans or other non-native artists and that were in the former division of ethnology have been transferred on a long-term loan to the National Collection of Fine Arts. This includes, particularly, the extensive series of Indian paintings by George Catlin and the excellent facsimiles of the paintings of John White. The archives formerly part of the Bureau of American Ethnology are now a part of the Office of Anthropology and continue to serve anthropologists and other scholars throughout the world. Several extensive collections of photographs were cataloged, particularly covering the years from 1890 to the early 1900's and mainly recording details from tribes of the Plains and Southwest, but also including the Maya and Seminole. Most significant were the creation of a single processing laboratory for archeological and ethnological materials, and the institution of im- proved procedures for handling incoming collections and the constant outgo of materials for loans, identifications, and study by visitors. Management of the six Museum aides, technicians, and specialists engaged in this work is a responsibility of Clifford Evans. A. Joseph Andrews continued his repair, restoration, and casting work with the limited facilities thus far available for the conservation laboratory. Among the items handled were two elaborately painted wooden doors from India; a marimba from Guatemala; pottery from China, Egypt, Libya, Brazil, and the Pima, Acoma, and Zuni Indians; and a Sioux tobacco pipe. The illustrating staff, consisting of Edward G. Schumacher, aided part-time by G. Robert Lewis and Marcia Bakry, prepared for the publications of the research staff a large number of scientific drawings and maps. VERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY The end of the year saw all divisions of the department, except fishes, in new quarters and the reorganization of their collection man- agement and research facilities in process or completed. To improve management of the fish collections, the ledger-type catalog books were replaced by a 3- by 5-inch card file. This new system provides complete data in the jar with each cataloged lot; it automatically provides duplicate cards for cross-reference purposes, and it is adaptable to automatic recorders and to data processing systems. Since color discrimination is important in systematic research on birds, the problem of supplying reproducible light conditions has been 88 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY solved by the installation of banks of new Examolite fixtures over the five permanent work surfaces in the bird range. These generate a light spectrum very near that of natural sunlight. INVERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY The long-awaited move of the marine-invertebrate collections to new quarters in the west wing was made in March and April of this year. Its accomplishment in somewhat less than four weeks was made possible only by the complete cooperation of all staff members, and especially by the coordination of all aspects of the move by museum specialist Henry B. Roberts, who devoted much of the year to the manifold details necessary for the transfer of over 450,000 bottles of specimens and their rearrangement in the process of transfer. Normal curatorial activities continued, nonetheless. Marian H. Pettibone arranged for the acquisition of the Berkeley collection of Polychaeta, traveling to Nanimo, British Columbia, to supervise its labelling and packing. David L. Pawson, having assessed the requirements of the echinoderm collection, instituted an international exchange program with 30 institutions in more than 20 countries to broaden the scope of the collection and enhance its value as a reference tool. And Joseph Rosewater completed an index to the uncataloged collections of mollusks, which include over 1100 miscellaneous acces- sions; these specimens, only generally available previously, are now more readily accessible and may be incorporated into the general collection more rapidly. ENTOMOLOGY Under grants from the National Science Foundation more than 10,000 water beetles and 14,133 specimens of Ataenius have been prepared for critical study. The transfer of Hemiptera collections into the unit tray system was completed this year. Carl J. Drake continued to improve the Drake collection so that now the combined Museum and Drake material contain more than 80 percent (1491) of the 1820 species of the family Tingidae (lacebugs). Research associate Carl F. W. Muesebeck and members of the Department of Agriculture staff have added to the collection of Hymenoptera large deposits of specimens from biological studies. Approximately 20,000 newly acquired specimens of Lepidoptera were prepared and sorted by Mrs. Joan M. Ledbetter, and approximately 2500 North American chrysaugine moths were consolidated and reorganized by summer intern E. D. Cashatt. The New World Glyphipterygidae were reclassified and THE COLLECTIONS CARE AND CONSERVATION 89 properly arranged as was much of the large collection of Brassolidae. Approximately 3000 newly acquired Microlepidoptera were prepared for critical examination. An important achievement concerns the enormous F. C. Bishopp col- lection of ticks, of which, when it was received, practically all of the specimens were dried out. During the past year Mrs. Sophie G. Lutterlough restored 35,000 specimens by treating them with trisodium- phosphate solution and then reintroducing them into alcohol. The gradual introduction of trisodium-phosphate solution into the vials of dried specimens by means of a large syringe avoids disturbing the specimens and thus prevents damage. Ralph E. Crabill and Mrs. Lutterlough have restored, relabeled, and rehoused 3000 myriapods and arachnids, among which 40 unsuspected type specimens were found. In addition, 1118 microscope slides were cleaned and sorted, and 14,600 specimens from the Hopkins collection were treated. PALEOBIOLOGY Because of increased need for space, the division of paleobotany was assigned to new quarters in the recently completed west wing of the Natural History Museum. For the first time, the entire paleobo- tanical collections of the Museum and those of the U.S. Geological Survey housed in the Museum are located in a single area. The collec- tions are arranged in order of stratigraphic occurrence and further arranged alphabetically by State under each age category. Foreign collections are maintained as a separate unit categorized first by strati- graphic occurrence and then alphabetically by country. The type collections are housed separately. The work of segregating specimens and preparing a type-specimen catalog by museum specialist James P. Ferrigno has been interrupted by the move. Museum specialist Louis R. Purnell completed a card file of type specimens in the Paleozoic ammonite collection of invertebrate paleon- tology. Three major-type collections have now been fully curated and manuscript lists prepared for the publication of a series of catalogs of type specimens which will supersede the 1905 catalog in part. Research associate Remington Kellogg undertook a major reorgani- zation of the extensive study collections of fossil marine mammals. This involved identification and the completing or furnishing of catalog data. The segments of the national collection of fossil fish, involving the scales, otoliths, agnathans, acanthodians, and placoderms were trimmed, cleaned, completely reorganized in storage, and their docu- mentation revised by David H. Dunkle with the aid of summer intern James McKenney. 90 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY GIFTS AND ADDITIONS SPECIMENS IN THE NATIONAL COLLECTIONS MAY 31, 1965 Department of Anthropology 1,000,010 Archeology 773, 562 Ethnology 188,645 Physical Anthropology 37, 803 Department of Invertebrate Zoology 11,962,150 Marine Invertebrates 2,113,365 Mollusks 9,848,785 Department of Vertebrate Zoology 2, 793, 396 Mammals 325, 746 Birds 514,209 Reptiles and Amphibians 161, 564 Fishes 1,791,877 Department of Entomology 16,489,253 (Former Division of Insects total, 1963 15,978,513) Coleoptera 134,085 Hemiptera '. 132,880 Lepidoptera 121, 595 Myriapoda and Arachnida 23, 238 Neuropteroids 98, 942 Department of Botany 3,118,587 Phanerogams 1, 963, 362 Ferns 237,177 Grasses 387, 269 Cryptogams 486, 881 Plant Anatomy 43, 898 Department of Paleobiology 13,179,166 Invertebrate Paleontology 13,128,197 Vertebrate Paleontology 48, 055 Paleobotany . 2,914 Department of Mineral Sciences 422, 541 Mineralogy & Petrology 417,212 Meteorites 5, 329 Total Natural History Collections 48,965,103 ANTHROPOLOGY To the physical-anthropology collections were added a series of 24 skeletons from Buena Vista, Ecuador, excavated by Emilio Estrada. In connection with the preparation of new African ethnological exhibits, a collection of 69 items from Libya and a collection of ten specimens from Zambia were secured. THE COLLECTIONS — GIFTS AND ADDITIONS 91 Among the outstanding ethnological Asian materials received and accessioned are the Tokyo National Museum collection, with 54 speci- mens including rural tools and basketry; the Government of the Ryukyu Islands collection, with 71 items emphasizing the wide range existing in traditional textile production; the Beue Tann collection, with 49 objects related to Chinese calligraphy; 16 exceptional examples of Japanese folk art, from Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hauge; 23 Nepalese carvings, from Paul Rose; and 37 Jewish ritual objects made by well- known Israeli craftsmen, from Dr. and Mrs. Abraham Kanof. The large series of Paleo-Indian artifacts from the Lindenmeier Site in Colorado, excavated by Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr., from 1935 through 1940, was the most important archeological material accessioned. In addition, a large collection of potsherds was received from the Uni- versity of Tokyo Andes Expedition, through the courtesy of its director, Professor Seiichi Izumi; type specimens are included for the entire range of formative period materials from the site of Kotosh in the Department of Huanuco, Peru. Archeological accessions included a large collection from the Brooks Range, Alaska, covering the time span from the earlier human occupations to the modern Eskimo, excavated by research associate John M. Campbell. An important collection from the Hostermann Site in South Dakota was also received by trans- fer from the River Basin Surveys. VERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY Fishes totaling about 15,000 specimens were received from three critical geographic areas: Victor G. Springer collected nearly 10,000 specimens of the inshore marine fish fauna of Dominica during October and November 1964 as a participant of the Bredin-Archbold-Smith- sonian biological survey of Dominica. These will be especially useful in monographic studies of western Atlantic fishes, for no comparable collections have been made in this area. Several thousand well- preserved fishes from islands of Oceania were received from the Smith- sonian Institution Pacific Ocean Biological Survey Program. Rich in representative species of the tropical, inshore reef habitat, they fill many geographic gaps from which few or no specimens are in the national collections. From the exploratory fisheries research activities of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, several thousand specimens of pelagic and deep sea fishes were received. Taken mainly from the Caribbean area, these represent some of the best scientific collections ever obtained in the region. Collections in the Western Atlantic, resulting from the Fish 92 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY and Wildlife Service Exploratory Program, have contributed impor- tantly to the great success of the Sears Foundation for Marine Research monographic studies of the fishes of the western North Atlantic. Three major collections from the New World tropics came as gifts to the collection of reptiles and amphibians from Wilmot A. Thornton, Albert Schwartz, and C. J. Marinkelle. An important collection of amphibians from East Africa was given by Margaret Stewart. And 587 specimens of reptiles and amphibians were collected in Iran for the Museum by Robert G. Tuck and John Neal of the division of mammals. Birds accessioned this year include important new material from little-known regions. The first major collection in the United States of specimens from Socotra and Abd-el-Kuri in the northern Indian Ocean was obtained by an expedition carried out by Alex Forbes- Watson. An important collection of oceanic birds from islands in the Central Pacific, obtained by the Smithsonian Pacific Ocean Biological Survey Program, documents many new distribution and nesting records. Some of the islands visited during the field work had never before been surveyed for birds. Three collections of Latin American birds totaling over 2000 skins and almost 400 anatomical specimens were accessioned during the year. These include specimens collected in Dominica by Richard L. Zusi, in Brazil by Philip S. Humphrey, and in Panama by Alexander Wetmore, whose years of field work there have brought the Museum an unparalleled collection of Panamanian birds. By transfer from the Fish and Wildlife Service 1033 skins and 111 skeletons of North American birds were received. In 1965 over 8000 specimens of mammals were accessioned. The largest increment came from Africa and the Middle East through the efforts of Henry W. Setzer. Particularly noteworthy were 5700 mammals from South Africa, Mozambique, and Iran, collected on grants from the Department of the Army; 1228 mammals from Pakistan collected by Robert Traub and the Department of Microbiology, University of Maryland; and a superb collection of 542 bats from Kenya, presented by Russel E. Mumford. A number of important accessions were of mammals from tropical America: 185 bats from northeastern Brazil, collected by Philip S. Humphrey and R. E. Shope; 185 mammals from the interior of British Guiana, obtained from Stanley E. Brock; Colombian bats from Jose Borrero and C. J. Marinkelle; 436 Panamanian mammals, mostly from Isla Cebaco, collected by E. L. Tyson on a National Science Foundation grant; and 218 Nicaraguan mammals from the University of Pennsylvania, through L. G. Clark. THE COLLECTIONS GIFTS AND ADDITIONS 93 A number of individual specimens of unusual interest was received: a skull and complete skeleton of the rare Pacific right whale from the Whales Research Institute, Tokyo, through the generosity of its Director, Hideo Omura; a frozen specimen of the rare Ross seal from the National Science Foundation, Office of Antarctic Programs; a frozen head of a pigmy sperm whale from Marineland Research Laboratory; and a skull of the rare rough-toothed porpoise Steno breda- nensis, from the University of Florida. The trend toward deposit of types in the National Museum continues; holotypes of the new sub- species of mink Mustela vision and of the bat Chiroderma salvini were contributed by the Alaska Department of Game and Fish and the University of Arizona, respectively. INVERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY Perhaps the largest and most significant addition to the invertebrate zoology collections this year was the more than 10,000 specimens of Polychaeta collected by Edith and Cyril Berkeley of the Pacific Bio- logical Laboratory at Nanaimo, British Columbia. This collection represents the accumulation of over 40 years of work, most of it having been the subject of study and scientific publication by this team. The significance and content of the collection have been described by Marian H. Pettibone in a paper soon to be published. The deposition in the Museum of an important collection such as this assures its per- manent availability to students. By exchange, 212 specimens of isopods were obtained from the Zoological Institute, Leningrad, U.S.S.R.; and 500 specimens of mol- lusks, from Tonga and the subantarctic islands of New Zealand, were obtained from the Dominion Museum, Wellington, New Zealand. Purchased through the Chamberlain fund were 3290 marine shells from North Borneo, collected by Mrs. Mary Saul, and 610 from Muscat, Oman, by Donald T. Bosch. Colleagues in other institutions and universities often deposit their study collections in the national collections when their researches are complete. In this manner 2354 specimens of copepods collected by Arthur Humes of Boston University were donated to the Museum. They were obtained during Humes' researches at Nosy Be, Malagasy Republic, as a part of the Indian Ocean Expedition. ENTOMOLOGY The largest, and perhaps most outstanding, contribution made to the entomological collections this year, that obtained in the western 94 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Mexican states by Paul Spangler and his family, consisted of 50,850 specimens, of which 32,000 were water beetles. Spangler also donated 7000 specimens from his personal collection. J. F. Gates Clarke and his wife contributed 11,674 specimens from the remote island of Rapa, obtained with the aid of a grant from the Office of Naval Research, and 2622 specimens from Arkansas. Ronald W. Hodges presented 3000 Goleoptera through the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Oliver S. Flint contributed 2062 beetles from the West Indies, and 2000 beetles of the subfamily Aphodiinae were obtained from Argentina. To the Hemiptera collections were added 5000 specimens from George F. Knowlton, 1169 specimens from George E. Bohart, and 651 speci- mens from Oliver S. Flint, Jr. To the Lepidoptera collections were added a notable number of small but important contributions, con- spicuous among which were the more than 3900 specimens collected in the Malagasy Republic by E. D. Cashatt and K. I. Lange; 791 butterflies from Greece collected by J. G. Coutsis; 1300 New Zealand moths contributed by T. H. Da vies;. 632 Hydrelia flies from D. L. Donier and J. L. Laffoon; 5000 specimens collected in Florida by Ronald W. Hodges; 495 European flies from D. L. Knutson; 890 Alaskan flies from K. M. Sommerman; and 2336 flies collected by George G. Steyskal, primarily in Egypt and North America. Donald R. Davis contributed over 5000 specimens from Arizona and New Mexico; W. Donald Duckworth and his wife obtained 10,125 moths and flies from Panama; Oliver S. Flint, Jr., contributed 1887 Lepidoptera and Diptera from the West Indies and the United States; and Waldo L. Schmitt presented 458 flies collected by him in Antarctica and New Zealand. Particularly important additions to the collection of biting and sucking lice were made by K. G. Emerson who deposited 1160 slides, including 33 holotypes, of these insects. In addition, he was responsible for the transfer of 919 slides of these important ectoparasites from the Depart- ment of the Army. Ralph E. Crabill, Jr., presented 402 European myriapods, almost all the species of which were previously unrepre- sented in the collections. Yu Hsi Moltze Wang presented 107 identi- fied Formosan myriapods, none previously represented in the col- lections. Waldo L. Schmitt presented 2383 mites from New Zealand and Antarctica, noteworthy because of the paucity of material in the collections from this part of the world. BOTANY Noteworthy among the wide diversity of botanical research materials from various areas of the globe added to the collections was a group THE COLLECTIONS GIFTS AND ADDITIONS 95 of 1 330 herbarium specimens of flowering plants received by exchange through the Botanical Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the U.S.S.R. A group of 1250 microscope slides of cleared strobili of Selaginella was received as a gift from Northwestern University. These slides document published research of Howard J. Arnott and Harry T. Horner, based largely on collections in the National Herbarium, on the disposition of mega- and microspores in this genus. The historically valuable diatom collection of M. L. Walsh, received as a gift from Mrs. Walsh of Baltimore, included 920 microscope slides, 350 samples of diatomaceous earth, and 385 bottles of liquid-preserved diatom- bearing materials. These represent careful collections from almost all the known diatom deposits in southern Maryland, many of which have now been exhausted or otherwise obliterated. Conrad V. Morton added 2595 photographs of fern types prepared in European herbaria. A collection of 1 50 ferns constituting three series of "Filices Japonicae Exsiccatae," prepared by M. Tagawa and K. Iwatsuki, was accessioned. These specimens contain isotypes of several new fern species. Two collections of African grasses were added to the grass herbarium: 385 specimens of Digitaria gathered by A. J. Oakes in West Africa, and a miscellaneous assortment from R. R. Martenson, a mis- sionary in Northern Cameroun. A large set of Mexican grasses was accessioned through A. Robinson of Kansas Wesleyan University, who identified them during a visit to the National Herbarium. Three groups of wood specimens were accessioned from Southeast Asia: a small but rare set from Cambodia, received on exchange from the French Centre Technique Forestier Tropical; 120 specimens from Thailand, donated by Robert M. King; and 220 woods from the Philippines, from William L. Stern. The latter two accessions com- prise excellent research materials, since the identifications of all speci- mens are corroborated by herbarium vouchers. Other important accessions included 330 specimens of European mosses received on exchange from the University of Helsinki and 635 lichen specimens from southeastern United States, collected by Mason E. Hale, Jr. PALEOBIOLOGY Among the specimens accessioned by the division of paleobotany, those of major importance include the 142 type or figured specimens received as gifts, of which a few examples are: the Goucher collection of cycadeoid trunk sections, representing the finest collection of de- scribed specimens from the Lower Cretaceous of Maryland, from Goucher College; the earliest described specimen of an American cycadeoid, from Johns Hopkins University; and, among the microfossils, 96 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY 12 holotypes of Maestrichtian and Danian calcareous nanno plankton from Alabama, Arkansas, France, and Denmark, from M. N. Bramlette and E. Martini. From the Walcott fund was purchased 1000 pounds of selected Rhynie chert. This quantity of material constitutes the largest single collection in the United States of this classic Middle Devonian plant-bearing material. From the Roland W. Brown fund was purchased an excellent exhibit specimen of the Lower Cretaceous cycadeoid Cycadeoidea marylandica, found near Laurel, Md. Also pur- chased was a collection of fossil plants from the Eocene of Bolca, Italy. Exchange with the Paleobotaniska Avdelning, Naturhistoriska Riks- museets in Stockholm, Sweden, brought in 89 specimens of Chinese Permo-Carboniferous plants and 44 Swedish Rhaeto-Liassic plants. A collection of amphibians and therapsid reptiles from the Permo- Triassic of the Karoo region in South Africa, outstanding in being probably the best documented Beaufort collection to date, was made by Nicholas Hotton under a grant from the National Science Founda- tion and with the help of J. W. Kitching of the Bernard Price Institute in Johannesburg. It includes about 312 specimens consisting of skulls, partial and complete skeletons, and identifiable fragments, and is particularly strong in the herbivorous anomodonts. A collection of about 550 specimens of early mammals was made by C. L. Gazin, assisted by Franklin L. Pearce, under a grant from the National Science Foundation. The greater part, about 320 specimens, consisted of jaws and maxillae of a variety of rare Paleocene mammals from Puerco and Torrejon horizons of the Nacimiento formation in New Mexico. The remaining portion of the collection was obtained principally from the Lysite early Eocene and Chadronian Oligocene of the Wind River Basin, Wyo., greatly increasing our representation of the smaller mammals of these horizons. David H. Dunkle, assisted by Gladwyn B. Sullivan, during the latter part of the summer season made a collection of about 115 specimens of vertebrate and invertebrate animals under support from the Walcott fund. Of these specimens, 81 were fossil fish secured from a clay pit in the upper Madera formation near Tijeras, N. Mex. Particular mention may be made of unusually complete skeletons of acanthodian and a variety of palaeoniscoid fishes, as well as the fragmentary remains of several sharks and a caelacanthine. An outstanding addition to the invertebrate-paleontology collections was made possible by the Walcott fund: during the winter of 1963-64, Richard E. Grant, of the U.S. Geological Survey, accompanied by Ali N. Fatmi, of the Geological Survey of Pakistan, made an extensive collection of Permian fossils from the Productus Limestone of the Salt, Khisor, and Surghar Ranges of West Pakistan; these consist of an Specimens of the feather-duster worm Sabellastarte magnified photographed alive in Puerto Rico. This photograph, in color, is being used by modelmaker Alfred Strohlein seen (below, left) discussing with Curator Charles Cutress the early stages of a model for exhibition. Line of visitors waiting to see exhibit of the Dead Sea Scrolls of Jordan in the foyer gallery of the Museum of Natural History. Such lines were common, and during the 22 days the Scrolls were on display over 200,000 persons were recorded entering the gallery. THE COLLECTIONS GIFTS AND ADDITIONS 97 estimated 35,000 specimens and an additional undetermined number that will be freed from limestone blocks by dissolution in hydrochloric acid. This collection, which is to be shared by the Geological Survey of Pakistan, will provide a basis for direct comparison of American Permian specimens with those from the best known Permian sequence in Asia, since the Productus Limestone of the Salt Range is a standard for reference and correlation of Permian rocks of all parts of the world, and its fauna must be considered in connection with Permian studies everywhere. The Pakistan collection, a valuable addition to the national collections under any circumstances, is especially valuable in view of the extensive program of Permian studies now under way. The Walcott fund also supported field work which resulted in several other important additions to the collections, each of several thousand specimens. These include Devonian invertebrates from southern New Mexico, collected by G. Arthur Cooper and J. T. Dutro; Ordo- vician Bryozoa from measured sections and type localities in north- eastern New York, by Richard S. Boardman and Olgerts Karklins; and invertebrates from the Middle Ordovician at Paquette Rapids, Ont., by Ellis Yochelson. MINERAL SCIENCES To the collections were added 11 meteorites not previously repre- sented, as well as 2066 grams of tektites received from the Ames Research Center of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. A major effort is being made to acquire for the petrographic reference collections specimens of rocks that have been described and chemically analyzed. About 100 such rocks were acquired during the year, most of them by transfer from the U.S. Geological Survey. Of the many important additions to the mineralogy collections, three were of outstanding importance: Harry Winston, Inc., presented to the Smithsonian in memory of Sir Ernest Oppenheimer, former Chairman of the Board of De Beers Consolidated Mines, Ltd., a magnificent gem-quality diamond crystal weighing 253.7 carats, from the Dutoitspan Mine, Republic of South Africa; John B. Jago of San Francisco donated his collection of minerals, numbering nearly 4000 specimens and generally considered to be the finest contemporary private collection in the United States; and Mr. and Mrs. Lennart Erickson of Palo Alto, Calif., donated three outstanding gems: a 117- carat emerald cabochon brooch, a 126-carat aquamarine, and a 50.5- carat rubellite tourmaline. 789-^27—66 14 Exhibits ANTHROPOLOGY An exhibit of Dead Sea Scrolls from Jordan was shown in the foyer gallery of the Museum of Natural History from February 27 through March 21. Negotiations for loan of the specimens and accompanying photographs, conducted by Gus W. Van Beek and the Department of State, had been in progress since 1960 with the Government of Jor- dan, which generously loaned the material for the Smithsonian ex- hibit. One of the most popular ever presented in the Museum, the exhibit was kept open Friday, Saturday, and Sunday evenings; and during its 22 days 209,643 persons were recorded as visiting it. The exhibition provided a synopsis of the story of the Dead Sea Scrolls in four sections: first, the discovery; second, the Essenes, the people of the Scrolls, and their community; third, the Scrolls themselves and their significance for historical and religious studies; and fourth, the techniques of Scroll research and publication. Van Beek was assisted in preparation of the exhibit by a number of internationally known scholars and by Rolland O. Hower, of the Smithsonian's exhibit staff, who was chief designer. The imaginative and effective arrange- ment, created for temporary traveling display, will eventually ac- company the material back to Jordan, where it will become part of the permanent Palestine archeological exhibits. The material was sched- uled for display in Philadelphia, Berkeley, Claremont, Omaha, and Baltimore, and will then go to Canada and England before its return to Jordan. This exhibit is an outstanding example of how much can be done to associate the meaning and significance of a group of objects with the objects themselves, stressing ideas in the exhibit rather than merely presenting specimens. Substantial progress was made in the African hall, in the hall of physical anthropology, and in the hall of Old World archeology. In the preparation of African materials, it was fortunately possible to undertake extensive restoration, cleaning, and repair of important specimens — some of them old and unique. A special crew, under contract, in the course of the year treated 288 separate items, of which the largest number were spears and swords and among the most important were wood carvings and masks, some of them among the oldest surviving from parts of Africa. They similarly treated over 100 specimens for exhibit in the hall of Old World archeology. A significant achievement was made by the plastics laboratory of the Office of Exhibits in the making of new casts of important works of 98 EXHIBITS 99 sculpture. Previously such casts have been made of plaster, and re- sulted in heavy, fragile specimens requiring considerable maintenance, including frequent repainting. Under the supervision of John C. Widener, old plaster casts are now being replaced with casts made of plastic. This involves cleaning and repairing the plaster cast, making a rubber mold of it, and then casting a reinforced, colored plastic duplicate. These new duplicates are light in weight, strong, and resis- tant to damage; they have the color built in and can be maintained by an occasional washing with detergent and water. A number of monochrome plastic casts have been made of reliefs from Zinjirli, Persepolis, and Nineveh. Much more ambitious was the copying in plastic of a large Egyptian red-granite lion, utilizing techniques devel- oped by Walter G. Sorrell. Using a fragment of Egyptian red granite as a guide, he made thin sheets of plastic reproducing the colors of the different crystals in the granite. These sheets were then broken into chips of various sizes, distributed over the surface of the mold, and a pink plastic matrix poured over them. The result is a magnificent cast which so nearly approximates the original stone that a fragment of the red granite placed against the plastic cast becomes lost in its back- ground. These techniques hold considerable promise for newer museums that are no longer able to acquire original sculptures from abroad. Work continued on the preparation and installation of the remaining few exhibits in the Asian hall, and collections already in the Museum were augmented with eight contemporary objects donated by Dr. and Mrs. Abram Kanof through the Jewish Museum in New York, and three specimens given by the Embassy of Israel. Installation of the Hall of Physical Anthropology approached its final stages with sections on man as a primate, on human biological variation, on pathology, and on the populations of the world, being produced. The section of exhibits on fossil man and a panel on mech- anisms of evolution are the only portions remaining for future prepara- tion. The world map showing body-build silhouettes of various popu- lations and accurate face masks of individuals from all parts of the world, has turned out to be particularly impressive and informative. On May 25, 1965, fire caused by a faulty electrical circuit gutted two cases in the Indian hall, one exhibiting Zuni and Hopi kachina figures, some of them collected as early as 1870 by such early explorers and scholars as Burke, Powell, Wheeler, Palmer, Cushing, and Steven- son, and the other, objects from the Spanish Mission period of the southwestern United States, illustrating the transition from Indian religious concepts to Catholicism. Nearly all of the objects in these 100 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY two exhibits were a total loss, although a few of the kachina figures can still be used for scientific study though not for exhibition. An ad- joining case illustrating the life of the Cocopa Indians was somewhat damaged by water and flames, but all of the material was saved. VERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY A model of a giant-sized black marlin, Makaira indica, captured by the donor, Alfred C. Glassell, Jr., provided a spectacular addition to the hall of life in the sea. The marlin, a world record for rod and reel, was captured off Cabo Blanco, Peru, and measured 14% feet in length and weighed 1560 pounds. Members of the curatorial staff participated in the planning and de- sign of the hall of osteology, which opened during the year, and the hall of cold-blooded vertebrates. The latter is in process of construc- tion, and considerable progress has been made in obtaining material for the topical and habitat cases. The freeze-dry method of preserving reptiles continues to be highly satisfactory and efficient. Freeze-drying of amphibians often brings a whitish wax to the surface, which is easily painted out by a thin coat of oil paint. On the basis of his experience in Chile and Antarctica last year, George E. Watson provided scripts for three cases in the temporary exhibition "Image of Chile," on display in fall of 1964. INVERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY Work on the hall of life in the sea progressed slowly throughout the year, with no additional exhibits opened. For alcove cases depicting reproduction and parental care, many models have been completed and work on others begun under the direction of Charles E. Cutress, Thomas E. Bowman, and David L. Pawson. In these exhibits an attempt is being made to show, by enlarged models, some of the many fascinating ways and devices by which marine invertebrates repro- duce their kind and provide protection for their eggs and young. Methods of reproduction, ranging from simple asexual splitting to the complex courtship behavior associated with sexual reproduction in a fiddler crab, and examples displaying parental care have been selected from as wide a range of animals as possible, so that these cases will also serve to illustrate the great diversity of form and structure in inverte- brate animals. With the assistance of summer intern Durbin Dixon, coral specimens were produced for inclusion in the coral-reef life group, but significant EXHIBITS 101 progress on this exhibit awaits construction of viewing ports and supporting steel work. Accompanied by Kjell B. Sandved, Cutress collected selected in- vertebrates and took over 1200 color photographs of living animals in Puerto Rico during August and September 1964. These, together with detailed notes, will form the basis for the construction of the models required for adequate representation of many of the minute and deli- cate invertebrate forms. Among the many specimens photographed was the large Caribbean feather-duster worm Sabellastarte magnified, selected to represent a polychaete annelid and a particular feeding mechanism. A model maker will construct with plastics and waxes an enlarged representation of this organism, working from the preserved specimens, notes, and photographs. Cutress continued to supervise the construction of models, for which data were obtained during a similar trip to the Hawaiian Islands in the previous year. PALEOBIOLOGY Clayton E. Ray was heavily occupied in developing plans for the hall of Quaternary vertebrates in collaboration with designer Lucius E. Lomax, of the Office of Exhibits. The laboratory of vertebrate paleontology made progress in mounting skeletons for exhibition in this hall of a Rancho La Brea group that includes the sabre-tooth cat Smilodon californicus, the ground sloth Paramylodon harlani, and the horse Equus occidentalis. Restoration has been completed preparatory to mounting the 4-horned antelope Stockoceros onusrosagrus from the Pleistocene of Arizona, received in an exchange from the Frick Lab- oratories at the American Museum in New York. Much progress also has been made in restoring the two giant ground sloths Eremotherium rusconii, secured by C. Lewis Gazin from the Pleistocene of Panama, which are to serve as the central display in the hall. MINERAL SCIENCES Construction was completed for new physical geology, meteorite, and jade exhibits, and for a major enlargement and revision of the gem exhibit. Paul E. Desautels wrote scripts for all the gem exhibit cases, the design was completed by Mrs. Dorothy Guthrie, and rein- stallation begun. When the gem exhibit was closed for revision in January 1965, a temporary exhibit was set up in the adjacent mineral hall. Edward P. Henderson and William G. Melson began writing scripts for the meteorite and physical geology exhibits, and the design and production of these will be started as soon as the gem and jade rooms are completed and reopened to the public in summer 1965. Museum of History and Technology Mrs. Lyndon Johnson during inspection of plans for Music on the Mall at the Museum of History and Technology. Secretary Ripley, left, is showing her a bass ophecliede from the collection of musical instruments. Below: Part of audience of over three thousand at concert of band music of the 1860's, played on restored Civil War-period instruments (see p. 109). Specially constructed device used for taking off exact measurements of hulls of sunken ships. Here it is being used to measure timbers on a ship believed to be late 16th-century Spanish, sunk off Bermuda. (See pp. 105-107.) Museum of History and Technology John C. Ewers, Director The Museum Historian as Scholar The academic historian relies upon the printed page and the written document for his primary source materials in reconstructing and interpreting history. The resourceful museum historian, however, is not limited to verbal sources. He knows that history is written in objects as well as in words. He seeks to recover the sights and sounds as well as the descriptions of history. In field and laboratory he seeks to employ the tools and methods of modern technology to obtain a more precise understanding of how people lived in the past. He is limited only by his ingenuity in making the most effective uses of these resources. The current research program of professional historians at the Museum of History and Technology provides numerous examples of this broader, more ingenious approach to history. I cite only a few examples. Buried treasure — whether it is in the ground or under the sea — has excited the curiosity of generations of Americans. In recent years the technical perfection of light diving gear has made undersea treas- ure hunting an increasingly popular pursuit. But under the leadership of Mendel L. Peterson, chairman of the Museum's department of armed forces history, underwater exploration in the Western Hemi- sphere has evolved from mere treasure hunting into systematic under- water archeology. In solving historical problems it combines with field exploration of underwater sites the study of written records of shipping and shipwrecks, and of the manufacture and uses of artifacts. It results in the recovery, preservation, and identification of dated artifacts which help to document the progress of the introduction of European culture into the New World, routes and cargoes in colonial trade, and the development of ships, and of their armament and other equipment. At underwater sites off Bermuda this year Peterson has conducted research in the techniques of surveying, measuring, and recording- undersea remains. Three new instruments for measuring in plan and elevation were used in exploring the timber remains of a ship believed 789-427—66—16 1Q5 106 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 l^g Half plan and elevations of timber remains, measured by the method described on the opposite page. Shape of the keel is conjectural. to be Spanish and of the late 16th century. An ingenious camera stand for photographing the remains in plan was built in the form of a brass tower adjustable in height. Carrying a 35-mm. camera at the top, the tower is set over the timber remains which have been marked with numbered "tacks" in a grid pattern. The photographs, taken in succession as the tower is moved over the site, later are as- sembled in a photographic mosaic which becomes a valuable guide to the artist making the finished drawing of the remains. Two instruments for measuring remains in elevation proved to be very successful. The first, a simple sighting device, is settled in the middle of the site and leveled. With this instrument, a theoretical MUSEUM OF HISTORY AND TECHNOLOGY INTRODUCTION 107 plane is established, and at each corner of a square encompassing the site datum rods are then set in the sea bottom, clear of the timber remains. With this sighting device, targets are set on the datum rods and securely fastened. These remain in place throughout the measuring operation. After the theoretical plane is established, a measuring frame con- sisting of heavy aluminum beams is placed on steel stanchions set vertically on the keelson of the timber remains. The frame is then secured to the stanchions at the plane established by the sighting device. Attached to this frame is a rack in which ride — at 6-inch intervals — measuring rods scaled in inches. Over each ship's timber in turn, starting at one end and progressing along the remains, the rack is set, leveled with the beam, and anchored at the outer end. The measuring rods are then lowered to contact the frame, and readings are taken directly from them. In this manner the curvature of each of the ship's frames is established. From these data, recorded with a grease pencil on white plastic sheets, an accurate elevation of the remains can be drawn. Techniques for preserving objects recovered from underwater sites meanwhile are being perfected through research in the Museum laboratory. These studies include the perfection of a more rapid method for dehydrating organic materials, and the uses, for wood specimens, of preservatives that penetrate and strengthen the specimens. Peterson's History Under the Sea: A handbook for underwater exploration, published in 1965, provides the first handbook on this subject ever printed. This pioneer text and its 56 plates cover the surveying of underwater sites, field preparation of materials recovered from these sites, laboratory techniques for preserving artifacts from underwater explorations, and photographic reproductions of selected metal, glass, and pottery specimens recovered from underwater sites and processed in the laboratory. Eugene Ostroff, associate curator of photography, employed modern technology in pioneering another field of historical research. Recog- nizing that image discoloration and fading was making old photo- graphs in the collections useless for reference or exhibition, he investi- gated the causes of this deterioration and explored the practicality of restoring the image. With some of the earliest photographs made by W. H. F. Talbot of England, who in 1839 invented the photographic negative, he obtained strikingly successful results. Faded prints in which the image was not visible to the eye were irradiated with neutrons in a reactor at the Brookhaven National Laboratories. This converted some of the image silver into radioactive isotopes. When an unexposed sheet of x-ray film was placed in contact with the original for a short 108 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 time, then processed, a clearly visible restored image corresponding to the original appeared on the x-ray film. Old photographs can be important historical documents. It is expected that the historian of the future will be indebted to Ostroff for his discovery of a means to recover the lost images on these faded documents. The use of the modern tape recorder in gaining knowledge of the past from living informants has proved an effective method of research in a variety of historical projects. Edwin A. Battison, associate cur- ator of mechanical and civil engineering, obtained from the surviving inventor, J. Frank Duryea, information on the construction of the Duryea automobile built in 1892-93, one of the first gasoline-powered automobiles built in the United States and the oldest in our collection. On the basis of these interviews with the inventor it was possible to restore missing details of the vehicle. The recorded data also pro- vided some of the information for Donald H. Berkebile's account of its construction, The 1893 Duryea Automobile, published by the Smithsonian Institution this year. C. Malcolm Watkins, curator of cultural history, carried a tape recorder to rural Moore County in North Carolina to record surviving folk-pottery traditions in an area where country folk have made red earthenware and salt-glazed pottery since before the American Revolution. There Ben Owen charmingly recalled how his grand- father had made pottery and described how he himself carried on the family tradition — from the digging of the clay to the removal of the fired pot from the kiln. Mrs. Joan Watkins supplemented the oral account with an extensive series of color photographs of this potter's shop and of the stages in his making of pottery. Examples of this pottery were obtained for the Museum collections. In the mountains of Virginia and North Carolina last fall Jay Scott Odell, museum specialist in the section of musical instruments, recorded traditional folk songs of the Appalachian Highlands played on the dulcimer and banjo, and descriptions of the making and use of these instruments from the lips of their makers or the musically talented descendants of makers. At the same time he photographed the playing of a dulcimer, made about 1875, which he later obtained for the na- tional collections. Such thorough documentation will be appreciated by the historian of future years. The sounds of history were sweet indeed in the series of concerts arranged by Mrs. Cynthia Adams Hoover, associate curator of musical instruments, during the year. The November 11, 1964, concert of Gustav Leonhardt, harpsichordist, playing on the Museum's restored MUSEUM OF HISTORY AND TECHNOLOGY INTRODUCTION 109 1754 Dulcken harpsichord, and Frans Brueggen, recorder player, was considered one of the highlights of the Washington musical year. At popular request, a program of the music of the 1860's, played on brass instruments of that period from the collections, was repeated in an open-air concert on the Mall in June. The musical arrangements were taken directly from handbooks of the Third New Hampshire Regiment of the 1860's. These and other concerts, played upon the kinds of instruments for which the music was written, not only delight those in attendance but are recorded for the study of musicians and historians. Surely the museum historian is no less concerned with written his- tory than is the academic historian — but he consults a greater variety of sources. He reads history not only in letters and documents, but also in illustrated trade catalogs, magazine and newspaper advertise- ments, plans, drawings, paintings, prints, and photographs, and in three-dimensional objects as well. The museum historian has the same dedication to detailed accuracy as does the scholar in the natural sciences. He requires the same precision in restoring a hundred-year-old machine tool or a two-hun- dred-year-old highboy as does the paleontologist in his restoration of a hundred-million -year-old dinosaur. In his field work the museum historian's methods resemble those successfully employed by the anthropologist, be he an archeologist exploring a prehistoric site occupied by a little-known primitive people, or an ethnologist obtaining from an aged American Indian informant verbal information on tribal customs of six decades ago. Historic- site archeology — on land and under the sea — offers the historian oppor- tunities to recover plans of ships and of domestic, industrial, and military structures about which little information is available in written sources, as well as possibilities of recovering dated artifacts which will help to document other undated ones. The oral testimony of elderly men and women provides previously unrecorded details about inven- tions, manufacturing and crafts processes, and the disappearance or survival of traditional arts and crafts. In his dealings with the objects he studies and admires, the mature museum historian's interests extend far beyond their aesthetic quali- ties and beyond the tracing of technological developments per se. Like the anthropologist, he is concerned with the broader implications of objects — 'the roles they played in the cultures which produced them and the social implications of technological change. He will continue to employ a variety of techniques and to consult a wide range of sources in his quest for answers to the problems of history. Research and Publications SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY A number of major works by members of the department of science and technology were published or are in press this year. Silvio A. Bedini, in his Museum Bulletin Early American Scientific Instruments and their Makers, brought together a wealth of facts and photographs that has stimulated wide interest in this subject. As a result, enough new information has been elicited to warrant a revised and enlarged edition, on which he is working at present. Bedini also has assembled data and illustrations documenting the scientific instrument as it appears in American archeology. His purpose is a study of the scientific back- ground of the exploration and early settlement of the North American continent up to about 1700, for a book-length work completed in first draft. The American Philosophical Society now has in press his Mechanical Universe. In his Museum Bulletin Bark Canoes and Skin Boats of North America, Howard I. Chapelle brought order and meaning to the inchoate 50-year accumulation of notes and portions of manuscript left by the senior author and authority on canoes, Edwin Tappan Adney. This monograph, carried to completion through the generosity of the Mariner's Museum, which supported Chapelle in his work on the Adney paper and his preparation of the numerous line drawings it contains, represents a high order of cooperation in museum research, and makes available information which otherwise might have remained forever buried in museum archives. Sami K. Hamarneh's Bibliography on Medicine and Pharmacy in Medieval Islam was published in Stuttgart by the Internationalen Gesellschaft fur Geschichte der Pharmazie. And the Early Engineering Reminiscences (1815-40) of George Escol Sellers, which Eugene S. Ferguson edited and annotated while he was curator of engineering, appeared as a Museum Bulletin. Three other book-length manuscripts are in press: Robert P. Mul- thauf, The Origin of Chemistry, Uta C. Merzbach (with Garrett Birk- hoff), Source Book in Classical Analysis, and John H. White, Jr., The Cincinnati Locomotive Builders. And among the total of 35 publications listed by the staff this year were a group of historical and analytical articles on museums of science and technology making up the December 1964 issue of Technology and Culture (vol. 6, no. 1). A number of publications appeared as a result of research directed to the documentation of collections. Donald H. Berkebile's study of the Duryea automobile exploits a series of tape-recorded interviews with 110 RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS — SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 111 the surviving inventor J. Frank Duryea, initiated and conducted here in 1956 and 1957 by Edwin A. Battison. The Duryea automobile, built in 1892-93, is the oldest in our collection and one of the first gasoline-powered automobiles constructed in the United States. Only through these interviews was it possible to restore missing details of the vehicle. White's article on the Pioneer documents a locomotive built in 1851 by Seth Wilmarth in South Boston, Mass., and used primarily on the Cumberland Valley Railroad in Pennsylvania. The machine was given to the Museum in 1960 by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Bedini's study of an 18th-century astronomical clock deals with a timepiece designed, in the words of its inventor, Father Francesco Borghesi (1723-1802), "so that I might contemplate leisurely, both during the day and in the night, the true face of the heavens and of the seas unobscured by clouds, even though I had no astronomical equip- ment." This clock, for which the faculty of eclipse prediction was also claimed, was presented upon its completion in 1764 to the Empress Maria Theresa of Austria. It was acquired by the Museum in 1958. An article by Edwin S. Battison on screw-thread cutting by the master -screw method is based upon a study of one of the oldest extant screw-cutting machines, signed "Manuel Wetschgi, Augspurg" and dated from the end of the 17th century or the beginning of the 18th. The machine was received from the Yale and Towne Company in 1959. Some other research papers published this year were inspired by work in connection with exhibits. Chapelle's paper on Robert Fulton's "Steam Battery" is one of a series of articles he has based on his design reconstructions of historically important ships. The subject of the article, the first steam-powered warship, was designed during the War of 1812. The reconstruction of this historic ship is based upon plans located by Chapelle in the Danish Royal Archives in Copenhagen. A paper on early electromagnetic instruments was published in connection with the design of the exhibits in electricity by Museum consultant Robert Chipman. The problem which inspired this paper was the reconstruction for exhibit of "Schweigger's multiplier" of 1821, popularly regarded as the progenitor of the galvanometer. In the course of this work Chipman found that several other instruments of the same type were developed in the same year by Johann C. Pog- gendorf and James Cumming. The consequence was an exhibit, in which five reconstructed instruments are shown, and the present paper, in which his findings are exposed. Robert M. Vogel has produced three papers in connection with the design of the hall of civil engineering. His paper on the engineering 112 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY contributions of Wendel Bollman arose in the dual problem of repre- senting the work of Bollman in the exhibit of bridge building and of evaluating an actual bridge, which had been brought to our attention as the last surviving example of Bollman's work. Because of the interesting and unique problems arising during the design and con- struction of the hall, Vogel has presented the results of his experience in two papers that describe the manner in which objects and docu- ments are utilized to produce exhibits which will be both attractive to a general audience and informative to the specialist. Walter F. Cannon, who spent part of 1962 and 1963 in London on a National Science Foundation research grant for the study of science in England in the 19th century, published the results in two papers, "History in Depth: the Early Victorian Period," and "Scientists and Broad Churchmen: an Early Victorian Intellectual Network." He is now working on a biography of John Herschel. Hamarneh spent the period June 29 through October 17, 1964, in a research tour often Middle Eastern countries and Spain. In addition to assembling manuscript data for a history of medicine in medieval Islam, he collected data for indexing the medical manuscripts in the Zahiriyah National Library, Damascus. Edwin A. Battison arranged for and supervised the translation of two Russian books through the Israel Program for Scientific Translations: S. V. Tarasov, Technology of watch production (Moscow, 1956), and A. S. Britkin and S. S. Vidonov's biography of the machine builder A. K. Nartov. These translations, which have been completed, will be published with introductions by Battison. Publications by the Staff July 1964 through June 1965 Adney, Edwin T., and Chapelle, Howard I. The bark canoes and skin boats of North America. (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 230), 246 pp., 224 figs., 1964. Battison, Edwin A. Screw-thread cutting by the master-screw method since 1480. Paper 37 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 105-120, 23 figs., 1964. Bedini, Silvio A. Early American scientific instruments and their makers. (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 231), 184 pp., 85 figs., 1964. -. The Borghesi astronomical clock in the Museum of History and Technology. Paper 35 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 29-76, 35 figs., 1964. U.S. Army communications satellite "Courier" (see p. 135) in newly opened hall of electricity. JHOHHHn A section of hall of electricity tracing development of early lighting systems and the telephone. Special exhibit of early modern scientific instruments from the collection of David H. H. Felix of Philadelphia. Above: 17th- and 18th-century Persian and Italian astrolabes and armillary spheres. Below: Gregor- ian telescopes by Watson and Nairne, planetarium by Jones. American merchant marine hall was opened November 13, 1964. Its many rigged models trace the evolution of American ships for over two centuries. Above: model of Santa Maria, built in Museo Maritimo, Barcelona, as reconstructed for New York World's Fair. Gift of Lawrence H. M. Vineburg. (See p. 129.) Installing 12-ton piston assembly of Interborough Rapid Transit Co. engine in the hall of heavy machinery. Engine from which it was removed was one of eight that drove the generators supplying power to New York's first subway, opened in 1904. These principal moving parts convey a sense of the size of the reciprocating steam engine at the peak of its development, before it was displaced by the steam turbine for this use. The piston is 7 feet in diameter and with its rod weighs 6 tons. The crosshead being screwed on lower end of the piston rod, below, guides the rod when the engine is in operation. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 113 . Bramante e l'astrario del de' Dondi: Memorie della Acca- demia Patavina di Scienze. Letter e ed Arti (Padua, 1964), vol. 34, pp. 286-290. . Johann Wolfgang Gelb of Ulm, 17th century clock and instrument maker. Physics (1964), vol. 6, pp. 245-258, 6 illustr. . Time and light, the history of combined utensils for lighting and timekeeping. La Suissee Horlogere (internat. ed.), (Winter 1964), vol. 78, pp. 486-502; (Spring 1965), vol. 79, pp. 54-76. — . A Renaissance lapidary lathe. Technology and Culture (Summer 1965), vol. 6, no. 3, pp. 1-9, 10 pis. The evolution of science museums. Technology and Culture (Winter 1965), vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 1-29, 2 figs. Berkebile, Donald H. The 1893 Duryea automobile. Paper 34 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 1-28, 29 figs., 1964. Cannon, Walter F. History in depth: The early Victorian period. History of Science (1964), vol. 3, pp. 20-38. . The role of the Cambridge movement in early 19th century science. Pp. 317-320 in Proceedings of the 70th International Congress of the History of Science. Paris: Hermann, 1964. . The normative role of science in early Victorian thought. Journal of the History of Ideas (October-December 1964), vol. 25, no. 4, pp. 487-502. . Scientists and broad churchmen: An early Victorian intel- lectual network. Journal of British Studies (November 1964), vol.4, no. 1, pp. 65-88. William Whewell, F.R.S., Part II: Contributions to science and learning. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London (Decem- ber 1964), vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 176-191. Chapelle, Howard I. Fulton's "Steam Battery": Blockship and catamaran. Paper 39 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 137-176, 20 figs., 1964. Chipman, Robert A. The earliest electromagnetic instruments. Paper 38 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 121-136, 8 figs., 1964. Farber, Eduard. History of phosphorus. Paper 40 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 177-200, 23 figs., 1965. Ferguson, Eugene S., Edit. Early engineering reminiscences (1815-40) of George Escol Sellers. (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 238), 203 pp., 83 figs., 1965. 114 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY . Technical museums and international exhibition. Tech- nology and Culture (Winter 1965), vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 30-46. Finn, Bernard S. The new technical museums. Museum News (November 1964), vol. 43, no. 3, pp. 22-26. . The science museum today. Technology and Culture (Winter 1965), vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 74-82. Hamarneh, Sami K. Origin and functions of the hisbah system in Islam and its impact on the health professions. Sudhofs Archiv fur Geschichte der Medizin und der Naturwissenschqften (June 1964), vol. 48, no. 2, pp. 157-173. ■ ■. The pharmacy museum at Krakow. American Journal of Hospital Pharmacy (June 1964), vol. 21, pp. 266-273, 12 illustr. . Bibliography on medicine and pharmacy in medieval Islam. Internationalen G e sell schaft fur Geschichte der Pharmazie (Stuttgart, 1 964), n.s., vol. 25, 184 pp., 5 illustr. . History of the division of medical sciences. Paper 43 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 269-300, 24 figs., 1964. . Medicine U.S.A. . . . Damascus international fair. Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association (January 1965), n.s., vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 28-29, 3 illustr. Surgical developments in medieval Arabic medicine. View- points (April 1965), vol. 5, no. 4, pp. 13-18, 6 illustr. Lenzen, Victor F., and Multhauf, Robert P. Development of gravity pendulums in the 19th century. Paper 44 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 301-348, 34 figs., 1965. Multhauf, Robert P. The ancient natural philosopher as a chemist. Pp. 815-818 in Proceedings of the 10th International Congress of the History of Science. Paris: Hermann, 1964. — . Engineering in Philadelphia, 1775-1825: Pennsylvania's contributions to the professions. Pp. 60-67 in Proceedings of the Second Rose Hill Seminar. 1 964. A museum case history. Technology and Culture (Winter 1965), vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 47-58. Vogel, Robert M. Tunnel engineering, a museum treatment. Paper 41 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 201-240, 44 figs., 1964. . The engineering contributions of Wendel Bollman. Paper 36 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 77-104, 24 figs., 1964. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS — SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 115 — . Smithsonian Institution opens a new hall of civil engineering. Civil Engineering (July 1964), pp. 84-85, 4 illustr. Assembling a new hall of civil engineering. Technology and Culture (Winter 1965), vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 59-73, 9 figs. White, John H. The "Pioneer" — light passenger locomotive of 1851. Paper 42 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 240), pp. 241-268, 30 figs., 1964. . Alexander Latta as a locomotive designer. Bulletin Cincin- nati Historical Society (April 1965), vol. 23, no. 2, pp. 128-135, 3 illustr. ARTS AND MANUFACTURES The new curator of agriculture and forest products, John T. Schle- becker, took up his duties on June 14, 1965. Since 1959 associate professor of history at Iowa State University, he is a member of the executive committee of the Agricultural History Society and an im- portant contributor to agricultural history studies. His History of Dairying in the United States 1607-1964 is in press, and he has in progress a much-needed general history of American agriculture. Paul V. Gardner spent six weeks in Europe examining 22 museum and private collections for the purpose of verifying attributions and preparing material for a definitive catalog of the unique collection of 18th-century European porcelains received from Dr. Hans Syz. In the same connection and with the support and cooperation of the Ceramica Stiftung of Basel, Switzerland, arrangements were made by Dr. Syz for consultation in Washington with Dr. Rainer Ruckert, Ober- konservator of the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich, Germany, who spent the period April 19 through June 14, 1965, working with Dr. Syz and the staff on special problems. Dr. Syz, who on April 27, 1965, was appointed an honorary fellow of the Smithsonian Institution in recognition of his scholarly contri- butions to the history of ceramics, continues to spend several days every month on the project. Gardner, who has spent a major portion of his time revising the script for the new hall of ceramics to include the Syz collection, has nearly completed his biography of Frederick Carder, founder of Steuben Glass Works. While in Europe, he visited London and the English Midlands in search of material concerning Carder's early training and experience. J. Jefferson Miller II was also heavily involved in the revision of the hall of ceramics script to include recent important 116 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY acquisitions in the Syz and Sutherland collections. He has contributed extensively to the material for the Syz catalog. Jacob Kainen continued his study of the Dutch engraver Hendrick Goltzius (1558-1617). Eugene Ostroff has developed a new technique to restore faded photographic images through neutron irradiation. This work, de- scribed on page 107, is the subject of a paper, "Early Fox Talbot Photographs and Restoration by Neutron Irradiation," to be published by the Journal of Photographic Science (London). Ostroff is continuing his research into Talbot's experimental procedures. As part of his investigation he examined four Talbot work diaries, and he uncovered a group of Talbot's photographic experiments which has been brought back to Washington for study. He also found what may prove to be the earliest negatives on a transparent flexible-base material. These photographs by Nevil S. Maskelyne were made, ca. 1860, on very thin sheets of mica. At the invitation of Beaumont Newhall, director of George Eastman House, Ostroff presented a paper describing this work at the Symposium on the History of Photography and served as modera- tor of a panel on the preservation of photographic materials. A project idea originated by Mr. Ostroff has resulted in a unique photograph of the United States. This consists of an unbroken aerial color photograph of the United States from the east to the west coast, and, as a result, the longest panoramic picture in the world was pro- duced. The project involved the cooperation of the United States Navy, North American Aviation, Chicago Aerial Industries, and Gen- eral Aniline and Film Corporation. Museum technician David Haberstitch, who joined the staff in November 1964, has investigated the history of the section of photogra- phy. His report concerning its establishment and early activities reveals that the Smithsonian Institution was probably the first museum in the United States to collect material related to the history of photography. Philip W. Bishop worked on studies of early drilling methods and has documented the procedure used by Colonel Drake in drilling the first commercial oil well. A study of depreciation methods and their influence on the process of innovation, especially during the period 1870-1914, is also in progress. Research concerned with the preparation of scripts for the halls of nuclear energy, petroleum, iron and steel, and general manufacturing, has required continuous consultation with the technical staffs of in- dustrial firms and scientific laboratories and has resulted, incidentally, in a number of substantial gifts to the Museum. John N. Hoffman, RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 117 who entered on duty July 12, 1964, as associate curator of manufac- tures and heavy industries, has developed a design for the hall of coal. He has begun a study of the significance of the canal in the develop- ment of Pennsylvania's coal resources in the early 1 9th century. Mrs. Grace Rogers Cooper continued her research on the spinning wheel and its use in America from the Colonial era through the 19th century. Rita J. Adrosko made progress in her work on American coverlets and began two short-term projects: one on Jacquard-woven silk pictures and Jacquard imitation tapestries, and the second on the use of natural dyes in 18th- and 19th-century American textiles. Museum specialist Doris M. Bowman located a number of excellent examples of early machine-made net of the late 18th and early 19th century for her study of that article. Her catalog of the Museum's excellent collection of sewing birds and similar clamping devices is also further advanced. Publications by the Staff July 1964 through June 1965 Androsko, Rita J. Restoring an old loom. Handweaver and Craftsman (Summer 1964), vol. 15, no. 3, pp. 16-18, 4 figs. Cooper, Grace R. Sewing machines, unusual styles of the 1850's. Spinning Wheel (a national magazine about antiques), (July- August 1964), vol. 20, nos. 7-8, pp. 20-21, 5 figs., cover illustr. . John Kay. In vol. 13 of Encyclopedia Britannica, 1965. . Moire. In vol. 15 of Encyclopedia Britannica, 1965. Miller, J. Jefferson ii. Transfer printed English earthenware for the American market. Apollo (January 1965), n.s., vol. 81, no. 35, pp. 46-50. . Early Meissen tea canisters. Country Life (Feb. 4, 1965), vol. 130, no. 3544, pp. 222-223. . Transfer printed American scenes on Staffordshire wares. In Annual Catalog of the Johns Hopkins Hospital Carriage House Antique Show (May 1965). CIVIL HISTORY Documentation of an important and extensive collection of over 350 examples of American folk art, the Eleanor and Mabel Van Alstyne collection, which came to the museum in December, partly 118 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY by gift and partly on loan from Mrs. Fred Dana Marsh of Woodstock, N.Y., was undertaken by Peter Welsh and Anne Castrodale. This collection includes rare examples of the late 1 8th century and extends to the early 20th century. Carved animals from carousels, circus wagon figures, and shop and tavern signs abound in the group, which also includes paintings, calligraphy, weathervanes, ships' ornaments, and small carved birds and animals. The original interior appearance and furnishings of the Smithsonian building have been the subject of an extensive research project ini- tiated by Richard H. Howland. In this he has been assisted by Rodris C. Roth. This nationally significant architectural landmark was designed in the 1840's by the noted architect James Ren wick, and the long-range plan of renovation is intended to produce an interior that is in harmony with the exterior, and yet can serve use- fully as offices and exhibit areas. The research is nearing completion : renovation of the Regents' room and the Secretary's offices has been completed to reflect the period of the third quarter of the 19th century, the epoch of Joseph Henry's secretaryship; and considerable work has already been accomplished on the renovation of the great hall, which will serve as an exhibit area and visitors' lounge. Welsh has collaborated in choosing for it exhibits that reflect the significant research accomplishments of the museums and major bureaus of the Smithsonian. Museum specialist Jay Scott Odell made two field trips to the south- ern Appalachian mountain country, primarily in Virginia and North Carolina, to search for American folk instruments for the collections and to record the present traditions of musical performance in those areas. Concerned with interrelated objectives of research and exhibits, C. Malcolm Watkins and Mrs. Joan Pearson Watkins, research col- laborator, during October sought a post-Gold Rush period ranch house kitchen in northern California to install in the Museum's hall of everyday life in the American past. One was found in a long-aban- doned house, built about 1862 at the foot of Mount Shasta, which exemplifies both the transfer of traditional Eastern folk concepts of farm-house architecture and the adaptation of design to new Western conditions. With the cooperation of George H. Watson, specialist in restoration of old structures, the house was thoroughly analyzed and measured, and its plans were drawn. Mrs. Watkins made a detailed photographic study of it, and interviewed descendants of the builder, a gold-miner-turned-rancher named George Washington Arbaugh, and others. RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS — ARTS AND MANUFACTURES 119 Mr. Watkins is also engaged in research relative to a frame "salt box" house built in 1853 in Half Moon Bay, San Mateo County. Embodying ideas from 18th- and early 19th-century Eastern proto- types as well as adaptive features typical of California, the house is rich in implications of cultural transfer and cultural change. Mrs. Elvira Clain-Stefanelli published her Select Numismatic Bibli- ography, a compilation of 4962 titles, arranged by subject, that sum- marize research in numismatics during the past two centuries, including the study of medals and decorations, and a history of prices and related economic and historical problems. Vladimir Clain-Stefanelli, in addition to his publications, gave two lectures, "The Future of United States Coinage" and "Historical Notes on Some Coinage Metals," that attracted wide press coverage because their themes touched on the impending shortage of silver for United States coinage. Publications by the Staff July 1964 through June 1965 Borthwick, Doris E. Outfitting the United States Exploring Expe- dition: Lieutenant Charles Wilkes' European assignment, August- November, 1836. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society (June 1965), vol. 109, no. 3, pp. 159-172, 7 illustr. Clain-Stefanelli, Elvira. Medallic art at the Cleveland convention: Exposition des medailles a la convention de Cleveland. Medailles (Paris, December 1964), vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 2-5. . Select numismatic bibliography, xiv, 406 pp. New York: Stack's, 1965. Clain-Stefanelli, Vladimir. A new quarter shekel of the first year of the Jewish war. Israel Numismatic Journal (1964), vol. 2, p. 7, pi. 6. . The future of United States coinage. Numismatist (1964), pp. 1673-1675; (1965), pp. 39-41. . The silver crisis in the United States coinage system. Central Economic Letter (Central National Bank of Cleveland, 1965), vol. 4, pp. 1-4. Collins, Herbert R. Political campaign torches. Paper 45 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 241), pp. 1-44, 1964. . Red Cross ambulance of 1898. Paper 50 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 241), pp. 165-176, 1965. 120 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY Hoover, Cynthia Adams. The slide trumpet of the nineteenth century. Brass Quarterly (Summer 1963), vol. 6, no. 4, pp. 159-178, 7 pis. Howland, Richard H., and Forbes, John D. The society of archi- tectural historians. Pp. 77-81 in Report of the Commission on the Humanities. New York: American Council of Learned Societies, 1964. . What is past is prologue. Museum News (November 1964), vol. 43, no. 3, pp. 34-39. . Echoes of a gilded epoch. Arts in Virginia (Fall 1964), vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 2-9. Klapthor, Margaret Brown. Southern Maryland during the War of 1812. The Record (Quarterly Journal of the Historical Society of Charles City, Md., 1965), pp. 1-6. (ed. of historical text). The First Ladies' Cook Book: Favorite Recipes of all the Presidents of the United States. Pp. 1-224. New York, 1965. Melder, Keith E. Bryan the campaigner. Paper 46 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 241), pp. 45-80, 1965. . The beginnings of the women's rights movement in the United States, 1800-1840. 500 pp. University Microfilms, 1965. Murray, Anne W. The elegant handkerchief. Antiques (June 1965), pp. 720-723. Roth, Rodris. The colonial revival and "centennial furniture." Art Quarterly (1964), vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 57-81, 24 figs. Scheele, Carl H. A new home for the Smithsonian's philatelic and postal history collections. Congress Book (Thirtieth American Philatelic Congress, 1964), pp. 11-14, 1 pi. ■ . A philatelic new look at the Smithsonian. Society of Philatelic Americans Journal (September 1964), vol. 47, no. 1, pp. 13-18, 3 figs. Philately and postal history at the Smithsonian Institution. Scandinavian Scribe (March 1965), vol. 1, no. 4, pp. 67-71. Washburn, Wilcomb E. A Roman sarcophagus in a museum of American history. Curator (December 1964), vol. 7, no. 4, pp. 296-299. . [Introduction to facsimile edition of] History of the Indians of Connecticut from the earliest known period to 1850, by John W. De Forest, Archon Books, 1964 [20 pp.]. . Law and authority in Colonial Virginia. Pp. 116-135 in Law and Authority in Colonial America, edit. George A. Billias; Barre, Mass., 1965. . From this two-room frame house, built about 1862 by George Washington Arbaugh in Siskiyou County, California, came the western frontier ranch kitchen, shown below, which has been installed in the hall of everyday life in the American past. (See pp. 118, 138.) This faded photograph of a table setting, taken circa 1841 by W. H. F. Talbot of England, who in 1839 invented the photographic negative, was exposed to radiation in the pile at Brookhaven National Laboratories. When the treated original was then placed in contact with x-ray film, the radioactive isotopes of some image silver produced this picture. (See pp. 107-108.) RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS ARMED FORCES HISTORY 121 — . Natural light and the museum of the future. AIA Journal (January 1965), vol. 43, no. 1, pp. 60-64. — . The museum and Joseph Henry. Curator (May 1965), vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 35-54. Welsh, Peter C. Tanning in the United States to 1850: A brief history. (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 242), 108 pp., 28 illustr., 1964. . The decorative appeal of hand tools. Antiques (February 1965), vol. 87, no. 2, pp. 204-207, 15 illustr. . United States patents, 1790 to 1870. Paper 48 in Contribu- tions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 241), pp. 109-152, 57 illustr., 1965. ARMED FORCES HISTORY Underwater exploration, with its related activities, continued to be a major element in the program of Mendel L. Peterson. Research on the techniques of surveying and measuring underwater remains pro- ceeded on Bermuda sites. Three new instruments for measuring in plan and elevation were tested on the timber remains of a ship believed to be Spanish of the late 16th century. Their use is described in detail and illustrated on pages 105-106. Research on techniques of preserving organic materials recovered from underwater sites was continued with substantial results by museum specialist Alan B. Albright. The following investigations were carried on: 1. The devising of a rapid method of dehydration, using heated alcohol. 2. Tests using acetone as a dehydration agent. 3. Experiments using various heat ranges in attempting to speed up the penetration of PEG 4000 in dehydrated wood. 4. Experiments in the use of PEG 6000 in the place of PEG 4000 where the greater inherent strength of the higher weight PEG would be useful in restoring very fragile organic objects. 5. Research into the use of fiberglass resin as a wood preservative. 6. Continued research in the problem of the preservation of iron recovered from under water; research into the use of high temperatures and wax impregnation under vacuum in an attempt to eliminate the long process involved in the use of electro-chemical baths. 7. Restoration of ceramic materials. The results of these researches were published by Peterson this year in his History under the Sea: A Handbook for Underwater Exploration. 789-427—66 18 122 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY In the division of military history Edgar M. Howell and museum specialist Donald E. Kloster completed in draft the first volume of a comprehensive descriptive and critical catalog on United States Army dress to include uniforms, headgear, and footwear. In connection with this work, they actively assisted the Department of the Army in research which resulted in the adoption of a new-type headgear. Howell continued his work on contemporary graphics relating to the role of the Army in the opening of the West, publishing a second monograph on the subject. Kloster completed as partial requirement for the degree of master of arts a thesis, "The United States Uniform from 1832 to 1851, from Romance to Practicality." In the division of naval history Philip K. Lundeberg broadened his long-range study of modern commerce warfare, completing a survey of "The Impact of Undersea Warfare upon Allied Strategy during the First World War," which he presented at the annual convention of the American Historical Association. Delivered at a session sponsored by the American Military Institute on the influence of technology upon strategy in World War I, this paper re-examined the maritime con- flict in terms of the downfall of Imperial Russia, as well as Imperial Germany. Notwithstanding the fact that undersea operations utterly failed Germany, their most ardent protagonist during the First World War, submarine and mine warfare exerted a profound influence upon Great Britain's peripheral strategy, repeatedly frustrating her attempts to achieve effective maritime collaboration with her isolated eastern ally. Melvin H. Jackson continued his study of naval muzzle-loading ordnance of the 18th and 19th centuries. A field trip to Europe, which covered the coastal region from Sweden to Spain and included southern France and England, produced from naval museums and archives basic information which will enrich material contained in a manu- script on muzzle-loading ordnance prepared by the late Colonel Carey Tucker. At the Legersmuseum in Leiden, a series of 50 draw- ings concerning brass cannon founding in the 18th century was brought to Jackson's attention. These drawings by Pieter Verbruggen (who, with his father Jan, was master-founder of the Royal Brass Foundry at Woolwich, England, from 1770 to 1800) proved of such interest, from both the point of view of ordnance and the history of technology, that plans are under way for their publication. Jackson's manuscript "Caribbean Vortex, 1793-1801," a maritime history of the Wars of the French Revolution in the Caribbean was completed and is under consideration by a university press. His lecture at the Walter Library, University of Minnesota, Salt, Sugar and Slaves'. The Dutch in RESEARCH & PUBLICATIONS ARMED FORCES HISTORY 123 the Caribbean, was published by the Associates of the James Ford Bell Collection. Publications by the Staff July 1964 through June 1965 Goins, Graddock R., Jr., Lorenzoni repeating system. P. 151 in Encyclopedia of Firearms, 1964. ■ — ■. John H. Hall and Hall breech-loading arms. Pp. 157-158 in Encyclopedia of Firearms, 1964. — ■ . Edward Maynard. P. 218 in Encyclopedia of Firearms, 1964. — — — . Pump action. Pp. 249-250 in Encyclopedia of Firearms, 1964. — — ■ — . Repeating arms. Pp. 254-256 in Encyclopedia of Firearms, 1964. Howell, Edgar M. A special artist in the Indian Wars. Montana, the Magazine of Western History (1965), vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 2-23, 23 pis. Jackson, Melvin H. Salt, sugar and slaves: The Dutch in the Caribbean (No. 2 in James Ford Bell Lectures). Minnesota: Associates of the James Ford Bell Collection, 1965. Peterson, Mendel L. History under the sea: A handbook for underwater exploration. Smithsonian Publication 4538, 108 pp., illustr., 1965. ■. Preservation of material recovered from water. 20 pp. Washing- ton: Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Division of Naval History, 1965. — ■ ■. The Spanish plate fleet. Pp. 162-169 in Proceedings of the Fifth Annual Convention of the Underwater Society of America. Mexico City, 1965. The Collections CARE AND CONSERVATION SPECIMENS ACCESSIONED, IDENTIFIED, AND DISTRIBUTED— FISCAL YEAR 1965 Departments Science and Tech- nology .... Arts and Manu- factures .... Civil History . . Armed Forces His- tory Total . . . Accessions (transac- tions) 1965 (new) 254 266 744 128 1,392 Trans- Lent for J erred to study to Exchanged other Gov- investigators Received with other ernment and other Specimens on loan institutions agencies institutions identified 2 1,393 1,398 0 334 50 92 181 1,460 22 112 1,150 145,834 950 384 1,755 148,046 SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY The receipt of a large collection often poses a problem in cataloging and documentation. Such collections sometimes come to the Museum because their processing has been beyond the capacity of other museums or private collectors. The extant records may be incomplete, and their rehabilitation and full documentation may require years. Three large collections were handled this year: the Hirsch collection of water meters (96 items), the Read collection of phonographs (93 items), and the Arthur collection of timekeeping devices (about 2600 items). Processing them called for a special effort in which summer interns and outside consultants assisted Deborah Mills in their cataloging. A program to make operable the majority of machines to be exhibited in the hall of heavy machinery was undertaken by William Henson and Marion Jarboe. The latter also began occasional demonstrations of the machine tools in the hall of tools. An alarm system devised by Elliot Sivo witch and Roy LaRoche of the division of electricity has been installed experimentally for the protection of several objects not cased. ARTS AND MANUFACTURES A new technique for restoring faded photographs through neutron irradiation was devised by Eugene Ostroff (it is described in detail on page 107). A small selection of the most valuable photographs in the collection is now being treated by this method. 124 THE COLLECTIONS CARE AND CONSERVATION 125 Museum specialist Elliott Hawkins continued a long-range program of increasing the collections of periodicals, monographs, and books devoted to motion pictures. The cleaning of George Washington's headquarters tent, a major conservation project, was jointly undertaken by the divisions of textiles and military history. With plans for its permanent exhibition, this Revolutionary War tent, which had been carefully stored for 75 years in the military history collections, was carefully examined. It was found basically in sturdy condition, but the metal hooks and eyes used to fasten the sidewalls to the top had rusted and had stained and deterioriated the linen fabric, leaving it in an acid condition. The tent was also mud stained and generally dusty. After consultation, it was decided that for safe preservation, the tent, of single ply, z-twist, plain-woven, unbleached linen, should be cleaned to neutralize the acid condition which is very harmful to cellulose fibers. Stretched out, the sidewalls measured 82/3// long and between 6 '4" and 5'iy4" high. The top measured 34' by 20 '8" and was edged with a valance trimmed in a narrow woven red wool-twill tape of 2-ply, s-twist worsted yarns. Before work could be started, the 171 rusty hooks and eyes were removed to prevent further deterioration from rust. The tent parts were then protected with fiberglass screening and carefully vacuumed with a hand-type, low-suction vacuum cleaner to remove all loose dust and dirt. Although neutralized distilled water would have been preferred, the quantity required made it more economical to use de-ionized water with a non-ionic detergent. To handle the two portions of the tent, a wooden frame ll'x7' by 1" deep was constructed to support a con- tainer made of two layers of polyethylene sheets that could be clamped and undamped to the frame as required. The sidewall portion was folded into eight layers, placed on fiber- glass screening of suitable size, and lowered into a bath of 1 80 gallons of neutral, de-ionized water at room temperature, where it was soaked for 65 hours. This removed the large water-mark stains on the tent and some of the soil. Supported on the screen, the sidewall was re- moved from the bath, the soiled water pumped out, and the dirt film was wiped off and rinsed from the polyethylene bath liner, after which the bath was refilled with a wash solution consisting of % oz. of non- ionic detergent to each gallon of de-ionized water, the detergent first having been dissolved in beakers of water over low heat. When the entire bath was at room temperature, the sidewall was lowered into it and remained there for 3% hours. The only mechanical action used was a gentle pushing and smoothing movement by hand to eliminate air bubbles that formed between the layers of tent. After being re- 126 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY moved from the detergent solution, the sidewall was rinsed four times. Each rinse solution was tested for pH, and the final reading was a very- satisfactory 7.1. After removal from the final rinse, the sidewall was allowed to drain on the screening until excess moisture was eliminated. It was then laid on a polyethylene film placed over a terrazzo floor and carefully smoothed flat while damp. The linen adhered to the plastic and dried smooth overnight. White absorbent towels, laid along the full length, took up excess moisture and protected the linen from dust. It was then rolled until the case was completed for exhibition. The top was treated in the same manner, except that, because of the shaped construction, it was dried on a frame stretched with fiberglass screening and supported two feet from the ground to allow a good circulation of air and to keep drying time at a minimum. At installa- tion it was lightly sprayed with distilled water and smoothed to the shape of its contour support structure. The entire project, under the general supervision of Mrs. Grace R. Cooper, was carried out by museum technician Maureen Collins of the textile laboratory, assisted by museum technician Lois Vann of the division of textiles and museum specialist Donald Kloster of the division of military history. CIVIL HISTORY A new, well-equipped conservation laboratory designed by museum specialist Jay Scott Odell, has facilities for the restoration of all types of musical instruments and includes a "go-bar deck," an adaptation of an 18th-century device for gluing bridges on harpsichord sound boards. With the completion of this laboratory, most of the restoration work can now be done at the museum under controlled conditions. Once the collections are in order, this shop will also be used for experiments in the building of modern reproductions of medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque instruments. Specially designed metal storage racks, installed for keyboard instru- ments, are cantilevered to allow for storage flexibility. The keyboard instruments, with their legs removed, are mounted on wooden pallets and lifted into place by a fork-lift truck. This system permits ready examination of the instruments, and is efficient enough to store a major portion of the Smithsonian's collection of more than 200 keyboard instruments. Under the guidance of museum technician Mrs. Betty J. Walters, considerable progress was made in assembling data on certain phases of the collections for use in a Termatrex data-retrieval system. Ulti- mately, it is expected that major portions of the collections, with their THE COLLECTIONS — GIFTS AND ADDITIONS 127 associated catalog records, can be made useful in a variety of ways hitherto impossible by visual or manual means. More than 95 percent of the entire reference collection of philatelic items was moved from the old Arts and Industries building into the new museum within two days, and the move was completed without damage to any of the 9,800,000 specimens handled. ARMED FORCES HISTORY Experiments were begun to test the effectiveness of a commercial rust-inhibitor formula C.R.C., which appears to be most effective and requires less work than is presently required in applying a wax formula. GIFTS AND ADDITIONS SPECIMENS IN THE NATIONAL COLLECTIONS MAY 31, 1965 Department of Science and Technology 84, 405 Physical Sciences 4,453 Mechanical and Civil Engineering 11,091 Electricity 7, 333 Transportation 25, 783 Medical Sciences 35, 745 Department of Arts and Manufactures 149, 808 Textiles 35,172 Ceramics and Glass 17, 157 Graphic Arts 51,714 Manufactures and Heavy Industries 35, 214 Agriculture and Forest Products 10, 551 Department of Civil History 10,196,735 Political History 48,350 Cultural History 23,688 Philately and Postal History 9, 944, 937 Numismatics 179, 760 Department of Armed Forces History 53, 303 Military 41,249 Naval 12,054 Total 10,484,251 SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY A number of notable collections were acquired this year by the department of science and technology. Among them are the Arthur collection of timekeeping devices, the Read collection of phonographs, a rare early American woodworking shop, a collection of wood- carvings, and the "first generation" of communications satellites. 128 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY The first, assembled by James Arthur, who also endowed the Arthur lectures at the Smithsonian, is especially remarkable for Japanese and early American clocks and for American watches. It was re- ceived on permanent loan from New York University. The Read collection was received from Oliver Read, co-author of the book From Tinfoil to Stereo. It contains such rarities as the Edison coin- operated phonograph of 1897, and it more than doubles the size of the Museum's phonograph collection. The woodworking shop, from Mansfield, Conn., contains an up-and-down sawmill, water turbines, and, among other machines, one of the earliest extant lathes with a completely intact automatic feed. It also contains a very important gage attachment for woodturning with handtools, which allows "automatic" sizing of the work. The wood carvings, gift of Joel Barlow, include a number of ship half-models, which augment our already strong collection, and also decorative ship carvings and figureheads, of which we have heretofore had very few. And in a highly successful example of systematic collecting of pioneer apparatus in a particular field, Bernard S. Finn succeeded in acquiring from five different donors, for a special ex- hibition of "communications in space," actual examples of the first eight communication satellites. Among the important individual specimens added to the collections were the following: A Chinese monumental equatorial sundial of the Ming dynasty. This instrument, 52 inches in height, is the only sundial of its type known to exist in the Western world. Its construction is of native copper gilded by the mercury process. The 25-inch dial is designed to be read on both sides, with the shadow marking the hours on the upper side during the summer months and on the lower side during the winter. The second ammonia-beam maser apparatus, designed in 1955 by Charles Townes of Columbia University, a joint gift of Townes and the University. The maser is an outstanding development of 20th-century quantum physics for which the inventor shared the Nobel Prize in 1964. An early American-made Schmidt telescope, built in the 1930's by C. A. and H. A. Lower of San Diego, Calif., was received from San Diego State College. A White Motor bus of 1917, received from the Baltimore Transit Co., the first commercial transit motor vehicle in the collection. A model, to the scale of 1" equals 1', of the famed "Louisville pumping engine," one of the masterpieces of Erasmus D. Leavitt, builder of the most efficient steam engines of the 19th century. Before Washing George Washington's headquarters tent (see pp. 125-126). Here the 82-foot sidewall is being rinsed. Sidewall is carefully smoothed onto polyethylene film for drying and is covered with towels to absorb excess moisture and to protect it from dust. Indian silhouette weathervane, one of many examples of American folk art in the Eleanor and Mabel Van Alstyne collection, gift of Mrs. Fred Dana Marsh. Chinese equatorial sundial, recently obtained for the national collections (see p. 128), is 52 inches high and measures 48 inches in overall length. The diameter of the dial is 25 inches. It is constructed of almost pure native copper assembled with wide dovetail joints, hammered into surface smoothness from the interior, and soldered. The decorative motifs are chiseled and engraved from the outside, and the whole is covered with heavy fire gilt. The dial is read on both sides — on the upper surface during summer and on the lower surface during winter. Early 1 5-passenger motor bus with solid-rubber tires, gift of Baltimore Transit Co., was built in 1917 by the White Motor Company. The body was made by J. G. Brill, the famous streetcar builder. Below: Bow view of model of the United States revenue cutter Bear, as she appeared in the late 19th century, acquired for new hall of naval history. . THE COLLECTIONS — GIFTS AND ADDITIONS 129 the original engine was scrapped jin 1 962, this fully operating model was begun by the builder and donor, Mr. Harry H. Catching of Lexington, Ky. A model of Columbus' flagship of 1492, Santa Maria, constructed at the Museo Maritimo in Barcelona, under the supervision of its director, Jose Ma. Martinez-Hidalgo y Teran. This model, presented by Lawrence H. M. Vine burgh, was built in connection with the full -sized reconstruction of the Santa Maria for the New York World's Fair. The project was directed by Sr. Hidalgo, as the leading authority on the ships of Columbus, with the advisory participation of Howard I. Chapelle. ARTS AND MANUFACTURES With the cooperation of the Fine Hardwoods Association and specialist manufacturers some 200 panels of foreign and domestic woods were presented for incorporation into a decorative screen, designed by the exhibits laboratory, that will provide the hall of forest products with an encyclopedic account of available timbers. For the agriculture collections a fine contemporary model of the first field pick-up hay baler (1932) was received from Mr. Leslie R. Tallman, son of the inventor. The ceramics collections continued to receive support from previous donors, notably Mrs. William A. Sutherland and Robert H. McCauley. Dr. Hans Syz formally donated 16 extremely valuable items of that part of his collection still on loan to the Museum. Other major gifts were those of Dr. Lloyd Hawes who presented 23 pieces of 18th- century English earthenware, including some excellent examples of polychrome salt glaze; and of Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Pfiueger, whose gift included an extremely fine pair of Chinoiserie busts from the Bow Factory (ca. 1755). The Holmegaards Glasvaerk of Denmark and the N. V. Koninklijke Nederlandsche Glasfabriek "Leerdam" of Holland added to the collections of contemporary glass some fine pieces which it was possible to include in the present exhibition area. Ray Winfield Smith's collection of ancient glass was lent to the Museum for installation in the glass gallery in September 1964, and during the year ten pieces from this collection were acquired. A splendid set of 31 Venetian views by Antonio Canal (1697-1768), commonly called Canaletto, constituting the entire body of his etchings, was received from Mrs. Francis P. Garvan of New York City. Among other important acquisitions were outstanding examples of German Expressionist printmaking including work by Max Beckmann, Ernst 789-427—66 20 130 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY Ludwig Kirchner, Erich Heckel, Franz Marc, and Max Pechstein; one of the earliest known lithographs Landscape with Men in Armor (1803) by Joseph Fischer; and the aquatint Green Clown with Boy by Georges Rouault. American contributions were represented by the etching Woolworth Tower (1913) by the pioneer modernist John Marin, and the color woodcut View from Taormina by Carol Summers. The A. B. Dick Company of Chicago presented an early model (ca. 1885) of the Edison mimeograph, an important pioneer example of duplicating equipment. To the collection of historic photographic equipment were added the first Polaroid-Land camera to be produced (1948); a prototype of the first Leica camera, invented by Osker Barnack (1912) and marketed by Leitz in 1924; and two examples of the Technicolor Corporation's 3-step color motion-picture cameras associated with the introduction of high-quality color motion pictures in 1930. Colonel and Mrs. Burnett Brown of Lacock Abbey, Wiltshire, the home of W. H. F. Talbot, gave a rare copy of Part VI (April 1846) of the latter's publication The Pencil of Nature, the first book to be illustrated with photographs. Dr. Zoltan Bay of the National Bureau of Standards deposited the original electron-multiplier developed by him (1938) at the Institute of Atomic Physics of the Royal Hungarian University, Budapest. This apparatus, to be included in the hall of nuclear energy, repre- sented a turning point in the development of instruments for counting elementary particles. An equally critical stage in the study of nuclear physics is represented by the million-volt Van de Graaff accelerator (1931) given by Merle A. Tuve of the Carnegie Institution's Division of Terrestrial Magnetism. Among other achievements, this machine brought protons close enough to atomic nuclei to overwhelm the inher- ent electrical repulsion, and so demonstrated the existence of the short- range nuclear force. Pioneer work among elementary particles was commemorated by Professor Conversi of the Universita degli Studi, Rome, Italy, in the form of a replica of his experiment with Piccioni and others (1941-1943) demonstrating the noncapture of mu mesons. A number of substantial gifts were received from industry for the iron and steel hall. Ford Motor Company Fund and U.S. Steel Corporation are supporting the construction of large models of a foundry and of an integrated steel plant, respectively. The Allis- Chalmers Company gave a model of a pelletizing plant, Bausch and Lomb a bench metallograph, and the Tinius Olsen Company a display of hardness-testing equipment. The coal industry contributed a variety of miners' tools, while a THE COLLECTIONS GIFTS AND ADDITIONS 131 further portion of a collection of tinware, previously on loan, was converted to a gift. Plans for the hall of petroleum were virtually completed by agreement with the engineers of various firms for demonstrations of oil production techniques to accompany the actual machinery. A group of oil men in and around Tulsa, Okla., have contributed, through Mr. W. H. Helmerich, a 57-foot mural describing the oil industry. This mural, now being painted by Mr. Delbert Jackson, staff artist of the Pan American Petroleum Corporation, will embellish the entrance to the hall of petroleum. The Austrian Imperial bridal veil, an outstanding example of Brus- sels Point de Gaze lace, was presented to the textile collections by Mrs. Marjorie Merriweather Post. The veil was worn by Princess Stephanie of Belgium for her wedding to Crown Prince Rudolph in 1881. Scat- tered over the Brussels needlepoint reseau, sheerest of all lace grounds, are garlands and sprays of ferns and flowers of many kinds. The crown of the veil is powdered with tiny rosebuds, while the double-headed eagle of Austria dominates the center back. The arms of the provinces of Austria and Belgium form the border, with the arms of Belgium at the center. Also added to the textile collections were nine fragments of Egyptian tapestry-woven fabric, woven between the third and eighth centuries, A.D. These interesting examples of early tapestry-weaving technique will be incorporated into the expanded area of tapestry weaving in the new textile hall. CIVIL HISTORY The collections were enriched in a variety of ways. The Honorable David K. E. Bruce presented numerous objects of French and English decorative arts and furniture. Mrs. Gustave A. Murman gave the woodwork of a Federal-period parlor from a house in Martha's Vine- yard, Mass. This room is remarkable for the primitive landscape painting that appears in an oval cartouche in the rectangular over- mantel panel above the fireplace. The room, with contemporary furniture, will be installed in the hall of everyday life in the American past. It was moved from its site by the Museum's restoration specialist, George H. Watson. The Eleanor and Mabel Van Alstyne collection, containing outstanding examples of folk art of the United States, was given by Mrs. Fred Dana Marsh. In addition to the kitchen of the George Washington Arbaugh ranch house in Siskiyou County, Calif., discovery of which is described on pages 118 and 138, the collections of 132 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY Californiana were greatly enriched by a unique figure of a hunter, carved of redwood, holding a gun in one hand and a partridge in the other. The wheeled platform on which it stands and its costume both confirm the traditional belief that it was carved, in about 1850, as a sign for a gun shop in San Jose. A handsome bass viola da gamba was acquired for the collection of musical instruments. This fine instrument, made in London, 1718, by Barak Norman, who is regarded as the Stradivarius of the viola da gamba, is richly carved with floral designs and an elaborate monogram on the back and sides. A carved male figure appears on the head. In excellent condition, this instrument, when not in use in Museum concerts, will be on exhibit. At a ceremony on December 18, 1964, Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson contributed to the First Ladies collection a most significant addition, the satin evening dress worn by her at a state dinner at the White House in December 1964. Presented by Mrs. Gladys P. Lehmann was one of a group of 188 arm chairs ordered in 1818 by Henry Clay and used in the United States House of Representatives until 1857. The chair, upholstered in its original black horsehair, bears the label of the maker, T. Constantine and Company of New York City. The Honorable John W. McCormack, Speaker of the House, presented the Museum with the flag flown at the Capitol during the time the body of President Kennedy was lying in state. Among the pieces of unusually fine jewelry given by Mrs. Merri- weather Post are a necklace of diamonds and oriental emeralds and a ring set with a large oblong emerald. Her daughter, Mme. Leon Barzin, gave a pair of pear-shaped diamond earrings once owned by Marie Antionette; another daughter, Mrs. Augustus Riggs IV, presented a seed-pearl bag with platinum frame set with rubies, emeralds, and sapphires. Remarkable during the past year was the increased number of institutions and private individuals from abroad contributing to the growth of the numismatic collections. Among them were the Hermit- age in Leningrad; the mints of Australia, the Netherlands, Norway, Nationalist China, and Pakistan; the banks of Guatemala, New Zea- land, and Venezuela; the Deutsche Bundesbank; the Bayerische Hypotheken- und Wechsel-Bank; the Australian Numismatic Society; as well as engravers and medallic art companies from Denmark and Italy. Frederick Hauck donated an impressive collection of 2478 gold coins, among them 1918 United States pieces which filled many gaps in the branch-mint issues in the national collections, and 560 foreign gold and platinum coins as well as medals encompassing the entire THE COLLECTIONS GIFTS AND ADDITIONS 133 world. Other additions to the United States series came from Mrs. F. G. C. Boyd, who gave 934 United States tokens and medalets. From the Stack family in New York came many donations, among which should be noted particularly a group of trial impressions of United States coins and pay orders signed in 1795 by David Ritten- house, first Director of the United States Mint. Mr. Willis H. du Pont added to his previous gifts of Russian coins, formerly owned by the Grand Duke G. Mikhailovitch, a group of 923 coins and medals in silver and bronze encompassing the period from Catherine II to Alexander I. Mrs. Wayte Raymond contributed over 2000 foreign coins struck during the 19th and 20th centuries. A well-rounded collection of coins of Nepal from the 1 7th through the 20th century was presented by Mr. Paul W. Rose. Outstanding among the philatelic objects acquired is a unique cover and its enclosure, carried by John Wise in his balloon Jupiter, August 17, 1859, from Lafayette, Ind., on the first attempt to carry American mail by air under authority of postal officials. The cover was pur- chased through the Charles and Rosanna Batchelor fund and the Milton A. Holmes Memorial fund. A specialized collection of 2392 stamps of various nations commemorating Rotary International was received from Dr. Joseph H. Kler of New Brunswick, N.J. Portions of this collection, important for its scope and completeness, were exhibited at a special ceremony in Washington, D.C., held to observe the issuance of new Rotary commemorative stamps by the Republic of China. An additional 80,000 postage stamps, with perforated initials, were given by Mr. and Mrs. Victor J. Van Lint of Riverside, Calif., and additional essays, proofs, and photographs of the stamps of China were given by Mr. and Mrs. R. O. D. Hopkins of Contoocook, N.H. ARMED FORCES HISTORY Significant additions to the national collection of historic warship models, being installed by the division of naval history in the new hall of armed forces history, include an attractive admiralty-style model of the 44-gun H.M.S. Boston, a vessel constructed for the Royal Navy in 1748 by Yankee shipwrights; a superb model of the United States Revenue cutter Bear, representing that historic vessel under sail during her late 19th-century service in Alaskan waters; and impressive models of the nuclear submarine George Washington, the nuclear frigate Bainbridge, and the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Vigilant. A remarkable group of maps and nautical charts, located at Ellicott City, Md., by Philip K. Lundeberg, includes an early hydrographic 134 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY survey (ca. 1828) of the harbor of Annapolis, Md.; pre-construction maps of the proposed Chesapeake and Potomac Canal and the Erie Canal; early 19th-century nautical charts of North American waters, retailed by Edmund Blunt; and, most significant for the history of exploration, a series of four manuscript charts of the southern coast of South America prepared during the Malaspina Expedition, an official survey conducted by the Spanish Navy in that quarter from 1798 to 1799. The Medal of Honor and other decorations, orders, and service medals awarded Major George G. McMurtry for conspicuous gallantry in action with the "Lost Battalion" in World War I were presented by Mrs. McMurtry. The Medal of Honor is the only example of this unique decoration from the modern period, during which it has been rarely awarded, in the national collections. From the Patent Office came an important group of ordnance patent models that supplement the already extensive and unique collection in the division of military history. A rare Confederate cutlass was received from Douglas R. Williams. The collections of materials from underwater sites were increased substantially during the year through field activity in Bermuda during July and August 1965. A large collection of sherds from the Spanish site, believed to be late 16th century, were acquired. From these frag- ments some 1 5 individual shapes of redware pottery probably can be reconstructed. A significant collection of ordnance materials recov- ered from the site of VHerminie, a. French frigate which sank in 1838, includes a device which may be a pill-lock firing mechanism for the heavy guns. If this identification proves to be correct, the device will be a very rare specimen, as this type of lock was transitional and in use for only a brief period. An early 18th-century iron naval cannon came to the collections as a gift from the DACOR Corporation through its vice president, Mr. D. L. Davison. This piece was recovered from a site, as yet unidentified, lying on Banner Reef south of Jamaica, West Indies. Exhibits SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Two major exhibition halls were opened in their entirety, and two others in part. The hall of civil engineering was dedicated on July 8, 1964, and the hall of American merchant shipping, on November 12, 1964. In September 1964, the refrigeration and diesel sections of the hall of heavy machinery were opened, and in February 1965, that portion of the hall of electricity representing communications, power, and electrical measurement. The division of electricity undertook a notable program of special exhibitions. In July 1964, the exhibition "Communications in Space" brought before the Museum's visitors the story of communications satellites from its beginning in 1958. The exhibit is based upon eight operable satellites received from the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. (Telstar I), National Aeronautics and Space Adminis- tration (Echo I, Relay I, and Syncom II), Department of the Army (Score and Courier), U.S. Air Force and the Lincoln Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Westford), and the American Radio Relay League (Oscar). The exhibit is completed by an ani- mated diorama illustrating the variety of modern communications systems and by an exhibit relating to the Satellite Communications Corporation. For this exhibit, which is scheduled for a 2-year showing, an illustrated brochure was prepared. Special exhibits were opened on the history of electrical transformers, on early modern scientific instruments, and on the Verrazano-Narrows bridge. The exhibit of transformers, in October 1964, was occasioned by the loan of two historic transformers of 1885 by the Budapest Historical Museum. Through the courtesy of the Hungarian Gov- ernment Peter Asztalos of the Ganz Electrical Works of Budapest presented two lectures here in connection with this exhibit. The exhibit of early modern instruments consisted of a collection, chiefly of 17th- and 18th-century instruments, owned by David H. H. Felix of Philadelphia. A showing in March and April 1965 of 43 drawings and paintings by Lili Rethi recorded the construction of the Verrazano-Narrows bridge, 1961-65. Also shown in March 1965 was a collection of prints from the civil engineering collections, to be circulated by the Smithsonian traveling exhibition service. 135 136 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY ARTS AND MANUFACTURES In September the halls of hand and photomechanical graphic-arts processes were opened. To the collections and exhibits transferred from the old building were added new cases and redesigned displays, among them a handsome free-standing installation of the diorama on Japanese woodcutting. The first special exhibition, "Sporting and Western Lithographs by Currier & Ives," was shown in the special exhibition hall, April through May 1965. The exhibit of photographs by Sam Falk, installed June 1964 in the exhibit hall in the Arts and Industries building, was extended through the year. Installation of the Tuve Van de Graaff accelerator in the hall of nuclear energy was virtually completed. This machine was dismantled at the division of terrestrial magnetism of the Carnegie Institution under the supervision of M. A. Tuve and Louis Brown. The supporting columns were redesigned by the staff. The reinstallation by exhibits specialist Abraham Richards and museum technicians John Carter and Francis Gadson has required meticulous measurements and the fitting of a complicated mass of instrumentation in an area difficult of access. Plans were advanced for extension of the demonstration program of the division of textiles to include spinning as well as weaving. In January demonstrations of tapestry weaving started on an experimental basis in the Arts and Industries building. These "live" exhibits, even on their present limited scale, continue to draw local residents as well as tourists, who actively participate by asking questions. Examples of contemporary and 19th-century hand-weaving and needlework were lent to the Instituto de Cultura Hispanica for a special exhibition in Madrid, "Arte Popular de America y Filipanas." In- cluded were a 20th-century afghan, poncho, stole, guest towel, and overshot coverlet, as well as a 19th-century overshot coverlet, a silk slumber throw of 1883, and an applique album quilt of 1847. Preparation for the reopening of the textile hall in the Museum of History and Technology is under way. One area of the new hall will be reserved for special changing exhibits drawn from the collections and from temporary loans. Part of the glass gallery was opened September 18, 1964. A special exhibition of 65 contemporary glass objects chosen by the curator and given by Leerdam factory in Holland is being installed in it. The opening of the ceramic hall, in production throughout the year, is scheduled for early spring, 1966. The popular beehive unfortunately had to be closed down during Gallery of glass, opened October 1964. traces the history of glassmaking from about 1500 B.C. to the present. Installing the Tuve Van de Graaff accelerator in the future hall of nuclear energy. History of the posts exhibit in newly opened hall of philately and postal history, Museum of History and Technology. Below: Transportation of the mails exhibit. Die transfer press, used by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing for the preparation of printing plates, is exhibited in the stamp production section. Below: Country-store post office of about 1880, furnished with original equipment, is a principal exhibit in the new hall. Nineteenth-century screw coining press in the new hall of monetary history and medallic art. This type of press, known as early as the 16th century, was widely used between 1700 and 1830. In the background, display of United States coins. Below: The Honorable John W. Snyder, former Secretary of the Treasury, and Director of the Mint Eva Adams examine display of currencies circulated in Colonial America. EXHIBITS 137 the winter because the colony proved too small for survival. It is hoped to modify the hive and install a larger colony during the current season. CIVIL HISTORY The numismatic displays in the Arts and Industries building were moved to the new Museum of History and Technology, where the hall of numismatics was opened Friday, October 23, 1964. While the layout differs in many respects from that previously used, the general character of the exhibit remains the same. The exhibits trace the evolution of money within a sequence of significant historical events and show it as an integral part of the cultural development of human society. Additional features are the world's largest collection of gold coins on display and the famous United States Mint collection, which had its inception in the late 18th century. Among the special numismatic displays were "The Kennedy Half Dollar," with original mint models and designs made available by the United States Mint; "The Austrian Empire and Its Currencies," an historical exhibit made possible by a recent donation from Mortimer and Anna Neinken; and "A Selection of Contemporary Artistic Medals from Europe," featuring prominent artists from France, Germany, Greece, and Italy. The Reifenberg collection, illustrating Israel's ancient history through its coins, was displayed from November 1964 through January 1965. Starting with two exceedingly rare pieces struck in Judaea under Persian rule, the exhibit, featuring a virtually complete series of ancient Judaean coins, was made possible through the cooperation of Mrs. Esther Reifenberg of Jerusalem, and Mr. M. Avida, Director, Cultural Relations Department of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Jerusalem, Israel. A temporary display, arranged through the courtesy of the Argentina Mint, illustrated coins and paper currencies of Argentina and included master hubs for the silver peso of 1881, Argentina's first national coin; the original model for the Liberty-head appearing on many of its coins; a wooden block for the 1000-peso banknote — the first issue made at the Buenos Aires Mint in 1889; as well as color proofs for projects of banknotes. The first international numismatic display ever held in the United States was organized by V. Clain-Stefanelli in August 1964, on the occasion of the convention of the American Numismatic Association in Cleveland. The displays from 20 countries represented contribu- tions from 41 exhibitors. 138 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 — MUSEUM OF HISTORY & TECHNOLOGY The hall of philately and postal history was opened September 18, 1964, after ceremonies at which more than 500 guests were addressed by assistant postmaster general Ralph Nicholson and James Conlon, chief, currency and stamp manufacturing, Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The new exhibits include more than 70 major units dealing with the history of the world's posts, United States stamp production, transportation of the mails, United States and foreign postal stationery, and the history of revenue stamps and stamped paper. Among them are a comprehensive selection of stamps of the world from the national collection, exhibited in 473 pull-out frames; the re-creation of a country- store post office, ca. 1880, furnished with original equipment and fix- tures; 15th- and 16th-century correspondence carried by the posts of the Republic of Venice; papyrus letters from Egypt; and a cover with its enclosure, carried by John Wise in his balloon Jupiter in 1859 from Lafayette, Ind., on the first attempt to transport mail by air under authorization of postal officials. The new hall, developed under former curators George T. Turner and Francis J. McCall and the pres- ent associate curator in charge, Carl H. Scheele, is the only permanent exhibition in the United States which presents a comprehensive and large-scale survey of postal history and stamp production. A special exhibition of stamps from the Federal Republic of West Germany was opened in April 1965 by His Excellency Heinrich Knappstein, the German Ambassador. Postal issues of the recent post-war period displayed included stamps honoring the late John F. Kennedy and the German resistance to the Nazis during World War II. Inclusion of a California post-gold-rush ranch- house kitchen in the hall of every day life in the American past became possible when an appro- priate room was found in Siskiyou County, Calif. Remarkable for never having been disturbed since it was constructed about 1862, and for bearing its original blue paint, the kitchen of tongue-and-groove boards was dismantled by George H. Watson, specialist in the restora- tion of old structures, and his assistant, Charles H. Rowell. Not only was the interior woodwork removed, but also the peeled cedar post rafters and pine roofers from the roof overhead and the heavy pine floor joists and stone piers supporting them. All were reconstructed in the exhibit hall by Watson and his crew so that the visitor views the room with its structure above and below, as though looking into a cross-section of the house. The kitchen is equipped with furnishings and utensils of the period collected in California and originally used there. On the other side of the kitchen is a temporary exhibit, "The Chinese in California," and nearby are prints and paintings lent by Joan Pearson Watkins. The kitchen and its associated exhibits, con- EXHIBITS 139 ceived and planned by C. Malcolm Watkins, were opened on May 7, 1965, with a ceremony and reception sponsored jointly by the Cali- fornia State Society of D.C. and the Smithsonian. For this occasion, the historic gold nugget found by James Marshall at Sutter's Mill, which inspired the great California gold rush, was specially exhibited. An exhibit of furniture from the Surrender Room of the McLean House at Appomattox, Va., marked the 100th anniversary of the surrender on April 9, 1865. An exhibition, opened May 29, 1965, marking the 200th anniversary of the Virginia Resolves against the Stamp Act, includes sections on the passage of the Stamp Act, the colonial reaction to it, and its eventual repeal. The exhibit will con- tinue into the bicentennial years of these events, through 1965 into 1966. "The Victorian American," a temporary exhibit of prints from the Harry T. Peters lithography collection, was organized by Peter C. Welsh to illustrate the national character of Americans during the Victorian era. ARMED FORCES HISTORY Completion of exhibits for the armed forces halls has occupied the entire staff of the department. The preparation of General George Washington's headquarters tent, a unique specimen in an excellent state of preservation, considering its age, proved an unusual and exacting task (cleaning, repairing, and preparing the tent itself for exhibition are described on p. 125). An undertent of unchemically treated linen was constructed and mounted over a chemically inert metal frame. The original tent was then placed over the whole with no resultant stress on any seams or fibers. One end of the tent was opened to present a period-room display using con- temporary camp furniture and objects. The whole was enclosed in a glass case. Completion of the extensive exhibit of the Continental gondola Philadelphia marked a memorable stage in the long history of that re- markable relic of the American Revolution. A system of ramps and protective railings enables visitors to view this heavily armed gunboat from all elevations, while ensuring her physical security. Nearby are cases of artifacts recovered from the Philadelphia site on Lake Champlain, as well as a series of maps illustrating Benedict Arnold's Northern Cam- paign of 1776, in which this historic man-of-war served. Visitor Services An important and extensive program for utilizing the Museum's ancient instruments in a series of concerts was initiated by Mrs. Cynthia Adams Hoover. In these activities she has been assisted by museum specialist Jay Scott Odell. Winter concert activities included a program of music of the 1860's played on brass instruments of that period from the collections. The musical arrangements were taken directly from the band books of the Third New Hampshire Regiment of the period (at popular request, this music was played again in a concert on the Mall). The English Consort of Viols played at the Smithsonian in November. The con- cert by Frans Brueggen, recorder, and Gustav Leonhardt, playing on the Museum's restored 1745 Dulcken harpsichord, was considered by local music critics as one of the highlights of the Washington musical year. In December, the Smithsonian and the Library of Congress were hosts to the national meetings of the American Musicological Society and the College Music Society, for which a concert featuring Carissimi's Oratorio "Jonas" was arranged. Music on the Mall was initiated in May on the Museum's terrace with the National Symphony Orchestra. The Honorable Adlai Steven- son, Ambassador to the United Nations, narrated Aaron Copland's "Lincoln Portrait," and the young pianist Andre Watts played Saint- Saens' Concerto No. 2. Tower music was a weekly feature in summer. Played by five wind musicians from the top of the north portico of the Renwick-designed Smithsonian building, it began the summer Tuesday evening music series in early June. These new developments have materially changed the atmosphere of the Mall lying between the Smithsonian's buildings. Mrs. Hoover collaborated in the extensive research leading to the design and construction of a new music platform and background shell for the outdoor concerts on the terrace. Several lectures and forums were sponsored in the department of civil history. Stella Mary Newton, advisor to the restoration depart- ment of the National Gallery, London, gave a lecture "Social Impli- cations in the Costumes in Hogarth's Paintings." John Harris, keeper of drawings of the Royal Institute of British Architects, lectured on "William Kent." Scott Symons, formerly assistant-curator-in-charge of the Canadiana collections, The Royal Ontario Museum, lectured publicly on "French Canadiana Versus the American Dream" and gave an intramuseum seminar on the same subject. (Mr. Symons also spent three weeks in residence as a visiting scholar studying the Museum's furniture collections.) 140 VISITOR SERVICES 141 In association with the Naval Historical Foundation, the division of naval history inaugurated an annual series of lectures on naval and maritime history. In November 1964, the noted German naval historian Vizeadmiral Friedrich C. Ruge presented an illustrated lecture, "Rommel and the Invasion of Western Europe, 1944," before a capacity audience of military and naval historians. As former naval advisor to the colorful field marshal, Ruge described Rommel's dogged but unsuccessful efforts to concentrate German armored strength on the Normandy coast on the eve of Operation "Overlord." In March 1965, the division again joined with the Foundation in sponsoring a lecture, "The Defense of Trade in World Wars I and II," by the distinguished British historian, Captain Stephen W. Roskill, R.N. Drawing not only upon his voluminous official history, The War at Sea, but also on his recent researches on British naval policy between the wars, Roskill analyzed the nigh-disastrous Allied under- estimation of a renewed U-boat threat in 1939 and presented a critical evaluation of the role once again played by the convoy system in safeguarding Allied sea communications. International Exchange Service International Exchange Service J. A. Collins, Chief The original plan of organization of the Smithsonian Institution provided for a system of exchange of current publications which would afford the Smithsonian Institution the most ready means of entering into friendly relations and correspondence with all the learned societies in the world and of enriching the Smithsonian library with the current transactions and proceedings of foreign institutions. When the first of the Smithsonian's long series of scientific publica- tions was issued, copies were sent to scientific and learned institutions abroad. In return, the Smithsonian Institution received many valuable publications from foreign institutions. To continue this de- sirable international exchange of scientific information, the Smithso- nian Institution appointed agents in a number of foreign countries to distribute the publications received from the Smithsonian Institution and to forward to the Smithsonian Institution the publications received from the foreign institutions. In 1851 the privilege of transmitting publications through the Smithsonian Institution to other countries, and of receiving publica- tions from foreign institutions in return, was extended to other insti- tutions in the United States. This opportunity to distribute their publications abroad was eagerly accepted and the system grew so rapidly that today most Government agencies, many universities, and scientific organizations representing every State in the Union utilize the International Exchange Service. Among the many colleges and universities transmitting publications through the Service during the past fiscal year were the following: University of California, Columbia University, Cornell University, Harvard College, University of Illinois, Indiana University, University of Kansas, University of Michigan, University of Oregon, University of Pennsylvania, Princeton University, University of Texas, University of Virginia, and Yale University. In fiscal year 1965, the International Exchange Service received for transmission 989,779 pounds of publications from foreign and domestic sources. This was a slight decrease from the preceding year. Of the amount received, 115,537 pounds were from foreign sources for dis- tribution to addressees in the United States. A strike of the long- shoremen on the east coast of the United States affected the operation 145 789-427—66 21 146 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 THE NUMBER AND WEIGHT OF PACKAGES RECEIVED FROM FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC SOURCES FOR TRANSMISSION THROUGH THE INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE SERVICE FISCAL YEAR 1965. Classification For transmissioti abroad by the Smithsonian Received by the Smithsonian for distribution in the United States Number of packages Weight in pounds Number of packages Weight in pounds U.S. parliamentary documents re- ceived for transmission abroad . . Publications received from foreign sources for U.S. parliamentary 823, 051 315,841 169, 558 1,308,450 1,371,313 340, 275 290, 775 243, 192 874, 242 8,344 7,005 47, 514 62, 863 12,081 U.S. departmental documents re- ceived for transmission abroad . . Publications received from foreign sources for U.S. departmental 20, 933 Miscellaneous scientific and literary publications received for trans- Miscellaneous scientific and literary publications received from abroad for distribution in the United 82, 523 Total 115,537 Total packages received . . . Total pounds received . . . 989, 779 of the Service from the middle of December 1964 until March 1965. Another strike in June by the Maritime unions against some of the steamship lines delayed the forwarding of publications to many countries. Publications were received from more than 350 different organizations, institutions, Government bureaus, Congressional committees, agricul- tural experiment stations, and individuals during the year for trans- mission to more than 100 different countries. Publications weighing 624,125 pounds, 70 percent of the total weight received for transmission abroad, were forwarded by ocean freight at a cost to the Smithsonian Institution of $36,856, or approx- imately 5.9 cents per pound. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE SERVICE 147 Addressed packages of publications are mailed directly to the intended addressees in the countries that do not have exchange bureaus. During the past fiscal year packages of addressed publications weighing 259,354 pounds — 30 percent of the total weight received for transmission abroad — were mailed to the intended addressees at a cost to the Smith- sonian Institution of $61,039, or approximately 23.5 cents per pound. Listed below are the names of the foreign exchange bureaus to which the International Exchange Service forwards addressed packages of publications for distribution to the intended recipients. List of Exchange Services Austria: Austrian National Library, Vienna. Belgium: Service des Echanges Interna tionaux, Bibliotheque Roy ale de Belgique, Bruxelles. China: National Central Library, Taipei, Taiwan. Czechoslovakia: Bureau of International Exchanges, University Library, Prague. Denmark: Institut Danois des Echanges Internationaux, Bibliotheque Royale, Copenhagen. Egypt: Government Press, Publications Office, Bulaq, Cairo. Finland: Library of the Scientific Societies, Helsinki. France: Service des Echanges Internationaux, Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris. Germany (Eastern) : Deutsche Staatsbibliothek, Berlin. Germany (Western) : Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Bad Godesberg. Hungary: Service Hongrois des Echanges Internationaux, Orszagos Szechenyi Konyvtar, Budapest. India: Government Printing and Stationery Office, Bombay. Indonesia: Minister of Education, Djakarta. Israel: Jewish National and University Library, Jerusalem. Italy: Ufficio degli Scambi Internazionali, Ministero della Pubblica Istruzione, Rome. Japan: Division for Interlibrary Services, National Diet Library, Tokyo. Korea: National Central Library, Seoul. Netherlands: International Exchange Bureau of the Netherlands, Royal Li- brary, The Hague. New South Wales: Public Library of New South Wales, Sydney. New Zealand: General Assembly Library, Wellington. Norway: Service Norvegien des Echanges Internationaux, Bibliotheque de PUniversite Royale, Oslo. Philippines: Bureau of Public Libraries, Department of Education, Manila. Poland: Service Polonais des Echanges Internationaux, Bibliotheque Nationale, Warsaw. Portugal: Servico Portugues de Trocas Internacionais, Biblioteca Nacional, Lisbon. 148 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Queensland: Bureau of International Exchange of Publications, Chief Secre- tary's Office, Brisbane. Republic of South Africa: Government Printing and Stationery Office, Cape Town.1 Rumania: International Exchange Service, Biblioteca Centrala de Stat, Bucharest. South Australia: South Australian Government Exchanges Bureau, Govern- ment Printing and Stationery Office, Adelaide. Spain: Servicio National de Canje de Publicaciones, Biblioteca Nacional, Madrid.1 Sweden: Kungliga Biblioteket, Stockholm. Switzerland: Service Suisse des Echanges Internationaux, Bibliotheque Centrale Federate, Berne. Tasmania: Secretary of the Premier, Hobart. Turkey: National Library, Ankara. Union of Soviet Socialist Republics: Bureau of Book Exchange, State Lenin Library, Moscow. Victoria: State Library of Victoria, Melbourne. Western Australia: State Library, Perth. Yugoslavia: Bibliografski Institut FNRJ, Belgrade. FOREIGN EXCHANGE OF GOVERNMENTAL DOCUMENTS The Smithsonian Institution received during the fiscal year 719,901 publications weighing 257,355 pounds for transmission to the recipients of full sets of official U.S. Government publications, and 92,512 publi- cations weighing 36,488 pounds for transmission to the recipients of partial sets. The recipients of full sets receive copies of all of the official publications, while the recipients of partial sets receive a selected list of the official publications. Recipients of the Full Sets Argentina: Division Biblioteca, Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y Culto, Buenos Aires. Australia: National Library of Australia, Canberra. New South Wales: Public Library of New South Wales, Sydney. Queensland: Parliamentary Library, Brisbane. South Australia: Public Library of South Australia, Adelaide. Tasmania: Parliamentary Library, Hobart. Victoria: State Library of Victoria, Melbourne. Western Australia: State Library, Perth. 1 Change in name. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE SERVICE 149 Austria: Administrative Library, Federal Chancellery, Vienna. Belgium: Service Beige des Echanges Interna tionaux, Bruxelles. Brazil: Biblioteca Nacional, Rio de Janiero. Burma: Government Book Depot, Rangoon. Canada: Library of Parliament, Ottawa. Manitoba: Provincial Library, Winnipeg. Ontario: Legislative Library, Toronto. Quebec: Library of the Legislature of the Province of Quebec. Saskatchewan: Legislative Library, Regina. Ceylon: Department of Information, Government of Ceylon, Colomboi Chile: Biblioteca Nacional, Santiago. China: National Central Library, Taipei, Taiwan. National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan. Colombia: Biblioteca Nacional, Bogota. Costa Rica: Biblioteca Nacional, San Jose. Cuba: Direction de Organismos Internacionales, Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Habana. Czechoslovakia: University Library, Prague. Denmark: Institut Danois des Echanges Internationaux, Copenhagen. Egypt: Bureau des Publications, Ministere des Finances, Cairo. Finland: Parliamentary Library, Helsinki. France: Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris. Germany: Deutsche Staatsbibliothek, Berlin. Free University of Berlin, Berlin-Dahlem. Parliamentary Library, Bonn. Great Britain: British Museum, London. London School of Economics and Political Science. Depository of the London County Council.) India: National Library, Calcutta. Central Secretariat Library, New Delhi. Parliament Library, New Delhi. Indonesia: Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Djakarta. Ireland: National Library of Ireland, Dublin. Israel: State Archives and Library, Hakirya, Jerusalem. Italy: Ministero della Pubblica Istruzione, Rome. Japan: National Diet Library, Tokyo.2 Mexico: Secretaria de Relaciones Exteriores, Departamento de Information para el Extranjero, Mexico, D.F. Netherlands: Royal Library, The Hague. New Zealand: General Assembly Library, Wellington. Norway: University Library, Oslo. Peru: Section de Propaganda y Publicaciones, Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Lima. Philippines: Bureau of Public Libraries, Department of Education, Manila. 2 Receives two sets. 150 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Portugal: Biblioteca Nacional, Lisbon. Republic of South Africa: State Library, Pretoria, Transvaal. Spain: Biblioteca Nacional, Madrid. Sweden: Kungliga Biblioteket, Stockholm. Switzerland: Bibliotheque Centrale Federate, Berne. Turkey: National Library, Ankara. Union of Soviet Socialist Republics: Ail-Union Lenin Library, Moscow. United Nations: Library of the United Nations, Geneva, Switzerland. Uruguay: Oficina de Canje Internacional de Publicaciones, Montevideo. Venezuela: Biblioteca Nacional, Caracas. Yugoslavia: Bibliografski Institut FNRJ, Belgrade.2 Recipients of the Partial Sets Afghanistan: Library of the Afghan Academy, Kabul. Belgium: Bibliotheque Royale, Bruxelles. Bolivia: Biblioteca del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y Gulto, La Paz. Brazil: Minas Gerais: Departmento Estadul de Estatistica, Belo Horizonte. British Guiana: Government Secretary's Office, Georgetown, Demerara. Cambodia: Les Archives et Bibliotheque Nationale, Phnom-Penh. Canada: Alberta: Provincial Library, Edmonton. British Columbia: Provincial Library, Victoria. New Brunswick: Legislative Library, Fredericton. Newfoundland: Department of Provincial Affairs, St. John's. Nova Scotia: Provincial Secretary of Nova Scotia, Halifax. Dominican Republic: Bibloteca de la Universidad de Santo Domingo, Santo Domingo. Ecuador: Biblioteca Nacional, Quito. El Salvador: Biblioteca Nacional, San Salvador. Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, San Salvador. Greece: National Library, Athens. Guatemala: Bioblioteca Nacional, Guatemala. Haiti: Bibliotheque Nationale, Port-au-Prince. Honduras: Biblioteca Nacional, Tegucigalpa. Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Tegucigalpa. Iceland: National Library, Reykjavik. India: Bombay: Sachivalaya Central Library, Bombay. Bihar: Revenue Department, Patna. Kerala: Kerala Legislature Secretariat, Trivandrum. Uttar Pradesh: University of Allahabad, Allahabad. Secretariat Library, Lucknow. West Bengal: Library, West Bengal Legislative Secretariat, Assembly House, Calcutta. 2 Receive two sets INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE SERVICE 151 Iran: Imperial Ministry of Education, Tehran. Iraq,: Public Library, Baghdad. Jamaica: Colonial Secretary, Kingston. University College of the West Indies, St. Andrew. Lebanon: American University of Beirut, Beirut. Liberia: Department of State, Monrovia. Malaysia: Federal Secretariat, Federation of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur National Library, Singapore.1 Malta: Minister for the Treasury, Valletta. Nicaragua: Ministerio de Relaciones Exterior es, Managua. Pakistan: Central Secretariat Library, Karachi. Panama: Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Panama. Paraguay: Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriors, Section Biblioteca, Asuncion. Philippines: House of Representatives, Manila. Scotland: National Library of Scodand, Edinburgh. Sudan: University of Khartoum, Khartoum.1 Thailand: National Library, Bangkok. Viet-Nam: Direction des Archives et Bibliotheques Nationales, Saigon. INTERPARLIAMENTARY EXCHANGE OF THE OFFICIAL JOURNALS There are being sent on exchange through the International Ex- change Service 110 copies of the daily issues of the Congressional Record and 88 copies of the daily issues of the Federal Register. Listed below are the names and addresses of the recipients of the official journals. Recipients of the Congressional Record and Federal Register Algeria: Direction de la Documentation, Ministere de l'Orientation, Algiers.4 5 Argentina: Biblioteca del Poder Judicial, Mendoza.3 Direction General del Boletin Oficial e Imprentas, Buenos Aires. Camara de Diputados Oficina de Information Parliamentaria, Buenos Aires. Australia: National Library of Australia, Canberra. New South Wales: Library of Parliament of New South Wales, Sydney. Queensland: Chief Secretary's Office, Brisbane. Victoria: State Library of Victoria, Melbourne.3 Western Australia: Library of Parliament of Western Australia, Perth. Belgium: Bibliotheque du Parlement, Palais de la Nation, Brussels.4 Brazil: Biblioteca da Camara dos Deputados, Brasilia, D.F.4 Biblioteca do Senado Federal, Brasilia.1 4 1 Change in name. 3 Federal Register only. 4 Congressional Record only. 6 Added during the year. 152 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Burundi: Departement des Affaires Juridiques et de Contentieux, Secretariat d'Etat a la Justice, Bujumbura.3 5 Cambodia: Ministry of Information, Phnom-Penh. Cameroon: Imprimerie Nationale, Yaounde.3 Canada: Clerk of the Senate, Houses of Parliament, Ottawa. Library of Parliament, Ottawa. Ceylon: Ceylon Ministry of Defense and External Affairs, Colombo.4 Chile: Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional, Santiago.4 China: Legislative Yuan, Taipei, Taiwan.4 Taiwan Provincial Assembly, Taichung, Taiwan Cuba: Biblioteca Publica Panamericana, Habana.3 Czechoslovakia: Ceskoslovenska Akademie Ved, Prague.4 Ecuador, Archivo-Biblioteca del Poder Legislativo, Quito. 3 5 Egypt: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Egyptian Government, Cairo.4 Finland: Library of the Parliament, Helsinki.4 France: Bibliotheque Assemblee Nationale, Paris. Bibliotheque Conseil de la Republique, Paris. Library, Organization for European Economic Cooperation, Paris.4 Bibliotheque du Conseil de PEurope, Strasbourg.4 Service de la Documentation Etrangere Assemblee Nationale, Paris.4 Gabon: Secretary General, Assemblee Nationale, Libreville.4 Germany: Amerika Institut der Universitat Miinchen, Miinchen. Archiv, Deutscher Bundestag, Bonn. Bibliothek des Instituts fur Weltwirtschaft an der Universitat Kiel, Kiel-Wik. Bibliothek Hessischer Landtag, Wiesbaden.4 Deutsches Institut fur Rechtswissenschaft, Potsdam-Babelsberg II.3 Deutscher Bundesrat, Bonn.4 Deutscher Bundestag, Bonn.4 Hamburgisches Welt-Wirtschafts-Archiv, Hamburg. Staatsbibliothek der Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbestiz, Berlin- Dahlem.1 4 • Great Britain: Department of Printed Books, British Museum, London. House of Commons Library, London.4 N.P.P. Warehouse, H.M. Stationery Office, London.3 7 Printed Library of the Foreign Office, London.4 Royal Institute of International Affairs, London.4 Greece: Bibliotheque Chambre des Deputes, Hellenique, Athens. Guatemala: Biblioteca de la Asamblea Legislativa, Guatemala. Haiti: Bibliotheque Nationale, Port-au-Prince. Honduras: Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional, Tegucigalpa. Hungary: Orszagos Szechenyi Konyvtar, Budapest. 1 Change in name. 3 Federal Register only. 4 Congressional Record only. 6 Added during the year. 8 Three copies. 7 Two copies. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE SERVICE 153 India: Civil Secretariat Library, Lucknow, United Provinces.3 Jammu and Kashmir Constituent Assembly, Srinagar.4 Legislative Assembly, Government of Assam, Shillong.4 Legislative Assembly Library, Lucknow, United Provinces. Kerala Legislature Secretariat, Trivandrum.4 Madras State Legislature, Madras.4 Parliament Library, New Delhi. Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics, Poona.4 Ireland: Dail Eireann, Dublin.4 Israel: Library of the Knesset, Jerusalem. Italy: Biblioteca Camera dei Deputati, Rome. Biblioteca del Senato della Republica, Rome. International Institute for the Unification of Private Law, Rome.3 Periodicals Unit, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome.3 Ivory Coast: Chef des Services Legislatifs, Assemblee Nationale, Abidjan.4 Japan: Library of the National Diet, Tokyo. Ministry of Finance, Tokyo. Jordan: Parliament of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, Amman.4 Korea: Library, National Assembly, Seoul. Kying Hee University, Seoul. 4 6 Luxembourg: Assemblee Commune de la C.E.C.A., Luxembourg. Mexico: Direccion General de Information, Secretaria de Governacion, Mexico, D.F. Biblioteca Benjamin Franklin, Mexico, D.F. Aguascalientes: Gobernador del Estado de Aguascalientes, Aguas- calientes. Baja California: Gobierno del Estado de Baja California, Mexicali. Campeche: Gobernador del Estado de Campeche. Chiapas: Gobernador del Estado de Chiapas, Tuxtla Gutierrez. Chihuahua: Gobernador del Estado de Chihuahua, Chihuahua. Coahuila: Periodico Oficial del Estado de Coahuila, Palacio de Gobierno, Saltillo. Colima: Gobernador del Estado de Colima, Colima. Guanajuato: Secretaria General de Gobierno del Estado, Guanajuato. Jalisco: Biblioteca del Estado, Guadalajara. Mexico: Gaceta del Gobierno, Toluca. Michoagan: Secretaria General de Gobierno del Estado de Michoacan, Morelia. Morelos: Palacio de Gobierno, Cuernavaca. Nayarit: Gobernador de Nayarit, Tepic. Nuevo Leon: Biblioteca del Estado, Monterrey. Oaxaca: Periodico Oficial, Palacio de Gobierno, Oaxaca.3 Puebla: Secretaria General de Gobierno, Puebla. Queretaro: Secretaria General de Gobierno, Section de Archivo, Queretaro. Sinaloa: Direccion del Periodico Oficial CE1 Estado de Sinaloa, Culiacan. 154 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Sonora: Gobernador del Estado de Sonora, Hermosillo. Tamaulipas: Secretaria General de Gobierno, Victoria. Veracruz: Gobernador del Estado de Veracruz, Departamento de Gobernacion y Justicia, Jalapa. Yucatan: Gobernador del Estado de Yucatan, Merida. Netherlands: Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague.3 New Zealand: General Assembly Library, Wellington. Nigeria: Office of the Clerk of the Legislature, Enugu.4 Office of the Western Nigeria Legislature, Ibadan.4 Clerk to the Regional Legislature, Mid-West Region, Benin City. 3 5 Norway: Library of the Norwegian Parliament, Oslo. Pakistan: Secretary, Provincial Assembly West Pakistan, Lahore.4 National Assembly of Pakistan, Rawalpindi. 4 6 Panama: Biblioteca Nacional, Panama City.4 Philippines: House of Representatives, Manila. Poland: Kancelaria Rady Panstwa, Biblioteka Sejmowa, Warsaw. Republic of South Africa: Cape of Good Hope: Library of Parliament, Cape Town. Transkei: Legislative Assembly, Umtata. 4 5 Transvaal: State Library, Pretoria Rhodesia: Legislative Assembly, Lusaka. l 3 Rumania: Biblioteca Centrala de Stat RPR, Bucharest. Rwanda: Service de la Legislation, Cabinet du President, Kigali. 3 Senegal: Secretaire-General, Assemblee Nationale, Dakar.4 Sierra Leone: Office of the Clerk, House of Representatives, Freetown.4 Spain: Boletin Oficial del Estado, Presidencia del Gobierno, Madrid.3 Sweden: Universitetsbiblioteket, Uppsala. Switzerland: International Labour Office, Geneva. 3 7 Library, United Nations, Geneva. Tanganyika: Library, University College, Dar es Salaam.4 Togo: Ministere d'Etat, de l'lnterieur, de l'Information et de la Presse, Lome. Uganda: National Assembly of Uganda, Parliament House, Kampala.4 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics: Fundamental'niia Biblioteka Obshchestvennykh Nauk, Moscow. Upper Volta: President de la Commission des Affaires Sociales et Culturelles, Assemblee Nationale, Ouagadougou.4 Chef de Cabinet, Presidence, Ouagadougou.3 Uruguay: Diario Oficial, Calle Florida 1178, Montevideo. Yugoslavia: Bibliografski Institut FNRJ, Belgrade.7 Libraries, scientific societies, educational institutions, and individuals may transmit publications through the International Exchange Service to other countries if they are being sent on exchange or as gifts. The publications must be packaged and addressed to the intended re- cipients. Transportation charges to the Smithsonian Institution must Footnotes: see p. 152. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE SERVICE 155 be prepaid. There is no charge to the sender for the transportation charges from the Smithsonian Institution to the intended addressees. Packages of publications are accepted for transmission to addressees in all countries except to the mainland of China, North Korea, and Communist-controlled areas of Viet-Nam. Packages of publications from domestic sources intended for addressees in the United States or in a territory subject to the jurisdiction of the United States are not accepted for transmission. The work of the International Exchange Service serves as a means of developing and executing, in part, the broad and comprehensive objective of the Smithsonian Institution — "the diffusion of knowledge." Over the years the Service has played a proud role in helping to promote the rapid growth of science by facilitating the international exchange of ideas. Libraries and learned institutions through- out the world have been enriched by the publications received through the Service from many institutions in the United States, and, in turn, the libraries and learned institutions of the United States have bene- fited from the publications received from the institutions in other countries. National Zoological Park National Zoological Park Theodore H. Reed, Director With the completion of the remodeled birdhouse (December 4, 1964), efforts of the National Zoological Park were turned to restocking the avian collection, which had dwindled during the time that there was little exhibition space for birds. When the house opened to the public on February 14, 1965, many new species were on view in addition to the ones that of necessity had been kept behind the scenes during the rebuilding. PURCHASES The major part of purchases for the year consisted of birds, but a number of interesting mammals were also added to the collection. Most important of these was a young female gorilla, Femelle, bought as a mate for Leonard, the male born at the National Zoo on January 10, 1964. Femelle and Leonard were not compatible, however, and the new female was put with Tomoka, a 3}2-year-old male, also born at the Zoo. This pairing has worked out most amicably. A pair of siamangs was obtained from a dealer. Twelve tenrecs were bought from a collector who had obtained them in Madagascar. These rare little insectivores had not been exhibited at the Zoo since 1910, and the Park was fortunate in securing two species: Hemicentetes semispinosus, the streaked tenrec, and the so-called common tenrec, Tenrec ecaudatus. Another interesting acquisition was a small-eared dog (Atelocynus microtis) purchased as a mate for one secured last year. For many years the Zoo had only one ostrich, an elderly male. Six young specimens of this interesting bird were obtained and are now on exhibit in a yard near the birdhouse. Other purchases were: 1 flat-headed cat (Felis planiceps) 6 honeycreepers 1 owl monkey 3 Inca jays 29 chipmunks 4 black-eared golden tanagers 8 flying squirrels 1 azure jay 1 bushbaby 2 green Inca jays 1 female jaguar 2 San Bias jays 159 160 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 2 troupials 4 Australian crested bronze-winged doves 2 American band-tailed pigeons 2 pied mynahs 2 spectacled mocking thrushes 2 black-headed orioles 4 blue rock thrushes 2 white-winged trumpeters 1 Curtis python 6 mud puppies 1 Texas lined snake 2 black-necked screamers 10 turacos 18 hummingbirds 3 cocks-of-the-rock 2 black-headed sugarbirds 6 blue-shouldered mountain tanagers 1 rufous motmot 10 masked crimson tanagers 2 quetzals 4 violaceous jays 3 Inca terns 2 blue-eared pheasants 2 common bronze-winged doves 5 black-bellied glossy starlings 2 pagoda mynahs 2 necklaced laughing thrushes 2 gold-headed mynahs 2 gray-headed mynahs assorted finches 4 pancake tortoises 1 prairie king snake 1 eastern hog snake 1 black-necked garter snake BIRTHS The number of animals born and hatched in the Zoo during the past year was gratifying. Reproduction of their kind is evidence that animals have adjusted well to the necessarily artificial conditions of captivity. The pygmy hippopotamuses for which the Zoo has long been famous continue to breed. Offspring of the original male were all named Gumdrop, but with the advent of the new sire progeny were given the names of Greek letters, and the eight young ones, two of which were born this year, bear names running from Alpha to Iota. The Nile hippopotamuses also had another baby. Birds in the new house took to nest-building almost immediately upon their transfer there. Of especial interest were the kookaburras and the Indian moorhens. By June 30 three pairs of kookaburras, all hatched at the National Zoological Park, were nesting. Following the procedure of previous years, all births and hatchings are listed below, whether or not the young were successfully raised. In many instances, the record of animals having bred in captivity is of interest. "Archie" is the splendid adult orangutan Elf owls (Micrathene whitneyi) obtained by exchange with the Toronto were obtained from the Ari- Zoo on June 2, 1965. zona-Sonora Desert Museum by exchange. Aldabra tortoise with leg in cast as a result of a spiral oblique fracture of the right humerus. Unable to walk on three legs, it soon learned to propel itself when put on a trucker's dolly. Forty-two anacondas born from one female on February 15, 1965. The young were approximately twenty inches long and one inch in diameter at birth. The new great outdoor flight cage, shown here just after completion and before the birds were moved in, may be entered from a walk leading through the deer area, or by way of a bridge from the upper level of the birdhouse. Typical of the new exhibition concept in the renovated birdhouse is such a grouping of birds as shown here in their natural habitat. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 161 Number Number of births of births and and Common name hatchings Common name hatchings Mammals Mammals — Continued Opossum 1 Dorcas gazelle 3 Ring-tailed lemur *1 African pygmy goat 4 Spider monkey 1 Aoudad *1 Black spider monkey 1 Barbary sheep 1 Pygmy marmoset 2 Big-horn sheep *1 Rhesus monkey 1 Barbary ape 4 VervetXgrivet guenon 2 Birds Green guenon 1 Chimpanzee 1 Double-crested cormorant 1 Two-toed sloth 2 Black-necked swan 2 Prairie dog 2 Canada goose 3 Patagonian cavy 5 Wood duck 33 Chinchilla *3 Mallard duck 44 Common jackal *2 Black duck 7 Gray fox *3 Cayenne wood rail 2 European brown bear 3 Indian moorhen 4 Grizzly bear *2 Nanday parrot 3 Neumann's genet 4 Kookaburra 5 African water civet 2 Leopard *2 Black leopard 2 Reptiles California sea-lion *2 Hyrax 1 Common snapping turtle 23 Grant's zebra 1 Common box turtle 12 Collared peccary 5, *2 Painted turtle 1 Nile hippopotamus 1 Yellow-bellied turde 1 Pygmy hippopotamus 2 Red-eared turde 6 Llama 1, *1 Tokay gecko 1 Reindeer 3, *3 Fence lizard 8 Reindeer X caribou 1 Blue spiny lizard 26 Cape buffalo 1 Anaconda 42 Brindled gnu 6 Ribbon snake 5 *Stillborn, or died shortly after birth. 789-427— 6C -22 162 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 GIFTS The Zoo received a bequest from the Gordon Gaver estate, consisting of a large number of reptiles, 25 mammals, and 3 birds. Mr. Gaver, who died in August 1964, had for many years owned and operated a roadside snake exhibit near Thurmont, Md. At his death, his entire collection came to the National Zoological Park and made a note- worthy addition. In some instances there were more specimens than the Zoo could exhibit, and these were of great value as exchange material with other zoos. The Montana Fish and Game Department sent two pronghorn antelopes; the Japanese Embassy gave the Zoo a collection of 40 especially fine goldfishes which had been part of the exhibit at the Japanese pavilion at the New York World's Fair. Space does not permit listing all gifts received during the year, but a complete list of Mr. Gaver's collection, and other gifts of interest, follows: Animal Rescue League, Washington, D.C., great black hawk. Back, Mrs. Allan N., Kensington, Md., boa constrictor. Blomeley, Dr. Charles P., Takoma Park, Md., cedar waxwing, mourning dove. Boehm, Edward Marshall, Trenton, N.J., 3 white-cheeked turacos. Bryan, John R., Bethesda, Md., 2 boa constrictors. Capps, Mrs. Carol, Washington, D.C., Chinese macaque. Carrol, Robert, Springfield Va., timber rattlesnake. Charles, Mrs. R. H., Washington, D.C., 2 ring-necked doves, albino ring-necked dove. Cochran, Dr. Doris, Washington, D.C., 2 tropical coral snakes. Cooper, William I., Washington, D.C., blue-faced toucan. DePrato, Mario, Washington, D.C., barking tree frog, 2 paradise fish. Dixon, Lindon, Fairfax, Va., pine vole. Eaton, Rev. Charles E., Washington, D.C., 2 Congo pygmy frogs. Edmunds, W. W., Oxon Hill, Md., 2 sparrow hawks. Fowle, Mrs. Margaret, Bethesda, Md., 4 strawberry finches, orange weaver, 2 cut-throat weavers, 2 African fire finches, Bengalee finch, 7 zebra finches, 2 red-eared waxbills. Gatti, Steve, Silver Spring, Md., Eleonora's falcon. Gaver, Gordon, Thurmont, Md., chimpanzee, woolly monkey, 9 rhesus monkeys, weeping capuchin, 3 capuchins, 2 green guenons, 2 sooty monkeys, 3 spider monkeys, 1 burro, 2 domestic goats, yellow- and-blue macaw, 3 Pekin ducks, cantil, Mexican beaded lizard, gila monster, African black cobra, Indian python (light phase), 2 coral NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 163 snakes, 2 Cook's tree boas, 2 banded kraits, 1 1 Russell's vipers, emerald tree boa, Gaboon viper, ball python, 27 Indian cobras, king cobra, regal python, 2 sand boas, 5 many-banded kraits, 6 star tortoises, 4 black tegus, 2 anacondas, South American boa, Indian python (dark phase), 4 American alligators, American crocodile, 2 chicken snakes, 6 pilot black snakes, corn snake, 59 common water snakes, timber rattlesnake, 6 eastern diamondback rattlesnakes, 36 western dia- mondback rattlesnakes, 55 cottonmouth moccasins, Galapagos tor- toise, red-footed tortoise, 8 northern copperheads, indigo snake, 3 Philippine cobras, 2 Indian cobras, 22 miscellaneous water snakes. Gray, Dr. Clinton, Alexandria, Va., 2 cockatiels. Greenhall, Paul, Washington, D.C., 4 tropical hermit crabs, fresh- water eel, tree frog, 2 giant toads. Griffin, Robert Dale, McLean, Va., pileated woodpecker. Grimmer, J. Lear, Washington, D.C., 14 West Indian anoles, 2 fence lizards, higatee turtle, 5 Grand Cayman water snakes, lazy snake, Grand Cayman racer. Hagen, Clemens O., Fairfax, Va., double yellow-headed parrot. Harman, Mrs. Ann, Washington, D.C., Asiatic quail. Hemba, Alton W., U.S. Consul General, Guayaquil, Ecuador, Gala- pagos tortoise. Keefer, Lonny, Mt. Rainier, Md., canyon tree frog. Keese, Robert, Rockville, Md., boa constrictor. Lakigh, George, Jacksonville Beach, Fla., 3 natterjack toads, 2 green toads, sand lizard. Locke, Otto Martin, New Braunfels, Tex., 8 collared lizards, 3 Texas alligator lizards, 25 blue spiny lizards, prairie kingsnake, Great Plains rat snake, Texas lined snake, eastern hog-nosed snake, eastern black-necked garter snake. Malone, Col., U.S. Army, Arlington, Va., 5 chameleons. Marcus, Dr. Leonard, Washington, D.C., 2 scorpions, whiptail, 2 western swifts. Martin, James, Norfolk, Va., 2 water moccasins. Martin, W. H., Leesburg, Va., slender glass lizard, peninsula cooter. May, Lonnie G., Laurel, Md., timber rattlesnake. McCrae, Glen, Littleton, Colo., bullsnake, Sonora gopher snake, western milk snake, California striped racer, Great Basin gopher snake. McGreevy, Dr. J., Arlington, Va., coatimundi. Meckstroth, Lt. Col. L. E., Davidsonville, Md., red-headed conure. Miller, Miss Christine, Bethesda, Md., civet. Morrison, Mrs. A., Washington, D.C, double yellow-headed parrot. Murphy, Miss Gwen, Arlington, Va., half-moon conure. 164 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 National Aquarium, Dept. of Commerce, Washington, D.C., piranha, 2 diamond-backed terrapins. Pohlman, Gunther, Neuwied/Rhn., West Germany, 22 newts. Preston, Mrs. Lois, Riverdale, Md., Chinese macaque. Quinlan, Mr. G. J., Washington, D.C., squirrel monkey. Ragan, Miss Donna, Washington, D.C., 18 western painted turtles. Reeves, Mrs. Clyde P., Arlington, Va., lesser hill mynah. Rider, V. D., Warrenton, Va., alligator. Ripley, S. Dillon, Washington, D.C., rosy-billed pochard, 2 falcated teal. Robey, Mrs. R. W., Silver Spring, Md., weeping capuchin. Robinson, Mrs. William S., Seat Pleasant, Md., ocelot. Ronningen, Miss Karen, McLean, Va., white-winged parakeet. Rowan, Mrs. Michael B., Silver Spring, Md., 2 Texas tortoises. Schwartzbeck, Donald F., Washington, D.C., snapping turtle (32 lbs.). Scott, James F., Falls Church, Va., pig-tailed macaque. Seibel, Hilda, Chevy Chase, Md., cockatiel. Sharpe, Brian, and Ereckson, Willard, Washington, D.C., European racer. Smith, Mrs. J. B., Arlington, Va., peach-faced lovebird. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Ray, Falls Church, Va., western flying squirrel, Abyssinian cavy. Smithsonian Institution, Division of Birds, Washington, D.C., 3 sooty terns, 6 Laysan albatrosses, 6 black-footed albatrosses. Stack, Dick, Linthicum Heights, Md., diamondback terrapin. Terborgh, Dr. John, College Park, Md., New Guinea tree snake. Teschan, Lt. Col. P. E., Chevey Chase, Md., Florida king snake. Teunis, Mrs. Elizabeth, Washington, D.C., red-and-blue macaw. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Cambridge, Md., 2 whistling swans. Washington, H., Washington, D.C., American bittern. Webb, Vick, Alexandria, Va., sulphur-breasted toucan. Williams, Mrs. Nellie, Hyattsville, Md., lesser hill mynah. Winn, Col. C. G., McLean, Va., white-handed gibbon. EXCHANGES The National Zoological Park participates in a continuing program of exchanging surplus animals with other zoos. This year Leonard, a young male gorilla born in the Zoo, was sent to Riverside Park Zoo in Toronto, Canada, in exchange for a 10-year-old male prangutan, a proven sire. Archie, the new orangutan, is being introduced to NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 165 the Zoo's two females, and it is hoped that eventually young ones will be born here. The National Zoo has bred gorillas, chimpanzees, and gibbons, but never orangs. Through the offices of U.S. Senator Karl Mundt, the Zoo received 3 pairs of ring-necked pheasants from South Dakota. In exchange a hybrid macaque and 2 parrots were sent to the Great Plains Zoo in Sioux Falls, S. Dak. Animals obtained through exchange were: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, Tucson, Ariz., 2 elf owls. Baltimore Zoo, Baltimore, Md., elephant trunk snake. Calgary Zoo, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, 2 American martens, 1 coyote, 1 coatimundi, 1 lynx. Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, Colorado Springs, Colo., 1 musang. Crowder, R. L., Stuart, Fla., 1 pygmy rattlesnake, 1 indigo snake. El Pinar Zoo, Caracas, Venezuela, 2 troupials, 2 blue tanagers, 2 brown tanagers, 15 saffron finches, 10 scarlet ibises. Gans, Carl, Buffalo, N.Y., 1 saw-scale viper. George's Pet Shop, Hyattsville, Md., 2 South American foxes, 1 tayra, 1 rhinoceros iguana, 1 Indian otter, 1 South American green lizard, 1 capybara, 1 golden tamandua, 2 speckled agoutis, 2 caimans, 1 14%-foot anaconda. Honolulu Zoo, Honolulu, Hawaii, 1 Nene goose. Kerfess, Cdr., John F., Alexandria, Va. Mohave diamondback rattle- snake, 2 banded geckos, 2 faded snakes. Memphis Zoo, Memphis, Tenn., 1 African porcupine. Portland Zoo, Portland, Oreg., 7 California ground squirrels. Rider, V. D., Warrenton, Va., 2 siamangs, 3 blood pythons, 1 gila monster, 1 beaded lizard, 1 galago. San Antonio Zoo, San Antonio, Tex., 4 scaled quail, 2 roadrunners, 2 wattled guans, 3 roseate spoonbills, 5 Cuban flamingos, 2 glossy ibis, 2 green-winged teal, 2 least tinamous. San Diego Zoo, San Diego, Calif., 4 double-yellow-headed parrots, 2 white-fronted Amazon parrots, 2 yellow-winged lorikeets, 1 eclectus parrot, 4 Beebe parakeets, 2 lorikeets. Southeast Pet Shop, Washington, D.C., 2 rhesus monkeys, 1 sooty mangabey. Tote-Em-In Zoo, Wilmington, N.C., 2 brown water snakes, 2 house snakes, 2 green chicken snakes, 1 canebrake rattlesnake, 1 Nile crocodile, 1 European badger. The following animals were sent to other zoos and to private col- lectors in exchange: Alipore Zoo, Calcutta, India, 1 pair red-and-blue macaws, 1 pair blue- and-gold macaws, 1 pair red, blue, and yellow macaws, 6 pairs wood 166 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 ducks, 2 pairs Canada geese, 2 Mexican beaded lizards, 2 gila mon- sters, 4 caimans. Baltimore Zoo, Baltimore, Md., 1 king cobra, 3 baby anacondas. Bates Wood Zoo, New London, Conn., 1 European brown bear cub. Buffalo Zoo, Buffalo, N.Y., 2 water civets. Chicago Zoo, Brookfield, 111., 4 baby anacondas. Cincinnati Zoo, Cincinnati, Ohio, 2 llamas. Cleveland Zoo, Cleveland, Ohio, 4 prairie dogs, 1 kookaburra. Crowder, R. L., Stuart, Fla., 1 baby anaconda. Department of Recreation and Parks, Richmond, Va., 2 peacocks. Detroit Zoo, Royal Oak, Mich., 1 Morelett's crocodile. Edinburg Zoo, Edinburg, Scotland, 4 raccoons, 19 chipmunks. Griffin, James, Key Biscayne, Fla., 4 pairs wood ducks. Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago, 111., 4 blossom-headed parakeets. London Zoo, London, England, 1 coatimundi. Palmer, Harold C, Douglasville, Ga., 1 American bison, 1 white fallow deer, 2 aoudads, 1 chimpanzee, 1 leopard, 1 Patagonian cavy, 2 ar- madillos, 1 douroucouli monkey, 1 black swan, 2 caimans, 3 boa constrictors, 1 regal python, 4 snapping turtles. Philadelphia Zoo, Philadelphia, Pa., 1 woolly monkey. Portland Zoo, Portland, Oreg., 5 baby anacondas, 2 blossom-headed parakeets. Pretoria Zoo, Pretoria, South Africa, 4 flying squirrels, 6 chipmunks. Rider, V. D., Warrenton, Va., 1 chimpanzee, 1 black leopard. San Antonio Zoo, San Antonio, Tex., 2 llamas, 2 dorcas gazelles. Topeka Zoo, Topeka, Kans., 2 baby anacondas. Tote-Em-In-Zoo, Wilmington, N.C., 2 spider monkeys, 4 capuchin monkeys, 9 rhesus monkeys, 2 sooty mangabeys, 2 green monkeys, 3 Pekin ducks, 15 copperheads, 53 water moccasins, 4 American alligators, 1 timber rattlesnake, 25 western diamondback rattlesnakes. STATUS OF THE COLLECTION, June 30, 1965 Class Mammals Birds Reptiles Amphibians Fishes Arthropods Mollusks Total 50 171 929 2,628 Orders Families Species or subspecies Individuals 13 50 231 643 22 69 432 921 4 27 204 716 2 10 31 107 5 11 26 156 3 3 4 55 1 1 1 30 NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 167 In the following lists of mammals and birds, sex is given where known; 1.0 indicates one male, 0.1 indicates one female, 1.1 indicates one male and one female. ANIMALS IN THE COLLECTION ON JUNE 30, 1965 MAMMALS Family and common name Scientific name Number Marsupialia Didelphidae: Common opossum Didelphis marsupialis 8 Phalangeridae: Sugar glider Petaurus breviceps 0.1 Squirrel glider Petaurus norfolcensis 1.2 Phascolomidae: Hairy-nosed wombat .... Lasiorhinus latifrons 2.0 Mainland wombat Phascolomis hirsutus 0.1 Macropodidae: Rat kangaroo Potorous tridactylus 1.3 Insectivora Tenrecidae: Common tenrec Tenrec ecaudatus 5 Streaked tenrec Hemicentetes sp 4.2 Erinaceidae: European hedgehog .... Erinaceus europaeus 1 .0 Chiroptera Pteropodidae: Giant fruit bat Pteropus giganteus 3.4 Primates Lemuridae: Ring- tailed lemur Lemur catta 1.2 Brown lemur Lemur fulvus 1.0 Lorisidae: TickelPs slow loris Nycticebus coucang tenasserimensis . . 0.1 Great galago Galago crassicaudatus 0.1 Bushbaby Galago senegalensis zain-zibaricus . . 2.1 Common potto Perodicticus potto 0.1 168 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Number Cebidae: Douroucouli, or night monkey . Aotus trivirgatus 1.1 Red uakari Cacajao rubicundus 1.1 White-faced saki monkey . . Pithecia pithecia 1.1 Capuchin Cebus capucinus 2.5 Weeping capuchin Cebus griseus 2.0 Squirrel monkey Saimiri sciureus 2.4 Black spider monkey .... Ateles fusciceps 5 Spider monkey Ateles geojfroyi 6 Woolly monkey Lagothrix sp 1.2 Callithricidae: Pygmy marmoset Cebuella pygmaea 4 Geoffroy's marmoset .... Oedipomidas spixi 1.1 Cottontop marmoset .... Saguinus oedipus 1.1 Hybrid marmoset S. midasXS. oedipus 1.0 Moustached tamarin .... Saguinus mystax 1.1 Cercopithecidae : Toque, or bonnet monkey . . Macaca sinica 1.1 Philippine macaque .... Macaca philippinensis 1.0 Crab-eating macaque .... Macaca irus 0.1 Hybrid macaque M. philippinensis XM. irus .... 1.0 Pig-tailed macaque Macaca nemestrina 0.1 Chinese macaque Macaca lasiotis 0.2 Rhesus monkey Macaca mulatta 3.3 Formosan monkey Macaca cyclopis 1.1 Red-faced macaque .... Macaca speciosa 0.1 Wander oo, or lion-tailed Macaca silenus 1.1 monkey. Barbary ape Macaca sylvanus 20 Moor macaque Macaca maurus 1.2 Crested macaque, or Celebes Cynopithecus niger 1.0 ape. Gray-cheeked mangabey . . Cercocebus albigena 0.1 Agile mangabey Cercocebus galeritus 1.0 Golden-bellied mangabey . . Cercocebus g. chrysogaster 1.0 Red-crowned mangabey . . . Cercocebus torquatus 1.1 Sooty mangabey Cercocebus Juliginosus 4.2 Crested mangabey Cercocebus aterrimus 2.1 Drill Mandrillus leucophaeus 1.0 Olive baboon Papio anubis 3.2 Chacma baboon Papio comatus 1.0 Gelada baboon Theropithecus gelada 3.4 Vervetguenon Cercopithecus aethiops 2.5 Grivet guenon, color variant . Cercopithecus aethiops 0.1 Hybrid guenon, color variant . C. a. pygerythrus X C. a. aethiops . 2 Moustached monkey .... Cercopithecus cephus 1.2 NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 169 Family and common name Scientific name Diana monkey Cercopithecus diana . . . Roloway monkey Cercopithecus diana roloway . DeBrazza's guenon Cercopithecus neglectus . . White-nosed guenon .... Cercopithecus nictitans . . Allen's swamp monkey . . . Allenopithecus nigroviridis . Patas monkey Erythrocebus sp Dusky langur Presbytis obscurus . . . . Langur Presbytis entellus . . . . Crested entellus Presbytis cristatus . . . . Pongidae: White-handed gibbon .... Hylobates lar Wau-wau gibbon Hylobates moloch Hybrid gibbon H. lar X H. sp Siamang gibbon Symphalangus syndactylus . Borean orangutan Pongo pygmaeus Sumatran orangutan .... Pongo pygmaeus abelii . . . Chimpanzee Pan satyrus Lowland gorilla Gorilla gorilla Number 1.0 0.1 1.0 0.1 1.1 1.0 1.0 0.1 1.0 1.0 0.1 0.4 2.0 0.1 2.1 3.1 2.2 Edentata Myrmecophagidae: Giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla . Tamandua, or collared ant- Tamandua tetradactyla . eater. Bradypodidae: Two-toed sloth Choloepus didactylus . . Dasypodidae: Nine-banded armadillo . . . Dasypus novemcinctus . . 0.1 3.0 8 1.1 Sciuridae: European red squirrel . . Gray squirrel, albino . . Western fox squirrel . . Southern fox squirrel . . Tricolored squirrel . . . Formosan tree squirrel . . Woodchuck, or groundhog Hoary marmot Prairie-dog California ground squirrel Washington ground squirrel Antelope ground squirrel Golden-mantled ground squirrel. Round-tailed ground squirrel RODENTIA Sciurus vulgaris . . . Sciurus carolinensis . . Sciurus niger . . . . Sciurus niger . . . . Callosciurus prevosti . Callosciurus erythraeus . Marmota monax . . Marmota caligata . . Cynomys ludovicianus . Citellus beecheyi . . . Citellus washingtoni . Citellus sp Citellus lateralis . . . Citellus tereticaudus 1.1 0.2 1.0 0.1 0.1 1.1 0.1 1.1 28 0.2 0.1 1.0 0.1 1.0 170 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Eastern chipmunk Tamias striatus . Eastern chipmunk, albino . . Tamias striatus . Yellow pine chipmunk .... Eutamias amoenus Siebold's chipmunk Eutamias sibiricus Eastern flying squirrel . . . Glaucomys volans Heteromyidae: Kangaroo rat Dipodomys sp Castoridae: Beaver Castor canadensis Pedetidae: Cape jumping hare Pedetes capensis . Cricetidae: Fat-tailed gerbil . . . White-footed mouse East African maned rat Muridae: Egyptian spiny mouse . Egyptian spiny mouse . Negev spiny mouse . . Giant forest rat . . . Slender-tailed cloud rat Gliridae: Garden dormouse Hystricidae: Cavia porcellus . . Dolichotis patagonum African porcupine Brush-tailed porcupine Palawan porcupine . Cavidae: Abyssinian guinea pig Patagonian cavy . . Dasyproctidae: Hairy-rumped agouti Speckled agouti . . Acouchy Chinchillidae: Mountain viscacha . Hy drochoeridae : Capybara Hydrochoerus hydrochaerus . . Pachyuromys duprasi Peromyscus sp . . Lophiomys ibeanus . Acomys cahirinus Acomys dimidiatus . Acomys sp . . . . Cricetomys gambianus Phloeomys cumingii Eliomys quercinus Hystrix cristata . Atherurus sp . . Thecurus pumilus Dasyprocta prymnolopha Dasyprocta punctata . Myoprocta acouchy . . Lagidium sp. Carnivora Canidae: Dingo Canis familiaris dingo Coyote Canis latrans . . . , Common jackal Canis aureus . . . , Timber wolf Canis lupus . . . . 1.2 1.0 1.0 1.1 2.2 NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 171 Family and common name Scientific name Number Texas red wolf Cards niger rufus 0.1 Fennec Fennecus zerda 1.1 Gray fox Urocyon cinereoargenteus 1.2 Red fox Vulpes fulva 1.0 Raccoon dog Nyctereutes procyonoides 0.1 South American fox .... Dusicyon culpaeus 1.1 Small-eared dog Atelocynus microtis 1.1 Cape hunting dog Lycaon pictus 1.1 Ursidae: Spectacled bear Tremarctos ornatus 1.0 Himalayan bear Selenarctos thibetanus 0.1 Japanese black bear .... Selenarctos t. japonicus 1.0 Korean bear Selenarctos t. ussuricus 1.1 European brown bear .... Ursus arctos 2.2 Iranian brown bear .... Ursus arctos 1.1 Grizzly bear Ursus horribilis 1.1 Kodiak bear Ursus middendorffi 1.0 Black bear Euarctos americanus 1.1 Polar bear Thalarctos maritimus 1.2 Hybrid bear Thalarctos maritimus X Ursus 2.1 middendorffi. Malay sun bear Helarctos malayanus 0.2 Sloth bear Melursus ursinus 1.1 Procyonidae: Cacomistle Bassariscus astutus 1.1 Raccoon Procyon lotor 0.1 Raccoon, albino Procyon lotor 0.1 Raccoon, black phase .... Procyon lotor 1.0 Coatimundi Nasua nasua 2.2 Peruvian coatimundi .... Nasua n. dorsalis 1.2 Kinkajou Potos flavus 2.1 Olingo Bassaricyon gabbi 1.1 Mustelidae: Fisher Martes pennanti 0.1 Marten Martes americana 1.2 Yellow- throated marten . . . Martes fiavigula henrici 1.1 British Guiana tayra .... Tayra barbara poliocephala .... 1.1 Grison Gallictis allimandi 1.0 Zorilla Ictonyx striatus 1.0 Wolverine Gulo gulo 0.1 Ratel Mellivora capensis 1.0 Eurasian, or common badger. Meles meles 0.1 Golden-bellied ferret badger . Melogale moschata 1.1 Common skunk Mephitis mephitis 0.1 River otter Lutra canadensis 2.0 172 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Viverridae: Genet Genetta genetta Formosan spotted civet . . . Viverricula indica . . . Linsang Prionodon linsang . . . African palm civet Nandinia binotata . . . Masked civet Paguma larvata .... Binturong Arctictis binturong . . . African water civet Atilax paludinosus . . . Cusimanse Crossarchus fasciatus . . White-tailed mongoose . . . Ichneumia albicauda . . Black-footed mongoose . . . Bdeogale sp Hyaenidae: Striped hyena Hyaena hyaena .... Felidae: Bobcat Lynx rufus Canada lynx Lynx canadensis .... Jungle cat Felis chaus Serval cat Felis serval Fishing cat Felis viverrinus .... Leopard cat Felis bengalensis . . . Golden cat Felis aurata Flat-headed cat Felis planiceps Ocelot Felis pardalis Jaguarondi Felis yagouaroundi . . . Puma Felis concolor Leopard Panthera pardus .... Black leopard Panthera pardus .... Lion Panthera leo Bengal tiger Panthera tigris .... Bengal tiger, white Panthera tigris .... Jaguar Panthera onca .... Clouded leopard Neojelis nebulosa .... Cheetah Acinonyx jubata .... PlNNIPEDIA Otariidae: California sea-lion £alophus californianus Patagonian sea-lion Otaria Jlavescens . . . Phocidae: Harbor seal Phoca vitulina . . . TUBULIDENTATA Ory cteropodidae : Aardvark Orycteropus qfer NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 173 Family and common name Scientific name Number Proboscidea Elephantidae: African elephant Loxodonta africana 0.1 Forest elephant Loxodonta cyclotis 1.0 Indian elephant Elephas maximus 0.2 Hyracoidea Procaviidae: Rock hyrax Procavia capensis 4 Perissodactyla Equidae: Mongolian wild horse . . . Equus przewalski 1.0 Grevy's zebra Equus grevyi 1.2 Grant's zebra Equus burchelli 1 .4 Burro Equus asinus 1.1 Tapiridae: Brazilian tapir Tapirus terrestris 1.1 Rhinocerotidae: One-horned Indian rhinoceros . Rhinoceros unicornis 1.1 African black rhinoceros . . Diceros bicornis 1.1 White, or square-lipped Ceratotherium simum 1.1 rhinoceros. Artiodagtyla Tayassuidae: Collared peccary Tayassu tajacu 6.2 Hippopotamidae : Hippopotamus Hippopotamus amphibius 1.2 Pygmy hippopotamus .... Choeropsis liberiensis 4.5 Camelidae: Arabian camel Camelus dromedarius 1.0 Bactrian camel Camelus bactrianus 0.1 Llama Lama glama 1.2 Alpaca Lama pacos 1.1 Cervidae: Axis deer Axis axis 2.0 Red deer Cervus elaphus *1.4 Sika deer Cervus nippon *1.7 American elk Cervus canadensis *1.0 Pere David's deer Elaphurus davidianus 1.0 Forest caribou Rangifer caribou 0.1 Reindeer Rangifer tarandus 4.10 Hybrid reindeer R. tarandusXR. caribou 0.1 *On deposit at another zoo or sanctuary. 174 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Number Giraffidae: Masai giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis 1.2 Antilocapridae : Pronghorn antelope Antilocapra americana 1.0 Bovidae: Sitatunga Tragelaphus spekii Yak Poephagus grunniens Gaur Bibos gaurus (one on deposit) . . . Cape buffalo Syncerus coffer Anoa Anos depressicornis Brindled gnu Connochaetes taurinus Maxwell's duiker Cephalophus maxwellii Dorcas gazelle Gazella dorcas Saiga antelope Saiga tatarica Rocky Mountain goat . . . Oreamnos americanus Himalayan tahr Hemitragus jemlahicus African pygmy goat .... Capra hircus Ibex Capra ibex Aoudad Ammotragus lervia Bighorn sheep Ovis canadensis Dall sheep Ovis dalli BIRDS Sphenisciformes Spheniscidae: King penguin Aptenodytes patagonica Adelie penguin Pygoscelis adeliae Struthioniformes Struthionidae: Ostrich Struthio camelus Rheiformes Rheidae: Common Rhea Rhea americana Casuariiformes Casuariidae: Double-wattled cassowary . . Casuarius bicarunculatus Dromiceiidae: Emu Dromiceius novaehollandiae *On deposit at another zoo or sanctuary. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 175 Family and common name Scientific name Number TlNAMIFORMES Tinamidae: Spotted tinamou Nothura maculosa 1 Tataupa tinamou Crypturellus tataupa 1 Procellariiformes Diomedeidae: Black-footed albatross .... Diomedea nigripes 1 Peleganiformes Pelecanidae: Old world white pelican . . Pelecanus onocrotalus 2.2 American white pelican . . . Pelecanus erythrorhynchos 2 Brown pelican Pelecanus occidentalis 1 Dalmatian pelican Pelecanus crispus 2 Phalacrocor acidae : Double-crested cormorant . . Phalacrocorax auritus 3 Great cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo 5 ClCONIIFORMES Ardeidae: Common egret Casmerodius albus 7 Black-crowned night heron . Nycticorax nycticorax 11 American bittern Botaurus lentiginosus 1 Bare-throated tiger bittern . . Tigrisoma mexicanum 1 Balaenicipitidae: Shoebill Balaeniceps rex 0.1 Ciconiidae: American wood ibis .... Mycteria americana 1 White stork Ciconia ciconia 2 White-bellied stork Sphenorhynchus abdimii 1 Black-necked stork Xenorhynchus asiaticus 1.1 Painted stork Ibis leucocephalus 1 Threskiornithidae: White ibis Eudocimus albus 3 Scarlet ibis Eudocimus ruber 11 Black-faced ibis Theristicus caudatus 1 Glossy ibis Plegadis falcinellus 5 Black-headed ibis Threskiornis melanocephala .... 1 Roseate spoonbill Ajaia ajaja 3 Phoenicopteridae: Chilean flamingo Phoenicopterus chilensis 1 Greater flamingo Phoenicopterus ruber 3.3 Greater flamingo Phoenicopterus ruber roseus 1 176 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Number Anseriformes Anhimidae: Crested screamer Chauna torquata 3 Black-necked screamer . . . . Chauna chavaria 1.1 Anatidae: Coscoroba swan Coscoroba coscoroba Mute swan Cygnus olor Black-necked swan Cygnus melancoriphus Whistling swan Cygnus columbianus Whooping swan Olor cygnus Trumpeter swan Olor buccinator Black swan Cygnus atratus Egyptian goose Alopochen aegyptiacus White-fronted goose .... Anser albifrons Bar-headed goose Anser indicus Emperor goose Anser canagicus Snow goose Anser caerulescens Snow goose, blue phase . . . Anser caerulescens Ross's snow goose Anser rossii Nene, or Hawaiian goose . . Bratita sandvicensis Red-brested goose Branta ruficollis Canada goose Branta canadensis Canada goose X snow goose, Branta canadensis X Anser caerulescens . hybrid. Canada goose Branta canadensis parvipes Canada goose Branta canadensis maxima Canada goose Branta canadensis minima Fulvous tree duck Dendrocygna bicolor Wood duck Aix sponsa Mandarin duck Aix galericulata Common pintail Anas acuta Green-winged teal Anas crecca Chestnut-brested teal .... Anas castanea European widgeon or Anas penelope baldpate. American widgeon Anas americana Spot-billed duck Anas poecilorhyncha Mallard Anas platyrhynchos American black duck .... Anas rubripes Philippine duck Anas luzonica Greater scaup Aythya marila Lesser scaup Aythya qffinis Ring-necked duck Aythya collaris Rosy-billed pochard .... Netta peposaca Red-crested pochard .... Netta rufina NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 177 Family and common name Scientific name Comb duck Sarkidiornis melanotos Ruddy shelduck Tadorna jerruginea . . Falconiformes Cathartidae: Andean condor Vultur gryphus . . . King vulture Sarcoramphus papa . . Sagittariidae: Secretary bird Sagittarius serpentarius Accipitridae: Hooded vulture Necrosyrtes monachus . Griffon vulture Gypsjuluus .... Ruppell's vulture Gyps ruppellii . . . Red- tailed hawk Buteo jamaicensis . . Swainson's hawk Buteo swainsoni . . . Red-shouldered hawk .... Buteo lineatus . . . Ornate hawk-eagle Spizjaetus ornatus. . . Long-crested hawk-eagle . . Lophaetus occipitalis . Golden eagle Aquila chrysaetos. . . Imperial eagle Aquila heliaca . . . White-bellied sea eagle . . . Haliaeetus leucogaster . Pallas' s fishing eagle Haliaeetus leucoryphus Bald eagle Haliaeetus leucocephalus Bateleur eagle Terathopius ecaudatus Lammergeier, or bearded vulture. Falconidae: American kestrel or American sparrowhawk. Peregrine falcon or duckhawk Eleonora's falcon . . Red-footed falcon . . Feilden's falconet . . Collared forest falcon Crested caracara . . White-throated caracara Gypaetus barbatus Falco sparverius Falco peregrinus . . . Falco eleonorae . . . Falco vespertinus . . . Keohierax insignis . . Micrastur semitorquatus Polyborus plancus . . Phalcoboenus albogularis Galliformes Megapodiidae: Brush turkey Alectura lathami . . Cracidae: Red-wattled curassow .... Crax globulosa . . Crested guan Penelope purpurascens White-crested piping guan . . Pipile cumanensis . 789-427—66 23 Number 2.2 3.3 1.0 2 1.1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 5 2 1 1 7 1 1 0.1 1 1 1 0.1 2 2 1 1 1.1 1.0 2.0 178 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Number Phasianidae: Common quail Coturnix coturnix 0.1 Rain quail Coturnix coromandelica 8 Scaled quail Callipepla squamata 4 Gambel's quail Lophortyx gambeli 1.0 California quail Lophortyx calif ornicus 1 Argus pheasant Argusianus argus 1.0 Golden pheasant Chrysolophus pictus . 0.1 Black-breasted Kalij pheasant . Lophura leucomelana 1.1 Silver pheasant Lophura nycthemera 1.0 Ring-necked pheasant .... Phasianus colchicus 6.4 Blue-eared pheasant Crossoptilon auritum 1.0 Napoleon peacock-pheasant . Polyplectron emphanum 1.1 Gray, or chinquis peacock- Polyplectron bicalcaratum *1.1 pheasant. Indian peafowl Pavo cristatus 3.3 Red jungle fowl Gallus gallus 1.0 Chukar Alectoris chukar 1.1 Painted partridge Francolinus pictus 1.0 Island chukar gray partridge . Francolinus pondicerianus 1.1 Greek chukar black wood Melanoperdix nigra 3.2 partridge. Numididae: Vulturine guinea fowl .... Acryllium vulturinum 0.1 Gruiformes Gruidae: Asiatic white crane Grus leucogeranus 1 Sandhill crane Grus canadensis 6 Common crane Grus grus 1.1 Sarus crane Grus antigone 1 Crowned crane Balearica pavonina 7 Demoiselle crane Anthropoides virgo 4 Psophiidae: White-winged trumpeter . . . Psophia leucoptera 1.1 Rallidae: Cayenne wood rail Aramides cajanea 3 White-throated crake .... Laterallus albigularis 1 Common gallinule Gallinula chloropus 6 Purple gallinule Porphyrula martinica 1 Eurypygidae: Sun bittern Eurypyga helias 1 Cariamidae: Crested seriama Cariama cristata 1 NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 179 Family and common name Scientific name Number Otididae: Kori bustard Ardeotis kori 2.0 Senegal bustard Eupodotis senegalensis 1.0 Charadriiformes Jacanidae: Pheasant-tailed jacana . . . Hydrophasianus chirurgus 1 Charadriidae: Banded plover ^pnifer tricolor 2 American golden plover . . . Pluvialis dominica 1 Southern lapwing Belonopterus chilensis 4 Glareolidae: Egyptian plover Pluvianus aegyptius 6 Recurvirostridae: Black-necked stilt Himantopus mexicanus 1 Laridae: Ring-billed gull Larus delawarensis 3 Laughing gull Larus atricilla 3 Silver gull Larus novaehollandiae 4 Sooty tern Sterna fuse ata 5 Inca tern Larosterna inca 2 COLUMBIFORMES Columbidae: Speckled pigeon Columba guinea 1 Band-tailed pigeon Columba fasciata 2 Green imperial pigeon . . . Ducula aenea 1 Crested bronze-wing pigeon . Ocyphaps lophotes 4 Orange-breasted green pigeon . Treron bicincta 0.2 Common bronze-wing pigeon . Phaps chalcoptera 2 Blue ground dove Claravis pretiosa 1.1 Ruddy ground dove .... Columbigallina talpacoti 1 Emerald dove Chalcophaps indica 1 Ringed turtle dove Streptopelia risoria 5 Mourning dove ^enaidura macroura 7 PsiTTACIFORMES Psittacidae: Kea Nestor notabilis 1.0 Black cockatoo Calyptorhynchus magnificus 1 .0 Solomon Islands cockatoo . . Kakatoe ducrops *1 Sulphur-crested cockatoo . . Kakatoe galerita 2 Bare-eyed cockatoo Kakatoe sanguinea 1 Rose-crested cockatoo .... Kakatoe moluccensis 1 Leadbeater's cockatoo . . . Kakatoe leadbeateri 4 Cockatiel Nymphicus hollandicus 1.2 180 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Yellow and blue macaw . . Red-and-green macaw. . . Scarlet macaw Red-and-blue macaw . . . Cherry-headed conure parrot Brown-throated conure . . Petz's conure Dusky-headed conure . . . Nanday or blackheaded conure. Chilean conure Yellow-winged conure . . . . Monk parakeet Double-yellow-headed Amazon parrot. Single-yellow-headed Amazon parrot. Yellow-naped Amazon parrot. Yellow-fronted Amazon parrot. Red-lored Amazon parrot . . White-fronted Amazon parrot . Festive Amazon parrot . . . Black-headed caique . . . . Budgerigar or warbling grass parakeet. Blue-rumped parrotlet Princess parrot .... Rosy-faced lovebird African grey parrot . . Red-sided eclectus parrot Alexandrine parakeet . Rose-ringed parakeet . Moustached parakeet . , Blossom-headed parakeet Blue-winged parakeet . . Scientific name Ara ararauna . . . Ara chloroptera . . Ara macao .... Ara maracana . . Aratinga erythrogenys Aratinga pertinax . Aratinga canicularis Aratinga weddellii . Nandayus nanday . Microsittacae ferruginea Brotogeris versicolurus Myiopsitta monachus . Amazona ochrocephala Amazona ochrocephala Amazona ochrocephala Amazona ochrocephala Amazona autumnalis . Amazona albifrons . . Amazona /estiva . . . Pionites melanocephala Melopsittacus undulatus Forpus cyanopygius . . Polytelis alexandrae Agapornis roseicollis . Psittacus erithacus . . Lorius roratus . . . Psittacula eupatria . . Psittacula krameri . . Psittacula alexandri. . Psittacula cyanocephala Psittacula columboides GUGULIFORMES Musophagidae: White-bellied go-away bird White-cheeked turaco . . . Purple-crested turaco . . . Cuculidae: Greater roadrunner Geococcyx californianus *On deposit at another zoo or sanctuary. Corythaixoides leucogaster Tauraco leucotis .... Gallirex porphyreolophus . NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK Family and common name Scientific name Strigiformes Tytonidae: Common barn owl Tyto alba .... Strigidae: Spectacled owl Pulsatrix perspicillata Snowy owl Nyctea scandiaca Barred owl Strix varia .... Brown wood-owl Strix leptogrammica . Burrowing owl Speotyto cunicularia Eagle owl Bubo bubo .... Elf owl Micrathene whitneyi 181 Number Trochilidae: White-throated amazilia hummingbird. Coliidae: Red-faced coly . . . Apodiformes Amazilia amazilia COLIIFORME Colius indicus . . Momotus momota . . . Baryphthengus ruficapillus GORAGIIFORMES Alcedinidae: Kookaburra or laughing Dacelo gigas . . jackass. White-breasted kingfisher . . Halcyon smyrnensis Momotidae: Blue-crowned motmot Great rufous motmot , Coraciidae: Lilac-breasted roller .... Coracias caudata Indian roller Coracias benghalensis Bucerotidae: Concave-casqued, or great Buceros bicornis . . pied, hornbill. Indian pied hornbill Malabar pied hornbill Wrinkled hornbill. . Wreathed hornbill . Yellow-billed hornbill Abyssinian ground hornbill Leadbeater's ground hornbill Anthracoceros malabaricus Anthracoceros coronatus . Rhyticeros corrugatus . . Rhyticeros undulatus . . Tockus fiavirostris . . . Bucorvus abyssinicus . . Bucorvus leadbeateri . . 13 1 1 2 2 •1.1 2 1 1 0.1 0.1 1.1 1.0 182 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Number PlCIFORMES Capitonidae: Lineated barbet Megalaima lineata 3 Great hill barbet Megalaima vixens 1 Ramphastidae: Swainson's toucan Ramphastos swainsonii 0.1 Keel-billed toucan Ramphastos sulfuratus 0.1 Channel-billed toucan . . . Ramphastos vitellinus 0.2 Razor-billed aracari .... Pteroglossus castanotis 1.0 Picidae: Pileated woodpecker .... Dryocopus pileatus 1 Passeriformes Cotingidae: Peruvian or scarlet cock-of- Rupicola peruviana 1.0 the-rock. Tyrannidae: Kiskadee Pitangus sulphuratus 3 Dicruridae: Greater racket-tailed drongo . Dicrurus paradiseus 3 Oriolidae: Maroon oriole Oriolus trailli 0.1 Corvidae: Magpie-jay Calocitta formosa 1 Green jay Cyanocorax yncas 3 Violaceus jay Cyanocorax violaceus 4 San Bias jay Cissilopha sanblasiana 2 Bushy-crested jay Cissilopha melanocyanea 1 Himalayan tree pie Dendrocitta Jormosae 1 Common jay Garrulus glandarius 1 Blue jay Cyanocitta cristata 1 Hunting cissa Cissa chinensis 6 Red-billed blue magpie . . . Urocissa erythrorhyncha 3 Formosan blue pie Urocissa caerulea 8 Pied crow Corvus albus 2 Common raven Corvus corax 2 Paridae: Great tit Parus major 1 Timaliidae: Slaty-headed scimitar babbler . Pomatorhinus schisticeps 1 White-crested laughing thrush. Garrulax leucolophus 4 Necklaced laughing thrush . . Garrulax monileger 2 Nilgiri or rufous-breasted, Garrulax cachinnans 2 laughing thrush. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 183 Family and common name Scientific name Troglodytes troglodytes Turdus migratorius .... Turdus migratorius .... Turdus viscivorus Thamnolaea cinnamomeiventris Copsychus malabaricus .... ^oothera citrina Black-capped sibia Heterophasia capistrata Silver-eared mesia Leiothrix argentauris . Red-billed leiothrix Leiothrix lutea. . . . Pycnonotidae: Black-headed bulbul .... Pycnonotus atriceps . . Red-vented bulbul Pycnonotus cafer . . . Red-whiskered bulbul .... Pycnonotus jocosus . . White-throated bulbul . . . Criniger Jlaveolus . . Irenidae: Gold-fronted chloropsis or leaf Chloropsis aurifrons . . bird. Troglodytidae: Winter wren Turdidae: American robin American robin, albino . . Mistle thrush Cliff chat Shama thrush Orange-headed ground thrush. Bombycillidae: Cedar waxwing Sturnidae: Rosy pastor Purple glossy starling . . . Greater glossy starling . . Violet starling Jungle mynah Hill mynah Pied mynah Gray-headed mynah . . . Black-headed, or Brahminy, mynah. Black-winged mynah . . Common starling .... Rothschild's mynah . . Gold-crested mynah . . Black-bellied glossy starling Nectariniidae: Tacazze sunbird .... Zosteropidae: Oriental white-eye . . . Bombycilla cedrorum Sturnus roseus . . . . Lamprotornis purpureus . Lamprotornis australis Cinnyricinclus leucogaster . Acridotheres fuscus . . . Gracula religiosa . . . Sturnus contra . . . . Sturnus malabaricus . . Sturnus pagodarum . . . Sturnus melanopterus . Sturnus vulgaris . . . Leucopsar rothschildi . Ampeliceps coronatus . Lamprotornis corruscus Nectarinia tacazze Number 1 4 7 5 4 4 4 0.1 4 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 6 1.0 fysterops palpebrosa 184 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Number Coerebidae: Green honeycreeper .... Chlorophanes spiza 0.1 Purple or yellow-legged Cyanerpes caeruleus 1.0 honeycreeper. Plocidae: Red-collared widowbird . . . Euplectes ardens 3.0 Jackson's whydah Euplectes jacksoni 1.0 Masked weaver Ploceus velatus 4.0 Red bishop bird Euplictes orix 1.0 Common silverbill or white- Lonchura malabarica 2 throated Munia. Bengalese finch (domesticated Lonchura striata 1 form of striated mannikin= white-backed Munia). Black-headed Munia or Lonchura malacca 3 chestnut mannikin. Nutmeg mannikin or spotted Lonchura punctulata 6 Munia. Cut-throat finch Amadina fasciata 2.1 Strawberry finch Estrilda amandava 3 Common waxbill Estrilda astrild 1 Orange-cheeked waxbill . . . Estrilda melpoda 1 Zebra finch Poephila castanotis 2.1 Java rice finch Padda oryzivora 11 Icteridae: Troupial Icterus icterus 3 Yellow-headed marshbird . . Agelaius icterocephalus 1 Giant cowbird Scaphidura oryzivora 1 Shiny cowbird Molothrus bonariensis 1 Colombian red-eyed cowbird . Tangavius armenti 1.0 Bronzed cowbird Tangavius aenus 1.1 Brown-headed cowbird . . . Molothrus ater 2 Red-winged blackbird . . . Agelaius phoeniceus 1 Purple grackle Quiscalus quiscula 3 Thraupidae: Blue tanager Thraupis virens Yellow-rumped tanager . . . Ramphocelus icteronotus Masked crimson tanager . . Ramphocelus nigrogularis Flame-rumped tanager . . . Ramphocelus flammigerus Blue-winged mountain tana- Compsocoma fiavinucha ger Boddaert's tanager Tachyphonus rufus Fringillidae: Black-chinned siskin .... Spinus barbatus Screaming seedeater Sporophila caerulescens NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 185 Family and common name Ruddy-breasted seedeater Chestnut-bellied seed finch Buff-throated saltator Blue-black grassquit Ortolan bunting . . Red-headed bunting Canary Yellow-grass finch . Scientific name Sporophila minuta . . . Oryzoborus angolinsis . . Saltator maximus . . . Volatinia jacarina . . . Emberiza calandra . . . Emberiza brumiceps . . Serinus canarius .... Sicalis luteola Number 1.1 2 2 1 1 1 2 14 Alligatoridae: Caiman Black caiman . . . American alligator . Chinese alligator . . Crocodilidae: Broad-nosed crocodile African crocodile . . Narrow-nosed crocodile Salt-water crocodile American crocodile Morelett's crocodile Gavialidae: REPTILES LORICATA Caiman sclerops . . . Melanosuchus niger Alligator mississipiensis Alligator sinensis. . . Osteolaemus tetraspis . Crocodylus niloticus Crocodylus cataphractus Crocodylus porosus . . Crocodylus acutus . . Crocodylus moreletii Indian gavial Gavialis gangeticus Chelydridae: Snapping turtle Alligator snapping turtle . . Kinosternidae: Stinkpot Mud turtle Tropical mud turtle . . . . Central American mud turtle. Emydidae: Tropical American pointed- nosed turtle. Box turtle Florida box turtle Ornate box turtle Kura kura box turtle . . . . Diamondback terrapin . . Map turtle Chelonia Chelydra serpentina Macrochelys temminckii Sternotherus odoratus . Kinosternon subrubrum Kinosternon spurrelli . Kinosternon cruentatum Geoemyda punctuaria Terrapene Carolina . . Terrapene c. bauri . . Terrapene ornata ornata Cuora amboinensis . . Malaclemys terrapin . Graptemys geographica 9 3 10 2 2 3 1 1 2 1 17 1 4 5 3 1 75 5 1 3 8 1 186 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Barbour's map turtle . Mississippi map turtle . Painted turtle .... Western painted turtle. Southern painted turtle Cumberland turtle . . South American red-lined turtle. Yellow-bellied turtle . . . Red-eared turtle Red-bellied turtle .... Gooter Peninsula cooter Florida red-bellied turtle Central American turtle . . Cuban water turtle .... Higatee turtle Chicken turtle Spotted turtle Wood turtle Iberian pond turde .... European water terrapin European pond turtle . . . Blanding's or semibox turtle Reeves' turde ...... Testudinidae: Duncan Island tortoise . . Galapagos tortoise .... Galapagos tortoise .... Giant Aldabra tortoise . . . South American tortoise . . Star tortoise Mountain tortoise Texas tortoise Soft-shell tortoise Pelomedusidae: African water turde . . . African black mud turtle . . Amazon spotted turtle . . Chelydidae: South American side-necked turde. Australian snake-necked turde. Matamata turde Small side-necked turde . . Scientific name Number Graptemys barbouri 4 Graptemys pseudogeographica kohni 3 Chrysemys p. picta 10 Chrysemys p. belli 17 Chrysemys p. dorsalis 1 Pseudemys scripta troostii 7 Pseudemys s. callirostris 2 Pseudemys s. scripta 18 Pseudemys s. elegans 36 Pseudemys rubriventris 6 Pseudemys floridana 6 Pseudemys j ". peninsularis 1 Pseudemys nelsoni 2 Pseudemys ornata 2 Pseudemys decussata 1 Pseudemys rugosa 1 Deirochelys reticularia 2 Clemmys guttata 2 Clemmys insculpta 6 Clemmys leprosa 5 Clemmys caspica rivulata 13 Emys orbicularis 1 Emys blandingii 2 Chinemys reevesii 4 Testudo ephippium 1 Testudo e. elephantopus 1 Testudo elephantopus vicina .... 2 Testudo gigantea 4 Testudo denticulata 5 Testudo elegans 5 Testudo emys 1 Gopherus berlandieri 1 Malacochersus tornieri 4 Pelomedusa sinuata 2 Pelusios subniger 1 Podocnemis unifilis 5 Batrachemys nasuta 1 Chelodina longicollis 3 Chelys fimbriata 1 Hydromedusa iectifera 2 NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 187 Family and common name Scientific name Number Large side-necked turtle . . . Phrynops hilarii 7 Krefft's turtle Emydura krefftii 3 Murray turtle Emydura macquarrii 3 South American gibba turtle . Mesoclemmys gibba 2 Flat-headed turde Platemys platycephala 1 Trionychidae: Spiny softshell Trionyx ferox 5 Texas softshell Trionyx f. emoryi 1 African softshell Trionyx triunguis 2 Sauria Gekkonidae: Tokay gecko Gekko gecko 26 Day gecko Phelsuma sp 1 Banded gecko Coleonyx variegatus 2 Agamidae: Agamid lizard Agama stellio 4 Blood-sucker lizard Calotes versicolor 2 Iguanidae: Common iguana Iguana iguana 7 Basilisk lizard Basiliscus sp 1 Rhinoceros iguana Cyclura cornuta 3 Carolina anole Anolis carolinensis 50 West Indies anole Anolis conspersus 4 Fence lizard Sceloporus undulatus 4 Blue spiny lizard Sceloporus cyanogenys 24 West Indies fence lizard . . . Leiocephalus varius 1 Plica lizard Plica plica 1 Scincidae: Mourning skink Egernia luctuosa 2 White's skink Egernia whitei 1 Four-lined skink Eumeces tetragrammus 1 Five-lined skink Eumeces fasciatus 1 Great Plains skink Eumeces obsoletus 1 Stump- tailed skink Tiliqua rugosa 1 Gerr hosauridae : African plated lizard .... ^jonosaurus sp 1 Madagascar plated lizard . . ^pnosaurus madagascariensis .... 1 Plated lizard Gerrhosaurus major 1 Lacertidae: European lizard Lacerta strigata trilineata 1 Sand lizard Lacerta agilis 1 Teeidae: Caiman lizard Dracaena guianensis 1 Ameiva lizard Ameiva ameiva praesignis 1 188 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Number Black tegu Tupinambis nigropunctatus 3 Spotted whiptail Cnemidophorus gularis 1 Cordylidae: South African spiny lizard . . Gordylus vandami perkoensis .... 2 African spiny lizard .... Cordylus polyzonus 2 Varanidae: Komodo dragon Varanus komodoensis 1.0 Dumeril's monitor Varanus dumerili 1 Malayan monitor Varanus salvator 1 Helodermatidae : Gila monster Heloderma suspectum 1 Mexican beaded lizard . . . Heloderma h. horridum 2 Beaded lizard, black phase . Heloderma h. alvernensis 1 Anguidae: European glass lizard, or slow Anguis fragilis 2 worm. Slender glass lizard Ophisaurus attenuatus 2 European glass lizard .... Ophisaurus apodus 4 Texas alligator lizard .... Gerrhonotus liocephalus inf emails . . 3 Serpentes Boidae: Common anaconda Eunectes murinus 5 Trinidad tree boa Epicrates fordii 2 Cook's tree boa Corallus enydris cooki 1 Boa constrictor Constrictor c. constrictor 5 Emperor boa Constrictor c. imperator 1 Sand boa Eryxjohni 1 Sand boa Eryxjaculus 1 Sand boa Eryx conica 1 Indian python Python molurus 3 Regal python Python reticulatus 4 Blood python Python curtis 1 African python Python sebae 1 Acrochor didae : Elephant trunk snake .... Acrochor dus javanicus 1 Colubridae: New Guinea tree snake . . . Boiga irregularis 1 Eastern kingsnake Lampropeltis getulus getulus .... 3 Speckled kingsnake Lampropeltis g. holbrooki 2 California kingsnake .... Lampropeltis g. calif orniae 3 Florida kingsnake Lampropeltis g. floridana 3 Sonoran kingsnake Lampropeltis g. splendida 1 Scarlet kingsnake Lampropeltis doliata doliata .... 1 Tropical kingsnake Lampropeltis d. polyzona 1 Eastern milk snake ..... Lampropeltis d. triangulum .... 2 NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 189 Family and common name Scientific name Number Coastal Plain milk snake . . Lampropeltis d. temporalis 1 Western milk snake Lampropeltis d. gentilis 1 Prairie kingsnake Lampropeltis c. calligaster 1 Mole snake Lampropeltis c. rhombomaculata ... 2 Texas lined snake Tropidoclonion lineatum texanum ... 1 Eastern garter snake .... Thamnophis sirtalis sirtalis .... 1 Eastern black-necked garter Thamnophis cyrtopsis ocellata .... 1 snake. Pvibbon snake Thamnophis sauritus 1 Eastern hog-nosed snake . . Heterodon platyrhinos platyrhinos . . . 1 Common water snake .... Matrix s. sipedon 3 Broad-banded water snake . . Natrix s. confiuens 1 Red-bellied water snake . . . Natrix erythrogaster erythrogaster . . 1 Blotched water snake .... Natrix e. transversa 1 Diamond-backed water snake . Natrix rhombifera 4 Brown water snake Natrix taxispilota 4 Grand Cayman water snake . Tretanorhinus variabilis lewisi ... 4 Eastern indigo snake .... Drymarchon corals couperi 1 Texas indigo snake Drymarchon c. erebennus 1 Black rat snake Elaphe obsoleta obsoleta 6 Black rat snake, albino . . . Elpahe o. obsoleta *1 Yellow rat snake Elaphe o. quadrivittata 4 Texas rat snake Elaphe o. lindheimeri 2 Corn snake Elaphe guttata guttata 4 Great Plains rat snake . . . Elaphe g. emoryi 1 Asiatic striped rat snake . . . Elaphe taeniura 5 Japanese rat snake Elaphe climacophora 1 Chinese rat snake Elaphe carinata 2 Aesculapian snake Elaphe longissima 2 African house snake .... Boaedon Juliginosus 2 Banded rat snake Dinodon rufozonatum 4 European racer Coluber viridijlavus . Northern black racer .... Coluber constrictor constrictor .... European racer Coluber jugularis caspius Pink coachwhip Masticophis fiagellum testaceus . . . Northern ringneck snake . . Diadophis punctatus edwardsii .... Eastern worm snake .... Carphophis amoenus amoenus .... Brown's snake Storeria dekayi Great Basin gopher snake . . Pituophis catenifer deserticola .... Bullsnake Pituophis c. sayi Bullsnake Pituophis sp File snake Simocephalus capensis Wolf snake Lycodon fiavomaculatum Green-headed tree snake . . Leptophis mexicanus Glossy snake Arizona elegans *On deposit at another zoo or sanctuary. 190 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Number Elapidae: Indian cobra Naja naja 1 Taiwan cobra Naja n. atra 7 African black cobra .... Naja melanoleaca 1 King cobra Ophiophagus hannah 2 Many-banded krait Bungarus multicinctus 2 Banded krait Bungarus fasciatus 1 Viperidae: Gaboon viper Bitis gabonica 1 Russell's viper Vipera russelli 1 Saw-scale viper Echis carinatus 1 Crotalidae: Copperhead Ancistrodon contortrix 2 Southern copperhead .... Ancistrodon c. contortrix 2 Northern copperhead .... Ancistrodon c. mokeson 2 Broad-banded copperhead . . Ancistrodon c. laticinctus 1 Cottonmouth Ancistrodon p. piscivorus 4 Western cottonmouth .... Ancistrodon p. leucostoma 1 Cantil Ancistrodon bilineatus 1 Pygmy rattlesnake Sistrurus miliarus 1 Green palm viper Trimeresurus gramineus 1 Green viper Trimeresurus sp 2 Mamushi Trimeresurus elegans 1 Habu Trimeresurus flavoviridis 2 Western diamondback rattle- Crotalus atrox 6 snake. Timber rattlesnake Crotalus h. horridus 1 Canebrake rattlesnake . . . Crotalus h. atricaudatus 1 Mohave diamondback rattle- Crotalus scutulatus 1 snake. AMPHIBIANS Gaudata Cryptobranchidae : Giant salamander Megalobatrachus japonicus 1 Amphiumidae: Congo eel Amphiuma means 1 Amby stomatidae : Tiger salamander Ambystoma tigrinum 2 Spotted salamander .... Ambystoma maculatum 1 Salaman dridae : Japanese red-bellied newt . . Diemictylus pyrrhogaster 4 Red-spotted newt Diemictylus viridescens viridescens . . 11 Broken-striped newt .... Diemictylus viridescens dorsalis ... 7 European newt Triturus sp 3 NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 191 Family and common name Scientific name Number European newt Triturus sp 4 Fire salamander Salamandra salamandra 6 Proteidae: Mudpuppy Necturus sp 2 Salientia Bufonidae: American toad Bufo terrestris americanus 1 Fowler's toad Bufo woodhousei fowleri 1 Blomberg's toad Bufo blombergi 1 Giant toad Bufo marinus 8 Natterjack toad Bufo calamita 1 Green toad Bufo viridis 1 Cuban toad Bufo peltocephalus 5 Crested tropical American Bufo typhonius 2 toad. Colorado River toad .... Bufo alvarius 2 Western toad Bufo boreas 1 Pipidae: Surinam toad Pipa pipa 4 African clawed frog Xenopus laevis 3 Congo pygmy frog Hymenochirus sp 2 Hylidae: Gray tree frog Hyla versicolor 1 Tree frog Hyla rubra 1 Canyon tree frog Hyla arenicolor 1 Green tree frog Hyla cinerea 1 Barking tree frog Hyla gratiosa 1 Microhylidae: Narrow-mouthed toad . . . Microhyla carolinensis 2 Ranidae: American bull frog Rana catesbeiana 1 Green frog Rana clamitans melanota 1 Leopard frog Rana pipiens 25 FISHES Neoceratodontoidei Protopteridae: Lungfish Protopterus sp 1 Enchelycephaloidei Teleostidae: Freshwater eel Synbranchus sp. . 192 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Family and common name Scientific name Number OSTARIOPHYSOIDEI Characidae: Piranha Serrasalmus natteri 1 Black tetra Gymnocorymbus ternetzi 1 Metynnis, or silver dollar . . Metynnis maculatus 1 Cyprinidae: Zebra danio Brachydanio rerio 2 Tiger barb Barbus partipentazona 1 White Cloud Mountain fish . Tanichthys albonubes 1 Goldfish Carassius auratus 31 Loricariidae: South American sucking Hypostomus plecostomus 9 catfish. Black bullhead Ictalurus melas 1 Electrophoridae : Electric eel Electrophorus electricus 6 Cyprinodontoidei Poeciliidae: Flag-tailed guppy Lebistes reticulatus 10 Guppy Lebistes reticulatus 15 Black mollie Mollienesia latipinna 1 Platy, or moonfish Xiphophorus maculatus 5 Green swordtail Xiphophorus sp 20 Red swordtail Xiphophorus sp 40 Percomorphoidei Anabantidae: Kissing gourami Helostoma temmincki 1 Paradise-fish Macropodus operculars 2 Centrarchidae: Common bluegill Lepomis macrochirus 1 Cichlidae: Peacock cichlid Astronotus ocellatus 1 Jack Dempsey fish Cichlasoma biocellatum 1 African mouthbreeder . . . Pelmatochromis guentheri 1 Angelfish Pterophyllum eimekei 1 Gobiidae: Bumblebee fish Brachygobius doriae 1 NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 193 ARTHROPODS Decapoda Family and common name Scientific name Number Cenobitidae: Land hermit crab Coenobita clypeatus 6 Key West hermit crab . . . Coenobita diogenes 13 Araneida Aviculariidae: Tarantula Eurypelma sp 1 Orthoptera Blattidae: Tropical giant cockroach . . Blaberus giganteus 35 MOLLUSKS PULMONATA Planorbidae: Pond snail Helisoma trivolvis 30 REPORT OF THE VETERINARIAN The posterior paralysis of Nikumba, the male lowland gorilla, has been mentioned in both the 1963 and 1964 reports of the veterinarian. In order to complete the record of his illness, it should be mentioned that mating has been observed on several occasions, and apparently he has made a complete physical and physiological recovery. The Komodo dragon, whose infection was discussed in last year's report, has completely recovered. Fecal cultures were made monthly, and in no instance were amoebae or flagellates indicated. The operation of the veterinary section was greatly facilitated by the construction of a one-story addition on the rear of the hospital, making it possible to remove animal holding cages from the building and to place them in the new addition. Within the additional space, it was also possible to provide an autopsy room with outside access, thus eliminating the transport of dead animals and birds through the hospital proper. Several interesting developments strictly within the field of veterinary medicine occurred during the past year. On July 4, 1964, the male Grevy zebra was observed to have a dangling left hind foot. The 789-427—06 24 194 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 stud was immobilized, and X-rays taken in the corral showed a double transverse fracture of the third metacarpal bone. While the animal was under anesthesia a plaster cast with a walking stirrup was applied, permitting relatively normal movement of the zebra. The cast was not disturbed for 12 weeks; following its removal, gradually increasing amounts of weight were placed on the foot. Two months later the animal was moving normally and had made a complete recovery. On June 7, 1965, a 400-pound Aldabra tortoise was found lame in the right front leg. X-rays taken in the enclosure revealed the presence of an oblique spiral fracture of the right forelimb, and a cast was applied. To assist in necessary movement, the tortoise was secured on a mover's dolly with ropes across its back. The cast as originally applied was lost the following weekend, and it was decided to immo- bilize the leg by using a part of the dolly as a splint. Relaxation of the right forelimb was much more pronounced, and a cast was applied that completely immobilized the fracture site. This cast will remain approximately 8 weeks, and further X-rays will be taken. The tortoise is separated from its cage mates, moves around effortlessly, and takes full advantage of the wheels on the dolly to support its weight. Cultural studies made on buccal and enteric infections in snakes and lizards in the reptile collection revealed a pure culture of Pseudo- monas aruginosa which was chlorotetracycline sensitive. A prophy- lactic program was established in which all snakes and lizards receive chlorotetracycline (soluble aureomycin) in their drinking water for 5 days, followed by 9 days of clear water. Since initiation of this pro- gram in mid-January 1965, deaths from necrotic gingivitis and necrotic enteritis in the reptile collection have been reduced to one or two specimens a month. An informal agreement was reached with the veterinary pathology section of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, involving the assignment, on a weekly basis, of a staff member to perform autopsies and to observe the clinically ill animals in the collection. This collaboration has been extremely beneficial both to the AFIP, because of their interest in comparative micropathology, and to the veterinary section, because of the Zoo's interest in having a more definitive statement as to the cause of deaths in the collecton. The staff of the veterinary section was increased by one medica technologist, Mrs. Janet Davis, who joined the section on March 1 She is a graduate of Oregon State University and has had a broad range of experience in Hawaii and more recently at George Wash- ington Hospital. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 195 The veterinary section procured the temporary services of three university students through the summer months. They are assisting in the routine operation of the veterinary hospital, as well as in animal care and treatment. The veterinary section was fortunate in having the cooperation and assistance of various specialists in the field of clinical investigation and medicine. Among these are Dr. A. G. Carlson of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.; Dr. F. R. Lucas, director of the Livestock Sanitary Laboratory in Centerville, Md.; Dr. Anthony Morris of the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.; Gen. Joe M. Blumberg and Col. F. M. Garner and their staff of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. The following papers were prepared for publication in the Inter- national Zoo Yearbook, volume 6 (London Zoological Society) : Use of a Walking Cast in a Third Metatarsal Fracture in the £ebra, by Clinton W. Gray, D.V.M.; Amoebiasis in the Komodo Dragon (Varanus komodoensis), by Clinton W. Gray, with Leonard C. Marcus, V.M.D. of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, W. C. McCarten, consultant in enteric microbiology, and Thomas Sappington, M.D.; Treatment of Pseudo- monas Infections in the Snake and Lizard Collection at the National Zoological Park, by Clinton W. Gray, Janet Davis, and W. G. McCarten. The veterinarian attended a meeting of the American Veterinary Medical Association in Chicago and a seminar on biomedical telemetry at San Francisco. He visited zoos in San Francisco and San Diego and the Penrose Research Laboratory in Philadelphia. Two specimens that died during the year may have established longevity records: (1) A Malay porcupine {Acanthion brachyura), col- lected in the vicinity of Pematang Siantar, Sumatra, by the National Geographic-Smithsonian Institution Expedition to the East Indies, was received on September 28, 1937. It died on January 12, 1965, after 27 years 3 months and 15 days in the Zoo. (2) An African lungfish (Protopterus annectens), received on June 10, 1942, as a gift from Dr. Thomas Barbour, director of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, was collected in Uganda in 1937. It fed on meat, liver, hearts, frogs, and tadpoles and had many ailments throughout the years, but through use of mud baths managed to pull through. It was in the mud bath for a month prior to its death on September 25, 1964. It had been at the Zoo for 22 years 3 months 15 days and is known to have been in captivity for 5 years previously. Following are autopsy statistics for the mortality which occured at the National Zoological Park during the past fiscal year, and a table of comparison with the past 6 years: 196 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 AUTOPSY STATISTICS, 1959-65 Mortality, fiscal year 1965 Cause Rep- tiles* Birds Mam- mals Total mortality past 7 years No autopsy, not enough remains, rotten, PMD Attrition (within 14 days after arrival) Systemic disorders Infectious diseases Injuries, accidents, killed by cage mates, not eating Euthanasia Miscellaneous (parasites, stillborn, shock) No cause determined Total 150 5 51 0 12 0 6 45 269 40 64 71 6 71 2 1 44 299 15 33 3 21 12 10 14 117 1959. 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965. 472 532 517 584 636 619 685 *Included with reptiles are amphibians, fishes, insects. VISITORS In August 1961 a planned attendance survey was begun at the Zoo under the direction of Albert Mindlin, statistician of the Management Office, District of Columbia, and was carried out by the police division. The following figures give the total estimated numbers of visitors who remained in the Zoo for at least an hour: 1962 3,391,977 1963 3,565,650 1964 3,943,156 1965 4,536,256 Visiting hours at the Zoo were lengthened for the summer months. Beginning July 1, 1964, buildings remained open until 6 p.m. Thirteen groups of handicapped children and 24 busloads of patients from St. Elizabeth's Hospital were escorted through the Zoo by various police officers throughout the year. Six busloads of children from Junior Village also visited the Zoo this year. On May 8 a total of 7,398 School Safety Patrol children, transported in 205 buses, visited the Park. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 197 Seventy members of the Virginia Herpetological Society met in the reptile house on January 9. Films were shown, and snakebite and its treatment were discussed. The Washington Biologists' Field Club held its annual meeting in the reptile house on April 9. The Maharajah of Mysore visited the Zoo on January 9 especially to see the Indian elephant, Ambika, that was given largely through his efforts to the children of America, from the children of India in 1961. ESTIMATED NUMBER OF VISITORS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1965 July (1964) 780, 400 August 828,475 September 345, 575 297,338 305,075 58,576 October . November December January (1965). February . . . March . . . . April May . . . 40,065 . . . 206,200 . . . 312,990 . . . 562,640 . . . 708,485 June 490,427 Total 4,536,256 About 2 p.m. each day the cars parked in the Zoo are counted and listed according to the State or country from which they come. This is, of course, not a census of the cars coming to the Zoo but is valuable in showing the percentage of attendance by States of people in private automobiles. Many District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia cars come to the Zoo to bring guests from other States. The tabulation for fiscal year 1965 is as follows: Percentage Maryland 33. 9 Virginia 26. 5 District of Columbia 15.8 Pennsylvania . New York . . North Carolina New Jersey . . Ohio West Virginia . Florida . . . Massachusetts . 4.8 2.6 2.0 1.6 1.5 1.3 1.1 Percentage Connecticut .7 South Carolina .6 California .6 Texas .6 Michigan .6 Tennessee .5 Illinois .5 Georgia .5 Delaware .4 Indiana .3 Total 97. 2 The cars that made up the remaining 2.8 percent came from the remainder of the United States as well as foreign countries. On days of even small attendance there are cars parked in the Zoo representing foreign countries, territories, and other States. 198 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 NUMBER OF BUS GROUPS VISITING THE ZOO IN FISCAL YEAR 1965 Number of Number in Locality groups groups Alabama 12 485 Arkansas 1 38 Connecticut 9 332 Delaware 31 1,139 District of Columbia 1,098 21,355 Florida Ill 3,875 Georgia 63 2,287 Illinois 10 318 Indiana 4 133 Iowa 5 207 Kansas 2 80 Kentucky 27 837 Maine 8 331 Maryland 1,684 61,818 Michigan 9 325 Minnesota 3 110 Mississippi 3 110 Montana 2 79 New Jersey 42 1,641 New Mexico 1 35 New York 285 10,017 North Carolina 522 9, 882 North Dakota 1 73 Ohio 19 617 Pennsylvania 936 16,090 South Carolina 46 1, 662 Tennessee 70 2,726 Texas 4 157 Virginia 1,414 53,303 West Virginia 104 3, 821 Wisconsin 1 37 Foreign groups 536 Total 6,520 194,456 New construction in connection with the redevelopment program for the National Zoological Park includes provision for parking areas. New parking areas have been completed under this program and during the next fiscal year more spaces with greater accessibility to display areas will be available to the public. FINANCES Funds for the operation of the National Zoological Park are appro- priated annually under the District of Columbia Appropriation Act. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 199 The operation and maintenance appropriation for fiscal year 1965 totaled $1,739,250, which was $141,894 more than for the preceding year. The increase consisted of $24,255 to cover salary increases for general-schedule employees in accordance with Public Law 88-426; $49,995 to cover salary increases for wage-board employees; $31,580 for within-grade salary advancements for both general-schedule and wage-board employees; $3,504 for annualization of one position established in fiscal year 1964; $4,300 to establish one position; $6,197 for employee's compensation; $7,000 for animal food; $10,000 for the purchase of animals; $1,600 for the replacement of guns; and $3,463 for miscellaneous supplies and equipment. Of the total appropriation, 85 percent ($1,478,641) was used for salaries and related personnel costs and 15 percent ($259,924) for the maintenance and operation of the Zoo. Included in the latter figure were $88,450 for animal food; $31,140 for fuel and heating; $23,280 for materials for building construction and repairs; $15,500 for electricity; $18,700 for the purchase of animals; $6,900 for telephone, postal, and telegraph services; and $6,735 for veterinarian equipment and supplies. The balance of $69,219 in operational funds was expended for other items, including freight, sundry supplies, uniforms, gasoline, road re- pairs, equipment replacement, and new equipment. POLICE DIVISION New construction and general facelifting throughout the Park have thrown an extra burden on the police division. Patrolling in areas where trucks and bulldozers are working is important for the safety of the visitors. Shifts have been changed and additional police assigned to these areas. For the first time in 35 years, new 38-calibre pistols were bought and issued to every man. Under the watchful eyes of the pistol instructors (Lt. Wolfe, Sgt. Grubbs, Pvts. Porter and McGoldrick) the officers are showing a marked improvement in their scores. Each man has been awarded a badge to be worn on his uniform, denoting his qualification. One new scooter was added to the police division's motor vehicles, and others are available from the garage when needed. Refresher courses in first aid were again conducted by Sgt. A. L. Canter and Pvt. D. R. Bowman. Pvts. H. M. Bell, N. Bowe, V. T. McGoldrick, S. L. Middleton, and F. E. Reilly attended Juvenile School sponsored by the Metropolitan Police Department. This was an 8-week course, and all received certificates at its completion. 200 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 During the year the police handled 1,141 traffic violations, 31 auto- mobile accidents, 123 juvenile arrests, 83 truancy cases, 37 criminal arrests, 177 miscellaneous complaints, and 149 police investigations. Sixty-nine adults and 278 children were either reprimanded or re- moved from the Park for misbehavior. The first-aid unit treated 716 cases, most of them minor. Through the efforts of Lt. J. R. Wolfe, blood procurement officer, the American Red Cross Blood Bank received 41 pints of blood from Zoo employees during the year, making a total of 829 pints reserved for them in the Blood Bank. Twenty-three pairs of eyeglasses and sunglasses, found and unclaimed, were donated to the D.C. Chapter of the Society for the Prevention of Blindness. Fifteen bags of clothing and miscellaneous articles, found and unclaimed, were turned over to the Goodwill Industries. During the year a total of 10,837 visitors stopped at the police station requesting information or assistance. SAFETY SUBCOMMITTEE The National Zoological Park Safety Subcommittee held monthly meetings to suggest and discuss recommendations to the director for safety improvements. An emergency alarm system was installed in the reptile house to be used in the event of snakebite. Under the direction of the safety officer, this system is under constant surveillance to assure proper functioning, and test drills are held periodically. Arrangements were made with the General Services Administration to have employees receive training in firefighting and fire control. GSA fire inspectors made the annual fire inspection of the Zoo, along with members of the safety subcommittee, and their cooperation was very much appreciated. Members of the subcommittee periodically inspected all buildings, grounds, and equipment and made a careful examination of the newly renovated birdhouse area prior to its opening to the public; hazards were reported and corrective action was recommended. Routine inspection of roads, walkways, steps, and public areas has continued as a safeguard to employees and visitors. MAINTENANCE, CONSTRUCTION, GROUNDS The mechanical division was occupied with the routine task of maintaining the buildings and facilities of the National Zoological NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 201 Park. Interspersed with routine were such unusual jobs as building a hydroponics room for growing grass and enlarging the room where worms and insects are raised for animal food. An addition was made to the building serving as veterinary hospital. Two old storerooms in the administration building were cleared out and completely remodeled to serve as offices for the director. The entire mechanical force joined in readying the remodeled birdhouse for its opening. New construction necessitated preparing quarters for many of the animals. A barn and paddock at the Garvin Tankersley farm in Boyds, Md., were made suitable for the zebras quartered there while their new Zoo enclosures were being built. Painting is a never-ending task. This year the interiors of the lion, monkey, reptile, and small-mammal houses were painted. The mechanical force made 190 new park benches and set them up throughout the Park for the comfort and convenience of visitors. The electrician installed a much-needed fluorescent lighting system in the puma house. Work of the grounds division included the planting of 93 trees, 400 evergreens, 700 azaleas, 1,000 bulbs, and 3,500 annuals. Trees were planted along the creek banks near the pistol range, the restaurant patio, behind the small mammal building, and along the sidewalk at the crosswalk. Azaleas were planted between the restaurant and the police station, around the elephant house guard rails, elephant house hill, birdhouse, and at the crossroads. Various bulbs and annuals were used in the flowerbeds, new and old, throughout the Park, extend- ing color in the beds from early spring well into winter. Lightning protection on two large trees near the administration building was installed. The grounds department removed dead wood from 100 trees over walks, roads, and public areas: felled 35 trees that were dead or in bad condition or considered noxious to animals; filled cavities and traced wounds on badly damaged trees; removed stumps from lawns; cut numerous perches for bird and animal cages, and cut foliage to be used as food for animals. Major projects included assisting in the preparation of the birdhouse for opening, setting out 2,000 new plants, installing large perches, scouting the wooded areas for old logs and stumps and placing them around the inside cages. Gifts of plants were received from the District Waterworks, Botanical Gardens, National Bureau of Standards, Glendale Nursery, Walter Reed Hospital, Naval Hospital, and the management of the annual Flower and Garden Show. 202 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 COOPERATION At all times special efforts are made to maintain friendly contacts with other Federal and State agencies, private concerns and individuals, and scientific workers for mutual assistance. As a result, the Zoo receives much help and advice and many valuable animals, and in turn it furnishes information and, whenever possible, animals it does not need. Special acknowledgment is due William Taback and John Pulaski, in the office of the Dispatch Agent in New York City, and Stephen E. Lato, Dispatch Agent in San Francisco, who are frequently called upon to clear shipments of animals coming from abroad, often at times of personal inconvenience. When it is necessary to quarantine animals coming into this country, they are taken to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's station in Clifton, N.J. During the past year, Dr. H. A. Waters and Andy Goodel, two of the officials stationed there, were most cooperative in keeping the National Zoological Park informed as to the well-being of animals and birds being held there for quarantine. Animals that died in the Zoo are offered to the U.S National Museum. If the Museum does not need them as study specimens or as exhibits, they are sent on request to research workers in other institutions. Specialists at the Museum are always willing to be of help in identifying rare specimens acquired at the Zoo. On May 7, 1965, under the auspices of the U.S. Forest Service, Smokey Bear, living symbol of forest fire prevention, received a certifi- cate and gold-medal award. These awards were presented by Lassie, star collie of the Lassie television series. Through the generosity of Stuart T. Saunders, chairman of the board, Pennsylvania Railroad Co., and John K. Murphy, public relations director, the Zoo received on June 23, 1965, a large carved granite eagle, one of 22 which graced the Pennsylvania Railroad Station in New York City from 1910 to 1965. At the demolition of the building, it was given to the National Zoo. Designed by the ar- chitectural firm of McKim, Mead & White, it weighs 5,700 pounds and stands 5 feet 4 inches high. It is now facing the plaza in front of the birdhouse. The National Zoological Park cooperated with the National Capital Parks and lent small animals to Park naturalists and to the Nature Center in Rock Creek Park for demonstration. The U.S. Army, Cameron Station, Va., again lent the grounds department a stump chipper, to be used in clearing unsightly stumps from Zoo lawns. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 203 On April 24, Sgt. Canter of the police force took six boxes of Crotalidae antivenin to Children's Hospital for a patient who had been bitten by a snake. These boxes were replaced by Children's Hospital the next day. Vultures were made available to Betsy Garrett Bang, School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, for her studies. Results of her research were published as The Nasal Organs of the Black and Turkey Vultures; a Comparative Study of the Cathartid Species in the Journal of Morphology, vol. 115, No. 2, September 1964. FRIENDS OF THE NATIONAL ZOO The Friends of the National Zoo held their annual meeting on October 7 in the Zoo cafeteria. This was followed by an inspection tour of the birdhouse area. On the evening of February 1 1 many of the Friends attended the formal opening of the remodeled birdhouse. Friends of the National Zoo continued their publication of a quarterly newsletter entitled Spots and Stripes. Members of the Zoo staff collab- orate in the preparation of the material, but the newsletter is financed and distributed by the Friends. They have also continued to work on plans for an educational program to be aimed at various levels, with the purpose of making the Zoo more meaningful to the schools. INFORMATION AND EDUCATION The major activity of the information and education section was the continuation of signing, relabeling, and graphic-arts services and support. During the year a total of 481 animal identification labels were completed, and an additional 115 are in production. Also pro- duced were 218 supporting informational signs (safety signs, building information signs, directional maps, construction signs, etc.) and 188 other visual information projects such as maps, charts, graphs, draw- ings, and publication layouts. Two scale models were also produced in conjunction with the renovation plans for the Zoo. Additional activities during the year included dissemination of animal information by telephone and correspondence; library and photograph file maintenance; and 23 special guided tours for groups of handicapped children, visiting schools and colleges, visiting personnel from other zoos, and foreign guests and dignitaries. The zoologist participated in two television programs for the edu- cational channel WETA. One was filmed in the studio using three 204 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 live animals, and the other was filmed directly at the Zoo, the first show to be taped by WETA's mobile unit. The zoologist also taped a 15-minute radio program on the Zoo for the Armed Forces Radio, Military District of Washington Information Office. A paper was prepared for the International Zoo Yearbook, vol. 6, (London Zoological Society) on Behaviour and Development of a Hand- Reared Two-Toed Sloth (Cholocpus didactylus), by Marion P. McCrane, zoologist. PERSONNEL Donald R. Dietlein, formerly medical entomologist with the U.S. Navy, was appointed special assistant to the director in September. Kerry Muller, formerly senior keeper in the birdhouse at the San Diego Zoo, became manager of the bird division here in May; and Robert H. Artis was appointed as personnel management specialist in May. J. Lear Grimmer, associate director of the Zoo since 1957, resigned on April 15, 1965, to engage in private research. Michael A. Brown, senior animal keeper, retired on December 19 after 45 years of service; Ralph B. Norris, head animal keeper, retired on the same date after 34 years at the Zoo. In fiscal year 1965 the Zoo had 212 authorized positions, as follows: Office of the Director, 12 (an increase of 1 special assistant to the di- rector by reallocation from the operations and maintenance depart- ment); operations and maintenance department, which includes the mechanical division, police division, grounds division, and services division, 122 (an increase of 1 authorized laborer and a reallocation of 1 labor position to the office of the director); animal department, 76 (a reallocation of 1 position to the scientific research department); scientific research department, 2 (an increase of 1 visual aid specialist by reallocation of an animal keeper position). The Smithsonian Institution named three persons as honorary col- laborators in recognition of their contributions to the National Zoologi- cal Park. These were Jean Delacour, world-renowned ornithologist, for his help and advice in stocking the new birdhouse, suggesting which species of birds should be exhibited, and giving valuable counsel in regard to suitable plants; J. Lear Grimmer, former associate director of the National Zoological Park, in recognition of his scientific and manage- ment contributions; and Mrs. Constance P. Warner, who has been associated with the Zoo for the past 8 years, working with the collection as an animal photographer. Mrs. Warner has generously allowed the Zoo to use freely any of her beautiful transparencies for labels and publications. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 205 The director attended the annual meeting of the American Associa- tion of Zoological Parks and Aquariums in Houston, Tex.; the midyear Zoo Directors Conference in Colorado Springs, Colo.; and the Western Regional Zoo Conference in Calgary, Alberta. The director was present at the opening of the new aquatic birdhouse in the New York Zoological Park on September 24 and at the formal dedication cere- monies of the new rare mammal house in the Philadelphia Zoological Gardens on May 1 . On May 20 the director attended a conference, held at the New York Zoo, to discuss problems resulting from large- scale importations of primates for medical research. Lectures during the year included groups at the Cosmos Club and the University Club in Washington, D.C., the Metropolitan Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, and a meeting of the Dakota Zoological Society in Bismarck, N. Dak. Donald R. Dietlein, special assistant to the director, made official visits to Philadelphia, New York, St. Louis, and Chicago for the pur- pose of studying zoo problems and maintenance. Charles Thomas, senior keeper, left on June 1 1 for Liberia, escorting a shipment of animals for President Tubman's farm at Totota. He is expected to return about the end of July bringing with him some African animals. A biweekly newsletter, Tiger Talk, was started on November 24. This is solely for distribution to Zoo employees and serves to let each department know what other sections are doing. REORGANIZATION To meet more adequately the 1890 Congressional mandate to the Zoo for "the advancement of science and the education ... of the public" a reorganization of the Zoo's personnel and functions was effected during the year. There was created a department of scien- tific research to be headed by a resident scientist (reallocated associate director position) who will develop and direct the program within the Zoo. Also, by reallocation from the animal department, a staff scientist position was created and a secretary was reallocated from the operational services program. The scientific research department will develop into one of the Zoo's major functions. The engineer and draftsman positions were moved from the opera- tions and maintenance department to a staff function of the director's office. The complexity of the construction program necessitated constant technical supervision. The information and education program was transferred from the former scientific research division to a staff position in the office of the 206 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 director. The staff has been increased by reallocating a position from the operational services program and a position from the protective services to create a docent and a visual information specialist. In addition to the signs and labels, the responsibilities of public relations, development of publications, and maintenance of libraries have been assigned to information and education. A position of divisional animal manager for each of the four divisions in the animal department has been created. As time and staffing permit, these positions will be filled by zoologically educated and experienced animal managers. It is felt that this reorganization will increase the potential for a higher level of animal care and increased scientific investigations. CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS In fiscal year 1965 the Smithsonian Institution Appropriation Act contained an item of $1,525,000 for the capital improvement program at the National Zoological Park. A portion of this is being used for the planning of the hospital and research complex and the service buildings — mechanical shop, automotive garage, property supply building, and greenhouse. The architect was selected for the planning of buildings in Phase IV of the new Zoo construction. At the sug- gestion of the Fine Arts Commission a landscape architect was engaged to assist in coordinating the entire plan and to make whatever adjust- ments in the master plan are necessary. Planning of the multiclimate house has been delayed until its siting is approved. The construction money was used for the hardy and delicate hoofed-stock areas and for the sewerage system. On July 21 work was started on the deer area, which consists of 8 paddocks, 3 single shelters, and 2 double shelters on the previously undeveloped hill between the Connecticut Avenue entrance and the birdhouse. The anticipated completion date is early fall 1965. On the same date, construction was started on parking lots A and B, located beside the new perimeter road between the elephant house and the Connecticut Aveune gate. This work was finished on May 30. These lots are designed for automobiles only, and accommodate 258 cars. At the same time, construction work began on a fenced-in property yard and access road directly west of the Holt mansion. This con- struction eliminated the old carriage barn. It is anticipated that completion will be in the early fall of 1965. In October the relief interceptor sewer mentioned in last year's annual report was completed. Stone riprap was placed on the west NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK 207 bank of Rock Creek, which had been straightened, and willow and mulberry trees were planted. In a few years the austere vista will be a refreshing green and covered with foliage. On December 4 final inspection of the remodeled birdhouse was made and the building accepted from the contractor. The next 2 months were spent in feverish activity of planting, decorating the cages, assem- bling the birds, and developing new routines of management. On the evening of February 11, there was an invitational black-tie opening, sponsored by the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. Minibuses were hired to carry the guests from the elephant house parking lot to the birdhouse. Fort Belvoir engineers furnished lights to illuminate the uncompleted great flight cage, and the Marine Corps furnished a jazz ensemble to brighten the party. The guests had a wonderful time and seemed to derive pleasure from being served canapes in the birds' kitchen. Two days later there was an invitational opening for the Friends of the National Zoo and employees of the Smithsonian Institu- tion. On February 14 the birdhouse was opened to the general public and has been a tremendous success ever since. A paper on The Remod- eled Bird House and New Great Flight Cage at the National Zoological Park by Theodore H. Reed, D.V.M., will appear in volume 6 of the Inter- national Zoo Yearbook, published by the London Zoological Society. On April 22 the construction of the hardy and delicate hoofed-stock areas was begun. On May 10 work started on a new transformer station for the Zoo at the Hawthorne Street gate back of the birdhouse, which will step down 13.2 kv. to 4.16 kv. for distribution throughout the whole Park. Installation of a new gas-fired boiler for the remodeled birdhouse was also started. In the middle of June the great flight cage was given final inspection and accepted. Again there is a period of feverish activity in getting the plants and other last-minute adjustments ready for a mid-July opening. The great flight cage received a citation for excellence in design from the American Iron and Steel Institute. On June 21 contractors began work on parking lot F, located behind the restaurant between Beach Drive and Rock Creek. When com- pleted, this parking lot will accommodate 24 buses and 270 automobiles. National Capital Parks, Department of the Interior, has lined the tunnel under administration hill (mentioned in last year's report) and installed electric facilities, and is constructing the portals and a bridge across Rock Creek at the lower end. During the year, the designs for the Zoo's internal sewerage system were completed and construction will start early next fiscal year. Astrophysical Observatory 789-427—66 25 Astrophysical Observatory Fred L. Whipple, Director The research achievements of the Observatory derive significantly from its ability to obtain data from its field installations and laborato- ries and to combine these with theoretical investigations.* To illustrate and emphasize this point, the results summarized in subsequent para- graphs are traced back to their origins in observational data. During the past year, the diversity of the data and the number of sources have been increased. That diversity is typified by the variety of observa- tions that now come from the Baker-Nunn cameras at the Observa- tory's field station.1 In recognition of this fact, their name has been changed from Satellite Tracking Stations to Astrophysical Observing Stations. RESEARCH BASED ON DATA FROM ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVING STATIONS Gathering observational data on artificial satellites is still the major activity of the stations. During this past year, 52,528 observations of 55 different satellites were made. Successful cooperation with the Air Force Baker-Nunn camera stations resulted in a series of observations linking the two networks. In addition, the Observatory has conducted a joint project with the Royal Radar Establishment, Malvern, England, using their 24-inch f/1 cameras to track bright passive satellites for geodetic objectives.1 An important new development under the direction of Carlton G. Lehr has been the experimental use of a laser beam to track satellites, a technique that permits the measurement of the range of the orbiting object from the observing site.1 Satellite tracking data continue to yield significant advances in our knowledge of the upper atmosphere. From an analysis of satellite drag * Unless otherwise noted, research is supported from Federal funds appropriated to the Smithsonian Institution. The Observatory, by paying scientists' salaries, shares in the support of all research. Support from outside sources is detailed in footnotes 1-25 on this and the following pages. 1 Supported by grant NsG 87/60 from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 211 212 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 data gathered between sunspot maximum (1958) and minimum (1964), Dr. Luigi G. Jacchia has derived new atmospheric models based on diffusion equilibrium. With the collaboration of Dr. Max Roemer and Jack Slowey, he has computed densities of the neutral atmosphere starting from a fixed set of boundary conditions at 120 km. and follow- ing empirical temperature profiles defined by exponential functions of height. These models have been adopted by the U.S. Committee on the Extension of the Standard Atmosphere for inclusion in the U.S. Supplemental Atmospheres, together with the appended formulas which give the variations of temperature with solar, geomagnetic, and geographic parameters. A significant new result is the discovery that a seasonal effect exists at middle and high latitudes at all heights up to at least 600 km. An analysis of observations of 14 satellites, including two 12-foot balloon satellites (1963 53A and 1964 76A) launched specifically for this research, has revealed that at any given height above 200 km., the atmosphere has a maximum density in winter and a minimum in summer. Dr. Jacchia and Mr. Slowey have also investigated the relation between exospheric temperature and geomagnetic indexes and con- cluded that the former varies with the solar plasma velocities in a nearly linear fashion. Dr. Manfred Friedman has developed a set of equations to describe the structure of the upper atmosphere. The analysis based on these equations will include effects of thermal conductivity, radiative trans- fer, and diffusion of the different constituents. A new estimate has been made by Dr. Franco Verniani of the total mass of the earth's atmosphere. The result is (5.136±0.007)X1021 grams. Data from satellite tracking have also been used in the study of the geopotential. From precisely reduced observations of nine satellites with inclinations between 28 and 95 degrees, Dr. Yoshihide Kozai has derived new values for the coefficients of the zonal harmonics of the earth's gravitational field through JH. Treating these zonal har- monics as known quantities, Imre Izsak used more than 26,000 obser- vations of 11 satellites with inclinations between 33 and 96 degrees to compute a new set of tesseral harmonics through the sixth degree. Since independent determinations give reasonable agreement on the total contribution of the nonzonal terms to the geopotential, the main features of the geoid seem to be well established. Basing his work on the results of Dr. Kozai and Mr. Izsak, E. M. Gaposchkin has improved the treatment of perturbations in the Ob- ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 213 servatory's computer program for differential orbit improvement and is now extending the program for determining the tesseral harmonics. The shapes for the surfaces of the constant potential and constant gravitation are being studied by Dr. Walter Kohnlein. Studies of the geophysical significance of satellite gravity results continue. From an analysis of zonal harmonics, Dr. Chi-Yuen Wang has suggested that the load of the last continental ice sheets, which per- sisted some 50,000 years near the end of the Pleistocene, may have de- formed the earth, flattening it near the poles and causing a bulge near the equator. Since the ice sheets retreated only some 11,000 to 15,000 years ago, there has been too little time for a complete isostatic recov- ery of the earth, and the residual of this deformation therefore remains in the earth's ellipticity. Using different approaches, Dr. William Strange and Dr. Wang have been investigating the possible relations between heat-flow and the gravity results. The Baker-Nunn camera system of the Observatory is a principal source of data for the NASA Geodetic Program begun this year, and studies in these fields by Observatory scientists have been and will con- tinue to be an important part of the program.2 The rate of accumulation, reduction, and analysis of data from simul- taneous photography of satellites by two or more Baker-Nunn cameras was increased considerably during the year. A cooperative program was initiated with the Air Force to use Baker-Nunn cameras at Oslo, Norway; Cold Lake, Canada; and Johnston Island, Pacific Ocean.1 These stations were used to provide data to strengthen the solutions for the coordinates of the SAO Baker-Nunn stations by providing a triangular network of stations in North America and Europe and by decreasing the distance between intervisible stations in the Pacific Ocean. From this network of 1 5 stations, we now have data of inter- visibilities that encompass the globe, providing another mathematical condition that enhances the precision of the resultant geodetic infor- mation. About 800 intervisible arcs were precisely reduced during the year, compared to a total of 200 in the previous 3 years. Dr. George Veis, assisted by Leendert Aardoom and Antanas Girnius, analyzed these data to determine more precise station coordinates. A companion program employed in the Observatory's geodetic studies determines not only the tesseral harmonic coefficients for the geopotential but also improves station coordinates from an analysis of data of orbit dynamics. Mr. Izsak determined a set of more accurate station coordinates at the same time as he solved for the tesseral har- monic coefficients. 3 Supported by contract NSR 09-015-018 with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 214 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 A procedure was developed by Dr. Kohnlein to combine the results of the intervisible (geometric) method and those of theorbital (dynamic) method to determine still more accurate station coordinates and the tesseral harmonics through the fourth order. It was gratifying to learn that the geometric and dynamic methods of determining station coordinates were in good agreement. Until this comparison, it was not known whether there might be a difference in the two results due to some unrecognized factor. The Astrophysical Observing Stations also gather data for the study of comets. Nine of the Baker-Nunn cameras have been equipped with a plastic defocusing device; measurements of the image density of photographs made through these optics reveal the total brightness of a comet. A total of 303 sequences of photometric observations of four comets, particularly of Ikeya and Everhart, have thus far been obtained.3 Dr. Richard B. Southworth analyzes these films for correlations with solar phenomena and for indications of the physical behavior of comets. As a necessary part of this work, Dr. Southworth is con- ducting an initial study to solve the problem of transferring observed stellar magnitudes to the Baker-Nunn color system. For the deter- mination of the spectral sensitivity of the Baker-Nunn optics, a catalog of published spectrophotometric data on standard stars has been compiled, and microdensitometer measurements have been made on films taken with the camera. To answer the question whether streams of solar particles reaching a comet play a significant role in its activity, Daniel Malaise, at 1' Uni- versity de Liege, is investigating the apparent motion of bright streamers in comet tails, using Baker-Nunn photographs.4 He is also studying the pseudoperiodic variation of the apparent angle between the comet tail and the radial direction from the sun. More than 200 photographic sequences of tail motion are being reduced and analyzed. For another line of investigation, the Astrophysical Observing Sta- tions obtain photographs of flare stars, which are characterized by sudden, nonperiodic increases in brightness. On a predetermined schedule, the stations repeatedly photograph a known flare star that is simultaneously being observed by one of the cooperating radio telescopes. Presently we cooperate in this program with the 250' Jodrell Bank telescope at Manchester, England, the 210' telescope at Parker, N.S.W, Australia, and the 1000' Cornell instrument at Arecibo, Puerto Rico. The resultant records permit a study of the 3 Supported by grant GP 2999 from the National Science Foundation. * Sponsored by fellowships from Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique, Belgium, the European Preparatory Commission for Space Research, and NASA. ASTROPHYSIGAL OBSERVATORY 215 relationship between optical and radio emissions. During this year, approximately 270 hours of optical observations have been logged, the data from which are analyzed by Leonard Solomon. The India cooperating agency, the Uttar Pradesh Observatory, has joined the program for observing flare stars and is using a photoelectric photometer in its research. Astrophysical Observing Stations have in past years made photo- metric observations to determine the earth's albedo.6 In a continuing program, Dr. Fred A. Franklin is testing improved techniques and instrumentation to measure the earthshine on the dark portion of the moon's surface before first quarter and after last quarter. Sun- light reflected from the earth faintly illuminates this part of the moon and can therefore indicate how reflective the earth is. METEORS Ground-based photographic and radar instruments provide data on the meteor process as a fragment of matter plunges into the earth's atmosphere from space.6 The automatic camera stations that make up the Prairie Network are providing data on bright meteors that will enable scientists to determine their orbits. In addition, there is the hope that some of the bodies photographed by the network will survive their journey and will be recovered on the earth's surface. Such freshly fallen meteorites can provide valuable data on the history of the objects in space. Dr. Richard E. McCrosky continues to supervise operations and to analyze photographs taken by the network's cameras. In the 11 months from May 1964 to April 1965, the period for which complete results are available, the network photographed 34 multiple- station meteors. Of these observations, 20 to 22 were of adequate quality for reduction to orbits. Because meteorite falls might have occurred, four of these were on a high priority basis. Subsequent analysis showed that a substantial fall certainly resulted from one of these events but not from the other three. For the one fall, Observa- tory personnel thoroughly searched a 1 -square-mile section of Marshall County, Kans., but failed to find the object. However, the local popu- lace has been alerted to the fall and there still remains the possibility that a recovery may be made in a cultivated area. Personnel of the Astrophysical Observing Stations have also been requested to watch for meteoritic material that might be of interest to 8 Supported in part by grant Y/8. 11/236 from the National Science Foundation. 6 Supported by grant NsG 291-62 from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 216 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Observatory scientists. Robert Citron at the South Africa station has recovered meteoritic specimens and added to our knowledge of the Gibeon meteorite fall. In the study of ionized meteor trails, electronic techniques play an important role. In Havana, 111., a radar installation jointly operated with the Harvard College Observatory, and under the direction of Dr. Gerald S. Hawkins and Dr. Southworth, has yielded observations of some 10,000 meteor trails.7 These have been electronically measured and reduced. Since they are of both sporadic and stream meteors, they will provide a substantial body of data for research into the astrono- my and physics of meteor particles.8 Dr. Southworth has been planning and supervising the improvement of the system so that it will be able to achieve greater accuracy of observations and to observe more and fainter meteors. Dr. Verniani and Dr. Hawkins have revised the ionization proba- bilities involved in the meteor process, thus permitting new estimates of the mass and density for a large sample of faint radio meteors. The mean density from this determination is 1 gm. cm.-3, and the mass distribution corresponds to that of the brighter photographic meteors observed with Super-Schmidt cameras. In cooperation with Dr. William G. Elford of the University of Adelaide, Australia, Dr. Hawkins has found the flux of meteors more massive than 10~6 gm. to be 40 km.-2 hr."1. Together with Dr. Hawkins and Dr. Verniani, Dr. Southworth has computed the ablation coefficient, which represents the rate of loss of mass by a meteor moving through the atmosphere. With Dr. Elford and Dr. Hawkins, he has determined the distribution of the radiants of sporadic meteors. To gather data on high-altitude wind velocities and directions, Dr. Mario D. Grossi has designed the necessary modifications of the Havana equipment.9 The extensive analysis of the atmospheric trajectories of 413 pre- cision-reduced Super-Schmidt meteors, which Dr. Jacchia conducted with the collaboration of Dr. Verniani and Robert E. Briggs, has been completed and is presented in Special Report No. 175. The analysis confirms the importance of fragmentation in the meteor phenomenon and the individual physical characteristics of meteors in different showers, on which Dr. Jacchia reported in past years. From the fact 7 Supported by contract NASr-158 between the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and Harvard University. 8 Supported in part by contract NAS 9-4873 with the NASA Manned Space Center. 9 Supported by contract AF 19(628)-3248 with the U.S. Air Force. Tlfr Radar observing sites (trough-type antenna as shown) for measuring the speed, trajectory, and flux of micrometeoroids entering the earth's atmosphere are maintained in several locations by the Smithsonian Astrophysical and Harvard College Observatories. Information concerning these particles is of vital interest to spacecraft designers preparing for the hazards of future space flights. Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory headquarters, Cambridge, Massachusetts. The Baker-Nunn camera, designed to the specifications of Smithsonian Astro- physical Observatory scientists, is a special satellite-tracking camera first put into operation in 1957 in time to photograph Sputnik I less than two weeks after launch. Since then, SAO's Baker-Nunn's have taken more than 150,000 photographs of objects in space. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 217 that some meteors suddenly break up completely at a point for which pv3 is a constant (p— atmospheric density, v= meteor velocity) we infer that heat transfer rather than dynamic pressure is the trigger mechanism in the breakup; this leads to the picture of a meteor body so porous that air molecules can penetrate to its core. Larger meteors do not break up so suddenly and completely, apparently because of the shielding effect of the outer layers of the meteor body. To complement the study of natural meteors, a radar system similar to that in Havana has been built and put into operation south of Wallops Island, Va., to detect the reentry of artificial meteors.10 The first records were obtained from this installation when a nickel-iron slug and an iron sphere were fired into the atmosphere with a velocity of approximately 10 km. sec.-1 This simulation is of great importance in testing the ionization and luminosity hypotheses that have been used in estimates of meteor masses. This work is closely correlated with that of a network of three cameras for photographing the arti- ficial meteors. Drs. Hawkins, Southworth, and McCrosky direct the scientific aspects of this investigation. NASA furnishes and fires the artificial meteors and the rockets. The Smithsonian field operations of both systems are under the management of Cliff Marsh. LABORATORY ASTROPHYSICS Laboratory investigations of the Observatory involve meteoritics, the atmosphere, comets, and exobiology. The sources of data for the Observatory's program in meteoritics are collections of meteorites, meteoritic fragments, and dust particles, and their analysis in the laboratory. Collaborating with Chester C. Langway, Jr., of the Army Cold Re- gions Research Laboratory, Dr. Edward L. Fireman is collecting dust samples from melted snow deep within the Greenland ice sheet. Several years ago unwanted heat from a power installation in Greenland was dissipated by a radiator in the ice. The heat melted out a cavern about 110 feet in radius that is now slowly refreezing. Dr. Fireman and Mr. Langway have installed a pump and filters which retrieve from the water the dust that was imbedded in the snow and ice before they were melted. This collection technique is an improvement over that employed in previous years when a filter was used in the camp water supply, which was also derived from melted glacial ice. Using previous collections, an analysis of particles collected from the melting 10 Supported by grant NsG 536 from the National Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration. 218 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 of millions of liters of ice and snow shows the presence of cobalt-60 but not of aluminum-26 or argon-39 radioactivities in the dust. On the basis of the decay characteristics of cobalt-60, Dr. Fireman and his collaborators tentatively ascribe this activity to iron-60 produced by cosmic rays. James C. DeFelice has developed a high-pressure geiger counter that is particularly useful in this work. Dr. Fireman wrote the 3-year summary article on meteorites for the commission on meteors and meteorites of the International Astro- nomical Union for 1965. Dr. David Tilles has made mass spectrometric studies of rare gases extracted from Pacific sea sediments and from the Greenland materials collected by Dr. Fireman and Mr. Langway.11 From his analysis he has confirmed the anomalous argon isotope ratios (an Ar^/Ar36 ratio below 200 compared with the atmospheric ratio of 295) of argon re- leased at high temperatures from a magnetic fraction of Pacific sediment previously reported by Dr. Craig M. Merrihue. He has also found similar argon anomalies in a separated high-density fraction of Green- land dust, demonstrating that these anomalies are a worldwide phenomenon. Dr. Merrihue developed a new technique for studying meteorites. It consists of doing mass spectroscopy on the noble gases from neutron- irradiated samples. With this technique he obtained a number of important results: First, the chondrules in meteorites are systematically enriched in radiogenic xenon-129, and are depleted in primordial xenon. This is evidence for an early high-temperature origin. Second the matrix materials in meteorites, on the other hand, show evidence of being formed at a lower temperature in equilibrium with solar gas. Third, the variations in the xenon-129/xenon-132 ratios as a function of temperature prove that the radiogenic xenon-129 results from in situ decay of iodine-129. Fourth, since both the xenon and the xenon-129 are highest in minerals with the highest diffusion constants, there appears to be negligible xenon diffusion since the decay of iodine-129. Fifth, the chondrules show spallation-type anomalies in krypton and xenon that cannot be attributed to recent cosmic rays and may be evidence for a primordial irradiation by high-energy protons. In addition, the mass spectroscopy of noble gases from neutron -irradiated meteorite samples provides information on the abundances of iodine, bromine, selenium, and tellurium and is an interesting method for potassium-argon dating. This method for potassium-argon dating offers two important advantages over conventional methods. First, potassium and argon are simultaneously determined by a single 11 Supported in part by grant G-16067 from the National Science Foundation. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 219 measurement on the same sample. Second, the absolute abundances of neither the potassium nor the argon are required. Dr. Merrihue also built the rare-gas extraction and sample prepara- tion system for the Observatory's mass spectrometer, thus aiding studies of rare gases from dust samples.11 And he initiated a program for the analysis of halogens in meteorites and separate fractions of meteorites. With James G. D' Amico, Dr. Fireman is measuring radioactivities in recently fallen chondritic meteorites, using a gamma-gamma coinci- dence spectrometer. Studying sodium-22 and aluminum-26 in par- ticular, they find evidence that there may be a slight variation in the radioactivities of these two isotopes that is related to the orbits of bodies in space. A new iron-silicate mineral containing essential potassium was found by scientists at the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories and was analyzed by Mrs. Ursula B. Marvin.12 The X-ray determinations showed that the mineral, which occurs in the Meso-Madaras chondrite, has the same structure as a synthetic potassium-magnesium silicate and is the first meteoritic mineral known to concentrate potassium. It was named Merrihueite. In collaboration with scientists at the General Electric Research Laboratory in Schenectady, N.Y., Mrs. Marvin investigated meteoritic minerals by the fission-trace method. Data indicate that uranium is not dispersed in meteorites, as was formerly believed, but rather con- centrated in certain minor accessory minerals, particularly whitlockite and zircon. These can contain up to 4,000 parts per million, but uranium is essentially absent from other minerals, including both olivine and quartz. The data also reveal that many meteoritic minerals contain excess fission tracks resulting from the spontaneous decay of some element other than uranium-238. The element may be extinct plutonium-244, which contributed to the track density early in the history of the universe. Dr. Whipple and Dr. Fireman have analyzed data on the cosmic -ray exposure ages of meteorites and have found evidence for space erosion of meteoroids. The estimated erosion rate is approximately 10~8 cm. per year for irons and 10~7 for stones. Dr. Matthias F. Comerford has conducted preliminary laboratory experiments to determine the relative erosion rates of different meteoroid classes. His early results indicate that a simple weighting technique will provide an adequate measure of mass loss, at least for brittle ma- terials. His work is proceeding in cooperation with Dr. H. Mark at NASA's Lewis Research Center. 12 Supported in part by grant NsG 282-63 from NASA to Dr. Clifford Frondel of Harvard University. 220 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Dr. Comerford has also begun making microstructural studies and measurements of annealing kinetics in metals and alloys to help explain recovery and recrystallization phenomena and to identify the processes involved. Such information is fundamental to a proper interpretation of the structures observed in iron meteorites. Dr. Paul W. Hodge and Dr. Frances W. Wright have completed surface analyses, by the electron-beam microanalyzer technique, of about 270 dust particles that probably are primarily cosmic in origin. To substantiate that probability, they are now working on similar analyses of the interiors of 23 spherules that had previously been sub- ject to surface analyses. To establish finally whether or not a volcanic origin is possible for the majority of spherules recovered in arctic ice deposits, they are continuing their investigation of volcanic spherules; results to date make a volcanic origin extremely unlikely. Dr. Joseph Goldstein redetermined the Fe-Ni phase diagram at temperatures above 500° C. The new phase diagram can be extrap- olated to 300°G. and suggests that the a/a -\- y boundary bends back to lower Ni concentrations above 400°C. He also measured the inter diffusion coefficients for the Fe-Ni system at 1 atm. and 40 kilobar pressures. With the newly determined phase diagram and diffusion coefficients he calculated the concentration gradients in meteoritic kamacite. The results show a Ni depletion in the kama- cite near the a/y interface below 450 °C. because the kamacite cannot remain in equilibrium at low cooling temperatures and because of a number of other features of the kamacite phase. Electron-probe measurements on several metallic meteorites when compared to his predicted features of the kamacite phase agree with cooling rates of small bodies, indicating a low-pressure formation. Basing his work on a broad range of observational data, Dr. G. Colombo has conducted a theoretical investigation of the dynamics of dust particles orbiting in the vicinity of the earth. He and his co- workers, Dr. Don Lautman and Irwin Shapiro of the M.I.T. Lincoln Laboratory, conclude that more observational data from ground, rocket, and satellite experiments are much needed. Under the direction of Dr. Nathaniel P. Carleton and Dr. Charles H. Dugan, laboratory studies of electron impact excitation of metastable levels in atoms and molecules of atmospheric interest have been per- formed.13 Studies were also made of the chemical reaction of certain of these metastable atoms and molecules. The atmospheric applica- tion of this work concerns the partition of energy supplied to the 18 Supported by contract AF 19(628)-4203 with the U.S. Air Force. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 221 atmosphere by various mechanisms, particularly photo ionization and heating by electric currents in the ionosphere. To understand more fully the phenomena of comet nuclei, Dr. Charles A. Whitney, Dr. Charles A. Lundquist, and Douglas T. Pitman are continuing laboratory experiments simulating conditions on the surface of a nucleus. Dr. Carl Sagan's laboratory for research in prebiological organic chemistry and related exobiological problems is now in operation. The basic process in the synthesis of organic compounds is the appli- cation of energy, chiefly ultraviolet radiation, to a mixture of molecules simulating features of the primitive environment of the earth or of contemporary planetary environments. Techniques of autoradio- graphic paper chromatography, thin-layer chromatography, and electrophoresis are applicable to these investigations. Some prelimi- nary results on nucleoside and nucleotide synthesis have been obtained. Dr. Sagan, working with J. P. Phaneuf and M. Ihnat of the Avco Corporation, has compared the ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared reflection spectra of the Martian bright areas with corresponding laboratory reflectivities of a variety of minerals.14 Except at short visible wavelengths, where the effects of the Martian blue haze are prominent, pulverized limonite matches the shape and amplitude of the Martian Russell-Bond albedo within experimental and obser- vational error. FLIGHT OPERATIONS Observations made from experiments high in the atmosphere or beyond it can yield information that is impossible to obtain from ground stations. The Observatory is broadening its efforts to obtain such data. To support the activities of these experiments, a new department of flight operations headed by John J. Burke has been established. Within this department work is progressing on a variety of flight instruments. Under the supervision of Dr. Giovanni G. Fazio and Dr. Henry F. Helmken, a spark-chamber detector to search for primary gamma rays has been built and is being tested.15 A balloon flight is scheduled for next year. Dr. Fazio and Dr. Comerford are investigating detectors to measure polarization of celestial X-ray sources. The purpose of Project Celescope is to construct an accurate photo- metric map of the sky in each of four ultraviolet wavelength bands.10 14 Research sponsored by a fellowship from the Alfred P. Sloane Foundation. 18 Supported by contracts NAS5-3255 and NAS5-9769 with NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. 18 Supported by contract NAS5-1535 with NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. 222 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 This program, under the scientific direction of Dr. Robert J. Davis, requires the use of sophisticated television techniques and the establish- ment of an accurate absolute standard of spectrophotometric sensitivity as a function of wavelength between 1000 and 3000 angstroms. The Celescope experiment has been rescheduled for installation aboard the third Orbiting Astronomical Observatory satellite, to be launched in 1 967. Preliminary experiments may also be conducted from balloons and rockets. Under Harvard auspices, Dr. Leo Goldberg and his group have designed and partially constructed a spectrometer-spectroheliometer which will be flown on the Orbiting Solar Observatory D satellite.17 This instrument is an improved version of the earlier OSO-BII experi- ment, which failed early in 1965 during its first orbits. Its purpose is to investigate the structure of the sun's outer atmosphere and to study the physical processes occurring in solar flares. STELLAR AND PLANETARY OBSERVATIONS Using several observational facilities, including the Kitt Peak National Observatory, Dr. Goldberg has been dealing with astrophysical im- plications of autoionization in atomic spectra. A considerable number of previously unobserved and unidentified features have been found in the solar spectrum. The profiles of the Ca I triplet near X 6350, recently identified by Mitchell and Mohler, have also been traced at various points along the solar radius and are being studied with the aid of absolute f-values measured by Mr. Gerald Newson in the Shock Tube Laboratory.18 A project has been established under the general direction of Dr. Stephen Strom and the specific direction of David W. Latham to de- velop instrumentation for obtaining highly accurate stellar continuous spectra. A prototype photomultiplier cooling package with careful temperature control has been designed by Thomas E. Hoffman and is being constructed. A data reduction scheme has been formulated by Mr. Latham, a semiautomatic data acquisition system has been perfected, and a monochromator is being built. The Observatory has supported the design and preliminary construc- tion of an infrared camera for Dr. Sagan's group. The camera is intended to obtain photographs of the moon and planets at several narrow-band wavelength intervals in the photographic infrared. The system is planned to be flexible for adaptation to a variety of large 17 Supported by contract NASw-184 between NASA and Harvard University. 18 Supported by grant NsG 438 from NASA to Harvard University. ASTROPHYSIGAL OBSERVATORY 223 telescopes and will accommodate six interference filters on a filter wheel. Dr. Fazio and Dr. Helmken have used the large (28-ft. square) parabolic mirror system at the U.S. Army Natick Laboratories to detect air cerenkov light from cosmic -ray particles striking the atmosphere and producing charged particle showers. Significant improvements in detection ability were achieved during the year. One major result of observational work has been the preparation of an atlas of the Large Magellanic Cloud by Dr. Hodge and Dr. Wright. The atlas includes a historical account of research on the Cloud, together with a summary of current knowledge; a complete bibliog- raphy of papers on this subject from 1925 through 1964; and 167 photographic charts on which have been identified known variable stars, star clusters, and emission nebulae. When the work is pub- lished, it should serve as a "clearing house" for information on these phenomena. Dr. Whitney and his group working in theoretical astrophysics have developed two observational programs: 19 1. Use of existing equipment and other optical observatories under guest investigator programs. Dr. Strom, Mr. Latham, and Dr. Whitney obtained spectrographic data at the McDonald Observa- tory, the Kitt Peak National Observatory, and the Mt. Wilson Ob- servatory. Dr. Strom and Mr. Latham have developed extensive computer programs to handle the reduction of these data. 2. Development of auxiliary equipment for the measurement of stellar spectra. As the first step in this program, Mr. Latham and Mr. Hoffman are constructing the photoelectric spectrometer mentioned earlier. Under this program they envisage the continuing develop- ment of various optical detectors to elucidate empirical questions raised by the theoretical program and to explore new avenues of observation. Dr. Sagan, Steven Kilston of Harvard College, and R. R. Drummond of the Goddard Space Flight Center undertook a search for life on Earth at km. resolution using photographs obtained by the Tiros and Nimbus meteorological satellites. Of several thousand photographs of essentially cloudless terrains taken by Nimbus I, two objects were found that were indicative of intelligent life on Earth: a jet contrail and a recently constructed interstate highway. One rectilinear feature was found on the Moroccan coast; it was not, however, due to the works of man. No signs of seasonal variation of vegetation could be found, although one rectilinear array due to the activities 19 Supported by grants GP-940 and GP-4318 from the National Science Founda- tion. 224 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 of Canadian loggers was discovered on a Tiros II photograph. It appears that several thousand photographs of the Earth, each with a resolution of a few tenths of a km., are required before any sign of intelligent life can be found with some reasonable reliability. An equivalent Mariner IV system — taking 22 photographs of the Earth with a resolution of several km. — would not detect any sign of life on Earth, intelligent or otherwise. THEORETICAL ASTROPHYSICS In a paper presented before the Thirteenth International Astro- physical Symposium organized by PInstitut d'Astrophysique of the University of Liege in Belgium, the director and Diarmaid H. Douglas- Hamilton of the Harvard College Observatory corrected visual bright- ness estimates of Comets Encke and Faye for telescope aperture and reduced them to absolute magnitude. A secular decrease in absolute brightness is indicated for both. On the assumption of a linear de- crease with time in the diameter of an icy nucleus, they calculated death dates of 1991 to 2000 for Comet Encke, and 1978 to 1985 for Comet Faye. They find no correlation between the brightness variations of the two comets and solar activity. On the other hand, for Comet Encke they find that the observed occurrence of a tail is strongly correlated with increased solar activity and with the observed presence of a distinct sharp nucleus. They suggest that variations in the solar wind may produce these effects. The director presented before the Symposium on Unmanned Ex- ploration of the Solar System, held by the American Astronomical Society in Denver, Colo., a description of cometry phenomena and of the probable basic nature of comets, and offered proposals for further investigations by improved classical astronomical methods, by labora- tory studies, by observations from balloons, by artificial comet ex- periments in space, by observations from space platforms, and by space probes passing near comets. These techniques should add signifi- cantly to our knowledge of the cometry nucleus and of possible cometary hazards to spacecraft, as well as to the possibility of using comets as fuel sources for interplanetary operation and exploration. From time to time a comet nucleus is observed to break into several pieces. Sometimes two or more comets are thus formed which sub- sequently follow nearly identical orbits. At other times the original comet simply vanishes, leaving only the suspicion that its nucleus fragmented. Dr. Whipple and Robert P. Stefanik have been conduct- ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 225 ing a study of 12 such split comets. The fact that these appear to be "new" rather than periodic comets leads to the suggestion that early in its life each of these fragmented comets was a large dirty snowball containing a source of heat in radioactive atoms. Planetary encounters eject the comet far out of the solar system and into interstellar space where sublimation of the more volatile materials depletes the core over a long time interval. Diffusing outward through the nucleus, the gases recrystallize in the extreme cold near the comet's surface to form an external shell that is brittle and a structurally weakened core. During its long stay in interstellar space, the comet is affected by virtually no external physical forces. Thus on its first close approach to the sun, exposure to strong external radiation may result in the formation of heat shock that causes the comet to split. Before the Third International Symposium on Bioastronautics and the Exploration of Space, held at San Antonio, Tex., the director revised historically the predictions of meteoroid penetration of space vehicles near the Earth's orbit and then compared the predictions with observational data from satellites. He concluded that the hazard is far less than it was thought to be several years ago. Prof. Prabhu L. Bhatnagar of the Indian Institute of Science was a distinguished visiting scientist at the Observatory during the summer and fall of 1964. He directed his attention to the problem of deriving a precise theory of the radiation transfer problem in the lunar surface, in which the lunar surface density is constant, varies linearly with depth, and varies exponentially with depth. The methods are being programed for utilization of infrared and radio observations, both throughout a lunation and during eclipses. The director cooperated in this research. Research in cosmology and general relativity proceeded along several paths. Dr. James P. Wright and Dr. Sachiko Tsuruta evaluated the pulsation periods of relativistic objects, paying particular attention to neutron stars where the whole star may pulsate in 0.001 second. The stability of superdense stars was studied using conventional trial functions corresponding to homologous oscillation, and further work indicates the need to use more elaborate trial functions. Dr. Wright also investigated the role of rotation in a particular relativistic model of the universe. Dr. Tsuruta evaluated the neutrino energy loss from stars through the so-called URGA (uniform rapid contraction) process for ordinary and dense matter in the temperature range T = 109 °K to T = 5 X 109 °K and of the density range p = 106 grams-cm.3 to 3 X 10u grams- cm.3. This energy loss rate is highly sensitive to temperature, and above a temperature of 2 to 3 X 109 °K the nuclear URGA process 789-427—66 26 226 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 exceeds the energy loss by the plasma-neutrino process; therefore the URGA process must be taken into account in detailed calculations of stellar evolution at high densities and temperatures. Dr. Tsuruta finds that inclusion of this new process does not significantly alter her earlier conclusions concerning the rate of cooling of neutron stars. She has found that stars of medium and heavy mass retain temperatures exceeding 2 X 109 °K for times of the order of 104 to 105 years, so such stars should be considered as candidates for some of the observed X-ray sources. Dr. Henri E. Mitler has made considerable progress in his study of neutron activation of nuclei in meteoroids from solar and galactic cosmic rays. He has found a relatively simple analytical method for obtaining the total number of neutrons, protons, and heavier particles evaporated from excited nuclei and has obtained an improved neutron production spectrum. He has also solved the problem of spallation production of nuclei in spherical meteoroids by cosmic rays and will apply this as a test of the space erosion theory by Dr. Whipple and Dr. Fireman. Dr. William M. Irvine completed a study of local irregularities in cosmological models according to general relativity. Conditions were derived for the validity of Newtonian gravitational theory on a local scale in such a universe, and it was shown that such models satisfy Mach's principle. The energy of the irregularities in such a universe is not conserved, a fact of significance to cosmogony. Research in stellar atmospheres, under the general supervision of Dr. Whitney, now comprises perhaps the strongest theoretical program of its kind in the world.19 To supplement this theoretical work, the observational program previously mentioned was initiated this year. An event of particular note was the second Harvard-Smithsonian con- ference on stellar atmospheres, held at the Observatories in January.20 This meeting was organized by Dr. Whitney, Dr. Eugene H. Avrett, and Dr. Owen J. Gingerich; the proceedings, published as Special Report No. 174, contained over 450 pages summarizing 3 days' dis- cussion of problems of the formation of spectrum lines. This conference series has clearly been adopted as an "Institution" by the astronomical community. The theoretical work of the Observatory's group was aimed primarily at uncovering the effects of departures from local thermodynamic equi- librium on the formation of spectrum lines and the continuous spectra 20 Supported in part by grant NONR(G)0031-65 from the Office of Naval Research. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 227 of stars. Also, accurate and powerful techniques for spectrum analysis have been brought to bear on problems of stellar composition. Dr. Avrett has made considerable progress in the calculation of strong absorption at emission lines formed in the outermost layers of stellar atmospheres and has completed an investigation of "source function equality" in multiplet lines. This study is part of a larger project involving radiative transfer calculations of spectra from complex atoms with applications to solar chromospheric lines. In collaboration with Dr. Robert W. Noyes, he is making a detailed analysis of the solar H and K lines of ionized calcium and of magnesium. The group devoted a major effort toward examining the validity of model atmosphere techniques and extending these theories and tech- niques to a practical analysis of the spectra of "real" stars. Dr. Wolf- gang Kalkofen continued his investigations of the influence of departures from local thermodynamic equilibrium on the structure of model atmospheres.21 This theoretical work, done in collaboration with Dr. Avrett, promises to have an important bearing on the quantitative analysis of stellar spectra, as evidenced by recent work of Dr. Strom and Dr. Gingerich. Dr. Strom and Dr. Gingerich have nearly completed an analysis of the spectra of Sirius and Vega, two bright stars whose surface tempera- tures are about 10,000°K. This will be the most thorough study ever performed for any star other than the sun. Two principal results have emerged from this study. In the first place, it is quite clear that Sirius has a metal content similar to that of metallic-line A stars and much higher than that of Vega. Second, there were significant discrepancies in the results in the analyses which were removed when the departures from local thermodynamic equilibrium for the second and third levels of neutral hydrogen were explicitly included. The magnitude of this effect will be appreciated when it is noted that the new models alter the estimates of surface temperature for these stars by about 1,000°K, and may indicate that there will be a significant revision of the stellar temperature scale.19 Dr. Whitney's theoretical work was aimed at providing insight into dynamical properties of stellar atmospheres and the general problem of gas dynamic flow in the presence of radiative transfer. Dr. Noyes continued his theoretical and observational studies of the solar atmosphere. He and Dr. Whitney organized an informal symposium on "motions in the solar atmosphere" to which a small number of specialists throughout the country were invited. 21 Supported in part by contract AF 19(628)-3877 between the U.S. Air Force and Harvard University. 228 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Dr. George B. Rybicki derived radiative transfer equations for a medium with small stochastically defined opacity and energy fluctua- tions. The theory is shown to provide a description of the solar atmosphere which has statistically defined inhomogeneities due to an underlying convection zone. An unexpected result is that long-range correlations in the emergent intensity may appear that are not directly related to the correlation scales in the energy fluctuations. Rather, they are related to the depth of the zone in which the energy fluctua- tions occur, even if this is large in comparison with a radiation mean- free path. Dr. Irvine pursued his fundamental studies of scattering phenomena in planetary atmospheres. He developed a new approach to the study of the formation of absorption bands in a scattering atmosphere through equations for the probability distribution of photon-optical paths. Also, radiative transfer in layers of large particles (dust or clouds) was invesitgated with an explicit evaluation of the influence of the large forward lobe in the scattering pattern. Dr. Irvine com- puted the cross sections for extinction, scattering, and radiation pressure for both dielectric and absorbing particles and included the contribu- tion of surface waves to the scattering. As an aid to the study of planetary cloud and dust layers, he evaluated the albedo and asym- metry factor of water droplets and sand spheres.22 Analyzing recent passive and active radio observations of Mars, Dr. Sagan and Dr. James B. Pollack have found a significant correlation of radar reflectivity enhancements with the Martian dark areas Cerberus- Trivium Gharontis, Nepenthes, and Syrtis Major. They have also continued their study of the physical environment of the planet Venus. They have estimated surface thermometric tem- peratures to be as follows: mean disk, 700°K; subsolar point, 1000°K; antisolar point, 610°K; pole, 470°K. They have shown that the Venus limb-darkening detected by Mariner II can be explained consistently either by an absorbing cloud or by scatterers nonuni- formly distributed through the atmosphere. Reconsidering the Venus greenhouse effect, they find that cloudless atmospheres, either in convective or in radiative equilibrium, require, to explain the high surface temperatures, integrated infrared optical depths much larger than is realistically expected from the constituents of the Venus atmos- phere. If the Venus clouds are made of water, many of the cloud parameters can be derived from the observations; such clouds play a major role in maintaining the high surface temperatures of Venus. M Supported in part by grant NsG 89/60 from NASA to Harvard University. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 229 HISTORICAL ASTRONOMY Dr. Hawkins has developed a computer program in astroarcheology that determines the position on the celestial sphere that is marked by a chosen line on the ground. The stones, stone holes, and archways at Stonehenge in England revealed a surprising fit with the extreme positions of sunrise, sunset, moonrise, and moonset. Also, the circle of 56 holes is exactly the number required to predict the swing of the moon and the occurrence of eclipse seasons. This observatory-com- puter is a remarkable achievement for circa 2000 B.C. Similar align- ments and computer possibilities were found from the stone rows and rings at Callanish, on the Isle of Lewis, Scotland. The program has been made available to other scientists, and already investigations using it have been made in Illinois, in Mexico, and elsewhere. Dr. Gingerich has undertaken an extensive study of Kepler's Astronomia Nova that should ultimately result in the first English translation of and commentary on this classic treatise. This work is an outgrowth of a previous computer study that indicated Kepler's work on the orbit of Mars was greatly impeded by his frequent nu- merical errors. Dr. Gingerich has also been examining, with the aid of a computer, Kepler's Rudolphine Tables of 1627 to determine the internal consistency of the calculations and their accuracy for pre- dicting planetary positions.23 INTERNATIONAL BUREAUS Recognizing the Observatory's active and productive program in geodesy, the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics invited the Observatory to establish a Central Bureau of Satellite Geodesy. The Bureau is now in operation, with Dr. Whipple as director and Jan RolfF as executive director.24 On January 1 , the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams was transferred to the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory from the Copenhagen Observatory, where it had operated since 1922. The Bureau's responsibilities include the rapid dissemination of astronomical information both by telegraph and by printed circulars, as well as the nomenclature of comets. Under the direction of Dr. Gingerich, the Bureau had issued 30 circulars by the end of the year.25 23 Supported in part by Harvard University. 24 Supported in part by the International Association of Geodesy. 25 Supported in part by the International Astronomical Union. 230 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 STAFF CHANGES The Observatory staff was increased during the year by physicists Dr. Wolfgang Kalkofen, Dr. Anthony Lee, Dr. James Pollack, Dr. George Rybicki, Dr. Sachiko Tsuruta, Dr. Franco Verniani, and Dr. James Wright; astrophysicist Dr. Max Roemer; geodesist Dr. William Strange; and mathematician Dr. Manfred Friedman. John Burke joined the staff as flight operations manager, William Hirst as chief of Moon watch, Thomas Hoffman as staff engineer, John Hsia as chief of station operations, and Raymond Watts, Jr., as chief of editorial and publications. The computations, data, and photoreduction divisions became the data processing department under Dr. Richard Haefner. Edward Gaposchkin and Leonard Solomon joined research and analysis, and Jerome Cherniack became chief of computations and Robert Martin chief of data. E. Nelson Hayes became editor-in-chief. Jan Rolff was appointed executive director of the Central Bureau for Satellite Geodesy. Consultants to the Observatory during the year were Dr. G. de Vaucouleurs, Dr. William Kaula, Dr. Colin Keay, Daniel Malaise, Dr. Shambhu Sinvhal, Dr. George Veis, Dr. John Wood, and Costas Papaliolios. Metallurgist Dr. Joseph Goldstein transferred to Goddard Space Flight Center. Physicist Jack Tech transferred from and returned to the National Bureau of Standards during the year. Moonwatch chief Richard Vanderburgh and physicists Dr. Morton Davies and Dr. William Elford resigned. As of June 30, 1965, the Observatory employed 468 persons. Death took two young Observatory scientists in 1965. Dr. Craig M. Merrihue, physicist, and associate of Harvard University, died in a mountain-climbing accident March 14, 1965. Born in Schenectady, N.Y., July 8, 1933, he was awarded the B.A. degree from Harvard University in 1956 and the Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley in 1964. He lived in Cambridge with his wife Sandra and their son Jeffrey. In his short career, he demonstrated an unusual combination of theoretical skills and ex- perimental aptitude and made important contributions to science, particularly in the analysis of radioisotopes in meterorites. He was a quiet, modest, unassuming man with intense enthusiasm for life. He was deeply involved in the public problems of his time, taking an active interest in conservation, civil liberties, and political issues. He was concerned alike for the individual and for society. A skillful mountain climber, he had led an expedition to the Andes, had climbed ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 231 in British Columbia and in the Karakoram in Pakistan, and was planning an expedition to the Hindu Kush in Afghanistan. While he and Daniel Doody, a member of the American Everest Expedition, were climbing on the side of Mt. Washington, they both fell and were killed. Because of his theoretical interests and practical skills as a scientist, and because of his experience as a mountain climber, Dr. Merrihue was a conspicuous candidate for the position of scientist on America's first manned expedition to the Moon. On April 21, 1965, Imre Izsak, chief of satellite research and analysis, and lecturer at Harvard University, died of a heart attack at the age of 36. He was in Paris attending a COSPAR symposium on tra- jectories of artificial celestial bodies as determined from observations. In the brief years of his scientific career, he had established himself as a preeminent authority on geodesy and had made significant con- tributions to the study of celestial mechanics. His death is both a deep personal tragedy and an irreparable loss to the scientific com- munity. Born in the small town of Zalaegerszeg, some 200 miles from Budapest, Izsak attended the University of Budapest, where he worked in astronomy under the late Karoly Lassovszky (who also later joined the Smithsonian) and specialized in the study of variable stars and galactic clusters. Fleeing Hungary during the 1956 revolt, he began studies of solar physics at the Zurich Observatory in Novem- ber of that year. Two years later he emigrated to the United States and, after a brief priod at the Observatory of the University of Cincin- nati, joined the staff of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. On February 24, 1964, he became a citizen of the United States. He lived in Cambridge with his wife Emily and an infant son Andrew. Izsak was a warm, charming, witty, gentle person. He gained not only the deep respect but also the spontaneous affection of his col- leagues. His association with them was one of mutual inspiration. PUBLICATIONS The following papers by staff members of the Astrophysical Observa- tory were published or presented as indicated: Aardoom, L.; Girnius, A.; and Veis, G. Determination of the absolute space directions between Baker-Nunn camera stations. Presented at the Second International Symposium on the Use of Artificial Satellites for Geodesy, Athens, April 1965. Avrett, E. H., and Strom, S. E. Comparison between model atmos- pheres and spectra from early-type stars. Ann. d'Astrophys., vol. 27, pp. 781-795, 1964. . See also Kalkofen and Avrett; Strom and Avrett. 232 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Carleton, N. P. Excitation and change of charge in ion molecule collisions in the adiabatic region. In M. R. C. McDowell, ed., Atomic Collision Processes, J. Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, pp. 652-660, 1964. Carleton, N. P.; Oldenberg, O.; and Sheridan, W. F. Secondary effects in electron excitation of some nitrogen bands. In M. R. G. McDowell, ed., Atomic Collision Processes, J. Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, pp. 440-442, 1964. Garleton, N. P., and Roach, J. R. Spectroscopic observation of a midlatitude red auroral arc. Journ. Geophys. Res., vol. 70, pp. 1262-1265, 1965. Colombo, G., and Fiocco, G. Reply to "Note on Kazer detection of atmospheric dust layers" by D. Deirmendjian. Journ. Geophys. Res., vol. 70, p. 746, 1965. Colombo, G.; Lautman, D. A.; and Shapiro, I. I. Dynamics of small particles in the solar system. Presented at the annual meeting of Trans. Amer. Geophys. Union, Washington, April 21, 1965. DeFelice, J. See Fireman and DeFelice; Fireman, DeFelice, and Langway. Dolan, J. F., and Fazio, G. G. Gamma-ray spectrum of the sun. Rev. Geophys., vol. 3, pp. 319-343, 1965. Elford, W. G., and Hawkins, G. S. Meteor echo rates and the flux of sporadic meteors. Harvard Radio Meteor Project Research Report No. 9, November 1964. Elford, W. G.; Hawkins, G. S.; and Southworth, R. B. The dis- tribution of sporadic meteor radiants. Harvard Radio Meteor Proj- ect Research Report No. 11, December 1964. Fazio, G. G. A vidicon spark chamber system for use in artificial earth satellites. Proc. Symp. on Filmless Spark Chamber Techniques and Associated Computer Uses. CERN, Geneva, pp. 95-103, 1964. . See also Dolan and Fazio; Pollack and Fazio. Fireman, E. L., and DeFelice, J. Multiple fall of Pribram meteorites photographed 7. The tritium and argon-39 in the Pribram meteorite (abstract). Bull. Astron. Insts. Czech., vol. 15, p. 113, 1964. Fireman, E. L.; DeFelice, J.; and Langway, C. C, jr. Greenland dust: radioactivity studies (abstract). Trans. Amer. Geophys. Union, vol. 46, p. 117, 1964. Fireman, E. L., and Langway, C. C, jr. Search for aluminum-26 in dust from the Greenland Ice Sheet. Geochim. et. Cosmochim. Acta, vol. 29, pp. 21-27, 1965. . See also Schaeffer, Stoenner, and Fireman. Fleischer, R. L.; Naeser, C. W.; Price, P. B.; Walker, R. M.; and Marvin, U. B. Fossil particle tracks and uranium distributions in ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 233 minerals of the Vaca Muerta meteorite. Science, vol. 148, pp. 629-632, 1965. Franklin, F. A. See Wright, Hodge, and Franklin. Friedman, M. P. A description of a computer program for the study of atmospheric effects on sonic booms. NASA CR-157, February 1965. Gingerich, O. Laboratory exercises in astronomy — spectral classifi- cation. Sky and Tel., vol. 28, pp. 80-82, 1964. •. Laboratory exercises in astronomy — the rotation of Saturn and its rings. Sky and Tel., vol. 28, pp. 278-279, 1964. . Translation of Introduction to Astrophysics: the Stars, by J. Dufay. Dover Press, New York, 1964. . Lunar visibilities in ancient Babylon. Isis, March 1965. Gingerich, O.; Mihalas, D.; Matsushima, S.; and Strom, S. An archetype non-gray stellar atmosphere. Astrophys. Journ., vol. 141, pp. 316-319, 1965. . See also Strom, Gingerich, and Strom. Girnius, A. See Aardoom, Girnius, and Veis. Goldberg, L. The origin of the emission reversals in the Fraunhofer H- and K-lines. Astrophys. Journ., vol. 140, pp. 384-386, 1964. Goldberg, L., and Noyes, R. W. Origin of emission cores in lines of ionized Ca and Mg (abstract). Astron. Journ., vol. 69, p. 542, 1964. Goldberg, L.; Parkinson, W. N.; and Reeves, E. M. Carbon mon- oxide in the ultraviolet solar spectrum. Astrophys. Journ., vol. 141, pp. 1293-1295, 1965. Goldstein, J. I.; Hanneman, R. E.; and Ogilivie, R E. Diffusion in the Fe-Ni system at 1 atm. and 40 kbar pressure. Trans, AIME, vol. 233, pp. 812-820, 1965. Haefner, R. R. The simultaneous observation program of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. Presented at the Second International Symposium on the Use of Artificial Satellites for Geodesy, Athens, April 1965. . Precise reduction of Baker-Nunn films at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. Presented at the Second International Symposium on the Use of Artificial Satellites for Geodesy, Athens, April 1965. Hawkins, G. S. Interplanetary debris near the earth. Ann. Rev. Astron. Astrophys., vol. 2, pp. 149-164, 1964. . Letter to the Editor. Physics Today, vol. 17, p. 56, 1964. . Secret of Stonehenge. Harpers, pp. 96-99, June 1964. . Meteors, comets, and meteorites. McGraw-Hill, Inc., New York, 1964. 234 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Hawkins, G. S. The sun and its planets. Holt, Rinehart, Winston, New York, 1964. Hawkins, G. S., and Friesen, D. A note on the grid of the ortho- graphic atlas of the moon. Planet. Space Sci., vol. 12, pp. 318-319, 1964. Hawkins, G. S.; Lindblad, B.-A.; and Southworth, R. B. The velocity of faint meteors. Smithsonian Contr. Astrophys., vol. 8, pp. 133-139, 1964. Hawkins, G. S.; Southworth, R. B.; and Rosenthal, S. Prelimin- ary analysis of meteor radiants and orbits. Harvard Radio Meteor Project Research Report No. 7, August 1964. Hawkins, G. S.; Southworth, R. B.; and Verniani, F. On the ablation-coefficient of meteors. Harvard Radio Meteor Project Research Report No. 10, December 1964. Hawkins, G. S., and Verniani, F. On the ionizing efficiency of meteors. Harvard Radio Meteor Project Research Report No. 5, 1964; also in Astrophys. Journ., vol. 140, pp. 1590-1600, 1964. . See also Elford and Hawkins; Elford, Hawkins, and South- worth; Verniani and Hawkins. Helmken, H. F. See Kraushaar, Clark, Gamire, Helmken, Higbie, and Agogino. Hodge, P. W. The Henbury meteorite craters. Smithsonian Contr. Astrophys., vol. 8, no. 8, pp. 199-213, 1965. Hodge, P. W.; Wright, F. W ; and Langway, C. C, Jr. Studies of particles for extraterrestrial origin. 3. Analyses of dust particles from polar ice deposits. Journ. Geophys. Res., vol. 69, pp. 2919- 2931, 1964. . See also Wright, Hodge, and Franklin. Irvine, W. M. Local irregularities in an expanding universe. Ann. Phys., vol. 32, pp. 322-347, 1965. — . Light scattering by spherical particles: radiation pressure, asymmetry factor, and extinction cross section. Journ. Opt. Soc. Amer., vol. 55, pp. 16-21, 1965. Irvine, W. M. ; Pikoos, C; Charon, J.; and Lectome, G. Effect of high voltage on spectral sensitivity for two photo multipliers. Astro- phys. Journ., vol. 140, pp. 1629-1631, 1964. Izsak, I. G. A new determination of non-zonal harmonics by satel- lites. Presented posthumously at the Second International Sym- posium on the Use of Artificial Satellites for Geodesy, Athens, April 1965. Izsak, I. G.; Gerard, J.; and Barnett, M. P. Mechanization of tedious algebra. Communications of the ACM, vol. 8, pp. 27-32, 1965. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 235 Jacchia, L. G. The temperature above the thermopause. In P. Muller, ed., Space Research V, North-Holland Publ., Amsterdam, pp. 1152-1174, 1965. Jacchia, L. G., and Slowey, J. Temperature variations in the upper atmosphere during geomagnetically quiet intervals. Journ. Geophys. Res., vol. 69, pp. 4145-4148, 1964. Kalkofen, W., and Avrett, E. H. Departures from L.T.E. in a model atmosphere (abstract). Astron. Journ., vol. 69, p. 546, 1964. Kohnlein, W. Determination of station coordinates from optical observations of artificial satellites. Presented at the Second Inter- national Symposium on the Use of Artificial Satellites for Geodesy, Athens, April 1965. Kozai, Y. New determination of zonal harmonics coefficients of the earth's gravitational potential. Publ. Astron. Soc. Japan, vol. 16, pp. 263-284, 1964. . New values for the zonal harmonics. Presented at the Second International Symposium on the Use of Artificial Satellites for Geodesy, Athens, April 1965. Summary of numerical results derived from satellite obser- vations. Presented at the Second International Symposium on the Use of Artificial Satellites for Geodesy, Athens, April 1965. Long range analysis of satellite observations. Presented at the Second International Symposium on the Use of Artificial Satel- lites for Geodesy, Athens, April 1965. Kraushaar, W.; Clark, G.; Gamire, G.; Helmken, H. F.; Higbie, P.; and Agogino, M. Explorer XI experiment on cosmic gamma rays. Astrophys. Journ., vol. 141, pp. 845-863, 1965. Langway, C. C, Jr., and Marvin, U. B. Some characteristics of black spherules. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci., vol. 119, pp. 205-223, 1964. Langway, G. C, jr. See also Fireman and Langway; Fireman, DeFelice, and Langway. Lautman, D. A. See Colombo, Lautman, and Shapiro. Lundquist, C. A. Orbital mechanics. Part IV of E. Stuhlinger and G. Mesmer, eds., Space Science and Engineering. McGraw-Hill Book Co., New York, 1965. Marvin, U. B., and Klein, C, jr. Meteoritic zircon. Science, vol. 146, pp. 919-920, 1964. . See also Fleischer, Naeser, Price, Walker, and Marvin; Langway and Marvin. Merrihue, C. M. Rare gas evidence for cosmic dust in modern Pacific red clay. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci., vol. 119, pp. 351-367, 1964. McCrosky, R. E., and Boeschenstein, H. jr. The Prairie Meteorite 236 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Network. Journ. Soc. Photo-Opt. Instr. Engrs., vol. 3, pp. 127- 132, 1965. Mitler, H. E. Origin of light elements. Phys. Rev., vol. 136, pp. 298-320, 1964. Noyes, R. W. See Goldberg and Noyes. Pollack, J. B., and Fazio, G. G. Nuclear interactions of cosmic rays as the source of the synchrotron radiating particles of our galaxy. Astrophys. Journ., vol. 141, pp. 730-744, 1965. Pollack, J. B., and Sag an, C. Polarization of thermal emission from Venus. Astrophys. Journ., vol. 141, pp. 1161-1183, 1965. . The microwave phase effect of Venus. Icarus, vol. 4, pp. 62-103, 1965. . See also Sagan and Pollack. Rosenthal, S. See Hawkins, Southworth, and Rosenthal. Rybicki, G. Transfer of radiation in stochastic media. Dissertation, Harvard University, 1965. Sagan, C. The atmosphere of Venus. In P. J. Brancazio and A. G. W. Cameron, eds., The Origin and Evolution of Atmospheres and Oceans, J. Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, pp. 279-288, 1964. . Primordial ultraviolet synthesis of nucleoside phosphates. /n S. W. Fox, ed., The Origins of Prebiological Systems, The Aca- demic Press, New York, pp. 207-219, 1965. . Is the early evolution of life related to the development of the earth's core? Nature, vol. 206, p. 448, 1965. Sagan, C., and Coleman, S. Spacecraft sterilization standards and contamination of Mars. Astron. Aeronaut., vol. 3, pp. 22-27, 1965. Sagan, C; Hanst, P. L.; and Young, A. T. Nitrogen oxides on Mars. Planet. Space Sci., vol. 13, pp. 73-88, 1965. Sagan, C; Phaneuf, J. P,; and Ihnat, M. Total reflection spectro- photometry and thermogravimetric analysis of simulated Martian surface materials. Icarus, vol. 4, pp. 43-61, 1965. Sagan, C, and Pollack, J. B. Spacecraft observations of Venus. Ann. d'Astrophys., vol. 28, pp. 229-233, 1965. Sagan, C, and Swan, P. R. Martian landing sites for the Voyager mission. Journ. Spacecraft and Rockets, vol. 2, pp. 18-24, 1965. . See also Pollack and Sagan. Schaeffer, O. A.; Stoenner, R. W.; and Fireman, E. L. Rare gas isotope contents and K-Ar ages of mineral concentrates from the Indarch meteorite. Journ. Geophys. Res., vol. 70, pp. 209-213, 1965. Slowey, J. i&tfjacchia and Slowey. Southworth, R. B. The size distribution of the zodiacal particles. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci., vol. 119, pp. 54-67, 1964. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 237 . See also Elford, Hawkins, and Southworth; Hawkins, Lind- blad, and Southworth; Hawkins, Southworth, and Rosenthal; Hawkins, Southworth, and Verniani. Strom, S. E., and Avrett, E. H. Detailed examination of a non-grey stellar atmosphere (abstract). Astron. Journ., vol. 69, p. 559, 1964. . The temperature structure of early-type model stellar atmospheres. I. Details of a representative model. Astrophys. Journ., vol. 140, pp. 1381-1390, 1964. Strom, S. E.; Gingerich, O.; and Strom, K. M. Metal abundance determinations for Vega and Sirius (abstract). Astrophys. Journ., vol. 70, p. 148, 1965. . See also Avrett and Strom; Gingerich, Mihalas, Matsushima, and Strom. Tilles, D. Atmospheric noble gases: solar wind bombardment of extraterrestrial dust as a source mechanism. Science, vol. 148, pp. 1085-1088, 1965 . Anomalous argon isotope ratios in particles from Greenland ice and Pacific Ocean sediments (abstract). Trans. Amer. Geophys. Union, vol. 46, p. 117, 1965. Tsuruta, S. Neutron star models. Dissertation, Columbia University. New York, 1964. Tsuruta, S.; Wright, J. P.; and Cameron, A. G. W. Oscillation periods of neutron stars. Nature, vol. 206, pp. 1137-1138, 1965. Veis, G. On the optimum use of satellites for geodesy. COSPAR Information Bulletin No. 20, November 1 964; also in Bull. Geodesique, No. 74, pp. 283-290, December 1964. . Establishment of a European satellite tracking network. Presented at the Symposium on the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Tracking Network, Paris, December 1964. Le reseau de tracking de l'observatoire de Smithsonian et les resultats geodesiques. Presented at a colloquium following the Symposium on the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Tracking Network, Paris, December 1964. The deflection of the vertical of major geodetic datums and the semimajor axis of the earth's ellipsoid as obtained from satellite observations. In Space Research V, P. Muller, ed., North-Holland Publ., Amsterdam, pp. 849-875, 1965. See also Aardoom, Girnius, and Veis; Whipple and Veis. Verniani, F. On the density of meteoroids. II: The density of faint photographic meteors. II Nuovo Cimento, vol. 33, pp. 1173-1184, 1964. . Densita e struttura delle meteore. Ric. Sci., vol. 34, pp. 5-12, 1964. 238 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Verniani, F. On the luminous and ionizing efficiencies of meteors (abstract). Astron. Journ., vol. 69, p. 561, 1964. . Aspetti attuali della fisica e dell' astro nomia delle meteore. Ric. Sci., vol. 45, pp. 377-415, 1964. . On the luminous efficiency of meteors. Smithsonian Contr. Astropyhs., vol. 8, pp. 141-172, 1965. Verniani, F., and Hawkins, G. S. Masses, magnitudes and densities of 320 radiometeors. Harvard Radio Meteor Project Research Report No. 12, March 1965. . See also Hawkins and Verniani; Hawkins, Southworth, and Verniani. Whipple, F. L. The history of the solar system. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., vol. 52, pp. 565-594, 1964. . Evidence for a comet belt beyond Neptune (abstract). Astron. Journ., vol. 69, p. 563, 1964. Astronomy from the space stations and meteor problems and photographs of the Perseids. In T. Page and L. W. Page, eds., Wanderers in the Sky, Macmillan Co., New York, pp. 119-121, 1965. . Meteor problems and photographs of the Perseids. In T. Page and L. W. Page, eds., Wanderers in the Sky, Macmillan Co., New YorK, pp. 203-206, 1965. Whipple, F. L., and Veis, G. Erdvermessung mit Satelliten. Bild der Wissenschaft, No. 5, pp. 397-404, 1965. Whitney, G. A. Gas dynamics of stellar atmospheres. Presented at the Workshop on the Interdisciplinary Aspects of Radiative Trans- fer, J.I.L.A., Boulder, Colo., Feb. 11, 12, 1965. Wright, F. W.; Hodge, P. W.; and Franklin, F. A. The differences between meteoritic and volcanic spherules. Presented at the Amer. Astron. Soc. Meeting, University of Kentucky, March 16, 1965. . See also Hodge, Wright, and Langway. Wright, J. P. General relativistic instability . Phys. Rev., vol. 136, pp. 288-289, 1964. . Solution of Einstein's field equations for a rotating, stationary and dust-filled universe. J. Math. Phys., vol. 6, pp. 103-105, 1965. . See also Tsuruta, Wright, and Cameron. The Special Reports of the Astrophysical Observatory distribute catalogs of satellite observations, orbital data, and preliminary results of data analysis prior to journal publication. Numbers 1 57 through 1 80, issued during the year, contain the following material: No. 157, July 1, 1964 Atmospheric densities and temperatures from the drag analysis of the Explorer 17 satellite, by J. Slowey. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY 239 No. 158, July 10, 1964 Satellite orbital data: Satellites 1959 7), 1963 13A (Telstar 2), and 1963 26A (Geophysical Research) for Oct. 1— Dec. 31, 1963; and Satellite 1963 30D for Oct. 30-Dec. 31, 1963. No. 170, December 30, 1964 Static diffusion models of the upper atmosphere with empirical temperature profiles, by L. G. Jacchia. No. 171, March 26, 1965 Densities and temperatures from the atmospheric drag on six artificial satellites, by L.G. Jacchia and J. Slowey. No. 172, April 28, 1965 The volcanic dust sampling program of the Smithsonian Astro- physical Observing Stations, by F. W. Wright and P.W. Hodge; based on field reports by A. Oakes, R. La Count, and S. Tishler. No. 173, May 24, 1965 The Prairie Meteorite Network, by R. E. McCrosky and H. Boe- schenstein, Jr. No. 174, May 17, 1965 Proceedings of the second Harvard-Smithsonian conference on stellar atmospheres. No. 175, April 23, 1965 An analysis of the atmospheric trajectories of 413 precisely reduced photographic meteors, by L. G. Jacchia, F. Verniani, and R. E. Briggs. No. 176, May 17, 1965 Some results at Smithsonian Observing Stations, by P. Brand, L. Solomon, J. Mazzotta, R. Proctor, J. Latimer, and E. Monash. No. 177, May 3, 1965 Catalog of satellite observations: Satellites 1958 a\ (Explorer 7), 1959 al (Vanguard II), 1959 7,1 (Vanguard III), 1960 il (Echo T), and 1960 i2 (Echo I rocket) for July 1 — Dec. 31, 1963, prepared by B. Miller. No. 178, May 5, 1965 Catalog of satellite observations: Satellites 1960 fl (Explorer VIII), 1961 51 (Explorer IX), 1961 ol (Transit 4A), 1961 o2 (Injun Solar Radiation 3), and 1962 ael (Telstar 1), for July 1-Dec. 31, 1963; Satellite 1962 tl (Cosmos 3) for Aug. 15-18, 1963; Satellite 1962 ASTROPHYSIGAL OBSERVATORY 241 ol (S51/UKI) for Dec. 1-5, 1963; Satellite 1962 a|"l (Cosmos 8) for Aug. 3-16, 1963; and Satellite 1962 /3al (Alouette) for Oct. 15-31, 1964, prepared by B. Miller. No. 179, May 7, 1965 Catalog of satellite observations: Satellites 1962 /3/il (Anna IB), 1962 /3t (Injun 3); 1962 /3ul (Relay 7), and Satellite 1963 13A (Telstar 2) for July 1-Dec. 31, 1963; Satellite 1963 9A (Explorer XVII) for July 1-Nov. 6, 1963; Satellite 1963 10A (Cosmos 14) for July 31-Aug. 30, 1963; Satellite 1963 26A (Geophysics Research) for June 29-Dec. 31, 1963; and Satellite 1963 30D for Oct. 30- Dec. 31, 1963. No. 180, June 4, 1965 Transfer of radiation in stochastic media, by G. B. Rybicki. 789-427—66—27 National Collection of Fine Arts National Collection of Fine Arts David W. Scott, Director The past year was one of dramatic developments for the National Collection of Fine Arts. The physical aspect of the Collection has changed in many ways, and its nature and plans have been no less affected. Physically, the Collection is administered from a new group of offices; it boasts a remodeled library and art hall; it is developing a large staging area on 24th Street, and it is engaged in very active planning in connection with the current remodeling of the Old Patent Office Building. Its planning during the past year extended even further, to include considerations for the development of display areas on the Mall, in the old Court of Claims Building, and in the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. The staff nearly tripled in size within the year. Beginning with 8 regular employees in July 1964, it had doubled by January and reached 22 by the end of June. The administrative side was greatly strength- ened by the establishment of two administrative officers and corre- sponding supporting staff. On the professional and curatorial side, a department of exhibits and a department of painting and sculpture were established. A central concern of the staff has been the care and development of the collections. The preliminary catalog listings have been completed through the categories of painting, scultpure, drawings, and prints. The Gellatly Collection was removed from the art hall so that ex- tensive conservation could be undertaken. An increasing number of donations of works of art has augmented the study, loan, and perma- nent collections. The purchase of a John Marin watercolor inaugu- rated a modest but vitally important program for rounding out the survey of American art. The wide expansion of the Collection's activities had been inspired and guided by the far-sighted legislation of May 17, 1938, and the competition program which followed that legislative encouragement for a gallery of modern and American art. The plans formulated during the past year were based on such directives as those instructing the bureau "to encourage the development of contemporary art and to effect the widest distribution and cultivation in the matters of such 245 246 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 art" and "to consider its province to be the cultural life of the com- munity all over the United States and ... its obligation to be the encouragement of a high standard of quality among artists in the fields of both the fine and practical arts." Bearing in mind these goals and others, including the Smithsonian's traditional role in research and the Collection's function as a repository for Government art, the director has developed policy guidelines in such studies as "The Mission and Projects of the National Collection of Fine Arts." Specific plans and projects have followed: community and educational exhibit proposals (including artmobiles) ; maintenance of Government-owned art (for instance Works Progress Administration [WPA] paintings) ; cooperative ventures with the Area Redevelopment Administration, the Office of Education, the Art-in-Embassies program, and the White House (Arts Festival) ; and a number of others. Gradu- ate programs and research facilities are being developed. A number of these projects are already bearing fruit. Probably the Collection's outstanding achievement of the year in support of American art was the organization and presentation of the Stuart Davis Memorial Exhibition, together with a catalog. This extensive exhibit (opened by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson) was most effectively presented in the re- modeled Art Hall. It may be said to reflect the high standards of presentation and scholarship of the NCFA and also the determination of the National Collection to present the great achievements of American art to the nation and the world. SMITHSONIAN ART COMMISSION The 42d annual meeting of the Smithsonian Art Commission was held in Washington on Tuesday, December 1, 1964. Members present were Paul Manship, chairman; S. Dillon Ripley, secretary; Gilmore D. Clarke, Page Cross, David E. Finley, Lloyd Goodrich, Walker Hancock, Bartlett H. Hayes, Wilmarth S. Lewis, Henry P. Mcllhenny, Ogden M. Pleissner, Edgar P. Richardson, Charles H. Sawyer, and Stow Wengen- roth. Also present were James Bradley, Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; David W. Scott, director of the National Col- lection of Fine Arts; Donald McClelland, acting assistant to the director; Richard P. Wunder, curator of paintings and sculpture; and Harry Lowe, curator of exhibits. Recommendations were made for the reappointment of Edgar P. Richardson, Charles Sawyer, and David E. Finley for the usual 4-year period. Dr. Richardson was elected chairman of the Commission replacing Paul Manship, who had served as chairman for many years and who had requested that he not be reelected. A view of the Stuart Davis Memorial Exhibition as it was shown in the National Collection of Fine Arts' Art Hall. The exhibition, organized by NCFA, was shown in the Art Hall from May 28 through July 5, 1965, before going on for exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, and the Art Galleries of the University of California at Los Angeles. There were 127 works by Stuart Davis in the exhibition; the one prominently shown in this photograph is a mural, titled Allee, lent to the show by Drake University of Des Moines, Iowa. John Marin's The Sea, Maine, 1921, a watercolor and charcoal, 163^ X 19^ inches. A new acquisition of the National Collection of Fine Arts. NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS 247 The following officers were elected for the ensuing year: Edgar P. Richardson, chairman; Gilmore D. Clarke, vice chairman; and S. Dillon Ripley, secretary. The following were elected members of the Executive Committee for the ensuing year: David E. Finley, chairman; Gilmore D. Clarke, Ogden M. Pleissner, and Henry P. Mcllhenny, with Edgar P. Richard- son and S. Dillon Ripley, ex officio. Mr. Ripley commented on the National Collection of Fine Arts and the appointment of Dr. Scott as the Collection's new director. He said that the current atmosphere in Washington appears to be suitable for the enhancement of the National Collection and that we can look for- ward with hope and great enthusiasm. Mr. Bradley remarked on current status of plans on remodeling of the Old Patent Office Building. He said that construction had already begun and that completion was expected in about 22 months' time. Events of the past year and for the future were briefly outlined by Dr. Scott and commented upon by members of the Commission. The Commission discussed the need to stimulate gifts and donations to the Collection. The Commission then reviewed works of art presented for their study and recommended the acceptance or rejection of these works as a part of the Collection. ACCESSIONS The Collection was increased by 1,243 new acquisitions from 27 donors during the year. These include 209 paintings and drawings, 7 pieces of sculpture, 1,025 graphics, and 2 decorative art objects. Significant among these accessions are a pair of portraits attributed to Jacob Eicholtz (1776-1842), Jane Evans Tevis and Joshua Tevis, given by the Misses Emily and Nanny Chase; two early 19th-century portraits of Margaret Schley Goldsborough and Edward Terbury Goldsborough by an undetermined artist, given by Miss Mary L. Schaff; a painting, Farmyard in the Snow, by the Ash-Can School painter James Preston (1873-1962), given by Mrs. Chester Browne; two murals by Ezra Winter (1886-1949), the gift of Mrs. Winter; representative examples of the work of Frank C. Kirk (1889-1963), given by Mrs. Kirk; a mural by Griffith Baily Coale (1890-1950), given by the United States [Line; two other works by Coale, gifts of the artist's widow; a study of an unexecuted equestrian monument, Work Horse, given by the artist Anna Hyatt Huntington (born in 1876); a large abstract painting by Charles Green Shaw (born 1892), given by the artist; 1,000 19th-century engravings, the gift of Joseph V. Reed; and a 248 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 watercolor, The Sea, Maine, 1921, by John Marin (1870-1953), acquired by purchase. The U.S. Department of Labor transferred 150 paintings executed by various American artists under the auspices of the Works Progress Administration during the 1930's. Included among these are works by Morris Graves (born 1910), Ivan Albright (born 1897), and Jerome Myers (1867-1940). In addition, the department of zoology, Museum of Natural History, transferred two paintings by James Henry Moser (1854-1913), The Still Hunt and Where the Millions Have Gone. A group of 20th-century paintings and drawings was made available for the Collection's lending service through the generosity of Olin Dows. The Catherine Walden Myer Fund The following was purchased from the Myer fund (established to secure first-class works of art for the use and benefit of the NCFA) : 1964-2-1 watercolor. The Sea, Maine, 1921, by John Marin (1870-1953). The Henry Ward Ranger Fund According to a provision of the Henry Ward Ranger bequest, paintings purchased by the Council of the National Academy of Design from the fund provided by the bequest and assigned to American art institutions may be claimed during the 5-year period beginning 10 years after the death of the artist represented. The following painting was considered for action by the Smithsonian Art Commission at its meeting December 1, 1963: No. 64. The Chiefs Canoe, oil by Belmore Browne (1880-1954), was accepted to become a permanent accession. Alice Pike Barney Memorial Fund Additions to the principal during the year amounting to $2, 305. 10 increased the total invested sums in the Alice Pike Barney Memorial Fund to $47,014.08. The Alice Pike Barney Memorial Lending Collection Forty-three works of art were loaned through the year, and 23 works were returned. Fifty-six paintings were examined, and priorities were established for the restoration of paintings and frames. Seven works are now in the process of restoration. NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS 249 Harold Colborn of Washington, D.C., donated to the collection Madame R. by Alice Pike Barney. THE COLLECTION Loans to Other Institutions Amon Carter Museum of Western Art, Fort Worth, Tex. 1 Archives of American Art, Detroit, Mich. 2 Arts Council of Great Britain, London, England 1 Direzione Belle Arti, Venice, Italy 1 Gallery of Modern Art, New York, N.Y. 1 Los Angeles County Fair Association, Pomona, Calif. 1 Marycrest College, Rock Island, 111. 1 Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, Fla. 1 Newark Museum, Newark, N.J. 1 Stadtisches Museum Haus Koekkoek, Kleve, Western Germany 1 University of California Art Gallery, Santa Barbara, Calif. 1 University Gallery, Gainesville, Fla. 10 University Museum, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. 1 University of Wisconsin Art Gallery, Madison, Wis. 2 Yellowstone County Fine Arts Center, Billings, Mont. 12 Total 37 Works of Art on Loan to the Federal Government Bureau of Internal Revenue 2 Bureau of the Budget 8 Federal Aviation Agency 1 Interstate Commerce Commission 10 National Science Foundation 3 Office of Economic Opportunity 1 Smithsonian Institution 53 U.S. Civil Service Commission 5 U.S. Department of Justice 10 U.S. Department of Labor 7 U.S. Department of Treasury 2 U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia 6 U.S. Senate 7 White House 91 White House (Office of the Vice President) 9 White House (Office of Special Assistant to the President) 1 1 White House: (Office of S.R. for Trade Negotiations) 1 (Plans for Progress) 3 Total 230 250 smithsonian year 1965 Restoration During the year 10 paintings were restored by Harold F. Cross, 2 by Ben B. Johnson, 1 by H. Stewart Treviranus, and 1 by Janice W. Hines. In addition, Mr. Cross examined paintings in the collections for condition, so as to establish a priority program for restoration preliminary to reinstallation in the Old Patent Office Building. Sixteen paintings by Albert Pinkham Ryder were examined by Sheldon Keck in anticipation of a special restoration project on these works. SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS The following chronological summary of the past year's special exhibitions reflects the NCFA's new awareness of its responsibility and potential as the Federal Government's primary agent for the recognition and encouragement of the Nation's artists. July 24-August 13, 1964. Fourth All- Army Art Exhibition The 20 final prize-winning works — 4 each in the categories of oil, watercolor, printmaking, drawing, and mixed media — selected after a series of competitive exhibitions held at Army installations around the world, comprised the exhibition. July 25- August 13, 1964. Potomac Appalachian Trail Club The Club's exhibition followed the Trail — through photo- graphs— its whole length, showing the opportunities for enjoyment and study of nature. A full program of talks, demonstrations, and slide showings was presented in the Natural History Building's auditorium throughout the period of exhibition. August 22-September 10, 1964. Sixth Bdsnnial Creative Crafts Exhibition The Creative Crafts Council of Washington, representing seven local craftsmen's associations, sponsored this exhibition of a wide variety of craftwork by their members. Among other crafts the show included original designs in ceramics, textiles, metalwork, and weaving. September 20-October 8, 1964. Ancient Rock Paintings and Engravings The exhibition contained 26 panels composed of photographs, casts, original surface prints, and drawings which surveyed pre- historic painting and carving in areas all over the world. The emphasis of the selection was on recent discoveries in the Great Lakes region of the United States. Circulated by the Smith- sonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. national collection of fine arts 251 September 20-October 8, 1964. The Capital Area Art Exhibi- tion Sponsored by the Landscape Club of Washington, D.C. A wide variety of representational subject matter was included in the 1 22 paintings, graphics, and sculptures selected for the show by the Club's jury. October 17-November 5, 1964. 71st Annual Exhibition, Society of Washington Artists Ninety-seven paintings and sculptures by artists from the Washing- ton area were selected by the Society. October 17-November 5, 1964. Wildlife Paintings of Basil Ede Fifty-one watercolor paintings of birds by the contemporary British artist Basil Ede comprised the exhibition. The showing was jointly sponsored by the British Embassy, the English Speaking Union, and the Audubon Society of the Central Atlantic States. November 14-December 3, 1964. Watercolors by "Pop" Hart The exhibition contained 30 observations in watercolor of the life and peoples of North Africa, the West Indies, Mexico, and the South Seas by the colorful American artist George Overbury Hart. Circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. November 14-December 13, 1964. One Hundred Books from Finland The exhibition, organized by the Finnish Publishers' Association, displayed a large selection of recent volumes from several popular presses of Finland. NCFA's presentation added several antique books, fabrics, and artifacts from Finland. December 13, 1964-January 3, 1965. 27th Annual American Art League The American Art League's annual exhibition included 126 paintings, graphics, and sculptures by area artists. December 15, 1964-January 5, 1965. Vases from the Etruscan Cemetery at Cerveteri Fifty antique ceramics, primarily dating from the 6th and 5th centuries, B.C., comprised the exhibition. The material was lent from an Italian collection. Circulated by the American Federation of Arts. January 9-28, 1965. Operation Palette II — The Navy Today The exhibition, sponsored by the Department of the Navy, was drawn from its large collection of paintings and drawings commis- sioned as a record of the Navy's activities and personnel. One hundred and twenty works were shown. February 9-22, 1965. Swedish Folk Art Nearly 400 objects, mostly of 18th- and 19th-century date, were 252 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 selected for exhibition by the Nordiska Museet of Stockholm. Kitchen implements and farm tools, as well as major pieces of furniture and objects connected with ceremonial events such as weddings, displayed a deep-rooted concern for the quality of every- day surroundings and a refinement of design that is characteristic of the Scandinavian manufacture. Circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. February 28-March 21, 1965. The Dead Sea Scrolls of Jordan Fourteen scrolls and scroll fragments were the main feature of the exhibit, but it included objects excavated from the religious com- munity which produced and preserved them. Explanatory maps, photographs, and charts coordinated the archeological treasures into a unified presentation of the story of the scrolls' discovery, the people and culture which produced them, and their contempo- rary importance to researchers in history, theology, and archeology. Circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. March 8-April 5, 1965. Danish Abstract Art This selection of work, ranging in date from 1938 through 1964 by 10 of Denmark's pioneering painters and sculptors, presented an ample experience of the development of contemporary abstract artistic expression in Denmark. Circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. April 28-May 16, 1965. Meddsval Frescoes from Yugoslavia This exhibition of approximately 90 full-sized facsimiles of frescoes from Yugoslavian churches offered a rare opportunity to view monumental, Byzantine-style painting of the 11th through 14th centuries. The copies of the originals were made under the super- vision of the Gallery of Frescoes in Belgrade, which organized the exhibition, and were of very fine quality. For NCFA the presentation of this exhibition had an added significance — it inaugurated the remodeled Art Hall. By combining the Foyer Gallery and Art Hall display areas, the NCFA was able to present the largest display of the murals in the United States. The NCFA and Yugoslav Embassy cooperated in playing host to the Dumbarton Oaks Byzantine Symposium in connection with this exhibition. Circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. May 28-July 5, 1965. Stuart Davis Memorial Exhibition The Stuart Davis Memorial Exhibition was certainly one of the the most important exhibitions in NCFA's history. The show was intended as a memorial tribute to one of the commanding figures in 20th-century American painting. This evaluation of the status NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS 253 of Stuart Davis could be defined by bringing together representative works from the whole range of his artistic lifetime as well as con- centrating on presentation of paintings of outstanding excellence. One hundred and twenty-seven of Davis's works — from an early watercolor portrait of 1911 to several canvases left unfinished at his death in 1964 — were lent at NCFA's request from 50 private and museum collections. NGFA coordinated the exhibition's tour to the Art Institute of Chicago, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, and the Art Galleries of the University of California at Los Angeles. The exhibit was opened by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, and dis- tinguished guests included Mrs. Stuart Davis, her son Earl, and Mrs. Edith Halpert. June 5-17, 1965. "Draw, Cut, Scratch, Etch — Print!" Fifty prints by American artists, in all major graphic media and dating from the early 19th century to the present, made up this exhibition, circulated by International Business Machines. June 5-27, 1965. Mother and Child in Modern Art The exhibition was made up of 20 paintings, 20 prints and draw- ings, and 7 sculptures, all related to the theme of maternity. Display of the works of 47 artists produced a great range of style and points of view. Circulated by the American Federation of Arts. SPECIAL PROJECTS White House Changing Exhibitions The first in a series of exhibitions of modern American painting and prints has been hung in the Executive Wing of the White House under the supervision of the director and with the assistance of Adelyn Breeskin and Donald McClelland. The rotating exhibition presently consists of 38 paintings and 53 prints by outstanding American artists of the 20th century and has been made possible by loans from a number of museums, collectors, and galleries. White House Festival of the Arts The director and Mrs. Breeskin served as art advisers for the first White House Festival of the Arts held on June 14, 1965. The Festival was concerned with both the visual and performing arts and presented the best of our art today. The paintings selected ranged from the realism of Andrew Wyeth to the "op art" of Richard 254 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Anuszkiewicz. The painting exhibition was designed and installed by Harry Lowe, curator of exhibits. Joseph Henry Statue In preparation for the Smithson Bicentennial Celebration, Harry Zichterman coordinated the task of cleaning and refinishing the Joseph Henry statue in front of the Smithsonian Building. Before restora- tion was initiated the metal and corrosive deposits of the statue were analyzed by the Conservation Research Laboratory of the Smithsonian Institution. Art-In-Embassies Program The State Department's Art-in-Embassies program, under the direction of Mrs. Nancy Kefauver, has been assisted by the National Collection of Fine Arts. The program's purpose is to bring American art to our embassies and in turn to improve our cultural image abroad. The National Collection now serves as a repository and clearinghouse for the Project's collection of paintings, prints, sculpture, and other objects prior to sending these works abroad. Dr. Scott also serves as a member of the Executive Committee for this important program. Educational Research Project The National Collection of Fine Arts, the American Association of Museums, the Graduate School of Education, Harvard University, and the Arts and Humanities Branch of the Office of Education are sponsoring a survey study, conducted by Bartlett Hayes, Jr., director of the Addison Gallery, the purpose of which is to investigate the scope and effectiveness of existing museum programs of educational art exhibits in the United States, in order to determine how these programs may be extended, supplemented, coordinated, and strengthened. Area Redevelopment Administration The National Collection of Fine Arts entered in a contract with the Area Redevelopment Administration to provide professional evalua- tions of proposals the latter receives in the fields of arts and crafts. This involves determination of quality, acceptability, and the potential of items produced under the proposal to sustain a livelihood for crafts- men and their associates. A study of private and governmental NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS 255 activities in this field is being made under the supervision of the director and staff by Charles Counts (special consultant), who is pri- marily concerned with this project. LIBRARY OF THE NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS AND THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY Ending a 12-year period when no full-time staff member was assigned to the library, regular operation was resumed in November 1964. The library now serves the National Portrait Gallery as well as the National Collection of Fine Arts. Although some new books and journals were acquired during the period mentioned, there were omissions of many important books and exhibition catalogs of the past decade; concentrated ordering of some of the most important of these has been a top priority project. The most important aspects of renewed activity during the year were the addition of a second staff member, the library assistant, in January 1965, and the move of the library collection to more spacious and attractive temporary quarters in April. The arrival of the library assistant provided the resources needed to give proper attention to the bureau library's own acquisitions and loan records as well as to the physical collection itself, and also enabled the reestablishment of reference service to the Institution's growing staff. During the year the library ordered 334 titles and 167 titles were cataloged. The slide collection was augmented by the addition of 181 slides, 46 of which were of the work of Albert Pinkham Ryder. Notable gifts received by the library during the year were: The Graphic Work of Mary Cassatt; a Catalogue Raisonne, by Adelyn D. Breeskin, New York, 1948, gift of the author; six catalogs of con- temporary art, by Roman Norbert Ketterer, Lugano, Switzerland, gift of the author; Portraits in Delaware, 1700-1850, published by the National Society of Colonial Dames of America, Delaware Chapter, Wilmington, 1951, gift of the Society; and The Arts in Early American History, by Walter Muir Whitehill (bibliography by Wendall and Jane Garrett), Chapel Hill, 1965, gift of the Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Va. The library must continue to build its strength as a general art reference collection. The following areas of concentration, however, are to be developed in depth to serve the special interests of the spon- soring bureaus: American painting and sculpture; portraits in all media, especially American portraits; American biography and history; and the 20th-century art of all countries. 256 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 PUBLICATIONS Publications issued by the National Collection of Fine Arts are as follows: Preliminary Catalogue listing of Paintings, Drawings, and Sculpture, 127 pp., no. 41449-64. Preliminary Catalogue Listing of Prints, 73 pp., no 44625-64. Stuart Davis, 98 pp., 63 ills. (Smithsonian Publication 4614). Four catalogs of the Traveling Exhibition Service were issued: Medieval Frescoes from Yugoslavia, 32 pp., 31 ills. (Smithsonian Publi- cation 4594). American Primitive Water colors, 10 pp. text, 5 ills. (Smithsonian Publi- cation 4591). Sketches by Constable, 32 pp. text, 56 ills. (Smithsonian Publication 4610). Traveling Exhibitions 1965-66. 61 pp., 19 ills. (Smithsonian Publi- cation 4609). Leaflets were published in connection with the following Traveling Exhibition Service exhibitions: Watercolors by Pop Hart (Smithsonian Publication 4607). Brazilian Tapestries (Smithsonian Publication 4592). Old Master Prints. Brass Rubbings from England. Eugene Berman: New Stage Designs. Other publications by staff members: Richard P. Wunder, Architectural and Ornament Drawings of the 16th to the Early 19th Centuries in the Collection of the University of Michigan Museum of Art, 106 pp., Ann Arbor, 1965. ADDITIONS TO THE STAFF During the past year the following were added to the staff: Abigail Booth, museum technician; Adelyn Dohme Breeskin, special consultant; Waunita E. Franz, secretary; Kenneth R. Despertt, aide; James G. Duggin, photographer; Shirley Harren, library assistant, NCFA-NPG; Chris Karras, information specialist; Harry Lowe, curator of exhibits; Edith T. Martin, clerk-typist; Ronald D. Miller, aide; Priscilla B. Porter, museum technician; Jesse R. Price, clerk; Louise W. Robinson, administrative officer; William H. Truettner, assistant curator, painting and sculpture; Bayard Underwood, on contract as architectural con- sultant; William Walker, librarian, NCFA-NPG; Richard P. Wunder, NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS 257 curator, painting and sculpture; Marjorie S. Zapruder, registrar; Harry W. Zichterman, administrative officer. STAFF ACTIVITIES Members of the staff devoted considerable time to the study of the collections and new accessions. Research projects were carried out in fields represented by the collections. Staff members also served as jurors for a number of art exhibitions both locally and nationally. Advice was given with respect to 51 5 works of art brought to the Collec- tion for expert opinion by the curatorial staff. In addition, several thousand requests for information were received by mail and telephone. David W. Scott, director, represented the Smithsonian Institution at the opening of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; served as juror at the Huntington Gallery of Art (Huntington, W. Va.); served as guest lecturer and critic at Pennsylvania State College; published "A Restoration of the West Portal of Saint Sernin of Toulouse" in the Art Bulletin, Fall, 1964; spoke on "Traveling Exhibitions" for the annual meeting of the Arts Councils of America, held in Washington; served on the Executive Council of the Art for Embassies program of the Department of State. Mrs. Adelyn D. Breeskin, special consultant for Fine Arts, was a member of the jury for the Carnegie International Exhibition, Pitts- burgh, Pa.; a member of the Board for the Print Council of America; lectured as an American Specialist throughout the Orient for the Department of State; and lectured at the Newark Museum on "The Rise of Women Artists." Donald McClelland, assistant to the director, lectured on Albert Pinkham Ryder at the University of Chicago and at the National Gallery of Art; served as member of the Board for the Mackinac Historical Society; and acted as a consultant for Fine Arts to the National Headquarters of the Episcopal Church. Richard P. Wunder, curator of painting and sculpture, served as director of the Drawing Society; was an adviser to the Museum of Early American Folk Art, New York, and the Olana Preservation Committee. Harry Lowe, curator of exhibits, represented NCFA and the Ameri- can Association of Museums at the opening of the St. Petersburg, Fla., Museum of Art; lectured at the annual meeting of the Tennessee Asso- ciation of Museums; lectured on "The American Tate" for the Centennial Club of Nashville, Tenn., and on "What Makes the Difference in Art?" for the National Conference of the Society of Technical Writers and Publishers. 789-427—66 28 258 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Rowland Lyon, curator of the lending collection and information service, exhibited in two print exhibitions; acted as a consultant to the Society of Washington Artists and the Landscape Club of Washington. Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service The National Collection of Fine Arts was instructed (PR 95 of the 75th Congress, 1938) to present exhibits throughout the United States in order "to foster ... a growing appreciation of art, both of past and contemporary time." The Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibi- tion Service (SITES), a unit of the National Collection of Fine Arts, serves to implement the legislative mandates given to the National Collection of Fine Arts. SITES circulates exhibitions of cultural and educational value throughout the United States and Canada as a service to museums, galleries, colleges, libraries, and their public. The negotiations, preparations, and organization of these circulated exhibi- tions are undertaken by the Traveling Exhibition Service, a self-sup- porting nonprofit organization financed through its rental fees. The year 1964-1965 was one of great changes for the Traveling Exhibition Service. Mrs. Dorothy Van Arsdale assumed the position of chief, Mrs. Nancy Padnos, assistant chief; Miss Barboura Flues became registrar and then exhibits coordinator, and Mrs. Louis Rose became registrar. Additions to the staff during the year are Mrs. Michael Taylor, exhibits coordinator; Mrs. Sarah McGurgan, typist; Herbert Hodge, clerk; Mrs. Sadie Curtin, accounting technician. With these changes the staff for the next year includes, besides the chief and assistant chief, four exhibits coordinators, an accounting clerk, a registrar, a typist, and file clerk. As soon as space is found, an administrative secretary will be added, and SITES will be in a much improved position to expand its offerings and service. TRAVEL In November 1964, Mrs. Van Arsdale visited three museums in San Francisco, one in Portland, Oreg., two in Seattle, one in Denver, one in Omaha, and one in Minneapolis. Mrs. Van Arsdale, Mrs. Padnos, and staff members also visited museums and collections along the eastern seaboard. Mrs. Padnos left for Europe the early part of June to visit museums and galleries in England, France, Italy, Switzerland, and Germany. NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS 259 EXHIBITIONS The Service has initiated 41 new shows this year and continued 81 from previous years. It has negotiated an exhibition of Treasures from Turkey. Among exhibitors are 106 public schools and 57 libraries, community centers, etc. The Service has made a total of about 586 bookings this past year and, with a total budget of approximately $200,000, has had an estimated 1,000,000 viewers. Exhibits Continued From Prior Years 1956-57: Japan II by Werner Bischof. 1957-58: The American City in the 19th Century; Theatrical Posters of the Gay Nineties. 1958-59: Advertising in 19th Century America; Religious Subjects in Modern Graphic Arts. 1959-60: Brazilian Printmakers; Images of War; Portraits of Greatness by Yousuf Karsh; Paintings by Young Africans; Japan I by Werner Bischof. 1960-61 : The America of Currier and Ives; American Art Nouveau Posters; The Spirit of the Japanese Print; Americans — A View from the East; Mies van der Rohe; Irish Architecture of the Georgian Period; Brasilia — A New Capital; Designed for Silver; American Textiles; The Image of Physics; The Beginnings of Flight; Tropical Africa I; Tropical Africa II; Symphony in Color; Paintings and Pastels by Children of Tokyo; Hawaiian Children's Art. 1961-62: Physics and Painting: UNESCO Watercolor Reproductions; Caribbean Journey; The Swedish Film; The Story of a Winery; Contemporary Italian Drawings; Contemporary Swedish Prints; Japanese Posters; The Face of Viet Nam; Le Corbusier — Chapel at Ronchamp; The Hidden World of Crystals; Children Look at UNESCO; My Friends. 1962-63: Eskimo Carvings; Holland; The New Generation: John Sloan; American Prints Today — 1962; Contemporary American Drawings I; Eskimo Graphic Art II; Pakistan Stone Rubbings: Contemporary Canadian Architecture; Twelve Churches; Today's American Wallcoverings; Craftsmen of the City; The Tradition of French Fabrics; A Child's World of Nature; West German Students' Art; Historic Annapolis; The Old Navy. 1963-64: Alvar Aalto; Albers: Interaction of Color; Africa, Antarctica, the Amazon; American Kindergarten Art; Contemporary American Landscape Architecture; Fifty Years of American Prints; Recent American Synagogue Architecture; Birds of Asia; The Bird that Never Was; Prints by Mary Cassatt; Craftsmen of the Eastern 260 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 States; Finnish Rugs and Tapestries by Oili Maki; Antonio Frasconi 1952-63; Graphics 163; Hearts and Flowers; Indian Miniatures; 7,000 Years of Iranian Art; The Nile; Treasures from the Plantin-Moretus Museum; Religious Themes by Old Masters; Eero Saarinen; Swedish Design Today; Swedish Folk Art; Swiss Posters; Turner Watercolors; Washington — My City. Exhibitions Initiated in 1965 Archeology Dead Sea Scrolls Government of Jordan, Smithsonian Insti- tution, Dr. Gus W. Van Beek. Paintings and Sculpture American Primitive Watercolors . Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Collec- tion, Williamsburg, Va. Arte Programmata Olivetti Corporation, New York City. Danish Abstract Art Danish Artists' Committee; Danish Embassy. Watercolors by Pop Hart . . . Miss Jeanne O. Hart, Kew Gardens, N.Y. Pueblo Indian Paintings .... Riverside Museum, New York City. Modern Watercolors from Swedish Institute, Stockholm; Swedish Sweden. Embassy. The Art of the Yoruba .... Dr. Lawrence Longo, University of Pennsylvania. Medieval Frescoes from Gallery of Frescoes, Belgrade; Embassy of Yugoslavia. Yugoslavia. Drawings and Prints Contemporary American Norfolk Museum of Arts and Sciences, Drawings II. Norfolk, Va. William Blake; Poet, Printer, William Blake Trust, London; Trianon Prophet. Press, Paris. Bridges, Tunnels, and Water- Smithsonian Institution, Division of Civil works. Engineering, Robert M. Vogel. Prints by Jacques Callot .... National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Lessing J. Rosenwald; Robert L. Baumfeld. Sketches by Constable Victoria and Albert Museum, London, Graham Reynolds. Contemporary Fine Presses in The Philadelphia College of Art. America. NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS 261 Eskimo Graphic Axt III . . . . Eskimo Art, Inc., Ann Arbor, Mich., Eugene Power. The Fabulous Decade Free Library of Philadelphia; Miss Dorothy Hale Litchfield. Kokoschka: King Lear, Apul- Marlborough Fine Arts, London. ian Journey, Hellas. Prints from the Mourlot Press. . Mourlot Imprimeurs, Paris. Old Master Prints National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Lessing J. Rosenwald. Decorative Arts American Costumes Index of American Design, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.G. American Furniture Index of American Design, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Eugene Berman: New Stage De- Artist; M. Knoedler and Company, New signs. York City. Brazilian Tapestries Senor Genaro de Carvalho, Bahia, Brazil. Masters of Ballet Design .... Spreckels Collection, California Palace of the Legion of Honor, San Francisco, Calif. Murals in Lace Museum of Contemporary Crafts, New York City; Collection Mme. Luba Krejci, Czechoslovakia. History The American Flag Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Be My Guest ! Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Brass Rubbings from England . Mrs. Lewis Purnell, Jamaica, B.W.I. World Fairs Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Children's Art Paintings by Young Balinese . . Collection of Mrs. Gordon Wiles, Encino, Calif. Paintings by Mexican Children . The Phoenix Art Museum. National High School Prints . . F. Louis Hoover, Normal State University, Normal, 111. Natural History and Science Ancient Rock Paintings and En- Cranbrook Institute of Science, Cranbrook, gravings. Mich. 262 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Colors and Patterns in the Animal CIBA Corporation, Basle, Switzerland; Kingdom. Prof. Dr. A. Portmann. The Eskimo in a Changing Charles Gimpel, Gimpel Fils, London. World. The Stonecrop Family; Variations San Diego Museum of Natural History, Dr. on a Pattern. Reid Moran. Photography African Folkways of Angola and National Geographic Society; Museum of Mozambique. Primitive Art, New York City. The Color of Water Jeanette Klute, Photographer; Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, N.Y. The Eloquent Light Mrs. Nancy Newhall, George Eastman House, Rochester, N.Y.; Ansel Adams, Carmel, Calif. Architecture Pier Luigi Nervi American Institute of Architects, New York City. Freer Gallery of Art Freer Gallery of Art John A. Pope, Director THE COLLECTIONS Twenty-five objects were added to the collections by purchase as follows : Glass 65.16. Egyptian (Roman period), possibly from Alexandria. Bowl of purplish translucent matrix; ribbed on the outside with opaque distorted spirals in millefiori technique. Slightly iridescent. Said to have been found in northwest Iran. Height: 0.052; diameter: 0.175. Metalwork 64.10. Persian, Sasanian, 4th century A.D. Bowl, shallow, silver, on low ring foot, with a Bacchanalian triumphal scene in flat relief against a gilded background; in the exergue, a panther drinking from a vase, flanked by a musician on either side. Small areas of dirt accretions in interior; reverse oxidized and partly covered with earthy accretions. Height: 0.041; diameter: 0.219; weight: 1 lb. 14 oz. (Illustrated.) Paintings 64.9. Chinese, Sung, 13th century. "Chien-tzu with a Shrimp Net." Kakemono, ink on paper. Inscription and one seal on the painting. Height: 0.746; width: 0.279. (Illustrated.) 65.9. Chinese, Sung, 13th century, attributed to Hu Chih-fu. "Saky- amuni Emerging from the Mountains." Hanging scroll, ink on paper. Inscription and two seals on the painting. Height : 0.920; width: 0.317. 265 266 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 65.10. Chinese, Ch'ing, dated 1759, by Chin Nung (1687-after 1764). Plum blossoms. Ink and color on paper. Written label with one seal on outside mounting; inscription and three seals on the painting. Height: 1.302; width: 0.282. 65.13. Chinese, Ch'ing, 17th century, by Hung-jen. Landscape. Hanging scroll, ink on paper. Artist's inscription and seal, and three collectors' seals, on the painting. Height: 0.838; width: 0.419. 64.8. Japanese, Edo, Nanga school, by Uragami Gyokudo (1745— 1820). "San Chu Dankin." Landscape in ink, on paper. Height: 1.286; width: 0.515. 64.11. Japanese, Edo, 18th century, Nanga school, by Ikeno Taiga (1723-76). Landscape: "Red Cliff." Ink and color on paper. Height: 1.308; width: 0.568. 64.12. Japanese, Edo, 18th century, Nanga school, by Ikeno Taiga (1723-76). Landscape: "Yo-yang Tower." Ink and color on paper. Height: 1.304; width: 0.568. (Illustrated.) 64.13. Japanese, Namboku Cho — Ashikaga, 14th century, Yamatoe school. Portrait of Kasuga Wakamiya. Ink, color and gold on silk. Height: 0.853; width: 0.396. 65.1. Japanese, Ashikaga, 15th century, Yamatoe school. Portrait of Fujiwara-no-Kamatari (A.D. 614-669), accompanied by two sons. Ink, color and gold on silk. Height: 0.845; width: 0.381. 65.5. Japanese, Edo, Kano school, by Kano Naonobu (1607-50). "Genji Monogatari" — Tales of Genji, Ukifune, Chapter LI. Ink and color on paper. One of a pair of screens: 65.5-65.6. Height: 1.537; width: 3.526. 65.6. Japanese, Edo, Kano school, by Kano Naonobu (1607-50). "Genji Monogatari" — Tales of Genji, Yugao, Chapter IV. Ink and color on paper. One of a pair of screens: 65.5-65.6. Height: 1.537; width: 3.526. Pottery 65.2. Chinese, Ming, mid-1 5th century. Jardiniere with footed base attached, and quatrefoil rim. Clay: fine white porcelain, thick. Glaze: transparent, faintly bluish, streaky in some areas. Decoration: in underglaze blue, a different flower spray on each side (lotus, peony, -?- and camellia) ; small sprays on base and foot. Height: 0.140; width: 0.260. (Illustrated.) 65.3. Chinese, Six Dynasties. Small dish on high footrim with lip cut in quatrefoil form. Clay: transparent, creamy FREER GALLERY OF ART 267 white, fine. Glaze: transparent, glossy, faintly bluish in droplets. Decoration: none. Height: 0.045; diameter: 0.133. 65.4. Chinese, Ming, Hsiian-te period (1426-35). Dish with slightly flaring plain rim. Clay: fine white porcelain. Glaze: transparent. Decoration: five-clawed dragons among clouds in overglaze iron red inside and out; six-character Hsiian-te mark in under-glaze blue on base. Height: 0.037; diameter: 0.190. 65.8. Chinese, T'ang. Rhyton in the shape of a duck. Clay: soft light buff pottery. Glaze: transparent lead glaze with fine crackle streaked with green and orangey brown; base unglazed. Decoration: carved in relief for the wings and tail feathers of the bird and to show floral motifs around the cup. Height: 0.124; length: 0.172. 65.11- Chinese, T'ang, Hsing ware. Five-lobed shallow bowls with 65.12. low foot. Clay: hard, fine-grained grayish buff stoneware. Glaze: transparent, showing slightly bluish in thick areas; base only partially glazed by accident. Decoration: a floral device stamped inside center of bowl. Height: 0.045; diam- eter: 0.127; diameter of base: 0.057 (65.11) and 0.054 (65.12). 65.14. Chinese, T'ang. Ovoid jar with flaring foot and three loop handles at the neck. Clay: whitish buff stoneware. Glaze: transparent, slightly creamy stopping unevenly short of base. Decoration: none. Height: 0.165; diameter: 0.133. 65.15. Chinese, T'ang. Hemispherical bowl with flaring foot and thickened, turned-over rim. Clay: whitish buff stoneware. Glaze: transparent, slightly creamy, stopping unevenly short of base; unglazed inside. Decoration: none. Height: 0.092; diameter: 0.159. 65.7. Japanese, Edo, 17th century, Imari. Shallow dish with plain rim. Clay: white porcelain. Six spur marks on base. Glaze: transparent. Decoration: underglaze blue; a stylized pine tree and clouds. Outside, continuous scroll pattern. Imitation Ming Ch'eng-hua mark badly written on base. Height: 0.060; diameter: 0.298. 65.17. Japanese, Edo, 17th century, Imari. Shallow dish with rounded rim. Clay: white porcelain. Five spur marks on base. Glaze: transparent, slightly grayish with some black specks. Decoration: underglaze blue, floral border, and in center, stylized pine tree leaning over a small plant. Out- side, two stylized lotus scrolls. Imitation Ming Ch'eng- hua mark badly written on base. Height: 0.070; diameter: 0.374. 268 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 65.18. Japanese, Edo (ca. 1700), Imari. Hexagonal vase or sake bottle with small flaring mouth. Clay: white porcelain. Glaze: dark coffee brown around bottom with white run- ning unevenly down from the top. Decoration: on white glaze at shoulder and upper part, two eagles and branches of trees in colored enamels and gilding. Height: 0.224; diameter: 0.127. Wood Sculpture 65.19. Japanese, Kamakura, late 13th century. Jizo. Decorated with kirigane; head, hands, and necklace separate; ear lobes and some beads missing; partial repair. Height: 0.355; width: 0.120. Repairs To The Collection Thirteen Chinese and Japanese paintings and screens were restored, repaired, or remounted by Mr. Sugiura, Oriental picture mounter, who also made a large number of rubbings of Chinese bronzes and sculptures. F. A. Haentschke, illustrator, remounted 91 Persian and Indian paintings. Ben Johnson, professional painting restorer, worked for some months at the Gallery, cleaning, repairing, and otherwise restoring 21 American paintings. Mr. Sugiura has also been working on a group of 11 Chinese and Japanese paintings and screens belonging to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, 6 of which have been completed; this work is being done in exchange for a Chinese bronze ting which has been incorporated into the Study Collection. In addition, he has completely cleaned, re- paired, and retouched three Far Eastern screens belonging to the Department of State. Changes In Exhibition Changes in exhibitions amounted to 39, which were as follows: American art — paintings 36 Chinese art — pottery 1 Near Eastern art — metalwork 2 FREER GALLERY OF ART 269 LIBRARY The library has been well used during the year, both by the staff and by students doing reference work. It also remains a continuing source of information for casual visitors wanting less scholarly material on the objects displayed in the galleries. The slide collection has been greatly expanded, with the acquisition of over 2,000 slides. Use of this resource has nearly tripled in the past year, as indicated by the number of slides borrowed by both staff members (73 percent) and by outside lecturers (27 percent). Most of the slides were provided by the photographic laboratory. During the year, 452 items were acquired by the library and inte- grated into the collection; 257 of these were by purchase, and 195 were by exchange and gift. In addition, 286 photographs were added to the study files. The year's cataloging projects totaled over 1,000 entries; 488 analytics were made, and 3,022 cards were added to the catalog. There were 330 requests for information by telephone and letter. Visitors were frequent: 670 scholars and students who were not members of the Freer staff used the library resources, 4 saw and studied either the Herzfeld archives or the Washington Manuscripts, and 3 came to see the library installation. The following gifts deserve special mention because of their out- standing quality. The Ellen Bayard Weedon Foundation has made it possible to purchase the following items: Pelliot, Paul — Toumchouq (Paris, 1961-64, two volumes); and Ota Ryo — Seishi kakei dai-jiten: Great dictionary of family names and family lines (Tokyo, 1963 reprint, three volumes). The library is receiving from the Felix and Helen Juda Foundation the volumes from the Hiraki collection of Ukiyoe prints currently being published in Tokyo, as well as a copy of Shin Saiiki-ki: New accounts of Chinese Turkestan — the journal of the Otani expedition (Tokyo, 1937). Richard P. Gale has also presented a set of 125 slides taken from his excellent collection of Japanese paintings. The gener- osity which makes these acquisitions possible is greatly appreicated. PUBLICATIONS New editions of two publications were issued by the Gallery as follows: Freer Gallery of Art Occasional Papers, Volume I, Number 4: James McNeill Whistler, A Biographical Outline Illustrated from the Collections of the Freer Gallery of Art, by Burns A. Stubbs (Smith- sonian Institution Publication 3994), originally published in 1950. 270 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Hokusai: Paintings and Drawings in the Freer Gallery of Art, by Harold P. Stern (Smithsonian Institution Publication 4419), originally published in 1960. Publications of staff members were as follows: Cahill, James F. Ettinghausen, Richard. Gettens, R. J. "Li Kung-lin". In: Encyclopedia of World Art. New York, McGraw-Hill, 1964. Vol. 9, pp. 247-251, pis. 132-136. Introduction to: Chang Dai-chien; exhibition of paintings Oct. 22-Nov. 2, 1963. New York, Hirschl & Adler Galleries, Inc., 1963, 27 pp., illus. Review of "Chinese Art: Painting, Callig- raphy, Stone Rubbing, Wood Engrav- ing," by Werner Speiser, Roger Goepper, and Jean Fribourg. In New York Review of Books (June 3, 1965), vol. 4, no. 9, pp. 23-24. Review of "A History of Far Eastern Art," by Sherman E. Lee. In Saturday Review (Dec. 12, 1964), vol. 47, no. 50, p. 45, illus. Review of "Cairo, City of Art and Com- merce," by Gaston Wiet, translated by Seymour Feiler. In Middle East, Wash- ington, D.C. (spring, 1965), vol. 19, no. 2, p. 243. "The Corrosion Products of Metal Antiqui- ties." In Smithsonian Annual Report for 1963, Washington, 1964, pp. 547-568, 10 plates. Review of special issue (vol. 64, no. 1) of Museums Journal. In Studies in Conserva- tion (February 1965), vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 36-37. Review of "Orichalcum and Related An- cient Alloys: Origin, Composition and Manufacture with Special Reference to the Coinage of the Roman Empire," by Earle R. Caley. In American Journal of Archaeology (January 1965), vol. 69, No. 1, p. 86. Review of "Technical Supplements" in FREER GALLERY OF ART 271 Museum News. In Studies in Conservation (February 1965), vol. 10, No. 1, p. 36. Stern, Harold P. Interview: "Nihon Kobijutsu Junkai Ten; the Traveling Exhibition of Ancient Japa- nese Art." In Nihon Bijutsu, Tokyo (Jan- uary 1965), No. 34, pp. 70-71, illus. Trousdale, William. "The Minaret of Jam; a Ghorid Monument in Afghanistan." In Archaeology (June 1965), vol. 18, No. 2, pp. 102-108, illus. PHOTOGRAPHIC LABORATORY; SALES DESK The photographic laboratory made 12,688 items during the year as follows: 7,816 prints, 966 negatives, 3,642 color slides, 171 black-and- white slides, and 93 color sheet films. At the sales desk 71,436 items were sold, comprising 6,004 publications and 65,432 reproductions (including postcards, slides, photographs, reproductions in the round, etc.). These figures indicate a marked increase in the work of both the photographic laboratory and sales desk over that of previous years. BUILDING AND GROUNDS The exterior of the building appears to be sound, with the exception of the roof, which has continued to blister. There is, however, no noticeable damage to date; the condition is being kept under close surveillance. A new bronze handrail was installed at the south entrance; during installation, the steps were damaged, and two pieces of granite had to be replaced. The sidewalk at the south entrance is in poor condition, and its improvement is under discussion; the installation of a driveway to remedy the dangerous condition at the receiving entrance is also under consideration. In the interior, new types of cases are being installed in Storage Room 2 for folding screens and outsize pictures; the latter in the past had no adequate storage space. All window sills and trims have been touched up and put into good condition. The work in the cabinet shop was divided among numerous jobs, including making and repairing furniture and equipment as the need arose. Attribution of man-hours for this year: 80 percent to installation, preservation, and restoration; 20 percent to building maintenance. Seasonal plantings in the courtyard were made and have flourished, and flower beds, first of bulbs and then of petunias, were made on the north side of the building. 272 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 ATTENDANCE The Gallery was open to the public from 9:00 to 4:30 every day except Christmas Day. The total number of visitors to come in the main entrance was 211,104, an increase of approximately 25 percent over that of the preceding year. The highest monthly attendance was in June — 31,015. There were 2,856 visitors who came to the Gallery office for various purposes — for general information, to submit objects for examination, to consult staff members, to take photographs or sketch in the galleries, to use the library, to examine objects in storage, etc. AUDITORIUM The series of illustrated lectures was continued as follows: 7964 October 73. Dr. Eleanor Consten von Erdberg, of the Rheinisch- Westphalische Technische Hochschule, Aachen, West Germany: "T'ao-t'ieh and Tao in Early Chinese Art"; attendance, 94. November 70. Dr. George C. Miles, of the American Numismatic Society, New York: "Unknotting the Knotted Column in Byzantine Architecture"; attendance, 125. 7965 January 72. William B. Trousdale, Freer Gallery of Art: "The Archaeological Exploration of Afghanistan"; attend- ance> 277. February 23. Dr. Sherman E. Lee, of the Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio: "Nuances and Connoisseur- ship in Chinese Painting"; attendance, 274. March 23. Dr. David Talbot Rice, University of Edinburgh, Scotland: "Two Rare Arabic Manuscripts in the Edinburgh Library"; attendance, 119. April 20. P. R. Ramachandra Rao, Critic of Indian Art, Hyderabad, India: "The Buddhist Sculpture of Southeast India"; attendance, 222. The auditorium was also used by ten outside organizations for 31 meetings, with a total attendance of 5,070. Silver bowl. Persian metalwork, Sasanian, 4th century A.D. 64.10, Freer Gallery of Art. Jardiniere. Chinese pottery, Ming dynasty, mid-1 5th century A.D. 65.2, Freer Gallery of Art. 1 '' II 4H I .«, * i i fR t *> ' * ,ti 7 •• >- £ # ff ? . U *, <8 *> f * 0^"~ i>/i, Landscape: Yo-yang Tower. Japanese painting, Edo period, 18th century A.D., Nanga school, by Ikeno Taiga (1723-1776). 64.12, Freer Gallery of Art. Right, Chinese painting, Chien-tzu with a Shrimp Net. Sung dynasty, 13th century A.D. 64.9, Freer Gallery of Art. FREER GALLERY OF ART 273 STAFF ACTIVITIES The work of the staff members has been devoted to the study of new accessions, of objects contemplated for purchase, and of objects sub- mitted for examination, as well as to individual research projects in the fields represented by the collection of Chinese, Japanese, Persian, Arabic, and Indian materials. In all, 10,627 objects and 1,499 photo- graphs were examined, and 781 Oriental language inscriptions were translated for outside individuals and institutions. By request, 36 groups totaling 798 persons met in the exhibition galleries for docent service by the staff members. Eight groups totaling 144 persons were given docent service by staff members in the storage rooms. Among the visitors were 188 distinguished foreign scholars or per- sons holding official positions in their own countries, who came here under the auspices of the Department of State to study museum admin- istration and practices in this country. TECHNICAL LABORATORY Mrs. Elisabeth W. FitzHugh, assistant in technical research since 1956, resigned in December. This position has been temporarily filled by student-intern William T. Chase of the Conservation Center, Insti- tute of Fine Arts, New York University. Reports were made on a total of 89 objects that passed through the laboratory. Among these, 30 Freer objects, exclusive of paintings, were examined and/or treated. Twenty-one paintings, mostly by James McNeill Whistler, were cleaned, repaired, and resurfaced. Among these, two were relined and eight were put on new stretchers. Twenty objects and paintings being considered for purchase were examined. Eighteen objects owned privately and by other museums were examined and/or repaired. Thirty-six identifications were made by X-ray diffraction analysis. Forty-one inquiries were answered by letter and numerous inquiries by telephone. Technical studies continued on Chinese bronzes in preparation of a forthcoming catalog on Ancient Chinese Bronze Ceremonial Vessels in the Freer Gallery of Art. Further studies were made on the corrosion products of metal antiquities. The editing of IIC Abstracts, published by the International Institute of Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, London, was continued. 789-427—66 29 274 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 LECTURES BY STAFF MEMBERS By invitation, the following lectures were given outside the Gallery by staff members (illustrated unless otherwise noted) : 7964 August 20. Dr. Ettinghausen, in Denver, Colo., at the Denver Art Museum: "7,000 Years of Iranian Art"; attendance, 500. October 8. Mr. Gettens, in Spoleto, Italy, at the International Symposium on the Problems of Conservation of Bronze and Nonferric Metals: "The Corrosion Products of Copper Alloys and other Non-Ferrous Metal Antiqui- ties"; attendance, 75. October 9. Mr. Gettens, in Spoleto: "The Construction of Chinese Bronzes"; attendance, 75. October 72. Dr. Ettinghausen, at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia: "Man and Nature in Islam"; attendance, 80. October 72. Dr. James Cahill, at a Faculty Seminar, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.: "Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism in Chinese and Japanese Painting"; at- tendance, 75. October 29. Dr. Cahill, at the Hermitage Foundation, Norfolk, Va.: "Chinese and Japanese Art in the Freer Gallery"; attendance, 120. November 8. Dr. Ettinghausen, at the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art, Kansas City, Mo.: "Persian Art of the Islamic Period: Tradition and Change"; attendance, 300. November 73. Dr. Cahill, at the University of California, Berkeley: "Yuan Chiang and His School"; attendance, 70. November 74. Dr. Cahill, at Mills College, Oakland, Calif., and at the Society for Asian Art, San Francisco: "The Expressive Means of Later Chinese Painting"; attendance, 85 and 40, respectively. December 3. Dr. Pope, at a meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America at the Freer Gallery of Art: "Early America and the Far East"; attendance, 38. December 3. Dr. Cahill, at a meeting of the Sino-America Cultural Society, Washington, D.C.: "A Photographic Expedition to Taiwan"; attendance, 200. December 70. Dr. Ettinghausen, at the Foreign Service Institute, Wash- ington, D.C.: "Culture of the Near East" ; attendance, 17. 7965 January 29. Dr. Ettinghausen, at the University of Chattanooga, Chattanooga, Tenn.: "Tradition and Change in Iranian Art of the Islamic Period"; attendance, 200. January 30. Dr. Ettinghausen, at the University of Chattanooga: "The Main Types of Iranian Architecture, Their Origin FREER GALLERY OF ART 275 1965 and Most Important Examples", and: "Painting in the Islamic World (Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and Indian)"; attendance, 14 at each lecture. January 30. Dr. Pope, at the College Art Association meetings, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, Calif.: "Preliminary Observations on the Use of Landscape Decoration on Japanese Porcelain"; attendance, 150. January 30. Dr. Stern, at the College Art Association meetings, Los Angeles County Museum of Art: "A Self-portrait of Moronobu"; attendance, 150. February 1. Dr. Cahill, at the Cosmos Club, Washington, D.C.: "Works of Art of the Palace Museum Collection in Formosa"; attendance, 150. February 16. Dr. Cahill, at Brown University, Providence, R.I.: "The Expressive Means of Later Chinese Painting"; at- tendance, 350. February 24. Dr. Ettinghausen, at the Department of State, Washington, D.C.: "Iran, Turkey and Pakistan: The Affinity of Their Civilizations"; attendance, 750. February 26. Dr. Ettinghausen, at the Cleveland Museum of Art: "The Islamic Phase of Iranian Art: Tradition and Change"; attendance, 150. February 28. Dr. Stern, at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts; "Popular Painting of Tokugawa Japan" ; attendance, 150. March 3. Mr. Gettens, at the Museum of Natural History, Smith- sonian Institution: "Minerals in Art and Archaeol- ogy"; attendance, 678. March 10. Dr. Pope, at Oxford University, England (William Cohn Memorial Lecture): "Some Historic Collections and Collectors in China"; attendance, 160. March 12. Dr. Pope, at the Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art, London, England: "Chinese Porcelain in Early America"; attendance, 125. April 2. Dr. Pope, at the Cleveland Museum of Art: "The Rise and Fall of Angkor"; attendance, 150. April 5. Dr. Ettinghausen, at the Art Museum, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor: "Dionysian Elements in Sasanian Art"; attendance, 40. Abril 5. Dr. Stern, at Skidmore College, Faculty Seminar on Far Eastern Art and Culture: "Japanese Paintings, Prints, and Decorative Arts"; attendance, 25. April 6. Dr. Stern, at Skidmore College, student group: "Japanese Paintings, Prints, and Decorative Arts"; attendance, 300. April 29. Mr. Trousdale, at Maryland Institute, Baltimore: "The Archaeological Exploration of Afghanistan"; attendance, 150. 276 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 1965 May 11. May 22. Dr. Ettinghausen, at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston: "Dionysiac Scenes in Sasanian Art"; attendance, 121. Dr. Pope, at the Frick Collection, New York: "Chinese Porcelains in Early America"; attendance, 175. Members of the ness as follows: 1964 May 18- July 7. June 8-September 2. July 16-18. July 28. August 13-17. August 15- December 11 . September 17-18. October 1-2. October 1-23. OFFICIAL TRAVEL staff traveled outside Washington on official busi- Mr. R. C. Mielke completed a trip through the Mid- western States, where he saw the building installations in the Dayton Art Institute, Cincinnati Art Museum, John Herron Art Institute (Indianapolis), City Art Museum of St. Louis, William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art (Kansas City, Mo.), Art Institute of Chicago, Detroit Institute of Arts, Toledo Museum of Art, and Cleveland Museum of Art. Dr. Pope, in Europe, visited numerous museums and saw private collections in Geneva and Basel, Switzer- land; Paris, France; and in and near London, England. Dr. Stern, in Philadelphia, examined numerous objects at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and one private collection. Dr. Cahill, in Baltimore, examined numerous Chinese paintings at the Walters Art Gallery. Dr. Stern, in New York, attended the Exhibition of Nepalese Art at Asia House, and examined Far Eastern objects at a dealer. Mr. Trousdale, in the Near East, participated in the University of Michigan's archeological excavation at Qasr al-Hayr al-Sharqi, Syria; visited archeological sites and architectural monuments, and examined museum and private collections in Istanbul and Ankara, Turkey; in Damascus, Syria; in Tehran, Qum, Isfahan, Arbaquh, Yazd, Kirman, Bam, the Sistan area, Kishmar, Mashhad, and Robat Sharaf, Iran; and in Cairo and Alexandria, Egypt. Dr. Cahill, in Ann Arbor, Mich., attended a special committee meeting to plan for the Palace Museum Photographic Archive. Dr. Pope, in New York, examined numerous Far Eastern objects at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and at several dealers. Mr. Gettens, in Italy, attended an International Symposium on the Problem of Conservation of Bronze FREER GALLERY OF ART 277 and Nonferric Metals held at Spoleto, October 5-15; examined numerous bronzes and historical sites in Perugia, Venice, Ravenna, Ancona, and Rome, including Vatican City. October 16- Dr. Stern, in Japan, attended conferences with the December 11. Commission for the Protection of Cultural Properties of the Ministry of Education of the Government of Japan as participating member of Negotiations, Selection, and Cataloging Committees of the America- Canada Participating Museums for the Memorial Exhibition, "Masterpieces of Japanese Art," 1965- 1966. Discussions were also held with the Cultural Attache of the U.S. Embassy on plans for the next Japan-America Cultural Conference. Examined numerous objects in the Kyoto and Tokyo National Museums, at the National Institute of Art Research, various temples and private collections, and at dealers. November 5-7. Dr. Cahill, in New York, attended a meeting of the Committee on Studies of Chinese Civilization, A.C.L.S.; and examined numerous objects at several dealers. November 13-14. Dr. Ettinghausen, in New York, attended the annual meeting of the American Research Center in Egypt; and examined objects at several dealers. December 8-12. Dr. Pope, in New York, examined numerous objects at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in a private collection, and at several dealers. 1965 January 2. Dr. Ettinghausen, in Winchester, Va., examined Indian miniatures in a private collection. January 9. Dr. Pope, in New York, attended a meeting of the Advisory Committee, Asia House Gallery. January 9. Dr. Cahill, in New York, attended a meeting of the Advisory Committee, Asia House Gallery; and examined objects at several dealers. January 9. Dr. Ettinghausen, in New York, attended a meeting of the Advisory Committee, Asia House Gallery; and examined objects at several dealers. January 13-14. Dr. Ettinghausen, in Houston, Texas, visited the Museum of Fine Arts and the Exhibition of Mythologi- cal Animals, Demons, and Monsters at the University of St. Thomas; and in Dallas, visited the Museum of Fine Arts. January 25-30. Dr. Stern attended, as chairman, the College Art Association meetings held at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; and examined numerous objects at several museums, private collections, and dealers. 278 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 1965 January 26- February 2. February 1-2. February 12. February 12-14. February 16-20. February 25- March 2. February 28- March 24. March 6. March 20. March 31- April 10. Dr. Pope, in Los Angeles, attended meetings of the College Art Association, including a meeting of the Board; and examined Chinese and Japanese objects at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. In San Francisco, he examined Chinese paintings and bronzes for the U.S. Collector of Customs; and at the M. H. de Young Memorial Museum, numerous Chinese blue- and-white porcelains in the Roy Leventritt Collection and Chinese bronzes in the Avery Brundage Collection. Dr. Ettinghausen, in Hudson, N.Y., examined objects in a private collection; and in New York, visited the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Dr. Stern, in New York, examined numerous objects in a private collection and at a dealer. Dr. Pope, in New York, attended meetings of the joint ACLS/SSRC Committee on Grants for Research on Asia; attended a.n exhibition of Indian sculpture at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; and examined objects at several dealers. Dr. Cahill, in Providence, R.I., attended the exhibition of Oriental Arts at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum; in New York, attended a meeting at New York University to plan a summer seminar in Chinese Art; and visited the "Relics of Ancient China in the Singer Collection" at Asia House and the exhibition of Indian sculpture at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; examined objects at several dealers; in Princeton, N.J., attended a meeting of the Chinese Art Subcom- mittee of the Committee on the Study of Chinese Civilization at Princeton University; and examined objects in private collections and at several dealers. Dr. Stern, in Minneapolis and Mound, Minn., examined numerous objects at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, and in a private collection. Dr. Pope, in Oxford and London, England, examined Far Eastern objects in several museums and private collections. Dr. Ettinghausen, in New York, examined objects at several dealers. Dr. Ettinghausen, in New York, met with Miss Marjorie Kevorkian of the Kevorkian Foundation; and ex- amined objects at several dealers. Dr. Stern, in Philadelphia, attended meetings of the Catalog Committee for the forthcoming Japanese Exhibition; in New York, attended a committee meeting of the Archives of American Art, and one for FREER GALLERY OF ART 279 April 2-6. April 12-15. April 16-17. April 19-23. April 23-24. May 1-3. May 7-14. May 8-10. May 14-15. May 19-21. May 20-25. the Restorer Training Program, Institute of Fine Arts Conservation Center; also visited several exhibitions, and examined numerous objects at museums and at a dealer. Dr. Ettinghausen, in New York, examined objects for a dealer; and in Ann Arbor, Mich., examined objects at the Art Museum, University of Michigan. Dr. Pope, in Chicago, attended a meeting of the Ameri- can Oriental Society, and examined objects at the Art Institute and at a dealer; in Denver, Colo., examined objects in the office of the U.S. Attorney. Dr. Ettinghausen, in New York, examined objects at several dealers. Mr. Gettens, at Harbor Island, Kure Beach, N.C., did research at the Sea Horse Institute (International Nickel Company); in Richmond, Va., visited the W.J. Barrow Research Laboratory for Paper at the Virginia Historical Society, and at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts examined Chinese bronze ceremonial vessels. Dr. Ettinghausen, in New York, examined objects at several dealers. Dr. Cahill, in Cambridge and Boston, attended a con- ference on projects for the Committee on Studies of Chinese Civilization; and examined objects at the Fogg Art Museum and the Museum of Fine Arts, including the Hobart Collection. Dr. Ettinghausen, in New York, assisted in giving a doctoral examination at Columbia University; and examined objects in private collections and at dealers. Dr. Cahill, in Kansas City, examined Chinese paintings in the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art, in- cluding the Nti Wa Chai Collection. Dr. Cahill, in New York, attended a meeting of the Committee on Studies of Chinese Civilization; visited the exhibition of Far Eastern art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; and examined objects in a private collection and at several dealers. Mrs. West and Mrs. Quail, in New York, attended meetings of the Museum Sales Association, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of the City of New York, and the Museum of Modern Art. Dr. Pope, in New York, attended a meeting of the Advisory Council of Asia House Gallery, and examined objects at several dealers; at Winterthur, Del., attended meetings of the Association of Art Museum Directors. 280 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 1965 May 27-22. Dr. Cahill, in New York, attended meetings of the Advisory Council, Asia House Gallery; and examined objects in a private collection and at several dealers. Dr. Ettinghausen, in New York, attended a meeting of the Advisory Council, Asia House Gallery; and examined objects at a dealer. May 24-26. Mr. Gettens, in Philadelphia, met with the Executive Council of the IIC-AG; visited the Science Center for Archaeology, University Museum; and examined objects at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. May 26-28. Mr. Mielke, in Philadelphia, attended meetings of the American Association of Museums, and visited the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the University Museum. June 2-4. Mr. Gettens, in Columbus, Ohio, attended the dedica- tion of the new Chemical Abstracts Building, Ohio State University; and in Oberlin, visited staff members at Oberlin College. June 10-20. Mr. T. Katsuki, in Boston, New Haven, and New York, examined numerous Far Eastern objects at several galleries and museums, and at dealers. Members of the staff held honorary posts, received recognition, and undertook additional duties outside the Gallery as follows : Dr. Pope: Research Professor of Oriental Art, Department of the History of Art, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Chairman, Editorial Board of Ars Orientalis, University of Michigan. Chair- man, Louise Wallace Hackney Scholarship Committee, American Oriental Society. Member, Board of Management, Cosmos Club, Washington, D.C. Member, Board of Directors, College Art Association. Member, Association of Art Museum Directors. Member, Board of Advisors of the Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. Chairman, ACLS/SSRG Joint Com- mittee for Grants for Research on Asia. Member, Advisory Committee, Asia House Gallery, New York, N.Y. Dr. Stern: Member, Art Committee, Cosmos Club, Washington, D.C. Advisor, City of San Francisco, for selection, artistic appraisal, and cataloging of Japanese and Korean objects in the Avery Brundage Collection. Member, ad hoc Committee for a planning program for the conservation of Far Eastern artistic and historic works, Freer Gallery of Art and New York University. Member, International Editorial Advisory Board, Japanese Ukiyoe Society, Tokyo, Japan. Member, Research Committee, Smithsonian Institution. Chairman, Program Com- FREER GALLERY OF ART 281 mittee, Far Eastern Section, College Art Association. Member, Negotiations, Selection, and Cataloging Committees, America- Canada Participating Museums for Memorial Exhibition "Masterpieces of Japanese Art," 1965-66. Dr. Ettinghausen: Honorary member, German Archaeological In- stitute, Berlin, Germany. Trustee, American Research Center in Egypt, New York. Adjunct Professor of Fine Arts, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Research Professor of Islamic Art, University of Michigan. Member of Executive Committee, Trustee, and Chairman of the Accessions Committee, Textile Museum of the District of Columbia. Member, Editorial Board, Art Bulletin, College Art Association of America, New York. Member, Consultative Committee, Ars Orientalis, Uni- versity of Michigan. Governor, Washington Society of the Archaeological Institute of America, Washington, D.C. Mem- ber, National Committee, Iran Foundation, Inc., for the Ad- vancement of Health and Education in Iran, N.Y. Member, Board of Directors, American Iqbal Society, Washington, D.C. Member, Board of Governors, Middle East Institute, Washington, D.C. Member, Editorial Board, Kairos, Salzburg, Germany. Foreign Member, Society of Iranian National Monuments, Teheran, Iran. Member, Administrative Committee of the International Society for Oriental Research, Istanbul, Turkey, and Frankfurt, Germany. Member, Board of Directors, Iran- America Society, Washington, D.C. Associate Member, Institut d'Egypte, Cairo, Egypt. Member, Advisory Committee, Asia House Gallery, New York. Member, Advisory Board, Fairfax County Cultural Association, Inc. Dr. Cahill: Adjunct Professor, Oriental Art, American University, Washington. Trustee, Japan-America Society, Washington. Member, Board of Directors, Sino-American Cultural Society, Washington. Member, Advisory Council, Asia House Gallery, New York. Chairman, Subcommittee on Chinese Art, Com- mittee on Studies of Chinese Civilization, American Council of Learned Societies. Mr. Trousdale: Member, Oriental Languages Honor Society, University of California, Berkeley. Member, American Oriental Society. Member, Archaeological Institute of America. Mem- ber, Iran-America Society. Mr. Gettens: Section Editor, I-History, Education and Documen- tation, Chemical Abstracts. Member, Board of Consulting Fellows, Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York Univer- sity. Assistant Editor, IIC Abstracts: Abstracts of the Technical 282 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Literature of Archaeology and the Fine Arts, London, England. Vice President, Council of the International Institute for Con- servation of Historic and Artistic Works (IIC), London, England. Member, Executive Committee, IIC, American Group. Mem- ber, International Council of Museums (ICOM), Committee on Museum Laboratories. Member, Advisory Board, Inter- museum Conservation Association, Oberlin College. Member, Art Committee, Cosmos Club, Washington, D.C. Member, Standing Committee for Commercial Standard CS 98-62 (Artists' Oil Paints), Commodity Standards Division, U.S. Department of Commerce. Member, Committee to Advise on the U.S. National Museum Conservation Laboratory. Mrs. FitzHugh: Editor, IIC Abstracts: Abstracts of the Technical Literature of Archaeology and the Fine Arts, London, England. Member, Board of Governors and Assistant Secretary, Washington Society of the Archaeological Institute of America. Mr. Sugiura: Member, ad hoc Committee for planning program for conservation of Far Eastern artistic and historic works, Freer Gallery of Art and New York University. Member, Kokuho Shuri Soken, Senmei Kai (Japan) . PERSONNEL 1964 July 13. Miss Barbara Bernhard reported for duty under the Intern Program and completed her internship August 21. July 24. Miss Laura Schneider resigned as secretary-sten- ographer. Miss Doreen Gee completed her research under a University of California scholarship. September 4. Miss Kumi Sugiura resigned as apprentice to the Oriental picture mounter. Robert Maeda completed his term as a Hackney Scholar. September 8. Miss Susan Campbell resigned as clerk-typist. September 9. Mrs. Susan Redding reported for duty as clerk-typist. September 14. Leslie Benji Nerio reported for duty as a Hackney Scholar. September 21. Ben B. Johnson started work on the restoration of some of the Whistler paintings (contract worker) and completed his work on June 25, 1965. FREER GALLERY OF ART 283 1964 October 9. October 12. October 19. November 9. November 15. December 4. December 7. 1965 February 1. February 26. March 1. June 7. June 16. Leslie Benji Nerio completed his term of duty as a Hackney Scholar. Mrs. Blanche A. Shuler resigned as secretary-sten- ographer and reported for duty as library assistant on October 12. Miss Sarah M. Wilson reported for duty as secretary- stenographer. Miss Marianne G. Melton reported*for duty as secretary-stenographer. David J. Heflin reported for duty (contract worker) during the absence of Thomas Goetting, museum technician (Art). A. R. Kruik reported for volunteer duty as an observer of Mrs. Sugiura's work methods. Mrs. Elisabeth W. FitzHugh resigned as assistant in technical research (chemist, analytical). Miss Daphne Campbell reported for duty to work on the "Bronze Book" manuscript (contract worker). William T. Chase, III, reported for duty as assistant in the technical laboratory (contract worker). Mrs. Susan Redding resigned as clerk-typist. Miss Katherine E. Jernberg reported for duty as clerk-typist. Miss Susan Lyles reported for duty under the Intern Program. Miss Priscilla Parsons reported for a 3-month term of study under a grant from the New York University, in the Near Eastern field. National Gallery of Art &»& tts.s National Gallery of Art John Walker, Director ORGANIZATION The statutory members of the Board of Trustees of the National Gallery of Art are the Chief Justice of the United States, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of the Treasury, and the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, ex officio. On May 6, 1965, Paul Mellon was reelected a general trustee of the National Gallery of Art to serve in that capacity for the term expiring July 1, 1975. The four other general trustees continuing in office during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1965, were John Hay Whitney, John N. Irwin II, Dr. Franklin D. Murphy, and Lessing J. Rosenwald. On May 6, 1965, Paul Mellon was reelected by the Board of Trustees to serve as president of the Gallery, and John Hay Whitney was reelected vice president. The executive officers of the Gallery as of June 30, 1965, were as follows: Chief Justice of the United States, Earl Warren, chairman. Paul Mellon, president. John Hay Whitney, vice president. Huntington Cairns, secretary-treasurer. John Walker, director. Ernest R. Feidler, administrator. Huntington Cairns, general counsel. Perry B. Cott, chief curator. J. Carter Brown, assistant director. The three standing committees of the Board, as constituted at the annual meeting on May 6, 1965, were as follows: Executive Committee Chief Justice of the United States, Earl Warren, chairman. Paul Mellon, vice chairman. Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, S. Dillon Ripley. John Hay Whitney. Franklin D. Murphy. 287 288 smithsonian year 1965 Finance Committee Secretary of the Treasury, Henry H. Fowler, chairman. Paul Mellon. Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, S. Dillon Ripley. John Hay Whitney. John N. Irwin II. Acquisitions Committee Paul Mellon, chairman. John Hay Whitney. John N. Irwin II. Lessing J. Rosenwald. John Walker. PERSONNEL At the close of fiscal year 1965, full-time Government employees on the permanent staff of the National Gallery of Art numbered 304. The U.S. Civil Service regulations govern the appointment of employ- ees paid from appropriated funds. APPROPRIATIONS For the fiscal year ended June 30, 1965, the Congress of the United States, in the regular annual appropriation, and in a supplemental appropriation required for pay increases, provided $2,227,000 to be used for salaries and expenses in the operation and upkeep of the National Gallery of Art, the protection and care of works of art acquired by the Board of Trustees, and all administrative expenses incident thereto, as authorized by the basic statute establishing the National Gallery of Art, that is, the Joint Resolution of Congress approved March 24, 1937 (50 Stat. 51), U.S. Code, title 20, sees. 71-75. The following obligations were incurred: Personnel compensation and benefits SI, 966, 805. 00 All other items 260, 154. 56 Total obligations $2, 226, 959. 56 NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART ATTENDANCE 289 There were 1,253,102 visitors to the Gallery during fiscal year 1965. There was, therefore, an increase of 16,947 over fiscal year 1964. The average daily attendance was 3,421. ACCESSIONS In all, 1,722 accessions were received by the Gallery as gifts, loans, or deposits during the fiscal year. While this quantity was substan- tially below the accessions in the preceding year, when the large and important gift by Lessing J. Rosenwald of graphic-arts materials swelled accessions to over 5,000, the gifts set forth below indicate that rarely in the Gallery's history have the accessions included so many outstanding paintings. GIFTS From the bequest of Chester Dale, New York, N.Y., the Gallery received 245 paintings, chiefly of the Impressionist School, including major works by Cezanne, Corot, Degas, Gauguin, van Gogh, Manet, Matisse, Monet, Picasso, and Toulouse-Lautrec. In addition, the following gifts or bequests were accepted by the Board of Trustees: Paintings Donor Artist Title Avalon Foundation, Heade Brazilian Seascape New York, N.Y. Do. Twachtman Winter Harmony Col. and Mrs. Edgar W. West Dr. Samuel Boud6 Garbisch, New York, N.Y. Do do Mrs. Samuel Boude Do Unknown Vase of Flowers Do do Watermelon Do Hicks The Cornell Farm Do Field "He Turned Their Waters into Blood" Do Chandler Captain Samuel Chandler Do do Mrs. Samuel Chandler 789-427—66— -30 290 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Donor Ernest Iselin, New York, N.Y. Patrick T. Jackson, Jr., Cambridge, Mass. National Gallery of Art, Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund Do Do Do Arthur Sachs, Cannes, France Artist Title Sargent Mrs. Adrian Iselin Trumbull Patrick Tracy Sithium The Assumption of the Virgin Largilliere Elizabeth Throckmorton Guardi Carlo and Ubaldo Resisting the Enchantments of Armida's Nymphs do Erminia and the Shepherds French School, A Knight of the Golden XV century Fleece James C. Stotlar, Bethesda, Wyant Peaceful Valley Md. Sculpture Donor Artist Title Chester Dale, New York, N.Y. Despiau Maud Dale Do Gauguin "Pere Paillard" (Father Lechery) Do do Pair of Wooden Shoes Do Houdon Voltaire Do Kisling Death Mask of Amedeo Modigliani Do Modigliani Head of a Woman Do Renoir Coco National Gallery of Art, Lehmbruck Standing Woman Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund Do Maillol Venus Graphic Arts Mrs. George Matthew Adams, Whitney Portrait of a Man New York, N.Y. (after Legros) Chester Dale, New York, N.Y. Various 21 prints and drawings Ella Fillmore Lillie, Danby, Vt. Mrs. John E. Lodge, Lillie 10 lithographs Various 12 prints Washington, D.C. John E. Thayer, Milton, Audubon Salt Water Marsh Hen Mass. Ukrainian Art Academy, Various 7 contemporary Russian U.S.S.R. prints national gallery of art Exchange of Work of Art 291 Portrait of Martin Luther, an engraving by Cranach, was exchanged for a superior impression of the same work. Other Gifts In the fiscal year 1965 gifts of money were made by the Charles Ulrick and Josephine Bay Foundation, Avalon Foundation, Samuel H. Kress Foundation, Old Dominion Foundation, Mrs. Cordelia S. May, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, J. I. Foundation, Inc., Mr. Edwin Binney III and the Lila Acheson Wallace Fund. Mrs. Mellon Bruce contributed additional funds for the purchase of works of art for the National Gallery of Art and for educational purposes related to works of art. WORK OF ART ON LOAN Portrait of a Man in a Fur-lined Coat by Rembrandt was received on loan from the Fuller Foundation, Boston, Mass. WORKS OF ART ON LOAN RETURNED The following works of art on loan were returned during the fiscal year: To Artist Col. and Mrs. Edgar W. Phillips Garbisch, New York, N.Y. Jerome Hill, New York, N.Y. Delacroix Do do Claiborne Pell, Washington, Bingham D.C. S. Dillon Ripley, Washington, Audubon D.C. Title Philip Slade The Arab Tax The Fanatics of Tangiers The Jolly Flatboatmen Washington Sea Eagle PAINTINGS TRANSFERRED TO NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY Thirty-five portraits were transferred to the National Portrait Gallery. 292 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 WORKS OF ART LENT The following loans ^ were made during t he fiscal year: To Artist Title Blair House; Washington, D.C. Stuart Ann Barry Do do Mary Barry Do do do A Gentleman of the Ashe Family Do Earl Andrew Jackson Do Sully John Quincy Adams Do Unknown Portrait of a Young Lady California Palace of the Quidor The Return of Rip Van Legion of Honor, San Winkle Francisco, Calif. Do Unknown Columbia Musee du Petit-Palais, Paris, Homer Breezing Up France Do Cooke Salute to General Washing- ton in New York Harbor Do Unknown Burning of Charles Town Do Bauman U.S. Mail Boat Museum of Fine Arts, St. West Self-Portrait Petersburg, Fla. Smithsonian Institution, Museum of History and Technology, Armed Forces History Hall Pine General William Smallwood Do Polk General Washington at Princeton Smithsonian Institution, Jarvis Commodore John Rodgers Museum of History and Technology, Presidential Reception Room Do do DeWitt Clinton Do Healy Daniel Webster Do Peale Robert Coleman Do Sully Major Thomas Biddle Munson- Williams-Proctor Audubon Arctic Hare Institute, Utica, N.Y. Vancouver Art Gallery, Pseudo Abundance and Satyr Vancouver, B.C. Antonio da Brescia Do do Jason (or Apollo) and the Dragon Do Master IO.F.F. Judgment of Paris Do Moderno David and Goliath NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART 293 To Artist Title Virginia Museum of Fine Homer Right and Left Arts, Richmond, Va. The White House, Sully Andrew Jackson Washington, D.C. EXHIBITIONS The following exhibitions were held at the National Gallery of Art during the fiscal year 1965: 7000 Tears of Iranian Art. Continued from the preceding fiscal year through July 19, 1964. Prints by Whistler from the National Gallery of Art Collection. Continued from the preceding fiscal year through July 23, 1964. Selected Renderings from the Index of American Design. July 2, 1964, through October 1, 1964. French 18th Century Color Prints from the Widener Collection. July 30, 1964, through October 1, 1964. Exhibition of Watercolors by Perkins Harnley from the Index of American Design. August 12, 1964, through November 3, 1964. 15th and 16th Century German Prints from the National Gallery of Art Collection. October 2, 1964, through December 6, 1964; January 11, 1965, through February 11, 1965. Drawings of the 15th and 16th Centuries from the Wallraf-Richartz Museum. October 4, 1964, through November 1, 1964. Blake's Engravings of Dante's Inferno and The Book of Job from the W. G' Russell Allen Collection. October 22, 1964, through January 10, 1965. William Blake: Poet, Printer, Prophet. October 25, 1964, through No- vember 22, 1964. Prints by Altdorfer, Durer, Lucas van Leyden, and Schongauer from the National Gallery of Art Collection. October 26, 1964, through December 15, 1964; January 14, 1965, through April 22, 1965. Piranesi Etchings of Prisons and Views of Rome from the National Gallery of Art Collection. November 4, 1964, through April 18, 1965. 294 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Designs for the Grave of the Late President John F. Kennedy. November 17, 1964, through December 13, 1964. 1964 Christmas Card Subjects from the Graphic Arts Collection. December 7, 1964, through January 10, 1965. The Watercolor Drawings of John White. January 31, 1965, through February 22, 1965. Landscape Prints by Rembrandt and Other Dutch Artists from the Rosenwald Collection. February 12, 1965, through May 19, 1965. Eyewitness to Space — sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. March 14, 1965, through May 23, 1965. Rosenwald Miniatures and Widener French 18th Century Books. April 24, 1965, through May 2, 1965. The Chester Dale Bequest. May 6, 1965, to continue into the next fiscal year. Graphic Arts from the Chester Dale Collection. May 6, 1965, to continue into the next fiscal year. Exhibition Illustrating Richard Bales' Index of American Design Suite No. 4. May, 20, 1965, to continue into the next fiscal year. Exhibition of Rembrandt's Portrait of the Artist's Son Titus on loan from the Norton Simon Foundation. May 26, 1965, to continue into the next fiscal year. Sketches by Constable from the Victoria and Albert Museum. June 6, 1965, to continue into the next fiscal year. White House Festival of the Arts Exhibition. June 18, 1965, to continue into the next fiscal year. Exhibitions of recent accessions: Tiberius and Agrippina by Rubens, November 29, 1964, through December 20, 1964; A Knight of the Golden Fleece, French School, XV Century, December 22, 1964, through February 5, 1965; Portrait of a Man in a Fur-lined Coat by Rembrandt, lent by The Fuller Foundation, from January 8, 1965; The Cornell Farm by Edward Hicks, Captain Samuel Chandler and Mrs. Samuel Chandler by Winthrop Chandler, February 6, 1965 through February 14, 1965; Watson and the Shark by Copley, February 21, NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART 295 1965, through April 4, 1965; Carlo and Ubaldo Resisting the Enchantments of Armida's Nymphs and Erminia and the Shepards by Francesco and Gian Antonio Guardi, April 4, 1 965, through April 27, 1 965; The Assumption of the Virgin by Miguel Sithium, from April 18, 1965; Mrs. Adrian Iselin by Sargent, Winter Harmony by Twachtman, and Brazilian Seascape by Heade, May 16, 1965, through June 8, 1965. TRAVELING EXHIBITIONS Special exhibitions of graphic arts from the National Gallery of Art collections were circulated during the fiscal year to 61 museums, universities, schools, and art centers in the United States and abroad. Index of American Design. Thirty-four traveling exhibitions of material from the Index were circulated to 17 States, the District of Columbia, and one foreign country, for 62 showings. CURATORIAL ACTIVITIES Under the direction of chief curator Perry B. Cott, the curatorial department accessioned 324 gifts to the Gallery during the fiscal year 1965. Advice was given with respect to 1,740 works of art brought to the Gallery for expert opinion, and 28 visits to collections were made by members of the staff in connection with other gifts. About 6,189 inquiries, many of them requiring research, were answered verbally and by letter. Assistant chief curator William P. Campbell served as a member of the Special Fine Arts Committee of the Department of State. Curator of painting H. Lester Cooke continued as consultant to NASA with duties of organizing and supervising commissions to artists for paintings of themes relating to the Space Program. He also acted as judge for the Tri-State Exhibition, Evansville, Ind., and "The Plains," a local art exhibit, during the fiscal year. The Richter Archives received and cataloged 485 photographs on exchange from museums here and abroad; 1,328 photographs were purchased, and about 500 reproductions have been added to the Rich- ter Archives. Five hundred photographs have been added to the Inconographic Index. RESTORATION Francis Sullivan, resident restorer of the Gallery, made regular and systematic inspection of all works of art in the Gallery and on loan to 296 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Government buildings in Washington and periodically removed dust and bloom as required. He relined, cleaned, and restored 10 paintings and gave special treatment to 42. Thirty-seven paintings were x-rayed as an aid in research. He continued experiments with synthetic materials as suggested by the National Gallery of Art Fellowship at the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research, Pittsburgh, Pa. Tech- nical advice was given in response to 252 telephone inquiries. Special treatment was given to works of art belonging to Government agencies, including the U.S. Capitol, Treasury Department, the White House, U.S. Coast Guard Academy, and the Freer Gallery of Art. PUBLICATIONS The volume by Gallery director John Walker entitled National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., published by Harry N. Abrams, Inc. in 1963, was translated and published in Germany, France, and Spain in the respective languages. It was also published in London, United Kingdom, by Thames & Hudson. All the curatorial staff cooperated in the preparation of the three- volume definitive catalog covering the entire Chester Dale Collection — Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Paintings and Sculpture of the French School, Twentieth Century Paintings and Sculpture of the French School, and Paintings Other Than French. The senior fellow of the National Gallery of Art Research Project at the Mellon Institute in Pittsburgh, Pa., Dr. Robert L. Feller, published several articles related to the important scientific research which he has been conducting. They are Control of the Deteriorating Effects of Light on Museum Objects in Museum, September 1964 issue; What's in a Name: Dammar in The Crucible, October 1964 issue; The Use of an Electrically-Conducting Glass Panel as a Heating Surface (with Jeanne L. Kostich) in Bulletin American Group — IIC, October 1964 issue; and Critical Pigment Volume Concentration and Chalking in Paints (with J. J. Matous) in Bulletin American Group — IIC, October 1964 issue. H. Lester Cooke, curator of painting, wrote an article for Art in America, April 1965 issue, entitled "A Plunger in the Market: Chester Dale and His Collection." Richard Field, assistant curator of graphic arts, prepared the catalog for the Pennsylvania State University exhibition Selected 15th Century Prints from the Lessing J. Rosenwald Collection, National Gallery of Art. Michael Mahoney, museum curator, wrote an article for the Min- neapolis Institute of Arts Bulletin, September 1964 issue, entitled "Salvator Rosa's Saint Humphrey." NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART 297 In April 1965 the Gazette des Beaux-Arts published an article entitled "Some Later Works of Piero di Cosimo," by Everett P. Fahy, Jr., National Gallery of Art Finley fellow. PUBLICATIONS FUND In fiscal year 1965 the Publications Fund placed on sale five new publications. These were: the Pantheon Story of Art for Young People, illustrated almost exclusively from the National Gallery of Art Col- lection; two books illustrated from subjects in the Rosenwald Col- lection— The Bite of the Print and George Rouault's Miserere; American Crafts and Folk Arts, based on the Index of American Design; and 707 Masterpieces of American Primitive Painting from the Collection of Edgar William and Bernice Chrysler Garbisch. In addition, three new catalogs of the Chester Dale Collection were published; these were made available to the public with the opening of the Chester Dale Bequest exhibition. Thirty-nine new 11- by 14-inch color reproductions were published which brought the total subjects on sale to 277. Twenty-eight new postcard subjects were added, which results in 224 subjects now being available to the public. Four new large repro- ductions were published with Gallery assistance: Poussin — 77z* Assumption of the Virgin; Sassetta and Assistant — Saint Anthony Leaving His Monastery; Turner — The Dogana and San Giorgio Maggiore; and Monet — Rouen Cathedral, West Faqade, Sunlight. EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM The program of the educational department was carried out under the direction of Raymond S. Stites, curator in charge of education, and his staff. Lectures, conducted tours, and special talks were given on the works of art in the Gallery's collections. Attendance for the general tours was 18,905 — an increase of 1,500 over last year. Attendance for all regularly scheduled general tours, tours of the week, and picture-of-the-week talks amounted to 36,843. In a new series, the Radio Picture of the Week, 22 discussions of individual paintings in the Gallery's collections were prepared by the educational department and broadcast during the intermissions of the Gallery's Sunday evening concerts each week from October 4 through February 28. A listener was able to subscribe on a monthly basis and follow the discussions with a color reproduction before him. Subscriptions so entered numbered 1,245. From replies to a question- naire, it is estimated that many subscriptions were utilized by complete 298 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 families or assigned to school classes. On the basis of radio audience ratings, it is estimated that the total number of listeners to the series was approximately 400,000. Special tours, lectures, and conferences (a total of 467) were arranged to serve 16,310 persons. These special appointments (which increased by seven over 1964) were made for Government agency groups, the Foreign Service Institute, the Foreign Students Council, the Armed Forces, club and study groups, religious organizations, conventions, museum officials, hospital representatives, and school students and faculty members from various parts of the country. The program of training volunteer docents continued, and special instruction was given to 1 26 ladies from the Junior League of Wash- ington and the American Association of University Women. By arrangement with the public, private, and parochial schools of the District of Columbia and of the surrounding counties in Maryland and Virginia, these two organizations conducted tours for 2,654 classes from the Metropolitan area of Washington. The 75,934 children in these classes represented an increase of 7,098 over last year. These volunteer docents also guided 794 Safety Patrol girls from Atlanta, Ga., on tours of the Gallery. Forty-four lectures were given on Sunday afternoons in the audi- torium. Of these, 26 were delivered by guest lecturers, 8 by members of the staff, and 5 were full-length film presentations. The distin- guished Sir Isaiah Berlin delivered the 14th annual series of the A. W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts on six consecutive Sundays beginning March 14, 1965, on the general subject "Sources of Romantic Art." Attendance at the above-mentioned Sunday afternoon programs in the auditorium totaled 12,569. This was lower in fiscal year 1965 than in 1964 inasmuch as the number of Sunday programs dropped from 52 to 44. However, there was a 10.4 percent increase in average attendance per Sunday. The slide library of the Educational Department has a total of 48,951 slides in its permanent and lending collections. During the year, 1,327 slides were added to the collections. Altogether, 317 per- sons borrowed a total of 8,603 slides, and it is estimated that these slides were seen by 19,671 viewers. Members of the staff participated in outside activities which included lecturing at various schools, clubs, and Government agencies. Two members of the staff taught evening courses at local institutions. Staff members prepared and recorded scripts for the Lectour and radio talks, and prepared material for the school-tour program and picture-of-the-week texts which are sold with reproductions of the picture. NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART 299 The project undertaken two years ago in connection with the "Widen- ing Horizons" program, designed by various Government agencies to introduce high school students to career opportunities offered in Wash- ington, was continued. Mr. Stites gave six briefing lectures and six tours to the volunteers conducting this program. These tours and lectures were attended by 1,570 persons — an increase of 755 over the previous year. A printed calendar of the programs and events of the Gallery was prepared and distributed to a mailing list of an average of approxi- mately 7,500 names. EXTENSION SERVICES The office of extension services, under the direction of Grose Evans, circulated to the public traveling exhibitions, films, slide lectures with texts, film strips, and other educational materials. Traveling exhibits are lent free of charge except for shipping expenses. The total number of exhibits in circulation was 1 04. These were cir- culated in 844 bookings, an increase of 445 over the preceding year's total of 399. Twenty-eight prints of two films on paintings in the National Gallery of Art were circulated in 316 bookings, an increase of 145 over last year. A total of 2,150 slide lecture sets was circulated in 5,717 bookings, an increase of 2,282 over the previous year. Based on the conservative average audience estimates per booking used for the past four years, the audience served by the traveling exhibitions circulated by the Gallery was approximately 422,000; for films the estimated audience was 94,800; and for slide lectures and film strips, the audience was an estimated 343,020. In addition, 64 exhibits were circulated by three outside groups, a national church organization, the New York State school system, and the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. These exhibits were seen by an estimated 111,243 viewers. It is estimated, therefore, that the extension services reached approx- imately 971,063 people during fiscal year 1965 as against 549,524 in fiscal year 1964. Mr. Evans prepared texts for new slide lectures and traveling ex- hibitions, made recordings of the texts for three slide lectures, and supervised the translation into French and recording of a lecture that will be circulated for the use of French language teachers. Five new subjects were added to the slide lectures and seven new subjects to the traveling exhibitions. Mr. Evans attended conferences to 300 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 demonstrate the extension services and to keep abreast of new develop- ments in the audiovisual field. LIBRARY During the year the library, under the supervision of Ruth E. Carlson, accessioned 5,919 publications obtained by gift, exchange, or purchase. A total of 2,313 photographs, acquired by exchange or purchase with private funds, was added to the photographic archives. During the year 1,895 publications were cataloged and classified; 6,686 cards were filed in the main catalog and the shelf-list. Library of Congress cards were used for 574 titles; original cataloging was done for 419 titles. Periodicals recorded were 3,129, periodicals circulated were 10,591, and 3,725 books were charged to the staff. There were 5,852 books shelved in regular routine. During the past fiscal year the library borrowed 1,242 books and received 6 photographic copies on the interlibrary loan program. The exchange program was continued and the library distributed 298 National Gallery of Art publications, and received 790 catalogs under this program. The library is a depository for black-and-white photographs of works of art in the Gallery's collections. These are maintained for use in research by the staff, for exchange with other institutions, for repro- duction in approved publications, and for sale to the public. Approx- imately 9,111 photographs were added to the stock in the library during the year, and 1,504 orders for 6,663 photographs were filled. There were 425 permits for reproduction of 1,003 subjects processed in the library. INDEX OF AMERICAN DESIGN Under the supervision of Grose Evans, the Index of American Design circulated, in addition to the traveling exhibitions referred to above (page 295), 133 sets of Index material color slides (6,536) throughout the United States, and 254 photographs of Index subjects were used for exhibits, study, and publication. The file of photographs was increased by 44 negatives and 84 prints. Fourteen permits to reproduce 114 subjects from the Index were issued. Approximately 271 visitors studied the Index material for research purposes and to collect material for publication and design. Special exhibitions were arranged of Index material, including one for the USIA for circulation overseas. NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART 301 The curator of the Index held special conferences with a number of persons and lectured to several groups about the Index. He also attended the Alexandria Antiques Forum. MAINTENANCE OF THE BUILDING AND GROUNDS The Gallery building, mechanical equipment, and grounds have been maintained throughout the year at the established standards. The renovation of the skylight on the west wing of the building has been completed, and considerable progress has been made on the east wing. When completed, this renovating is expected to give the Gallery building a completely watertight skylight for the first time in its history. Six new gallery rooms were completed for the exhibition of the Chester Dale Collection of paintings. The Gallery greenhouse continued to produce flowering and foliage plants in quantities sufficient for all decorative needs on holidays, for special openings, and for day-to-day requirements of the Garden Courts. Contracts were entered into for the installation of special security devices for the protection of the cases containing Renaissance jewelry and other art objects in Gallery G—2. This is in the nature of a pilot- plant installation which, if it fulfills its promise, will be extended to other areas. LECTOUR During the fiscal year 1965 Lectour, the Gallery's electronic guide system, was used by 58,121 visitors. MUSIC PROGRAM Forty Sunday evening concerts were given during the fiscal year in the East Garden Court. Thirty-three of the concerts were sponsored by funds bequeathed to the Gallery by William Nelson Cromwell. The 22d American Music Festival of seven concerts was sponsored by the Guibenkian Foundation, Inc. The National Gallery Orchestra, conducted by Richard Bales, played nine concerts at the Gallery during the season. Two of these orchestra concerts were made possible in part by a grant from the Music Performance Trust Fund of the American Recording Industry. The National Gallery of Art strings, conducted by Mr. Bales, fur- nished music during four of the Gallery's openings. The orchestra program on October 25, 1964, was played in honor of United Nations 302 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Day, and the concert on January 17 featured Mr. Bales's "The Repub- lic" and was played in honor of the inauguration of the President and Vice President of the United States. Seven Sunday evenings, April 25 through June 6, were devoted to the Gallery's 22d American Music Festival. All concerts were broadcast in their entirety by WGMS-AM and FM. Washington music critics continued their regular coverage of the concerts. During the inter- mission periods of the Sunday evening broadcasts, members of the educational staff spoke on art matters, and Mr. Bales discussed the musical programs. Mr. Bales appeared as guest conductor at various places throughout the country and taught a class in composition. The Gallery orchestra played a number of concerts at schools and churches in nearby towns and cities. Two hour-long television programs of the National Gallery of Art orchestra with Mr. Bales conducting were taped by WTOP-TV, and these, together with two previous programs which were repeated, were telecast during the winter and spring. Mr. Bales completed and performed two new works, one of which was commissioned by the Kindler Foundation of Washington. He also participated in the Civil War Centennial celebration and received an award for the National Gallery of Art. The Gallery orchestra and Mr. Bales also received a certificate of award from the American Association of University Women for an outstanding cultural and educational contribution to the community through the television programs. This is the third year that the Gallery has been so honored. OTHER ACTIVITIES J. Carter Brown, assistant director, served in an advisory capacity to the White House in the organization and installation of the art in the White House Festival of the Arts, June 14, 1965. He was assisted by H. Lester Cooke, curator of painting, and other members of the Gallery staff. At the request of the President, the National Gallery of Art provided lunch for the 200 guests of the White House Festival of the Arts. Also at the request of the White House, the Gallery was opened especially for the National Conference of the Arts Councils of America, June 18, 1965. The delegates and guests of the International Pub- lishers Association spent an evening at the Gallery on June 4, 1965, during their convention. The Gallery provided facilities for the ceremony held by the Post Office Department on December 2, 1 964, in honor of the first-day issue of a stamp dedicated to the Fine Arts. NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART 303 In response to requests, 41,766 copies of "An Invitation to the Gal- lery" and 2,100 information booklets were sent to Senators, Repre- sentatives, and various organizations for distribution. Henry Beville, head of the photographic laboratory, and his assistants processed 62,378 items including negatives, prints, slides, color trans- parencies, and color separations. A total of 196 permits to copy works of art in the National Gallery of Art and 92 permits to photograph were issued during the fiscal year. During the 1965 inaugural ceremonies, the Trustees were pleased to make the Gallery available for the Reception of Distinguished Ladies on January 18, 1965. Over 6,500 invited guests were received in the two Garden Courts and viewed the collections. Both the First Lady, Mrs. Johnson, and the wife of the Vice President, Mrs. Humphrey, assisted in the receiving lines. AUDIT OF PRIVATE FUNDS OF THE GALLERY An audit of the private funds of the Gallery will be made for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1965, by Price Waterhouse & Co., public accountants. A report of the audit will be forwarded to the Gallery. Girl with a Hoop by Auguste Renoir (1841-1919). Canvas 49^ inches X 30H inches. Chester Dale Collection, 1962. National Gallery of Art. The Assumption of the Virgin by Miguel Sithium (circa 1465/70-1525). Canvas 8% inches X 6lA inches. Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund. National Gallery of Art. Mademoiselle Malo by Edgar Degas (1834-1917). Canvas 3 Us inches X 25^i inches. Chester Dale Collection. National Gallery of Art. A Knight of the Golden Fleece. Flemish School, 15th century, circa 1495. 26H X 2VA inches. Gift of Arthur Sachs. National Gallery of Art. A Corner of the Moulin de la Galette by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. 39lA X 35 V% inches. Chester Dale Collection. National Gallery of Art. Patrick Tracy by John Trumbull (American, 1756-1843). Canvas 9\y2 X 52^8 inches. Gift of Patrick T. Jackson, Jr., 1964. National Gallery of Art. Carlo and Ubaldo Resisting the Enchantments of Armida's Nymphs by Gian Antonio (1699-1760) and Francesco Guardi (1712-1793). Canvas 98H X 181 inches. Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund. National Gallery of Art. Still Life by Paul Cezanne (French, 1839-1906). Canvas 26 X 32^ inches. Chester Dale Collection, 1962. National Gallery of Art. Canal Zone Biological Area 789-427—66—32 Canal Zone Biological Area Martin H. Moynihan, Director The Canal Zone Biological Area, a bureau of the Smithsonian Insti- tution, is responsible for maintaining Barro Colorado Island in Gatun Lake, Canal Zone, as a biological preserve. The island is approxi- mately 3,600 acres in area. It is almost completely covered by "tropical monsoon forest" (see tabulations on the annual rainfall below) and contains a rich fauna. One of the few places in the American tropics close to large centers of human population, yet largely unaffected by recent human activities, it is particularly suitable and convenient for research on many aspects of tropical biology and the tropical environ- ment. The Canal Zone Biological Area also has authority to use a large tract of land on the adjacent mainland near Gamboa, Canal Zone. This mainland territory is covered by various types of second-growth vegetation and patches of forest which are more humid than the forest on Barro Colorado Island. The bureau maintains a laboratory on Barro Colorado Island, with attached library and living quarters, available for use by scientists and students from all over the world. The bureau's scientific staff conducts research on several groups of animals and plants on Barro Colorado itself, in adjacent regions of the Canal Zone and the Republic of Panama, and in other parts of Central and South America. RESEARCH ACTIVITIES One hundred and nine scientists and students, representing 14 nations, worked on Barro Colorado Island for at least several days, and used research facilities on the mainland. This represents a marked increase over previous years. These researches dealt with a wide range of disciplines. Fields receiving particular attention were behav- ioral studies of insects, fishes, amphibians, birds, and mammals; sys- tematics of insects and arachnids; communication systems of moths, birds, and primates; and the ecology of species diversity in vertebrates and higher plants. The General Electric Corporation, on behalf of the U.S. Army, conducted extensive investigations of the acoustical properties of the island forest. 307 308 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Dr. Austin Stanley Rand, a herpetologist, was added to the staff last year, bringing the total of senior staff scientists to four. Dr. Robert L. Dressier continued his studies of orchids and orchid pollination, supported by the National Science Foundation. In con- nection with this project, he made brief trips to Brazil, Peru, several U.S. museums, and a longer trip to Costa Rica. Dr. Neal G. Smith continued his field studies on the evolution and genetics of egg-mimicry in parasitic cuckoos, the behavior of oropen- dolas, and initiated an experimental study of avian species diversity in tropical grasslands. He visited museums in Washington, New York, Ithaca, and Boston. Dr. Rand attended the Lizard Ecology Symposium in Kansas City, Mo., and the meeting of the American Association of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists in Lawrence, Kan. He also visited the Chicago Natural History Museum, Harvard University, and the University of Pennsylvania for consultation on his continuing research on the evolu- tion of the West Indian Anoles, and on concepts and techniques of bioacoustics. Dr. Martin H. Moynihan continued research on the communication systems and social behavior of New World primates and various groups of passerine birds. A study of geographic variation in social behavior among Andean birds is being supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation. In connection with this work, Dr. Moynihan made several field trips to Colombia and Venezuela, and visited laboratories in London, Oxford, Cambridge, Paris, and New Orleans. He also delivered a paper in the symposium on social interactions among primates at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Montreal. The following papers by staff members of the Canal Zone Biological Area appeared in various publications: Dressler, R. L. Encyclia trachycarpa refound. American Orchid Soc. Bull., vol. 33, pp. 587-588. 1964. . Nomenclatural notes on the Orchidaceae II. Taxon 13, pp. 246-249. 1964. Moynihan, M. Some behavior patterns of platyrrhine monkeys I. The Night Monkey (Aotus trivirgatus). Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 146(5), pp. 1-84. 1964. Rand, A. S. An observation on Dracaena guyanensis foraging under water. Herpetologica, vol. 20, p. 207. 1964. . Ecological distribution in anoline lizards of Puerto Rico. Ecology, vol. 45, pp. 745-752. 1964. . Inverse relation between temperature and shyness in the lizard Anolis lineatopus. Ecology, vol. 45, pp. 863-864. 1964. CANAL ZONE BIOLOGICAL AREA 309 . On the frequency and extent of naturally occurring foot injuries in Tropodurus torquatus (Sauria: Iguanidae). Papeis Avul- sos do Departamento de Zoologia, Sao Paulo, Brazil, vol. 17, pp. 225-228. 1965. BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT An electrical cable system from the mainland to Barro Colorado Island was installed, providing the island with well-regulated 60-cycle, 120-volt single-phase and 220- volt single- and three-phase power. Electrical power capacity was increased by a factor of 5, enabling the use of more sensitive instruments than was possible previously when erratic generators provided the electricity. The internal electrical wiring system also was revised to provide a larger margin for future power requirements. The laboratory building was extensively remodeled, permitting more efficient use of available space. A soundproof room has been installed to facilitate acoustical investigations. Radio transmitters for communication between Barro Colorado and the mainland were installed and are available for use at any time of the day or night in case of emergencies. The island's extensive trail system was cleared and trail markers replaced. Expansion of the library continued, and the bureau now has more than 4,700 volumes and receives 84 periodicals. In all probability, this is the largest and best general biological library in the American tropics. It is frequently used by members of other scientific and educa- tional organizations in the Canal Zone and the Republic of Panama, as well as by the scientists and students conducting research on Barro Colorado itself. New animal cages were constructed, and many of the older cages were repaired. Normal maintenance activities were carried on as usual. The launches required extensive repairs as they age rapidly. Living quarters were repaired and modified. FINANCES In addition to $179,640 appropriated to the Smithsonian Institution by Congress for the regular operations of the Canal Zone Biological Area, trust funds for the maintenance of the island and its living facil- ities are obtained by collections from visitors and scientists, table subscriptions, and donations. 310 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 The following institutions continued their support of the laboratory through the payment of table subscriptions: Eastman Kodak Co., New York Zoological Society, and the Smithsonian Institution. Donations also are gratefully acknowledged from Dr. Eugene Eisen- mann, G. M. Goethe, and E. F. Morris. PLANS It is anticipated that limited facilities on both sides of the isthmus will soon be available for marine research. Dr. Ira Rubinoff, a marine biologist, will join the staff next year. Five research assistantships were made available this year, and the following predoctoral students were chosen: Michael Robinson, Oxford University, will study the behavior of leaf and stick mimicking insects. Nicholas Smythe, University of Maryland, is interested in the behavior and ecology of agoutis and pacas. Eugene Morton will investigate the effects of physical factors in the environment on the kinds and forms of vocalizations given by various animals. Martin Naumann, University of Kansas, will study neotropical social wasps. John Oppenheimer, University of Illinois, will initiate a long-term study of the social organization of the White-Faced Monkey (Cebus capucinus). A program has been established with the Organization of American States providing support for scientists and students, especially Latin Americans who do not have access to many other sources of support. Applications are now being reviewed by the Organization of American States. It is hoped to continue the expansion of the scientific staff and the research activities of the bureau, and to attract larger numbers of visit- ing scientists and students. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The Canal Zone Biological Area can operate only with the excellent cooperation of the Canal Zone Government and the Panama Canal Company. Thanks are due especially to the Customs and Immigration officials; the Police Division; the Division of Sanitation; and the Elec- tronics Section of the Electrical Division. Also deeply appreciated are the advice and assistance provided by the Gorgas Memorial Lab- oratory, the Inter-American Geodetic Survey, the Division of Veteri- nary Medicine, Dr. W. John Smith of Harvard University, and R. A. Botzenmayer, chief engineer, Southern Command Network. CANAL ZONE BIOLOGICAL AREA 311 ANNUAL RAINFALL, BARRO COLORADO ISLAND, CANAL ZONE, 1925-64 Total Station Total Station Tear inches average Tear inches average 1925 104. 37 1945 120.42 109. 84 1926 118.22 113.56 1946 87.38 108.81 1927 116.36 114.68 1947 77.92 107.49 1928 101.52 111.35 1948 83.16 106. 43 1929 87.84 106. 56 1949 114.86 106. 76 1930 76.57 101. 51 1950 114.51 107.07 1931 123.30 104.69 1951 112.72 107. 28 1932 113.52 105.76 1952 97.68 106. 94 1933 101.73 105.32 1953 104. 97 106.87 1934 122.42 107.04 1954 105. 68 106. 82 1935 143.42 110.35 1955 114.42 107.09 1936 93.88 108.98 1956 114.05 107. 30 1937 124.13 110.12 1957 97.97 106. 98 1938 117.09 110.62 1958 100. 20 106. 70 1939 115.47 110.94 1959 94.88 106.48 1940 86.51 109.43 1960 140.07 107.41 1941 91.82 108.41 1961 100.21 106.95 1942 111.10 108.55 1962 100. 52 107. 07 1943 120.29 109. 20 1963 108.94 107.10 1944 111.96 109. 30 1964 113.25 107.28 COMPARISON OF 1963 AND 1964 RAINFALL, BARRO COLORADO ISLAND [In inches] Accumu- Total Station Tears of 7964 lated excess or or excess Month 7963 7964 average record deficiency deficiency January 7.94 .22 2.24 39 -2.02 -2.02 February 3.14 .25 1.33 39 -1.08 -3.10 March 1.65 .21 1.20 39 -.99 -4.09 April 6.38 4.56 3.55 40 + 1.01 -3.08 May 9.08 15.82 11.02 40 4-4.80 + 1.72 June 5.96 19.25 10.91 40 + 8.34 + 10.06 July 12.83 17.44 11.73 40 + 5.71 + 15.77 August 18.87 8.56 12.50 40 -3.94 + 11.83 September 8.06 11.41 10.32 40 + 1.09 + 12.92 October 10.19 16.87 13.97 40 + 2.90 + 15.82 November 21.60 16.04 17.90 40 -1.86 + 13.96 December 3.24 2.62 10.61 40 -7.99 + 5.97 Year 108.94 113.25 107.28 + 5.97 Dry season Wet season 19.11 5.24 89.83 108.01 8.32 98.96 -3.08 + 9.05 Dr. Neal Smith, staff zoologist, examining eggs of parasitic cuckoos in the main laboratory building, Barro Colorado Island, Canal Zone. Vocalization of frogs being recorded by Dr. Stanley Rand, staff zoologist, outside the main animal house, Barro Colorado Island, Canal Zone. -'<2Vn> . I View of laboratory clearing from dock area, Barro Colorado Island, Canal Zone. Laboratory clearing at Barro Colorado Island, looking E.N.E. across Gatun Lake. An insect trap is located in right foreground. National Air Museum National Air Museum S. Paul Johnston, Director Fiscal year 1965 was a period of transition for the National Air (and Space) Museum. Not only did long-term plans for the new fa- cility to house the museum's collections come into clearer focus, but all museum programs were subject to critical reexamination. Orientation toward the "famous first" which had long dominated museum thinking was subordinated in favor of programs designed to yield scientific information and education tailored to fit the needs of our potential audiences in this period of rapidly advancing aerospace technology. 1 . For the masses who are expected to visit the new facility yearly, our displays must present in clear and understandable fashion a bal- anced story of aerospace development — not only of where we have been and where we are but also where we are headed. 2. For the relatively small group of serious researchers in aerospace technology and/or history, the museum must reorganize its already extensive research resources and make them more readily available. 3. For those whose need-to-know includes the actual examination of aerospace hardware, the NAM study collection at Silver Hill, Md., must be better documented and better housed. All these matters re- quired detailed review. One of the first actions of the present director on taking office in September 1964 was to assemble a group of outside consultants to take an objective look at the over-all problem. None of these advisers were museum people as such, but each had a long background in some aspects of aerospace science and technology. Their collective exper- ience covered the entire range of air and space development. All were sufficiently senior to have broad personal historical perspective. They were asked to avoid any consideration of the placement of specific items of hardware in specific locations in a projected building, but rather to concentrate on such broad questions as "What is the purpose of an aerospace museum in the nation's capitol?" — "What sort of story should it tell?" — and "To whom does it speak?" The results of this exercise are contained in a report entitled "Pro- posed Objectives and Plans for the National Air and Space Museum," dated January 15, 1965. The report was considered and approved (with minor modifications) by the National Air Museum Advisory 315 316 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Board at its meeting on January 26, 1965. It was subsequently ap- proved by the Secretary and now constitutes the basic planning docu- ment for the future. A condensed version of this report was given wide distribution through one of the publications of the Aerospace Industries Association. The practice of seeking outside advice and assistance on museum problems was followed throughout the year. Individuals and groups knowledgeable and experienced in matters in which NAM is interested (e.g., aero and space medicine, meteorology, flight safety, lighter-than- air flight, etc.) were recruited to serve as advisers in developing useful and accurate presentations for the new facility. A great deal of interest in the museum has been engendered in this manner. It is evident that there will be no lack of enthusiastic volunteer support for NAM activities. In addition to such informal arrangements, contracts were made with certain specialized consultants (1) to make a study of NAM's organiza- tion and management problems in the preservation and restoration division at Silver Hill, (2) to make preliminary studies of the organiza- tion of our documentary and other research material, and (3) to advise on matters relating to flight control displays and similar operations. Although, in the past, a certain number of space artifacts had been collected and were on display, little in the way of space-oriented programs or scientific or technological capability existed. To remedy this difficulty, two major steps were undertaken. First, to alleviate the "space vacuum," an astronautics department under the direction of Frederick C. Durant III was established. Mr. Durant came into the museum in October 1964 as one of the members of the planning group. He joined the staff as assistant director of astronautics in January 1965. His long background and broad expe- rience in rocketry and space technology have greatly strengthened NAM's position. Under his direction a curatorial staff specializing in space vehicle design, launch and propulsion technology, auxiliary sys- tems development, and life support techniques will be developed. Second, close working relationships were established with NASA, not only through the activities of NASA's Artifacts Committee (which deals primarily with the disposition of important NASA- developed hardware) but also with the scientific and technical staffs of NASA. Administrator James Webb, Dr. Hugh Dryden, Dr. Robert Seamans, and their associates supplied strong and continuing support to NAM's plans and programs. In turn, NAM provided public exhibition space for NASA displays of current interest. Concurrently with the completion of such programs as the Gemini flights, the Ranger Moon shots, and the Mariner Mars exploration, the associated NATIONAL AIR MUSEUM 317 equipment, explanations of the programs, and the achieved results were put on display in the rotunda and in the west hall of the Arts and Industries Building. Public interest and NASA's favorable reaction to these activities have been high. In addition to the establishment of a separate astronautics depart- ment as mentioned above, the organic structure of the staff was re- studied and lines of responsibility clarified. As now constituted, five major departments exist: aeronautics, astronautics, information and education, exhibits, and administration. As soon as conditions permit, an assistant director of aeronautics (as an "opposite number" for Mr. Durant) will be selected. During the year the work of the department was ably forwarded by the present curatorial staff: Louis Casey for aircraft, Robert Meyer for power plants and propulsion, and Kenneth Newland for auxiliary systems and devices. The information and education department, headed by chief historian Paul E. Garber, maintained a constant service to correspond- ents and visitors in connection with their studies on flight and flight technology. Steps were initiated to improve the sorting and cataloging of the Museum's collection of research material. The services pro- vided by Mr. Garber and his assistants contributed greatly to the preparation of many articles for publication, television, and other programs. Among his many activities, Mr. Garber gave 47 formal lectures on various aspects of the history of flight, conducted 14 lecture tours to museums, and participated in 6 radio and television programs. The exhibits department, under the direction of James Mahoney, in addition to maintaining close and continuous contact with the architects of the new facility, made considerable progress in temporarily refurbishing certain of the older NAM exhibit areas. Recognizing that NAM has an obligation to maintain acceptable exhibits for public display during the interval before any new building is available, several areas in the Arts and Industries Building (opened up by the removal of exhibits to the Museum of History and Technology) are being redeveloped for NAM's temporary use. These include the southeast hall for display of aircraft and engines primarily for pri- vate flying use, and the former power machinery hall for aerospace art works, including paintings, drawings, and prints from our own col- lections and on loan from NASA. As mentioned earlier, the west hall has been in active use for temporary NASA displays of current interest. Specimen preservation and restoration requirements for the preser- vation and restoration division at Silver Hill were the subject of con- siderable study and review in early 1965. The relationship between 318 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 the curatorial staff and the division was clarified and codified. Under Walter Male's direction, in spite of severe personnel limitations, work progressed on the restoration of such major items as the NC-4 and the Loeing Amphibian, previously scheduled. It is expected that the studies now under way by consultants will provide a more stable base for future programing of the work of the division. Meanwhile, a complete inventorying and cataloging of all NAM specimens at Silver Hill was accelerated during the midsummer of 1965. In the late spring of 1965 the first floor of the facility at 24th Street, formerly occupied by the Museum of History and Technology was turned over to the NAM exhibits department. The space was cleaned and repainted and will be developed into an exhibits facility for the Air Museum. The entire NAM collection of aircraft models was moved into 24th Street to permit long-needed cataloging and evaluation and also to make available more room at Silver Hill for preservation and restoration work. Under funds appropriated by the Congress, the architectural and engineering work on the new facility made excellent progress in the past year. Close and frequent contact was maintained with the archi- tects, Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum in St. Louis and their associates, Mills, Petticord, & Mills in Washington. Gyo Obata was in active personal charge of the project during the entire year. In the spring he moved a part of his St. Louis design staff to Washington to facilitate close cooperation with NAM and GSA. By the end of the year prac- tically all major design problems were resolved, and the architect reported that the complete construction drawings will be available by the end of August 1965. Although Congress has not yet given final approval of the project, planning work is going forward as rapidly as time and personnel permit. The target date for completion of the new Air and Space Museum is now estimated sometime during fiscal 1970, and all budgeting is being drawn on that basis. Among the important staff-generated publications which appeared during the year were the National Aeronautical Collections, 10th edition, by Paul E. Garber, and the first two publications in the new Smithsonian Annals of Flight series, The First Nonstop Coast-to-Coast Flight and the Historic T-2 Airplane, by Louis S. Casey and The First Airplane Diesel Engine: Packard Model DR-980 of 1928, by Robert B. Meyer. Several other papers by staff personnel are in preparation. Also, the production of a definitive biography of Samuel Pierpont Langley was started in collaboration with the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory at Cambridge. President Johnson seen viewing a model of the proposed new Air and Space Museum. At left are S. Paul Johnston, Director of the Museum, and Secretary Ripley. SkiSt'll ~. \m v . A sketch of the interior of the proposed new Air and Space Museum. ■■mmiHIIIIIIIIIIIIHI"""""" •„*W rate jffiSJk^L*. 1^ A model of the Smithsonian's proposed new Air and Space Museum showing the main entrance facing the Mall. The Wright Brothers' plane can be seen in the center background. NATIONAL AIR MUSEUM 319 Accessions to the Museum, both in hardware and in research material, are listed below. Special mention, however, should be made of certain major items received in the past 12 months: Agena B Flight Test Vehicle, USAF Vertol VZ-2 Helicopter, AMG/USA McDonnell XHV-1 Gonvertiplane, USA Prototype Ion Thruster, Electro Optical Systems, Inc. Bell Model 30 Helicopter, Franklin Institute Laboratory Glassware — Ion Experiment, Mrs. Robert H. Goddard Besler Aero Steam Engine, Rear Admiral John K. Leydon SPIRE Inertial Guidance System, M.I.T. Prototype TIROS Satellite, NASA ACCESSIONS Additions to the National Aeronautical and Space Collections, re- ceived and recorded during the fiscal year 1965, totaled 324 specimens in 67 separate accessions, as listed below. Those from Government departments are entered as transfers unless otherwise indicated; others were received as gifts or loans. Air Forge, Department of the: Flight test vehicle (Agena B) (NAM 1546). Air Forge, Department of the (Monteith, Maj. Gen. D. O., Amarillo Air Force Base, Tex.): General Electric I-A Turbojet Engine (1942), first American-made jet engine (NAM 1503). Air Forge, Department of the, Systems Command, Los Angeles, Calif.: Unmarked ball 16-inch diameter made of BSTM-B265/ 58T. Outer shell oxidized. This specimen reentered atmosphere over Australia and is part of the Agena (NAM 1535). Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, D.C. : Cutaway of ejection seat and accessory components from an F-86A-5 aircraft (NAM 1497). Army, Department of the, Army Materiel Command, Fort Eustis, Va.: Vertol VZ-2, S/N 56-6943, tilt-wing VTOL aircraft (NAM 1536). Army, Department of the, Director of Procurement, Washington, D.C: McDonnell XHV-1 convertiplane combining feature of fixed-wing and rotary-wing (NAM 1537). Arnold, Maj. David L., Arlington, Va.: AAF summer uniform, worn during time immediately preceding death of Gen. H. H. Arnold (NAM 1549). 320 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Basford, G. M., Co., New York, N. Y.: Cutaway model of Hensoldt binoculars, similar to those used by John Glenn on his space flight (NAM 1494). Brichagek, J. F., Euclid, Ohio: Model of 1914 Burgess-Dunne hydroplane -swept wing biplane, 1: 16 size (NAM 1540). Cochran, Jacqueline, New York, N Y.: One medal and two awards given to the donor for outstanding achievements in aviation (NAM 1490). Dickson, Sidney H., Easton, Md.: World War I, fleece-lined leather flying boots, purported to have been used by Col. William Thaw (NAM 1493). Doolittle, Gen. James H., Redondo Beach, Calif. : Bronze Antarctica Service Medal presented to donor by U.S. Navy (NAM 1517). Electro Optical Systems, Inc., Pasadena, Calif.: Ion Thruster, marked with label reading "in part developed by Dr. A. T. For- rester, Electro Optical Systems, Inc." This specimen is operational duplicate of Thruster used in suborbital shot (NAM 1545). Exchange Club, Meridian, Miss.: Curtiss P-40E fighter WW II (NAM 1506). Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, Pa.: Bell model 30 helicopter (NAM 1504). General Dynamics, Fort Worth, Tex. Desk model approximately 1:80 size of the Convair F 111 A. Model has variable swept wing (NAM 1541). General Services Administration, Washington D.C. : LR-79 Rocket Engine (NAM 1534). Georgetown Cabinet & Finishing Co., Inc., Washington, D.C: Model of Vlaicu monoplane (1910) (NAM 1498). General Motors Corp., AC Electronics Division, Milwaukee, Wis.: An incomplete inertial guidance system for a Thor rocket booster, plus nose cone and first station of Thor (NAM 1526). Goddard, Mrs. Robert H., Worcester, Mass.: Equipment used to test the flash visibility range of several mixtures of metal powders (NAM 1552). Suitcase used by Dr. Robert H. Goddard (NAM 1551). Glassware used by/or under the supervision of Dr. Goddard in experimental investigations of the behavior of ions (NAM 1550). Goodrich, B. F. Co., Washington, D.C: Polaris rocket chamber (sectionalized) showing filament winding technique (NAM 1553). Hamilton, R. B., Jr., Baltimore, Md. : Wright airplane stabilizer parts, 1913; exact-scale reproductions of the impeller and pendulum units (Contract) (NAM 1527). NATIONAL AIR MUSEUM 321 Hammersley, Col. Howard, Jr., Roanoke, Va.: AAF summer flight suit used in Mediterranean theater of operations during World War II (NAM 1548). Hartwigk, Herbert D., Cayucos, Calif.: Model of 1914 Burgess flying boat, 1:16 size; model of Curtiss N, circa 1913-14, Trainer; 1:16 size; model of the Wright B-l, circa 1912, U.S. Navy Air- craft, 1 :16 size (NAM 1519). Institute of Aeronautical Science, New York, N. Y.: A periodic compass, World War I, German. Designed for use in aircraft (NAM 1495). Leydon, Rear Adm. John K., Washington, D.C.: Besler aeronautical steam engine of 1956 (120 h.p.) designed to power Fairchild M 224, four-engine airplane (NAM 1514). Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Burbank, Calif.: Wing section to illus- trate the thermal deicing system of aircraft wings (NAM 1539). Lockheed-Georgia Co., Marietta, Ga.: Lockheed Jetstar Corp. transport, 1:16 size, circa 1964 (NAM 1522). Lowe A. W., St. Louis, Mo.: Early type of static-line parachute (NAM 1509). Macdowell, Karl P., Fairfax, Va.: 1928 airline ticket for trip, London to Paris, issued to donor (NAM 1508). Massachusettes Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.: SPIRE inertial guidance system used on the first successful inertially guided transcontinental flight, Feb. 8, 1953 (NAM 1511). Matt, Paul R., Temple City, Calif., Model of Curtiss HA fighter, circa 1919; first Navy fighter type (NAM 1516). Mcdonnell Aircraft Corp., St. Louis, Mo.: One-third scale model of Gemini spacecraft. This model represents the spacecraft which will be used in the U.S. Manned-Space Program (NAM 1513). Mikesh, Mat. Robert C, San Francisco, Calif.: Model of Douglas DST bearing registration and livery of first of DC-3 production series (NAM 1523). Mohawk Airlines, Utica, N. Y.: Nine scale models representing aircraft used by Mohawk Airlines (NAM 1554). National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, D.C.: Prototype satellite Tiros, one of original five such craft built. Basic configuration that of Tiros II (NAM 1544). National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif. : Model North American X-l 5-3, model 1 : 16 size S/N 66672 (NAM 1518). Navy, Department of the (Marine Corps School, U.S.), Quantico, Va.: Japanese copy of a Type 92, 7.7 mm. Lewis machinegun for aircraft (NAM 1525). 780-427—66 33 322 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Navy, Department of the, Lakehurst, N. J.: Wooden propeller (NAM 1524). Navy, Department of the, Mechanigsburg, Pa.: A collection of Japanese and German World War II aircraft instruments (NAM 1502). Navy, Department of the, Bureau of Naval Weapons, Washing- ton, D.G.: Michell-crankless aeronautical engine, 12 cylinder, liquid-cooled barrel, approximately 200 h.p. at 2,000 r.p.m. (NAM 1538). Neumann, C, Tulsa, Okla.: Collection of early airborne radio and radar equipment plus descriptive manuals (NAM 1492). Northwest Airlines, Minneapolis, Minn.: Scale model of DC-8 transport (NAM 1529). Opsahl, Alvin B., Minneapolis, Minn. : Wright J 4-B engine built April 2, 1926 by Wright Aeronautical Corp. (NAM 1528). Patent Office, U.S., Washington, D.C.: Patent model in support of patent claim for R. J. Spaulding Flying Machine, Mar. 5, 1889, patent no. 398984 (NAM 1521). Patterson, Mr. & Mrs. Jefferson, Washington, D.C.: Military uniform belonging to 1st Lt. Frank Stuart Patterson (1918) in whose honor Patterson Field (later Wright- Patterson AFB, Dayton, Ohio) was named (NAM 1499). Perkin-Elmer Corporation, Norwalk, Conn.: 1:16 scale model of the Stratoscope II telescope used in high altitude experimental telescopic photography (NAM 1500). Piasecki, Frank, Philadelphia, Pa.: Piasecki PV2, 3-blade rotor helicopter (NAM 1505). Robertson, Clifford, St. Petersburg, Fla.: Portion of fabric from the French airplane "Question Mark," which made first Paris to New York flight, autographed by pilots Coste and Bellonte (NAM 1547). Ryan, Prof. James J., St. Paul, Minn.: Ryan Flight Recorder Exhibit unit which contains the components of the Recorder, showing its development and uses (NAM 1507). Scale Craft Models, Massillon, Ohio: Model 1:16 size of Fabre Hydro "Avion" Canard 1910 first hydroaircraft; Curtiss "Tan- ager" — Winner of Guggenheim Safe Flight Contest (1929) 1:16 size; and model of Wright Model "F," 1:16 size (NAM 1543). Schoenberg, Mr., Long Island, N.Y.: 1:4 size model of a New Standard D-25A "Pride of Patterson" and a Curtiss-Reed propel- ler, circa 1925 (NAM 1489). NATIONAL AIR MUSEUM 323 Smith, J. C, Massillon, Ohio: Lockheed XC-35 aircraft, 1:16 size model of first transport airplane with pressurized cabin (NAM 1520). Smithsonian Institution, Unknown: Model 1 :49 size of North Ameri- can F-100G Super Sabre aircraft (NAM 1515). Smithsonian Institution, Found in NAM Collection: Small brass fitting, check valve; attributed to Robert Goddard (NAM 1530). Nose cone of small rocket with ejection mechanism attributed to Robert Goddard (NAM 1531). Tail section of small rocket attrib- uted to Robert Goddard (NAM 1532). Five pairs of World War I radio headsets (NAM 1496). Four pairs of World War I, U.S. Army radio earphones |(NAM .1501). Life-size painting of Maj. Gen. George O. Squier (NAM 1491). Sperry Gyroscope Co., Division of Sperry-Rand Corp., Great Neck, N.Y. : A collection of 60 early aircraft instruments, most of which were developed and manufactured by the Sperry Gyroscope Co. (NAM 1488). Vaeth, J. Gordon, Washington, D.C. : Copy of first Tiros Nephanaly- sis (cloud map) signed by James B. Jones and J. H. Conover (NAM 1533). Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Blacksburg, Va.: J44-R-12 Fair- child cutaway turbojet engine (1952-59) (NAM 1512). Waterman, Waldo, San Diego, Calif.: Full-size reproduction of the 1909 Popular Mechanics glider (NAM 1542). Willis, J. L., Sydney, Australia: Two fine examples of native-made Australian boomerangs (NAM 1510). ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The cooperation of the following persons and organizations in providing reference materials for the Museum's Historical Flight Research Center is sincerely appreciated and acknowledged: Air Force, U.S., Wright-Patterson Bagley, J. A., Farnborough, Hants, AFB, Ohio. England. Air Force, U.S. Kelly AFB, Texas. Bell Aerosystems Company, Buffalo, All-Woman Transcontinental Air N.Y. Race, Inc., Teterboro, N.J. Boeing Co., Seatde, Wash. American Institute of Aeronautics and Bradford, R. W., Don Mills, Ontario, Astronautics, New York, N.Y. Canada. Aviation Week and Space Tech- Bronte, Emory B., Honolulu, Hawaii. nology, New York, N.Y. Brunner, Calyton J., Troy, Ohio. 324 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Campbell, Mark (estate of) through Kenn C. Rust) Glendale, Calif. Cathcart, Donald G., Hermosa Beach, Calif. Chamberlain, Ralph G., Lincoln Park, Mich. Coast Guard, U.S., Washington, D.C. Coombs, Charles I., Los Angeles, Calif. Experimental Aircraft Association, Hales Corners, Wis. Fahey, James C, Falls Church, Va. Federal Aviation Agency, Washing- ton, D.C. General Dynamics/Fort Worth, Fort Worth, Tex. Gratz, Charles Murray, Greenwich, Conn. Hart, John T. (through William MacCracken), St. Louis, Mo. Herr, Otto, Hanover, Germany. Hodous, Mrs. Charles J., Jr., Fairview Park, Ohio. Holt, Ken, Washington, D.C. Hooper, Harold, Vienna, Va. Hunsaker, Dr. J. C, Cambridge, Mass. Hutchinson, Capt. J. D., Denver, Colo. Jacobs, Col. Stanley F., USAF Ret., Arlington, Va. Kaman Aircraft Corp., Bloomfield, Conn. Kines, Ronald L., Hyattsville, Md. Knell, K. A., Cambridge, England. Koster, William C, Evanston, 111. Kulp, Mrs. Jeanne, Reisterstown, Md. Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Burbank, Calif. Lea, John, Washington, D.C. Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Washing- ton, D.C. Lazarus, William C. (thru A. B. McMullen), Washington, D.C. Marshall, Mrs. Shirley, Tucson, Ariz. Matt, Paul R., Temple City, Calif. Merkle, Gustave John, Greenbelt, Md. Messer, Glenn E., Birmingham, Ala. Meyer, Jerome B., Ormond Beach, Fla. Murray, J. J., West Hollywood, Calif. National Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration, Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. National Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration Washington, D.C. Navy, U.S., Washington, D.C. Navy, U.S., Philadelphia, Pa. Ninety Nines, Inc., El Paso, Tex. North American Aviation, Inc., Washington, D.C. Nye, Willis L., Hay ward, Calif. New York Port Authority, New York, N.Y. Rolls-Royce, Ltd., Derby, England. Shell Companies Foundation, Inc., New York, N.Y. Sivel, Dr. W., San Francisco, Calif. Smith, Mrs. Joan Merriman, Long Beach, Calif. Stearns, Raymond L., Raleigh, N.C. Thompson Ramo Wooldridge, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio. Townson, George, Meadowbrook, Pa. Turner, Thomas, Washington, D.C. Wigton, Don C, Detroit, Mich. Williams, Warren W., Douglasville, Pa. United Air Lines, Chicago, 111. Philip S. Hopkins, director of the National Air Museum since 1958, whose efforts during the past few years laid the groundwork for the magnificent new NASM facility-to-be, retired as of August 1, 1964. Paul E. Garber served as acting director for the month of August and the present incumbent took office on September 1, 1964. John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Roger L. Stevens Chairman, Board of Trustees The past 12 months have seen greater strides toward the creation of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts than any previous period since inception of the original idea. Funds have been raised to match the full Federal appropriation. The ground-breaking has taken place. The Metropolitan Opera National Company, jointly spon- sored and underwritten by the Center and the Metropolitan Opera Association, is a reality. Final architectural plans are being prepared, and the letting of contracts will begin in September. A year from now the superstructure of the Center should be rising on the banks of the Potomac. It is a year in which the Center has graduated from the realm of hopes, plans, and dreams to actuality, detail, and promise. ORGANIZATION The National Cultural Center was established by an Act of Congress in September 1958. This Act which terminated in 5 years was ex- tended for 3 more years until September 1966, and specified that the money for the Center's construction must be raised by voluntary contributions. Congress authorized a nationwide fund-raising campaign for this purpose. Following the death of President Kennedy there was a spontaneous movement throughout the country to make the Cultural Center, in which he had taken such a close personal interest, his sole official memorial in the Nation's capital. President Johnson sent an Admin- istration request to Congress in December 1963; the measure was passed with full bipartisan support and signed into law by the President on January 23, 1964 (Public Law 88-260). Under the bylaws of this Act, and pursuant thereto, the Board of Trustees have held three meetings during the past 12 months, and the members of the Executive Committee met five times during the same period. 327 328 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIONS Board of Trustees At the present time the membership of the Board of Trustees of the John F. Kennedy Center is as follows: Richard Adler* Howard F. Ahmanson Floyd D. Akers Robert O. Anderson + * Ralph E. Becker + K. LeMoyne Billings + Mrs. Thomas W. Braden* Ernest R. Breech Edgar M. Bronfman Mrs. George R. Brown* Ralph J. Bunche Anthony J. Celebrezze Joseph S. Clark Abe Fortas* J. William Fulbright Mrs. George A. Garrett Leonard H. Goldenson* George B. Hartzog, Jr. + Mrs. John F. Kennedy -f- Robert F. Kennedy +* Francis Keppel Mrs. Albert D. Lasker + Erich Leinsdorf+* Sol M. Linowilz+* Harry C. McPherson, Jr.+* George Meany L. Quincy Mumford Edwin W. Pauley* Arthur Penn* Mrs. Charlotte T. Reid Richard S. Reynolds, Jr. Frank H. Ricketson, Jr. S. Dillon Ripley, 11 + Richard Rodgers* Leverett Saltonstall Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.* Mrs. Jouett Shouse-f- Mrs. Jean Kennedy Smith* Roger L. Stevens + Frank Thompson, Jr. Walter N. Tobriner + William Walton + William H. Waters, Jr. Edwin L. Weisl, Sr.* Robert W. Woodruff* James C. Wright, Jr. Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, Mrs. John F. Kennedy and Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower continue to serve as honorary cochairmen of the Center The elected officers of the Center are as follows: Roger L. Stevens, chairman Robert O. Anderson, vice chairman Sol M. Linowitz, vice chairman Ralph E. Becker, general counsel Daniel W. Bell, treasurer K. LeMoyne Billings, secretary Philip J. Mullin, assistant secretary and administrative officer Herbert D. Lawson, assistant treasurer Kenneth Birgfeld, assistant treasurer Paul Seltzer, assistant treasurer L. Corrin Strong, chairman emeritus *Denotes a new member appointed by the President since June 30, 1964 + Denotes a member of the Executive Committee KENNEDY CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS 329 JFK Center/GSA Liaison Committee The General Services Administration is serving as the Center's agent for design and construction. The JFK Center/GSA Liaison Committee was formed to work on final plans and specifications and all future phases of building the Center. It held 18 meetings throughout the fiscal year. These meetings bring together represent- atives of the Center, General Services Administration, and the archi- tect and make determinations with respect to planning, contracting, and construction. The committee also serves as a coordinating group among the various agencies of the Government having inci- dental interest or jurisdiction in the planning and construction of the project. This includes the government of the District of Colum- bia, the National Park Service, and the various security and police jurisdictions. In addition to Mr. Stevens, chairman ex officio, trustees and offi- cers of the Center serving on the committee are : Ralph E. Becker, general counsel Mrs. Jouett Shouse S. Dillon Ripley George B. Hartzog, Jr. Philip J. Mullin, administrative officer Program Committee Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., was appointed chairman of the Center's Program Committee. Serving with him will be Mrs. Thomas W. Braden, Harold Clurman, Richard N. Goodwin, August Heckscher, Mrs. John F. Kennedy, Senator Robert F. Kennedy, Goddard Lieberson, Oliver Smith, and George Stevens, Jr. The Program Committee will make recommendations for the maximum effective use of the Center's facilities to comply with the law and the intent of the Congress and will also suggest candidates for the position of program director as well as guidelines respecting the duties of this office. The Board of Trustees in turn will act on these recommen- dations and define the policy with respect to the Center's operations. Memorial Committee The John F. Kennedy Center Memorial Committee, responsible for selecting a suitable and appropriate memorial to President Kennedy for inclusion within the Center complex, has met and has made a preliminary report on its recommendations to the trustees. 330 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Fine Arts Accessions Committee The Fine Arts Accessions Committee appointed a subcommittee to assist it in preliminary consideration and screening of all works of art offered to the Center. The subcommittee is made up of leading authorities in the fine arts residing in the Washington area. Serving on the subcommittee are: David W. Scott, National Collection of Fine Arts, as chairman; J. Carter Brown, National Gallery of Art; Mrs. Marjorie Phillips, The Phillips Gallery; Edward Durell Stone; Hermann W. Williams, Jr., Corcoran Gallery of Art; and Karel Yasko, General Services Administration. The list of gifts tendered and offi- cially accepted thus far (not including those from foreign governments) comprise the following items: Portrait of President Kennedy by Carlos Andreson. Gift of the artist. Stein way grand piano. Gift of Mrs. Edward Sloane. Mural painting by Mark Rothko. Gift of Mrs. Albert Lasker. Japanese BYOBU folding two-panel screen. Gift of a group of Japanese ladies. Recording of Enesco's 1st and 2d Rumanian rhapsodies conducted by the composer. Gift of Donald H. Gabor. PROGRESS IN FUND RAISING As of June 30, 1965, pledges and contributions to the John F. Ken- nedy Center for the Performing Arts exceeded $15.5 million — the amount necessary to qualify for the full matching Federal grant. Included in that sum was a gift of S500,000 from the Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr., Foundation and a $5-million grant from the Ford Foundation which had been contingent on two-to-one matching terms as originally stipulated in April 1964. Land Gift The two daughters and the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Christian Heurich, Sr., deeded to the Center, as a gift, a plot of land appraised at $150,000. It is situated within the boundaries of the Center's site. This gift, which was made in memory of Mr. and Mrs. Heurich, Sr., completed the acquisition of their property without the necessity for any condemnation action by the National Capital Planning Commission. kennedy center for the performing arts 331 Foreign Gifts In addition to the previously reported gifts of marble from the Italian Government and a Waterford chandelier from Ireland, four other foreign governments have made contributions to the Center in the past year. The Danish Government agreed to supply the furniture valued at $155,000 for the Grand Foyer. The West German Government will donate sculptured bronze panels for the entrance of the Center with a minimum value of $250,000. A magnificent hand- woven red silk curtain, accented with gold, will hang from the proscen- ium of the Opera House as a joint gift from the Government of Japan and the America-Japan Society of Tokyo. Because of the time and skills required, the donors expect the cost to exceed $140,000. Twelve crystal chandeliers, designed by the noted Norwegian glass designer Jonas Hidle, will enhance the Concert Hall as Norway's contribution to the Center. The architect estimates that to procure or duplicate this gift which is being fabricated by the Christiania Glasmagasin, near Oslo, would cost in excess of $15,000 each. Development Committee With Robert O. Anderson as chairman, the Development Com- mittee will continue to prevail upon the trustees to assist the Center through their own individual gifts and by additional solicitation of foundations and individuals for major contributions. In addition, approaches to and from foreign governments will be further pursued. The Washington Area Special Gifts Committee and its subcommit- tees, having completed their work, ceased operation as a fund-raising adjunct of the Center. Washington Committee Theater Seat Priority Plan A maximum of 100 seats, at $3,000 each, will be allocated in the theater for sale by the Washington Committee under the Theater Seat Priority Plan. Each endowment will include priority privileges for opening-night performances for a period of 25 years. To become effective a minimum of 80 seats had to be sold. This number has already been subscribed. Seat Endowment Plan To date, 30 boxes and 270 seats have been officially designated by donors in the Center. A considerable amount of funds remains in the reserve account awaiting final disposition. 332 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Sousa Memorial Orginally conceived in the form of a band shell to be erected on the roof terrace, this endowment, owing to changes in the utilization of the roof area, will provide the stage and acoustical sound reflectors in the Concert Hall. An appropriate plaque will designate this as a gift in the name of John Philip Sousa from John Philip Sousa Memo- rial, Inc. This group is made up largely of high school and college band masters whose bands are presenting concerts and other musical events: the proceeds from these events are being contributed toward the fulfillment of their $100,000 pledge. Nearly half of the pledged amount has been received by the Center. Bands and orchestras participating will be appropriately recognized by inscription on the memorial plaque. Gifts of Materials Interest has been shown by several domestic industries in supplying American-produced materials as gifts to the Center. The Reynolds Metals Co. has donated aluminum ingots valued at $75,000 which will be fabricated to meet the specifications of the architect. The Martin Marietta Corp. has given the Center 13,000 barrels of cement, which reduces the amount required for purchase in the building con- tract by more than $50,000. It is possible that other gifts of this type will be received before the invitations to bid go out to the general contractors. Future Needs With the monies obtained from public contributions, the Federal grant, and the Treasury bonds, there are, according to the General Services Administration, sufficient funds on hand to proceed with the construction of the Center. However, it should be recalled that in the John F. Kennedy Center Act (Public Law 88-260), Congress stated that the Center shall, among other activities, "develop programs for children and youth and elderly (and for other age groups as well) in such arts designed specifically for their participation, education and recreation." No previous provision has been made for the finan- cial support of such activities. In view of this the trustees have dis- cussed the need and plans for a program development fund to insure that the mandate of Congress will be appropriately and fully realized. KENNEDY CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS 333 ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENTS Studio Film Theater Final drawings are about complete for the 500-seat Studio Film Theater to be located on the roof of the Center above the 1,100-seat main theater. Proscenium-type screen facilities will provide for the projection of 16 mm., 35 mm., and 70 mm. motion pictures while the theater also will be available for dramatic offerings, concerts, dance recitals, and lectures. When desirable or appropriate, this auditorium can also be converted into a theater-in-the -round. Further Refinements Although the shape of the Opera House has been altered, it still maintains the circular effect originally envisioned. The Concert Hall now is in a rectangular form in the interest of better acoustics. Provision also has been made for the installation of an Aeolian-Skinner concert organ which was given to the Center by Mrs. Jouett Shouse. It has been designed for use either as a solo instrument or as part of an orchestra. In the theater more balcony seats have been added and some orches- tra seats removed to provide a more intimate atmosphere. There also will be a 200-seat tourist center and cinema on the ground level for the showing of documentary films and for orientation sessions in conjunction with tours of the Center. Land Developments Steps have been initiated for the condemnation of the Watergate Inn and surrounding area. On the property adjacent to the site of the Center there is under construction a project known as the Watergate Towne Development. Four buildings are contemplated in this undertaking and it is known that Building No. 1, which is designated as stage 4 of the development, will rise to a height 41 feet above the main roof of the Center. As long ago as last November 25, 1964, the Center's general counsel went on record before the Board of Zoning Appeals to express the trustees' opposition to the proposed height of this building. Thus far the Board has not handed down a ruling on this matter. The developer of the 334 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Watergate project, however, indicated no intention of altering his blueprints. It was, therefore, resolved by the trustees that the officers and general counsel of the Center take all legal measures to oppose vigorously the construction of Building No. 1 to any height not sub- stantially below the cornice line of the Kennedy Center. Development of the Site On May 8, 1964, the National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC) which is the central planning agency for the Federal and District of Columbia Governments, reaffirmed its approval of the site. On July 23, 1964, the National Capital Planning Commission approved the site plan in lieu of zoning. These latter actions were taken after ex- tensive study by a task force composed of representatives of the NCPC, the General Services Administration, the National Park Service, the District of Columbia Department of Highways and Traffic, and the Center's architect. Consultants To assure that the Center will have the benefit of the finest technical knowledge and experience in the many diverse fields connected with the performing arts, the architect and General Services Administration have made extensive use of consultants. Specialists in lighting, seating, acoustics, audiovisual equipment, stage design and equipment, and theater planning have been retained. Working together they will af- ford the Center the finest technical competence available in all phases of opera, musical comedy, drama, ballet, symphony orchestra, and motion picture presentations. Included in the list are two of the Nation's leading acoustical ex- perts— they have been consulting, advising, and working closely with the architect, General Services Administration, and the Center to insure that the acoustical characteristics of the Kennedy Center will be the finest and most nearly perfect of any of the performing-arts halls in the world. Restaurant Facilities A 10-year agreement was entered into with the Restaurant Management Division of Automatic Canteen Company of America to cover the operation of all restaurant facilities in the Center. Auto- matic Canteen has recently designed the Metropolitan Opera's new facilities at Lincoln Center. They will be responsible for catering and Architect's model of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, showing the facade facing the Potomac River. Architect's conception of the entrance plaza of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in the Nation's Capital. Model of the grand foyer for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. KENNEDY CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS 335 servicing the main restaurant which will seat approximately 275 per- sons, a dual-purpose cafeteria/buffet seating approximately 245, and a coffee shop with a capacity of about 100 persons. In addition, there will be other refreshment areas in the Grand Foyer. Income accruing to the Center from this contract is expected to be sizable. Construction Schedule The architect reported that his final plans would be ready by Sep- tember 30. It will then take approximately 8 weeks for General Services Administration to review the plans and prepare the necessary documents for bidding. Thus, it would be about December 15, 1965, before the bids will have been received and evaluated. Prior to that time demolition of all remaining buildings on the site will have been completed and the necessary relocation of Rock Creek Parkway should be finished. SPECIAL EVENTS Ground-Breaking Ceremony At noon on December 2, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson broke ground for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts before an audience of more than 1,000 persons, including members of the Kennedy family, the Congress, the Diplomatic Corps, the Supreme Court, the Cabinet, the Center's trustees, and distinguished perform- ing artists. The program for the ceremony included the following: Invocation by the Most Reverend Philip Hannan, Auxiliary Bishop of Washington. Introduction by the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Sir John Gielgud who delivered a passage from Shakespeare's Henry V. A hymn by the choral group of the U.S. Navy Band. The reading by Jason Robards, Jr., of quotations from the speeches by President Kennedy concerning the arts. Remarks by Senator-elect Robert F. Kennedy. Address by the President of the United States. Swearing in of the Center's new trustees by Justice White of the Supreme Court. 336 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Following the ceremony a luncheon was held in the diplomatic reception rooms of the State Department for some 400 distinguished guests. Speakers at the luncheon were Vice President-elect Humphrey, Edward Durell Stone, and Roger L. Stevens. John F. Kennedy Center-Metropolitan Opera National Company As an indication of his great and personal interest in the project, President Kennedy himself announced, at the White House on October 11, 1963, the formation of the Metropolitan Opera National Company under the joint auspices of the Metropolitan Opera Association and the Center. At that time he fully endorsed the purpose of the Company to "fill a long-felt need in our musical life . . . (and to) . . . give opportunity to the young talent with which this country abounds." It was of increasing concern to the trustees of the Center that during the period of planning and construction it was vitally necessary to emphasize and give active affirmation to the national character of the Center. The Metropolitan Opera Association's concept of a truly na- tional opera company that would bring this art form to cities and citizens throughout this land seemed to present an ideal and timely project for furtherance of the trustees' efforts in this direction. Not only does the Company fulfill a specific provision of our Congres- sional mandate— to present classical and contemporary opera — 'but it also provides simultaneously a means of training and participation for talented young Americans. It seems particularly fitting that this first presentation under the cosponsorship of the Center should be one that was so close to the late President to whom the Center is a memorial. In the middle of July the Company is scheduled to assemble on the campus of Butler University in Indianapolis, Ind., for an intensive 8-week rehearsal period prior to launching their first nationwide tour on September 20 at Clowes Memorial Hall in Indianapolis. Their season will extend through May 1966 and include some 70 North American cities. (On the evening of May 3, 1965, the Metropolitan Opera National Company appeared in the Department of State Auditorium as part of a series of Cabinet presentations.) kennedy center for the performing arts 337 New York World's Fair One of the new exhibits in the Federal Pavilion at the 1965 New York World's Fair is a handsome display of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in which a model of the Center is the highlight. Surrounding it are color enlargements of interior and exterior photo- graphs of the model together with quotations from President Kennedy's speeches concerning the importance of the arts in our society as well as pertinent statements of President Johnson. This exhibit is located at the end of the panoramic ride in the Federal Pavilion which last year had 5% million visitors. THE FUTURE Never before in the history of the Nation's capital have the prospects for a truly national center for the performing arts looked as bright as they do today. From incoming mail, press comments, and general interest expressed in numerous ways, the country at large is aware of, in support of, and eager for the reality of the Kennedy Center. We have successfully hurdled the two initial stages: the preparation of firm and detailed groundwork and planning; and, the conclusion of the campaign to secure the necessary funds for construction. Ahead of us lies the construction itself and then utilization of the Center's facilities in compliance with the mandate of Congress. In the ensuing 12 months major strides should be made in the building of the Center and progress will continue in planning for its projected operations. Finally, it cannot be stressed too greatly that the development of the Center to the stage herein described would not have been possible without the unceasing support and encouragement that has been received from the Smithsonian Institution, the General Services Admin- istration, the many other Government agencies who have been at all times helpful and understanding, the members of Congress whose faith and trust in our undertaking have eased many burdens and problems, all of the members of President Kennedy's family whose active interest has been a constant source of inspiration, and the enthusiasm and support of President and Mrs. Johnson. 789-427—06 34 338 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 FINANCIAL REPORT, JULY 1, 1964, THROUGH JUNE 30, 1965 July 28, 7965 To the Board of Trustees of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Washington, D.C. Gentlemen: We have examined the books and records of the JOHN F. KENNEDY CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS for the period July 1, 1964, through June 30, 1965, and submit our report herewith as follows: Exhibit A — Balance Sheet as of June 30, 1965. Exhibit B — Statement of Income, Expenses and Fund Balance for the Year July 1, 1964 Through June 30, 1965. Exhibit B-I — Statement of Expenses for the Year July 1, 1964 Through June 30, 1965. Our examination was made in accordance with generally 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 accompanying report presents fairly the financial position of the JOHN F. KENNEDY CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS at June 30, 1965 and the results of its operation for the period then ended in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles. Respectfully submitted, (S) John J. Addabo Certified Public Accountant EXHIBIT A BALANCE SHEET, JUNE 30, 1965 ASSETS CURRENT ASSETS Cash in banks General accounts . $2,146,615.19 Time deposits and savings accounts 10,015,320.77 $12,161,935.96 Notes receivable — due within one year 125, 000. 00 Accounts receivable 9, 219. 18 Accrued interest receivable 164, 369. 20 Petty cash fund 400. 00 Deposit with airline 425. 00 Stock, bonds, and property re- ceived 268,659.00 $12,730,008.34 KENNEDY CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS 339 PLEDGES RECEIVABLE National General Account $10, 000. 00 National Seat Reserve Account 600. 00 President's Business Committee 26, 500. 00 Washington Area Building Fund — General 6, 100. 00 Washington Area Building Fund — Reserve 10, 523. 17 Washington Area Seat Reserve Ac- count 5, 350. 00 Washington Area Federal Employee Drive 1,884.50 Washington Area Federal Employee Drive — Seat Endowment 45. 00 Washington Area Tangible Property . 35, 000. 00 $96, 002. 67 REAL ESTATE FIXED ASSETS AND OTHER TANGIBLE PROPERTY Cost of land— advanced to NCPC . . $146, 000. 00 Construction costs 926, 784. 20 Furniture and equipment — book value 5, 343. 88 Land and other property donated. . . 414, 750. 00 Gifts from foreign nations 1,787,000.00 3,279,878.08 OTHER ASSETS Notes receivable — due later than one year $350, 000. 00 Prepaid expenses — Creative America . 56, 425. 00 406, 425. 00 Total assets $16, 512, 314. 09 LIABILITIES AND NET WORTH LIABILITIES Payroll taxes withheld $1, 082. 34 NET WORTH Pledges receivable $96, 002. 67 Fund balance— June 30, 1965 16,415,229.08 16,511,231.75 Total liabilities and net worth $16, 512, 314. 09 340 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 EXHIBIT B STATEMENT OF INCOME, EXPENSES, AND FUND BALANCE FOR THE YEAR JULY 1, 1964, THROUGH JUNE 30, 1965 CONTRIBUTIONS AND PLEDGES PAID IN GEN- ERAL ACCOUNTS National General Account $6, 255, 553. 36 President's Business Committee 1, 361, 406. 36 Washington Area Building Fund 661, 169. 01 Washington Area Federal Employee Drive 1, 888. 63 Interest Income 314, 054. 93 National Tangible Property 1, 787, 000. 00 Special Theatre Club 189, 614. 45 Total general accounts $10, 570, 686. 74 RESERVE ACCOUNTS National Reserve Account $104, 233. 98 National Seat Reserve Account 161, 272. 78 Washington Area Building Fund 603, 113. 94 Washington Area Seat Reserve Ac- count 209, 126. 63 Washington Area Federal Employee Drive — Seat Endowment 3, 449. 63 School Children's Reserve Fund 1, 207. 46 Total reserve accounts 1, 082, 404. 42 Total income $11, 653, 091. 16 Deduct expenses — exhibit B-l 392, 811. 61 Excess of receipts over expenses $11, 260, 279. 55 Fund balance — beginning of year 4, 815, 154. 08 Expenses prior to July 1, 1964, capitalized as construction costs 339, 795. 45 Fund Balance— June 30, 1965 $16, 415, 229. 08 KENNEDY CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS 341 EXHIBIT B-l STATEMENT OF EXPENSES FOR THE YEAR JULY 1, 1964, THROUGH JUNE 30, 1965 Salaries $76, 236. 04 Extra help 3, 818. 77 Depreciation — furniture and equipment 868. 34 Equipment rental and repairs 2, 398. 01 Meetings 4, 453. 23 Office supplies and postage 3, 491. 54 D.C. area expenses 6, 624. 17 Printing and publicity 233. 51 Promotion 32, 107. 83 Publications 948. 60 Telephone and telegraph 6, 863. 44 Travel 17, 022. 29 Taxes — payroll and civil service 4, 925. 18 Unclassified (55. 58) Accounting and audit fees 4, 600. 00 Legal fees 350. 00 Insurance 1, 768. 93 Public relations and fund raising fees 68, 637. 50 President's Business Committee 45, 377. 92 Metropolitan Opera 150, 000. 00 Inaugural Ball— N.Y. World's Fair 313. 15 Israeli Benefit 1, 427. 50 Total $432, 410. 37 Less — allocated to construction costs (-39, 598. 76) TOTAL EXPENSES $392, 811.61 National Portrait Gallery National Portrait Gallery Charles Nagel, Director The National Portrait Gallery Commission is composed of the following members: Catherine Drinker Bowen, Julian P. Boyd, John Nicholas Brown, Lewis Deschler, David E. Finley, Wilmarth Sheldon Lewis, Richard H. Shryock, and Frederick P. Todd. Ex officio mem- bers of the Commission are Chancellor of the Smithsonian Institution, Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States ; Director of the Na- tional Gallery of Art, John Walker; and Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, S. Dillon Ripley. The Commission met three times during the fiscal year: on September 23, 1964, January 27, 1965, and May 19, 1965. The director also attended these meetings. Final bids were received on the alteration of the Fine Arts and Por- trait Gallery Building, and work on it began on December 31, 1964. Happily, new construction is proceeding satisfactorily. The director and Victor Proetz have been working on plans for the exhibition areas that will be coordinated with the structural drawings prepared by the architects. In addition, John Frazer is pursuing a research project under con- tract in the Frick Art Reference Library, and Mr. Proetz is under similar contract for architectural studies of the exhibition areas of the Gallery's new building. The staff of the Gallery is being augmented as rapidly as funds permit and qualified personnel can be recruited. The director entered on duty July 1, 1964. At the end of the year neither the position of associate director nor that of historian-biographer had been filled, but prospects seemed good for obtaining outstanding men for these positions and for getting the archival programs of the Gallery organized and underway. Staff members appointed during the year include Robert G. Stewart, associate curator; William Walker, librarian; Mrs. Shirley Harren, library assistant; Barnard Lebowitz, museum aide; Mrs. Genevieve Kennedy, museum specialist; Jean T. Adamonis, secretary; Carol Hutchinson and Barbara Boiling, clerk-typists. Meanwhile, preparations are being made for a temporary gallery in the Arts and Industries Building in which to display some of the present holdings until such time as the move into the new building is consummated. During the year the director visited the National Portrait Galleries of Dublin, Edinburgh, and London, where he found directors who 345 346 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 were all most cordial and willing to share the benefits of their experi- ence. He also visited the Historical Museum in Mexico City to study the use of dioramas in connection with historical material. During the year the accessions listed on pages 346-348 came as gifts to the collections of the Gallery. Of these, the 34 likenesses transferred to our collection by the National Gallery of Art as a gift from the late Andrew Mellon constitute an outstandingly important accession during the Gallery's initial year of operation. An additional portrait of John James Audubon by his son was the gift of the Avalon Foundation. For other gifts, such as the portrait of John Jordan Crittenden by George P. A. Healy from Silas B. McKinley and that of Charles Lee from Mrs. A. D. Pollack Gilmour, the Gallery is particularly grateful. These portraits come to us as gifts from descendents of the sitters, the ideal but no longer, unfortunately, the usual way of objects being added to the collections. The four original drawings of Americans, a gift from the trustees of the National Portrait Gallery of London, were particularly welcome as evidence of the interest in our Gallery on the part of our great precursor. In addition, the archives has acquired nearly 20,000 portrait prints through the Metropolitan Museum from the Joseph V. Reed Collection and from the Robbins Print Collection. PORTRAITS ACCEPTED BY THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY FOR FISCAL YEAR 1964-65 SUBJECT *Aubudon, John James *Buchanan, James *Calhoun, John *CIay, Henry ♦Clay, Henry *Clinton, DeWitt Crittenden, John Jordan ARTIST John Woodhouse Au- dubon George P. A. Healy Rembrandt Peale (att.) John James Aubudon (att.) George P. A. Healy John Wesley Jarvis George P. A. Healy Douglas, William Orville Oskar Stoessel Eisenhower, Dwight David ♦Eisenhower, Dwight David Finley, David E. John Groth Thomas E. Stephens Oskar Stoessel DONOR Avalon Foundation Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon Mr. & Mrs. Silas McKinley David E. Finley Arnold Roston Anonymous David E. Finley ♦Portraits transferred to the National Portrait Gallery from the National Gallery of Art. NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY 347 PORTRAITS ACCEPTED BY THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY FOR FISCAL YEAR 1964-65— Continued SUBJECT Ford, Henry ♦Forrestal, James Vincent ♦Foster, Stephen *Fuller, George Greeley, Horace ♦Harrison, Benjamin, Jr. ♦Harrison, William Henry Harte, Francis Bret * Hawthorne, Nathaniel ♦Hemingway, Ernest ♦Howells, Mildred and William Dean ♦Howells, William Dean ♦Jackson, Andrew ♦Laurens, Henry ♦Laurens, Henry Lee, Charles ^Lincoln, Abraham ♦Mac Veagh, Wayne ♦Marshall, George C. ♦Marshall, John ♦McCloskey, John Car- dinal ♦Men of Progress ♦Monroe, James Moody, Dwight Lyman ♦Moultrie, William ♦Muir, John Pershing, John J. ♦Pierce, Franklin ♦Pocahontas Ripley, S. Dillon ARTIST H. Wollner Albert K. Murray Thomas Hicks George Fuller Thomas Nast Charles Willson Peale James Reid Lambdin Sir Leslie Ward Emanuel Leutze Rene Bolz Augustus Saint Gaudens John Quincy Adams Ward Ralph E. W. Earl John Singleton Copley J. S. Copley (eng. by Green) Cephas Thompson George P. A. Healy Augustus Saint Gaudens Thomas E. Stephens James Reid Lambdin George P. A. Healy Christian Schussele John Vanderlyn Carlo Pellegrini Charles Willson Peale Edwin Keith Harkness Leopold Seyfert George P. A. Healy British School Robert White DONOR Henry Ford II Anonymous Andrew Mellon Mrs. Augustus Vincent Tack Trustees, London N.P.G. Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon Trustees, London N.P.G. Andrew Mellon Anonymous Miss Mildred Howells Miss Mildred Howells Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon Mrs. A. D. Pollack Gilmour Andrew Mellon Eames Mac Veagh Anonymous Andrew Mellon Miss Elizabeth McClos- key Cleary Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon Trustees, London N.P.G. Andrew Mellon Miss lone Bellamy Harkness Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Cooper Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon S. Dillon Ripley ♦Portraits transferred to the National Portrait Gallery from the National Gallery of Art. 348 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 PORTRAITS ACCEPTED BY THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY FOR FISCAL YEAR 1964-65— Continued SUBJECT *Rochambeau, Comte de Roosevelt, Franklin D. Sankey, Ira David Stone, Harlan Fiske Thayer, Abbott *Truman, Harry S. ARTIST Joseph Desire Court Oskar Stoessel Carlo Pellegrini Oskar Stoessel DONOR Andrew Mellon David E. Finley Trustees, London N.P.G. David E. Finley Gladys Thayer Reasoner Roger C. Fenn Augustus Vincent Tack Mrs. Augustus Vincent Tack Jacob Eichholtz Rembrandt Peale George P. A. Healy Sir Joseph Edgar Boehm the National Portrait Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon Andrew Mellon Albert E. Gallatin Gallery from the National *Tyler, John ♦Washington, George ♦Webster, Daniel *Whistler, James Abbott McNeil * Portraits transferred to Gallery of Art. The National Portrait Gallery Commission, after some discussion, came to the conclusion that fine color photographs would be the ideal medium in which to present to the public the likenesses of the current holders of office in the Cabinet, Supreme Court, Senate, and the House of Representatives. Some 556 pictures at the present moment are involved, and the project would probably cost about $85,000 with the photographs framed. Once the project is completed it would take relatively little in the way of funds to keep it up to date, and those members of Government who were replaced would automatically become part of the iconographical archive with new photographs simply inserted in the frames to replace them. It was thought wise, because of the uncertainties of the lasting qualities of color, that both a color and a black-and-white print of each photograph be supplied for record purposes. The Gallery is making a late start and consequently is at a disad- vantage in the matter of securing what objects there are available. Purchase funds for the National Portrait Gallery are a must under present conditions and every effort should be made to obtain them from both public and private sources. Funds are vitally necessary to get important objects that suddenly come on the market, and the National Portrait Gallery should be in a competitive position to obtain such objects for its collection. Meanwhile, all the portraits received from whatever source are being checked to determine their condition and a conservation pro- gram is being embarked upon which will include a number of new frames. NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY 349 LIBRARY During the year the library accessioned 40 titles for the Gallery, 17 of these having been obtained through exchange or gift. William Walker, though a member of the staff for less than a year, is making excellent progress in building up the joint library for both the National Portrait Gallery and National Collection of Fine Arts. He is seeing to it that books are assigned to each bureau according to its greater need and that a minimum of duplication is involved. It should be kept in mind that what is purchased for the National Collection of Fine Arts is available to the National Portrait Galllery and vice versa. At present, we have a small but most valuable reference library in our temporary offices in the Arts and Industries Building. At the May 1964 meeting, the Commissioners adopted the following criteria for the Proposed Library Research and Publication Program of the Gallery: The Library research and publication program of the National Portrait Gallery must be conceived in broad terms if the Gallery is to make significant contributions to education. To achieve this end, extensive biographical, archival, and iconographic materials are essential, as is also a skilled and ample staff of librarians and scholars who will engage in their own research as well as assist professional visitors. Publication should also be provided for, since it is by publication that the influence of the National Portrait Gallery will be most widely felt. The persons represented in the Library by drawings, prints, and photographs should be far more numerous than those represented in the Gallery and should include relatively minor figures as well as those of national significance. Biographical information on such figures should be assembled for the use of qualified scholars. If this program is carried out, the National Portrait Gallery will become a national biographical and iconographical research center. Such a center would include all standard reference works such as: 1. General biographical dictionaries. 2. Specialized dictionaries relating to regions, occupations, etc. 3. Guides to and studies of biography as such. 4. Critical and historical studies of American painting and other visual arts. 5. National, state, and local histories. 6. Files of journals devoted to American histories (national, regional, and state). 7. Guides to collections of American manuscripts. 8. Encyclopedias and bibliographies of American history. 9. American biographies and memoirs. One of the Library's tasks would be the establishment of a national union catalogue of likenesses germane to the basic purposes of the National Portrait Gallery in public and private possession. 350 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 In closing I should like to quote from a letter written by Thomas Carlyle to David Lang in 1854 concerning a project of a National Exhibition of Scottish Portraits. It puts forward in powerful fashion the need for and the value of the portrait and, where possible, accom- panying documentation. To the searcher after truth in the study of people who have made a significant contribution to the history and culture of their country, collections of such material are invaluable. In all my poor historical investigation it has been, and always is, one of the most primary wants to procure a bodily likeness of the personage inquired after; a good PORTRAIT, if such exists; failing that, even an indifferent if sincere one. In short, any representation, made by a faithful human creature, of that Face and Figure, which he saw with his own eyes, and which I can never see with mine, is now valuable to me, and much better than none at all. This, which is my own deep experience, I believe to be, in a deeper or less deep degree, the universal one; and that every student and reader of History, who strives earnestly to conceive for himself what manner of FACT and MAN this or the other vague Historical NAME can have been will, as the first and directest indication of all, search eagerly for a Portrait, for all the reasonable portraits there are; and never rest till he have made out, if possible, what the man's natural face was like. Often ... I have found that the Portrait was as a small lighted candle by which the Biographies could for the first time be read, and some interpretation made of them; the Biographical Personage no longer an empty impossible Phantasm, or distracting aggregate of inconsistent rumors — ■ in which state, alas his usual one, he is worth nothing to anybody . . . Next in directness are a man's genuine Letters, if he have left any, and you can read them to the bottom; of course a man's actions are the most complete and indubitable stamp of him; but without these aids of Portraits and Letters, they are in themselves so infinitely abstruse a stamp, and so confused by foreign rumor and false tradition of them, as to be oftenest undecipherable with certainty. This letter, written more than 100 years ago with all the quaintness of phrase, punctuation, and capitalization characteristic of a letter written by a great author about a field where his competence could be considered as no more than ancillary, is yet a definitive statement of the value to scholars of the collections we are belatedly endeavoring to assemble for the National Portrait Gallery in Washington. Abraham Lincoln by George P. A. Healy. Oil on canvas, lAVs X 54M inches. Gift of Andrew Mellon to the National Portrait Gallerv. Pocahontas, British School. Oil on canvas, 30 X 25 inches. Gift of Andrew Mellon to the National Portrait Gallery. Henry Laurens, attributed to John Singleton Copley. Oil on canvas, 54H X 405s inches. Gift of Andrew Mellon to the Nadonal Portrait Gallerv. Henry Ford, by H. Wollner. Bronze bust, 16 inches high. Gift of the Henry Ford Trade School Alumni Association to the National Portrait Gallery. Radiation Biology Laboratory Radiation Biology Laboratory W. H. Klein, Director On February 16, 1965, the Radiation Biology Laboratory was estab- lished out of the Division of Radiation and Organisms as an inde- pendent unit separate from the Astrophysical Observatory and reporting directly to the Secretary through the Assistant Secretary for Science. The laboratory will continue its emphasis upon three general areas: regulatory biology, solar radiation measurements, and carbon dating. The specific areas of biological research pursued during the year include mechanisms of control of regulatory responses by non- ionizing radiation such as phototropism, photomorphogenesis, the induction of photosynthetic activity, and the interaction of ionizing radiation such as X-rays with synthetic and morphological systems. A study has been completed of the composition of a water-soluble chloroplast protein fraction extracted from etiolated bean leaves greened in the presence and absence of chloramphenicol. The proteins of the water-soluble chloroplast fraction were analyzed by assessing the reaction to antisera of chloramphenicol treated and untreated plastids, by column chromatography, and by zone electrophoresis on acrylamide gel. Chloramphenicol caused an accumulation of a water-soluble chloro- plast protein fraction. This accumulation resulted from a decrease in the amount of some proteins found in the water soluble fraction and an increase in others. It had previously been found that chloram- phenicol partially inhibited light-dependent formation of chloroplast protein and lamellae. Therefore, it was concluded that chloram- phenicol inhibited the formation of some protein needed for building lamellae, resulting in accumulation in the soluble fraction of lamellar protein whose synthesis is insensitive to chloramphenicol. Experiments have been initiated to determine the effects of illumina- tion on the ability of chloroplasts isolated from etiolated bean leaves to synthesize proteins in vitro. In the area of polyphosphate structure, model phosphorus compounds such as trimetaphosphoimidate were chemically synthesized. Natural polyphosphate and model compounds were compared as to hydrolysis properties, infrared spectra, and phosphorus-to-nitrogen ratios. 353 7S9-427— 66' 35 354 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 A study of the products of various chemical and enzymatic hydrolyses of natural polyphosphates was concluded. The results indicated that natural "polyphosphates" are really not linear phosphate anhydrides and, therefore, are not true polyphosphates. Polyphosphates were also isolated from uniformly C14-labeled Chorella cells and shown to be free from radioactivity. Thus, for the first time, the polyphosphate from Chorella has been shown to be truly inorganic. The study of the biochemical events occurring between an etiolated plant's first exposure to radiant energy and the manifestation of the light-induced morphological changes has been continued. The demonstration of the significant role of the endogenous reducing and nonreducing sugars has led to a detailed study of the incorporation, distribution, and utilization of exogenously supplied radioactive substrate. Glucose in solution applied to etiolated leaf tissue is incorporated almost entirely as sucrose. In light-treated samples the primary effect during the first few hours is an increased disappearance of sucrose. However, after an extended dark development period, the light response is reflected as loss of fructose. In general, results ob- tained substantiated the fact that the photomorphogenic response is dependent upon endogenous carbohydrate levels. Of particular significance is the inverse relationship between the disappearance of C14 from the ethanol soluble fraction and the accumu- lation of C14 in the cellulosic residue. These changes were easily determined during the first few hours following photomorphogenic induction. Significant changes were also observed in the basic (amino acids) and acidic (organic acids) fractions obtained through ion ex- change techniques. Identification of the specific compounds involved is now being pursued. In vivo spectrophotometric measurements of the phytochrome pigment controlling photomorphogenesis in 6-day-old dark grown bean seedlings indicate that the disappearance of the active form of the pigment after formation by red light is a pseudo second order reaction. Thus a plot of the reciprocal of the pigment concentration versus time gives a straight line. This fact allows for the interpolation and extrapolation of pigment concentrations at any time after inductive exposures and allows for the calculation of the amounts of inactive red-absorbing form of the pigment present at any time. Such calculations indicate little or no dark reversion of the 730-absorbing form to the 660-absorbing form and very little, if any, dark synthesis of the 660-absorbing form. A comparison of growth in three environmentally controlled areas, with light quality the variable factor, indicates that the direction of RADIATION BIOLOGY LABORATORY 355 change in day length has marked influences on physiological responses in the day neutral plant, Black Valentine Bean. As day length increases there is a pronounced increase in dry weight, stem elongation, number of flowers and fruit set. These are reduced quite sharply with decreas- ing day lengths even though the total day length is relatively long. These differences in growth are most pronounced in the areas where there are large amounts of far -red radiation present. Data obtained from Wintex barley, a long-day plant, agrees with the dry-weight determinations for bean, indicating the influence of seasonal change in photosynthetic periods. Although the critical photo- period for Wintex barley is 14.5 hours, flower induction occurs in older plants planted in November when the maximum day length is 10.5 hours. Also plants grown under sources containing longer wavelengths produce a marked increase in the number of elongated inter nodes as compared with plants grown in the absence of longer wavelengths. No significant differences have been observed between the different environmental conditions for fresh weights of shoots and roots or chlorophyll concentrations. The light-sensitive sporangiophore of Phycomyces has been demon- strated to respond to mechanical stimuli in much the same manner as to light. After a pressure increase in the cell there is a decrease in growth rate, and after a decrease in pressure there is an increase in growth rate. The time course of these responses is the same as for the light-induced growth responses. The interaction between the light- and mechanically-induced responses is not yet known. Near normal growth rates have been achieved in sporangiophores immersed in aerated water in which the osmotic pressure is about 3.4 atmospheres using either glucose or inorganic salts. Using such an aqueous system it was demonstrated that materials can be taken up selectively by the light-sensitive growing zone, since the fluorescent dye phloxine was incorporated only into the wall of the growing zone. A number of other fluorescent dyes were examined, but none was incorporated. Approximately 100 samples of archeologic and geologic interest were dated by carbon- 14 techniques. A new system was developed for quantitatively removing radon from samples by passing carbon dioxide through an activated charcoal trap at — 40°G. This method now makes it possible to count radiocarbon samples immediately without the 30- or 45-day delay which was previously necessary. Water samples from the saline lake at the head of Antonette Bay, Ellesmere Island, were analyzed, and the data indicate that the lake was cut off from the fiord by glacial advance about 3,000 years ago. A survey of marine deposits on the east coast between Washington, 356 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 D.C., and Myrtle Beach, S.C., did not indicate that the sea was above its present level in the last 50,000 years. The age of the Pamlico formation is greater than 45,000 years. Measurements of total sun and sky radiation have continued using an automatic system sampling once every 3 minutes for 100 m/x, band widths throughout the visible. Because of slight variations in calibra- tion constants indicated to be the result of the geometry of the standard pyranometer, a new square receiver pyranometer was designed to eliminate these variations. The total energy received upon a hori- zontal surface varies markedly, with weather conditions as expected, and spectral quality does change. For example, the energy received for a series of days in the month of November varied from 343 langleys for a clear day to 70 langleys for a cloudy day with some snow. Simi- larly, the ratio of the 0.6-0.7 micron band to 0.7-0.8 micron band changed from 3.4 to 1.6. OTHER ACTIVITIES The laboratory staff participated in a number of scientific meetings during the year. In July Dr. Klein collaborated with representatives of the Division of Biology and Medicine, U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, to deter- mine the feasibility of making a prospective population genetics study in Iceland; he also surveyed sites near Keflavik, Iceland, to evaluate the possibility of establishing a field station for measuring solar radia- tion in high northern latitudes. In August Dr. Klein attended the Fourth International Photobiology Congress in Oxford, England, and participated in a symposium on phytochrome research. In June and July Dr. Shropshire consulted with investigators in photobiology and biophysics at Gif-Sur-Yvette, Zurich, Tubingen, Freiburg, Eindhoven, Wageningen, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Uppsala, and Stockholm. During this trip he presented a lecture at Le Phyto- tron, Gif-Sur-Yvette, entitled "Phytochrome Controlled Responses" and one at the Max-Planck Institut fur Biologie, Tubingen, entitled "Light-Induced Biochemical Changes and High Intensity Range Responses of Phycomyces." In August he attended the Photobiology Congress at Oxford and presented a symposium lecture, "Photoresponses in Phycomyces Sporangiophores," at the 10th International Botanical Congress in Edinburgh. In August the American Institute of Biological Sciences meeting in Boulder, Colo., was attended by Dr. Correll, Mr. Edwards, Dr. Klein, Dr. Loercher, Dr. Margulies, and Dr. Mitrakos. Dr. Correll presented a paper on "Alkali-Stable RNA Fragments from Chlorella," and Mr. RADIATION BIOLOGY LABORATORY 357 Edwards and Dr. Klein presented recent data on "Relationship of Phytochrome Concentration and Physiological Responses." Dr. Klein participated in the executive committee sessions of the American Society of Plant Physiologists. Mr. Harrison attended the Advanced Seminar for Scientific Glass- blowers held in August at the State University of New York, Alfred, NY. In March Dr. Klein attended the meetings of the Solar Energy Society in Phoenix, Ariz., and in April he was a participant in the 18th Annual Research Conference in Gatlinburg sponsored by the Biology Division of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Also in March Dr. Correll was invited to present a seminar, "RNA Polyphosphate in Algae," to the Department of Botany, University of California, Berkeley, and Dr. Shropshire was invited to present a lecture on "Phycomyces Research" to the Department of Biology of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. In March Dr. Shropshire consulted with Dr. Cairns of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory of Quantitative Biology to make arrange- ments for cooperatively offering, with Dr. Dennison of Dartmouth and Dr. Delbriick of the California Institute of Technology, an intensive course to be supported by the National Science Foundation on sensory physiology and the photoresponses of Phycomyces. In April Dr. Correll attended the meetings of the American Chemical Society held in Detroit, Mich., and Mr. Long attended the annual meetings of the American Geophysical Society in Washington, D.C. Dr. Margulies presented a paper entitled "Effect of Chloramphenicol on Structure and Protein Composition of Bean Chloroplasts" to the Washington Area Section of the American Society of Plant Physiolo- gists, held at the University of Maryland in May. Dr. Shropshire was an invited participant at the Thirtieth Cold Spring Harbor Symposium on Quantitative Biology held in June on sensory receptors. In May Mr. Long visited the Lamont Geological Observatory in Palisades, N.Y., to use their mass spectrograph for C13 analysis. He also attended the carbon dating conference held at Washington State University in June and presented a paper, "Techniques of Methane Preparation for Carbon Dating." STAFF CHANGES AND VISITING SCIENTISTS Scientists who joined the staff during the year are Dr. Bernard Nebel, plant physiologist, and Dr. Robert Rogers, cytogeneticist. Dr. Kon- 358 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 stantinos Mitrakos, visiting plant physiologist from Athens, Greece, and Dr. Adolf Steiner, visiting plant physiologist from the University of Freiburg, continued their work on carbohydrate metabolism. On June 30, 1965, the laboratory staff consisted of 33 persons. PUBLICATIONS Correll, David L. Sialic acid-containing glycopeptide from Chlorella. Science, vol. 145, pp. 588-589, 1964. . Alkali-stable RNA fragments from Chlorella. Phytochemistry, vol. 4, pp. 453-459, 1965. Loercher, Lars, and Liverman, James L. Influence of cobalt on leaf expansion and oxidative phosphorylation. Plant Physiol., vol. 39, pp. 720-725, 1964. Margulies, Maurice M. Effect of chloramphenicol on light-depend- ent synthesis of proteins and enzymes of leaves and chloroplasts of Phaseolus vulgaris. Plant Physiol., vol. 39, pp. 579-585, 1964. . Relationship between red light mediated glyceraldehyde-3- phosphate dehydrogenase formation and light-dependent develop- ment of photosynthesis. Plant Physiol., vol. 40, pp. 57-61, 1965. Shropshire, W., Jr.; Klein, W. H.; and Edwards, J. L. Photomor- phogenesis induced by flavin-mononucleotide fluorescence. Physiol. Plantarum, vol. 17, pp. 676-682, 1964. Science Information Exchange Science Information Exchange Monroe E. Freeman, Director The Science Information Exchange (SIE) receives, organizes, and disseminates information about scientific research in progress. Its mission is to assist the planning and management of research activ- ities supported by Government and non-Government agencies and institutions by promoting the exchange of information that concerns subject matter, distribution, level of effort, and other data pertaining to current research in the prepublication stage. It helps program directors and administrators to avoid unwarranted duplication and to determine the most advantageous distribution of research funds. It serves the entire scientific community by informing individual investigators about who is currently working on problems in their special fields. The Exchange is concerned only with research actually in progress in order to cover the 1- to 3-year information gap between the time a research project is proposed or started and the time the results become generally available in published form. Thus, the Exchange complements, rather than duplicates, the services of technical libraries and established documentation centers. Information is received by the Exchange from all available sources, specifying who supports a research task, who does it, where it is being done, and a 200-word technical summary of what is being done. These basic data are cast into a one-page record, the Notice of Re- search Project (NRP), that serves as the major input and output of the Exchange. These records are analyzed, indexed, processed, and stored in computer and manual files in such a way that a wide variety of questions about any of these items or any combination of items can be quickly retrieved or compiled. The acquisition of research task records and the output of infor- mation services have continued to increase throughout the year. Registration of unclassified research by the Federal agencies is now approaching comprehensive proportions with registration including more than 95 percent of all federally sponsored research in the life, medical, biological, agricultural, and behavioral sciences, and with more than 60 percent of basic research in the physical sciences. Inter- est and participation by non-Federal research groups have shown a 361 362 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 slow but steady increase particularly in state programs in agricul- ture, natural resources, and conservation, a trend that will probably continue over the years for these relatively smaller and widely scat- tered research programs. A number of associations, widely varying in scope, such as the American Sociological Society and the American Chemical Society's Petroleum Research Fund, have arranged for increased input and participation. Discussions with many others are under way. The demand for information services, on the other hand, has increased substantially, rising from 34,000 information requests in fiscal year 1964 to an estimated 43,000 in 1965. Especially significant has been an increasing demand from Federal agencies for the retrieval and organization of research records covering broad fields of national interest, such as all current research on water resources, pesticides, and oceanography, or the organization of records covering broad agency programs. About 1 8 of these major tasks involving the scien- tific staff and data-processing specialists have been completed or are in various stages of planning and development, compared with 6 such com- pilations in 1964. These compilations, such as the Water Resources Research Catalog, are often published and widely disseminated by the sponsoring agency. In connection with this particular catalog, SIE was designated by the President, in October 1964, as the national cataloging center for current and projected scientific research in all fields of water resources. The expanding services of SIE have been noted and commended in the past year by the President's report, War on Waste; in the report of the Select Committee on Government Research, House of Repre- sentatives; and by Senator Clinton P. Anderson in reference to the Water Resources Research Catalog. Recognizing that the comprehensive collection of current research records serves little purpose unless used to the maximum by scientists and engineers throughout the scientific community, SIE has made increasing efforts to make these services known and available to all eligible and potential users. More than 60 articles, news notes, and briefings about SIE have been presented to scientific groups or published in a wide variety of scientific journals. Thirty thousand descriptive brochures were distributed, mostly on request. An information exhibit was set up at the national meeting of the Association for Clinical Research. Over the year, almost 800 visitors came to SIE to study and explore its programs, including 35 visitors from foreign countries. An increased interest in SIE has been exhibited by many foreign visitors, especially in regard to the future possibility of exchange arrangements. This has been seconded by a rising interest from SCIENCE INFORMATION EXCHANGE 363 American agencies whose research interests and responsibilities do not necessarily stop at international boundaries. As a result of a 2-year program to increase efficiency and economies, substantial savings over anticipated needs have been realized. Al- though workloads generally increased in some activities as much as 20 to 25 percent, the total staff was increased by only 2% percent while nonprofessional personnel decreased from 115 to 108. In illus- tration of the effectiveness of new systems, the registration cost of 70,000 projects was reduced 16 percent, the registration cost of research proposals was reduced 50 percent, and the production cost of investigator reports was reduced 20 percent over fiscal year 1964. In addition to the continued effort to improve its present system, SIE is conducting a number of studies of more general relevancy to the field of information. From the vantage point of a current aware- ness program unique in terms of breadth of science areas covered, experience, and methods of approach, SIE professional staff were engaged in the systematic study of the following problems: 1 . The use of current scientific research information for adminis- trative purposes. 2. The evaluation of performance in retrieval by cooperative study with participating Federal programs. 3. The development of new indexing systems for publication pur- poses as program management tools, also of value at the bench level. 4. Information yield as a function of the depth of indexing. 5. The study of education and experience requirements for the recognition of scientific content and context. 6. The economics of computer storage and retrieval, as part of a broader study on optimal combinations of human and computer resources. National Armed Forces Museum Advisory Board National Armed Forces Museum Advisory Board John H. Magruder III, Director At its fourth meeting, on January 12, 1965, the National Armed Forces Museum Advisory Board recommended to the Board of Regents that— 1. The Smithsonian Institution's facilities be expanded under the provisions of Public Law 87-186 to include a National Armed Forces Museum. 2. Provisions be made in a reorganization plan of the President or by legislation to transfer to the Smithsonian Institution such authority as is necessary to enable it to administer and maintain Fort Washington as a site for the National Armed Forces Museum. 3. The Smithsonian Institution be directed by legislation to pursue the planning, development, and construction of a National Armed Forces Museum and that such sums be appropriated by the Congress to the Smithsonian Institution as may be necessary for these purposes. These recommendations were based on a detailed study completed by the Advisory Board with the assistance of its coordinating staff, headed by Col. John H. Magruder III, U.S. Marine Corps. Later in the year the Board's study was published under the title A Study Relating to the Establishment of a National Armed Forces Museum (Smith- sonian Publication 4611). On January 28, 1965, the Board of Regents approved the foregoing recommendations subject to the condition that the legislation to be sought would authorize only the planning of a National Armed Forces Museum, not construction, at this time. The Board of Regents further approved the submission of a request for an initial appro- priation not to exceed SI 00,000 for planning. Subsequently, the Smithsonian Institution, in compliance with the provisions of Public Law 87-186, undertook preliminary consultations with the Commis- sion of Fine Arts, the National Capital Planning Commission, and the General Services Administration, preparatory to submitting formal recommendations to the Congress with respect to the establishment of a National Armed Forces Museum and the acquisition of a site. Throughout the year the staff of the National Armed Forces Museum Advisory Board carried on negotiations with various agencies of the Armed Forces and the General Services Administration in regard to 367 368 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 the transfer to the Smithsonian Institution of military and naval objects appropriate for the collections of the proposed National Armed Forces Museum. As a result, a numerous and most varied assortment of objects was added to the collections. For example, there were acquired from the Department of the Army two now-rare Model 1903 6-inch coast defense guns complete with disappearing carriages; from the Department of the Navy a 5-inch deck gun with fire-control equipment from the World War II submarine U.S.S. Scabbardfish; from the U.S. Marine Corps the prototype of the M50 ONTOS self-propelled antitank vehicle; and from the General Services Admin- istration a valuable series of wind tunnel models used in the develop- ment of the U.S. Army Nike Ajax and Nike Hercules guided missiles. Among objects designated for eventual transfer to the Smithsonian, the Department of the Army, with the cooperation of the Depart- ment of Defense, set aside a most comprehensive array of components of the Nike Ajax, Lacrosse, Corporal, Redstone, and SS-10 missile systems. The staff, in cooperation with the Smithsonian Library, continued to acquire from Armed Forces historical agencies and elsewhere numerous publications in the field of military and naval history, to serve as a nucleus of the study center library of the National Armed Forces Museum. Smithsonian Museum Service 789-427—66 36 Smithsonian Museum Service G. Carroll Lindsay, Curator The Smithsonian Museum Service expanded both the variety and quantity of its services in accepting the challenge of serving the nearly 19 million visitors who came to the Smithsonian in fiscal 1965. Moving forward at a quickened pace, the Smithsonian Museum Ser- vice established new programs designed to interest a public growing more knowledgeable and sophisticated each year. One of the most successful new programs was a series of free film pres- entations, known as the Smithsonian Free Film Theater. The Theater presents unusual films that are entertaining as well as educational. Showing is augmented by brief introductory remarks from noted scien- tists and specialists whose work often is seen in the films. The enormous response to this new program from museum visitors is further proof of the great potential of the Smithsonian as a practitioner of the special art of museum education. This program was organized and operated by audiovisual specialist Mary Ann Friend and Mrs. Linda Gordon, docent in zoology. The Smithsonian Museum Service continued its role of interpreting, through various educational media, the work and collections of the Smithsonian in the fields of science, history, and art. For the eleventh consecutive year the Junior League of Washington continued its volunteer docent program, conducting school classes from the greater Washington area through the Smithsonian. The program was carried out through the cooperation of G. Carroll Lindsay, curator of the Smithsonian Museum Service, with Mrs. Arnold B. McKinnon, chairman of the League's docent committee, and Mrs. Joseph Smith, Jr. co-chairman. Mrs. Smith will serve as chairman for the forthcoming year, with Mrs. Gilbert Grosvenor as co-chairman. During the 1964-65 school year 33,821 children were conducted on 1,161 tours, an increase of over 50 percent above the preceding year's participation. Tours were conducted for grades 3 through 6 in the Halls of Every- day Life in the American Past, Mammals, Indians and Eskimos, Native Peoples of the Americas, and Textiles, and for grades 5 through junior high school, in the Halls of Gems and Minerals, and Prehistoric Life. The resumption this year of tours in the popular Early American 371 372 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Hall, now in the Museum of History and Technology, alone accounted for 13,016 children participating in 438 tours. Tours were conducted from October 12, 1964, through May 28, 1965. This year, tours were able to proceed during the month of April, with the aid of compact portable amplifiers which enabled the docent to be heard even when the hall was massively crowded with tourists. In addition to Mrs. McKinnon and Mrs. Smith, the members of the League's guided tour committee were: Mrs. Roger Block, Mrs. Thomas A. Bradford, Jr., Mrs. Reginald Bragonier, Mrs. Keith A. Garr, Mrs. Challen E. Caskie, Mrs. Thomas R. Cate, Mrs. C. A. Child, Mrs. F. David Clarke, Mrs. Steven Conger, Mrs. Phillip Dearborn, Mrs. Henry M. deButts, Mrs. James L. Dooley, Mrs. Robert T. Foley, Mrs. George Gerber, Mrs. Gilbert Grosvenor, Mrs. Franklin Hart, Mrs. William Henry, Mrs. Scott Heuer, Mrs. Walter M. Johnson, Jr., Mrs. Vernon Knight, Mrs. Lansing Lamont, Mrs. James H. Lefeaver, Miss Robbin Liggett, Mrs. Dickson R. Loos, Mrs. James Mailliard, Mrs. John Manfuso, Jr., Mrs. Ernest May, Mrs. H. Roemer McPhee, Jr., Mrs. James E. Miller, Mrs. William Minshall, Jr., Mrs. R. Kendall Nottingham, Mrs. Edward Outlaw, Mrs. Jack Osburn, Jr., Mrs. Robert Point, Mrs. L. Edgar Prina, Mrs. W. James Sears, Mrs. E. Tilman Stirling, Mrs. William R. Stratton, Mrs. Charles Turner, Mrs. John S. Voorhees, Mrs. Richard Wallis, Mrs. Keith Wheelock, Mrs. Mark White, and Mrs. Kennedy Wilson. The Institution values most highly the proficient endeavors of these volunteers. Their services to the schools of the Washington area do much to make the Smithsonian museums effective educational resources. The staff of the Museum Service also provided tours of the exhibits for a large number of individuals and groups. These tours for visitors from all over the United States as well as abroad were given in a foreign language for those who were unfamiliar with English. Among the many distinguished visitors were Her Royal Highness Princess Christina of Sweden and Her Royal Highness Princess Benedikte of Denmark. In addition to offering such services as tours, members of the staff of the Museum Service gave lectures to groups both at the Smithsonian and outside. To assist the large number of museum visitors, the Museum Service maintained information aides at the entrances of the museum buildings during the summer. About 100 young men from the National Capitol Council of Churches' Neighborhood Youth Corps assisted with this activity, as did a local Girl Scout troop. SMITHSONIAN MUSEUM SERVICE 373 The Audioguide system in the Museum of Natural History continued in operation, offering visitors general as well as detailed information about the exhibits, through tape-recorded lectures. Mrs. Linda Gordon, docent in zoology, and Mrs. Marjorie Halpin, docent in anthropology, responded to requests for services and informa- tion in their special fields. They also assisted members of the scientific staff with the training of the Junior League volunteer guides, and prepared bibliographies for use in responding to inquiries from the public. Mrs. Gordon, in conjunction with her responsibilities to the Free Film Theater, wrote several film reviews. Mrs. Halpin wrote and revised information leaflets and prepared a manuscript for an illustrated booklet on George Catlin's Indian paintings. Audiovisual programs continued under the direction of Mary Ann Friend, the audiovisual specialist. A large number of slides were sold or lent to individuals and groups for educational purposes. Photo- graphs and films also were distributed in the same manner. These audiovisual aids are provided as educational aids to persons who are not able to visit the Smithsonian. Many slides and photographs also were used by various communications media to publicize the work and activities of the Smithsonian. The second edition of the Brief Guide to the Museums in the Washington Area was published. Reproductions of two paintings by Stuart Davis were published in conjunction with the Stuart Davis Memorial Exhibition. Many publications interpreting the exhibits were made available at the Museum Shops, and visitors may browse at shops in the Museum of History and Technology, Museum of Natural History, and the Arts and Industries Building. Each area emphasizes self-service to allow visitors the greatest freedom in making their selections. In addition to publications, reproductions of objects in the collections are available, and prints, slides, and postcards also are sold. During the past year receptions were held in connection with openings of temporary exhibits and halls, presentations, and on other special occasions. The Museum Service arranged for the preparation of invitations, for the greeting and directing of guests, for catering services, and for other related functions. Among the important special events was a luncheon for the Medal of Freedom recipients which was held at the Smithsonian in conjunction with the inauguration of the President of the United States. Particular attention was given also to details of special meetings and conferences held here. The Urban Service Corps, as in the past, held several summer sessions at the Smithsonian. Mrs. Linda Gordon organized the classes at the museums, providing speakers, films, and tours. 374 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Members of the staff made trips to various cities to attend and participate in conferences, seminars, and scholarly sessions, to confer on and to observe sales and audiovisual operations, and to study and discuss museum connoisseurship. William Grayson, consultant on television, film, and radio broad- casting, worked on programs to expand the Smithsonian's use of the mass media of broadcasting and film. Under his supervision, broad- cast coverage increased, and groundwork was laid for further activity in this area. Arrangements also were made for radio and television coverage of Smithsonian exhibits and events, and special announce- ments of such events were sent to a large number of radio and television stations. The Museum Service also prepared a monthly Calendar of Events of lectures, concerts, and temporary exhibits at the Smithsonian. Notices of these events were sent to newspapers, magazines, and other publications. In the spring the format of the Calendar was revised to facilitate mailing and to make the Calendar serve as an official invi- tation to the public to attend Smithsonian activities. Mrs. Paul Scott made a study of a membership program for the Smithsonian. She visited other museums and spoke and corresponded with persons well known for their work in this area. Her report encompassed not only operation of such a program but also activities and publications offered to the members — activities and publications designed to attract further interest in the Institution. Smithsonian Institution Library Smithsonian Institution Library Mary A. Huffer, Acting Librarian During the year emphasis has been placed upon improving services and strengthening the collections. The Library Committees have been active in advising and assisting the Library in formulating an acquisi- tions policy. During the summer a physical count and analysis of all materials under the Library's jurisdiction was made. For the first time in many years there is an accurate picture of the size and distribution of the various collections under the Library's administration, as well as the degree of bibliographic control exercised over them. Over the years the book collections have been acquired and added to the Library but never fully classified or cataloged, even though in some instances they are among the most heavily used and valuable portions of the Library's collections. Although the Library has maintained an active weeding program, it has not always counted the discarded or transferred material or adjusted the statistics. A summary of the data from the count is given in table 1 ; the official count given in table 2 in the Summarized Statistics at the end of this report excludes all material not fully classified and cataloged, and all unbound pieces of serial material. Trade catalog literature and technical reports, because of the special manner in which they are processed, are listed separately. The official count will quickly climb back to the level of totals previously reported, as the partially cataloged and classified materials are processed in the reclassification program. Table 1— SUMMARY COUNT OF LIBRARY MATERIALS CATA- LOGED AND UNCATALOGED*, SEPTEMBER 1964 Cataloged Uncataloged Totals Monographs 88, 921 104, 028 192, 949 Serials (bound) 85, 312 45, 506 130, 818 Serials (unbound)** 19, 738 22, 444 42, 182 Trade Catalogs 3, 923 216, 241 220, 164 Technical Reports 8, 000 8, 000 Totals 205,894 388,219 594,113 •Partially cataloged material was counted as uncataloged for purposes of this survey. **By estimated number of bound volumes. 78^-427—66 37 377 378 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Of major significance was the decision in March to begin to classify all incoming materials according to the Library of Congress classi- fication scheme and start a divided catalog. A full-scale reclassification program is planned as soon as staff becomes available; in the meantime, however, materials handled under this new system are moving appreci- ably faster through the cataloging process and into the hands of the user. Another significant development was the work begun in the acquisitions section to make use of the IBM 1440 computer in all applicable phases of its work. Coding and programing have proceeded to the point where early in fiscal 1966 all accounting and ordering procedures concerning monographic materials will be handled by the computer. Studies are continuing within the Library concerning possible future computer applications. After the creation of the Smithsonian Office of Anthropology in March 1964, Mary L. Horgan, who had been appointed Bureau of American Ethnology librarian in September, was designated librarian of the newly created Smithsonian Office of Anthropology Branch Library. She has spent a considerable amount of time planning the consolidation and move of the former Bureau of American Ethnology and Department of Anthropology libraries into new quarters on the third floor of the Natural History Building. Material submitted this year for translation on the Special Foreign Currency Science Information Program, formerly called the P.L. 480 translation program, consisted of 5 volumes in Russian, totaling 3,119 pages. Translation of several important sets is gradually being effected: G. P. Dement'ev's Birds of the Soviet Union, 6 volumes, and S. I. Ognev's Mammals of USSR and Adjacent Countries, 9 volumes, each lack only 1 volume to be submitted for completion of the set. Four volumes of the 30-volume Flora USSR are in process or finished and progress is being made on other sets. At present there is a list of 164 volumes totaling over 63,000 pages, requested by Smithsonian research staff, waiting for translation from Russian into English. An event which will continue to have great impact on the Library was the establishment within the past year of the Federal Library Committee to improve coordination and planning among research libraries of the Federal Government. The acting librarian is serving on the Task Force on Acquisition of Library Materials and Correlation of Federal Library Resources of this committee. As an additional service and aid to keep staff members informed of all newly acquired materials, the Library began on October 31 to issue on a biweekly basis a new-book list. Twenty-three lists have been issued to date. SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION LIBRARY 379 While its primary purpose is service to the Museum staff, the Library has become over the years an important center of research for other scholars and students. During the past year numerous visitors from throughout the United States and the world came to use the Library's facilities and to seek the help of its staff. During fiscal 1965 the reference staff contributed and assisted in the construction of the Central Pacific Reference File. This file, patterned on the concept used in organizing the Human Relations Area Files, came about in response to the need of the staff on the Pacific Program to have ready access to all the information that could be located in domestic and foreign sources on a group of islands in the Pacific Ocean for which an intensive biological survey is under way. The file is proving to be a time saver for the scientist. One scholar came half way around the world to see the wonderful tool that had responded so promptly and well to his query for information. BRANCH LIBRARIES Trade-catalog literature of approximately 200,000 volumes received from Columbia University was unpacked and placed on shelves, and later in the year the trade-catalog collection from the Baker Library, Graduate School of Business Administration, Harvard University, was processed (2,573 pieces) and made available. The addition of these two collections to the trade-catalog literature already held by the Institution makes the Smithsonian Library holdings in this field most comprehensive if not preeminent. The Library is grateful to the Columbia and Harvard Libraries for their gifts. In January the installation of a Xerox 914 machine in the Museum of History and Technology Branch Library led to improved and speedier service. The Patent Office Library continued to be generous in transferring valuable back files of serials and materials for historical research to the Museum of History and Technology Branch Library. The outstand- ing item in the transfer this year is the Academie des Sciences' Descrip- tion des Arts et Metiers (Paris, 1761-89, 45 vols.), one of two complete sets in existence. On October 18, 1964, after 12 years during which there was no full-time librarian, William B. Walker was appointed librarian of the National Collection of Fine Arts/National Portrait Gallery Branch Library. The most important aspects of renewed activity during the year have been the addition of a second staff member, the library assistant, in January 1965, and the move of the library collection to more spacious and attractive quarters in April. 380 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 The Entomology Branch Library has been without a librarian since A. James Spohn's transfer to the Central Reference Staff in October. Carl J. Drake presented to the Library his personal collection of approx- imately 1,000 books plus assorted journals and reprints, mainly on Hemiptera, which he collected over a span of more than 50 years. STAFF ACTIVITIES AND CHANGES Ruth E. Blanchard, librarian of the Smithsonian for the past 7 years, was appointed special assistant to the Secretary for Library of Congress and Smithsonian matters on November 16, 1964. Mrs. Mary A. Huffer was designated acting librarian, and Jean Chandler Smith transferred from the Department of the Interior Library on January 18, 1965, to become assistant librarian. Mrs. Mary C. Quinn was appointed to the new position, secretary to the librarian, on February 21, 1965. Janet Dickson, chief of the catalog section since October 1959, transferred to the Library of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare on November 21, 1964. Clarice M. Barker has been acting chief of the catalog section since that time. Mrs. Vija Karklins was appointed senior cataloger in April 1965 to replace Mrs. E. C. Bach- rach, who transferred to the National Agricultural Library in Decem- ber. Mrs. Angeline Ashford was appointed junior cataloger in February to fill the vacancy created when Salavador Waller left to become librarian at the D.C. General Hospital in January. Mrs. Maria Bazylewicz transferred in April 1965 from the section of numis- matics in the Museum of History and Technology to fill the position of library assistant. Carol B. Boyd was appointed library assistant on September 9, 1964. In the reference and circulation section the following staff changes took place during the past year : Mrs. Gloria Mauney resigned August 28, 1964, after being with the library for 9 years, to take a position with the D.C. School System. A. James Spohn, entomology librarian, was detailed part time and later transferred full time to the Central Library reference staff. Mrs. Sue Chen was appointed on August 15, 1964, to the newly created position of reference librarian. Thomas Harper was appointed on June 27, 1965, as loan-desk librarian to replace Thomas Wilding, who had transferred to the acquisitions section. Mildred D. Raitt was promoted to assistant chief of the acquisitions section on February 28, 1965. Mrs. Shirley S. Harren transferred to the National Collection of Fine Arts /National Portrait Gallery staff on January 3, 1965, and, to fill the vacancy thus created, Thomas SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION LIBRARY 381 Wilding was made exchange librarian on March 28, 1965. Mrs. Jeannette L. Mills was appointed clerk-typist on September 5, 1964. All the vexing problems associated with so many personnel changes and vacancies, as can be seen from reading the above, have plagued the Library during the past year. The staff continued to attend special courses and seminars for growth and development. Participation was active in professional organiza- tions and in attendance at the annual conferences of the Special Libraries Association and American Library Association. The following papers by staff members of the Library appeared in various journals : Goodwin, Jack S., compiler. Current Bibliography in History and Technology (1963). Technology and Culture, 6: 346-374, 1965. Smith, Jean Chandler. Bibliography on the Metabolism of Endoparasites Exclusive of Arthropods, 1951-1962. Experimental Parasitology 16: 236-290, 1965. NOTABLE GIFTS, FISCAL YEAR 1965 Academie des sciences, Paris. Descriptions des arts et metiers faites approuvees par messieurs de l'Academie. 1761-89. 45 vols. Transfer from Patent Office Library. Blatchley, Willis S. On the coleoptera known to occur in Indiana. 1910, from Mrs. Lewis H. Weld, Arlington, Va. Breeskin, Adelyn D. The graphic work of Mary Cassatt; a catalogue raisonne. N.Y., 1948. Gift of the author. Brewster, David. The life of Sir Isaac Newton. 1831, and 33 other volumes on engineering, art, history, and many other subjects, from Mrs. Carolyn Edwards, Glen Echo, Md. Brinkley F. The art of Japan. 2 vols. 1901, from Mrs. Herbert Campbell, Washington, D.C. Bushell, Stephen W. Chinese art. 1914, from Mrs. Herbert Campbell. Washington, D.C. A collection of about 2,573 trade catalogs, post 1900, from the Baker Library, Harvard University, Graduate School of Business Administration. A collection of catalogs, covering about 400 different concerns, primarily heating and plumbing, filling about 75 linear feet of shelf space and number- ing in the thousands, from Clifford T. L. Cryer, Denville, N.J., and John Gordon L. Cryer, Newark, N.J. A collection of eleven books on covered bridges from Mrs. Samuel Reed, Peoria, 111. A collection of 79 books on numismatics of the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries from Dr. and Mrs. Vladimir Clain-Stefanelli, Washington, D.C. A collection of yearbooks, handbooks, and journals on various sports, numbering about 1,000 from the estate of Stephen Mahoney. Gift of Mrs. Stephen Mahoney, Washington, D.C. 382 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Comstock, John N. The wings of insects. 1918, from Mrs. Lewis H. Weld, Arlington, Va. du Pont and allied families. 1965, from Pierre S. du Pont, Wilmington, Del. Goldwater, Barry Morris. The face of Arizona. 1 964, from Senator Barry M. Goldwater, Scottsdale, Ariz. Hattori, H. Myxomycetes of Nasu District. Revised edition, 1964, from Em- peror Hirohito through the Ambassador of Japan to the United States. Hirohito, Emperor of Japan. Flora Nasuensis, additions and emendations. 1 963, from Emperor Hirohito through the Ambassador of Japan to the United States. Kalakaua. The legends and myths of Hawaii, edited by R. M. Daggett. 1888, from Mrs. Herbert Campbell, Washington, D.G. Ketterer, Roman Norbert. 6 catalogs of contemporary art. Gift of the author. Lugano, Switzerland. National Society of Colonial Dames of America. Delaware Chapter. Portraits in Delaware, 1700-1850. Wilmington, 1951. Gift of the Society. Reynolds, G. William. New World heroes, Lincoln and Garfield. 1892, from Miss Elizabeth Spratt, Sydney, Australia. Roebling, John A. Report on the Niagara Railway Suspension Bridge. 1855, from Mrs. Milburn Truitt, Fort Wayne, Ind. Viereck, Henry L. Hymenoptera of Connecticut. 1916, from Mrs. Lewis H. Weld, Arlington, Va. Whitehall, Walter Muir. The arts in early American history. (Bibliography by Wendell and Jane Garrett.) Chapel Hill, 1965. Gift of the Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Va. Williston, Samuel W. Manual of North American diptera. 3d ed. 1908, from Mrs. Lewis H. Weld, Arlington, Va. SUMMARIZED STATISTICS OF ACTIVITIES ACQUISITIONS Items (pieces) received: 7963-64 1964-65 Exchange and purchase 69, 584 Gift and transfer 9, 656 Miscellaneous 3, 260 Total pieces 120, 008 82, 500 SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION LIBRARY 383 Disposition of items (pieces) not retained: Library of Congress 60, 977 33, 323 National Library of Medicine 2, 245 1, 263 National Agricultural Library 1,406 95 U.S. Book Exchange 3, 014 1, 220 Other Federal libraries and agencies 389 1, 548 4,498 4,632 1,284 1,190 81 42 1,064 634 Total pieces 68, 031 37, 449 New material procured: Books purchased Subscriptions placed New exchanges arranged Specific publications requested as gifts or exchange Total pieces 6, 927 6, 498 CATALOGING Volumes cataloged: 7963-64 1964-65 Smithsonian Main Library including Museum of Natural History Branch Bureau of American Ethnology (SOA after March 1, 1965) Department of Entomology Museum of History and Technology National Air Museum National Armed Forces Advisory Board National Collection of Fine Arts National Portrait Gallery National Zoological Park Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Smithsonian Office of Anthropology Smithsonian Radiation Biology Laboratory Total (full cataloging) Trade catalogs (Museum of History and Technology) Simplified cataloging Total new material cataloged Volumes recataloged Total volumes cataloged 11, 257 12, 882 Catalog cards Bled 34, 718 46, 808 Number of serials recorded 35, 042 32, 572 Binding and repair: Volumes bound 5,175 5,259 Volumes repaired in the Library 1, 859 1, 761 •Fleure adjusted. 4,544 3,982 257 112 106 3,530 5,080 184 245 16 179 178 73 12 31 74 562 414 79 77 99 9,437 10, 397 478 1,433 1,137 916 *1 1,052 12,746 205 136 384 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 CIRCULATION STATISTICS Smithsonian books circulated: Central Library Museum of History and Technology Entomology Smithsonian Office of Anthropology National Collection of Fine Arts/National Portrait Gallery Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Total Library of Congress books circulated by: Central Library Museum of History and Technology Total Interlibrary loan books circulated by: Central Library Museum of History and Technology Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Total Total books circulated 1963-64 1964-65 12,960 21,018 11,957 12,345 985 924 *924 1,125 416 2,045 2,231 28, 871 38, 059 2,095 2,699 1,218 1,517 3,313 4,216 1,051 1,619 413 475 451 1,464 2,545 33, 648 44, 820 REFERENCE SERVICES Reference searches: Questions received in person or by telephone Central Library Museum of History and Technology Entomology Smithsonian Office of Anthropology National Collection of Fine Arts/National Portrait Gallery Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Total Questions received by mail: Central Library Museum of History and Technology National Collection of Fine Arts/National Portrait Gallery Total Total reference requests handled •Bureau of American Ethnology. 21,129 22, 141 12, 496 13, 160 996 769 *697 1,045 214 3,135 3,369 38, 453 40, 698 148 139 33 43 4 181 186 38, 634 40, 884 SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION LIBRARY 385 Cataloged volumes as of Cataloged volumes Total cataloged volumes as October 1964 added 1964-65 of July 1965 56, 289 3, 601 59, 890 TABLE 2— CATALOGED ACCESSIONS TO THE LIBRARY IN FISCAL YEAR 1965 Library Smithsonian Central Library Branch Libraries: Museum of Natural History Libraries Museum of History and Technology Trade Catalog Collection Smithsonian Office of Anthropology (formerly Bureau of American Ethnology and Depart- ment of Anthropology, U.S.N.M.) Entomology Radiation Biology Laboratory (formerly Radia- tion and Organisms) National Air Museum National Collection of Fine Arts National Portrait Gallery National Armed Forces Museum Advisory Board National Zoological Park Canal Zone Biological Area Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Cambridge, Mass. Washington, D.C. Miscellaneous Collections Total 15,127 373 1 5, 500 42, 693 5,080 47, 773 4,154 1,433 5,587 35, 677 305 35, 982 3,390 106 3,496 1,640 99 1,739 1,897 245 2,142 6,698 178 6,876 78 12 90 13 16 29 1,097 74 1,171 3,178 ** 3,178 3,055 414 3,469 2,378 2,378 2,018 ** 2,018 Technical Report Collection — S.A.O. Cambridge, Mass. 8, 000 179,382 11,936 *191, 318 8,000 *No longer includes uncataloged or unbound serials. "Figures not available. Publications and Information Publications and Information Paul H. Oehser, Chief and Public Relations Officer The editorial and publications division expanded its operations in fiscal 1965 in full support of the Institution's newly defined emphasis on research and education. As the Smithsonian continues to fulfill its mission of "diffusing knowledge," the publishing arm of the Insti- tution plays a vital role in communicating research results to the world. Operating as the Smithsonian Press, responsibilities and activities of the editorial and publications division moved forward in four main programs: 1. Editing, designing, and publishing of scholarly books and reports on explorations and research by staff members and collabora- tors of the Institution in the fields of science, history, and art, along with publications of a more popular nature, such as museum guide- books, information leaflets, and art catalogs. 2. Control and distribution of Smithsonian publications. 3. Day-to-day dissemination of information to the press and to the inquiring public. 4. Printing of materials of a current and emergency nature, such as museum labels and invitations and announcements of Smithsonian events, by a branch of the Government Printing Office located at the Institution for this purpose. PUBLICATIONS PROGRAM One hundred and thirty publications appeared under the Smith- sonian imprint during the past year in its various series, as listed below. These publications are issued partly from federally appropri- ated funds (Smithsonian Reports and publications of the National Museum, the Bureau of American Ethnology, the National Air Museum, and the Astrophysical Observatory) and partly from private endowment funds (Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, publi- cations of the Freer Gallery of Art, and some special publications). The Institution also publishes under the auspices of the Freer Gallery of Art the series Ars Orientalis, which appears under the joint imprint of the University of Michigan and the Smithsonian Institution. In 389 390 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 addition the Smithsonian also publishes for sale to visitors guidebooks, information pamphlets, postcards, folders, and popular publications on scientific and historical subjects related to its important exhibits and collections. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections In this series, under the immediate direction of Mrs. Nancy Link Powars, the following papers were issued: VOLUME 145 No. 8. Foraminifera from late Pleistocene clay near Waterville, Maine, by Martin A. Buzas. 30 pp. 5 pis. 4 figs. (Publ.4596.) March 1,1965. ($1.) VOLUME 146 No. 4. Evolutionary trends in the avian genus Clamator, by Herbert Friedmann. 127 pp. 14 figs. (Publ. 4532.) October 30, 1964. ($2.) No. 5. Some behavior patterns of platyrrhine monkeys. 1. The night monkey (Aotus trivirgatus), by M. Moynihan. 84 pp. 22 figs. (Publ. 4533.) October 23, 1964. ($1.25.) No. 6. A revision of the American vultures of the genus Cathartes, by Alexander Wetmore. 18 pp. (Publ. 4539.) August 14, 1964. (50 cents.) No. 7. A new species of marine pennate diatom from Honolulu Harbor, by Paul S. Conger. 5 pp. 1 pi. (Publ. 4593.) October 23, 1964. (40 cents.) VOLUME 148 No. 1 . A new theory identifying the locale of Columbus's light, landfall, and landing, by Ruth G. Durlacher Wolper. 41 pp. 12 figs. (Publ. 4534.) September 11, 1964. (75 cents.) No. 2. The brachiopod superfamily Stenoscismatacea, by Richard E. Grant. 192 pp. 24 pis. 34 figs. (Publ. 4569.) April 1, 1965. ($4.50.) No. 3. Upper Cambrian trilobite faunas of northeastern Tennessee, by Franco Rasetti. 127 pp. 21 pis. 2 figs. (Publ. 4598.) June 10, 1965. ($3.) No. 4. Planktonic Foraminifera from the western North Atlantic, by Richard Cifelli. 36 pp. 9 pis. 4 figs. (Publ. 4599.) February 23, 1965. ($1.) No. 5. Hexahedrites, by Edward P. Henderson. 41 pp. 4 pis. 8 figs. (Publ. 4601.) June 14, 1965. ($1.) VOLUME 149 No. 1. The distribution and abundance of Foraminifera in Long Island Sound, by Martin A. Buzas. 89 pp. 4 pis. 22 figs. (Publ. 4604.) May 25, 1965. ($1.50.) No. 2. A study of the early Tertiary condylarthran mammal Meniscotherium, by C. Lewis Gazin. 99 pp. 11 pis. 9 figs. (Publ. 4605.) May 10, 1965. ($2.) PUBLICATIONS AND INFORMATION 391 No. 3. The relationships of Quemisia gravis (Rodentia: PHeptaxodontidae), by Clayton E. Ray. 12 pp. 1 pi. 2 figs. (Publ. 4606.) April 28, 1965. (50 cents.) Smithsonian Annual Reports REPORT FOR 1963 The complete volume of the Annual Report of the Board of Regents for 1963 was received from the printer on December 7, 1964. Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution showing the operations, expenditures, and condition of the Institution for the year ended June 30, 1963. xii+595 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4530.) The general appendix contained the following papers (Publ. 4570- 4589): The solar system, by Sir Bernard Lovell. Advances in astronomical technology, by Aden B. Meinel. The analysis of starlight, by Bernard Pagel. Astronomical photography from the stratosphere, by Martin Schwarzchild. The Smithsonian's satellite-tracking program: Its history and organization — part 2, by E. Nelson Hayes. The neutrinos, by Melvin Schwartz. The antibiotics from a botanical viewpoint, by Kenneth L. Jones. Atomic and other wastes in the sea, by I. Eugene Wallen. What is cybernetics?, by Donald M. MacKay. The use of the electron microscope in the study of fossils, by William W. Hay. Color changes in animals, by D. B. Carlisle. History of the Corbin Preserve, by Richard H. Manville. The Southern Ocean: A potential for coral studies, by Donald F. Squires. The promise of underwater archeology, by George F. Bass. Plants in the Arctic-Alpine environment, by Stanwyn G. Shetler. Concerning whales and museums, by A. E. Parr. Tropical subsistence agriculture in Latin America: Some neglected aspects and implications, by Raymond E. Crist. An archeological reconnaissance in Hadhramaut, South Arabia — A preliminary report, by Gus W. Van Beek, Glen H. Cole, and Albert Jamme, W. F. The corrosion products of metal antiquities, by Rutherford J. Gettens. Religious art East and West, by Benjamin Rowland. REPORT FOR 1964 The report of the Secretary, which will form part of the 1964 Annual Report of the Board of Regents, was issued January 28, 1965. Report of the Secretary and the financial report of the Executive Committee of the Board of Regents for the year ended June 30, 1964. xiii + 293 pp. 14 pis. (Publ. 4595.) 392 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Special Publications James Means and the problem of manflight during the period 1882-1920, by James Howard Means, M.D. xi + 143 pp. 29 pis. 15 figs. (Publ. 4526.) July 21, 1964. ($3.) Communications in space. 23 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4568.) August 13, 1964. (50 cents.) Masters of space, by Philip S. Hopkins. 32 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4590.) October 23, 1964. (50 cents.) Research opportunities. 65 pp. (Publ. 4603.) December 9, 1964. (50 cents.) Training by simulation, by Alan B. Shepard, Jr. 13 pp. (Publ. 4597.) Janu- ary 8, 1965. (25 cents.) Opportunities in oceanography, by E. John Long. 33 pp. 46 figs. (Publ. 4537.) July 29, 1964. (50 cents.) A study relating to the establishment of a National Armed Forces Museum. 23 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4611.) April 15, 1965. History under the sea, by Mendel Peterson. 108 pp. 56 pis. (Publ. 4538.) April 26, 1965. ($3.) The national aeronautical collections, by Paul E. Garber. 10th ed. 168 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4255.) May 27, 1965. ($2.) Smithsonian Institution directory. 99 pp. (Publ. 4638.) June 30, 1965. Reprints A biographical sketch of James Smithson. 20 pp., illustr. (Publ. 2276.) October 21, 1964. (50 cents.) The gown of Mrs. John F. Kennedy. [Supplement to "The Dresses of the First Ladies of the White House," by Margaret W. Brown, published by the Smithsonian Institution in 1952. (Publ. 4060).] September 25, 1964. (50 cents.) Smithsonian physical tables. Prepared by William Elmer Forsythe. Ninth revised edition, third reprint. (Publ. 4169.) March 1, 1965. ($10.) Lichen handbook, by Mason E. Hale, Jr. 178 pp. 20 pis. 58 figs. (Publ. 4434.) August 18, 1964. ($4.) Brief guide to the museums in the Washington area. 39 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4528.) August 25, 1964. (25 cents.) Opportunities in oceanography, by E. John Long. 33 pp. 46 figs. (Publ. 4537.) Revised edition, April 1965. (50 cents.) The Smithsonian Institution. 55 pp. (Publ. 4600.) Revised edition, Decem- ber 24, 1964. (50 cents.) United States National Museum Publications The editorial work of the National Museum continued during the year under the immediate direction of John S. Lea, assistant chief of the division. The following publications were issued: PUBLICATIONS AND INFORMATION 393 REPORT The United States National Museum annual report for the year ended June 30, 1964. Pp. viii+215, illustr., January 23, 1965. BULLETINS 161, part 4 (end of volume). The Foraminifera of the tropical Pacific collec- tions of the "Albatross," 1899-1900, by Ruth Todd. Pp. v+139, 28 pis., January 26, 1965. 230. The bark canoes and skin boats of North America, by Edwin Tappan Adney and Howard I. Chapelle. Pp. xiv+242, 224 figs., September 8, 1964. 231. Early American scientific instruments and their makers, by Silvio A. Bedini. Pp. xii + 184, 86 figs., August 14, 1964. 238. Early engineering reminiscences (1 81 5-40) of George Escol Sellers, edited by Eugene S. Ferguson. Pp. xix+203, 84 figs., February 15, 1965. 239. The Recent Mollusca of Augustus Addison Gould, by Richard I. Johnson. Pp. v+182, 45 pis., July 28, 1964. 240. Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology: Papers 34-44, by members of the staff and others. Paper 34. The 1893 Duryea automobile, by Don H. Berkebile. Pp. 1-28, 30 figs., October 13, 1964. Paper 35. The Borghesi astronomical clock, by Silvio A. Bedini. Pp. 29-76, 35 figs., November 13, 1964. Paper 36. The engineering contributions of Wendel Bollman, by Robert M. Vogel. Pp. 77-104, 24 figs., November 13, 1964. Paper 37. Screw-thread cutting by the master-screw method since 1480, by Edwin A. Battison. Pp. 105-120, 23 figs., October 29, 1964. Paper 38. The earliest electromagnetic instruments, by Robert A. Chip- man. Pp. 121-136, 8 figs., November 13, 1964. Paper 39. Fulton's "steam battery": Blockship and catamaran, by Howard I. Chapelle. Pp. 137-176, 20 figs., November 24, 1964. Paper 40. History of phosphorus, by Eduard Farber. Pp. 177-200, 23 figs., March 8, 1965. Paper 41. Tunnel engineering — a museum treatment, by Robert M. Vogel. Pp. 201-240, 44 figs., October 29, 1964. Paper 42. The "Pioneer": Light passenger locomotive of 1851 in the Museum of History and Technology, by John H. White. Pp. 241-268, 30 figs., November 17, 1964. Paper 43. History of the Division of Medical Sciences, by Sami Hamarneh. Pp. 269-300, 24 figs., November 24, 1964. Paper 44. Development of gravity pendulums in the 19th century, by Victor F. Lenzen and Robert P. Multhauf. Pp. 301-348, 34 figs., May 14, 1965. 241. Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology: Papers 45-51, by members of the staff and others. 789-427—66 38 394 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Paper 45. Political campaign torches, by Herbert R. Collins. Pp. 1-44, 95 figs., December 22, 1964. Paper 46. Bryan the campaigner, by Keith Melder. Pp. 45-80, 19 figs., May 6, 1965. Paper 48. United States patents, 1790 to 1870: New uses for old ideas, by Peter C. Welsh. Pp. 109-152, 57 figs., May 5, 1965. Paper 50. Red Cross ambulance of 1898 in the Museum of History and Technology, by Herbert R. Collins. Pp. 165-176, 8 figs., April 14, 1965. 242. Tanning in the United States to 1850: A brief history, by Peter C. Welsh. Pp. ix + 99, 28 figs., December 21, 1964. 243. Lacebugs of the world: A catalog (Hemiptera: Tingidae), by Carl J. Drake and Florence A. Ruhoff. Pp. viii + 634, 57 pis., 6 figs., March 8, 1965. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM From volume 34 — Part 3. Systematic anatomy and ontogeny of the stem in Passifloraceae, by Edward S. Ayensu and William L. Stern. Pp. 45-74, 12 pis., August 21, 1964. From volume 35 — Part 6 (end of volume). Cacao and its allies, a taxonomic revision of the genus Theobroma, by Jose Cuatrecasas. Pp. 379-614, 12 pis., 44 figs., August 21, 1964. From volume 36 — Part 4. Studies on Parmelia subgenus Parmelia, by Mason E. Hale, Jr., and Syo Kurokawa. Pp. 121-192, 9 pis., 1 fig., August 26, 1964. Part 5. A monograph of Parmelia subgenus Amphigymnia, by Mason E. Hale, Jr. Pp. 193-358, 16 pis., 29 figs., April 8, 1965. PROCEEDINGS From volume 1 1 4 — No. 3475. Moths of the family Acrolophidae in America north of Mexico (Microlepidoptera), by Frank F. Hasbrouck. Pp. 487-706, 219 figs.. October 15, 1964. From volume 115 — Title page, table of contents, and index. Pp. i-v-f 633-654, March 1, 1965. No. 3492. The Jambeli culture of south coastal Ecuador, by Emilio Estrada, Betty J. Meggers, and Clifford Evans. Pp. 483-558, 12 pis., 42 figs., September 25, 1964. No. 3493. A revision of the carcharhinid shark genera Scoliodon, Loxodon, and Rhizoprionodon, by Victor G. Springer. Pp. 559-632, 2 pis., 14 figs., September 1, 1964. From volume 1 1 6 — No. 3494. A review of the ophidioid fish genus Oligopus with the description of a new species from West Africa, by Daniel M. Cohen. Pp. 1-22, 5 pis., October 13, 1964. PUBLICATIONS AND INFORMATION 395 No. 3495. North American Stenomidae (Lepidoptera: Gelechioidea), by W. Donald Duckworth. Pp. 23-72, 4 pis., 45 figs., October 27, 1964. No. 3496. A survey of vertebral numbers in sharks, by Victor G. Springer and J. A. F. Garrick. Pp. 73-96, 1 pi., October 16, 1964. No. 3497. Neotropical Microlepidoptera, IV. A new genus of Stenomidae with descriptions of four new species (Lepidoptera: Gelechioidea). Pp. 97-114, 5 figs., September 11, 1964. No. 3498. One new species and two redescriptions of catfishes of the South American callichthyid genus Corydoras, by Stanley H. Weitzman. Pp. 115-126, 6 figs., October 13, 1964. No. 3499. Osteology and relationships of South American characid fishes of subfamilies Lebiasininae and Erythrininae with special reference to subtribe Nannostomina, by Stanley H. Weitzman. Pp. 127-170, 10 figs., October 13, 1964. No. 3500. Three new species of frogfishes from the Indian and Pacific Oceans with notes on other species (family Antennariidae), by Leonard P. Schultz. Pp. 171-182, 3 pis., September 1, 1964. No. 3501. Neotropical Microlepidoptera, V. Synopsis of the species of the genus Proeulia from central Chile (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), by Nicholas S. Obraztsov. Pp. 183-196, 9 pis., October 29, 1964. No. 3502. Neotropical Microlepidoptera, VI. Genera Orsotricha Meyrick and Palinorsa Meyrick (Gelechiidae, Oecophoridae), by J. F. Gates Clarke. Pp. 197-204, 1 pi., 4 figs., November 23, 1964. No. 3503. Contributions to the knowledge of the Hemerobiidae of western North America (Neuroptera), by Waro Nakahara. Pp. 205-222, 1 pi., 4 figs., January 26, 1965. No. 3504. A contribution to the study of the genus Sphaerocera Latreille in Central and South America (Diptera: Sphaeroceridae), by O. W. Richards. Pp. 223-242, 28 figs., April 5, 1965. No. 3505. Herpetology of the Zuni Mountains region, northwestern New Mexico, by Frederick R. Gehlbach. Pp. 243-332, 4 pis., 10 figs., February 26, 1965. No. 3506. Review of the genus Cerceris in America north of Mexico (Hymenop- tera: Sphecidae), by Herman A. Scullen. Pp. 333-548, 1 pi.. 182 figs.. May 25, 1965. No. 3507. North American moths of the genus Swammerdamia (Lepidoptera: Yponomeutidae), by W. Donald Duckworth. Pp. 549-556, 3 figs., May 25, 1965. Bureau of American Ethnology Publications The editorial work continued under the immediate direction of Mrs. Eloise B. Edelen. The following publications were issued: ANNUAL REPORT Eighty-first Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology, 1963-1964. ii + 31 pp.1965. 396 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 BULLETINS Bulletin 191. Anthropological Papers Nos. 68-74. iii-f 425 pp., 104 pis., 55 figs., 13 maps. 1964. No. 68. The prehistory of Panama Viejo, by Leo P. Biese. No. 69. The language of Santa Ana Pueblo, by Irvine Davis. No. 70. Observations on certain ancient tribes of the Northern Appa- lachian Province, by Bernard G. Hoffman. No. 71. El Limon, an early tomb site in Code Province, Panama, by Matthew W. and Marion Stirling. No. 72. Archeological notes on Almirante Bay, Bocas del Toro, Panama, by Matthew W. and Marion Stirling. No. 73. The archeology of Taboga, Uraba, and Taboguilla Islands, Panama, by Matthew W. and Marion Stirling. No. 74. Iroquois masks and maskmaking at Onondaga, by Jean Hendry. Bulletin 192. Archeology of the Yakutat Bay area, Alaska, by Frederica de Laguna et al. xi-f-245 pp.? 19 pls.} 25 figs., 7 maps. 1964. Bulletin 193. Archeological investigations in the Parita and Santa Maria zones of Panama, by John Ladd. xii-f-291 pp., 25 pis., 68 figs., 2 maps, 14 charts. 1964. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY PUBLICATIONS Publication during the year in the series Smithsonian Contributions to Astrophysics follows: VOLUME 8 No. 4. The velocity of faint meteors, by Gerald S. Hawkins, Bertil-Anders Lindblad, and Richard B. Southworth. Pp. 133-139, 3 figs., September 2, 1964. No. 5. On the luminous efficiency of meteors, by Franco Verniani. Pp. 141-172, 8 figs., June 17, 1965. No. 6. Second catalog of hourly meteor rates, by Charles P. Olivier. Pp. 171-180, May 11, 1965. No. 7. Meteor geomagnetic effects, by Sydney Chapman and Attia A. Ashour. Pp. 181-197, 4 figs., June 9, 1965. No. 8. The Henbury meteorite craters, by Paul W. Hodge. Pp. 199-213, 17 figs., April 20, 1965. National Air Museum Publications The following monographs were issued during the year in the new series Smithsonian Annals of Flight: VOLUME 1 No. 1. The first nonstop coast-to-coast flight and the historic T-2 airplane, by Louis S. Casey. Pp. x-f-1-90, 44 figs., December 17, 1964. PUBLICATIONS AND INFORMATION 397 No. 2. The first airplane diesel engine: Packard model DR-980 of 1928, by Robert B. Meyer. Pp. vii+48, 38 figs., April 30, 1965. National Collection of Fine Arts Publications The following catalogs were issued during the year: Stuart Davis memorial exhibition. 98 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4614.) 1965. Traveling Exhibitions Catalog, 1965-1966. 61 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4609.) 1965. Sketches by Constable from the Victoria and Albert Museum. 79 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4610.) 1965. Medieval frescoes from Yugoslavia. 32 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4594.) 1965. Brazilian tapestries of Genaro de Carvalho. 4 pp. (Publ. 4592.) 1964. American primitive watercolors. 16 pp. (Publ. 4591.) 1964. (25 cents.) Watercolors by Pop Hart. 4 pp. (Publ. 4607.) 1964. Old master prints. 4 pp. 1964. Brass rubbings from England. 4 pp. 1964. Eugene Berman: New stage designs. 4 pp. 1964. Freer Gallery of Art Publications Hokusai paintings and drawings in the Freer Gallery of Art. 38 pp. 35 figs. + 2 color. (Publ. 4419.) Revised edition, 1965. ($1.) James McNeill Whistler: A biographical outline, illustrated from the collections of the Freer Gallery of Art, by Burns A. Stubbs. 29 pp. 28 pis. Freer Gallery of Art Occasional Papers, vol. 1, No. 4. (Publ. 3994.) 1965 (reprint of 1950 edition). ($1.) American Historical Association Reports The annual reports of the American Historical Association are trans- mitted by the Association to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institu- tion and are by him communicated to Congress, as provided in the act of incorporation of the Association. The following reports were issued during the year: Annual report of the American Historical Association for the year 1963. Vol. 1. Proceedings. xxvii4-302 pp. December 15, 1964. Report of the National Society, Daughters of the American r.evolution In accordance with law, the manuscript of the 67th annual report of the National Society, Daughters of the American Revolution, was transmitted to Congress on March 19, 1965.1 1 D.A.R. reports are published as Senate documents and are not available from the Smithsonian Institution. 398 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 DISTRIBUTION PROGRAM Requests for publications and information showed a substantial increase during the year. The Publications Distribution Section, under the immediate supervision of Mrs. Eileen M. McCarthy, received 41,014 requests for publications from foreign and domestic libraries, universities, research institutions, educational establishments, and individuals throughout the world. A total of 1,082,479 publications, miscellaneous items, and informa- tion leaflets were distributed during fiscal 1965. The following titles were issued and sent to libraries as a result of the Institution's participation in the National Science Foundation translation program : Berg, L. S. Freshwater fishes of the U.S.S.R. and adjacent countries, vols. 2 and 3. Borutsku, E. V. Freshwater Harpacticoida. Fauna of U.S.S.R., Crustacea, vol. 3, No. 4. Byalynitskii-Birulya, A. A. Scorpions. Fauna of Russia and adjacent countries, Arachnoidea, vol. 1. Arthrogastric Arachnids of Caucasia. Part 1 , Scorpions. Jerzmanska, Anna. Ichthyofauna from the Jasto Shales of Sobniow. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, vol. 5, No. 4. Mischenko, L. L. Locusts and grasshoppers. Fauna of U.S.S.R., Orthoptera, vol. 4, No. 2. Nikol'skii, A. M. Ophidia. Fauna of Russia and adjacent countries, reptiles, vol. 2. Tarasov, S. V. Technology of watch production. Telenga, N. A. Braconidai. Fauna of the U.S.S.R., Hymenoptera, vol. 5, No. 4. Shishkin, B. K., editor. Flora of the U.S.S.R., vol. 3. INFORMATION PROGRAM With the growth of the Institution and the inauguration of many new programs, the day-to-day business of keeping the press and other communications media informed concerning the Smithsonian became highly accelerated. So much so that on July 20, 1964, a full-time press officer, George Berklacy, joined the staff. During the year stepped-up information activities included: 1. Issuance of more than 100 press releases on noteworthy events and scientific researches. PUBLICATIONS AND INFORMATION 399 2. Distribution of 10 news features to specialized media. 3. Answering some 500 written inquiries and more than 1,500 telephone calls for specific information. 4. Arranging and holding press conferences in advance of major exhibitions or activities. 5. Giving information to approximately 300 visitors, many of them newsmen and writers, who sought knowledge concerning the work, facilities, history, and resources of the Institution. 6. Installation of "Dial-a-Satellite" service. This tape-recorded message was inaugurated as a public service to furnish listeners within a radius of 150 miles of the Smithsonian with up-to-date information on the location of satellites and other astronomical phenomena. More than 700 individuals dialed daily for the message. PRINTING PROGRAM The Smithsonian Print Shop, a branch of the Government Printing Office under the immediate supervision of Murray C. Ballard, operated at more than maximum capacity during the past year, completing 704 individual printing jobs, or approximately 28 percent more than the preceding year These assignments included labels, forms, invita- tions, programs, leaflets, flyers, announcements, and other printing of a current and emergency nature. OTHER ACTIVITIES For the first time the Smithsonian participated with a publications exhibit at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Montreal, December 27-30, 1964. The exhibit also encompassed the work of the Smithsonian in general with particular emphasis on its research and museum programs. Not only did the chief of the division attend the Montreal meeting, but he and two editors in the division represented the Institution at the annual meeting of the Association of American University Presses held the latter part of May in Lexington, Ky. The Smithsonian Institution and T.F.H. Publications, Inc., of Jersey City, N.J., in May 1963 entered into an agreement to establish a re- stricted fund to be known as the "T.F.H. fund for the increase and diffusion of knowledge concerning fishes suitable for home aquaria." T.F.H. will donate to the Smithsonian Institution reprinted books to be sold by the Institution at not less than cost. The money derived 400 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 from such sales will be earmarked for research, collection or purchase of fish specimens, explorations, and publication of scientific reports related to aquarium fishes. The second reprint under this agreement was published March 29, 1965; it is The Fresh-Water Fishes of Siam, or Thailand, by Hugh M. Smith, Bulletin 188 of the U.S. National Museum, originally issued in 1945. STAFF CHANGES Three new editors were added to the staff of the division during the past year: Harriet T. Douty on July 13, 1964; Ernest E. Biebighauser on August 2, 1964; and Mrs. Joan B. Horn on September 8, 1964. On July 20, 1964, George J. Berklacy was appointed press officer, and on January 17, 1965, Grimilda Pontes joined the staff as assistant in the design department. Mrs. Dorothy M. Watson was. appointed clerk-stenographer on March 31, 1965, following the resignation of Sue D. Wallace on January 29, 1965. Report of the Executive Committee of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution For the Year Ended June 30, 1965 Report of the Executive Committee of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution For the Year Ended June 30, 1965 To the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution: Your executive committee respectfully submits the following report in relation to the funds of the Smithsonian Institution, together with a statement of the appropriations by Congress for the Government bu- reaus in the administrative charge of the Institution. SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION Parent Fund The original bequest of James Smithson was £104,960 8s 6d ($508,318.46). Refunds of money expended in prosecution of the claim, freight, insurance, and other incidental expenses, together with payment into the fund of the sum of £5,015, which had been withheld during the lifetime of Madame de la Batut, brought the fund to the amount of $550,000. The gift of James Smithson was "lent to the United States Treasury, at 6 per centum per annum interest" (20 U.S.G. 54) and by the Act of March 12, 1894 (20 U.S.C. 55) the Secretary of the Treasury was "authorized to receive into the Treasury, on the same terms as the original bequest of James Smithson, such sums as the Regents may, from time to time see fit to deposit, not exceeding, with the original bequest the sum of $1,000,000." The maximum of $1,000,000 which the Smithsonian Institution was authorized to deposit in the Treasury of the United States was reached on January 11, 1917, by the deposit of $2,000. Under the above authority the amounts shown below are deposited 403 404 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 in the United States Treasury and draw 6 percent interest: Unrestricted Donor funds Income 1965 James Smithson $727, 640 $43, 658. 40 Avery 14, 000 840. 00 Habel 500 30.00 Hamilton 2,500 150.00 Hodgkins (General) 116,000 6,960.00 Poore 26, 670 1, 600. 20 Rhees 590 35.40 Sanford 1,100 66.00 ?, 000 $53, 340. 00 Restricted funds Hodgkins (Specific) $100, 000 6, 000. 00 Reid 11,000 660.00 111,000 6,660.00 ,000,000 $60,000.00 In addition to the $1,000,000 deposited in the Treasury of the United States there has been accumulated from income and bequests the sum of $7,314,088.20 which has been invested. Of this sum, $6,232,813.25 is carried on the books of the Institution as the Con- solidated Fund, a policy approved by the Regents at their meeting on December 14, 1916. The balance is made up of several small funds. report of the executive committee 405 Consolidated Fund [Income for the unrestricted use of the Institution] Fund Investment 1965 Income 1965 Abbott, W. L., Special $24,420.96 $1,197.37 * Avery, Robert S., and Lydia 64,746.08 3,174.52 Forrest, Robert Lee 1,771,443.93 86,855.18 Gifts, royalties, gain on sale of securities .... 452, 590. 06 22, 1 90. 56 Hachenberg, George P., and Caroline .... 6, 592. 34 323. 24 ♦Hamilton, James 661.65 32.44 Hart, Gustavus E 798. 37 39. 12 Henry, Caroline 1,982.44 97.21 Henry, Joseph and Harriet A 80, 353. 01 3, 939. 70 Higbee, Harry, Memorial Fund 19,211.07 941.93 *Hodgkins, Thomas G. (General) 49, 654. 39 2, 434. 55 Morrow, Dwight W 126,754.98 6,214.84 Olmsted, Helen A 1,314.17 64.43 *Poore, Lucy T. and George W 266,780.80 13,080.31 Porter, Henry Kirke 469,448.21 23,017.17 *Rhees, William Jones 775. 49 38. 03 *Sanford, George H 1,459.13 71.56 *Smithson, James 2,001.15 98.16 Taggart, Gansen 586. 25 28. 72 Witherspoon, Thomas A 211,535.38 10,371.60 Total $3,553,109.86 $174,210.64 *In addition to funds deposited in the United States Treasury. 406 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Consolidated Fund [Income restricted to specific use] Fund Investment 1965 Abbott, William L., for investigations in biology . $170, 887. 51 Armstrong, Edwin James, for use of Department of Invertebrate Paleontology when principal amounts to $5,000. 00 2, 370. 64 Arthur, James, for investigations and study of the sun and annual lecture on same 65 , 556. 00 Bacon, Virginia Purdy, for traveling scholarship to investigate fauna of countries other than the United States 82,123. 80 Baird, Lucy H., for creating a memorial to Secre- tary Baird 60,098. 06 Barney, Alice Pike, for collection of paintings and pastels and for encouragement of American artistic endeavor 47,014. 08 Barstow, Frederick D., for purchase of animals for Zoological Park 1 ,638. 70 Brown, Roland W., endowment fund — study, care, and improvement of the Smithsonian paleo- botanical collections 53,393. 25 Canfield collection, for increase and care of the Canfield collection of minerals 62 ,693. 53 Casey, Thomas L., for maintenance of the Casey collection and promotion of researches relating to Coleoptera 20 , 546. 1 5 Chamberlain, Francis Lea, for increase and pro- motion of Isaac Lea Collection of gems and mollusks 46,159. 90 Dykes, Charles, for support in financial research. . 70,572. 10 Eickemeyer, Florence Brevoort, for preservation and exhibition of the photographic collection of Rudolph Eickemeyer, Jr 17,816. 94 Guggenheim, David and Florence, Foundation for a commemorative Guggenheim Exhibit, an annual Daniel Guggenheim Lecture, and annual Guggenheim Fellowships for graduate students for research at the National Air Museum 25,251.29 Hanson, Martin Gustav and Caroline Runice, for some scientific work of the Institution, prefer- ably in chemistry or medicine 14,572. 05 REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 407 Consolidated Fund — continued Fund Investment 7965 Income 7965 Higbee, Harry, income for general use of the Smithsonian Institution after June 11, 1967. . $873. 99 $40. 31 Hillyer, Virgil, for increase and care of Virgil Hillyer collection of lighting objects 10,772. 90 528. 21 Hitchcock, Albert S., for care of the Hitchcock Agrostological Library 2,586.50 126.83 Hrdlicka, Ales and Marie, to further researches in physical anthropology and publication in connection therewith 95,007. 12 4,440. 48 Hughes, Bruce, to found Hughes alcove 31,375.95 1 538 39 Johnson, E. R. Fenimore, research in underwater photography 13,168.61 615.47 Loeb, Morris, for furtherance of knowledge in the exact sciences 142,858.52 7,004.39 Long, Annette and Edith C, for upkeep and preser- vation of Long collection of embroideries, laces, and textiles 890 02 43 63 Maxwell, Mary E., for care and exhibition of Max- well collection 32,151.01 1,576.37 Myer, Catherine Walden, for purchase of first-class works of art for use and benefit of the National Collection of Fine Arts 33,109. 66 1 ,623. 37 Nelson, Edward W., for support of biological studies 39,014.44 1,912.88 Noyes, Frank B., for use in connection with the col- lection of dolls placed in the U.S. National Museum through the interest of Mr. and Mrs. Noyes „ 1,574.79 77.21 Pell, Cornelia Livingston, for maintenance of Alfred Duane Pell collection 12,150. 22 595 72 Petrocelli, Joseph, for the care of the Petrocelli col- lection of photographic prints and for the en- largement and development of the section of photography of the U.S. National Museum . . 12 , 1 51. 68 595. 81 Rathbun, Richard, for use of division of U.S. Na- tional Museum containing Crustacea 17,434. 18 854. 77 *Reid, Addison T., for founding chair in biology, in memory of Asher Tunis 29,156. 18 1 ,429. 53 Roebling Collection, for care, improvement, and increase of Roebling collection of minerals ... 197, 828. 71 9 , 699. 58 Roebling Solar Research 41 , 1 04. 53 2 015.33 Rollins, Miriam and William, for investigations in physics and chemistry 250,459.26 11,986.20 Smithsonian employees' retirement 37,471.48 1 853.35 *In addition to funds deposited in the United States Treasury. 408 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Consolidated Fund — continued Fund Investment 1965 Income 1965 Smithsonian Institution and THF $7 , 543. 98 $216. 66 Springer, Frank, for care and increase of the Springer collection and library 29 ,394. 98 1, 441. 22 Strong, Julia D., for benefit of the National Collec- tion of Fine Arts 16,389.20 803.56 Walcott, Charles D. and Mary Vaux, for develop- ment of geological and paleontological studies and publishing results of same 787 , 543. 04 38 , 574. 76 Walcott, Mary Vaux, for publication in botany . . 94,883.87 4,652.19 Younger, Helen Walcott 127,107.05 6,737.52 Zerbee, Francis Brinckle, for endowment of aquaria 1 ,554. 86 76. 22 Total $2,806,250.73 $137,370.95 Freer Gallery of Art Fund Early in 1906, by deed of gift, Charles L. Freer, of Detroit, gave to the Institution his collection of Chinese and other Oriental objects of art, as well as paintings, etchings, and other works of art by Whistler, Thayer, Dewing, and other artists. Later he also gave funds for con- struction of a building to house the collection, and finally in his will, probated November 6, 1919, he provided stocks and securities to the estimated value of $1, 958, 591. 42 as an endowment fund for the oper- ation of the Gallery. The fund now amounts to $11, 345, 500. 73. report of the executive committee 409 Summary of Endowments Invested endowment for general purposes $5, 278, 509. 86 Invested endowment for specific purposes other than Freer en- dowment 3, 035, 578. 34 Total invested endowment other than Freer 8, 314, 088. 20 Freer invested endowment for specific purposes 11,345,500.73 Total invested endowment for all purposes $19,659,588.93 Classification of Investments Deposited in the U.S. Treasury at 6 percent per annum, as authorized in the U.S. Revised Statutes, sec. 5591 Si, 000, 000. 00 Investments other than Freer endowment (cost or market value at date acquired): Bonds $2, 869, 467. 95 Stocks 3,416,006.37 Real estate and mortgages 951, 406. 00 Uninvested capital 77,207.88 7,314,088.20 Total investments other than Freer en- dowment 8,314,088.20 Investments of Freer endowment (cost or market value at date acquired): Bonds $6,270,238.91 Stocks 4,869,718.34 Uninvested capital 205,543.48 11,345,500.73 Total investments $19,659,588.93 789-127—66 39 410 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Current funds: General: Cash: United States Treasury current account Inbanks and on hand Investments — stocks and bonds (quoted market value $1,418,400.00) (note) Travel and other advances Total general funds Restricted: Cash: United States Treasury current account In banks Investments — stocks and bonds (quoted market value $1,695,875.00) (note) Total restricted funds SMITHSONIAN BALANCE SHEET OF PRIVATE Assets $583,587.85 40, 549. 99 1,695,540.60 $1,662,558.56 112,511.03 1,775,069.59 1,459,651.17 20, 262. 26 3, 254, 983. 02 2,319,678.44 Total current funds 5,574,661.46 REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 411 EXHIBIT A INSTITUTION FUNDS, JUNE 30, 1965 Current funds: General: Unexpended funds — unrestricted (Exhibit B) Total general funds Fund Balances $3, 254, 983. 02 3, 254, 983. 02 Restricted (Exhibit C): Unexpended income from endowment Funds for special purposes: Gifts Grants Contracts Total restricted funds Total current funds 1,351,543.59 615,908.71 613, 902. 20 (261, 676. 06) 2,319,678.44 5. 574. 661. 46 412 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Assets — Continued Endowment funds and funds functioning as endowment: Investments: Freer Gallery of Art: Gash $205, 543. 48 Stocks and bonds (quoted market value $17,276,105.00) (note) 11,139,957.25 11,345,500.73 Consolidated: Cash $77, 207. 88 Stocks and bonds (quoted market value $7,852,739.00) (note) 6, 155, 605. 37 6,232,813.25 Loan to United States Treasury 1,000,000.00 Other stocks and bonds (quoted market value $177,204.00) (note) 129, 868. 95 Real estate 951,406.00 8,314,088.20 Total endowment funds and funds functioning as endowment 19,659,588.93 $25, 234, 250. 39 Note: Investments are stated at cost or appraisal value at date of gift. REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 413 Fund Balances — Continued Endowment funds and funds functioning as endowment (Exhibit D): Freer Gallery of Art $11, 345, 500. 73 Other: Restricted $3, 035, 578. 34 General 5, 278, 509. 86 8,314,088.20 Total endowment funds and funds function- ing as endow- ment 19,659,588.93 $25, 234, 250. 39 414 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 eq H i— i pq i— i E X w •fe 35 SO CO so CS CN SO Cs CO CO SO CO CO CO o in 00 Cs" (N O 00 o £ UJ O H H H £ oo « 2; * < P u s o 2 oo HH 00 S O (72 § ffi u t. 0 H £ a S « H < H WJ O 00 o o cO so CN 5 3' CN CO sO CO CO CO O lO Cs' SO Cs Cs' CO CM O 00 s o so CO Cs s s^ *-■ S> CM of v 2 S 5 oooo REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 415 O H I— I PQ I— I X X < w o 25 m D CN •— : ) jj 00 so Q w en" CS Q 25 a is W t6 5 < <-3 en w ^ o- >" ft 'n iri ttf "a K 00 u 25 § * 0 NO eg < t> < ^ s « *5* g Q in Q 25 CO H 25 t- <2 SO D Q c2 ■*" Z Pn W m l-H H O i— i 6© < (4 o > h en | i— i «3 B ti W * H Oh a! "S "" CM S 5 s H 25 cm" cs 05 3 " CM 1 rt s S> a 25 >— i K W a ffi u tn u 0 1 h IM 25 O w 2 s W c H 'Sb < V h -Q w ca ■tf CO o en o r-~ in O O m r- cm o in cc en ~ CM so in c TH in N M ■0 xf (O \5 N N O C\ fl ■* h ^ U1 O r< en ■* m CM oo' r-." CM Cs o m so m so SO 00 CM •* en 00 CO 00 en en en o Cs en o Cs CM CM r-" en 00 I-.T en 00 rf" o en en en" t--' ■<*■ o cm" 00 en r-" r-' O cm" 00 en r-" o CS CM so 00 oo" Cs in oo" tj- tj- rr m Cs 00 SO 00 in ri in oc' r- csi in in en so w en *- > csf en" en" en O t- cm cm r- CM CM 00 CM* en rf m T— 1 o m in SO >* Cs c m __ t-- T en r- 1 CM so r^ SO ** r- os Cs -+ r-» m m Cs en tj- in . »-i • m • 00 so O Cs • Csl • CM in so •3- Cs" 00 m" so r-" in CM cm" pq S 5 o T3 C U a E Art funds ds E o «*3 n 2 o -a c ° u J u B i V! IS u u M ta o ra c u fc£ E o alle estr: ictei n 1 V ,_u , Si c« "to 3 -a be n U H u w o c E o u Free Unr H 03 'j: a 3 OHO < 416 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 £ o CO -t o u-> CO no o NO -* CO 00 ■* m CO o cn (N o Cs CO >+ in -t Tj- t~~ rH CO *■ T— 1 m cO CN CN ^ 6ft u I in Q H t o «, •ft, o oo in r^ CO co" ON f- CN CO CN CO t~^ 00 CO r-" o" cn in o CO O -1- •o m CO CO CO o CN Cn" m in CN ■«J-" CO 00 in NO © Tf rt- 00 * NO no CO 00 oo ■^ t-h o Cs NO CO © r»" -d ON t» 00 nO m © NO CO CN cO~ 6ft © O no © CN CN oo" oo 3 t-T ,_ © © ON r- CN NO © CN r-~ NO © tc C\ On m •* cO m 00 ON r-" no 6ft CO SO CO no on" CO CO NO CO NO oC CO CN in 00 r> CO O H 00 T-i r- r-. © H CO oo m r-~ co CO CM ,_, ,_, «-< r^- in CO CO © CN ON ON m *t CO NO 6ft © ON NO in in CO ■* -tf- CN m NO © m ON CO 6ft 8 b£ S ~ fi a o " Q U X ■ft "8 .a o I- O ID iu ■& ■*-> <2 Oh « " t X t, u u aj a .is > a SQ0P .5 ,2 no +-> w .y 03 B i O ^ be O o o o -a CI m a x (L> s 3 03 fl H .2 (« c3 >> o 3 >> <*1 T) o u .2 C V "t-i a. "ca o T5 O 15 H u a ti n REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 417 EXHIBIT D Smithsonian Institution PRIVATE FUNDS STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN PRINCIPAL OF ENDOWMENT FUNDS AND FUNDS FUNCTIONING AS ENDOWMENT YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 1965 Balance at beginning of year $19, 220, 868. 62 Add: Income added to principal as prescribed by donor 12, 010. 79 Transfer from unexpended income for investment 7, 171. 64 Net gain on investments 419,537.88 Balance at end of year 19, 659, 588. 93 Balance at end of year consisting of: Freer Gallery of Art 11, 345, 500. 73 Other: Restricted 3, 035, 578. 34 General 5, 278, 509. 86 $19,659,588.93 418 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Q « U c/2 H CU W o z fa in no cn o >•»» T-H H H o O CO h f=H fa C/J H 2: 2 w S3 z < fa w z fa P o en o z X fa fa H 0 Pi 5 C/3 a 3 a < fa fa fa s s CO i-i O NO rf in oo d n' no n ^ n s ^ o a o 00 **■ _| t fO o nO r~ vO 00 in 00 d CN C^ d 00 "+ t~» VD Tfr rH 00 eg m vO "tf- C\ * o C) m CN r^ r-- cn m m in &* ~ CN cs <— r»» m ■«*■ *- en m oo so *— en N N en so 00 so rf en en r^ in so m Tf OS CM Tj- ■* M"" ■* tt en t-. r^ so Z < z o GO B H S CO >-s G W Q S < oo t-< r^- so <-> cm r-- t-» en c "* ~ ~ ™ 5 o" K" o o" ■ ~ oo '* O en >- en O Cs] rf- ^ oo cs en m m r-- CS sO in en ■t oo n tn ^ so oo r~- m m o en o **• **■ r-» CM in en r- cm so cs cs m so oo oo r» oo so cm en oo ■*• SO SO O0 00 u — . 'S p u ti o, s I 3 £ B •g < g 0 W "3 s -a c O TJ "5H 3 4J 0- <& M be ^ •£ a O M T3 E3 re J3 £ a re >* 13 ac C O ctj n re c -t-j .~ re •-* S c a re x — re > c •■•< w o .2 re re 3 j: js S 3 420 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 CO o CO CN 00 in LO 00 Cn n© in 00 CN CO o CN 00 CM 2 CM o in GO SO © NO Cn NO 00 O o 00 o SO CO 00 CO ON VO CO NO lO 00 CM >o in CM on. ON M 1 of CO in NO o r-" o *— i co" o cm" CM CO co" o T-H t^ in" CO CM CO 00 o cm" s 3 a o O CO h Z CO Ph & pq CO Q Z En H Z a u 0 •J Q &3 ffi U CO NO r-H CN NO NO •*-)- in oo on n- 00 "* 1 OJ 00 in ^ CO m ■* o o CM CM in CO oo o 00 of Q rH Tf CN rH T"H CM CO t ■«*■ O TH CM 00 00 t-~ r- CM 00 CM no" s tt NO OJ CO CM o NO CO 00 CO O CN in m NO CO CN <* CO NO o ON O m H Cn in O CO CN LO <+ o CO 00 m r^ NO NO CO CO *t o CN Ol § ° Cn r- CN Cn r»- o vD OJ CO 00 NO Ol o NO o NO LO NO m NO •2 * r-= T-H CO ■* CN 00 CO o CO CO LO Cn 2 o" in r~- 00 Cn OJ CO r^ NO fe CO p- NO OJ CO T-H O] ■§, t& OJ O -n 0 ^ o n b o T) cd C "Z2 C3 C3 C a V 5 -a 0 Ph Si BQ rr CD V U aa 13 hn r=3 g 3 T5 pq r3 3 W JS ■£ > "° -3 — cs .y 3 SI'S 5 ° 5 O U tM U H » 3 Sh rrj 8 .2 » » 8 u u w y & &■ B S ft, 0 1 SI s a co o ^2 a. 3 CO 2 1 o .5 r-5 Ph J2 &, c3 S3 So .y u a "5 a^ 3 12 » C 4) ccj B § a &< S ,y "H CO ■!-> O 1-1 CO CO Ph b£ REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 421 The practice of maintaining savings accounts in several of the Wash- ington banks and trust companies has been continued during the past year, and interest on these deposits amounted to $4,017.04. Deposits are made in banks for convenience in collection of checks, and later such funds are withdrawn and deposited in the United States Treasury. Disbursement of funds is made by check signed by the Secre- tary of the Institution and drawn on the United States Treasury. The Institution gratefully acknowledges gifts and grants from the following : Ernest L. Abernathy, a gift to the Satellite General Program. American Heritage Publishing Company, a gift for the purchase of historical materials for the National Air Museum. American Petroleum Institute, a grant for research entitled "The Crustose Corallines of the North Atlantic." American Philosophical Society, a grant to defray expenses for expedition to Greece and Turkey. Anonymous donor, a gift for the Department of Botany. Anonymous donor, a gift to the Smithsonian Institution Bicentennial Ceremony. Anonymous donor, a gift for the restoration of the Belmont furniture. Appalachian Power Company, a grant for the survey of the areas on the New River in Virginia and North Carolina. Archbold Foundation, a grant for the support of research entitled "Biological Survey of Dominica Project." Atomic Energy Commission, a grant for research entitled "A Study of the Biochemical Effects of Ionizing and Nonionizing Radiation on Plant Metab- olism During Development." Bredin Foundation, a grant for the support of research entitled "Biological Survey of dominica Project." Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Campbell, a gift to the Zoo Animal Fund. Joanne Toor Cummings, a gift for the purpose of acquiring ceramics and glass. DeBeers Consolidated Mines, Ltd., a gift to defray travel expenses to South Africa. Department of Agriculture, a grant toward the purchase of the J. Douglas Hood Collection of thrips. Department of Air Force: Grant for the support of research entitled "Study of Atomic and Electronic Collision Processes which occur in the Atmosphere at Auroral Heights." Grant for studies directed toward the development of a technique for measur- ing wind speed and direction at heights using ionized paths generated by meteors. Grant for the purpose of training personnel in tracking space object #388. Grant for the purpose of the observation in tracking space object #388. Grant for the purpose of training 8 personnel on the Baker-Nunn. Grant to provide optical satellite tracking support for two nights for program 162. Grant for the support of research entitled "Researches — Molecular Collisions." 422 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Grant for the support of research entitled "Compilation of a Subject Index and Cross Reference Listing for the 1964 OAR-AFRR." Department of Army: Grant for the support of basic research entitled "Potential Vectors and Reservoirs of Disease in Strategic Overseas Area." Grant for the support of research entitled "Mammals and Their Ectoparasites from Iran." Grant for support of research on the analysis of bird migration in the Pacific Area and the study of the ecology of birds and mammals on one or more Pacific Islands. Grant for the support of research entitled "The Mosquitoes of Southeast Asia." Department of Interior: Grant for the support of research entitled "Bird Guide." Grant for the support of research entitled "Tropical Fishes." Grant for the purpose for the preparation of camera-ready copy of research data suitable for photocopying and printing as a current Water Resources Research Catalog. Department of Navy, a grant for the support of the Careers in Oceanography Fund. James M. Doubleday, a gift to the Historic Dresses Fund. Carl Dry, a gift for support of Smithsonian Institution's participation in an around the world cruise by Thomas Kurth and party. Ford Motor Co., a gift in support of the model foundry for the Iron and Steel Hall. General Motors Corporation, a gift to defray expenses in connection with International Council of Museums Committee for Museums of Science and Technology. Mrs. Robert H. Goddard, a gift for the Robert H. Goddard Memorial Fund. R. M. Griffin, a gift to the Zoo Animal Fund. E. P. Henderson, a gift for the support of research entitled "Meteorite and Tektite Research Fund." Historical Society of Montana, a contribution for the support of the Smithsonian Institution. Ethel R. Holmes, a gift for the Milton A. Holmes Memorial Fund "Numismatics." Ethel R. Holmes, a gift for the Milton A. Holmes Memorial Fund "Philately." International Association of Geodesy, a gift for the support of operation of Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Central Bureau of Geodesy. International Astronomical Union, a gift for the support of the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams. Felix and Helen Juda Foundation, a gift to the Freer Gallery of Art for the purchase of collections. Joseph H. Kler, a gift for the Delaware Log House Exhibit. H. P. Kraus, a gift to the Freer Gallery of Art Library Fund. REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 423 Edwin A. Link, a gift for the support of the Oceanography Program of the Smithsonian Institution. Link Foundation: Grant for the support of the Second Annual Edwin A. Link Lecture. Grant for the preparation of a leaflet about the Oceanographic Sorting Center. Eugene and Agnes Meyer Foundation, a gift for the James Smithson Bicen- tennial Celebration. J. Jefferson Miller II, gift for the Gardner-Miller Ceramics and Glass Fund. Kathryn and Gilbert Miller Fund, Incorporated, gift for the support of the National Portrait Gallery. Jacques Minkus, gift for the purchase of Eleanor Roosevelt's eyeglasses and chain. Ambrose Monell Foundation, gift for the James Smithson Bicentennial Celebration. National Aeronautics and Space Administration: Grant for the procurement of photoreduction equipment for Satellite Track- ing Program. Grant for the support of research entitled "Optical Satellite Tracking Program." Grant for the support of research entitled "Textures of Meteorites." Grant for research of the systematic recovery of meteorites and the photog- raphy of meteorites in flight. Grant for the support of basic scientific research entitled "Physical and Chemical Investigations of Tektites and Related Glassy Materials." Grant for research studies in the recovery and analysis of space fragments. Grant for the scientific and engineering study for instrumenting an orbiting telescope. Grant for research entitled "Computation of Data Reduction of S-16 High Energy Gamma-Ray Experiment." National Geographic Society: Grant for support of research entitled "Investigation of the Crustose Coralline of North America." Grant for support of an aerial survey of Stonehenge and Callanish. Grant for support of meteorite-tektite studies in Australia. National Lead Company, gift for the design and furnishing of an exhibit on drilling mud. National Science Foundation: Additional grants for the support of research projects entitled as follows: "Early Tertiary Mammals of North America." "Earth Albedo Observations." "Revisionary Study of Blattoidea." "Rare Gases in Meteorites." "Morphology and Paleoecology of Permian Branchiopods of the Glass Mountain, Texas." 424 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 "South Asian Microlepidoptera, particularly the Philippine Series." "Photoresponse and Optical Properties of Phycomyces Sporangiophores." "Taxonomy of Bamboos." "Lower Cretaceous Ostracoda of Israel." "Marine Mollusks of Polynesia." "Tertiary Echinoids of the Eastern United States and the Caribbean." "Zoogeography of Southern Ocean Sclearactinian Coral Faunas." "The American Commensal Crabs of the Family Pinnotheridae." "Indo-Australian Vespidae sens. lat. and Specidae." "Support of publication of an English translation of Flora of Japan, by Jisaburo Ohwi." "Revision of Genera of Paleozoic Bryozoa." "Monographic Studies of the Tingidae of the World." "Study of Type Specimens of Ferns in European Herbaria." "Polychaetous Annelids of New England." "The Phanerogams of Colombia." "Monograph of Parmelia Subgenus Xanthoparmelia." "Revision of Scarab Beetles of the Genus Ataenius." "Systemic Studies of the Archidaceae, Subtribe Epidendrinae." "A Monograph of the Stomatopod Crustaceans of the Western Atlantic." "Recording of Data for Specimens Collected During the U.S. Antarctic Program." "Distribution of North America Calanoid and Harpacticoid Copepoda." "Magalithic Structures of Panope." "Collection of Meteorites and Tektites in Australia." "Installation of powerline to Barro Colorado from Mainland." "Upper Cretaceous Inoceraminae in North America and Western Europe." "Environment of Permo-Triassic Reptiles of the Order Therapsida in South Africa." "Taxonomic and Biological Studies of Neotropical Water Beetles." "Evolution and Distribution of Parmelia in Eastern Asia and Pacific." "Sorting of U.S. Antarctic Research Program Biological Collections." "Taxonomic Studies of the Family Stenomidae in Neotropical Region." "Pre-Industrial System of Water Management in Arid Region." "Effects of Displacement." "Revisionary Studies in the Chilopoda." "Photographic Investigations of Comets." "Purchase of the Hood Collection of Thrips." "Archeological Survey of Southwestern Kansas." "Taxonomic and Biological Studies on Central American Caddisflies." "Undergraduate Research Participation Program." "Identification Guide to Antarctic Birds." "Ostracoda of the Indian Ocean." "Sorting of Collections from the U.S. Antarctic Research Program." "Sorting of Collections from the International Indian Ocean Expedition." REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 425 "Systematic of the Antarctic and Sub-Antarctic Gammaridean Amphipods." "Eltanin Cruise Participations." "Stellar Atmospheres." "Comparative Study of Molluscan Faunas of Tertiary Stages." "The Mammals of Panama." "Systematics of Stomiatoid Fishes." "Cooperative Systematics Studies in Antarctic Biology." Neinken Foundation, a gift for defraying the cost to Europe in order to investi- gate collections. H. F. O'Brien, grant for work in marine archeology to be known as the O'Brien Marine Archeology Fund. Office of Naval Research: Grant for the purpose of conducting a conference on "The Formation of Spectrum Lines." Grant to perform aeronautical research studies. Grant to provide expert consultants to advise the Navy Advisory Committee. Grant for the purpose of conducting systematic zoological research on the marine fauna of Tropical Pacific Area. Grant to perform psychological research studies. Grant for the support of research entitled "Information of Shark Distribution, and Distribution of Shark Attack all over the World." Grant for studies concerning the development of a proposal for an institute for Laboratory of human performance standards. Grant for research entitled "Behavior of Animals Associated with Coral Reefs." Grant for research entitled "Microlepidoptera of the Island of Rapa." Grant for support of research entitled "Studies of the Ecology, Distribution and Classification of South American Birds." Research Corporation, grant for its convocation of prominent scholars and scientists in recognition of the Smithson Bicentennial Celebration. Bernard T. Rocca, Sr., gift to purchase a very fine gold nugget from Colombia. Bernard T. Rocca, Sr., gift to the Rocca Fund. Rockefeller Foundation, grant for support of research entitled "Relationship of Birds to Arthropod Transmitted Virus Disease." S and H Foundation, grant to help defray the expense of the Bicentennial Celebration of the birth of James Smithson. Frank R. Schwengel, grant to the Jeanne Schwengel Memorial Fund. Montgomery Scott Company, grant to the Burleigh Rock Drill Fund. Shell Oil Foundation, grant for the purchase of photographs of World War I. Sidney Printing and Publishing Company, grant for the purchase of U.S. coins. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, grant for support of the observance of the 200th anniversary of the birth of the founder of the Smithsonian Institution. E. R. Squibb and Sons, grant for the purpose of enriching the Squibb Ancient Pharmacy. St. Petersburg Shell Company, grant for the St. Petersburg Shell Company Fund. 789-427—66 40 426 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 For the purpose of the Smithson Bicentennial Ceremony: Anonymous Alexander C. Liggett Laura D. Barney Henry P. Mcllhenny John Nicholas Brown Paul Mellon Mrs. Henry Cook Mrs. Paul Moore David and Margey Finley Mrs. William Morden Crawford H. Greenwald Marjorie Merriweather Post Wilmarth Lewis Thomas Watson United States Steel Company, grant to defray the cost of a model of an in- tegrated steel plant. University of Michigan, a contribution to the Freer Gallery of Art for the ARS ORIENTALIS Fund. I. E. Wallen, a grant to provide for underseas vehicle experience by the Smithsonian Institution staff. C. Malcolm Watkins, a grant for the purchase of New York State pottery. Ellen Bayard Weedon Foundation, gift to the Freer Gallery of Art for the Library Fund. Wenner-Gren Foundation, a grant to aid steady and analysis of skeletal ma- terial from Near Eastern sites. Wenner-Gren Foundation, a grant to aid attendance of non-LJ.S. anthropolo- gists at the Bicentennial celebration of the birth of James Smithson. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, grant to permit the participation in the International Indian Ocean Expedition. Charles M. Wormser, grant to provide acquisitions for the Division of Numismatics. The following appropriations were made by Congress for the Govern- ment bureaus under the administrative charge of the Smithsonian Institution for the fiscal year 1965: Salaries and Expenses $15,540,000.00 National Zoological Park $1,738,565.00 The appropriation made to the National Gallery of Art (which is a bureau of the Smithsonian Institution) was $2,176,000.00 Iii addition, funds were transferred from other Government agencies for expenditure under the direction of the Smithsonian Institution as follows : Working funds, transferred from the National Park Service, Interior Department, for archeological investigations in river basins throughout the United States $237, 000. 00 The Institution also administers a trust fund for partial support of the Canal Zone Biological Area, located on Barro Colorado Island in the Canal Zone. REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 427 AUDIT The report of the audit of the Smithsonian Private Funds follows: THE BOARD OF REGENTS, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20560 We have examined the balance sheet of private funds of Smithsonian Insti- tution as of June 30, 1965, and the related statement of current general private fund receipts and disbursements and several statements of changes in funds for the year then ended. Our examination was made in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards, and accordingly included such tests of the accounting records and such other auditing procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. Except for certain real estate acquired by gift or purchased from proceeds of gifts which are valued at cost or appraised value at date of gift, land, build- ings, furniture, equipment, works of art, living and other specimens and certain sundry property are not included in the accounts of the Institution; likewise, the accompanying statements do not include the National Gallery of Art, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and other departments, bureaus and operations administered by the Institution under Federal Appro- priations. The accounts of the Institution are maintained on the basis of cash receipts and disbursements, with the result that the accompanying statements do not reflect income earned but not collected or expenses incurred but not paid. In our opinion, subject to the matters referred to in the preceding paragraph, the accompanying statement of private funds presents fairly the assets and funds principal of Smithsonian Institution at June 30, 1965; further, the accompany- ing statement of current general private fund receipts and disbursements and several statements of changes in funds, which have been prepared on a basis consistent with that of the preceding year, present fairly the cash transactions of the private funds for the year then ended. Washington, D.C. PEAT, MARWICK, MITCHELL & CO. October 8, 1965 Respectfully submitted: Robert V. Fleming Caryl P. Haskins Clinton P. Anderson Executive Committee. STAFF OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION June 30, 1965 Office of the Secretary Special Assistants Executive Assistant Treasurer General Counsel Editorial and Publications Education and Training Library Library of Congress Liaison Fine Arts Special Project Special Projects Smithsonian Museum Service Personnel Buildings Management Supply Division Photographic Services Division Theodore W. Taylor, Assistant to the Secre- tary Philip C. Ritterbush, scientific matters William W. Warner, international activities John Whitelaw, research staff Robert W. Mason Otis O. Martin Peter G. Powers Paul H. Oehser, Chief Jerold Roschwalb, Assistant Director Mrs. Mary A. Huffer, Acting Librarian Ruth E. Blanchard Thomas M. Beggs Robert N. Cunningham, Director, Smithson Bicentennial Celebration G. Carroll Lindsay, Curator J. A. Kennedy, Director Andrew F. Michaels, Jr., Director A. W. Wilding, Chief O. H. Greeson, Chief Honorary Smithsonian Fellows, Associates, Collaborators, Custodians of Collections, and Honorary Curators Anthropology Vertebrate ^oology John M. Campbell (Archeology), Sister Inez Hilger (Ethnology), C. G. Holland (Arche- ology), Neil M. Judd (Archeology), Olga Linares de Sapir (Archeology), Betty J. Meggers (Archeology), Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr. (Archeology), Matthew W. Stirling (Archeology), Walter W. Taylor, Jr. (Anthropology), William J. Tobin (Physical Anthropology), Nathalie F. S. Woodbury (Archeology) John W. Aldrich (Birds), Oliver L. Austin (Birds), Leonard Carmichael (Psychology and Animal Behavior), Herbert G. Deig- nan (Birds), Robert W. Ficken (Birds), Herbert Friedmann (Birds), Laurence Irving (Birds), E. V. Komarek (Mammals), Richard H. Manville (Mammals), Michael Palmieri (Birds), Dioscoro S. 429 430 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Invertebrate ^oology Entomology Botany Paleobiology Mineral Sciences Science and Technology Arts and Manufactures Civil History Rabor (Birds), Lester L. Short (Birds), Robert Traub (Mammals), Alexander Wetmore (Birds) Willard W. Becklund (Helminthology) , J. Bruce Bredin (Biology), Ailsa M. Clark (Marine Invertebrates), Allen McIntosh (Mollusks), J. Percy Moore1 (Marine In- vertebrates), Waldo L. Schmitt (Marine Invertebrates), Benjamin Schwartz (Hel- minthology), Mrs. Mildred Stratton Wilson (Copepod Crustacea) Doris H. Blake (Coleoptera), Melbourne A. Carriker, Jr.2 (Mallophaga), Carl J. Drake3 (Hemiptera), K. C. Emerson (Mal- lophaga), Frank M. Hull (Diptera), William L. Jellison (Siphonaptera, Ano- plura), Carl F. W. Muesebeck (Hy- menoptera), Thomas E. Snyder (Isoptera) Chester R. Benjamin (Fungi), Jose Cuatre- casas (Flora of Tropical South America), Francis R. Fosberg (Pacific Floras), Emery C. Leonard (Acanthaceae), Elbert L. Little, Jr. (Dendrology), Floyd A. McClure (Bamboos), Kittie F. Parker (Compositae), John A. Stevenson (Fungi), Egbert H. Walker (Myrsinaceae, Eastern Asian Floras), William N. Watkins (Woods) C. Wythe Cooke (Invertebrate Paleontology), J. Thomas Dutro (Invertebrate Paleon- tology), Remington Kellogg (Vertebrate Paleontology), Axel A. Olsson (Inverte- brate Paleontology), Franco Rasetti (In- vertebrate Paleontology), Wendell P. Woodring (Invertebrate Paleontology) Gunnar Kullerud (Meteorites), Waldemar T. Schaller (Mineralogy) Derek J. de Solla Price Hans Syz (Ceramics) Mrs. Arthur M. Greenwood (Cultural History), Elmer C. Herber (History), Ivor Noel Hume (Cultural History), Fred W. McKay (Numismatics), Mrs. Emery May Norweb (Numismatics), R. Henry Norweb (Numismatics), Mrs. Joan Pear- son Watkins (Cultural History) l Deceased March 1, 1965. J Deceased July 27, 1965. 3 Deceased October 2, 1965. STAFF OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 431 Armed Forces History Exhibits Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Freer Gallery of Art National Air Museum National Zoological Park Canal %pne Biological Area William Rea Furlong, Frederic C. Lane, Byron McCandless W. L. Brown (Taxidermy) Charles G. Abbot Oleg Grabar, Grace Dunham Guest4, Max Loehr, Katherine N. Rhoades Frederick C. Crawford, Alfred V. Ver- ville E. P. Walker C. C. SOPER UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM Director Registrar Exhibits Labels Editor Office of Exhibits Natural History Laboratory History and Technology Laboratory Conservation Research Laboratory Frank A. Taylor Helena M. Weiss George Weiner John E. Anglim, Chief A. Gilbert Wright, Assistant Chief Julius Tretick, Production Supervisor Benjamin W. Lawless, Chief William M. Clark, Jr., Production Super- visor Charles H. Olin, Chief Mrs. Jacqueline S. Olin, Chemist MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Director Assistant Director for Systematics Assistant Director for Oceanog- raphy Smithsonian Oceanographic Sorting Center Administrative Officer Smithsonian Office of Anthropology Cultural Anthropology T. Dale Stewart Richard S. Cowan I. Eugene Wallen H. Adair Fehlmann, Supervisory Museum Specialist Mrs. Mabel A. Byrd Richard B. Woodbury, Acting Head Mrs. M. Blaker, Archivist Henry B. Collins, Senior Scientist Waldo R. Wedel, Senior Scientist Joseph Andrews, Exhibit Specialist Saul H. Riesenberg, Curator in Charge Clifford Evans, Jr., Associate Curator William H. Crocker, Associate Curator Kent V. Flannery, Associate Curator 4 Deceased July 7, 1964. 432 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Physical Anthropology River Basin Surveys Vertebrate ^oology Fishes Reptiles and Amphibians Birds Mammals Invertebrate ^oology Marine Invertebrates Mollusks Entomology Neuropteroids Gordon D. Gibson, Associate Curator Eugene I. Knez, Associate Curator Robert M. Laughlin, Associate Curator William C. Sturtevant, Associate Curator Gus W. Van Beek, Associate Curator J. Lawrence Angel, Curator in Charge Lucile E. Hoyme, Associate Curator Robert L. Stephenson, Acting Director Philip S. Humphrey, Chairman Leonard P. Schultz, Senior Scientist Watson M. Perrygo, Chief of Specimen Prep- aration Laboratory Ernest A. Lachner, Curator in Charge Victor G. Springer, Associate Curator William R. Taylor, Associate Curator Stanley H. Weitzman, Associate Curator Robert H. Gibbs, Jr., Associate Curator Leonard P. Schultz, Senior Scientist Doris M. Cochran, Curator in Charge James A. Peters, Associate Curator George E. Watson, Acting Curator in Charge Richard L. Zusi, Associate Curator Paul Slud, Associate Curator Charles O. Handley, Jr., Curator in Charge Henry W. Setzer, Associate Curator David H. Johnson, Research Curator Donald F. Squires, Chairman Raymond B. Manning, Acting Curator in Charge Thomas E. Bowman, Associate Curator Charles E. Cutress, Jr., Associate Curator Marian H. Pettibone, Associate Curator David L. Pawson, Associate Curator Meredith L. Jones, Associate Curator Louis S. Kornicker, Associate Curator J. Laurens Barnard, Associate Curator W. Duane Hope, Associate Curator Roger F. Cressey, Jr., Associate Curator Fenner A. Chace, Jr., Senior Scientist Horton H. Hobbs, Jr., Senior Scientist Joseph Rosewater, Acting Curator in Charge Joseph P. E. Morrison, Associate Curator Harald A. Rehder, Research Curator J. F. Gates Clarke, Chairman Oliver S. Flint, Jr., Associate Curator in Charge STAFF OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 433 Lepidoptera Coleoptera Hemiptera Myriapoda and Arachnida Botany Phanerogams Ferns Grasses Cryptogams Plant Anatomy Fungi Paleobiology Invertebrate Paleontology Vertebrate Paleontology Paleobotany Sedimentology Donald R. Davis, Curator in Charge W. Donald Duckworth, Associate Curator William D. Field, Associate Curator Oscar L. Cartwright, Curator in Charge Paul J. Spangler, Associate Curator Richard C. Froeschner, Associate Curator in Charge Ralph E. Crabill, Jr., Curator in Charge William L. Stern, Chairman Lyman B. Smith, Curator in Charge Wallace R. Ernst, Associate Curator Dan H. Nicolson, Associate Curator Stanwyn G. Shetler, Associate Curator Velva E. Rudd, Associate Curator John J. Wurdack, Associate Curator Conrad V. Morton, Curator in Charge David B. Lellinger, Associate Curator Thomas R. Soderstrom, Curator in Charge Jason R. Swallen, Research Scientist Mason E. Hale, Jr., Curator in Charge Paul S. Conger, Associate Curator Harold E. Robinson, Associate Curator E. Yale Dawson, Curator William L. Stern, Acting Curator in Charge Richard H. Eyde, Associate Curator Chester R. Benjamin, Honorary Research Associate in Charge John A. Stevenson, Honorary Research Asso- ciate G. Arthur Cooper, Chairman Richard S. Boardman, Curator in Charge Porter M. Kier, Associate Curator Richard Cifelli, Associate Curator Erle G. Kauffman, Associate Curator Martin A. Buz as, Associate Curator Richard H. Benson, Associate Curator Kenneth M. Towe, Associate Curator C. Lewis Gazin, Curator in Charge David H. Dunkle, Associate Curator Nicholas Hotton III, Associate Curator Clayton E. Ray, Associate Curator Francis M. Hueber, Curator in Charge Walter H. Adey, Associate Curator Jack W. Pierce, Curator in Charge 434 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Mineral Sciences Meteorites Mineralogy Petrology George S. Switzer, Chairman Kurt Fredriksson, Curator in Charge Edward P. Henderson, Curator Roy S. Clarke, Jr., Chemist Paul E. Desautels, Associate Curator in Charge William Melson, Associate Curator in Charge MUSEUM OF HISTORY AND TECHNOLOGY Director Assistant Director Liaison Editor Administrative Officers Science and Technology Physical Sciences Mechanical and Civil Engineering Electricity Transportation Medical Sciences Arts and Manufactures Manufactures and Heavy Industries Agriculture and Forest Products Textiles Ceramics and Glass John C. Ewers Silvio A. Bedini Roger Pineau William E. Boyle, Virginia Beets Robert P. Multhauf, Chairman; in Charge of Sections of Chemistry and Meteorology Deborah J. Mills, Assistant Curator Walter F. Cannon, Curator in Charge; Sections of Astronomy and Physics Uta C. Merzbach, Associate Curator, Sec- tions of Mathematics and Antique Instru- ments Robert M. Vogel, Associate Curator in Charge; Sections of Heavy Machinery, Tools, and Civil Engineering Edwin A. Battison, Associate Curator, Sec- tions of Light Machinery and Horology Bernard S. Finn, Curator Howard I. Chapelle, Curator in Charge; Section of Marine Transportation Kenneth M. Perry, Associate Curator John H. White, Jr., Associate Curator, Sec- tion of Land Transportation Sami K. Hamarneh, Curator in Charge; Sections of Medical and Dental History and Pharmaceutical History and Health Philip W. Bishop, Chairman Philip W. Bishop, Acting Curator John N. Hoffman, Associate Curator John T. Schlebecker, Curator Mrs. Grace Rogers Cooper, Curator Rita J. Adrosko, Associate Curator Paul V. Gardner, Curator J. Jefferson Miller II, Associate Curator STAFF OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 435 Graphic Arts Civil History Political History Cultural History Philately and Postal History Numismatics Armed Forces History Military History Naval History Jacob Kainen, Curator Eugene Ostroff, Associate Curator, Section of Photography Richard H. Howland, Chairman Peter C. Welsh, Curator Mrs. Doris E. Borthwick, Assistant Curator Anne Castrodale, Assistant Curator Wilcomb E. Washburn, Curator Mrs. Margaret B. Klapthor, Associate Curator Keith E. Melder, Associate Curator Mrs. Anne W. Murray, Associate Curator Herbert R. Collins, Assistant Curator Mrs. Claudia B. Kidwell, Assistant Curator C. Malcolm Watkins, Curator Howard M. Brown, Associate Curator Mrs. Cynthia A. Hoover, Associate Curator Rodris C. Roth, Associate Curator Carl H. Scheele, Associate Curator in Charge Vladimir Clain-Stefanelli, Curator Mrs. Elvira Clain-Stefanelli, Associate Curator Mendel L. Peterson, Chairman Edgar M. Howell, Curator Craddock R. Goins, Jr., Associate Curator Philip K. Lundeberg, Curator Melvin H. Jackson, Associate Curator INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE SERVICE Chief J. A. Collins NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK Director Office of the Director T. H. Reed Travis E. Fauntleroy, Assistant to the Direc- tor Marian McCrane, Zoologist Clinton W. Gray, Veterinarian SMITHSONIAN ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY Director Office of the Director Publications and Information Fred L. Whipple Carlton W. Tillinghast, Assistant Director (Administration) Charles A. Lundquist, Assistant Director (Science) Leon Campbell, Jr., Executive Director R. N. Watts, J. Cornell 436 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 Astronomers Chemist Engineers Geodesists Geologists Geophysicists Mathematicians Physical Metallurgist Physicists G. Colombo, L. Goldberg, Y. Hagihara, G. S. Hawkins, Y. Kozai, R. Martin, J. Slowey, L. Solomon, F. W. Wright D. A. Pitman T. E. Hoffman, G. G. Lehr, Y. Nozawa L. Aardoom, W. Kohlein, J. Rolff, W. E. Strange, G. Veis O. B. Marvin, J. Wood E. M. Gaposchkin, C. Y. Wang R. W. Briggs, M. P. Friedman, D. A. Laut- man M. F. Comerford E. Avrett, P. L. Bhatnagar, N. P. Carle- ton, A. F. Cook, R. J. Davis, J. De Felice, C. H. Dugan, G. G. Fazio, E. L. Fireman, F. Franklin, O. Gingerich, M. Grossi, R. R. Haefner, H. F. Helmken, P. V. Hodge, W. M. Irvine, L. G. Jaccia, W. Kalkofen, A. R. Lee, D. J. Malaise, R. E. McCrosky, H. Mitler, R. W. Noyes, J. B. Pollack, A. G. Posen, M. Roemer, G. B. Rybicki, C. E. Sagan, R. B. Southworth, S. E. Strom, D. Tilles, S. Tsuruta, F. F. Verniani, C. A. Whitney, J. P. Wright RADIATION BIOLOGY LABORATORY Director Assistant Director Biochemists Geochemist Plant Physiologists Electronic Engineer Instrument Engineering Technicians Physicist W. H. Klein W. Shropshire, Jr. D. L. Correll M. M. Margulies A. Long V. B. Elstad, K. Mitrakos; L. Price, A. M. Steiner J. H. Harrison D. G. Talbert. B. Goldberg NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS Director Assistant to the Director Special Consultant Curator (Exhibits) Curator (Painting and Sculpture) David W. Scott Donald R. McClelland Mrs. Adelyn Dohme Breeskin Harry Lowe Richard P. Wunder STAFF OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 437 Curator {Information and Lending) Librarian Smithsonian Traveling Exhibition Service Smithsonian Art Commission Members Members Emeritus Rowland Lyon William Walker Mrs. Dorothy Van Arsdale, Chief Mrs. Nancy Curtis Padnos, Assistant Chief Edgar Richardson, Chairman Gilmore D. Clarke, Vice Chairman S. Dillon Ripley, Secretary Gilmore D. Clarke, Page Cross, David E. Finley, Lloyd Goodrich, Walker Han- cock, Bartlett H. Hayes, Jr., Wilmarth S. Lewis, Paul Manship, Henry P. McIlhenny, Paul Mellon, Ogden M. Pleissner, Edgar Richardson, S. Dillon Ripley, Charles H. Sawyer, Stow Wengenroth, Andrew Wyeth Leonard Carmichael, Alexander Wetmore FREER GALLERY OF ART Director Assistant Director Head Curator {Near Eastern Art) Associate Curator {Chinese Art) Head, Technical Laboratory John A. Pope Harold P. Stern Richard Ettinghausen William Trousdale Rutherford J. Gettens Trustees President Vice President Secretary- Treasurer Director Administrator General Counsel Chief Curator Assistant Director NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States, Chairman Dean Rusk, Secretary of State Henry H. Fowler, Secretary of the Treasury S. Dillon Ripley, Secretary of the Smith- sonian Institution Paul Mellon, John Hay Whitney, John N. Irwin II, Lessing J. Rosenwald, Franklin D. Murphy Paul Mellon John Hay Whitney Huntington Cairns John Walker Ernest R. Feidler Huntington Cairns Perry B. Cott J. Carter Brown 438 SMITHSONIAN YEAR 1965 NATIONAL AIR MUSEUM S. Paul Johnston Frederick G. Durant Paul E. Garber James A. Mahoney Louis C. Casey, Curator in Charge Kenneth E. Newland, Curator in Charge Robert B. Meyer, Curator in Charge Director Assistant Director (Astronautics) Assistant Director (Education and Information) Visual Information Officer Flight Craft Flight Materiel Flight Propulsion Preservation and Restoration Walter M. Male, Facilities Manager CANAL ZONE BIOLOGICAL AREA Director M. H. Moynihan Biologists Robert L. Dressler, A. Stanley Rand, Neal G. Smith JOHN F. KENNEDY CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Chairman Officers Roger L. Stevens Robert O. Anderson, Vice Chairman Sol M. Linowitz, Vice Chairman Ralph E. Becker, General Counsel Daniel W. Bell, Treasurer K. LeMoyne Billings, Secretary Philip J. Mullin, Assistant Secretary and Administrative Officer Herbert D. Lawson, Assistant Treasurer Kenneth Birgfeld, Assistant Treasurer Paul Seltzer, Assistant Treasurer L. Corrin Strong, Chairman Emeritus NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY Director Charles Nagel Associate Curator Robert G. Stewart Commission Catherine Drinker Bowen, Julian P. Boyd, John Nicholas Brown, Lewis Deschler, David E. Finley, Wilmarth Sheldon Lewis, Richard H. Shryock, Col. Frede- rick P. Todd Ex Officio Chief Justice of the United States Secretary, Smithsonian Institution Director, National Gallery of Art STAFF OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 439 SCIENCE INFORMATION EXCHANGE Director Deputy Director Associate Directors Assistant Directors Executive Officer Monroe E. Freeman David F. Hersey Willis R. Foster, Life Sciences Frank J. Kreysa, Physical Sciences William H. Fitzpatrick, Special Projects Harvey Marron, Operations Edward H. Kohn NATIONAL ARMED FORCES MUSEUM ADVISORY BOARD Director Assistant Director Museum Specialist Chairman Ex Officio Members Col. John H. Magruder III James S. Hutchins Col. Robert M. Calland John Nicholas Brown Secretary of Defense, Secretary, Smith- sonian Institution Chief Justice of the United States, Secre- tary of Army, Secretary of Navy, Secretary of Air Force, David Lloyd Kreeger, Henry Bradford Washburn, Jr., William H. Perkins, Jr., James H. Cassell,