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5 of
ANNUAL
REPORT
JAN i;
Chicago Natural History Museum
FLOODLIGHTED NORTH ENTRANCE
CHICAGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM
Report of the Director
to th
ic
Board of Trustees
for the year 1962
CHICAGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM
1963
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
BY CHICAGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM PRESS
5~0 7
Contents
PAGE
Former Members of the Board of Trustees 10
Former Officers
Board of Trustees, 1962 12
List of Staff, 1962 13
Report of the Director
Trustees and Officers
Gifts to the Museum
The N. W. Harris Public School Extension 2o
James Nelson and Anna Louise Raymond Foundation 26
Staff of the Museum
Volunteer Workers
Memberships
Museum Attendance
Special Exhibits and Programs
Expeditions and Field Trips *
Department of Anthropology
Department of Botany
Department of Geology
Department of Zoology
Library of the Museum
Public Relations
Activities of Staff Members in'Scientific and Professional Societies . . 7o
Co-operation with Other Institutions
Motion Pictures
Photography and Illustration
Book Shop
Publications and Printing
Cafeteria
Maintenance, Construction, and Engineering bS
Attendance Statistics and Door Receipts 91
Financial Statements
Accessions in 1962
105
Members of the Museum
Benefactors
Honorary Members °_
„ . 105
Patrons ,„
105
Corresponding Members
Contributors
Corporate Members 108
Life Members 108
Non-Resident Life Members 110
Associate Members Ill
Non-Resident Associate Members 133
Sustaining Members 133
Annual Members 134
Articles of Incorporation 165
Amended By-Laws 167
Illustrations
PAGE
North Entrance of Museum frontispiece
Solomon A. Smith 9
Holiday Science Lecture 27
John Witte, Museum's 50 Millionth Visitor 32
Reception Opening Exhibition of Tutankhamun Treasures 34
Spice Exhibit 36
Bronze Plaque from Benin 38
Gold Breastplate from Colombia 42
Silver Trade Goods 44
Model of Vanilla pompona 46
Diamond and Platinum Cornucopia Pin 52
Camp Site of Iranian Expedition 58
Spiny Squirrel Fish from Brazil 61
Hawaiian Tree Snail 63
Insect Exhibit 65
Chinese Toggles 68
Aleutian Boat 74
Leaf Insect 77
photograph by Fabian Bachrach
SOLOMON A. SMITH
Trustee of the Museum since 1920
Treasurer since 1914
Contributor and Corporate Member
Former Members of the
Board of Trustees
George E. Adams,* 1893-1917
Owen F. Aldis,* 1893-1898
Allison V. Armour,* 1893-1894
Sewell L. Avery,* 1932-1960
Edward E. Ayer,* 1893-1927
John C. Black,* 1893-1894
Watson F. Blair,* 1894-1928
Leopold E. Block,* 1936-1952
John Borden,* 1920-1938
Walther Buchen,* 1952-1961
M. C. Bullock,* 1893-1894
Daniel H. Burnham,* 1893-1894
Harry E. Byram,* 1921-1928
Chesser M. Campbell,* 1959-1960
William J. Chalmers,* 1894-1938
Boardman Conover,* 1940-1950
Richard T. Crane, Jr.,* 1908-1912
1921-1931
D. C. Da vies,* 1922-1928
George R. Davis,* 1893-1899
Albert B. Dick, Jr.,* 1936-1954
James W. Ellsworth,* 1893-1894
Charles B. Far well,* 1893-1894
Howard W. Fenton,* 1941-1951
Henry Field,* 1916-1917
Marshall Field, Jr.,* 1899-1905
Marshall Field III,* 1914-1956
Ernest R. Graham,* 1921-1936
Frank W. Gunsaulus,* 1893-1894
1918-1921
Albert W. Harris,* 1920-1941
Harlow N. Higinbotham,* 1894-1919
Emil G. Hirsch,* 1893-1894
Charles L. Hutchinson,* 1893-1894
Huntington W. Jackson,* 1894-1900
Arthur B. Jones,* 1894-1927
Chauncey Keep,* 1915-1929
William V. Kelley,* 1929-1932
George Manierre,* 1894-1924
Charles H. Markham,* 1924-1930
Cyrus H. McCormick,* 1894-1936
Charles A. McCulloch,* 1936-1945
John Barton Payne,* 1910-1911
George F. Porter,* 1907-1916
Clarence B. Randall, 1946-1961
Frederick H. Rawson,* 1927-1935
Norman B. Ream,* 1894-1910
George A. Richardson,* 1930-1957
John A. Roche,* 1893-1894
Theodore Roosevelt, Jr.,* 1938-1944
Martin A. Ryerson,* 1893-1932
Fred W. Sargent,* 1929-1939
Stephen C. Simms,* 1928-1937
James Simpson,* 1920-1939
Frederick J. V. Skiff,* 1902-1921
Albert A. Sprague,* 1910-1946
Silas H. Strawn,* 1924-1946
Edwin Walker,* 1893-1910
Albert H. Wetten,* 1939-1953
Leslie Wheeler,* 1934-1937
Norman Williams,* 1894-1899
John P. Wilson,* 1932-1959
William Wrigley, Jr.,* 1919-1931
* deceased
10
Former Officers
PRESIDENTS
FIRST
VICE-PRESIDENTS
SECOND
VICE-PRESIDENTS
THIRD
VICE-PRESIDENTS
SECRETARIES
TREASURERS
DIRECTORS
Edward E. Ayer* 1894-1898
Harlow N. Higinbotham* 1898-1908
Stanley Field 1909-1961
Martin A. Ryerson* 1894-1932
Albert A. Sprague* 1933-1946
Marshall Field III* 1946-1956
Norman B. Ream* 1894-1902
Marshall Field, Jr.* 1902-1905
Stanley Field 1906-1908
Watson F. Blair* 1909-1928
Albert A. Sprague* 1929-1932
James Simpson* 1933-1939
Silas H. Strawn* 1940-1946
Albert B. Dick, Jr.* 1946-1951
Henry P. Isham 1952-1953
Samuel Insull, Jr 1954
Hughston M. McBain 1955-1956
Walther Buchen* 1957-1961
Albert A. Sprague* 1921-1928
James Simpson* 1929-1932
Albert W. Harris* 1933-1941
Albert B. Dick, Jr.* 1942-1946
Samuel Insull, Jr 1946-1953
Joseph N. Field 1954-1961
Ralph Metcalf 1894
George Manierre* 1894-1907
Frederick J. V. Skiff* 1907-1921
D. C. Da vies* 1921-1928
Stephen C. Simms* 1928-1937
Clifford C. Gregg 1937-1961
Byron L. Smith* 1894-1914
Frederick J. V. Skiff* 1893-1921
D. C. Davies* 1921-1928
Stephen C. Simms* 1928-1937
Clifford C. Gregg 1937-1961
* deceased
11
BOARD OF TRUSTEES, 1962
officers Stanley Field, Chairman of the Board
Clifford C. Gregg, President
Hughston M. McBain, First Vice-President
Joseph N. Field, Second Vice-President
Bowen Blair, Third Vice-President
Solomon A. Smith, Treasurer and Assistant Secretary
E. Leland Webber, Secretary
board of
trustees
Lester Armour
Bowen Blair
Wm. McCormick Blair
Walter J. Cummings
Joseph N. Field
Marshall Field, Jr.
Stanley Field
Clifford C. Gregg
Samuel Insull, Jr.
Henry P. Isham
William V. Kahler
Hughston M. McBain
J. Roscoe Miller
William H. Mitchell
John T. Pirie, Jr.
John Shedd Reed
John G. Searle
John M. Simpson
Edward B. Smith
Solomon A. Smith
Louis Ware
J. Howard Wood
committees Executive — Stanley Field, Clifford C. Gregg, Solomon A.
Smith, Joseph N. Field, John G. Searle, Hughston M.
McBain, Wm. McCormick Blair, Henry P. Isham,
Marshall Field, Jr.
Finance — Solomon A. Smith, Hughston M. McBain,
Walter J. Cummings, Henry P. Isham, Wm. McCor-
mick Blair, John G. Searle, Lester Armour
Building — Joseph N. Field, William H. Mitchell, Louis
Ware, J. Roscoe Miller, J. Howard Wood
Auditing — John G. Searle, Marshall Field, Jr., Louis Ware
Pension — Hughston M. McBain, William V. Kahler, John
G. Searle, John T. Pirie, Jr., Samuel Insull, Jr.
12
LIST OF STAFF, 1962
E. Leland Webber, B.B.Ad., C.P.A., Director
DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY
Paul S. Martin, Ph.D., Chief Curator
Donald Collier, Ph.D., Curator, South American Archaeology and Ethnology
George I. Quimby, A.M., Curator, North American Archaeology and Ethnology
John B. Rinaldo, Ph.D., Associate Curator, Archaeology
Kenneth Starr, Ph.D., Curator, Asiatic Archaeology and Ethnology
Phillip H. Lewis, M.A., Curator, Primitive Art
Hoshien Tchen, Ph.D., Consultant, East Asian Collection
Allen S. Liss, A.B., Custodian of Collections!
Christopher C. Legge, M.A., Assistant Custodian of Collections
Alfred Lee Rowell, Dioramist
Gustaf Dalstrom, Artist
Theodore Halkin, B.F.A., M.S., Artist
Walter C. Reese, Preparator
Susan Schanck, B.S., Artist-Preparator
Agnes M. Fennell, B.A., Departmental Secretary
Robert J. Braidwood, Ph.D., Research Associate, Old World Prehistory
Fred Eggan, Ph.D., Research Associate, Ethnology
J. Eric Thompson, Dipl.Anth.Camb., Research Associate, Central American
Archaeology
Evett D. Hester, M.S., Field Associate
DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY
John R. Millar, Chief Curator
J. Francis Macbride, Curator, Peruvian Botany
John W. Thieret, Ph.D., Curator, Economic Botanyf
Louis O. Williams, Ph.D., Curator, Central American Botany
Patricio Ponce de Leon, Ph.D., Assistant Curator, Cryptogamic Herbarium
Samuel H. Grove, Jr., Artist-Preparator
Frank Boryca, Technician
t resigned
13
DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY (continued)
Walter Huebner, Preparator
Robert Anderson, Artist
Edith M. Vincent, A.B., Research Librarian
Dorothy Gibson, Assistant and Departmental Secretary
E. P. Killip, A.B., Research Associate, Phanerogamic Botany
Rogers McVaugh, Ph.D., Research Associate, Vascular Plants
Donald Richards, Research Associate, Cryptogamic Botany
Earl E. Sherff, Ph.D., Research Associate, Systematic Botany
Hanford Tiffany, Ph.D., Research Associate, Cryptogamic Botany
Margery C. Carlson, Ph.D., Associate, Botany
DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY
Sharat K. Roy, Ph.D., Chief Curator*
Rainer Zangerl, Ph.D., Chief Curator
Edward J. Olsen, Ph.D., Curator, Mineralogy
Bertram G. Woodland, Ph.D., Associate Curator, Petrology
Harry E. Changnon, B.S., Curator of Exhibits
Henry Horback, Assistant
Henry U. Taylor, Preparator
Robert H. Denison, Ph.D., Curator, Fossil Fishes
William D. Turnbull, Assistant Curator, Fossil Mammals
David Techter, B.S., Assistant, Fossil Vertebrates
Eugene S. Richardson, Jr., Ph.D., Curator, Fossil Invertebrates
Orville L. Gilpin, Chief Preparator, Fossils
Ronald J. Lambert, Preparator, Fossils
Maidi Wiebe Leibhardt, Artistf
Tibor Perenyi, Ph.D., Artist
Evelyn Shahroch, Departmental Secretary
Ernst Antevs, Ph.D., Research Associate, Glacial Geology
Albert A. Dahlberg, D.D.S., Research Associate, Fossil Vertebrates
Erik N. Kjellesvig-Waering, B.S., Research Associate, Fossil Invertebrates
Everett C. Olson, Ph.D., Research Associate, Fossil Vertebrates
Bryan Patterson, Research Associate, Fossil Vertebrates
R. H. Whitfield, D.D.S., Associate, Fossil Plants
Violet Whitfield, B.A., Associate, Fossil Plants
+ deceased
t resigned
14
DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY
Austin L. Rand, Ph.D., ScD., Chief Curator
Joseph Curtis Moore, Ph.D., Curator, Mammals
Philip Hershkovitz, M.S., Research Curator, Mammals
Emmet R. Blake, M.S., Curator, Birds
Melvin A. Traylor, Jr., A.B., Associate Curator, Birds
M. Dianne Maurer, A.B., Assistant, Birds
Robert F. Inger, Ph.D., Curator, Amphibians and Reptiles
Hymen Marx, B.S., Assistant Curator, Reptiles
Janet Wright, Assistant, Reptilesf
Loren P. Woods, A.B., Curator, Fishes
Pearl Sonoda, Assistant, Fishes
Rupert L. Wenzel, Ph.D., Curator, Insects
Henry S. Dybas, B.S., Associate Curator, Insects
August Ziemer, Assistant, Insects
Fritz Haas, Ph.D., Curator Emeritus, Lower Invertebrates
Alan Solem, Ph.D., Curator, Lower Invertebrates
D. Dwight Davis, Curator, Vertebrate Anatomy
Joan Davis Levin, B.A., Assistant!
Sophie Andris, Osteologist
Carl W. Cotton, Taxidermist
Mario Villa, Assistant Taxidermist
Peter Anderson, Assistant Taxidermist
Joseph B. Krstolich, Artist
Wanda Harrison, A.B., Departmental Secretary
Rudyerd Boulton, B.S., Research Associate, Birds
Alfred E. Emerson, Ph.D., Sc.D., Research Associate, Insects
Harry Hoogstraal, Ph.D., Research Associate, Insects
Ch'eng-chao Liu, Ph.D., Research Associate, Reptiles
Orlando Park, Ph.D., Research Associate, Insects
Clifford H. Pope, B.S., Research Associate, Amphibians and Reptiles
Charles H. Seevers, Ph.D., Research Associate, Insects
R. M. Strong, Ph.D., Research Associate, Anatomy
Robert Traub, Ph.D., Research Associate, Insects
Alex K. Wyatt, Research Associate, Insects
Luis de la Torre, M.S., Associate, Mammals
Marion Grey, Associate, Fishes
Waldemar Meister, M.D., Associate, Anatomy
Edward M. Nelson, Ph.D., Associate, Fishes
t resigned
15
DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY (continued)
Harry G. Nelson, B.S., Associate, Insects
Karl Plath, Associate, Birds
Dioscoro S. Rabor, M.S., Associate, Birds
Lillian A. Ross, Ph.B., Associate, Insects
Ellen T. Smith, Associate, Birds
Robert L. Fleming, Ph.D., Field Associate
Georg Haas, Ph.D., Field Associate
Frederick J. Medem, Sc.D., Field Associate
DEPARTMENT OF THE N. W. HARRIS PUBLIC SCHOOL EXTENSION
Richard A. Martin, B.S., Curator
David A. Ross, B.S.A., Preparatory
Bertha M. Parker, M.S., Research Associate
JAMES NELSON AND ANNA LOUISE RAYMOND FOUNDATION
FOR PUBLIC SCHOOL AND CHILDREN'S LECTURES
Miriam Wood, M.A., Chief
Marie Svoboda, M.A.
Harriet Smith, M.A.
Edith Fleming, M.A.
Maryl Andre, B.S.
Joanne Evenson, B.S.f
Ernest J. Roscoe, M.S.
Elda B. Herbert, M.A., Secretary
THE LIBRARY OF THE MUSEUM
Administration
Meta P. Howell, B.L.S. Librarian
M. Eileen Rocourt, M.A., Associate Librarian
Esther P. Kerster, Secretary
Classification and Cataloguing
W. Peyton Fawcett, B.A.
Bertha W. Gibbs, B.A., B.S. in L.S.
Chih-wei Pan, M.S.
Reference
Eugenia Bernoff Jang
Accessions, Binding, Stacks
George Stosius, M.E.
Constantin Globa, Dipl.Eng.
f on leave
t resigned
16
ASSOCIATE EDITORS OF MUSEUM PUBLICATIONS
Lillian A. Ross, Ph.B., Scientific Publications
Patricia M. Williams, A.B., Assistant
Helen Atkinson MacMinn, A.M., Miscellaneous Publications
PUBLIC RELATIONS COUNSEL
Paula R. Nelson
Marilyn Jindrich, B.S., Associate
DIVISION OF MEMBERSHIPS
Gloria Pagano, in chargef
Lois M. Buenger, B.A., in charge
ADMINISTRATION AND RECORDS
James I. Goodrich, Assistant to the Director
Marion A. Kratky, B.A., Secretary to the President f
Helen B. Christopher, Secretary to the President
Susanmary Carpenter, B.A., Secretary to the Director
Marion G. Gordon, B.S., Registrar
Raymond A. N. Gomes, Assistant Recorder!
Hilda Nordland, Assistant Recorder
Jeannette Forster, Assistant Recorder
Jessie Dudley, Receptionist
ACCOUNTING
Marion K. Hoffmann, Auditor
Eleanor Sheffner, Assistant Auditor
Robert E. Bruce, Purchasing Agent
THE BOOK SHOP
Jane Comiskey, B.A., Manager
DIVISION OF ILLUSTRATION
E. John Pfiffner, Staff Artistf
Marion Pahl, B.F.A., Staff Illustrator
t resigned
17
DIVISION OF PHOTOGRAPHY
John Bayalis, Photographer
Homer V. Holdren, Assistant
Ferdinand Huysmans, Dipl.A., Assistant
Clarence B. Mitchell, B.A., Research Associate, Photography
DIVISION OF MOTION PICTURES
John Moyer, in charge
DIVISION OF PRINTING
Raymond H. Hallstein, Sr., in chargef
Harold M. Grutzmacher, in charge
BUILDING OPERATIONS
James R. Shouba, Building Superintendent
Division of Maintenance
Gustav A. Noren, Superintendent of Maintenance
Division of Engineering
William E. Lake, Chief Engineer*
Leonard Carrion, Chief Engineer
Jacques L. Pulizzi, Assistant Chief Engineer
THE GUARD
Harry R. Smith, Captainf
William L. Daggett, Captain
t resigned
* retired
18
Annual Report of the Director
Annual Report
of the Director
To the Trustees:
I have the honor to present a report of the operations of the Museum
for the year ending December 31, 1962.
The single event of greatest public impact during 1962 was the
showing of the Egyptian treasures from the tomb of King Tutan-
khamun during the period from June 15 through July 15. The two-
year tour of this exhibition in the United States is intended to draw
public attention to the campaign to save the many archaeological
treasures that will be lost upon completion of the Aswan Dam, unless
funds are made available for intensive archaeological work. The
extent of the interest generated in Chicago was evidenced by the
123,722 visitors to the exhibition.
On July 2, the 50 millionth visitor to the present building since
its opening on May 2, 1921, was received in the person of John
McFaul Witte of Westchester, Illinois. John, aged 12, was presented
with a Life Membership in the Museum by the Director.
Expeditionary work in connection with current research projects
of the scientific staff was particularly noteworthy. Our expeditions
were active in Canada, Borneo, South and Central America, Bechu-
analand, southern Asia, the Philippines and other islands in the
Pacific, and in numerous areas within the United States. Study
trips by the staff ranged far afield, including the completion of a
round the world trip by Dr. Alan Solem, Curator of Lower Inverte-
21
brates. Field Associates and collectors extended our work in many-
other areas of the world.
Mention of the intensive program of field work and collecting
leads inevitably to a broader consideration. Field work, which is
essential to much of the research program of a natural history mu-
seum, produces collections of specimens — specimens that must be
processed by technicians, studied by our staff or by collaborators
elsewhere, published in the technical literature, and systematically
filed, stored, and maintained for future use by other scientists work-
ing on different problems.
The burgeoning scientific activity in this country since World
War II has placed on each segment of the scientific community an
increasing burden as it attempts to maintain its proportionate role
in the total effort. A major museum, similar to a major library,
must by its very nature grow in collections, in space, in staff, if it is
to fulfill its responsibilities to science and to the nation.
A concomitant to accelerated scientific research is the need for
a continually better informed populace as an aid to understanding
of new scientific knowledge and of the scientific process, and also
for the pure intellectual stimulation derived from a broad scientific
background. The science museum today has a responsibility for
an increasing commitment to revision of exhibits as its principal
contribution to public understanding. Temporary exhibits, in par-
ticular, provide an opportunity to transmit timely information about
matters of current scientific interest. Such exhibits are, however,
high in "per viewer" cost compared with exhibits planned to re-
main on view for years.
Growth is evident in other areas of our work. During the last
ten years, the number of school children, other students, and teachers
visiting the Museum annually has increased from 164,000 to 371,000.
In 1962, 217,159 persons came in organized groups. We were able
to serve only 52,508 of these through our Raymond Foundation
activities. Ten years ago, we produced 20,000 pieces of photo-
graphic work annually in our Division of Photography; in 1962,
37,544 were completed. As our library grows in size and distinction,
more advanced students visit it and more requests for interlibrary
loans are received from universities, various industries, and other
museums. As the number of graduate students in universities in
this country and abroad grows, so does the number that comes to
the Museum for instruction or independent study in our reference
collections. We are gratified at the demand for these and other
Museum services, but we recognize that such demands mean more
22
librarians, photographers, preparators, guards, guides, maintenance
personnel; yes, even more soap powder to eliminate small finger-
prints from walls.
A museum such as Chicago Natural History Museum is thus in
what is termed a "growth situation" in the investment world. Un-
fortunately, the corollary ends there, for, unlike a growth industry
which nurtures itself through monetary profits, the Museum re-
quires a continuing infusion of financial support from the commu-
nity to which it pays its dividends of service.
In recognition of these very basic facts of museum existence, the
staff began a study during 1962 to determine the resources needed
if we are to meet the demands that will be made on the Museum
during the next two decades. Although the study was not com-
pleted during 1962, two over-riding concerns were so evident that
immediate action was necessary. The first need was a revision of
staff salaries to bring us to a position closer to other major museums
and to colleges and universities. Action by the Board of Trustees
in December authorized some of the most critical revisions which
will help to retain present and attract future staff. The other major
problem is that of providing space to house our growing collections.
Although the solution to this need was not in sight at the year's end,
progress has been made on the physical planning which is precedent
to a solution.
Further planning and assessment of need are indicated and will
be undertaken. They will be most fruitful as we move in an orderly
fashion to meet the challenges and opportunities of the years ahead.
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS
At the annual meeting of the Board of Trustees, President Stanley
Field requested that he be no longer continued in that office after
fifty-three years of service. The Board of Trustees, therefore, elected
Mr. Field Chairman of the Board and elected the former Director,
Dr. Clifford C. Gregg, President. Hughston M. McBain was re-
elected First Vice-President, Joseph N. Field was elected Second
Vice-President, and Bowen Blair, Third Vice-President. Solomon
A. Smith was re-elected Treasurer and elected Assistant Secretary.
E. Leland Webber, formerly Assistant Director, was elected Secretary
of the Board and Director of the Museum.
23
GIFTS TO THE MUSEUM
The Museum received $3,062.50 from Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Don-
nelley. William S. Street donated $3,500 toward a zoological expe-
dition to the Near East. The Searle Foundation gave an unrestricted
gift of $2,000 and Jack C. Staehle likewise gave $1,593.75. Edward
Alexander and Philip K. Wrigley each contributed $1,000 and the
Children's Press also gave $1,000. Contributions were received from
William G. Burt in the amount of $1,175, Joseph N. Field in the
amount of $750, and William H. Mitchell in the amount of $500.
Stanley Field, Chairman of the Board of Trustees, gave an addi-
tional $31,234.75, and Mrs. Stanley Field, a Benefactor of the Mu-
seum, gave $15,000 to the Sara Carroll Field Fund. Miss Margaret
B. Conover contributed $971.88 to the Conover Game-Bird Fund,
and Dr. Maurice L. Richardson added $1,000 to the Maurice L.
Richardson Paleontological Fund. Mrs. Cyril L. Ward gave $2,000
to the Frances F. Ward Endowment Fund. Dr. Clifford C. Gregg
contributed $250 to the Commander Frank V. Gregg Memorial
Fund. The Karl P. Schmidt Fund also received $50, the Museum
Memorial Fund $207, and the Walther Buchen Memorial Fund
$100. The Frederick Reynolds and Abby Kettelle Babcock Fund
received $521.57 from the estate of the late Mrs. Abby K. Babcock
(for use of Special Funds see page 94).
Additional gifts were received from Mr. and Mrs. Lee W. Alberts,
Richard H. Alschuler, Herbert R. Anderson, Mrs. Maryl Andre,
Edwin C. Austin, Mrs. Henry Warren Austin, Lyman Barr, George
A. Bates, Arthur Joel Bell, Bowen Blair, William McCormick Blair,
Mrs. Walther Buchen, Peder A. Christensen, Mr. and Mrs. Gay-
lord Donnelley, Walter Erman, David G. Feagans, Flexible Steel
Lacing Company, James R. Getz, Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Hahn,
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Haywood, Lloyd Kraus, D. F. Krebs, Com-
mander John F. Kurfess, Samuel A. Marx, Mrs. Katheryn L.
McCord, H. Earle Muzzy, John Plain Foundation, Clarence B.
Randall, Melvin N. and Mary F. Rothschild Fund, Judd Sack-
heim, Mr. and Mrs. Reuben M. Schutz, Edward D. Shumway,
B. L. Smalley, Mr. and Mrs. Hermon Dunlap Smith, and Roy E.
Sturtevant.
In recognition of her generous gifts to the Museum, Mrs. A. W.
Fuller was elected a Patron, Corporate Member and Contributor
by the Board of Trustees. Other Contributors elected by the
Board are: Edward Alexander, A. G. Atwater, Miss Caroline F.
Bieber, Reverend Thomas Borgmeier, Mrs. Ann S. Donnelley,
Elliott Donnelley, Mrs. Florine G. Oppenheimer, Seymour Oppen-
24
heimer, Harrison R. Steeves, Jr., Walter T. Stille, Mrs. Babs O.
Weiss, and Philip K. Wrigley. Gifts of materials received during
the year are listed at the end of this Report (see page 96).
THE N. W. HARRIS PUBLIC SCHOOL EXTENSION
This year of 1962 is the golden anniversary of Harris Extension, for
it is the fiftieth since the department had its beginning in 1912.
Its organization was the realization of a plan formulated earlier by
the Museum under its new president, Stanley Field, for preparing
special exhibits and carrying them into the classrooms of Chicago
schools. The establishment of the department was made possible
through the generosity of the late Norman Wait Harris, Chicago
banker, who in 1911 had set up an endowment of $250,000 for the
purpose. It was in recognition of Harris' generous contribution to
the cause of education that the trustees of the Museum decreed that
the new department should carry his name. Later contributions
from the founder's son, the late Albert W. Harris, and other members
of the Harris family added some $225,000 to the original endowment.
During this fiftieth year, the department has functioned in ac-
cordance with plans and procedures long established for carrying out
the responsibilities for which it was organized. The list of schools
and other public-service institutions receiving exhibits every two
weeks on the scheduled lending program fluctuated only slightly:
at the start of the year it numbered 497 and at the year's end 499.
As in all normal years, each school and other institution received
34 different portable exhibits. The two departmental trucks that
circulate the exhibits operated 163 days and traveled a combined
total of 12,267 miles. Only 14 of the circulating exhibits were dam-
aged while out on loan.
In the course of the year, but chiefly during the summer months
when the exhibits were not in circulation, 182 of the department's
1,000-plus portable exhibits were reconditioned. Thirty-seven re-
quests for special loans of individually selected exhibits or such
study-kit material as fossils, rocks, herbarium sheets, and bird and
mammal skins were satisfactorily met. The work of Preparator
David A. Ross, begun late in 1961 on the outmoded coal-mine and
oil-well exhibits, was interrupted in March by his induction into]the
Army. The coming year, however, promises real progress, for two
new preparators have been appointed to the staff of Harris Extension.
25
JAMES NELSON AND ANNA LOUISE RAYMOND
FOUNDATION FOR PUBLIC SCHOOL AND
CHILDREN'S LECTURES
In 1962 Raymond Foundation continued its program to help groups
and individuals to interpret and understand the Museum exhibits.
Organized groups use the Museum in greater numbers each year. A
total of 4,463 groups (including 217,159 persons) registered in the
Museum in 1962. Most of these were school groups (for those who
were helped by Raymond Foundation, see table on page 29).
Programs for school groups included tours, workshops (where
students were able to handle selected materials), and study unit
programs in which the students participated in seeking out some of
the information by the use of question sheets. Motion pictures were
used in many of these programs wherever the film could add to the
understanding of the subject matter being discussed and the exhibits
being studied.
Of the twenty-eight television programs presented to children's
audiences, twelve were given on the Lee Phillips Friendship Show
(WBBM-TV) by Mrs. Maryl Andre, Mr. Ernest Roscoe, and Miss
Harriet Smith, and sixteen were presented on Totem Club (WTTW-
TV). Five of the Totem Club programs were presented on the
weekly program designed especially for children who are deaf or
partially deaf. For these programs, labels, drawings and action
augmented the verbal presentation to help the children follow the
thread of the story. Participants in WTTW-TV programs were
Mrs. Andre, Misses Joanne Evenson, Edith Fleming, Harriet Smith,
and Miriam Wood, and Mr. Roscoe.
"Journey to Mexico," a series of Museum Stories, was written
by Miss Fleming and presented to children who attended the spring
Saturday morning motion picture programs.
Three new programs were presented in 1962 :
1. Chicago's first Holiday Science Lectures were given Decem-
ber 26, 27, 28 and 29, as part of a national program sponsored by
the American Association for the Advancement of Science (made
possible by a grant from the National Science Foundation). The
1962 series in Chicago, on "Microbes in Health and Disease," was
presented by Dr. Rene Dubos of the Rockefeller Institute in New
York. Four different lectures were presented on four consecutive
mornings to the same group of selected, high ability high school
students (grades 10-12), and a limited number of teachers from the
Chicago area. Each lecture was followed by a question and answer
period. This series, which combined the stimulating and scholarly
26
lectures of Dr. Dubos with the penetrating questions of the students,
was one of the most dynamic programs the Museum has been privi-
leged to present.
2. A series of six Saturday morning Workshops (3 hours each)
was presented to a group of seventeen elementary school teachers
from Evanston, Illinois. The request for this course came from the
Steering Committee of the Professional Growth and Development
Committee for School District No. 65 in Evanston. The purpose
was to give the teachers a survey of the Museum, its exhibitions and
activities, and to help them to use the Museum's facilities. For
satisfactory participation in a minimum of sixteen hours in these
six sessions, each teacher received one credit from the Evanston
Board of Education. The response from the participants was most
gratifying. Since most museums cannot possibly offer personal pro-
gram services to the large number of visiting school groups with the
DR. RENE DUBOS AND STUDENTS AT HOLIDAY SCIENCE LECTURE
27
limited staff available, it seems increasingly necessary that school
teachers be well acquainted with the museums if optimum use is to
be made of them. It is hoped that this type of cooperative teacher
training can be continued and expanded.
3. During the Christmas vacation period, a Holiday Excursion
in the Museum, called "Bible Plants and Animals," was offered.
A direction sheet, prepared by Mrs. Maryl Andre and Miss Marie
Svoboda, helped the visitors find the exhibits that showed plants and
animals mentioned in the Bible, and gave more information about
the exhibits.
During the period in the spring when many school groups visit
the Museum, Mrs. Elizabeth Deis, a former member of the Ray-
mond Foundation staff, assisted with tours; during both the spring
and fall busy period, Mrs. Helen Christopher helped in meeting
groups as they entered the Museum.
Programs for Individuals or Groups
Intermediate Girl Scout Nature-Badge Programs Attendance
February (3 Saturdays) 2,127
Honor Days for Organizations
Camp Fire Girl Day 1,040
Cub Scout Day 1,320
Girl Scout Day 1,109
Journeys
No. 28.— Winter Fur 'n Feathers
Winter of 1961-62 (January, February) 175
No. 29. — Journey to Mexico
Spring 536
No. 30. — Collecting Minerals and Rocks
Summer 418
No. 31. — Migration
Fall 386
No. 32. — Understanding Scenery
Winter of 1962-63 (December only) 75
Awards presented to participants in Journey program:
Travelers (completed 4 different Journeys) 64
Adventurers (completed 8 different Journeys) 41
Explorers (completed 12 different Journeys) 26
Final Special Journey 12
Museum Discoverers 7
Total Awards 150
28
RAYMOND FOUNDATION ATTENDANCE TOTALS FOR 1962
1. Work with Children
A. School groups Groups Individuals Groups Individuals
Chicago public 268 10,295
Chicago parochial 24 973
Chicago private 29 731
Total Chicago groups 321 11,999
Suburban public 838 28,436
Suburban parochial 33 1,194
Suburban private 8 657
Total suburban groups 879 30,287
Out-of-state groups 102 4,279
Total 1,302 46,565
B. Other groups
Special (clubs, etc.) 72 5,943
C. Individuals or groups
Journeys 1,590
Children's movies 31 18,172
Total 31 19,762
Total Work with Children 1,405 72,270
2. Work with Adults
Colleges 14 436
Public tours 46 1,248
Miscellaneous groups 13 227
Museum-film showings 47 3,732
Total Work with Adults 120 5,643
3. Miscellaneous Programs
Television programs 28
Grand Total 1,553* 77,913
* In addition to programs and tours, 679 of these groups (including 30,965 people) were shown movies
or other visual materials to help them to a better understanding of the subject being studied.
29
STAFF OF THE MUSEUM
E. Leland Webber, formerly Assistant Director, was elected Director
to succeed Dr. Clifford C. Gregg.
The Museum suffered a great loss in the death, on April 17, of
Dr. Sharat K. Roy, Chief Curator of the Department of Geology, a
distinguished scientist of outstanding ability and achievement in the
fields of invertebrate paleontology, meteoritics, and volcanology.
Dr. Rainer Zangerl, formerly Curator of Fossil Reptiles, was ap-
pointed Chief Curator of the Department of Geology by the Board
of Trustees at its May meeting. Dr. Joseph C. Moore, formerly
Research Fellow of the American Museum of Natural History,
joined the staff in January as Curator of Mammals. Philip Hersh-
kovitz, formerly Curator of Mammals, was made Research Curator
of Mammals. Other appointments were: James I. Goodrick, Assist-
ant to the Director; Miss Lois M. Buenger, in charge of the Division
of Memberships; Dr. Tibor Perenyi, Artist in the Department of
Geology; Christopher C. Legge, Assistant Custodian of Collections
in the Department of Anthropology; Mrs. Helen B. Christopher,
Secretary to the President of the Museum, and William L. Daggett,
Captain of the Guard. Ernest Roscoe, formerly Assistant in the
Division of Lower Invertebrates, was appointed Guide Lecturer,
Raymond Foundation.
William E. Lake, Chief Engineer, who had rendered outstanding
service to the Museum during 42 years' association, retired in Oc-
tober. A realignment of responsibilities for building operations was
made at that time, and James R. Shouba, Superintendent of Main-
tenance, was appointed Building Superintendent, in overall charge
of building operations; Leonard Carrion, Assistant Chief Engineer,
was appointed Chief Engineer, and Gustav Noren, Assistant Superin-
tendent of Maintenance, was appointed Superintendent of Mainte-
nance. Jacques L. Pulizzi was made Assistant Chief Engineer.
Harold Grutzmacher, Assistant to Raymond Hallstein in the Division
of Printing, was placed in charge upon Mr. Hallstein's resignation.
Resignations during the year were: Allen Liss, Custodian of
Collections in the Department of Anthropology; Dr. John W.
Thieret, Curator of Economic Botany; Mrs. Maidi Wiebe Leib-
hardt, Artist in the Department of Geology; Mrs. Gloria Pagano,
in charge of the Division of Memberships; Miss Janet Wright,
Assistant in the Division of Reptiles; Mrs. Joan Davis Levin, Assis-
tant in the Division of Anatomy; Miss Marion A. Kratky, Sec-
retary to the President; E. John Pfiffner, Staff Artist; Raymond
30
Halls tein, in charge of Division of Printing; Miss Joanne Evenson,
Raymond Foundation; Harry R. Smith, Captain of the Guard;
and Raymond Gomes, Assistant Recorder. David Ross, Preparator
in Harris Extension, was on leave for military service.
I record with regret the deaths of Dr. Wilfrid D. Hambly, for-
merly Curator of African Ethnology; Colin Campbell Sanborn,
formerly Curator of Mammals; William H. Corning, formerly Super-
intendent of Maintenance; Miss Frances Foley, formerly Secretary
of the Department of Geology; Ray Herring, formerly an employee
in the Division of Printing; and John Besch, formerly a carpenter
in the Division of Maintenance.
VOLUNTEER WORKERS
The Museum thanks its volunteer workers for their help during
the year. Some of them, designated as Research Associates and
Associates, are included in the List of Staff at the beginning of the
Report. Other volunteers are: James Bacon, Gary Brown, Steven P.
Collings, David Denison, Stanley J. Dvorak, Mrs. Onnolee Elting,
Dr. MacDonald Fulton, Dr. Ramon Guevara, Sol Gurewitz, Miss
Mary O'Brien, Peter N. Richardson, Mrs. E. K. Witcher, and
Jay Wollin.
MEMBERSHIPS
At the end of 1962, the membership rolls of the Museum included
8,224 different persons. New Members in 1962 in all categories
were 1,457. Losses by death, transfers to higher membership classes,
moves from the Chicago area, and some cancellations reduced the
net gain to 538 compared with 1961's net gain of 411. (Contributors
elected by the Board of Trustees during the year are listed on
page 106, and complete membership lists begin on page 105.) The
increase in endowment funds from Life and Associate Members
and the increase in operating funds from Annual and Sustaining
Members show a growing appreciation by the community of the
educational and cultural benefits of membership. The Museum is
very grateful to all its Members for their interest and support.
It is with deep regret that I record the death of one whose
service and loyalty for many years have meant so much to the
development of the Museum: Mrs. Stanley Field, Benefactor, Pa-
tron, Corporate Member, and Life Member. It is with deep regret
that I also record the death of Cornelius Crane, Benefactor.
31
JOHN WITTE,
MUSEUM'S
50 MILLIONTH VISITOR,
RECEIVES AWARD FROM
THE DIRECTOR
MUSEUM ATTENDANCE
Attendance in 1962 totaled 1,470,424, a gain of 162,857 over 1961
attendance, which can be attributed primarily to the showing of the
"Tutankhamun Treasures."
The July attendance of more than 294,000 was the largest monthly
total since 1933-34, when unusually high visitation resulted because
of proximity to the nearby Century of Progress Exposition.
32
SPECIAL EXHIBITS AND PROGRAMS
The major special exhibit of 1962 was "Tutankhamun Treasures,"
previously mentioned, which the Museum sponsored jointly with
the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, from June 15
through July 15. The 123,722 visitors to the "Tutankhamun Treas-
ures" rank the showing among the Museum's most popular presen-
tations. During the month the Museum was privileged to present a
series of lectures by Dr. Ahmed Fakhry, Professor of History of
Ancient Egypt and the East, University of Cairo.
Of great importance, but of lesser popular interest, was the ex-
hibit, "The Art of Benin," which combined the distinguished Fuller
Benin collection with the Museum's collection and was on display
from October 19 through January 6. The range and quality of the
Fuller collection had long been known, but this exhibition was
the first time the major portion had been publicly shown. The
Museum is once again indebted to Mrs. A. W. F. Fuller for this
further expression of her interest. The Museum was fortunate to
have the assistance of Dr. Philip J. C. Dark, Professor of Anthro-
pology at Southern Illinois University, who helped to organize the
exhibition and was the author of the catalogue. Dr. Dark also
presented two lectures during the exhibition.
A selection of 68 photographs of tribal life of East Africa and
Zanzibar was displayed from November 1 to mid-January, 1963,
through the courtesy of Dr. Robert F. Gray, Associate Professor of
Anthropology at Tulane University, who selected the photographs
shown from 4,000 taken during his two field trips to Africa.
"Indians of the Overland Trail," an exhibit of almost life-sized
oil paintings by the Arizona artist, Paul Dyke, was shown during
March in Stanley Field Hall.
Traditional annual exhibits included the Seventeenth Interna-
tional Exhibition of Nature Photography, sponsored by the Nature
Camera Club of Chicago, in February; the Twelfth Annual Amateur
Handcrafted Gem and Jewelry Competitive Exhibition, sponsored
by the Chicago Lapidary Club; and "A Child's World of Nature,"
exhibited in co-operation with the Junior School of the Art Institute
of Chicago. The exhibit of the work done in our halls by students
of the school was forwarded to the Traveling Exhibition Service of
the Smithsonian Institution for circulation under its auspices.
Members' Night, held April 27, attracted an enthusiastic gather-
ing of 1,638 members and guests. The showing of the newly com-
pleted Hall of Primitive Art was the principal exhibition feature
of the evening. In an adjacent hall, Mr. Phillip Lewis, Curator of
33
DR. MOH. H. ABD-UR-RAHMAN, CURATOR IN THE EGYPTIAN MUSEUM, WITH
GUESTS AT RECEPTION OPENING EXHIBITION OF 'TUTANKHAMUN TREASURES"
Primitive Art, and Dr. Louis 0. Williams, Curator of Central
American Botany, lectured on aspects of their respective professional
work. Other new or re-installed exhibits were featured, and the
work-rooms, laboratories, and study collections were open to our
visitors.
The 117th and 118th free lecture series were presented through
the provisions of the Edward E. Ayer Lecture Fund. A total of
15,346 persons attended the seventeen Saturday afternoon pro-
grams, several of which attracted capacity audiences.
34
EXPEDITIONS AND FIELD TRIPS IN 1962
The Museum conducted fifteen expeditions and field trips in 1962.
Department of Anthropology — Great Lakes Archaeological Field
Trips (George I. Quimby, Curator of North American Archaeology
and Ethnology, and James R. Getz, Museum Contributor) ; Mexico
Archaeological Field Trip (Dr. Donald Collier, Curator of South
American Archaeology and Ethnology); Southwest Archaeological
Expedition (Dr. Paul S. Martin, Chief Curator of Anthropology).
Department of Botany — Guatemala Botanical Expedition, 1962-63
(Dr. Louis 0. Williams, Curator of Central American Botany);
Northwest Territories Botanical Expedition, 1961-62 (Dr. John W.
Thieret, former Curator of Economic Botany).
Department of Geology — Black Hills Geological Field Trip (Dr.
Bertram G. Woodland, Associate Curator of Petrology); Rocky
Mountain Paleontological Field Trip (William D. Turnbull, Assistant
Curator of Fossil Mammals); Wyoming Invertebrate Paleontological
Field Trip (Dr. Eugene S. Richardson, Jr., Curator of Fossil In-
vertebrates).
Department of Zoology — Africa Zoological Field Trip, 1961-62
(Melvin A. Traylor, Jr., Associate Curator of Birds) ; Borneo Zoolog-
ical Expedition, 1962-63 (Dr. Robert F. Inger, Curator of Amphibians
and Reptiles); Pacific Zoological Field Trip, 1961-62 (Dr. Alan
Solem, Curator of Lower Invertebrates); Rush Watkins Zoological
Field Trip to Tahiti (Rush Watkins, Museum Contributor); Su-
rinam Zoological Field Trip, 1961-62 (Philip Hershkovitz, Research
Curator of Mammals); Virginia Zoological Field Trip (Henry S.
Dybas, Associate Curator of Insects); William S. and Janice K.
Street Iranian Expedition of Chicago Natural History Museum (Mr.
and Mrs. William S. Street, Museum Contributors).
35
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(HALL 28)
DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY
DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY
DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY
DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY
BRONZE PLAQUE FROM BENIN
DEPICTING
TWO EUROPEANS
THE FULLER COLLECTION
Department of Anthropology
Research and Expeditions
Dr. Donald Collier, Curator of South American Archaeology and
Ethnology, continued work on materials from the Casma Valley,
Peru. He also did research on Peruvian metallurgy that involved
comparison of metal tools and ornaments in the Museum's collec-
tion, the Cummings collection, and the collections of the Amer-
ican Museum of Natural History and the Museum of the American
Indian. When he attended the International Congress of Ameri-
canists in Mexico City in August he studied materials in the National
Museum and the regional museum at Teotihuacan and visited a
number of important new excavations in central Mexico. The most
significant of these were the excavations of Richard S. MacNeish
in the Tehuacan Valley, in caves and open sites that have yielded
a sequence from 7000 B.C. until the Spanish conquest. Of particular
interest in this valley is the pre-Columbian irrigation system with
subterranean canals similar to ones in the Nazca region of Peru.
Phillip H. Lewis, Curator of Primitive Art, extended his study
of New Ireland art to significant collections of New Ireland art
and material culture in seven museums in the eastern United States.
More than three hundred objects in these collections were studied
and photographed. The resulting photographs, measurements, and
observations, together with those made on objects in the large New
Ireland collection of Chicago Natural History Museum, are the
first step toward the creation of a body of research materials, which,
together with a sampling of European and Australian museums,
will provide an over-all view of most of the art of New Ireland
extant in world museums. It is hoped that these photographs
and observations can be taken into the field in New Ireland, where
ethnological inquiry will help to sort out variants of the New Ireland
art style and at the same time facilitate inquiry into the social
functions of the art and the problems of change through time.
Dr. Paul S. Martin, Chief Curator, and Dr. John B. Rinaldo,
Associate Curator of Archaeology, continued research on cultural
adaptation, change, and ecology in eastern Arizona. Analysis of
the 6,000 sherds from the Carter Ranch site, Arizona (excavated
in 1961-62), by William A. Longacre, research assistant to Chief
Curator Martin and predoctoral student, University of Chicago,
yielded two major hypotheses: that two matrilineal kin-based
39
groups occupied Carter Ranch Pueblo and that there were at least
three traditions of pottery design.
Statistical analyses of frequencies of potsherds from the same
site were undertaken with the aid of the Univac computer at the
University of Chicago. Leslie A. Freeman and James Brown, re-
search fellows at the University of Chicago, and Assistant Professor
Lewis R. Binford calculated hundreds of regression analyses and
chi-square tests on Univac.
The results of the palynological work indicate a long period of
climatic change from a humid, cool, pluvial climate to a warm, arid
one similar to that prevailing today in Arizona.
A grant from the National Science Foundation helped finance
the above work and made it possible to continue, during the sum-
mer, archaeological and palynological studies in eastern Arizona.
The Museum is grateful for this support given to the researches
of Dr. Martin and his associates. Data thus obtained are being
readied for analysis by means of an I.B.M. computer at the Uni-
versity of Chicago. Borings were taken from a dry lake bed to
obtain samples for pollen analyses.
The Museum acknowledges with pleasure the contributions made
to the funds of the expedition by James R. Carter, C. E. Gurley,
Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Hahn, Charles E. Keney, and Judd Sackheim.
The Museum is also grateful to Dr. Robert L. Graves, Associate
Director of the Operations Analysis Laboratory, and Allan B.
Addelman, Chief Engineer of Univac, University of Chicago, for
placing the facilities of their laboratory at the disposal of Dr. Martin,
and to Bennet Fox, Research Assistant, Department of Statistics,
University of Chicago, for his help. Thanks are also given to
John Fritz, James Hill, Felipe Jocano, Tom Marks, John Saul,
Roland Strassburger, and Gair Tourtellot, students, for their as-
sistance.
Al. N. Oikonomides, a specialist in Greek archaeology study-
ing at the University of Chicago, did research on the Museum's
collection of Greek antiquities from Italy and Egypt. With the
exception of a few pieces, the collection is unpublished and un-
known in the scholarly world. His article in the Museum Bulletin
(see page 84) discusses the most important piece in the collection,
a bronze bust of the god Serapis.
George I. Quimby, Curator of North American Archaeology and
Ethnology, continued his investigations of anthropological problems
in the Upper Great Lakes region. Particular attention was focused
on the Late Woodland and Historic periods from about A.D. 1400
to 1820 in an effort to bridge gaps between modern concepts of
40
tribal cultures and the prehistoric cultural complexes of the region.
During the year field trips were made to sites in Michigan, Ontario,
and Wisconsin. Study trips were made to various museums and
to homes of individuals possessing specific areal collections. As
a part of this program, Curator Quimby, assisted by James R.
Getz, made an archaeological survey of the north shore of Lake
Michigan and part of the north shore of Lake Huron from Fayette
to Drummond Island, Michigan. Surface collections were made
from newly discovered sites as well as from those found on previous
field trips. A technique for working flint, not previously known for
the Upper Great Lakes area, was discovered at some of the sites.
Associate Curator Rinaldo devoted the first part of the year
to the preparation, with Chief Curator Martin, of a report on the
Carter Ranch site, a prehistoric Pueblo Indian village in eastern
Arizona. From June to September he co-directed excavations for
the Southwest Archaeological Expedition, and after his return re-
sumed the analysis of data initiated in the field.
Dr. Kenneth Starr, Curator of Asiatic Archaeology and Ethnol-
ogy, continued his studies of Asian prehistory and contemporaneous
cultural change on Taiwan.
Accessions— Anthropology
Outstanding among acquisitions were some fourteen hundred rare
and valuable folk- and minor-art pieces, most of them Chinese,
acquired by the Museum from Miss Caroline Frances Bieber, of
Santa Fe, New Mexico. The larger part of the collection came by
gift. It contained two distinct groups: (1) a general collection con-
sisting of a wide variety of objects, including fine costumes and tex-
tiles, costume accessories, jewelry, shadow puppets, paper cut-outs
and stencils, paintings, drawings and block prints, tools and toys,
and a wide range of minor art objects of many types and materials;
and (2) an unmatched collection of 237 belt toggles, beautifully
fashioned small objects traditionally worn by Chinese gentlemen as
decorative counterweights for personal accessories suspended from
their belts.
This excellent collection of materials in large part is represent-
ative of middle- and upper-class life in the Peking area of North
China during the period of the Ch'ing Dynasty (a.d. 1644-1911).
The collection serves unusually well to exemplify the amazing va-
riety of expression — in terms especially of techniques of manufacture
and decorative motifs — that is manifested in Chinese folk and minor
41
arts. Already well known, the Museum's collections of such ma-
terials has been very richly enhanced by the addition of Miss
Bieber's materials and now are among the very best and most rep-
resentative in the world. The Chinese collections were further en-
larged by a fine group of cut-velvet textiles that were presented
to the Museum by Miss Edna H. Bahr, a donor on many occasions.
The Tibetan collections were notably supplemented by purchase
of a group of about 150 ethnological specimens obtained through
the courtesy and co-operation of Desmond Doig, of Calcutta, India.
This collection, which is particularly representative of western and
southern Tibet and which also includes materials from Nepal, Sik-
kim, and Bhutan, nicely balances the Museum's excellent existing
Tibetan collection, which until now was composed mainly of ma-
terials from the eastern, Chinese-influenced portion of Tibet.
A notable gift received from A. G. Atwater is a magnificant
gold breastplate from Colombia, in Quimbaya style, a.d. 500-900.
GOLD COLOMBIAN BREASTPLATE
GIFT OF A. G. ATWATER
w
42
Care of the Collections— Anthropology
The new storage area for Asian Ethnology neared completion, while
members of the department carried out the long and laborious
task of transferring the many thousands of specimens from the
old storages to the new. In charge of the moving were Allen Liss,
Custodian of Collections until his resignation, and Christopher C.
Legge, Assistant Custodian. Miss Anna C. Rose, Antioch College
student, who contributed signally in this transfer over a six-month
period assumed a great measure of responsibility for carrying the
work forward and was unusually willing and conscientious. Sol
Gurewitz, a very faithful and cheerful volunteer, also has helped
very greatly in the transfer, as well as in the performance of many
other duties. Such loyalty and willingness to do all that is asked
of him is most appreciated in a volunteer worker.
Miss Mary E. Hogquist, assistant, whose marked ability has
made her assistance invaluable, assumed full responsibility for pro-
cessing the thousands of newly acquired specimens of Asian eth-
nological materials. In this long and tedious project she has been
given excellent and continuing aid by Patrick M. Brantlinger, Miss
Kaaren Stoner, and Miss Rose, Antioch College students, without
whose help the work could not possibly have been done.
Many new photographs have been taken of both older speci-
mens and newly acquired materials, and prints have been made
and placed in the department's albums for use by scholars and
the public. This work was shared by the Division of Photography
and Miss Hogquist.
Dr. Hoshien Tchen, Consultant, East Asian Collection, con-
tinued his highly specialized work of cataloguing the Museum's
extensive collection of Chinese and Tibetan ink-rubbings. Dr. Tchen
completed the cataloguing of a large and valuable collection of
more than 300 Chinese and Tibetan ink-rubbings, the gift of the
late Dr. David C. Graham. These rubbings are from Ssu-ch'iian
province in west China and were taken from tomb reliefs of the
Han period (207 B.C.-A.D. 220). Outstanding among them is a
series that gives an unusually fine representation of the typical
regional culture of this area in west China. Dr. Tchen also worked
toward the completion of the cataloguing of two other groups of
rubbings. The first consisted of rubbings of the famous Buddhist
sculpture and inscriptions found in Lung-men, at Lo-yang in Honan
Province. These date from the Northern Wei dynasty (A.D. 424-534)
to the T'ang dynasty (A.D. 618-907). The second group consisted
of rubbings of the tomb inscriptions of the T'ang dynasty. These
43
TRADE GOODS
MADE BY
CANADIAN SILVERSMITHS
FOR
GREAT LAKES INDIANS
ABOUT A.D. 1770
rubbings represent the most famous tombstones of the T'ang period
and include examples of writing by such celebrated calligraphers
and scholars as Ch'u Sui-liang, Yen Chen-ch'ing, Liu Kung-chuan,
and Li Yang-ping.
Exhibits— Anthropology
In the Division of Asiatic Archaeology and Ethnology the year
saw the continuing re-installation of Hall 32, devoted to illustrating
Chinese life as it has been during recent centuries. Of basic im-
portance in the execution of this long program have been the highly
imaginative ideas and techniques of Theodore Halkin, Artist, and
the excellent craftsmanship of Walter C. Reese, Preparator. Reno-
vation of the Chinese art and archaeological exhibits also continued
in George T. and Frances Gaylord Smith Hall (Hall 24).
Curator Lewis conceived and supervised the exhibit, "The
Human Image in Primitive Art," which completed the Hall of
Primitive Art (Hall 2, Edward E. and Emma B. Ayer Hall). To-
gether with the previously presented "Primitive Artists Look at
Civilization," and several definitive and explanatory cases including
the complex exhibits, "Primitive Art in Time and Space," designed
and executed by Artist Gustaf Dalstrom, the total offerings in this
hall now sample art in the world-wide collections of the Museum,
with the subject-matter — man — depicted in the various art styles.
This marks the completion of the introductory phase of a program
of exhibition in primitive art. Preparator Reese installed many
of the specimens, and Miss Rose, Antioch College student, helped
in checking specimens.
New exhibits on "Modern and Traditional Hopi Crafts" and
"Music and Musical Instruments of the Pueblo Indians" were pre-
pared for Hall 7 (Ancient and Modern Indians of the Southwestern
United States) by Artist Dalstrom. He also completed sketches
and working drawings for a revision, based on the latest archaeo-
logical findings, of the Swiss Lake Dweller diorama in Hall C (Stone
Age of the Old World). Alfred Lee Rowell, Dioramist, continued
work on a diorama for Hall F (Peoples of Micronesia and Polynesia) .
Artist-Preparator Susan Schanck designed "The Art of Benin" ex-
hibit and the showing of the Gray photographs of East African
tribal life (see page 33), and she assisted in many other aspects
of the exhibition program.
45
MODEL OF
VANILLA POMPONA
ON EXHIBITION IN
HALL OF USEFUL PLANTS
(HALL 28)
Department of Botany
Research and Expeditions
Dr. Margery C. Carlson, Associate in Botany, collected several
hundred plant specimens for the Museum herbarium during a va-
cation trip to Hawaii in February and March. She completed
identification of the specimens and continued study of plants col-
lected by her in Mexico and Costa Rica in previous years.
Dr. Earl E. Sherff, Research Associate in Systematic Botany,
identified collections of Hawaiian plants referred to him by others,
with a resultant gain of many specimens for the herbarium.
Dr. Rogers McVaugh, Curator of Vascular Plants at the Uni-
versity of Michigan and Research Associate on the staff of the
Museum, completed his manuscript on the Myrtaceae for the Flora
of Guatemala. He also submitted for prior publication a shorter
paper describing new species and changes in names of Guatemalan
Myrtaceae. He was in residence at the Museum from mid-July
to mid-August to continue work on an annotated catalog of the
Sesse" and Mociiio collection of Mexican plants made in the 1780's.
The collection has been on deposit in the Museum from the Instituto
"Antonio Jose" Cavanilles," Madrid, Spain, since 1936. He was
able to identify most of the undetermined specimens and arrange
to have the remainder sent to other specialists. He made a revised
annotated list of the collection that now must be further checked
against literature, records, and specimens in European herbaria.
Dr. Sydney F. Glassman, of the University of Illinois (Navy Pier,
Chicago), completed the manuscript for the second and conclud-
ing part (West Indian Species), of A Revision of the Genus Coper-
nicia. This study of the wax palm was initiated by the late Dr.
B. E. Dahlgren, Curator Emeritus, and supported over the years
with funds by S. E. Johnson and Son, Inc. Although J. Francis
Macbride, Curator of Peruvian Botany, was severely injured in an
automobile accident early in the year and disabled for several
months, he made progress during the year in his work on the Com-
positae, a family of plants, for the Flora of Peru.
Dr. C. Earle Smith, Jr., former Associate Curator of Vascular
Plants, submitted manuscript for two reports on his collections made
in 1961 in the Tehuacan area of Mexico when he was Consulting
Botanist for the Archaeological-Botanical Tehuacan Project that
was conducted by Dr. Richard S. MacNeish of the Royal Ontario
Museum and sponsored by the R. S. Peabody Foundation. One
47
report is on the flora and the other is a history of agriculture in
the Tehuacan valley with reference to the origin and spread of
certain cultivated plants.
Dr. John W. Thieret, former Curator of Economic Botany,
accompanied by Gerald Groves of Salt Lake City and James Dela-
houssaye, a student at the University of Southwestern Louisiana,
spent the month of August making further observations, collections,
and photographs to conclude a survey of the vegetation in the
Fort Providence- Yellowknife Highway area at the western end of
Great Slave Lake. The project was aided by a National Science
Foundation grant.
Dr. Patricio Ponce de Leon, Assistant Curator of the Cryptogamic
Herbarium, did local collecting and continued his studies of the
genus Polyporus as part of a projected revision of New World
Polyporaceae. He also made arrangements to receive samples taken
monthly from the filters of Chicago's Southside Filtration Plant
in order to study the composition and seasonal variation in the
phytoplankton of Lake Michigan.
Dr. Louis O. Williams, Curator of Central American Botany,
completed his treatment of the Melastomaceae for the Flora of
Guatemala after a study trip in May during which he spent about
one week each at the Gray Herbarium (Cambridge), the New York
Botanical Garden Herbarium, and the United States National Her-
barium to check Guatemalan Melastomes in those collections. Dr.
Williams submitted for publication a preliminary paper containing
descriptions of new species, nomenclatural changes, and comments
pertinent to the family. He completed manuscript for the plant
families Onagraceae and Halorrhagaceae in Guatemala before his
departure for further collecting in that country. He arrived at
Huehuetenango late in November, and was joined by Antonio
Molina, botanist at the Escuela Agricola Panamericana (Teguci-
galpa, Honduras). Field work began immediately and specimens
were collected from a number of different localities from which
adequate material had not been obtained previously.
Miss Edith M. Vincent, Research Librarian, handled routine
operations of the departmental library and in addition remained
a rich source of information concerning botanical literature for all
who used the library.
48
Accessions— Botany
Of 87 accessions (13,219 specimens) recorded for the year, 49 lots
amounting to 5,177 specimens were received by gift, 32 lots amount-
ing to 6,771 specimens came on exchange, and 4 lots including
699 specimens were purchased. Once again Holly Reed Bennett,
Contributor Member of the Museum, was the donor of the largest
number of specimens received in 1962 from one source. His avoca-
tional but intensive and thorough collecting in specific areas of
western United States produced 3,945 carefully prepared and named
specimens of great value to the herbarium. Of special merit also
were 1,129 Honduran plants received on exchange from the Escuela
Agricola Panamericana because they add measurably to the rep-
resentation of Central American plants of which the Museum al-
ready has one of the world's richest collections. Other accessions
of note included plants from Sarawak and from Bolivia; mosses
and liverworts from Great Bear Lake, Northwest Territories, Canada,
collected by Dr. William C. Steere (received in an exchange from
the University of Michigan) ; Peruvian plants collected in 1951 and
1956-57 by the Fifth and Sixth Andean Expeditions of the Uni-
versity of California, in which the Museum participated; plants
peculiar to beaches of Mexico and the West Indies, from Dr. Jon-
athan Sauer of the University of Wisconsin; pollen slides based on
specimens in the Museum herbarium; and microscope slides of sec-
tioned plant-parts prepared by Professor P. Maheshwari of the
University of Delhi, India.
Care of the Collections— Botany
Dr. Glassman volunteered his services to merge specimens of palms
filed in the main herbarium with those specially prepared by the
late Dr. Dahlgren and kept in Room 10. In this move some relief
of crowded conditions in one section of the main herbarium of
vascular plants was obtained, along with the advantage of having
all the palm material together. Several thousand unmounted un-
identified specimens in storage were organized as to country, collector,
and collector's numbers by Assistant Dorothy Gibson with student
help. As identifications become available, the referent specimens
can now be found readily. Likewise, specimens identified only as
to family and stored at the end of family groups in the herbarium
were similarly arranged for most families.
49
Assistant Curator Ponce de Leon, assisted by Antioch College
student Jennifer J. Puleston and DePauw University student Tod
Steussy, completed the transfer of all specimens of mosses and
hepatics to color-coded folders that are used to indicate geographic
location. Transfer operations necessitated numerous identifications
and revisions, and included the preparation of new labels and of
annotation labels as well as new folders and the remounting of
specimens. The transfer of the Polypore family of fungi to color-
coded folders also was begun with the help of Donald Saunders
and Antioch College student Katherine T. Josephson. Cryptogamic
specimens totaling 800 were mounted and added to the Herbarium.
Mrs. Lenore Warner worked on an alphabetical index of type-
photographs in families and genera to supplement and cross-reference
the numerical indices completed in 1960 and the generic indices
completed last year. In continuation of exchange, 7,334 type-
photographs were sent to other institutions, 260 were sold, and 730
new negatives were added to the files. A total of 26,732 specimens
was mounted and added to the Herbarium of Vascular Plants.
Plants were mounted by Mrs. Karoline Benyovszky, and for a
part of the year by Peter Feldman and Matthew Richards. Mrs.
Jennie Pletinckx did the filing and in the process added Dalla Torre
and Harms index numbers to genus folders. Robert Yule performed
a number of routine tasks for the herbarium, the departmental
file of photographs, and other divisions of the Museum. In addi-
tion to 89 visitors recorded as using herbarium specimens for study
in the Museum, 10,198 specimens were shipped for study at other
institutions in the United States and eleven foreign countries.
Exhibits— Botany
Construction and placement of remodeled exhibition cases in their
new arrangement were completed by the Division of Maintenance
in the Hall of Useful Plants (Hall 28) . New exhibits of stem fibers
(flax, ramie, Indian hemp, jute), of leaf fibers (bow string hemp
and New Zealand hemp), of surface fibers (cotton, kapok), and
of miscellaneous coarse fibers (brush, broom, bark cloth) were com-
pleted except for labeling and small details in some instances. Four
case units on spices and two showing gums and pectins were in-
stalled. Miniature dioramas of coffee and tea planatations, a cas-
sava field and mill, and a model of a tea bush in flower and fruit
were removed from Hall 25 (Food Plants and Palms), where they
occupied individual cases, and were placed in Hall 28 in architectur-
50
ally integral units of the hall. Layout, design, and execution of
exhibits were largely the work of Artist-Preparator Samuel H. Grove,
Jr., and Artist Robert Anderson. Technician Frank Boryca made
plant models for inclusion in various exhibits and Preparator Walter
Huebner carved in wood a number of models of fiber and seed anat-
omy, made display devices, and remodeled interiors of exhibition
cases for installation of materials. Almon Cooley trimmed leaves of
plant models and completed other routine assignments.
51
HI ^^^K^d^^^^SI
WKS^^^^^^m^^V^^^r M
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^■iBSilteJ
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"4. '^JLKihBH
*
5.v 1 j?^% *
ps^i^i
^ M III m
WJibm
DIAMOND AND PLATINUM CORNUCOPIA PIN
GIFT OF
SEYMOUR OPPENHEIMER
MRS. FLORINE G. OPPENHEIMER
MRS. BABS WEISS
Department of Geology
Research and Expeditions
Dr. Eugene S. Richardson, Jr., Curator of Fossil Invertebrates,
made eight one-day excursions to the Peabody Coal Company's
strip mines in Will and Kankakee counties, Illinois, to collect fos-
sils from a recently discovered fauna contemporary with the well-
known Mazon Creek plants and animals. He is studying one of
the common and relatively large fossils from this fauna, an inverte-
brate of unknown affinities.
During the summer Curator Richardson and Chief Preparator
Orville L. Gilpin returned to Cottonwood Canyon, in the northern
Bighorn Mountains of Wyoming, to collect Early Devonian fossils.
Assisted by Peter N. Richardson and David Denison, both making
their second trip, and by Steven P. Collings of Rockville, Indiana,
long associated with Curator Richardson and Chief Curator Rainer
Zangerl in the Museum's Mecca Project (see Annual Report, 1961,
page 49), they enlarged the quarry from which Preparator Gilpin,
Curator Richardson, and Dr. Robert H. Denison, Curator of Fossil
Fishes, had previously made significant collections of primitive ar-
mored fishes. Although they collected several fine eurypterids ("sea
scorpions"), the fossil fishes were again the more important finds.
Besides several articulated specimens of the armored fishes Pro-
taspis and CardipeUis, the party recovered an articulated lungfish
and two lungfish skulls. The eurypterids of this fauna are at present
being studied by Erik N. Kjellesvig-Waering, Research Associate.
Two days were spent in Custer County, South Dakota, collecting
articulated partial skeletons of Cretaceous mosasaurs, pterodactyls,
fishes, and birds under the experienced guidance of Dr. John Clark,
of Spearfish, South Dakota.
Curator Denison has spent much of the year in completing
his revision of the Cyathaspididae, a family of Silurian and De-
vonian jawless vertebrates. Included in this is a description of
new Canadian material from British Columbia and Northwest Terri-
tories collected by the California Standard Company. He has also
continued his work on the Early Devonian fishes of Wyoming,
concentrating especially on the lungfishes and CardipeUis. His only
field work was a trip to a fish-bearing quarry in the Mississippian
rocks of eastern Michigan.
Dr. Edward J. Olsen, Curator of Mineralogy, completed a com-
putation of the pressures of oxygen and water that control the
53
presence of minerals found in serpentinite rocks. The results were
especially fruitful since they showed that the metallic iron-nickel
alloys found in these rocks are entirely compatible with an origin
as secondary minerals. Dr. Olsen continued work on the calcu-
lated effect of nickel in similar alloys in meteorites and particularly
its effect on the stability of the mineral, cohenite, over which there
has been controversy recently. In addition, he has begun initial
computations on the stabilities of other meteorite minerals and
the solubility of silicon in meteoritic iron. During the year he
completed a qualitative study of the trace elements in copper arti-
facts of North American Indians in co-operation with George I.
Quimby, Curator of North American Archaeology and Ethnology.
During the summer Curator Olsen made a trip to southern Illinois,
where he collected samples of peridotite rock intruding coal beds.
These rocks may possibly contain small amounts of natural iron-
carbon alloy minerals.
Dr. Bertram G. Woodland, Associate Curator of Petrology, com-
pleted studies on a suite of lamprophyric dikes from northeast
Vermont and on the thermal metamorphism of pelitic rocks of the
Burke area, Vermont. He was also engaged in a detailed study
of cone-in-cone structure, utilizing the Museum's collection as well
as material he collected in Indiana and Wyoming and other speci-
mens from Nova Scotia, South Dakota, Wyoming, Alabama, Mon-
tana, and Iowa donated by other geologists. Dr. Woodland also
initiated a petrographic study of the sedimentary rocks of the Bear-
tooth formation, Cottonwood Canyon, Wyoming, in collaboration
with Curator Richardson, and a study of the micro-structures in
the metamorphic rocks of the Royalton area, Vermont. Dr. Wood-
land spent three weeks in the field studying structures in the Pre-
Cambrian metamorphic rocks of the southern Black Hills and collect-
ing from many pegmatite quarries in the vicinity and from the
the Tertiary extrusive and intrusive rocks of the northern Black
Hills. He also made a brief visit to the Museum's quarry in Cot-
tonwood Canyon, Wyoming, and collected in the Cretaceous beds
of the Bighorn Basin near Greybull, Wyoming. He identified the
types of material in artifacts collected during the Museum's archae-
ological expedition to the Southwest. Douglas F. Gilbert, James
Martin, and David Kuder, Antioch College students, helped in
the laboratory and cataloguing work of the petrology section.
William D. Turnbull, Assistant Curator of Fossil Mammals,
and Dr. Charles A. Reed, of Yale University, have completed their
joint study of an aberrant group of small middle Tertiary burrowing
insectivores related to the moles. The work is based upon hun-
54
dreds of tiny scraps of bone, the only evidence of the existence
of this extinct line of animals. The report is the result of inter-
mittent studies over the past six or more years. Turnbull's work
on the fossil fauna of the Washakie formation continues and his
study of the adaptive types of mammalian masticatory apparatus
is nearly complete. During June and July he was in the field in
the Northern High Plains and Mountain States on a reconnaissance
trip to locate possible Mesozoic and earliest Tertiary mammal lo-
calities. Perhaps the most significant find resulted from following
a lead called to his attention by Dr. and Mrs. Edmund Vinje of
Hazen, North Dakota — the acquisition of a Paleocene faunule from
a channel sandstone within the Tongue River formation that out-
crops along the Garrison Reservoir. Other notable discoveries
were made in the Cretaceous Hell Creek beds and the Oligocene
Pipestone Springs beds in Montana.
Harry Changnon, Curator of Exhibits, began work in August
on the collection of field data and preparation of a manuscript for
a field guide on the geology of the Chicago Region.
Chief Curator Zangerl did preliminary work on peculiar prim-
itive fishes of Pennsylvanian age that occur in the Mecca and Logan
Quarry shale of west-central Indiana and spent some time on manu-
scripts that describe repetitive shield variation in modern turtles
and osteogenetic differentiation of the shell in the New Guinea
turtle Carettochelys insculpta.
Accessions— Geology
In addition to material collected during the field work mentioned
above, the collections were enlarged by gift and purchase. Addi-
tional specimens from the Niobrara Chalk of Kansas were pur-
chased from Marion C. Bonner (through the Maurice L. Richardson
Paleontological Fund). They include the fishes Saurodon and Cim-
olichthys, two mosasaurs, and a wing of the flying reptile, Pteranodon.
During the year a magnificent diamond-platinum clip was re-
ceived as a gift from Seymour Oppenheimer, Mrs. Florine G. Oppen-
heimer, and Mrs. Babs 0. Weiss. In addition, a large specimen
(1,575 grams) of rough gem kunzite from Brazil was obtained by
purchase. A 47-carat faceted specimen of kunzite from Brazil and
a faceted 14-carat crystal of the rare mineral sinhalite from Ceylon
were received by exchange. All of these gemstones have been added
to the exhibition cases in H. N. Higinbotham Hall (Hall 31, Gems
and Jewels) . An exchange was completed for eight very large speci-
55
mens of petrified wood that are beautifully cut and polished and
show considerable detail in vascular structure. An exchange was
also completed for a specimen of the New Zealand meteorite, Mokoia.
The Department of Geophysical Sciences of the University of Chi-
cago presented a fully catalogued collection of economic ores from
various North American localities, a collection that was originally
amassed by Professor Edson S. Bastin, internationally famous eco-
nomic geologist.
Care of the Collections— Geology
Preparation of study specimens has kept the Paleontology Labora-
tories busy this past year. The Devonian fishes from Cottonwood
Canyon, Wyoming, the reptiles and birds from the Pierre Shale
of South Dakota, and the mosasaurs and fishes from the Kansas
chalk were worked out of the matrix. Plaster reproduction of fos-
sil specimens is rapidly becoming one of our most time-consuming
chores. During the year Chief Preparator Gilpin and Preparator
Ronald J. Lambert have prepared and sent out a total of 335 casts
to four colleges in the United States and to four institutions in
foreign countries.
Henry Horback, Assistant, continued work on the preparation
of a catalog of the Museum's collection of meteorites, begun by
the late Dr. Sharat K. Roy, Chief Curator of Geology. An inventory
of all the specimens of stone and iron-stone meteorites and a por-
tion of the iron meteorites has been completed. This involves the
checking and rechecking of all pertinent data as to date and locality
of fall or find, the classification, description, and weight of each
specimen, the number of individuals representing the meteorite,
and bibliographic references. All of the iron-stone and iron meteorites
in the collection were checked for oxidation and, where necessary,
specimens were re-etched and treated with a rust-resisting agent.
Sixty-five specimens of tektites from Luzon, Philippine Islands,
and twenty from Thailand in addition to two specimens of a stone
meteorite from New Zealand were catalogued and numbered, and
storage labels and file cards were prepared. During the year a
revised classification system was completed for the silicate minerals.
In addition to cataloguing more than 400 fossil vertebrates,
Assistant David Techter began the task of reorganizing the fossil
plant collection. This involved making standard labels for several
hundred specimens and rearranging specimens more compactly by
locality. Chih-wei Pan, of the Museum staff, continued the identi-
56
fication and cataloguing of Cenozoic invertebrates from the extensive
Nelson Collection, and Miss Carole Stentz, a summer assistant from
Oberlin College, identified and catalogued several hundred Creta-
ceous specimens from the same collection. Mrs. Maria Weiss, holder
of the Museum's Thomas J. Dee Fellowship, was occupied for sev-
eral months in rearranging portions of the collections of fossil in-
vertebrates.
Exhibits— Geology
During the year fourteen exhibits were dismantled and reinstalled
in the Hall of Economic Geology (Hall 36). New backgrounds
were added and labels brought up to date. Special emphasis was
given to minerals and rocks that have increased in economic im-
portance. Where necessary, new specimens were added. The sec-
tion of the hall devoted to useful rocks and non-metallic minerals
was completed and work begun on the reinstallation of exhibits
of metallic ores. The exhibit of fluorescent minerals was reinstalled
with new labels and an improved ultra-violet lamp that greatly
increases the intensity of fluorescence of the specimens. Because
of the public interest in the earth's moon satellite engendered by
the government space-program, a 20-inch detailed identification
chart was added to the moon model in Clarence Buckingham Hall
(Hall 35, Moon, Meteorites, and Minerals), thus enhancing its use-
fulness as a study model for Museum visitors. The exhibition
program was carried on by Harry E. Changnon, Curator of Exhibits,
Associate Curator Woodland, Assistant Horback, and Preparator
Henry U. Taylor. Illustrations were made by Mrs. Maidi Wiebe
Leibhardt and Dr. Tibor Perenyi, Departmental Artists.
57
CAMP SITE OF
WILLIAM S. AND JANICE K. STREET
IRANIAN EXPEDITION
Department of Zoology
Research and Expeditions
Field work was done in North America, South America, Pacific
Islands, New Zealand and Australia, the Philippines, Southern Asia,
and Africa by members of our staff. In South America one non-
staff member completed an expedition that was begun in 1960.
North America. Associate Curator Henry S. Dybas, with Dr.
Monte Lloyd of the University of California (Los Angeles), spent
five weeks in early summer in Virginia studying an emergence of
seventeen-year periodical cicadas and several days surveying areas
in southern Illinois and Indiana where they expect to make field
studies of thirteen-year periodical cicadas that are scheduled to
emerge in 1963.
South America (Surinam). In February Harry A. Beatty, of
New York, completed his project, begun in 1960, of collecting birds
and mammals. Research Curator Philip Hershkovitz and Dr. Jack
Fooden, Post-Doctoral Fellow, completed their mammal studies
that were begun in 1961.
Pacific Islands, New Zealand, and Australia. Curator
Alan Solem and Mrs. Solem returned in October from their year's
work in the Pacific area. They collected land mollusks on Tahiti,
Fiji, New Caledonia, and Malaya, and made smaller collections
on weekend trips in New Zealand and Australia. Museum Contribu-
tributor Rush Watkins spent several months in Tahiti collecting
coral-reef fishes.
Philippine Islands. Associate Dioscoro S. Rabor was sup-
ported in part for field work (birds) in Palawan, done during his
vacation period from Silliman University, where he teaches.
Borneo. Curator Robert F. Inger and Dr. Bernard Greenberg
of Roosevelt University made a short trip to Borneo to initiate
a study on cycles and population densities of frogs. A graduate
student, F. Wayne King, was left with a staff of Dyaks to complete
the study.
Southern Asia. In Nepal, Field Associate Robert L. Fleming
continued his field studies of birds as opportunity offered in the
vicinity of Kathmandu. Curator Solem (see above) returned from
his Pacific area work by way of Malaya, where he was able to
make collections of land mollusks. Mr. and Mrs. William S. Street
of Seattle, Contributors to the Museum, accompanied by Douglas M.
Lay, graduate student from Louisiana State University, as assistant,
59
arrived in Iran in July. Their expedition, organized to study and
collect mammals, will continue into 1963. Mammals of 90 species
were collected by mid-December.
Africa. In Egypt and the Sudan, Research Associate Harry
Hoogstraal continued collecting specimens in connection with his
studies of birds and mammals and arthropod-borne diseases. Asso-
ciate Curator Melvin A. Traylor, Jr., completed his bird studies
in Southern Africa, begun in 1961, by collecting in the Ngamiland
area of Bechuanaland.
Division of Mammals. A taxonomic study, at the generic level,
of certain squirrels of southern Asia was completed by Curator
Joseph Curtis Moore as part of his continuing interest in this group
of mammals. He edited a symposium of eleven papers on marine
mammals of the marine shelf of North America and wrote an intro-
duction and a synopsis for it. Curator Moore also completed a
study of the relationships of certain beaked whales of the Pacific.
The publication of a 524-page study on the evolution of a large
and hitherto confused group of South American rodents by Re-
search Curator Hershkovitz marks an important step in document-
ing their treatment in the check-list of South American Mammals
that he is preparing. For the same purpose he revised certain
monkeys, and Dr. Fooden completed a revision of another group
of monkeys. Douglas M. Lay, the William S. Street Fellow (Mam-
malogy), completed a short paper of new locality records of some
Mexican mammals and of two species hitherto unrecorded for North
America. Miss Betsy P. Thompson, Antioch College student, assisted
Curator Moore in various aspects of his divisional work.
Division of Birds. Curator Emmet R. Blake's work on the
birds of South America included the completion of a report on
the birds of Sierra Macarena, Colombia, and another on the birds
of southern Surinam, the latter based on the collection made there
by Harry A. Beatty, in 1960-62. Associate Curator Traylor com-
pleted some taxonomic studies on the collection he made early
in the year in Africa and completed and submitted for publication
his check-list of Angola birds. He also completed a study of fall
bird-migration in Egypt in co-operation with Research Associate
Hoogstraal's studies on vectors of arthropod-borne diseases, con-
tinued studies of birds sent by Field Associate Fleming from Nepal,
and began to prepare the section on African waxbills for Peters'
Check-list of Birds of the World, a publication of Harvard University.
Chief Curator Austin L. Rand's bird work was chiefly on a forth-
coming handbook of New Guinea birds that is almost finished.
He also did some critical studies on Philippine birds with Associate
60
SPINY SQUIRREL FISH
FROM DEEP WATERS OFF BRAZIL
Drawing by Mary Ann Holloway
Rabor, who spent part of the summer at the Museum. Associate
Ellen T. Smith's activities included measuring series of ducks and
geese for inclusion in the next edition of Handbook of North American
Birds, a volume sponsored by the American Ornithologists' Union.
Divison of Amphibians and Reptiles. Curator Inger's taxo-
nomic research again centered around the material from Borneo,
where he first collected in 1950, and from the Congo, where he col-
lected in 1959. With Dr. Greenberg of Roosevelt University, he
completed a study of the breeding cycle of a Borneo frog and began
a more comprehensive study of such cycles and population densities
of Borneo frogs. With Assistant Curator Hymen Marx, he com-
pleted a study of variation in certain primary sex organs (hemipenes)
in snakes.
Division of Fishes. Curator Loren P. Woods and Associate
Marion Grey continued the taxonomic studies on which they were
working last year (see Annual Report, 1961, p. 57).
Division of Insects. Curator Rupert L. Wenzel completed the
zoogeographical section of his monograph on histerid beetles, genus
Margarinotus, and, in collaboration with Major Vernon J. Tipton of
the United States Army, continued studies on the bat flies of Pan-
ama. Studies of ptiliid beetles by Associate Curator Dybas included
examination of two fossil specimens of Miocene age from Mexico.
Mr. Dybas also made preliminary studies in connection with future
studies of periodical cicadas.
Research Associate Charles H. Seevers completed his work on
the genera of rove beetles that live with ants. Associate Harry G.
Nelson started a paper on the type specimens in the Karl Brancsik
collection of Coleoptera acquired by the Museum some years ago.
Associate Lillian A. Ross completed a manuscript on Central Amer-
can spiders of a genus of Micryphantidae. Research Associate
Alex K. Wyatt continued to transfer his collection of North Amer-
ican Lepidoptera into standard museum cases. About half of his
collection remains to be transferred.
Division of Lower Invertebrates. Curator Emeritus Fritz
Haas completed the first 300 pages of his monograph of the fresh-
water unionid clams for the series Das Tierreich (Berlin). This
project was started last year and will be published separately. He
also prepared a report on the collection made by Dr. Frederick
Medem in Colombia, and, with Dr. Robert Robertson of the Academy
of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, prepared a report on non-marine
mollusks from British Honduras.
Curator Solem was away from the Museum most of the year on
a field trip begun in 1961. During this time he made detailed studies
62
on two genera of New Zealand land-snails and assembled material
for a review of the Australian endodontid land-snail fauna. From
May to September, he visited museums in twenty European cities
in search of type specimens and completed diagnoses and descrip-
HAWAIIAN TREE SNAIL
COLLECTED ON PACIFIC ZOOLOGICAL FIELD TRIP
tions of more than 500 species of endodontid snails, 140 of them
new to science.
Assistant Ernest J. Roscoe continued his studies of non-marine
mollusks of western North America until his transfer to Raymond
Foundation in September.
Division of Anatomy. Curator D. D wight Davis completed
his monograph on the anatomy of the giant panda, a project begun
in 1938. Other research included a study of relative growth of parts
of certain cats, a study of the anatomy of the heart in bears, and a
philosophical study of the history of comparative anatomy. Asso-
ciate Waldemar Meister completed his studies of the histological
structure of the long bones in penguins. Research Associate R. M.
Strong continued his studies of the anatomy of birds.
The scientific work of the Department of Zoology was aided by
grants from the National Science Foundation (6), the National In-
stitutes of Health (1), and the Office of the Surgeon General, United
States Army (1).
63
Accessions— Zoology
The healthy growth of our collections is shown by the following fig-
ures: mammals, 2,638; birds, 4,645; amphibians and reptiles, 5,776;
fishes, 4,700; insects, 91,804; lower invertebrates, 11,200 sets, with
about 74,000 specimens; anatomy, 73 specimens.
These specimens came in 289 shipments, in large lots and small,
from near and far, by gift, purchase, and expedition. Some came
direct from the collectors, some were transfers of private collections,
some were by exchange with other museums, and some came from
the two local zoos. The diversity of these accessions is illustrated
by the following entries: 1 frog from Celebes (exchange); 2 bear
hearts (gift) ; 4 waterbugs from Madagascar, Australia, and Solomon
Islands (gift); 29,492 beetles from Brazil (purchase); 1 fish from
Ecuador (exchange) ; 279 mammals from Surinam (expedition) ; 427
amphibians and reptiles from Borneo (purchase); 1,493 birds from
Africa (expedition) ; 1 whale skeleton from Puerto Rico (exchange) ;
50 lots of land mollusks from British Honduras (gift); 1,276 fishes
from Tahiti (expedition).
An outstanding gift was a collection of 4,822 beetles, donated by
Harrison R. Steeves, Jr., of Birmingham, Alabama. The meticu-
lously prepared specimens are mostly from Alabama and represent
more than 1,000 species, many of them new to the Museum's col-
lections.
Care of the Collections— Zoology
Such items as these — "specimens were catalogued," "skulls were
cleaned," "routine poisoning" or "fumigating," "put more alcohol
in specimen jars to replace evaporation loss," "new collection was
incorporated," "reorganized collection," "wrote new labels for cases,"
"specimens were selected for exchange," "returned loans were proc-
essed," "more space is needed," "additional help is required" — are
commonplace in divisional reports. They reflect the continual pul-
sing rhythms that add to and maintain a big collection.
Of the other activities that go on continually may be mentioned :
the current bibliographic work of Assistant M. Dianne Maurer on
Angola birds, the many telephone inquiries answered by Assistant
Pearl Sonoda, the illustrating done by Assistant Joan Davis Levin,
the skeletons prepared by Osteologist Sophie Andris, and the large
mammal-skins prepared by Tanner Mario Villa. Alan D. Havens,
Antioch College student, helped with the routine in the Division
of Insects.
64
/i 1 1
^fl HCMA2.
BL<
CHIEF CURATOR RAND AND TAXIDERMIST COTTON
REVIEW NEW INSECT EXHIBIT
Exhibits— Zoology
"The Insect World" is the title for a series of new insect exhibits,
the first of which was installed and the second nearly finished. The
first case shows seven primitive orders from springtails to stone-
flies, each order with a panel to itself. Actual insects are shown,
and if they are minute, enlarged diagrams are used to show their
structure. Collateral material varies but includes such items as
growth stages, photographs of habitats, and special features (for ex-
ample, a Chinese cricket cage and a section of an arboreal nest of
termites) .
Ideally, when exhibits begin to disintegrate they should be mod-
ernized. But practical reasons often dictate that we remove only
the evidence of the ravages of time. This exasperating task was
carried on with the systematic fish exhibit (Hall O), where crum-
bling fins were restored. In addition, the renovation of the Texas
65
coast fish habitat group (Hall O) and of the elephant seal group
(Hall N) has been completed and renovation of the hoofed and horned
mammals (Hall 13, George M. Pullman Hall) has been started.
This exhibition work was carried on by Taxidermist Carl W.
Cotton, Assistant Taxidermist Peter Anderson, and Artist Joseph B.
Krstolich. For the insect exhibit, under the direction of Associate
Curator Dybas with Assistant August Ziemer preparing the speci-
mens, art work was prepared by Staff Artist E. John Pfiffner and
Staff Illustrator Marion Pahl. Antioch College students Adrian N.
DeWind and Alan D. Havens also took an active part in helping to
further the insect exhibition work.
The other routine of the taxidermists included helping to prepare
skeletons of large animals received in the flesh from the zoos, prep-
aration of mounted birds for the use of Raymond Foundation, and
training of a missionary-student, Peter Hocking, in preparing speci-
mens. One of the important intermuseum activities is the demon-
stration of methods of exhibition and preparation to personnel from
other museums. During the year, this courtesy was extended to
representatives of about twenty institutions.
66
LIBRARY OF THE MUSEUM
PUBLIC RELATIONS
SCIENTIFIC SOCIETIES
CO-OPERATION
MOTION PICTURES
PHOTOGRAPHY AND
ILLUSTRATION
BOOK SHOP
PUBLICATIONS AND
PRINTING
CAFETERIA
MAINTENANCE, CONSTRUCTION
AND ENGINEERING
ii
m
4:
11 ^/ffi >
riJi
At*
, , jp 'SI
IJP
CHINESE TOGGLES
FROM
C. F. BIEBER COLLECTION
LIBRARY OF THE MUSEUM
The Library's holdings during the year increased by 9,784 items,
through gifts, exchange, purchase and transfer of additional serials
in the natural sciences from The John Crerar Library. These items
include books, periodicals, pamphlets, photostats, maps, microfilms,
and other library materials. The advancement in scientific progress
and the phenomenal increase in research activities in formerly un-
developed areas of the world has increased in no less proportions
the amount of scientific information that is published. This has
emphasized the problems of selection, acquisition and storage. The
Library is concerned with the responsibility of providing the mem-
bers of the scientific staff with the literature they require, but it is
not possible to maintain a complete comprehensive library for in-
formation in each of the Museum's fields of scientific endeavor.
This is prohibitive financially as well as from the standpoint of
space; therefore, it has been expedient to choose what is most im-
portant and avoid as much duplication as possible. Decisions in
selectivity take time, and this process has been a consistent coop-
erative effort on the part of the scientific and library staffs. During
the year, 1,825 books were accessioned and 9,092 journals were re-
corded on the Kardex.
Of comparable importance is the program that is required to
identify and dispose of portions of the book collections that no
longer prove useful to the Library. The program of discarding ob-
solete, ephemeral and duplicate materials continued with the with-
drawal of 375 items. Proceeds from the sale of some of this material
amounted to $1,903.75.
Gifts to the Library are screened carefully because the Library
cannot afford to catalog and house them unless they fit into its
acquisition program. This opportunity is taken to thank each donor
for his generosity and thoughtfulness in contributing to the Library's
resources (see list on page 103).
There is an obvious need for physical enlargement of the Library
facilities. The current rate of growth has been far in excess of what
was anticipated ten years ago. A survey of the situation was
made to find a means to rectify the present dilemma and to estab-
lish a flexible plan to cope with the future. The survey was pro-
jected over the next twenty years. Included in the proposed re-
quirements, insofar as they can be foreseen, is the extent of the
Library's program in its relationship to the research program in
the scientific divisions; studies of additional space needs; and im-
provement by means of physical access.
69
The Reference Division was reorganized in June. Since the
Library does not have the manpower to render more than lim-
ited reference service, yet definitely recognizes its responsibilities
for such work, a re-assignment of staff duties was made in the
Reference and Catalog Divisions in order to speed up and improve
service to visitors. Activities in the Reading Room during the
past year and especially during the last six months indicate a con-
tinuing increase in the use of the collections by visitors, and the
significance of the Library as a research center has become more
and more evident. Reference librarians must keep up to date on
new acquisitions and as the cataloging division receives all incoming
material almost immediately upon receipt, it was deemed advisable
to turn over the supervision of the Reading Room to Mrs. Bertha
Gibbs and Mr. W. Peyton Fawcett of the Cataloging Division,
who now serve in the Reading Room during alternate monthly
periods. It is important that the catalogers know the needs of
the readers who seek the Library resources, and the alternate monthly
period in the Reading Room enables them to keep in touch with
the needs of the card catalog. This information enhances the con-
tributions made to the card catalog by catalogers in their selection
of subject heading material. These contributions provide an ex-
tremely effective key to the Library's resources. Thus, this arrange-
ment serves a dual purpose.
Mere statistics do little to reveal the high quality of service
given by the reference staff in personal assistance to visitors in
pursuit of information ; 678 visitors consulted the Library's resources
during the year, and 2,583 volumes were circulated to readers.
Reference questions often take the form of telephone inquiries and
340 such queries were handled by the Reference Staff.
The new arrangment in the Reading Room enabled Mrs. Eugenia
Jang, who had had sole supervision of the Reading Room together
with her many other duties, to devote her attention to the recording
on the Kardex of incoming serials, to watch for gaps in receipts
and write for missing issues, to oversee the distribution of serials
to the departmental and divisional libraries, and to expedite the
service of interlibrary loan. As has been customary, a good deal
of material was lent to other organizations and institutions during
the year and the Museum Library, in turn, borrowed books to
supplement its resources. The number of items borrowed and lent
amounted to 358.
A section of 71 trays was added to the general card catalog
in the main library. The cards constituting the catalog in both the
Author and Title and the Subjects sections have been redistributed
70
in the total space now available. At the same time, numerous
duplicate and inaccurate cards were removed from the "unrevised"
portions of both sections, further relieving the congestion. The
catalog now presents an improved appearance, and its use has been
greatly facilitated by the creation of additional space.
The project for the creation of a Subject Headings Authorities File,
begun in 1961, has been carried forward by the typing of cards for
subjects under the letters H through N. The File is now com-
pletely revised through the letter F. During 1962 the cataloging
division revised 2,588 subject headings and cross-references and added
an additional 565. Miss Evelyn L. Smith, a very able Antioch
student who worked in the Library from October through December,
prepared subject headings and cross-reference cards for the letters
H-N. During the year 4,891 cards were added to this file. These
will be revised by the Cataloging Division to eliminate duplication
and to provide additional cross-references.
The Authors Authorities File received 1,265 additional cards, in-
cluding the complete names and pertinent data on authors,
societies, museums, government bureaus of various countries, etc.
This file is used by the catalogers to ensure accuracy, uniformity
and consistency in catalog entries, and is amply cross-indexed to
cover variant forms of names and designations. Duplicate cross-
references are filed in the main catalog for both subjects and authors,
to help users who wish to locate any desired entry.
Further progress in the reclassification of the older holdings of
the Library, with special emphasis on serials, has been made.
During the year, 3,271 volumes, comprising 387 titles, were re-
classified according to the Library of Congress scheme. Each item
was also completely recataloged and new cards were prepared, con-
taining accurately verified bibliographical data. The volumes were
relabeled and cleaned, and many were repaired and rebound.
New acquisitions in the number of 1,163 have been processed,
including 2,178 volumes. 766 cards describing the Library's holdings
of new, rare, or unique works, and also including analytics for
articles in serials not analyzed by the Library of Congress, were sub-
mitted to the National Union Catalog. Entries were also submitted
to be included in New Serial Titles, issued monthly with annual
cumulations by the Library of Congress. Altogether, 1,550 titles
comprising 5,449 volumes were processed, and 1,351 analytics were
made for monographs and selected subjects not included in pub-
lished indexes. A total of 14,094 cards were filed in the general
and departmental card catalogs.
71
In the East Asia Division of the Library the revision and typing
of permanent main entry cards based on the original hand-written
slips continued during the year; 296 main entries, including cards
for separate works, serials and analytics, were typed and filed in
the catalog of that division. Each of these cards contains bibli-
ographical data in romanized Chinese and Chinese calligraphy, with
English translation of the title and collation and notes in English.
The most rapidly growing section of the Library is the collection
of periodicals, received on exchange and by purchase. The Library
has continued to develop its system of exchanges, domestic and
foreign, with academies, learned societies, universities and research
institutions. During the year 27 additional formal exchange agree-
ments were concluded, and some informal agreements were nego-
tiated; 41 older exchanges were revised, others expanded, curtailed
or cancelled.
In accordance with its usual practice as a service to Museum
staff members, the Library translated 249 items into English.
This year 1,269 volumes, the greater portion comprising serial
publications, were prepared for shipment to the bindery. The rapid
deterioration of modern printing paper presents a grave problem,
and improved methods of book repair were studied and applied,
together with preservative measures, to 606 volumes; 4,812 volumes
were labeled. The arduous task of alleviating crowding, not only
in the general library but also in the departmental libraries, was
undertaken by Mr. Stosius.
Under the student training program offered by Antioch College,
the Library was again fortunate in having the temporary but very
able services of Miss Sally Thomasson, Miss Margaret Harton,
and Miss Evelyn L. Smith.
72
PUBLIC RELATIONS
During 1962 the efforts of the Division of Public Relations were con-
centrated on developing a balanced program of informing the public
about the Museum's functions, from the acquisition and preservation
of collections through research, education, and exhibition.
Information about five Museum zoological expeditions was fea-
tured in all metropolitan and many suburban newspapers. Well-
illustrated articles on two important anthropological acquisitions and
on the Pacific Research Laboratory emphasized the preservation of
collections in the Department of Anthropology. Research being done
in the Departments of Geology, Botany, and Zoology was featured in
articles by science writers for the Chicago newspapers, and carried
by the New York Times and the national press services.
Publicity for the Museum's educational program stressed the
work of the Raymond Foundation and the adult lecture series. The
inauguration of the Holiday Science Lectures for selected high school
students received special attention with the arrangement of a press
luncheon and the distribution of a press kit describing the origin and
purposes of this distinguished program. Broadcasting and news-
paper media responded with extensive coverage.
The Museum's exhibition program continued, for publicity pur-
poses, to be divided into two categories: the monthly featured ex-
hibits and the special exhibits. For the first group, especially fine
newspaper publicity appeared on the newly installed Maori council
house; the new permanent exhibit, "The Human Image in Primitive
Art"; and the exhibit on diatoms in Chicago's water.
The schedule of special exhibitions was climaxed during the sum-
mer by the "Tutankhamun Treasures," followed in the fall by "The
Art of Benin." The outstanding attendance record for the "Tutan-
khamun Treasures" was undergirded by the most comprehensive pub-
licity campaign yet undertaken by the Division of Public Relations.
In addition to excellent response by metropolitan newspapers, arti-
cles appeared in downstate and nearby state newspapers and in news
media abroad. Many company publications carried information,
and the Illinois Central Railroad and Chicago Transit Authority
made advertising space available on their stations and vehicles. In
addition, circulars were distributed to selected mailing lists, posters
were displayed in schools and universities, and an exhibit of appro-
priate books was arranged in the Chicago Public Library. Broadcast
coverage included filming of the exhibition opening by all Chicago
television stations and by Movietone Newsreel. Several important
programs featuring the exhibition were subsequently arranged on
73
local radio and television stations. Only a slightly less extensive
campaign was carried out for "The Art of Benin," including notice
in the "Life Guide" section of Life magazine, features in the Chicago
Defender and Ebony magazine, and fine photographic reproductions
of several Benin bronzes in Perspective magazine.
Appropriate publicity was also planned for six other special ex-
hibits during the year. Of these, special mention should be made
of the delightful pictures from the annual exhibit of the Junior School
of the Art Institute, which were reproduced in all four Chicago news-
papers.
Throughout 1962, the Bulletin continued to be used by many
newspapers and magazines throughout the country as an important
source of feature material.
The Museum wishes to express appreciation for the generous co-
operation of many news media in our public relations program. In
particular, thanks are due Chicago's American, the Chicago Daily
News, the Chicago Sun-Times, and the Chicago Tribune; ABC, CBS,
NBC, and WGN radio and television; educational television station
WTTW, and radio station WFMT. We also thank the many subur-
ban and neighborhood newspapers who consistently reported Mu-
seum activities, the Associated Press, United Press International,
and Central Press Association, who were most helpful in carrying
news beyond the Chicago metropolitan area.
NATIVE MODEL OF SKIN-COVERED BOAT
U
»" "■■»"
ALEUTIAN ISLANDS
CA. 1870
74
ACTIVITIES OF STAFF MEMBERS IN SCIENTIFIC
AND PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES
Dr. Paul S. Martin, Chief Curator of Anthropology, and Mr.
George I. Quimby, Curator of North American Archaeology and
Ethnology, attended the annual meetings of the Society for American
Archaeology, in Tucson, Arizona. Dr. Martin presided over a session
on southwestern archaeology and Mr. Quimby was chairman of a
session on the archaeology of the eastern United States. Dr. Donald
Collier, Curator of South American Archaeology and Ethnology,
attended the annual meetings of the Central States Anthropological
Society, in St. Louis, Missouri, and the International Congress of
Americanists, in Mexico City.
Dr. Martin and Dr. John B. Rinaldo, Associate Curator of
Archaeology, attended the annual Pecos Conference at Globe,
Arizona, and the Southwestern Ceramic Conference at Flagstaff,
Arizona. Curators Martin, Rinaldo, Quimby, Collier, and Lewis were
present at the annual meeting of the American Anthropological
Association, in Chicago. Dr. Collier was a member of the program
committee and served as chairman for one session. Curator Quimby
was chairman of the committees for local arrangements for the meet-
ing of the Association. He was also appointed to the nominating
committee of the Society for American Archaeology.
Chief Curator of Botany John R. Millar, Dr. Louis 0. Williams,
Curator of Central American Botany, and Dr. Patricio Ponce de
Leon, Assistant Curator of the Cryptogamic Herbarium, attended
the Annual Symposium on Systematics, in St. Louis. Mr. Millar
also attended the annual meeting of the American Institute of
Biological Sciences, in Corvallis, Oregon. Dr. Williams attended
the Neotropical Botanical Conference sponsored by the National
Science Foundation and held at the Imperial College of Tropical
Agriculture of the University of West Indies, in Trinidad.
Dr. Rainer Zangerl, Chief Curator of Geology, Dr. Robert H.
Denison, Curator of Fossil Fishes, and Mr. William D. Turnbull,
Assistant Curator of Fossil Mammals, attended the annual meeting
of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology. Dr. Denison was elected
President of the Society and Dr. Zangerl was re-elected Secretary-
Treasurer. Assistant Curator Turnbull reported on his studies of
Arctoryctes-Cryptoryctes.
Dr. Austin L. Rand, Chief Curator of Zoology, Mr. Emmet R.
Blake, Curator of Birds, and Mr. Melvin Traylor, Associate Cu-
rator of Birds, attended the meetings of the XHIth International
Ornithological Congress, in Ithaca, New York. Mr. Blake served
75
as chairman of the nominating committee. Dr. Rand also attended
the annual meeting of the American Ornithologists' Union, in Salt
Lake City, and the sessions of the Wilson Ornithological Club, at
Purdue University. He was elected President of the Ornithologists'
Union.
Dr. Joseph C. Moore, Curator of Mammals, and Mr. Philip
Hershkovitz, Research Curator, attended the annual meeting of the
American Society of Mammalogists, at Middlebury College, in
Vermont. Dr. Moore was elected to the Board of Directors of the
society and was re-appointed chairman of its Committee on Marine
Mammals. Mr. Hershkovitz was re-appointed to the Committee
on Nomenclature. Dr. Moore and Mr. Hershkovitz also attended
the symposium on New World Primates during the annual meeting
of the American Anthropological Association, in Chicago, and Mr.
Hershkovitz attended the Pan American Institute of Educational
Relations, in Chicago.
Dr. Robert F. Inger, Curator of Amphibians and Reptiles, and
Mr. Loren Woods, Curator of Fishes, were present at the meetings
of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, in
Washington, D.C., and Mr. Woods also attended the Conference
on the International Indian Ocean Expedition, in Washington.
Dr. Rupert Wenzel, Curator of Insects, continued his work on the
Nomenclature Committee of the Entomological Society of America.
Mr. Henry S. Dybas, Associate Curator of Insects, attended the
meetings of the north central states branch of the Entomological
Society of America in Minneapolis. He was elected chairman of
the systematics section and was placed on the program committee.
Dr. Fritz Haas, Curator Emeritus of Lower Invertebrates, and
Dr. Alan Solem, Curator, were present at the meetings of the First
European Malacological Congress, in London. Dr. Haas was elected
an honorary member of the Deutsche Malakozoologische Gesellschaft
in recognition of his contributions to malacology. Mr. D. Dwight
Davis, Curator of Vertebrate Anatomy, attended the meetings of
the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists in Wash-
ington, D.C., and the meeting of the American Society of Zoologists
in Philadelphia.
Mr. E. Leland Webber, Director, and Miss Miriam Wood,
Chief of Raymond Foundation, attended the Midwest Museums
Conference, in Minneapolis. Mr. Webber participated in a panel
discussion entitled "Museums — Their Programs and Problems."
Miss Wood also attended the Sixth General Conference of the Inter-
national Council of Museums, which met in The Hague, in The
76
Netherlands. The Director also attended the Conference of Direc-
tors of Systematic Collections in Washington, D.C., and the annual
meeting of the American Association of Museums in Williamsburg.
Miss Lillian A. Ross, Associate Editor of Scientific Publications,
attended the Conference of Biological Editors in New Orleans,
where she participated in a panel discussion of redactory services
for publications in foreign languages.
Members of the Library staff attended local meetings of the
American Library Association and the Special Libraries Association.
Many scientific journals are edited wholly or in part by members
of the Museum staff. These include Curator Williams, Economic
Botany; Curator Davis, Evolution and the Journal of Morphology;
Assistant Curator Turnbull, News Bulletin of the Society of Vertebrate
Paleontology and Sdugetierkundliche Mitteilungen (Stuttgart, Ger-
many) ; Curator Inger, Copeia; Curator Collier, American Antiquity;
Associate Curator Rinaldo, Archives of Archaeology; and Curator
Woods, The American Midland Naturalist.
The members of the Museum's scientific staff contributed many
articles to various journals and also published numerous books on
subjects within the Museum's area of research. A list of these articles
and books can be found on page 82.
LEAF INSECT
FROM
TROPICAL ASIA
77
COOPERATION WITH OTHER INSTITUTIONS
Dr. Paul S. Martin, Chief Curator of Anthropology, lectured at the
University of Illinois and the University of Arizona. Dr. Martin,
Dr. Donald Collier, Curator of South American Archaeology and
Ethnology, Dr. Kenneth Starr, Curator of Asiatic Archaeology
and Ethnology, and Mr. George I. Quimby, Curator of North
American Archaeology and Ethnology, taught courses in the De-
partment of Anthropology of the University of Chicago. Mr.
Quimby also lectured at the Michilimackinac Historical Society in
Michigan. He was appointed a Collaborator of the United States
National Park Service, and served on the advisory board of the
archaeological salvage project at Ocmulgee National Monument in
Georgia. The Museum continued the course in museology given
by the Department of Anthropology in co-operation with the Uni-
versity of Chicago Department of Anthropology. Fecadu Gadamu,
from Ethiopia, held the Museum Fellowship of the University of
Chicago during the first half of the year, and his work at the Museum
continued into the fall.
Dr. Rainer Zangerl, Chief Curator of Geology, taught a course
in histology for paleontologists to advanced students of paleozoology
of the University of Chicago. The University course on vertebrate
paleontology was offered this year at the Museum by Dr. Everett
Olson, Research Associate. One of the lectures in this course was
given by Dr. Robert Denison, Curator of Fossil Fishes, and another
by Mr. William Turnbull, Assistant Curator of Fossil Mammals.
Dr. Edward Olsen, Curator of Mineralogy, received an appointment
as lecturer in the Department of Geophysical Sciences of the Uni-
versity of Chicago. Dr. Olsen also began a study of meteorites in
co-operation with Dr. Robert Mueller, of that Department. Dr.
Bertram G. Woodland, Associate Curator of Petrology, lectured to
the Northwestern University Geology Club.
A course in Zoogeography, Phylogeny and Evolution was pre-
sented at the Museum for a University of Chicago class. The
Museum staff lecturers were Dr. Austin Rand, Chief Curator of
Zoology; Dr. Rupert L. Wenzel, Curator of Insects; Dr. Robert
Inger, Curator of Reptiles and Amphibians; Mr. Henry Dybas,
Associate Curator of Insects; Mr. Loren Woods, Curator of Fishes;
Mr. Philip Hershkovitz, Research Curator of Mammals; Mr. D.
D wight Davis, Curator of Vertebrate Anatomy; Dr. Zangerl and
Mr. Turnbull.
Curator Davis lectured at Harvard University in a seminar on
comparative anatomy. He also lectured at the University of 1111—
78
nois and the University of Chicago, and he supervised the studies of
a graduate student from the University of Chicago. Dr. Inger con-
ducted a seminar at the University of Southern California and lec-
tured at the San Diego State College and the University of Chicago.
Dr. Wenzel was appointed Lecturer in Zoology at the University of
Chicago. Mr. Dybas presented a course in entomology at North-
western University. Mr. Woods gave a series of three lectures
at Harvard University and Dr. Alan Solem, Curator of Lower
Invertebrates, lectured at the University of Hawaii and several
other overseas institutions. Dr. Alfred E. Emerson, Research
Associate, was honored by being elected to the National Academy
of Sciences.
The following Museum staff members lectured at the Chicago
Academy of Sciences during the year: Dr. Louis 0. Williams,
Curator of Central American Botany; Dr. Joseph Moore, Curator
of Mammals; Mr. Quimby; Mr. Turnbull; Mr. Davis; and Dr.
Wenzel. Mr. Harry E. Changnon, Curator of Exhibits, conducted
nine field trips for the Academy as part of a series of physical science
lectures and field trips given for local science teachers and students
under the sponsorship of the National Science Foundation. Dr.
Zangerl and Dr. Eugene Richardson, Curator of Fossil Inverte-
brates, lectured in this series.
Under the co-operative plan adopted in 1946 by the Museum
and Antioch College fourteen students were employed in 1962 by
the Museum (their names are listed in appropriate places in this
Report). The Museum lent Tibetan masks to the University of
Indiana and Chinese jades to the University Museum in Philadel-
phia. The exhibit of "Tutankhamun's Treasures" was installed
jointly by the Oriental Institute and the Museum. Assistance
was given by Dr. Pinhas Gelougaz, Dr. Helene J. Kantor and Mr.
Robert Hansen of the Institute. A part of the Museum's collection
of Tibetan xylographs was microfilmed and described under the
supervision of Mr. Chih-wei Pan, of the Museum library staff. This
project was carried out jointly with the staff of the Inner Asian
Project of the Far Eastern and Russian Institute of the University
of Washington.
The facilities of the Museum were used by universities and col-
leges of the United States and Canada. Supervised classes from a
number of art schools continued to use the Museum exhibits as part
of their regular classroom work in sketching, painting and modeling.
In May the results of the work from classes of the School of the Art
Institute of Chicago were featured in a special exhibit in the Museum.
79
The Chicago Area Science Fair (sponsored by the Chicago Teachers'
Science Association) and Chicago Latin Day (sponsored by the Illi-
nois Classical Conference for Latin students of the Chicago area),
in which about 1,500 students participated, were also held in the
Museum in May.
Twelve Senior Girl Scouts from the Chicago Girl Scout Council
were trained as Museum Aides to assist in Museum work, especially
in Nature Proficiency Badge Girl Scout programs. A group of eight
Senior Girl Scouts from the South Cook County Girl Scout Council
was trained to usher at the Audubon illustrated lectures.
Scientists from all over the world visited the Museum to study
the collections and use the laboratories and workrooms of the four
scientific departments.
Meetings were held at the Museum during the year by various
organizations working in fields related to the scope of the Museum,
among them the Illinois Audubon Society, Illinois Orchid Society,
Illinois Garden Guild, Kennicott Club, Nature Camera Club, Citi-
zenship Council of the Board of Education, Adult Education Council,
Chicago Police Academy, and Chicago Chamber Orchestra Associa-
tion. The Free Concerts Foundation presented six concerts in the
James Simpson Theatre.
MOTION PICTURES
During the year the photography, editing, and script preparation
for the Museum's new film (yet to be titled) were completed. Prints
will be made and sent to the many schools and organizations that
have requested this new film after screening "Through These Doors,"
the current Museum film that was produced in 1950. During the
year a new opening sequence with the Director of the Museum
and other new scenes were filmed for "Through These Doors" to
keep it up to date. This year the film was sent to 88 schools and
organizations throughout the Chicago area, and requests from other
parts of the country and from Canada for its loan also were filled.
General inspection, which includes the repair, cleaning, and re-
placement of damaged sections of films, was carried out on the
usual twice-a-year plan for all film-subjects in the Film Library.
Cataloguing and accessioning of all films, now numbering 111 com-
plete productions on various natural-history subjects, were con-
tinued, as was checking of the thousands of feet of film in the foot-
age library. Requests for loan of films by Raymond Foundation,
Museum staff, and outside sources were filled.
80
PHOTOGRAPHY AND ILLUSTRATION
Work of the Division of Photography is integral to many aspects
of the Museum program — scientific and popular publications, ex-
hibition, research activities of the staff and others in the scientific
community, and audio-visual aids. Thus, a notable variety of work
is completed. During 1962, 35,116 prints and 2,428 new negatives
were prepared.
Major projects included a large number of photographs of the
Fuller and the Museum Benin collections, many of which appeared
in the exhibition catalogue, The Art of Benin; and the completion
of the first 35 color transparencies of the unique Stanley Field
collection of plant models. The latter are the first units of a pro-
jected series of botanical teaching aids.
The exhibition program, scientific illustration, and design for
public relations purposes placed a heavy burden on the Division of
Illustration. Through close collaboration and sharing of responsi-
bilities between the Staff Artist and the Staff Illustrator, balanced
and effective accomplishment in all fields resulted during the year.
BOOK SHOP
In terms of concentrated usage of space, the Book Shop ranks high
among the divisions of the Museum. More than 600 different books
and 800 novelties are normally on sale in only 800 square feet of sales
area. Sales during the year were $182,327, a slightly lower total
than 1961 sales.
PUBLICATIONS AND PRINTING
Distribution of Museum publications totaled 94,635 copies, of which
75,601 were sold and 19,033 were distributed to other institutions
and to individuals under exchange agreements.
Publications issued by the Museum in 1962 are listed on the
following pages. Of these, copies printed by the Museum Press
totaled 57,097, from 2,091 pages of type composition. Twelve issues
of Chicago Natural History Museum Bulletin were printed, averaging
9,248 copies an issue.
Harold M. Grutzmacher, who was placed in charge of the Divi-
sion of Printing upon the resignation of Raymond H. Hallstein, Sr.,
capably handled the increased responsibility.
81
MUSEUM PUBLICATIONS IN 1962
DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY
Angress, Shimon, and Charles A. Reed
An Annotated Bibliography on the Origin and Descent of Domestic Mammals,
1900-1955. Fieldiana: Anthropology, vol. 54, no. 1, 139 pp.
Martin, Paul S., John B. Rinaldo, William A. Longacre, Constance Cronin,
Leslie G. Freeman, Jr., and James Schoenwetter
Chapters in the Prehistory of Eastern Arizona, I. Fieldiana: Anthropology,
vol. 53, 245 pp., 78 illus., 1 map.
RlTZENTHALER, ROBERT E., and GEORGE I. QUIMBY
The Red Ocher Culture of the Upper Great Lakes and Adjacent Areas. Fieldi-
ana: Anthropology, vol. 36, no. 11, 33 pp., 12 illus.
DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY
Macbride, J. Francis
Flora of Peru. Botanical Series, vol. xiii, pt. v-b, no. 1, 267 pp.
Mathias, Mildred E., and Lincoln Constance
Flora of Peru. Botanical Series, vol. xiii, pt. v-a, no. 1, 97 pp.
Standley, Paul C, and Louis O. Williams
Flora of Guatemala. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 24, pt. vii, no. 2, 100 pp., 19 illus.
Williams, Louis O.
Tropical American Plants, III. Fieldiana: Botany, vol. 29, no. 7, 17 pp.,
3 illus.
DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY
Denison, Robert H.
A Reconstruction of the Shield of the Arthrodire, Bryantolepis brachycephalus
{Bryant). Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 14, no. 6, 6 pp., 4 illus.
Roy, Sharat Kumar, Jewell J. Glass, and Edward P. Henderson
The Walters Meteorite. Fieldiana: Geology, vol. 10, no. 37, 12 pp.
DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY
Baker, Edward W., and A. Earl Pritchard
Macfarlaniella, a New Genus of False Spider Mites (Acarina: Tenuipalpidae).
Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 44, no. 15, 3 pp., 1 illus.
Blake, Emmet R.
Birds of the Sierra Macarena, Eastern Colombia. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 44,
no. 11, 44 pp.
A New Race of Penelope montagnii from Southeastern Peru. Fieldiana: Zool-
ogy, vol. 44, no. 14, 2 pp.
Haas, Fritz
A New Species of Land Snail from Bolivia. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 44, no. 10,
2 pp., 1 illus.
82
Hershkovitz, Philip
Evolution of Neotropical Cricetine Rodents (Muridae) with Special Reference
to the Phyllotine Group. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 46, 527 pp., 124 illus.
Inger, Robert F., and Chin Phui Kong
The Fresh-Water Fishes of North Borneo. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 45, 268 pp.,
120 illus.
King, Wayne
A New Gekkonid Lizard of the Genus Cyrtodactylus from the Philippine Islands.
Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 44, no. 13, 4 pp., 1 illus.
McDaniel, Burruss, Jr., and Edward W. Baker
A New Genus of Rosensteiniidae (Acarina) from Mexico. Fieldiana: Zoology,
vol. 44, no. 16, 5 pp., 2 illus.
Traylor, Melvin A.
New Birds from Barotseland. Fieldiana: Zoology, vol. 44, no. 12, 3 pp.
JAMES NELSON AND ANNA LOUISE RAYMOND FOUNDATION
Fleming, Edith
Life in a Mexican Town. Museum Storybook [9 Museum Stories], 21 pp.,
9 illus., paperbound.
OTHER MUSEUM PUBLICATIONS
Dark, Philip J. C.
The Art of Benin, A Catalogue of an Exhibition of the A. W. F. Fuller and
Chicago Natural History Museum Collections of Antiquities from Benin,
Nigeria [edited by Phillip H. Lewis and Donald Collier]. 124 pp., 48 illus.,
1 map.
General Guide, Chicago Natural History Museum. 47 pp., 32 illus., floor plans,
map [forty-first edition].
Report of the Director to the Board of Trustees for the Year 1961. 167 pp., 18 illus.
CHICAGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM BULLETIN
Chicago Natural History Museum Bulletin, vol. 33 (1962), 12 nos., 96 pp., illus.
Articles and Reviews by Staff Members of Chicago Natural History
Museum in Volume 33 of the Bulletin
Collier, Donald
The Mystery of the Toltec Head, no. 6, p. 3, 3 illus.
Davis, D. Dwight
The Human Skull — an Evolutionary Puzzle, no. 11, pp. 6-8, 3 illus.
Evenson, Joanne
Museum Education Reaches Out to the Blind, no. 2, p. 8, 1 illus. and cover
picture.
Fleming, Robert L.
Scientific Expedition to the Himalayas, no. 2, pp. 4-7, 1 illus.
83
Haas, Fritz
Review of Sea Shells of the World, by R. Tucker Abbott, no. 7, p. 8.
Hershkovitz, Philip
Bats and Their Menus, no. 8, pp. 2-3, 5, 8, 4 illus.
Suriname Zoological Expedition, no. 4, pp. 3, 7-8, 2 illus.
Inger, Robert F.
Departure of Borneo Zoological Expedition, no. 8, pp. 4-5, 3 illus.
Rare Lizard Reaches Museum, no. 3, p. 7, 1 illus.
Review of The Giant Snakes, by Clifford H. Pope, no. 6, p. 8.
Jindrich, Marilyn K.
Cricket Warriors and Musicians of China, no. 7, pp. 2-3, 2 illus. and cover
picture.
New Maori Family "At Home" in Polynesian Hall, no. 1, pp. 2-3, 4 illus. and
cover picture.
Lewis, Phillip H.
The Art of Benin, no. 10, pp. 2-3, 4 illus. and cover picture.
The Human Image in Primitive Art, no. 5, pp. 2-3, 6 illus.
Liss, Allen S.
Review of Chicago Area Archaeology (edited by Elaine A. Bluhm), no. 6, p. 8.
Millar, John R.
The Cannonball Tree, no. 2, pp. 3, 7, 2 illus.
Moore, Joseph Curtis
Scientific Rarities from Ceylon, no. 7, pp. 5, 8.
Nelson, Paula R.
March Exhibits, no. 3, p. 3, 1 illus.
The Nile Crocodile, no. 7, pp. 6-7, 2 illus.
OlKONOMIDES, AL. N.
Serapis, The Great God of Hellenistic Egypt and the Greco-Roman World, no. 12,
pp. 2-3, 8, 5 illus.
Olsen, Edward J.
At Sea on a Continent! no. 9, pp. 6-8, 2 illus.
Fluorescent Minerals, no. 10, pp. 7-8.
Ponce de Leon, Patricio
Microscopic Plants: "Lake Michigan's 'Jewels,' " no. 9, pp. 2-3, 1 illus. and
cover picture.
Rand, Austin L.
A Decorated Inchworm, no. 8, pp. 7-8, 1 illus.
A Zoological Expedition to the Philippines, no. 5, pp. 4-5, 7-8, 1 illus.
January through the Latitudes, no. 1, pp. 4-5, 12 illus.
Review of The Bird Watcher's Guide, by Henry Hill Collins, Jr., no. 6, p. 8.
Roscoe, Ernest J.
The Unusual Is Where You Find It, no. 6, p. 7.
Solem, Alan
Portrait of a Collector, no. 6, pp. 6-7.
84
Street, Janice K.
Field Work in Iran Continues, no. 12, pp. 6-8, 2 illus.
Street, William S.
A Field Report from Iran, no. 11, pp. 2-3, 8, 2 illus. and cover picture.
Woods, Loren P.
Sea Lamprey Exhibit Shows Different Feeding Structures of Larvae and Adults,
no. 3, pp. 6-7, 3 illus.
OTHER PUBLICATIONS OF STAFF MEMBERS IN 1962
DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY
Collier, Donald
"The Central Andes." Courses Toward Urban Life (edited by Robert J.
Braidwood and Gordon R. Willey) [Viking Fund Publications in Anthro-
pology, no. 32, New York], pp. 161-176.
"Museums and Ethnological Research." Alfred Kroeber, a Memorial [Kroeber
Anthropological Society Papers, no. 25, Berkeley], pp. 149-154 (also pub-
lished in Curator, vol. V, no. 4, pp. 322-328).
Review of Anthropology and the Public: the Role of Museums (by H. H.
Frese). Current Anthropology, vol. 3, no. 2, p. 218.
Review of The Ethnobotany of Pre-Columbian Peru (by Margaret A. Towle).
American Scientist, vol. 50, no. 4, pp. 416A, 418A.
Lewis, Phillip H.
"The New Hall of Primitive Art at Chicago Natural History Museum."
The Delphian Quarterly, vol. 45, no. 3, pp. 5-8, 21, 2 illus.
Review of Indian Art in America (by Frederick J. Dockstader). American
Antiquity, vol. 27, no. 3, pp. 429-430.
Martin, Paul S.
"Archaeological Investigations in East Central Arizona." Science, vol. 138,
no. 3542, pp. 825-827.
Quimby, George I.
"A Year with a Chippewa Family, 1763-1764." Ethnohistory , vol. 9, no. 3,
pp. 217-239.
"Alexander Henry in Central Michigan, 1763-1764." Michigan History,
vol. 46, no. 3, pp. 193-200.
"Comment on the Paleo-Indian Tradition in Eastern North America." Cur-
rent Anthropology, vol. 3, no. 3, p. 262.
"Old Copper Artifacts from Chicago." Chicago Area Archaeology [Illinois
Archaeological Survey, Inc., Bulletin no. 3, University of Illinois],
pp. 35-36.
"Omaha Kinship Terminology and Spruce-fir Pollen." American Antiquity,
vol. 28, no. 1, pp. 91-92.
Review of Prehistoric Copper Mining in the Lake Superior Region (edited by
Roy Ward Drier and Octave Du Temple). Michigan History, vol. 45,
no. 4, pp. 377-378.
Review of The Archeology of Corcajou Point (by Robert L. Hall). Journal
of the Illinois State Historical Society, Winter, 1962, pp. 421-422.
"The Age of the Oconto Site." The Wisconsin Archeologist, vol. 43, no. 1,
pp. 16-19.
85
Rinaldo, John B.
Review of Survey and Excavations in Lower Glen Canyon, 1952-1958 (by
William Y. Adams, Alexander J. Lindsay, Jr., and Christy G. Turner II).
American Antiquity, vol. 28, no. 1, pp. 111-112.
DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY
Williams, Louis O.
"Tropical American Plants, IV." Brittonia, vol. 14, no. 4, pp. 441-446,
3 illus.
DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY
Olsen, Edward J.
"Nickeliferous lazulite from Baraboo, Wisconsin." American Mineralogist,
vol. 47, pp. 773-774.
"Copper Artifact Analysis with the X-ray Spectrometer." American An-
tiquity, vol. 28, pp. 234-238.
Techter, David
"Fossils." American Peoples Encyclopedia Yearbook for 1962, pp. 296-297.
Woodland, Bertram G.
"Lamprophric Dikes of the Burke Area, Vermont." The American Mineral-
ogist, vol. 47, pp. 1094-1110.
Zangerl, Rainer
Review of The Technology of Wine Making (by M. A. Amerine and W. V.
Cruess). Economic Botany, vol. 16, no. 2, pp. 131-132.
DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY
Blake, Emmet R., and William K. Baker
"Additional Evidence of Rivoli's Hummingbird in Colorado." The Auk,
vol. 79, pp. 481-482.
"Family Corvidae" (American forms). Check-list of Birds of the World [Mu-
seum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University], vol. 15, pp. 204-282.
"New Bird Records from Surinam." Ardea, vol. 49, pp. 178-183.
Dybas, Henry S., and D. Dwight Davis
"A Population Census of Seventeen-year Periodical Cicadas (Homoptera:
Cicadidae: Magicicada)." Ecology, vol. 34, pp. 432-444.
Dybas, Henry S., and Monte Lloyd
"Isolation by Habitat in Two Synchronized Species of Periodical Cicadas
(Homoptera: Cicadidae: Magicicada)." Ecology, vol. 34, pp. 444-459.
Haas, Fritz
"Caribbean Land Molluscs: Subulinidae and Oleacinidae." Studies on the
Fauna of Curacao and other Caribbean Islands, vol. 13, pp. 49-60, pis. 7-11.
Inger, Robert F., and F. Wayne King
"A New Cave-Dwelling Lizard of the Genus Cyrtodactylus." Sarawak Museum
Journal, vol. 10, pp. 274-276.
Inger, Robert F., and Hyman Marx
"Variation of Hemipenis and Cloaca in the Colubrid Snake Calamaria lumbri-
coidea." Systematic Zoology, vol. 11, pp. 32-38.
86
Rand, Austin L.
"Birds in Summer," 31 pages [Encyclopedia Britannica Press].
"Comment on the Proposed Validation of Pnoepyga Hodgson, 1844. Z.M.(S.)
1457." Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature, vol. 19, part 3, p. 131.
Review of Birds in Colour (by Karl Aage Tinggaard). The Quarterly Review
of Biology, vol. 37, no. 2, p. 185.
Review of Birds of Anaktuvuk Pass, Kobuk, and Old Crow (by Laurence
Irving). The Quarterly Review of Biology, vol. 37, no. 2, pp. 178-179.
Review of Birds of the World (by Oliver L. Austin, Jr.). The Auk, vol. 79,
no. 2, pp. 288-289.
Review of The Parasitic Weaverbirds (by Herbert Friedmann). The Quarterly
Review of Biology, vol. 37, no. 2, p. 180.
Roscoe, Ernest J.
"Escalante and the Recognition of Ancient Lakes in the Great Basin." Great
Basin Naturalist, vol. 22, nos. 1-3, pp. 87-88.
Review of A Revision of the Sphaeriidae of North America (Mollusca: Pelecy-
poda) (by H. B. Herrington). The American Midland Naturalist, vol. 68,
no. 2, pp. 507-508.
Solem, Alan
"A Preliminary Review of the Pomatiasid Land Snails of Central America."
Archivfiir Molluskenkunde, vol. 90, parts 4-6, pp. 191-213, 3 illus., 2 maps.
"Descriptions of, and Notes on New Hebridean Land Snails." Bulletin,
British Museum (Natural History), Zoology, vol. 9, part 4, pp. 227-256,
19 illus.
"Hydrobiid Snails from Lake Pontchartrain." Nautilus, vol. 74, part 4,
pp. 157-160, 2 illus.
Traylor, Melvin A., Jr.
"An Aberrant Specimen of Lybius undatus leucogenys Blundell and Lovat."
Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club, vol. 82, pp. 86-87.
"A New Name for Estrilda astrild angolensis Reichenow." Bulletin of the
British Ornithologists' Club, vol. 82, p. 22.
"A New Pipit from Angola." Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club,
vol. 82, pp. 76-77.
"Notes on the Birds of Angola, Passeres." Companhia Diamantes de Angola,
Publicacoes Culturais, no. 58, pp. 53-142.
Wenzel, Rupert L.
"Key to the Genera and Subgenera of Histeridae of the United States."
The Beetles of the United States (by Ross Arnett), part 3, fascicle 26 (His-
teridae), pp. 372-378.
87
CAFETERIA
Both the number of individuals served, 323,638, and the gross
receipts of the cafeteria, $266,876, represented a considerable in-
crease over the figures of 1961. The increase in Museum attendance
was partially responsible, but considerably extended service and
service hours in both the cafeteria and the lunchroom accounted
for the greater portion of the increase. Food service is now available
from 11:00 a.m. until 30 minutes before the Museum closing hour.
MAINTENANCE, CONSTRUCTION, AND ENGINEERING
Two major projects begun in 1961 were brought near to completion
in 1962: the construction work in the Hall of Useful Plants (Hall 28)
and in Hall 32, in conjunction with the re-installation of the Chinese
collections. Major construction and electrical work was done in
Hall 9 prior to the exhibition of the "Tutankhamun Treasures" and
additional work was completed for the exhibition of the "Art of
Benin" in the same hall later in the year. The sculptures of British
champion domestic animals by Herbert Haseltine were removed from
Hall 12, for later re-installation in Hall 19, and a new office was con-
structed for the President in the Hall 12 area.
In continuation of our effort to create additional and critically
needed storage space, a number of ground floor stair wells were
bricked in.
The entire skylight over Stanley Field Hall, approximately 20,000
square feet in area, was cleaned and caulked to eliminate leaks.
Further, tuckpointing of the exterior of the building was completed.
The north parking lot was re-surfaced by personnel of the Chicago
Park District.
The summer cleaning and renovation of the boilers were com-
pleted. New or replacement equipment installed during the year
included a water pump, a gas cooking range in the cafeteria, a pro-
jection screen for the Lecture Hall, and an additional 244 fluorescent
fixtures in various exhibition and storage areas.
Steam generated included 67,541,650 pounds, of which 17,219,720
pounds were furnished to the Chicago Park District and 12,195,-
120 pounds were furnished to the John G. Shedd Aquarium.
E. Leland Webber, Director
Chicago Natural History Museum
88
ATTENDANCE STATISTICS
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
LIST OF ACCESSIONS
LIST OF MEMBERS
COMPARATIVE ATTENDANCE
STATISTICS AND DOOR RECEIPTS
FOR THE YEARS 1962 AND 1961
1962 1961
Total attendance 1,470,424 1,307,567
Paid attendance 217,386 183,369
Free admissions on pay days
Students 67,283 58,497
School children 216,324 199,487
Teachers 13,667 12,684
Members 1,637 1,121
Service men and women 902 1,070
Special meetings and occasions 9,423 13,421
Press 16 48
Admissions on free days
Thursdays (52) 180,191 (52) 154,509
Saturdays (52) 357,103 (52) 323,664
Sundays (52) 406,492 (52) 359,697
Highest attendance on any day . . . (July 15) 29,472 (July 23) 14,812
Lowest attendance on any day . . . (January 1 5) 248 (December 23) 364
Highest paid attendance (July 4) 9,108 (July 4) 4,925
Average daily admissions 4,050 3,602
Average paid admissions 1,050 886
91
CHICAGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES-CURRENT FUNDS
FOR THE YEARS 1962 AND 1961
GENERAL OPERATING FUND
RECEIPTS 1962 1961
Endowment income
From investments in securities $ 709,802 $ 707,772
From investments in real estate 112,000 112,000
$ 821,802 $ 819,772
Chicago Park District— tax collections $ 360,185 $ 335,340
Annual and sustaining memberships 33,402 30,830
Admissions 54,346 45,842
Sundry receipts 136,983 99,898
Restricted funds transferred to apply against
Operating Fund expenditures 171,045 118,370
$1,577,763 $1,450,052
EXPENDITURES
Operating expenses
Departmental $ 654,406 $ 666,995
General 632,501 575,101
Building repairs and alterations 132,388 107,834
$1,419,295 $1,349,930
Collections: purchases and expedition costs $ 111,035 $ 70,961
Furniture, fixtures and equipment 25,276 17,558
Provision for mechanical plant depreciation 22,486 22,486
$1,578,092 $1,460,935
DEFICIT FOR YEAR $ 329 $ 10,883
AUDITOR'S CERTIFICATE APPEARS ON FOLLOWING PAGE
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
92
CHICAGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES-CURRENT FUNDS
FOR THE YEARS 1962 AND 1961 (CONTINUED)
N. W. HARRIS PUBLIC SCHOOL EXTENSION FUND
1962 1961
Income from endowments $ 36,604 $ 36,298
Expenditures 24,359 24,556
SURPLUS FOR THE YEAR $ 12,245 $ 11,742
OTHER RESTRICTED FUNDS
RECEIPTS
From Specific Endowment Fund investments. ... $ 92,942 $ 91,917
Contributions for specific purposes 82,552 84,939
Operating Fund appropriation for mechanical
plant depreciation 22,486 22,486
Sundry receipts 66,571 59,903
$ 264,551 $ 259,245
EXPENDITURES
Transferred to Operating Fund to apply against
expenditures $ 171,045 $ 118,370
Added to Endowment Fund principal 60,000 58,552
Loss (gain) on sale of restricted fund securities . . . (60) 121
$ 230,985 $ 177,043
EXCESS OF RECEIPTS OVER EXPENDITURES $ 33,566 $ 82,202
The Trustees,
Chicago Natural History Museum:
We have examined the accompanying comparative statement of receipts and
expenditures — current funds of the Chicago Natural History Museum for the year
ended December 31, 1962. Our examination was made in accordance with gen-
erally accepted auditing standards, and accordingly included such tests of the
accounting records and such other auditing procedures as we considered necessary
in the circumstances.
In our opinion, the statement mentioned above presents fairly the receipts
and expenditures of the current funds of the Chicago Natural History Museum
for the year ended December 31, 1962, in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles applied on a basis consistent with that of the preceding year.
Arthur Young & Company
January 18, 1963
93
USE DURING 1962 OF SPECIAL FUNDS
CONTRIBUTED IN FORMER YEARS
Anthropology Purchase Fund $ 848.23
Edward E. Ayer Lecture Foundation
Cost of Museum lecture series 4,825.00
Subsidy to publication program 1,884.39
Frederick and Abby Kettelle Babcock Fund
Subsidy to publication program 2,371.24
Botany Purchase Fund 25.00
Mrs. Joan A. Chalmers Bequest Fund.
Purchase of specimens 2,521.59
Laboratory equipment 531.19
Emily Crane Chadbourne Zoology Fund
Collection purchased 1,200.00
Conover Game-Bird Fund
Purchase of specimens 2,000.00
Emmet R. Blake, study trip 125.00
Robert L. Fleming, field trip 300.00
D. S. Rabor, field trip 600.00
Thomas J. Dee Fellowship Fund
Fellowship grants to:
Philip J. C. Dark 969.78
Mrs. Mary McDermut 4,500.00
Rogers McVaugh 600.00
D. S. Rabor 500.00
Mrs. Barbara Solem 500.00
Mrs. Maria Weiss 600.00
Geology Purchase Fund 206.25
Group Insurance Fund*
Group insurance costs 22,548.35
Maxwell Hahn Anthropology Fund
Southwest Archaeological Expedition 50.00
N. W. Harris Public School Extension Fund
Preparation, care, and distribution of exhibits to Chicago schools. . 24,359.46
Library FuNDf
Purchase of books and periodicals 5,177.14
National Science Foundation
Research grants (13 projects) 52,495.32
James Nelson and Anna Louise Raymond Public School and
Children's Lecture Fund
Subsidy to public school and children's lecture program 40,142.08
Donald Richards Fund
Purchase of specimens 31.00
Maurice L. Richardson Paleontological Fund
Field trip to Wyoming 839.49
Field trip to northern high plains and mountain states 623.74
Field trip to New Haven 127.78
* Established by Stanley Field
t Established by Edward E. Ayer, Huntington W. Jackson, Arthur B. Jones, and
Julius and Augusta N. Rosenwald
94
Judd Sackheim Anthropology Fund
Southwest Archaeological Expedition 250.00
Karl P. Schmidt Fund
Study grants 257.78
W. S. and J. K. Street Iranian Expedition Fund
Expedition expenses 23,250.00
United States Army, Walter Reed Army Medical Center
Research grant 3,571.95
A. Rush Watkins Zoology Fund
Purchases 101.10
Zoology Purchase Fund 165.55
These funds have been used in accordance with the stipulations under which
they were accepted by the Museum. In addition, the income from more than
$15,000,000 of unrestricted endowment funds was used in general Museum operation.
Contributions and Bequests
Contributions and bequests to Chicago Natural History
Museum may be made in securities, money, books, or
collections. They may, if desired, take the form of a
memorial to a person or cause, to be named by the giver.
For those desirous of making bequests to the Museum,
the following form is suggested:
FORM OF BEQUEST
I do hereby give and bequeath to Chicago Natural
History Museum of the City of Chicago, State of Illinois:
Cash contributions made within the taxable year to Chicago
Natural History Museum to an amount not in excess of
20 per cent of the taxpayer's net income are allowable as
deductions in computing net income for federal income tax
95
ACCESSIONS IN 1962
DEPARTMENT OF
ANTHROPOLOGY
Adler, Donald, Chicago: 2 Japanese
coins — Japan (gift)
Atwater, A. G., Chicago: gold breast-
plate in Quimbaya style — Colombia
(gift)
Bahr, Miss Edna H., Ridgefield,
Connecticut: 27 pieces of velvet (mostly
table and chair covers) and 15 miscel-
laneous textiles — China (gift)
Beyer, Dr. H. Otley, Manila: 15
Neolithic stone tools — Batangas Prov-
ince, Luzon, Philippine Islands (gift)
Bieber, Miss Caroline Frances,
Santa Fe, New Mexico: 237 toggles, 1
book on textile designs, 1 hair ornament,
1 lion figure, 1 jade ring — China (gift) ;
9 netsuke — Japan (gift) ; 1 puppet head
— Indonesia (gift)
Brittingham, Mrs. Irene, Wash-
ington, D.C.: archaeological and ethno-
logical specimens — Peru, Bolivia, Ecua-
dor, Paraguay, Philippines, and Paki-
stan (gift); 3 pieces of silver jewelry —
Bolivia (gift)
Chicago Natural History Museum:
Collected by Dr. Paul S. Martin
(Southwest Archaeological Expedition,
1962): 516 stone, bone, shell, and pot-
tery artifacts, 28 pottery vessels (12
"whole," 16 "restorable"), 4 textile
fragments, 4 human skeletons, 9 car-
tons of potsherds, 4 cartons of flint
chips, 4 cartons of bone and charcoal,
1 carton of vegetal materials — Arizona
Collected by Dr. Donald Collier
(Mexico Archaeological Field Trip, 1962):
potsherds, Teotihuacan I style, from
the trenches in the south platform of
Plaza I, Oztoyahualco, made by Car-
men Cook de Leonard in 1957-59 —
Teotihuacan, Mexico
Purchases: ethnological material
(253 items) from Tibet and contiguous
areas; 1 Chinese abacus; 2 Eskimo masks
made in 1961 at Amuktuvuk Pass, Alas-
ka; costumes (27 items) mostly from
Karen tribe, Burma; 268 ethnological
specimens from Shipibo, Ishkonahua,
and Witoto Indians of Peru and from
Yahgan Indians of Chile; approximately
1,500 specimens, C. F. Bieber Collection
of Asian Folk and Minor Arts, mainly
from China
Transfer: hat, rainhat, 2 raincoats
and mat, all of rice straw (purchased
from American Trading Company in
1912, made in Japan), and "deck" of
96 Indian playing cards (collected in
Jaipur, India, in 1912 by C. F. Mill-
spaugh) — from Department of Botany,
Chicago Natural History Museum
Cowen, Miss Edna T., Oak Park,
Illinois: 6 pottery vessels — Southwest
United States (gift)
Despres, Leon M., Chicago: piece
of manilla (metal currency) — Kano, Ni-
geria (gift)
Ericsson, Mrs. Florence Sargent,
Chicago: 2 buffalo robes — Plains, United
States (gift)
Evangelista, Alfredo, Manila: 2
prehistoric pottery jars — Luzon, Philip-
pine Islands (gift)
Felix, Mrs. Benjamin Bates, Dun-
dee, Illinois: 2 pairs of moccasins — Wis-
consin (gift)
Frederick, Mr. and Mrs. Clar-
ence L., Chicago: 2 carved wooden fig-
urines from Senufo Tribe, West Sudan,
and 1 carved wooden antelope, Bam-
bara Tribe, West Sudan — Africa (gift)
Fuller, Mrs. A. W. F., London: a
pictorial record of Plains Indians in a
notebook, done in European style —
Plains, United States (gift)
Hamilton, Mrs. James H., Evan-
ston, Illinois: Navaho blanket and piece
of Mexican drawnwork — Southwest
United States and Mexico (gift)
Hester, Evett D., Chicago: pottery
jar found buried along the Tobuk River
— Northern Luzon, Philippine Islands
(gift)
Li Tsung-T'ung, Professor, Tai-
pei, Formosa: hand towel or cover for
the hard Chinese pillow — China (gift)
Oetjen, Miss Joanna V., Chicago:
Hopi jar, black-on-orange, and piece of
petrified wood — New Mexico (gift)
Schallerer, Miss M. H., Chicago:
mask carved of whalebone, prehistoric
Eskimo, probably from Pt. Barrow re-
gion— Alaska (gift)
Smith, Miss Harriet M., Evanston,
Illinois: Sioux war club — Dakota Ter-
ritory, United States (gift)
Suttie, Mrs. Melvin D., North
Aurora, Illinois: pair of cloth boots with
fur lining — -Hankow area, China (gift)
96
Ware, Louis, Winnetka, Illinois: 2
rugs — Bokharat, Persia
DEPARTMENT OF
BOTANY
Academy of Sciences of the Ukrain-
ian S.S.R., Kiev, U.S.S.R.: 422 vascu-
lar plants (exchange)
Aristeguieta, Dr. Leandro, Cara-
cas, Venezuela: 2 specimens of Bacopa
(gift)
Arizona, University of, Tucson:
165 pollen slides (exchange)
Bennett, Holly Reed, Chicago:
3,945 vascular plants (gift)
Bold, Dr. Harold C, Austin, Texas:
22 specimens of algal type material (gift)
British Museum (Natural His-
tory), London: 229 vascular plants (ex-
change)
Brown, Mrs. G. K., Mequon, Wis-
consin: specimen of Matthiola bicornis
(gift)
California, University of, Berke-
ley: 66 vascular plants (exchange) and
482 vascular plants (Fifth and Sixth
Expeditions to the Andes, in which this
Museum participated by financial con-
tribution)
Carlson, Dr. Margery C, Evans-
ton, Illinois: 461 vascular plants (gift)
Chicago Natural History Museum:
Collected by Dr. John W. Thieret
(Northwest Territories Botanical Expe-
dition, 1961-62) : 90 vascular plants
Purchases: 34 ferns from Malaya, 440
vascular plants from Borneo and Bo-
livia, 150 mosses from Czechoslovakia,
and 75 vascular plants from South
Africa
Cinncinati, University of, Cincin-
nati, Ohio: 3 slides of wood sections
(gift)
Daniel, Hno., Medellin, Colombia:
12 vascular plants (gift)
Delhi, University of, New Delhi,
India: 50 microslides of sectioned plant
parts (exchange)
Escuela Agricola Panamericana,
Tegucigalpa, Honduras: 1,129 vascular
plants (exchange)
Florida, University of, Gainesville:
128 vascular plants (gift)
Georgia, University of, Athens: 1
specimen of Paspalumfimbriatum HBK.
(exchange)
Gibson, Dorothy, Waukegan, Illi-
nois: 40 cryptogams (gift)
Gibson, Robert F., Waukegan, Illi-
nois: 7 specimens of fungi (gift)
Gray Herbarium, Harvard Uni-
versity, Cambridge, Massachusetts:
682 photographs of fern type specimens
and 1 photocopy of the Catalogue of
Pteridophyta of the Willdenow Her-
barium (exchange)
Heller, A. H., Managua, Nicara-
gua: 4 vascular plants and 1 drawing
(gift)
Herbarium Bradeanum, Rio de Ja-
neiro, Brazil: 400 vascular plants (ex-
change)
Instituto Agronomico do Sul, Pe-
lotas, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil: 181
vascular plants (exchange)
Illinois, University of, Urbana:
200 vascular plants (exchange)
Iowa, State University of, Iowa
City: 446 vascular plants (exchange)
Kaplan, Dr. Lawrence, Chicago:
39 specimens of pines (gift)
Lankester, C. H., San Jose, Costa
Rica: 6 vascular plants (gift)
McVaugh, Dr. Rogers, Ann Arbor,
Michigan: 87 specimens of Orchidaceae
(gift)
Michigan, University of, Ann Ar-
bor: 504 plant specimens (209 bryo-
phytes and 295 vascular plants) (ex-
change)
Michigan State University, East
Lansing: 66 vascular plants (exchange)
Mount Marty College, Yankton,
Dakota: 118 pollen slides (exchange)
Murdy, Ray, Aberdeen, South Da-
kota: 8 specimens of aquatic plants (gift)
National Museum of Canada, Ot-
tawa, Ontario: 492 vascular plants (ex-
change)
Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna,
Austria: 100 cryptogams (exchange)
Oulu, University of, Oulu, Finland:
198 plant specimens (76 cryptogams and
122 vascular plants) (exchange)
Pan American Petroleum Corpo-
ration, Tulsa, Oklahoma: 424 pollen
slides (exchange)
Pivorunas, August, Chicago: 6
specimens of fungi (gift)
Ponce de Leon, Dr. Patricio, Chi-
cago: 430 cryptogams (gift)
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Sur-
rey, England: 61 specimens of Gramin-
eae and 1 photograph of the type speci-
97
men of Jacaranda egleri Sandwith
(exchange)
Rudd, Dr. Velva, Washington, D.C.:
8 vascular plants (gift)
Sauer, Dr. Jonathan, Madison,
Wisconsin: 108 beach plants (gift)
Schipp, W. A., Perthville, New South
Wales, Australia: 6 original water color
drawings of Central American plants
(exchange)
Shell Development Company,
Houston, Texas: 193 pollen slides (ex-
change)
Sherff, Dr. Earl E., Hastings,
Michigan: 37 vascular plants (gift)
Smiley, Nixon, Miami, Florida:
specimen of Mimosa (gift)
Solem, Dr. Alan, Chicago: 2 speci-
mens of mosses (gift)
Southwestern Louisiana, Univer-
sity of, Lafayette: 111 plant specimens
(99 vascular plants and 12 bryophytes)
(exchange)
Stuessy, Tod, Lake Bluff, Illinois:
56 cryptogams (gift)
Texas Research Foundation, Ren-
ner: 153 vascular plants (exchange)
Texas, University of, Austin: 665
vascular plants (exchange)
Thieret, Dr. John W., Lafayette,
Louisiana: 43 vascular plants (gift)
United States National Museum,
Washington, D.C.: 648 vascular plants
(exchange)
Watson, Joseph, Columbia, Ken-
tucky: 7 specimens of algae (gift)
Williams, Dr. Louis O., Park For-
est, 111.: 48 vascular plants (gift)
DEPARTMENT
GEOLOGY
OF
Academy of Sciences, Paleonto-
logical Institute, Moscow, U.S.S.R.:
Permian reptiles and amphibians — vari-
ous localities (exchange)
American Museum of Natural
History, New York: cast of skullroot
of fossil fish — Australia (gift)
Armistead, Robert, Chiefland, Flor-
ida: fossil bone fragments — Florida (gift)
Bannister, Archie, Twin Lakes,
Wisconsin: fossil mammal fragment —
locality unknown (gift)
Beeger, Richard, Houghton, Mich-
igan: mineral specimens — various local-
ities (gift)
Beerbower, Dr. James, Easton,
Pennsylvania: fossil fish specimens —
Maryland (gift)
Beyer, Dr. H. Otley, Manila: tek-
tites — Philippine Islands (gift)
Bock, Dr. Wilhelm, Philadelphia:
fossil fish specimens — locality unknown
(gift)
Brown, Neal, Billings, Montana:
fossil and mineral specimens and 4 maps
— various localities (gift)
California Standard Company,
Edmonton, Alberta: fossil fishes — Brit-
ish Columbia (gift)
Chalmers Crystal Fund, William
J. : minerals and tektites — various local-
ities (purchase)
Chicago, University of, Chicago:
ore specimens (E. S. Bastin collection)
— various localities (permanent loan);
Permian reptiles, fossil fish specimens,
and well samples of calcareous shale —
various localities (gift)
Chicago Natural History Museum:
Collected by Dr. Robert H. Denison
and William D. Kelly (field work, 1962):
fossil fishes — Michigan
Collected by Dr. Eugene S. Richard-
son, Jr. (Wyoming Invertebrate Pale-
ontological Field Trip, 1962) : numerous
fossils — Wyoming
Collected by Dr. Richardson (field
work, 1962): numerous fossil inverte-
brates— Illinois
Collected by William D. Turnbull
(Rocky Mountain Paleontological Field
Trip, 1962) : fossil mammals — Wyoming
Collected by Dr. Bertram G. Wood-
land (Black Hills Geological Field Trip,
1962): mineral specimens — various lo-
calities
Choate, Joe H., Rapid City, South
Dakota: chert nodules — South Dakota
(gift)
Clark, Dr. John, Spearfish, South
Dakota: fossil invertebrates, fishes, rep-
tiles, and minerals — various localities
(gift)
Cook, Mr. and Mrs. Harry, Lovell,
Wyoming: 4 rough sapphires — Wyo-
ming (gift)
Darsow, Dr. William F., Chicago:
mineral specimen — locality unknown
(gift)
Dawson, Norman R., San Marcos,
California: mineral specimens — Califor-
nia (exchange)
Denison, Dr. Robert H., and David
Denison, Highland Park, Illinois: fos-
sil invertebrates — Illinois (gift)
98
Dineley, Dr. David L., Ottawa,
Canada: cone-in-cone concretion speci-
mens— Nova Scotia (gift)
Dreyfuss, Louis, Evergreen Park,
Illinois: fossil invertebrate — Illinois (gift)
Evans, Glen L., Caldwell, Idaho:
petrified wood — various localities (ex-
change)
Furdyna, J. K., Cambridge, Massa-
chusetts: cone-in-cone concretion speci-
men— Montana (gift)
Furnish, W. M., Iowa City, Iowa:
fragment of fossil invertebrate — Wyo-
ming (gift)
Gilbert, Mr. and Mrs. Tinkham,
Salem, Oregon: polished "thunderegg"
— locality unknown (gift)
Gunnell, E. M., Denver, Colorado:
minerals — various localities (exchange)
Heston, William, Chicago: fossil
invertebrates, plants, and mammals —
South Dakota (gift)
Holman, Larry, Dixfield, Maine:
mineral — locality unknown (gift)
Jensen, James, Provo, Utah: fossil
fishes — Utah (exchange)
Kemp, Miss Doris, Riverdale, Illi-
nois: mineral — Iowa (gift)
Kietzke, Kenneth, Spearfish, South
Dakota: fossil reptile and fish specimens
— various localities (gift)
Kosanke, R. M., Chicago: mineral
specimens — various localities (gift)
Krzton, John, Chicago: kunzite
specimen — locality unknown (exchange) ;
mineral specimens — locality unknown
(gift)
Leinbach, Winifred, Elkhart, Indi-
ana: fossil mammal fragments — Ohio
(gift)
Loupekin, Professor I. S., Nairobi,
Kenya: mineral specimens — various lo-
calities (gift)
Martin, Harold, Rapid City, South
Dakota: cone-in-cone concretion speci-
mens— South Dakota (gift)
Millar, John R., Skokie, Illinois:
mineral — Florida (gift)
OPPENHErMER, SEYMOUR, MRS. FLOR-
ine G. Oppenheimer, and Mrs. Babs
O. Weiss, Chicago: diamond pin (gift)
Orr, James, Chicago: fossil inverte-
brates— Montana (gift)
Palmer, Dr. A. R., Washington,
D.C.: cone-in-cone concretion and coned
concretion — various localities (gift)
Patterson, Walter P., Lombard,
Illinois: invertebrate fossil — Minnesota
(gift)
Princeton University, Princeton,
New Jersey: cast of fossil reptile skull
and jaws (exchange)
Rapp, Dr. George, Rapid City,
South Dakota: mineral specimens —
various localities (gift)
Reichel-Dolmatoff, Gerardo, Co-
lombia, South America: molar of fossil
mammal — Ecuador (gift)
Richardson, Dr. Eugene S., Jr.,
Gurnee, Illinois: invertebrate fossils,
fossil plants, and a mineral — Pennsyl-
vania (gift)
Richardson Paleontological Fund,
Maurice L. : fossil reptiles and fishes —
various localities (purchase)
Rogers, A. J., Sanford, Michigan:
fossil fishes — Michigan (gift)
Schade, Mrs. George, Glenview,
Illinois: coprolite — Illinois (gift)
Scott, S., Custer, South Dakota:
mineral specimens — various localities
(gift)
Sestini, Dr. Julian, Chicago: min-
erals— Illinois (gift)
Slaughter, A. L., Lead, South Da-
kota: mineral specimens — South Dakota
(gift)
Slaughter, Dr. Robert H., Dallas,
Texas: cast of fossil mammal (exchange)
Sloan, Dr. Robert, Minneapolis:
cast of fossil mammal (gift)
Soper, Ellis Clark, Franklin, North
Carolina: mineral — Argentina (gift)
Teller, S. A., Chicago: volcanic
sands — New Zealand (gift)
United States National Museum,
Washington, D.C.: mineral — Ceylon
(exchange)
Victoria University of Welling-
ton, Wellington, New Zealand: 2 mete-
orite fragments — Taranaki, North Is-
land, New Zealand (exchange)
Vinje, Dr. and Mrs. Edmund G.,
Hazen, North Dakota: fossil fishes, rep-
tiles, mammals, invertebrates, and plants
—North Dakota (gift)
Wollin, Jay, Morton Grove, Illi-
nois: 2 cone-in-cone specimens — Kansas
(gift); fossiliferous microbreccia — Iowa
(gift)
Woodland, Dr. Bertram G., Home-
wood, Illinois: 30 mineral specimens —
Vermont (gift)
Zangerl, Dr. Rainer, Hazel Crest,
Illinois: fossil reptile bone, gar pike
scales, 42 specimens of paleoniscoids —
various localities (gift)
99
Zelnick, Gale, Broadview, Illinois:
38 fossil invertebrates — Illinois (gift)
DEPARTMENT OF
ZOOLOGY
Academy of Natural Sciences of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: 50 lots of
non-marine shells — British Honduras
(gift)
Adler, Kraig K., Columbus, Ohio:
2 salamanders — United States (gift)
American Museum of Natural His-
tory, New York: mammal — Peru (ex-
change)
Arslan, Muhammad, Lahore, Paki-
stan: 3 mammals — Pakistan (gift)
Ballew, William, Pensacola, Flor-
ida: turtle — Kentucky (gift)
Benesh, Bernard, Burrville, Ten-
nessee: 167 insects — South America,
chiefly Chile (gift); 28 insects — South
America and East Asia (gift)
Bergeron, Eugene S., Balboa, Canal
Zone: 45 non-marine mollusks — Panama
(gift)
Berry, Mrs. P. Y., Kuala Lumpur,
Malaya: 8 frogs, 27 frog tadpoles —
Malaya (exchange)
Biggs, The Reverend H. E. J.,
Bromley, Kent, England: 6 land snails
— Solomon Islands (gift)
Blake, Miss Elizabeth, Evanston,
Illinois: bird — Illinois (gift)
BOKERMANN, Dr. WERNER C. A.,
Sao Paulo, Brazil: 28 frogs — Brazil (ex-
change) ; 2 frogs — Brazil (gift)
Borgmeier, Father Thomas,
O.F.M., Jacarepagua, Brazil: 257 in-
sects— Argentina, Brazil, and Costa
Rica (gift)
Brigham Young University, Provo,
Utah: 1,151 insects — Nevada (perma-
nent loan)
British Museum (Natural His-
tory), London: frog tadpole — Sarawak
(exchange)
Burch, John Q., Los Angeles: 2 ma-
rine shells — Lower California, Mexico
(gift)
California Academy of Sciences,
San Francisco: 15 lots of nonmarine
mollusks — Africa and India (exchange)
California at Los Angeles, Uni-
versity of, Los Angeles: 5 fishes— Gulf
of California (gift)
Campbell, Milton, Urbana, Illinois:
2 insects — Panama (gift)
Camras, Dr. Sidney J., Chicago: 9
insects — United States (gift)
Canfield, Phillip, Rockford, Illi-
nois: 4 lots of fresh- water shells — Illinois
(gift)
Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh, Penn-
sylvania: 1 bird — Brazil (exchange); 5
fishes — Argentina (gift)
Cei, Dr. Jose M., Mendoza, Argen-
tina: frog — Costa Rica (exchange)
Chicago, University of, Chicago:
1 mammal, 250 lots of marine, land, and
fresh-water shells — various localities
(gift)
Chicago Natural History Museum:
Collected by Harry A. Beatty (Gui-
ana Zoological Expedition, 1960-61):
141 mammals, 279 birds, 2 fishes-
Surinam
Collected by Philip Hershkovitz (Suri-
nam zoological field trip, 1961-62): 369
mammals, 16 amphibians and reptiles —
Surinam
Collected by D. S. Rabor (Philippine
zoological field work, 1961-62): 30 mam-
mals, 1,963 birds — Philippine Islands
Collected by Melvin A. Traylor, Jr.
(Africa zoological field trip, 1961-62):
73 mammals, 1,495 birds, 2 bird nests,
1 frog — Africa (Northern Rhodesia and
Bechuanaland)
Collected by William D. Turnbull
(Rocky Mountain paleontological field
trip, 1962): 4 mammals, numerous land
snails — Colorado
Collected by A. Rush Watkins (Rush
Watkins zoological field trip to Tahiti,
1962): 1,267 fishes, 20 land crabs, 6 lots
of invertebrates — Tahiti
Purchases: 887 mammals; 1,685 birds
and 1 egg; 1,336 amphibians and rep-
tiles; 86,728 insects; 634 specimens, 148
lots, and 1 large collection of lower in-
vertebrates
Chicago Zoological Society, Brook-
field, Illinois: 26 mammals, 11 birds, 16
amphibians and reptiles — world-wide
(gift)
Chin, Phui-Kong, Jesselton, North
Borneo: 30 sea snakes — North Borneo
(exchange)
Clancey, P. A., Durban, South Af-
rica: bird — South Africa (gift)
Colorado, University of, Museum,
Boulder: 5 lizards — Mexico (gift)
Cooper, Dr. Kenneth W., Hanover,
New Hampshire: 2 beetles — New Jersey
(gift)
100
Cornfield, Mrs. Edith, Riverdale,
New York: 4 sea shells — Maine (gift)
Daleske, Donald J., Urbana, Illi-
nois: 34 brook lampreys — Illinois (gift)
Davis, Dr. Charles C, Cleveland,
Ohio: about 40 fresh- water snails — El
Salvador (gift)
de Maeyer, Francis, Chicago: 3
birds — Mexico (gift)
Dominion Museum, Wellington, New
Zealand: 2 birds — New Zealand (gift)
Drake, Dr. Robert, Vancouver,
British Columbia: landsnail — Mexico
(gift)
Dunn, Mrs. Emmet Reid, Bryn
Mawr, Pennsylvania: 829 publications
on mammals (gift)
Dvorak, Stanley J., Chicago: 4 ma-
rine shells — Australia and Philippine
Islands (exchange, gift)
Eigsti, W. E., Hastings, Nebraska:
8 grasshoppers — Nebraska (gift)
Eisenmann, Ralph, Chicago: 17 birds
— Illinois (gift)
Emerson, Dr. Alfred E., Chicago:
1,028 ants— United States (gift)
Emerson, Colonel K. C, Arlington,
Virginia: 277 bird lice — world-wide (gift)
Engelmann, Mr. and Mrs. George
W., Palos Heights, Illinois: bird-
Illinois (gift)
Ericsson, Mrs. Florence Sargent,
Chicago: 9 mammal specimens — north-
western North America (gift)
Evans, Dr. Howard, Ithaca, New
York: numerous fresh-water snails —
New York (gift)
Evenson, Miss Joanne L., Chicago:
land snail — Michigan (gift)
Fechtner, Frederick R., Rockford,
Illinois: 23 lots of fresh- water mollusks
— Minnesota (gift); 41 fresh-water
clams — Illinois (gift)
Fleming, Dr. Robert L., Kathman-
du, Nepal: 18 birds, 37 amphibians and
reptiles — Nepal (gift)
Frederick, Mrs. Clarence L., Chi-
cago: 3 marine shells — Africa (gift)
Fulton, Dr. MacDonald, Chicago:
156 amphibians and reptiles — Puerto
Rico (gift)
Gans, Dr. Carl, Buffalo: lizard —
Tanganyika (exchange); 2 mammals —
Somali Republic (gift)
Giske, Richard, Round Lake, Illi-
nois: ground squirrel — Illinois (gift)
Gordon, Dr. Malcolm S., Los An-
geles: 175 frogs — Thailand (gift)
Gregg, Dr. Clifford C, Valparaiso,
Indiana: 3 eggs — Indiana (gift); 12 in-
sects— Switzerland (gift); land snail —
Indiana (gift)
Gregory, Stephen S., Northbrook,
Illinois: 5 birds — Illinois (gift)
Guerrero, Mrs. Nidia, Chicago:
snake — Paraguay (gift)
Hadfield, Mrs. Rita, Chicago: 7,115
ants — world-wide, but chiefly midwest-
em United States (gift)
Haile, Dr. Neville S., Jesselton,
North Borneo: 69 non-marine mollusks
— North Borneo (gift)
Harrisson, Dr. Tom, Kuching, Sara-
wak: 2 lizards, 585 fishes — Sarawak
(gift)
Hart, Mrs. Chester H., Oak Park
Illinois: volute shell — Australia (gift)
Heath, Miss Helen, Chicago: bird
— Illinois (gift)
Hocking, Peter, Yarino Cocha, Peru:
2 birds — Illinois and Wisconsin (gift);
53 birds— Peru (gift)
Holtz, Mrs. R. D., Homewood, Illi-
nois: 2 birds — Illinois (gift)
Hoogstraal, Dr. Harry, Cairo,
Egypt: 124 mammals, 485 birds, 63
amphibians and reptiles, 83 insects-
Egypt, Lebanon, Southern Rhodesia,
and Sudan (gift)
Hoy, Gunnar, Salta, Argentina: 16
birds — Argentina (gift)
Hubricht, Leslie, Meridian, Missis-
sippi: 23 fresh-water snails — eastern
North America (exchange); 850 non-
marine mollusks — Alabama and Ten-
nessee (exchange)
Hungerford, Dr. H. B., Lawrence,
Kansas: 4 insects -Australia, Madagas-
car, and Solomon Islands (gift)
Illinois State Normal University,
Normal: 8 fishes — various localities (ex-
change)
Irmischer, Paul, Chicago: fish —
Illinois (gift)
Jackson, Ralph, Cambridge, Mary-
land: 125 non-marine mollusks — Flor-
ida, North Carolina, and Texas (gift)
King, F. Wayne, Chicago: lizard —
Bahamas (gift)
Krauss, Dr. N. L. H., Honolulu: 2
frogs — Brazil (gift); 1 snake — Cuba
(gift)
Kuns, Dr. M. L., Madison, Wiscon-
sin: lizard and snake — Puerto Rico (gift)
Kuntz, Dr. Robert E., care of APO,
San Francisco: 646 amphibians and rep-
101
tiles — Formosa, Korea, and Philippine
Islands (gift); 369 fishes — Palawan,
Philippine Islands (gift)
Lim, BooLiat, Kuala Lumpur, Ma-
laya: 2 snakes — Malaya (gift)
Lincoln Park Zoological Society,
Chicago: 8 mammals, 1 bird, 7 amphib-
ians and reptiles — various localities (gift)
Lowe, Dr. Charles H., Jr., Tucson,
Arizona: 2 snakes — Arizona (gift)
Lynch, John D., Normal, Illinois:
snake — Illinois (gift)
Massoia, Dr. Elio, Buenos Aires,
Argentina: 5 mammals — Argentina
(gift)
Maurer, Miss M. Dianne, Palatine,
Illinois: bird — Illinois (gift)
Medem, Dr. Frederick, Bogota,
Colombia: 8 amphibians and reptiles —
Colombia (exchange)
Menzies, J. I., London: 23 amphib-
ians and reptiles — Sierra Leone (gift)
Michigan, University of, Ann Ar-
bor: 151 birds — India, Iran, and Nepal
(exchange)
Musee d'Histoire Naturelle "Gri-
gore Antipa," Bucharest, Rumania: 60
amphibians and reptiles — Rumania (ex-
change)
Museo Argentino de Ciencias
Naturales, Buenos Aires, Argentina:
frog — Argentina (exchange)
Museum G. Frey, Munich, Germany:
40 beetles — Africa, Asia, and Europe
(exchange)
Museum National d'Histoire Nat-
urelle, Paris: fish — off West Africa
(exchange)
Naturhistorisches Museum, Vien-
na, Austria: frog — Celebes (exchange)
Natur-Museum und Forschungs-
Institut "Senckenberg," Frankfurt-
am-Main, Germany: 9 fresh- water mus-
sels— Transvaal (exchange)
Nelson, Dr. Edward M., San Juan,
Puerto Rico: 1 mammal, 70 amphibians
and reptiles, numerous mixed inverte-
brate animals — Puerto Rico (gift)
Nevo, Eliatar, Galil Maravi, Israel:
52 frogs — Israel (exchange)
Oregon, University of, Eugene:
900 land and fresh-water mollusks —
Oregon (gift)
Pasteur, Dr. Georges, Rabat, Mo-
rocco: 2 lizards — Madagascar and
Morocco (exchange)
Phelps, William H., Caracas, Vene-
zuela: 4 birds — Venezuela (exchange)
Phillips, Dr. Craig, Washington,
D.C.: 3 fishes— British West Indies
(gift)
Pope, Clifford H., Winnetka, Illi-
nois: snake — Wisconsin (gift)
Pope, Mrs. Henry, Glencoe, Illinois:
about 3,000 marine shells — Bahamas
(gift)
Puerto Rico, University of, Maya-
guez: whale — Puerto Rico (exchange)
Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke
Histoire, Leiden, The Netherlands:
6 snakes — Java and Sumatra (exchange)
Robinson, Douglas C, College Sta-
tion, Texas: lizard — Mexico (gift)
Romer, J. D., Hong Kong: 10 am-
phibians and reptiles — Hong Kong (gift)
Roscoe, Ernest J., Chicago: 320
publications on malacology (gift)
Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto:
12 fishes — Canada (gift)
Ryckman, Dr. Raymond E., Loma
Linda, California: 17 batflies — Mexico
(exchange)
Savage, Dr. Jay M., Los Angeles:
12 amphibians and reptiles — western
United States (exchange)
Schad, Dr. Gerry A., Quebec: snake
— Ecuador (gift)
Shedd Aquarium, John G., Chicago:
2 turtles — North America (gift); 15 fishes
— Hawaii (gift)
Smith, Dr. Leslie M., Davis, Cali-
fornia: 12 insects — United States (gift)
Smith, R. E., Oaklawn, Illinois: bird
— Illinois (gift)
South African Museum, Cape
Town: 4 beetles — South Africa (ex-
change)
Stanford University, California: 3
amphibians and reptiles — Philippine
Islands (exchange); 6 fishes — Antarc-
tica (gift)
Steeves, Harrison R., Jr., Birming-
ham, Alabama: 4,822 beetles — south-
eastern United States, chiefly Alabama
(gift)
Stille, Walter T., Rochester, New
York: 3,000 ampibians and reptiles —
United States (gift)
Tarpon Zoo, Tarpon Springs, Flor-
ida: frog — Colombia (gift)
Turnbull, William D., and Dr.
Rainer Zangerl, Chicago: 61 land
shells — Texas (gift)
Umtali Museum, Umtali, Southern
Rhodesia: 14 snakes — Northern Rhode-
sia and Southern Rhodesia (exchange)
102
United States Fish and Wildlife
Service, La Jolla, California: 12 fishes
— Galapagos Islands, Mexico, and Pan-
ama (gift); Pascagoula, Mississippi: 803
fishes — various localities (gift); Wash-
ington, D.C.: fish — eastern Ecuador
(gift)
Vaiden, M. G., Rosedale, Missis-
sippi: 2 birds — Mississippi (exchange)
Walsh, Fraser, care of APO, New
York: 3 birds— Turkey (gift)
Washburn, Dr. Robert, Milwau-
kee, Wisconsin: 12 pond snails — Wis-
consin (gift)
Weaver, James, Rockford, Illinois:
7 birds — Illinois (gift)
Wisconsin, University of, Madi-
son: 530 lots of fishes — Wisconsin (gift)
World Book Encyclopedia of Field
Enterprises, Chicago: World Book
Encyclopedia Scientific Expedition to
the Himalayas: 152 mammals, 3 fishes
—Nepal (gift)
Young, Dr. Frank, Bloomington,
Indiana: 14 beetles — Florida and Mich-
igan (gift)
Yunker, Dr. Conrad, Balboa
Heights, Canal Zone: 7 lizards and
snakes — Panama (exchange) ; lizard and
snake — Panama (gift)
Zickman, Mrs. R., Villa Park, Illi-
nois: 24 wasps — Wisconsin (gift)
Zoologisch Museum, Amsterdam,
The Netherlands: frog — Java (exchange)
RAYMOND FOUNDATION
Brittingham, Mrs. Irene, Washing-
ton, D.C.: 9 wooden dolls — Korea (gift);
2 carved wooden figures depicting In-
dians of Ecuador — Ecuador (gift); 23
figures of brass and silver and 2 figures
in full costume of Indiansjfof Peru —
Peru (gift)
Row, Peterson and Company,
Evanston, Illinois: 16 film strips on
geology (gift)
Teller, Sidney A., Chicago: small
bottle of "Sands of Sahara" — Egypt
(gift)
DIVISION OF
PHOTOGRAPHY
Chicago Natural History Museum
Made by Division of Photography —
2,428 negatives, 32,428 contact prints,
2,688 enlargements, 247 Kodachromes,
208 lantern slides, 7 rolls of film de-
veloped
DIVISION OF
MOTION PICTURES
Atlantis Productions, Inc., Holly-
wood, California: "African Girl — Mal-
obi" (390-foot sound/color film) (pur-
chase)
Chicago Natural History Museum
"Field Studies in Central American
Volcanology" (expedition, Dr. Sharat K.
Roy) (2,700-foot silent/color film)
Film Associates, Hollywood, Cali-
fornia: "Our Changing World" (600-
foot sound/color film) (purchase)
LIBRARY OF
THE MUSEUM
Archer, Dr. W. Andrew, College Park,
Maryland
Bieber, Miss Caroline Frances,
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Bouge, Madame L. J., Paris, France
Collier, Dr. Donald, Chicago
Denison, Dr. Robert H., Highland Park,
Illinois
Field, Dr. Henry, Coconut Grove,
Florida
Field, Stanley, Lake Bluff, Illinois
Gregg, Dr. Clifford C, Valparaiso,
Indiana
Haas, Dr. Fritz, Chicago
Hambly, Dr. W. H., Chicago
Hisamatsu, Dr. Sadanari, Entomological
Laboratory, College of Agriculture,
Ehime University, Japan
Inger, Dr. Robert F., Homewood,
Illinois
The John Crerar Library, Chicago
Langhorne, Mrs. George Tayloe,
Chicago
McDharlin, Mrs. Marjorie Batchelder,
Santa Fe, New Mexico
McGhie, Mrs. George, Lake Bluff,
Illinois
Martin, Dr. Paul S., Winnetka, Illinois
Oetjen, Miss Joanna V., Chicago
Peterson, Howard R., Chicago
Pfiffner, E. John, Palatine, Illinois
Richardson, E. Stanley, Philadelphia
103
Richardson, Dr. Eugene S., Jr., Gurnee, Thurow, Donald Ralph, Dallas, Texas
Illinois Valy, Eugene E., Chicago
Roscoe, Ernest J., Chicago Ward, Mrs. Cyril L., Evanston, Illinois
Schuster, Dr. Carl, Woodstock, Wenzel, Dr. Rupert L., Oak Park,
New York Illinois
State University of Iowa, College of White, F., Oxford, England
Medicine Library, Iowa City Woods, Loren P., Homewood, Illinois
Street, William S., Seattle, Washington Wren, David L., Chicago
104
MEMBERS OF THE MUSEUM
FOUNDER
Marshall Field*
BENEFACTORS
Those who have contributed $100,000 or more to the Museum
Graham, Ernest R.*
Ayer, Edward E.*
Buckingham, Miss
Kate S.*
Conover, Boardman*
Crane, Cornelius*
Crane, R. T., Jr.*
Field, Joseph N.*
Field, Marshall, III*
Field, Stanley
Field, Mrs. Stanley*
Fuller, Captain A.W.F.*
♦ deceased
Harris, Albert W.*
Harris, Norman W.*
Higinbotham, Harlow N.
Kelley, William V.*
Pullman, George M.*
Rawson, Frederick H.*
Raymond, Mrs. Anna
Louise*
Raymond, James Nelson *
Ryerson, Martin A.*
Ryerson, Mrs.
Martin A.*
Simpson, James*
Smith, Mrs. Frances
Gaylord*
Smith, George T.*
Sturges, Mrs. Mary D.*
Suarez, Mrs. Diego
HONORARY MEMBERS
Those who have rendered eminent service to Science
Beyer, Professor H. 0.
Cutting, C. Suydam
Field, Stanley
Gustaf VI, His Majesty,
King of Sweden
Suarez, Mrs. Diego
PATRONS
Those who have rendered eminent service to the Museum
Brewer, Charles H.
Calderini, Charles J.
Chadbourne, Mrs. Emily
Crane
Chancellor, Philip M.
Cutting, C. Suydam
Day, Lee Garnett
Ellsworth, Duncan S.
Fuller, Mrs. A. W. F.
DECEASED 1962
Field, Mrs. Stanley
Hancock, G. Allan
Moore, Mrs. William H.
Suarez, Mrs. Diego
White, Harold A.
CORRESPONDING MEMBERS
Scientists or patrons of science, residing in foreign countries, who have rendered
eminent service to the Museum
Humbert, Professor Henri
Keissler, Dr. Karl
105
CONTRIBUTORS
Those who have contributed $1,000 to $100,000 to the Museum
in money or materials
$75,000 to $100,000
Chancellor, Philip M.
$50,000 to $75,000
Chalmers, Mrs. Joan A.*
Dee, Thomas J.*
Keep, Chauncey*
Morton, Sterling*
Remmer, Oscar E.*
Rosenwald, Mrs.
Augusta N.*
$25,000 to $50,000
Adams, Mrs. Edith
Almy*
Babcock, Mrs. Abby K.*
Bensabott, R.*
Blackstone, Mrs.
Timothy B.*
Block, Leopold E.*
Buchen, Walther*
Coats, John*
Coburn, Mrs. Annie S.*
Crane, Charles R.*
Crane, Mrs. R. T., Jr.*
Cutting, C. Suydam
Farr, Miss Shirley*
Jones, Arthur B.*
Murphy, Walter P.*
Porter, George F.*
Richards, Donald
Richards, Elmer J.
Rosenwald, Julius*
Schmidt, Karl P.*
Vernay, Arthur S.*
White, Harold A.
$10,000 to $25,000
Adams, Joseph*
Armour, Allison V.*
Armour, P. D.*
Avery, Sewell L.*
Barnes, R. Magoon*
Bartlett, Miss Florence
Dibell*
Chadbourne, Mrs. Emily
Crane
Chalmers, William J.*
Conover, Miss
Margaret B.
Cummings, R. F.*
Everard, R. T.*
Gunsaulus, Dr. F. W.*
Hoogstraal, Harry
Insull, Samuel*
Laufer, Dr. Berthold*
Lufkin, Wallace W.*
Mandel, Leon
McCormick, Cyrus
(Estate)
McCormick, Stanley
Mitchell, John J.*
Perry, Stuart H.*
Reese, Lewis*
Richardson, Dr.
Maurice L.
Robb, Mrs. George W.*
Rockefeller Foundation,
The
Sargent, Homer E.*
Schweppe, Mrs.
Charles H.*
Straus, Mrs. Oscar S.*
Strawn, Silas H.*
Street, William S.
Strong, Walter A.*
Walpole, Stewart J.*
Watkins, Rush
Wetten, Albert H.*
Witkowsky, James*
Wrigley, William, Jr.*
$5,000 to $10,000
Adams, George E.*
Adams, Milward*
American Friends of
China
Arenberg, Albert L.
Arenberg, Mrs. Claire S.
Bartlett, A. C*
Bieber, Miss Caroline
Frances
Bishop, Heber (Estate)
Borland, Mrs. John Jay*
Borth, Edgar C*
Chicago Zoological
Society, The
Crane, R. T.*
Cuatrecasas, Dr. Jose
Doane, J. W.*
Field, Dr. Henry
Fuller, William A.*
Graves, George Coe, II*
Harris, Hayden B.*
Harris, Norman Dwight*
Harris, Mrs. Norman W.*
Haskell, Frederick T.*
Hester, Evett D.
Hutchinson, C. L.*
Keith, Edson*
Langtry, J. C.
MacLean, Mrs.
M. Haddon*
Moore, Mrs. William H.
Oppenheimer, Mrs.
Florine G.
Oppenheimer, Seymour
Payne, John Barton*
Pearsons, D. K.*
Porter, H. H.*
Ream, Norman B.*
Revell, Alexander H.*
Riley, Mrs. Charles V.*
Salie, Prince M. U. M.
Schwengel, Dr. Jeanne S.*
Searle, John G.
Sherff, Dr. Earl E.
Sprague, A. A.*
Street, Mrs. William S.
Storey, William Benson*
Telling, Miss Elisabeth
Thorne, Bruce
Tree, Lambert*
Valentine, Louis L.*
Van Evera, DeWitt
Ward, Mrs. Cyril L.
Weiss, Mrs. Babs O.
Wyatt, Alex K.
$1,000 to $5,000
Acosta Solis, Dr. M.
Alexander, Edward
Armour, Lester
Arnemann, George F.
Atwater, A. G.
Avery, Miss Clara A.*
Ayer, Mrs. Edward E.*
* deceased
106
CONTRIBUTORS (continued)
Baker, Herbert
Baker, Mrs. Herbert
Barr, Mrs. Roy Evan
Barrett, Samuel E.*
Bascom, Dr. William R.
Bennett, Holly Reed
Bishop, Dr. Louis B.*
Bishop, Mrs. Sherman C.
Blair, Watson P.*
Blair, Wm. McCormick
Blaschke, Stanley Field
Block, Mrs. Helen M.*
Borden, John*
Borgmeier, Rev. Thomas
Boulton, Rudyerd
Brown, Charles Edward*
Burt, William G.
Cahn, Dr. Alvin R.
Carman, Dr. J. Ernest
Cervenka, Joe
Clyborne, Harry Vearn
Clyborne, Mary Elizabeth
Cory, Charles B., Jr.*
Cowles, Alfred
Crocker, Templeton*
Cummings, Mrs.
Robert F.*
Cummings, Walter J.
Desloge, Joseph
Dick, Albert B., Jr.*
Doering, O. C*
Donnelley, Mrs. Ann S.
Donnelley, Elliott
Dybas, Henry S.
Eitel, Emil*
Emerson, Dr. Alfred E.
Field, Joseph N.
Field, Marshall, Jr.
Fish, Mrs. Frederick S.*
Fleming, Dr. Robert L.
Force, Dr. Roland W.
Frederick, Clarence L.
Frederick, Mrs. Helen
Fuller, Mrs. A. W. F.
Fuller, Captain A. W. P.*
Gerhard, William J.*
Gerstley, Dr. Jesse R.*
Getz, James R.
Graham, Dr. David C.
Graves, Henry, Jr.*
Gregg, Dr. Clifford C.
Grier, Mrs. Susie I.*
Gunsaulus, Miss Helen*
Gurley, William F. E.*
Hand, Miss La Verne
Harvey, Byron, III
Herz, Arthur Wolf*
Hibbard, W. G.*
Higginson, Mrs.
Charles M.*
Hill, James J.*
Hinde, Thomas W.*
Hixon, Frank P.*
Hoffman, Miss Malvina
Holabird, Mrs. John A.
Howe, Charles Albee
Hughes, Thomas S.*
Isham, Henry P.
Jackson, Huntington W.*
James, F. G.
James, S. L.
King, Joseph H.*
Knickerbocker,
Charles K.*
Kraft, James L.*
Langford, George
Lee Ling Yun
Lerner, Michael
Look, Alfred A.
Lundelius, Dr. Ernest
Maass, J. Edward*
MacLean, Haddon H.
Mandel, Fred L., Jr.
Manierre, George*
Maremont, Arnold H.
Marshall, Dr. Ruth*
Martin, Alfred T.*
Martin, Dr. Paul S.
McBain, Hughston M.
McCormick, Cyrus H.*
McCormick, Mrs. Cyrus*
McElhose, Arthur L.*
Mitchell, Clarence B.
Mitchell, William H.
Moyer, John W.
Nash, Mrs. L. Byron
Nichols, Henry W.*
Odell, Mrs. Daniel W.
Ogden, Mrs. Frances E.*
Ohlendorf, Dr. William
Osgood, Dr. Wilfred H.*
Palmer, Potter*
Park, Dr. Orlando
Patten, Henry J.*
Pearse, Langdon*
Pinsof, Philip
Prentice, Mrs.
Clarence C.
Quimby, George I.
Rauchfuss, Charles F.*
Raymond, Charles E.*
Reynolds, Earle H.*
Ross, Miss Lillian A.
Ross, Walter S.*
Rumely, William N.*
Schapiro, Dr. Louis*
Schwab, Henry C*
Schwab, Martin C*
Schweppe, Charles H.*
Seevers, Dr. Charles H.
Shaw, William W.
Smith, Byron L.*
Smith, Ellen Thome
Smith, Solomon A.
Solem, Dr. Alan
Sprague, Albert A.*
Staehle, Jack C.
Steeves, Harrison R., Jr.
Steyermark, Dr.
Julian A.
Stille, Walter T.
Sturtevant, Mrs. Mary
Brown
Sturtevant, Roy E.
Teskey, Mrs. Margaret
Thompson, E. H.*
Thorne, Mrs. Louise E.*
Thurow, Donald R.
Trapido, Dr. Harold
Traylor, Melvin A., Jr.
Trier, Robert
Van Valzah, Dr. Robert
Von Frantzius, Fritz*
Ware, Louis
Wheeler, Leslie*
Whitfield, Dr. R. H.
Wielgus, Mrs. Laura
Wielgus, Raymond
Willems, Dr. J. Daniel
Willis, L. M.*
Wilson, John P.*
Wolcott, Albert B.*
Wrigley, Philip K.
Yarrington, Dr. C. W.*
Zangerl, Dr. Rainer
* deceased
107
Armour, Lester
CORPORATE MEMBERS
Moore, Mrs. William H.
Blair, Bowen
Blair, Wm. McCormick
Brewer, Charles H.
Calderini, Charles J.
Chadbourne, Mrs. Emily
Crane
Chancellor, Philip M.
Cummings, Walter J.
Cutting, C. Suydam
Day, Lee Garnett
Ellsworth, Duncan S.
Field, Joseph N.
Field, Marshall, Jr.
Field, Stanley
Fuller, Mrs. A. W. F.
Gregg, Dr. Clifford C.
Hancock, G. Allan
Insull, Samuel, Jr.
Isham, Henry P.
Kahler, William V.
McBain, Hughston M.
Miller, Dr. J. Roscoe
Mitchell, William H.
DECEASED 1962
Field, Mrs. Stanley
Pirie, John T., Jr.
Randall, Clarence B.
Reed, John Shedd
Searle, John G.
Simpson, John M.
Smith, Edward Byron
Smith, Solomon A.
Suarez, Mrs. Diego
Ware, Louis
White, Harold A.
Wood, J. Howard
LIFE MEMBERS
Those who have contributed $500 to the Museum
Alexander, Edward
Allerton, Robert H.
Arenberg, Mrs. Judith S.
Armour, A. Watson, III
Armour, Miss Cynthia
Armour, Gordon Field
Armour, Lester
Armour, Miss Linda
Armour, Mrs. Vernon
Armour, Vernon Kelley
Ascoli, Mrs. Max
Austin, Edwin C.
Babson, Henry B.
Barr, Mrs. Roy Evan
Barrett, Mrs. A. D.
Barrett, Robert L.
Bates, George A.
Baur, Mrs. Jacob
Belden, Joseph C, Jr.
Bell, Mrs. Laird
Bent, John P.
Bermingham, Edward J.
Birdsall, Mrs. Carl A.
Blum, Harry H.
Bolotin, Hyman
Borland, Mrs. Bruce
Borland, Chauncey B.
Brassert, Herman A.
Brundage, Avery
Buchanan, D. W.
Budd, Britton I.
Burley, Mrs. Clarence A.
Burnham, John
Burt, William G.
Butler, Julius W.
Carney, William Roy
108
Carpenter, Mrs. John
Alden
Carr, George R.
Carton, Alfred T.
Casalis, Mrs. Maurice
Cathcart, James A.
Chatfield-Taylor, Wayne
Chrisos, Dr. Sam S.
Clare, Carl P.
Clegg, Mrs. William G.
Connor, Ronnoc Hill
Cook, Mrs. Daphne Field
Cowles, Alfred
Cox, William D.
Cramer, Corwith
Crown, Colonel Henry
Crown, Robert
Cudahy, Edward A.
Cummings, Dexter
Cummings, Walter J.
Cunningham, James D.
Dahl, Ernest A.
Davidson, David W.
Denman, Mrs. Burt J.
Dick, Edison
Dickinson,
William R., Jr.
Dierssen, Ferdinand W.
Donnelley, Gaylord
Dorschel, Querin P.
Drake, John B.
Durbin, Fletcher M.
Eckhart, Percy B.
Edmunds, Philip S.
Elich, Robert William
Erdmann, Mrs.
C. Pardee
Farr, Newton Camp
Fay, C. N.
Field, Joseph N.
Field, Marshall, Jr.
Field, Mrs. Norman
Field, Stanley
Forgan, James B.
Frankenthal, Dr.
Lester E.
Friedlich, Mrs.
Herbert A.
Haffner, Mrs.
Charles C, Jr.
Hales, William M.
Harris, Norman W.
Hecht, Frank A.
Hickox, Mrs. Charles V.
Hixon, Mrs. Frank P.
Hodgson, Mrs. G. C.
Hoover, H. Earl
Hoover, Ray P.
Hopkins, L. J.
Hoyt, N. Landon
Hutchins, James C.
Insull, Samuel, Jr.
Jarchow, Charles C.
Jelke, John F.
Joiner, Theodore E.
Jones, J. Morris
Kahler, William V.
Keith, Mrs. Stanley
Kelley, Miss Jennifer
James
Kelley, Russell P.
LIFE MEMBERS (continued)
Kelley, Russell P., Jr.
Kelley, Russell P., Ill
Kenney, Clarence B.
King, James G.
Kirk, Walter Radcliffe
Knight, Lester B.
Kohler, Eric L.
Krafft, Mrs. Walter A.
Ladd, John
Leslie, Dr. Eleanor I.
Leslie, John Woodworth
Levy, Mrs. David M.
Linn, Mrs. Dorothy C.
Lloyd, Glen A.
Lunding, Franklin J.
MacLeish, John E.
MacVeagh, Eames
Manierre, Francis E.
Mark, Mrs. Cyrus
Mason, William S.
McBain, Hughston M.
McBride, W. Paul
McCormick, Fowler
McGraw, Max
Mcllvaine, William B.
McKinlay, John, Jr.
McLennan,
Donald R., Jr.
McMillan, James G.
Meyne, Gerhardt F.
Miller, Mrs. C. Phillip
Miller, Dr. J. Roscoe
Mitchell, William H.
Morse, Charles H.
Mueller, Miss Hedwig H.
Myrland, Arthur L.
Odell, William R.
Offield, James R.
Oldberg, Dr. Eric
Orr, Robert M.
Otis, J. Sanford
Paesch, Charles A.
Palmer, Honore
Perry, William A.
Phelps, Mrs. W. L.
Pick, Albert, Jr.
Prentice, Mrs.
Clarence C.
Primley, Walter S.
Raymond, Dr. Albert L.
Roberts, Shepherd M.
Robertson, Hugh
Robinson, Sanger P.
Rodman, Mrs. Katherine
Field
Rodman, Thomas
Clifford
Rosenwald, William
Ross, Mrs. Robert C.
Rubloff, Arthur
Runnells, Mrs. Clive
Ryerson, Edward L.
Sackheim, Judd
Sawyer, Ainslie Y.
Seabury, Charles W.
Searle, John G.
Sengstack, David K.
Shakman, James G.
Sharpe, Nathan M.
Shire, Mrs. Moses E.
Simpson, John M.
Smith, Edward Byron
Smith, Solomon A.
Smith, Solomon B.
Soper, James P., Jr.
Spalding, Keith
Spatta, George
Stern, David B., Jr.
Stuart, Harry L.
Stuart, John
Stuart, R. Douglas
Sturges, George
Sullivan, Bolton
Sulzberger, Frank L.
Taylor, James L.
Thompson, John R., Jr.
Tree, Ronald L. F.
Tyson, Russell
Valentine, Mrs. May L.
Veatch, George L.
Wagner, Louis A.
Waller, Richard A.
Wanner, Harry C.
Ward, P. C.
Ware, Louis
Ware, Mrs. Louis
Warren, Paul G.
Welch, Mrs. Edwin P.
Welling, Mrs. John Paul
Whiston, Frank M.
Willard, Alonzo J.
Wilson, Mrs. Robert E.
Witte, John McFaul
Wrigley, Philip K.
Wrigley, William
Baum, Mrs. James F.
Field, Mrs. Stanley
DECEASED 1962
Madlener, Mrs. Albert F. Zimmerman, Herbert P.
Swift, Harold H.
109
NON-RESIDENT LIFE MEMBERS
Those, residing fifty miles or more from the city of Chicago, who have
contributed $100 to the Museum
Alexander, Walter
Allen, Dr. T. George
Andrew, Edward
Boynton, Charles T.
Cassevant, Albert F.
Clemen, Dr. Rudolf A.
Coolidge, Harold J.
Desmond, Thomas C.
Dulany, George W., Jr.
Fowler, Miss Lissa
Franklin, Egington
Freeman, Charles Y.
Gregg, Clifford C, Jr.
Gregg, Major John B.
Gregg, John Wyatt
Hearne, Knox
Holloman, Mrs.
Delmar W.
Johnson, David E.
Johnson, Herbert F., Jr.
Keatinge, Daniel W.
Knudtzon, E. J.
Macnaughton, Mrs. M. F.
Maxwell, Gilbert S.
Miller, Emil W.
Minturn, Benjamin E.
Moore, J. Kinney
Price, Mark
Richardson, Dr.
Maurice L.
Rosenwald, Lessing J.
Ruhle, George C.
Sackett, DeForest
Shirey, Dwight
Skarrn, Mr. Kenneth W.
Smith, Mrs. Vera Lash
Stern, Mrs. Edgar B.
Strassheim, Fred W.
Watt, Herbert J.
Weaver, Mrs. Lydia C.
Wiman, Mrs.
Charles Deere
Post, Mrs. Philip Sidney Zerk, Oscar U.
Murray, Mrs. Robert H.
DECEASED 1962
Osgood, Mrs. Cornelius
110
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS
Those who have contributed $100 to the Museum
Aaron, Charles
Aaron, Ely M.
Abadin, Dr. Amando F.
Abbell, Joseph J.
Abbott, Donald
Putnam, Jr.
Abeles, Mrs. Jerome G.
Abler, Julius J.
Abrams, Duff A.
Abrams, Dr. Herbert K.
Abrams, James Ross
Abramson, Jules
Abramson, Ralph J.
Ackerman, Dr. Joseph
Ackley, Dr. W. O.
Adamick, Gustave H.
Adams, Mrs. Charles S.
Adams, Cyrus H., Ill
Adams, Mrs. Frances
Sprogle
Adams, Fred E., Jr.
Adams, George L.
Adams, Miss Jane
Adams, John Q.
Adams, William C.
Adamson, Henry T.
Addington, James R.
Addington, Mrs.
Sarah Wood
Adler, Harry
Adler, Dr. Robert
Aeby, Miss Jacquelyn
Ahlschlager, Walter W.
Akehurst, A. George
Akenson, Wylie G.
Albade, Wells T.
Alberts, Lee Winfield
Alberts, Mrs. M. Lee
Albiez, George
Albright, Dr. Arthur C.
Albright, C. Jere
Alder, Thomas W.
Aldis, Graham
Alenduff, Harold W.
Alexander, William H.
Allbright, John G.
Allen, Craig T., Jr.
Allen, Frank W.
Allen, Mrs. Grace G.
Allen, Herman
Allen, Joseph M.
Allen, Nathan
Allen, Waldo Morgan
Allen, Wayne M.
Allensworth, A. P.
Allin, J. J.
Allmart, William S.
Allport, Hamilton
Allworthy, Joseph
Allyn, Mrs. John W.
Alschuler, Alfred S., Jr.
Alsip, Mrs. Charles H.
Alter, Harry
Altholz, Mrs. Herbert C.
Alton, Carol W.
Alward, Walter C, Jr.
American, John G.
Ames, Alfred C.
Ames, Rev. Edward S.
Ames, Joseph B.
Ancel, Louis
Andersen, John D.
Anderson, A. Harold
Anderson, A. L.
Anderson, Mrs. Alfred
Anderson, Mrs. A. W.
Anderson, Carlyle E.
Anderson, Francis M.
Anderson, Dr. Herbert L.
Anderson, Herbert R.
Anderson, Hugo A.
Anderson, J. W.
Anderson, Mrs.
Robert Gardner
Anderson, W. W.
Andreasen, Norman
Andrews, Mrs. E. C.
Andrews, Milton H.
Andrews, Mrs. Otis G.
Angelopoulos, Archie
Anger, Frank G.
Anning, H. E.
Anstiss, George P.
Antognoli, John L.
Appelt, Mrs. Jessie E.
Appleton, Arthur I.
Appleton, John Albert
Arenberg, Albert L.
Arenberg, Kenneth M.
Aries, Dr. Leon J.
Armour, Mrs. Laurance
Armour, Laurance H., Jr.
Armour, Mrs. Stanton, Sr.
Armour, T. Stanton
Armstrong, Mrs. Julian
Armstrong, Kenneth
Armstrong, Richard R.
Armstrong, W. H.
Armstrong, Mrs.
William A.
Arnold, Herbert R.
Arnold, Mrs. Lloyd
Arnold, Lorn E.
Arnold, Robert M.
Arntzen, John C.
Artingstall, Samuel G.
Arvey, Mrs. Edith F.
Ascher, Fred
Ashe, Clayton
Ashenhurst, Harold S.
Asher, Frederick
Asher, Norman
Asher, Dr. Sidney
Ashwell, Mrs. John W.
Atwood, Carl E.
Auer, George A.
Augur, Allison L.
Augustus, Mrs. Helen A.
Aurelius, Mrs. Marcus A.
Ause, Orval H.
Avery, George J.
Avery, Guy T.
Avery, William H.
Axelrad, Mrs. Milton S.
Ayres, Robert B.
Babbitt, Mrs. Oscar
Babson, Mrs. Gustavus
Bacci, Alex H.
Back, Miss Maude F.
Bacon, Dr. Alfons R.
Bacon, R. H.
Bade, Miss Florence
Harriett
Baehr, William B.
Baer, David E.
Baffes, Dr. Thomas G.
Baggaley, William Blair
Baker, Dr. Bernard
Baker, Edward H.
Baker, Greeley
Baker, Paul E.
Bailey, George R.
Bair, W. P.
Bairstow, Mrs.
Harry, Jr.
Baker, Greeley
Baldauf, John H.
Baldwin, Mrs. Amy G.
Baldwin, Rosecrans
Baldwin, Vincent Curtis
Balgemann, Otto W.
Balkin, Louis
Ball, Clayton G.
Ball, Dr. Fred E.
Ball, Ralph K.
Ballard, E. E.
Ballard, Mrs. Ernest H.
Ballard, Mrs. Foster K.
Ballenger, A. G.
Ballis, S. R.
Balluff, Louis N.
Baltis, Walter S.
Banker, O. H.
Banks, Dr. Seymour
Bannister, Miss
Ruth D.
Ill
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Bannon, James W.
Barancik, Richard M.
Barber, Phil C.
Barbera, Joseph
Barden, Horace G.
Bardwell, William U.
Bargquist, Miss
Lillian D.
Barker, E. C.
Barkhausen, Mrs.
Henry G.
Barlow, John T.
Barnard, George Hugh
Barnes, Cecil
Barnes, Mrs. John S.
Barnes, Miss Lilace Reid
Barnett, Claude A.
Barney, Albert S.
Barnhart, Mrs. A. M.
Barr, Mrs. Alfred H.
Barr, George
Barrett, Mrs. Arthur M.
Barry, Mrs. Scammon
Barson, Dr. Lloyd J.
Barsumian, Edward L.
Bartel, Thomas B.
Barthell, Gary
Bartholomae, Mrs.
Emma
Bartholomay, Henry C.
Bartholomay, Herman, Jr.
Bartholomay, Mrs.
William, Jr.
Barton, A. D.
Bashore, Mrs. Helen
Basile, A. R.
Basile, William B.
Basinger, Paul J.
Basta, George A.
Bates, Dr. A. Allan
Bates, Mrs. A. M.
Bates, Rex J.
Battey, Paul L.
Baum, Dr. Hugo C.
Baum, Wilhelm
Baumann, Harry P.
Bausch, William C.
Bayly, Dr. Melvyn A.
Beach, Miss Bess K.
Beach, E. Chandler
Beach, George R., Jr.
Beachy, Mrs. Walter F.
Beatty, John T.
Becherer, Robert C.
Beck, Alexander
Becker, Edward C.
Becker, Mrs. Ethel G.
Becker, James H.
Becker, Louis L.
Becker, Max
Becker, Mrs. S. Max, Jr.
Beckler, R. M.
Beckman, Mrs. Victor A.
Beckstrom, Miss
Lucile M.
Beddoes, Hubert
Beebe, Dr. Robert A.
Behr, Carlton E.
Behr, Mrs. Edith
Beidler, Francis II
Belding, Mrs. H. H., Jr.
Belinky, Walter
Bell, Chauncey M.
Bell, J. Delos
Bellizzi, Dr. Alfredo
Bellows, Jason Ernest
Belmonte, Dr. John V.
Belnap, Nuel D.
Bender, Eric
Benjamin, Jack A.
Benner, Harry
Bennett, Bertram W.
Bennett, Clinton C.
Bennett, Edward H., Jr.
Bennett, Dr. H. Stanley
Bennett, Professor
J. Gardner
Bennett, S. A.
Bensinger, B. E.
Benson, John
Benson, Mrs.
Thaddeus R.
Berc, Harold T.
Bere\ Lambert
Berend, George F.
Berens, Alfred S.
Berens, Dr. David G.
Bergen, Mrs. G. L.
Bergfors, Emery E.
Bergman, Arthur W.
Berkely, Dr. J. G.
Berman, Seymour
Bernstein, Samuel
Bernstein, Saul
Berry, V. D.
Bersbach, Elmer S.
Bertschinger, Dr. C. F.
Berwanger, Jay
Besly, Mrs. C. H.
Bettendorf , Harry J.
Bettman, Dr. Ralph B.
Betts, David H.
Betz, Carl E.
Biddle, Robert C.
Biedermann, Lee F.
Biehn, Dr. J. F.
Bielinski, Dr. Henry E.
Biersborn, Charles F.
Bigelow, Mrs. Ann
Biggers, Bryan B.
Biggs, Mrs. Joseph H.
Bigler, Dr. John A.
Bikle, W. E.
Billow, Miss Virginia
Billsten, Henry A.
Bimmerle, Dr. John F.
Binder, Miss Kay
Birch, Dr. Carroll L.
Bird, Miss Frances
Bittel, Mrs. Frank J.
Bittrich, Miss Grace
Bixby, Edward Randall
Bixby, Frank L.
Bixby, George, Jr.
Bjork, Eskil I.
Black, Dr. Chester J.
Black, Harry
Blackburn, Oliver A.
Blaine, James B.
Blair, Miss
Anita Carolyn
Blair, Bowen
Blair, Edward
McCormick
Blair, John M.
Blair, Wm. McCormick
Blair, Wolcott
Blanksten, Samuel B.
Blatchford, Dr. Frank
Blatchford, Thomas R.
Blecker, Mrs.
Michael, Jr.
Blessing, Mrs. Lewis G.
Blish, Charles C.
Bliss, Vincent R.
Block, Joseph L.
Block, Leigh B.
Block, Mrs. Leigh B.
Block, Nelson C.
Block, Philip D., Jr.
Block, Samuel W.
Bluford, Mrs. David
Blumenschein, C. M.
Blumenthal, Dr. Irving
Blumenthal, Milton M.
Blunt, J. E.
Blustin, L. Sanford
Boal, Stewart
Boal, Thomas
Bobrinskoy,
Mrs. George V.
Bodjanac, Stephen
Bodman, Robert E.
Bodman, W. S.
Boe, Archie R.
Boehme, Harold C.
Boericke, Mrs. Anna
Boetcher, John E.
Boettcher, Arthur H.
Bogert, George T.
Bogert, Mrs. Gilbert P.
Bohac, Ben F.
112
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Bohan, Clinton W.
Bohasseck, Charles
Bohne, Carl J., Jr.
Bolotin, Gerald G.
Bolten, Paul H.
Bondy, Berthold
Bonine, Miss Ada
Bonniwell, Donald R.
Boomer, Dr. Paul C.
Boone, Arthur
Booth, George E.
Boothby, Palmer C.
Borcherdt, Mrs.
Robert T.
Borg, George W.
Bori, Mrs. Albert V.
Borland, Mrs.
John Jay, II
Borland, William F.
Borowitz, David
Borwell, Robert C.
Bosch, Charles
Bosch, Mrs. Henry
Boss, Sidney M.
Bosworth, Mrs.
Roland I.
Boughner, Jackson L.
Bournique, Miss Helen E.
Bousa, Dr. Bohuslav
Bowen, Mrs. Clarence W.
Bowers, Ralph E.
Bowersox, W. A.
Bowes, Arthur S.
Bowker, Mrs. Charles, Jr.
Bowman, Mrs. E. M.
Bowman, J. C.
Bowman, Johnston A.
Boyd, Mrs. T. Kenneth
Boyer, Paul F.
Braddy, Jim
Bradley, Mrs. A. Ballard
Bradley, Edward J.
Bradley, John R.
Bradley, Roy D.
Bradway, Malcolm S.
Brainerd, Mrs. Arthur T.
Bramble, Delhi G. C.
Brammer, Dr. Lowell H.
Branch, Judson B.
Brandel, Miss Carola R.
Brandenburg, John A.
Brandt, Charles H.
Brandt, Leslie A.
Brandt, William A.
Branham, William T.
Bransfield, John J.
Bransfield, John J., Jr.
Braucher, Ralph L.
Brauer, Mrs. Paul
Braun, Dr. L. L.
Braun, Martin H.
Braun, Dr. Milton
Bremner, Mrs. David F.
Brennan, B. T.
Brenner, S. L.
Brennom, Dr. Elmo F.
Breslin, Dr. Winston I.
Brichetto, John L.
Bridges, Arnold
Briggs, George L.
Bristol, James T.
Broadhurst, R. P.
Brock, Donald C.
Brodie, Miss Laura
Brodribb, Lawrence C.
Brodsky, J. J.
Brody, Bernard B.
Brost, Robert V.
Brostoff, Harry M.
Browder, William B.
Brown, A. Wilder
Brown, Baird
Brown, Cameron
Brown, C. Foster, Jr.
Brown, Mrs. C. H.
Brown, Christy
Brown, Mrs. Everett C.
Brown, H. Templeton
Brown, Isadore
Brown, Dr. Joshua M.
Brown, Mark A.
Brown, Richard P., Jr.
Brown, Warren W.
Brown, William F.
Browne, Aldis J., Jr.
Bruhn, H. C.
Brunell, Albert H.
Bruning, Herbert F.
Brunsvold, Mrs.
Henrietta A.
Brunswick, Joseph E.
Brunswick, Larry
Brust, Paul W.
Bryant, John J.
Bua, Nicholas J.
Buchanan, Eugene D.
Buchanan, L. B.
Buchbinder, Robert
Buchen, Paul J.
Buchen, Mrs.
Walther H.
Buchner, Dr. E. M.
Buckley, Mrs. Warren
Bucklin, Mrs. Vail R.
Buddeke, Ivo W.
Buddington, Robert M.
Budrys, Dr. Stanley
Buechler, Adolph
Buehler, A. C, Jr.
Buehler, H. L.
Buehler, Robert
Buettner, Walter J.
Buffardi, Louis
Bulley, Allen E.
Bund, Marcus
Bunn, B. H.
Bunn, C. M.
Bunte, Mrs. Theodore W.
Burbott, E. W.
Burch, Clayton B.
Burchmore, John S.
Burd, James E.
Burg, Harry
Burgweger, Mrs.
Meta Dewes
Burke, Mrs. Edmund L.
Burke, James O.
Burnell, Homer A.
Burnham, Mrs. George
Burnham, Joseph A.
Burns, Mrs. Randall W.
Burrows, Robert S.
Burry, William
Burwell, Mrs.
Dorothy M.
Busch, David T.
Bush, Earl J.
Bush, Mrs. William H.
Butler, Mrs. Coula P.
Butler, George W.
Butler, John C.
Butler, Paul
Butzow, Mrs. Robert C.
Bye, William H.
Byrne, Miss Margaret H.
Cahn, Dr. Alvin R.
Cahn, Morton D.
Caiazza, Theodore M.
Cainkar, Louis F.
Caine, Leon J.
Caldwell, Wallace B.
Call, Edgar J.
Callender, Mrs.
Joseph E.
Calvin, Mrs. H. L.
Camenisch, Miss
Sophia C.
Cameron, Anson W.
Cameron, Mrs.
John Wheaton
Cameron, William T.
Camp, J. Beidler
Campbell, Donald F., Jr.
Campbell, George V.
Campbell, Hugh
Campbell, John Noble
Canby, Caleb H., Jr.
Canman, Richard W.
Canmann, Mrs.
Harry L.
Capes, Miss Alice G.
Caples, William G.
113
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Capps, Dr. Joseph A.
Carey, Mrs. Charles
Carlen, Raymond N.
Carlin, Leo J.
Carlisle, Mrs. William T.
Carlson, Walter C. D.
Carmell, Sherman
Caron, O. J.
Carp, Joseph T.
Carqueville, Mrs. A. R.
Carr, Rr. Adm. B. L.
Carr, Robert A.
Carr, Mrs. Robert F.
Carroll, J. B.
Carroll, John A.
Carstens, Milton Searle
Carter, Mrs. Armistead B.
Carter, Miss Frances
Jeannette
Carton, Laurence A.
Carton, Dr. Robert W.
Caspers, Paul
Cass, Sidney H.
Cassady, Thomas G.
Castruccio, Giuseppe
Cathcart, Silas S.
Caywood, Thomas E.
Cederlund, R. Stanley
Cerling, Fredolph A.
Cermak, George R.
Cernoch, Frank
Cerny, Mrs. Jerome
Cervenka, Carl
Chace, Thomas B.
Chalfant, Arnold R.
Chameroy, Arthur T.
Chandler, Henry P.
Chandler, Marvin
Chapin, William Arthur
Chapman, Arthur E.
Chapman, Dave
Chapman, Richard R.
Chase, Norman M.
Chatain, Robert N.
Chazanow, George
Cheney, Dr. Henry W.
Chenicek, Dr. J. A.
Chenier, Miss Mizpah
Cherones, George D.
Cherry, Walter L., Jr.
Chesler, Morton C.
Chester, W. T.
Chiara, Anthony R.
Childs, Leonard C.
Chilgren, Arthur D.
Chinlund, Miss Ruth E.
Chorn, William G.
Christensen, Robert W.
Christian, John F.
Christiansen, Dr. Henry
Christopher, Dr. G. L.
Christy, Dr. Harold W.
Chulock, Willmar A.
Churan, Charles A.
Church, Mrs. Freeman S.
Ciral, Philip F.
Clansky, Roy W., Jr.
Clark, Mrs. Alice Dargan
Clark, Mrs. Edward S.
Clark, Edwin H.
Clark, Dr. James Wilson
Clark, K. Raymond
Clarke, Charles F.
Clarke, Ernest E.
Clarke, Miss Lorena
Clarke, Dr. T. Howard
Clay, John
Clement, Franklin G.
Clement, Howard W.
Clement, James W.
Clements, George L.
Clifford, Fred J., Jr.
Clifford, J. S.
Clinch, Duncan L.
Cline, Lyle B.
Clonick, Abraham J.
Clonick, Herbert J.
Clonick, Seymour E.
Close, James W.
Clough, Herbert W.
Clovis, Paul C, Sr.
Clow, Miss Marion
Cluxton, Dr.
Harley E., Jr.
Coale, William F., Jr.
Coates, E. Hector
Coates, John M.
Coath, V. W.
Coburn, Maurice W.
Cochran, John L.
Cocks, Thomas G.
Coey, David R.
Coghlan, Mrs. David L.
Cohen, George B.
Cohen, Harry
Cohen, S. T.
Cohn, Aaron H.
Coldiron, Harry A.
Cole, John W.
Cole, Sidney I.
Coleman, Clarence L., Jr.
Coleman, Dr. George H.
Coleman, Mrs. John
Coleman, Loring W.
Coleman, Marvin H.
Colenso, James E.
Coliton, William P.
Collias, Philip J.
Collins, Beryl B.
Collison, E. K.
Colnon, Stuart
Colvin, Miss Bonnie
Colvin, Miss Jessie
Colwell, Clyde C.
Compton, Mrs.
Arthur H.
Compton, D. M.
Cone, Fairfax M.
Cone, Mrs. R. E.
Conger, Miss Cornelia
Conklin, Miss Shirley
Conley, Philip
Connell, P. G.
Connery, John
Connors, Mrs. Thomas A.
Conover, Miss
Margaret B.
Cook, Mrs. Charles B.
Cook, Mrs. David S.
Cook, Jonathan Miller
Cook, Junius F., Jr.
Cook, L. Charles
Cook, Leslie H.
Cook, Dr. Richard S.
Cook, Thomas H.
Cooke, Dr. Pauline M.
Cooley, Gordon A., Sr.
Coolidge, Dr. Edgar D.
Coombs, James F.
Coonley, John Stuart
Coonley, Prentiss L.
Cooper, Lee
Cooper, Samuel
Cooper, S. Robert
Copland, David
Corbett, Paul M.
Corbett, Mrs. William J.
Cordray, Mrs. David P.
Corrington, John W.
Cosford, Thomas H.
Costanzo, Dr. Vincent A.
Costanzo, Dr.
Vincent A., Jr.
Costello, A. B.
Costello, Dr. Lome
Coston, James E.
Cottle, Dr. Maurice H.
Cotton, Eugene
Coulon, Dr. Albert E.
Coulson, John S.
Coursen, Charles B.
Covington, John R.
Covington, William S.
Cowan, Ralph
Cowen, Miss Edna T.
Cowen, Dr. Jack P.
Cowen, Maurice L.
Cowles, Knight C.
Cox, Clifford B.
Coyne, Thomas R.
Cragg, Mrs. George L.
Craig, George M.
Craig, Mrs. Virginia
114
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Crain, G. DM Jr.
Cram, Mrs. Norman
Crawford, Henriques
Crawford, Robert A.
Crawford, W. F.
Creange, A. L.
Cretors, Charles J.
Criel, Theodore A., Jr.
Crohn, Miss Natalie
Cromwell, Miss
Juliette Clara
Cross, Louis J.
Cross, Robert C.
Cryor, Robert E.
Cubbins, Dr. William R.
Cudahy, Edward I.
Culbertson, James G.
Cullen, J. A.
Culmer, Dr. Charles U.
Culver, Sydney K.
Cummings, Mrs. D. Mark
Cummings, Edward M.
Cummings, Mrs.
Frances S.
Cummings, Nathan
Cump, Percy W., Jr.
Cuneo, Francis J.
Cuneo, John F.
Cunningham, J. Lester
Cunningham, Seymour S.
Curtis, Austin
Guthrie, Jr.
Curtis, Glenn R.
Curwen, H. L.
Cusack, Harold
Cushing, John Caleb
Cushman, Barney
Cutler, Paul William
Cutter, Charles F.
Dabasinskas, Walter
Daemicke, Mrs.
Irwin Paul
Dahl, Miss Bernice
Dahlberg, Wendell
Dahlin, Carl A.
Daily, Orville G.
Daily, Col. Richard
Daley, Harry C.
Dalmar, Mrs. Hugo
Dalmar, Hugo, Jr.
Daly, James J.
Dammann, J. F.
Danders, Raymond A.
Dangel, W. H.
Danielson, Philip A.
Danley, Jared Gage
Danne, William C, Jr.
Dantzig, Leonard P.
Dapples, George H.
D'Aquila, George
Darbo, Howard H.
Darby, John H.
Darrow, Paul E.
Daughaday, C. Colton
Davidson, D. E.
Davidson, Louis G.
Davies, Marshall
Davies, Trevor L.
Davis, Arthur
Davis, C. S.
Davis, DeForest Paine
Davis, Don L.
Davis, Frank S.
Davis, Henry E.
Davis, Dr. Joseph A.
Davis, Mrs. June
Brendecke
Davis, Dr. Loyal
Davis, Morton A.
Dawes, Charles C.
Dawson, John H.
Dean, Mrs. S. E., Jr.
Deardorff, Merle S.
Decker, Charles O.
De Costa, Lewis M.
de Dardel, Carl O.
Deeming, W. S.
Deis, Mrs. Thomas P.
Delaney, Frederick A.
DeLarye, Dr. William L.
DeLay, Frank P.
Delp, Larry
Demaree, H. S.
Deming, Everett G.
Denis, Stanley T.
Denney, Ellis H.
Deree, William S.
Dern, James G.
Desgrey, Charles W.
Detmer, John F.
De Trana, Dr. George
Deutsch, Mrs. Percy L.
Devine, Matthew L.
Devoe, Carl
De Vries, David
DeWitt, Clyde F.
DeWitt, Dennis
Dick, A. B., Ill
Dick, Mrs. A. B., Ill
Dick, Elmer J.
Dick, Robert
Dick, Mrs. Robert F.
Dickinson, F. R.
Dickson, Vincent B.
Diestel, Mrs. Herman
Dietch, Henry X.
Diggs, Mrs. N. Alfred
Diller, Robert
Diller, Theodore C.
Dillie, James P.
Dillion, Don F.
Dimick, Miss Elizabeth
Dixon, George W., Jr.
Dixon, Stewart S.
Dixon, Wesley M., Jr.
Dixon, Mrs. William
Warren
Dobyns, Mrs. Henry F.
Doctor, Isidor
Dodge, Mrs. Paul C.
Dolan, Tom
Dole, John L.
Dolke, W. Fred
Domville, Mrs.
Millington
Donlon, Mrs. Stephen E.
Donnel, Mrs. Curtis, Jr.
Donnelley, Elliott
Donnelley, Mrs. H. P.
Donnelley, Thomas E., II
Donnersberger,
Raymond G.
Donohue, Edgar T.
Doody, Miss Kitty
Doolittle, John R.
Dornbusch, Charles H.
Dorocke, Joseph, Jr.
Dorsey, John K.
Doucette, Robert J.
Douglas, James H., Jr.
Douglass, H. James
Douglass, Mrs.
Helen James
Douglass, Kingman
Dover, S. M.
Doyon, Robert Gale
Drago, Stephen
Drake, Charles R.
Drake, Mrs. Harry L.
Drake, Robert T.
Drake, Mrs. R. Taylor
Drangsholt, Mrs.
Gunnar S.
Dreutzer, Carl
Drever, Thomas
Dreyfus, Mrs. Moise
Dry, Carl
Duclos, George A.
Dudak, Mrs. Anna
Dudley, Laurence H.
Duffy, James F.
Dukelow, Mrs. Madelina
Dulla, Steven G.
Dulsky, Mrs. Samuel
Dumelle, Frank C.
Dunbaugh, Harry J.
Duncan, Albert G.
Duner, Joseph A.
Dunlap, William E.
Dunlop, Charles
Dunlop, Mrs. Simpson
Dunphy, Charles S.
115
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Durand, Mrs. N. E.
Dvonch, Dr. William J.
Dyer, Robert T.
Easterberg, C. J.
Eastman, Mrs. George H.
Eaton, J. Frank
Ebbers, Todd A.
Ebeling, Frederic 0.
Ebert, Carl H.
Ebin, Mrs. Dorothy
Mylrea
Ebzery, Miss Joan
Eckert, Theodore T.
Eddy, Alfred K.
Edelson, Dave
Edelson, Mitchell, Jr.
Edmunds, John K.
Edwards, Miss Edith E.
Edwards, G. H.
Edwards, William C.
Eger, Gerard J.
Ehrlich, Stanton L.
Eichengreen, Edmund K.
Eichler, Robert M.
Eiseman, Fred R.
Eisenberg, Sam J.
Eisendrath, Edwin W.
Eisenhower, Earl D.
Eisenschiml, Mrs. Otto
Eisenstein, Sol
Eklund, Ernest A.
Eldred, Mrs. Harriot W.
Ellbogen, Miss Celia
Ellies, E. E.
Ellinger, Dr. R. H.
Elliott, Mrs. Edwin P.
Elliott, Miss Grace E.
Ellis, Mrs. G. Corson
Ellis, Howard
Elmer, Mrs. Clarence W.
Elston, Mrs. I. C.
Elting, Victor, Jr.
Elting, Winston
Elvgren, Gillette A.
Emanuelson, Conrad R.
Embree, Henry S.
Embree, J. W., Jr.
Emery, Edward W.
Emmerich, Miss Clara L.
Engelman, Mrs. Roberts.
Engelmann, George W.
English, Harold
English, William L.
Engstrom, Harold
Entsminger, Samuel E.
Epstein, Harvey
Epstein, Herman L.
Erickson, Donald
Erickson, L. Hyland
Ericson, Mrs. Chester F.
Ericsson, Clarence
Ericsson, Dewey A.
Ericsson, Walter H.
Erikson, Carl A.
Erman, Walter
Ernest, Joseph R.
Ernst, Mrs. Leo
Escudier, A. F.
Esgar, R. Rea
Ettelson, Jerome
Lawrence
Etten, Henry C.
Evans, Miss Anna B.
Evans, Eliot H.
Evans, Keith J.
Evans, Vernon K.
Everett, William S.
Evers, John W.
Faber, Milton D.
Fabrice, Edward H.
Fackt, Mrs. George P.
Factor, Mrs. Jerome
Fader, A. L.
Faherty, Roger
Fairweather, Dr. D. H.
Faithorn, Walter E.
Faletti, Richard J.
Falk, Dr. Alfred B.
Falk, Ralph, II
Falls, Dr. A. G.
Farley, Preston
Farnham, Mrs. Harry J.
Farrell, Mrs. B. J.
Farrell, Mrs. Ernest H.
Farwell, Albert D.
Farwell, John V., Ill
Faurot, Henry, Jr.
Faust, Harry C.
Fay, Eugene C.
Febhardt, Mrs. Ernest A.
Feinstein, Edward
Howard
Feiwell, Morris E.
Fell, Dr. Egbert H.
Fellows, William K.
Felsenthal, Edward
George
Fennekohl, Mrs.
Arthur C.
Ferguson, R. W.
Fernald, Robert W.
Ferry, Mrs. James H., Jr.
Fetzer, Wade, Jr.
Feuchtwanger, Sidney
Fiduccia, Charles B.
Field, John S.
Field, Meyer
Field, Mrs. William A.
Fiffer, Robert S.
Filerman, Arthur
Filkins, A. J.
Filter, Patrick S.
Fineman, Oscar
Fink, Mrs. Frank
Fink, Joseph H.
Finley, Max H.
Finnerud, Dr. Clark W.
Firsel, Maurice S.
Firth, M. S.
Fish, Mrs. Helen S.
Fishbein, Dr. Morris
Fisher, Mrs. Raymond
Fishman, Samuel
Fisk, Albert
Fisk, Mrs. Burnham M.
Fiske, Kenneth M.
Fitzmorris,
Mrs. Charles C, Sr.
Fitzmorris, James
Fitz Simmons, Dr. J. A.
Flacks, Reuben S.
Flagg, Miss Grace S.
Flanagan, James F.
Fleischman, Miss Anne
Fleming, E. I.
Fleming, Mrs. Joseph B.
Fletcher, Joseph
Fletcher, Mrs. Mildred C.
Flinn, Walter H., Jr.
Flint, George M.
Florian, Anton G.
Florsheim, Harold M.
Florsheim, Irving S.
Flowers, Dr. Vladimir C.
Foell, W. J.
Folds, Charles W.
Follansbee, Rogers
Follett, Dwight
Folonie, Mrs. Robert J.
Foote, Mrs. Harley T.
Forch, Mrs. John L., Jr.
Ford, Miss Thelma
Ford, Mrs. Willis Roland
Foreman, Alfred K., Jr.
Foreman, Edwin G., Jr.
Foreman, Harold E.
Forgan, Mrs. J. Russell
Forgan, Robert D.
Forman, Charles
Forster, J. George
Fort, George A.
Fortune, Miss Joanna
Foster, Mrs. Charles K.
Foster, Robert S.
Fowle, Frank F.
Fowler, Mrs. Earle B.
Fox, Clarence E.
Fox, Jacob Logan
Fox, Myron H.
Fox, Dr. Paul C.
Franche, Mrs. D. C, III
116
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Franke, Allyn J.
Frankel, Jones B.
Frankel, Louis
Frankenstein, Lester E.
Frankenstein, William B.
Franklin, G. K.
Franz, Herbert G.
Fraser, Edward S.
Frasier, Richard C.
Frazer, Mrs. George E.
Freda, Dr. Vincent C.
Frederick, Mrs.
Clarence L.
Freehling, Stanley M.
Freeman, Ernest E.
Freeman, Gaylord A.
Freeto, Clarence E.
Freiler, Abraham J.
Frenier, A. B.
Freudenthal, G. S.
Freund, Mrs. I. H.
Freund, Mrs. J. Dennis
Frey, Charles Daniel
Freyn, Henry J.
Fridstein, Meyer
Friedberg, Dr. Stanton A.
Friedlander, William
Friedlich, John
Friedman, Mrs.
Norman B.
Friedman, Raphael N.
Fritsch, Miss Josephine
Frye, W. P.
Frystak, A. J.
Fucik, E. Montford
Fucik, Frank M.
Fuller, Mrs. Gretta
Patterson
Fuller, J. E.
Fuller, Judson M.
Fuller, Perry L.
Fullerton, Thomas
Fulton, Paul C.
Fyanes, F. D.
Gabriel, Adam
Gainer, Walter D.
Gale, Willis
Galgano, John H.
Gall, Frank
Gall, Harold J. F.
Gall, Harry T.
Gallup, Rockwell L.
Gait, Mrs. Anne
Rick cords
Gait, Mrs. A. T.
Gamble, D. E.
Gamble, E. Ross
Gamm, Dr. Stanford R.
Garcia, Jose
Gardner, Addison L., Jr.
Gardner, F. Sewall
Gardner, Frederick D.
Gardner, Henry A.
Gardner, Henry K.
Gardner, Robert A., Jr.
Garen, Joseph F.
Garrison, Dr. Lester E.
Garvey, W. H., Jr.
Gary, Theodore S.
Gates, Mrs. L. F.
Gaul, Michael F.
Gawthrop, H. H.
Gay, Rev. A. Royall
Gaylord, Mrs. Ruth K.
Gebhardt, Alfred E.
Gebhardt, Mrs. Ernest A.
Gee, James W.
Gehl, Dr. W. H.
Geiling, Dr. E. M. K.
Geist, Herbert
Geittmann, Dr. W. F.
Geldmeier, Dr. Erwin F.
Gellert, Donald N.
Gensburg, Samuel H.
Gentry, Veit
Gerden, Paul
Gerding, R. W.
Gerk, G. F.
German, Fred W.
Gerngross, Mrs. Leo
Gerrard, J. M.
Gettelman, Mrs.
Sidney H.
Gettleman, Arthur
Gettleman, Frank E.
Getz, James R.
Getz, Mrs. James R.
Getzoff, Byron M.
Giacobe, Mrs. Anthony J.
Gibbs, A. E.
Gibbs, Richard F.
Gibson, Paul
Gibson, Truman K., Jr.
Gidwitz, Alan K.
Gidwitz, Victor E.
Gidwitz, Willard
Giffey, Miss Hertha
Gifford, Frederic Z.
Gifford, Mrs.
Frederick C.
Gilchrist, Mrs. John F.
Gilchrist, Mrs. William
Albert
Giles, Dr. Chauncey D.
Giles, Mrs. Guy H.
Giles, John O.
Gill, Joseph L.
Gillett, Frank G.
Gillett, W. N.
Gilmore, Dr. John H.
Gimbel, J. W., Jr.
Giryotas, Dr. Emelia J.
Gits, Mrs. Remi J., Sr.
Glade, David Bruce
Glaescher, Mrs. G. W.
Glaman, Miss Johanna C.
Glasner, Rudolph W.
Glass, Mr. Marvin
Glasser, Joshua B.
Glassner, James J.
Glenn, Miss Terry
Glick, Louis G.
Glore, Robert Hixon
Glos, Mrs. Albert H.
Gluck, Gerson, I.
Gober, Miss Martha P.
Godley, Mrs. John M.
Godwin, Dr. Melvin C.
Goes, Mrs. Arthur A.
Goessele, John H.
Golber, David
Gold, Norman
Goldberg, Charles K.
Goldblatt, Joel
Golding, Robert N.
Goldsby, Fred L.
Goldstein, Dr. Abraham
Goldstein, Dr. Helen L.
Button
Goldstein, Nathan S.
Goldy, Walter I.
Goltra, Mrs. William B.
Gomberg, Dr. Harry
Goodfriend, S. L.
Goodman, Benedict K.
Goodman, Howard
Goodman, Mrs. Milton F.
Goodman, Mrs. William
Goodman, William E.
Goodson, Orr
Goodwin, George S.
Gopp, Leonard W.
Gordon, Colin S.
Gordon, Edward
Gordon, Harold J.
Gordon, Leslie S.
Gordon, Dr. Richard J.
Gordon, Mrs. Robert D.
Gorrell, Mrs. Warren
Gootlieb, Frederick M.
Gould, Jay
Gould, Mrs. June K.
Grade, Joseph Y.
Graham, Andrew C.
Graham, Mrs. Arthur R.
Graham, David
Graham, Douglas
Graham, E. V.
Graham, Miss
Margaret H.
Granger, Mrs. Lillian M.
Grant, Gordon B.
117
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Grant, James D.
Grant, John G.
Grant, Robert M.
Graves, Austin T.
Graves, Howard B.
Grawoig, Allen
Grawols, G. L.
Gray, A. S.
Gray, Dr. Earle
Gray, Edward
Gray, Philip S.
Greeley, Joseph M.
Green, Howard E.
Green, Michael
Greenburg, Dr. Ira E.
Greene, Henry E.
Greene, Howard T.
Greene, Wesley H.
Greenebaum, Robert J.
Greenlee, Mrs. William
Brooks
Greenman, Mrs. Earl C.
Greenwald, Herbert S.
Gregg, Clarence T.
Gregg, Lewis D.
Gregory, James J.
Gregory, Stephen S., Jr.
Grentzner, C. A.
Gressens, Otto
Grey, Dr. Dorothy
Griffenhagen, Mrs.
Edwin O.
Griffith, Mrs. Carroll L.
Griffith, Dean L.
Griffith, Mrs. William C.
Grimes, Don R.
Griswold, Barret B.
Griswold, Harold T.
Griswold, J. Edwin
Grizzard, James A.
Groak, Irwin D.
Grohe, Robert F.
Gronkowski, Rev. C. I.
Grosberg, Charles
Groseth, Mrs. Haakon B.
Grossman, Frank I.
Grote, Russell H.
Grotowski, Mrs. Leon
Grunow, Mrs. William C.
Guenzel, Paul W.
Guernsey, Mrs. Nellie T.
Guest, Ward E.
Guetzkow, Harold S.
Guldager, Carl D.
Gunlock, V. E.
Gurley, Miss Helen K.
Gustafson, Carl
Gustafson, Carl I.
Gustafson, Gilbert E.
Gustafson, Mrs.
Winfield A.
Gutgsell, Mrs. Emil J.
Guthrie, Mrs. Eleanor Y.
Guthrie, S. Ashley
Gwinn, R. P.
Gwyer, Dr. F. V.
Haas, Albert F.
Hachmeister, A. W.
Hadley, Mrs. Edwin M.
Haedike, Edward J.
Hagen, Mrs. Daise
Hagues, Mrs. David N.
Hahn, Arthur
Hailand, Arthur G.
Haines, Mrs. James J.
Hair, T. R.
Hajicek, Rudolph F.
Hale, Mrs. Samuel
Hales, Mrs. Burton W.
Hales, Burton W., Jr.
Hall, Edward B.
Hall, Miss Eliza P.
Hall, Mrs. J. B.
Hallauer, Edward W.
Halligan, W. J.
Halperin, Aaron
Halverstadt, Romaine M.
Hamilton, Miss Eva Alice
Hamilton, Samuel
Hamling, Ben M.
Hammaker, Paul M.
Hammerschmidt, Mrs.
George F.
Hand, George W.
Hands, H. William
Handy, Ellsworth A.
Hanelin, Dr. Henry A.
Hansen,
Mrs. Bertha Cooley
Hansen, Mrs. Fred A.
Hansen, Jacob W.
Hanson, Mrs. Norman R.
Harder, John H.
Harders, Mrs. Flora
Rassweiler
Hardin, David K.
Hardin, George D.
Harding, Miss
Addie Clark
Harding, John P., II
Hardy, Mrs. L. Martin
Harig, Herbert
Harkrider, Raymond
Harmon, Foster W.
Harms, Van Deursen
Harper, Alfred C.
Harris, David J.
Harris, Gerald H.
Harris, Gordon L.
Harris, Herman
Harris,
Mrs. Mortimer B.
Harris, Robert Bruce
Harris, Stanley G.
Harrison, Carter H., Jr.
Harsha, E. Houston
Hart, Henry N.
Hart, Max A.
Hartman, Dr. Robert R.
Hartmann, A. O.
Hartung, George, Jr.
Hartz, W. Homer
Harvey, Byron
Harvey, Byron, III
Harvey, Daggett
Harwood, Thomas A.
Harwood, Thomas W.
Hass, G. C.
Hass, Miss Harriet E.
Hassmer, Joseph L.
Haug, Dr. Elsie L.
Haugen, Bernhart
Havelaar, W. C.
Hawkes, Albert K.
Hawkes, Joseph B.
Hawkinson, Marshall J.
Hay, Mrs. William
Sherman
Hayakawa, Dr. S. I.
Hayes, Harold C.
Hayes, Miss Hatti
Hayes, Dr. Thomas H.
Hayes, Mrs. William F.
Hayward, Thomas Z.
Haywood, Mrs.
Marshall L., Jr.
Hazlett, Dr. William H.
Hazlett, Mrs. William H.
Head, James D.
Healy, Thomas H.
Healy, Vincent Jerrems
Hearst, Mrs. Jack W.
Heaton, Harry E.
Heaton, Herman C.
Hecht, Fred C.
Hecht, Kenneth G.
Hecht, Myron A.
Hedin, Walter L.
Heffernan, Miss Lili
Heffron, Kenneth C.
Hefner, Adam
Heggie, Miss Helen
Heide, Mrs. Bernard H.
Heinzelman, Karl
Heinzen, Mrs. Carl
Heisler, Francis
Heldmaier, Miss Marie
Helfrich, J. Howard
Heller, Mrs. Florence G.
Heller, John A.
Hellman, George A.
118
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Hellyer, Walter
Helmich, Miss Lenore
Hemenway, Henry H.
Hemphill, James C.
Henderson, Kenneth M.
Henebry, John P.
Henke, Frank X., Jr.
Henkel, Frederick W.
Henley, Dr. Eugene H.
Hennessy, John H.
Henschel, Edmund C.
Hensel, Paul G., Jr.
Herbst, LeRoy B.
Herdina, Jerry
Herman, Richard P.
Hermann, Grover M.
Herron, James C.
Herron, Mrs. Oliver L.
Hertzberg, Lawrence
Herz, Mrs. Alfred
Herz, J. H.
Hesse, E. E.
Heuser, Arthur W.
Heverly, Earl L.
Hewitt, Edwin Shields
Heymann, Robert L.
Hibben, Joseph W.
Hieber, J. Patrick
Higgins, Miss Margaret
Hildebrand, Dr.
Eugene, Jr.
Hildebrand, Grant M.
Hilgendorf, George M.
Hilker, Mrs. Marion
Hilkevitch, Dr. A. A.
Hill, Carlton
Hill, Dormand S.
Hill, Rolwood R.
Hill, Mrs. Russell D.
Hill, Stacy H.
Hille, Dr. Hermann
Hillier, William H.
Hind, Mrs. John Dwight
Hines, Charles M.
Hinkson, Dr. G. Duncan
Hinman, Mrs. Estelle S.
Hinrichs, Henry, Jr.
Hirsch, Albert
Hirsch, Edwin W.
Hirsch, LeRoy E.
Hirsch, Milton W.
Hirschberg, Samuel J.
Hirtenstein, Robert E.
Histed, J. Roland
Hixon, Mrs. Robert
Hobbs, Russell D.
Hodges, F. Robert
Hodgman, Mrs.
Charles R., Jr.
Hodgkinson, Mrs. W. R.
Hodous, Michael F.
Hoefman, Harold L.
Hoffman, Miss
Elizabeth
Hoffman, Edward
Hempstead
Hoffmann, Dr. Eugene
Hoffman, Raymond A.
Hogan, Robert E.
Hokenson, Howard G.
Hokin, Edwin E.
Holabird, W. S., Jr.
Holden, Edward A.
Holderby, Glen W.
Holinger, Dr. Paul H.
Holland, M. J.
Hollander, Mrs. Samuel
Holleb, A. Paul
Holleb, Marshall M.
Hollenbach, Louis
Holliday, W. J.
Hollins, Gerald
Holloway, Allen D.
Holloway, Charles C.
Holloway, J. L.
Holmberg, Mrs.
Adrian O.
Holmblad, Dr.
Edward C.
Holmburger, Max
Holmes, J. A.
Holmes, William
Holmes, William N.
Holt, McPherson
Holub, Anthony S.
Holzheimer, Carl
Hooper, Miss Frances
Hoover, Mrs. Fred W.
Hope, Alfred S.
Hopkins, Albert L.
Hopkins, Mrs. James M.
Hopkins, Mrs.
James M., Jr.
Hopkins, Dr. M. B.
Horcher, William W.
Hornburg, Arthur C.
Home, Mrs. William
Dodge, Jr.
Horner, Mrs.
Maurice L., Jr.
Horton, Mrs. Helen
Horween, Arnold
Horween, Isidore
Horwich, Leonard J.
Hosbein, Louis H.
Hoshell, Robert J.
Hoslett, Dr. Schuyler
Dean
Houck, Irvin E.
Houck, L. E.
Hough, Charles F.
Hough, Frank G.
Hovland, Mrs. John P.
Howard, Bailey K.
Howard, Mrs. Harvey H.
Howard, Howell H.
Howe, Miss Alice
Howe, Miss Amy L.
Howe, Charles Albee
Howe, Col. Ralph B.
Howe, Roger F.
Howell, Miss Laura O.
Howie, Mrs. James E.
Howse, Richard G.
Howson, Louis R.
Hoy, Pat
Hoyne, Miss Susan D.
Hraback, L. W.
Hrdlicka, Mrs. John D.
Hubachek, Frank
Brookes
Huber, Dr. Harry Lee
Huck, Ralph F.
Hudson, Miss
Katherine J.
Hudson, William J.
Huey, Mrs. A. S.
Hufty, Mrs. F. P.
Huggins, G. A.
Hughes, Dr. Charles E.
Hughes, John E.
Hughes, John W.
Hume, James P.
Hume, Patrick H.
Humphrey, H. K.
Huncke, Oswald W.
Hunding, B. N.
Hunker, Robert W.
Hunt, George L.
Hunt, Jarvis
Hunt, Miss Ruth
Hunt, Theodore W.
Hunt, Mrs. William O.
Hunter, Mrs. C. K.
Hunter, Lemuel B.
Huska, Mrs. Joseph
Hust, George
Huszagh, Ralph D.
Hutchens, Edward J.
Hutchins, John S.
Hutchinson, Foye P.
Hutchinson, Samuel S.
Huth, Frank D.
Hvale, Mrs. James L.
Hynes, D. P.
Hypes, William P.
I ekes, Raymond W.
Ickes, Mrs. Wilmarth
Idelman, Bernard
Igoe, Michael L.
Igoe, Michael L., Jr.
Ignowski, Vincent P.
119
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Iker, Charles
Ilg, Paul F.
Ilg, Robert A.
Illich, George M., Jr.
Ingalls, Allin K.
Ingersoll, Robert S.
Ingersoll, Roy C.
Ingersoll, Mrs. S. L.
Ingram, Frank H.
Inlander, N. Newton
Inlander, Samuel
Irons, Dr. Ernest E.
Irons, Mrs. Spencer E.
Irvine, George L.
Isaacs, Roger D.
Isham, George S.
Isham, Henry P.
Isham, Henry P., Jr.
Isom, W. R.
Ives, Clifford E.
Ives, George R.
Jackson, Allan
Jackson, Archer L.
Jackson, Byrne A.
Jackson, Carl W.
Jackson, Charles Selwyn
Jackson, G. McStay
Jacobi, Miss Emily C.
Jacobs, Aaron M.
Jacobs, Julius
Jacobs, Nathan E.
Jacobs, Mrs. Walter H.
Jacobs, Walter L.
Jacobs, Wyatt
Jacobson, A. J.
Jacobson, Arent J.
Jacobson, Jacob
Jacobson, Raphael
Jahn, Reinhardt H.
James, Ralph C.
James, Thomas M.
James, Walter C.
Jameson, Clarence W.
Jancosek, Thomas A.
Jansey, Dr. Felix
Janson, Dr. C. Helge M.
Janusch, Fred W.
Jarchow, Mrs. C. E.
Jarchow, Charles C.
Jarchow, Robert B.
Jastromb, Samuel
Jeffers, Howard F.
Jeffries, Dr. Daniel W.
Jens, Arthur M., Jr.
Jensen, W. J.
Jerger, Wilbur Joseph
Jessen, Floyd E.
Jessen, Dr. George N.
Jirgal, John
Jirka, Dr. Frank J.
Job, Dr. Thesle T.
Johnson, Alvin O.
Johnson, Calmer L.
Johnson, Herbert M.
Johnson, Hjalmar W.
Johnson, John H.
Johnson, Mrs. Norma O.
Johnson, Norman E.
Johnson, Mrs. O. W.
Johnson, Paul C.
Johnson, P. Sveinbjorn
Johnson, Philip C.
Johnson, R. Ellis
Johnson, Ray T., Jr.
Johnson, Wallace D.
Johnston, Edward R.
Johnston, Mrs. Hubert
McBean
Johnston, Hulburd
Johnston, Mrs. M. L.
Jolly, Miss Eva Josephine
Jonak, Frank J.
Jones, Gordon M.
Jones, James B.
Jones, John E.
Jones, Dr. Margaret M.
Jones, Miss Susan E.
Jonswold, C. R.
Jordan, Horace W.
Jordan, Robert J.
Jorgensen, Paul
Joseph, Mrs. Jacob G.
Joseph, Louis L.
Joy, Guy A.
Juergens, H. Paul
Julian, Dr. Ormand C.
Julien, Victor R.
Jurco, Stephen
Kahn, Mrs. Arthur S.
Kahn, J. Kesner
Kahn, Jerome J.
Kaine, James B.
Kaiser, Dr. George D.
Kalnitz, Arnold B.
Kamenjarin,
Mrs. Anthony
Kamin, William C.
Kamins, Dr. Maclyn M.
Kamm, Dr. Bernard A.
Kane, Jerome M.
Kanehl, James R.
Kanelos, George A.
Kanter, Jerome J.
Kaplan, Morris I.
Kaplan, Nathan J.
Kaplan, Stanley A.
Kargman, Wallace I.
Karlos, Anthony C.
Karst, Lambert P.
Kasakoff, Lawrence
Kasch, Frederick M.
Kash, Bernard B.
Kass, Joseph J.
Katz, Mrs. Sidney L.
Katz, Solomon
Katz, William
Katzenstein, Mrs.
George P.
Katzin, Frank
Kaufman, Justin
Kaufman, M. G.
Kaufmann, Dr.
Gustav L.
Kay, Joseph C.
Kay, Mrs. Marie E.
Keach, Benjamin
Keare, Mrs. Spencer R.
Kearns, Mrs. Jerry J.
Keeley, Robert E.
Keene, William J.
Keeshin, J. L.
Kehoe, Mrs. High Boles
Keith, Stanley
Kelemen, Rudolph
Kelley, John F.
Kelley, Mrs. M. Cotton
Kellogg, Mrs. Helen L.
Kelly, Arthur Lloyd
Kelly, Barbara Wetten
Kelly, Charles Scott
Kelly, Mrs. Haven Core
Kelly, T. Lloyd
Kelsey J. D.
Kemp, Russell M.
Kemper, Hathaway G.
Kemper, Miss Hilda M.
Kemper, James S.
Kempner, Stan
Kendrick, John F.
Kennedy, Mrs. E. J.
Kennedy, Henry Warner
Kennedy, James G.
Kennedy, Lesley
Kennedy, R. J.
Kennedy, Ralph L.
Kennedy, Taylor L.
Kenny, Henry
Kenoe, Henry W.
Kent, Robert H.
Kentor, William E.
Kern, Mrs. August
Kern, H. A.
Kern, Dr. Nicholas H.
Kern, Trude
Kerwin, Edward M.
Ketteman, Dr. Charles H.
Kettering, Mrs.
Eugene W.
Ketzler, A. C.
Kew, Mrs. Stephen M.
Kidston, AlanR.
120
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Kidwell, L. B.
Kiefer, Dr. Joseph H.
Kiessling, Mrs. Charles S.
Kile, Miss Jessie J.
Kimball, Paul C.
Kimball, William W.
Kimbark, John R.
King, Mrs. Charles G.
King, Clinton B.
King, George F.
King, Harold R.
King, Mrs. John
Andrews
Kingman, Mrs. Arthur G.
Kinkead, W. S.
Kinsey, Robert S.
Kirkland, Mrs.
Weymouth
Kirst, Lyman R.
Kitchell, Howell W.
Kittle, Mrs. C. M.
Kitzelman, Otto
Klapman, Philip A.
Klatt, Albert Arthur
Kledzinski, Miss Loretta
Klee, Steven Michael
Klefstad, Sivert
Klein, Robert L.
Klein, William P.
Kleinpell, Dr. Henry H.
Kleist, Mrs. Harry
Kleppinger, William H.
Kleutgen, Dr. Arthur C.
Klinetop, Mrs. Charles W.
Knapp, William G.
Knickerbocker, Miss
Paula
Knight, Howard
Knight, John S.
Knowlton, John M.
Knutson, A. C.
Knutson, George H.
Koch, Mrs. Fred J.
Koch, Raymond J.
Koch, Robert J.
Koczur, Dr. Joseph L.
Koehnlein, Wilson 0.
Koenig, Oswald N.
Koenig, Philip F.
Koerber, Lorenz F., Jr.
Kohn, Edward
Kohn, Henry L.
Kolar, George G.
Kolbe, Frank F.
Kolehmainen, Waino M.
Kolesiak, Walter R.
Kollar, Dr.
John Anton, Jr.
Kopf, Miss Isabel
Kopinski, Louis
Koppenaal, Dr.
Elizabeth Thompson
Korf, Dr. Stanley R.
Kornblith, Mrs.
Howard G.
Kosmach, Frank P.
Kosobud, William F.
Kostrzewski, Dr. M. J.
Kotal, John A.
Kotin, George N.
Koucky, Dr. J. D.
Kowalski, Dr. Leonard F.
Kozlik, Frank B.
Kraft, Mrs. David H.
Kraft, John H.
Kraft, Norman
Kralovec, Emil G.
Kralovec, Mrs. Otto J.
Kramer, Dr. George M.
Kramer, Leroy, Jr.
Kraus, Samuel B.
Kraus, William C.
Krautter, L. Martin
Krebs, Walter O.
Kresl, Carl
Kresnoff, Dr. Charles S.
Kretschmer,
Herman L., Jr.
Krez, Leonard O.
Kribben, Arthur K.
Kribben, Delafield
Krider, E. A.
Kriser, Mrs. Leonard S.
Kritzer,
Richard W., Sr.
Krivanek, Dr. Joseph H.
Kroch, Carl A.
Kroehler, Kenneth
Kroeschell, Robert A.
Kropff, C. G.
Krost, Dr. Gerard N.
Krupnick, Samson
Kruty, Samuel
Kuehn, A. L.
Kuehn,MissKatherineA.
Kuh, Mrs. Edwin J., Jr.,
Kuhn, Frederick T.
Kuhn, Dr. Hedwig S.
Kuhn, Overton F.
Kulikowski, Leon T.
Kunka, Bernard J.
Kunstadter, Albert
Kunstadter, Sigmund W.
Kurfess, John Fredric
Kurpieski, Mrs. Eleanor
Kurtz, William O., Jr.
Kurtzon, Morris
Kurzdorfer, E. T.
Kutak, Jerome F.
Kutchins, Edmund
Kutza, Dr. Michael J.
Kyritsis, Mathon
Laadt, George A.
Laadt, Dr. John R.
Lacey, Miss Clara R.
Laflin, Miss June
Atchison
Laflin, Louis E., Jr.
Laflin, Mrs. Louis E., Jr.
Laflin, Louis E., Ill
Laidley, Roy R.
Laing, Mrs. Milton L.
Laing, William
Lake, Charles W., Jr.
Lambert, C. A.
Lamberton, R. H.
Lambertsen, John G.
Lambrecht, Carl R., Jr.
Lampert, Wilson W.
Lanahan, Mrs. M. J.
Lane, F. Howard
Lang, Edward J.
Lang, Eugene C.
Lang, Gordon
Langdon, Lawrence E.
Langeluttig,
Col. Albert
Langenbach, Mrs.
Alice R.
Langford, Mrs. Robert E.
Langhorne,
Mrs. George Tayloe
Lanman, David T.
Lanman, Mrs.
Edward Boylston
Lansinger, Mrs. John M.
Lapham, Fen ton D.
Large, Judson
Larimer, Howard S.
Larkin, Mrs. Walter D.
Larrance, Ken
Larsen, Samuel A.
Larson, Leslie S.
Larson, L. S.
Larson, Mrs. Sarah G.
La Salle, Miss Janet A.
Lasch, Harry
Lassers, Sanford B.
Laterza, Michael F.
Lathrop, Dr. Clarence A.
Latshaw, Dr. Blair S.
Laud, Mrs. Sam
Lautmann, Herbert M.
Lavers, A. W.
Lavidge, Arthur W.
Law, Mrs. Robert O.
Lawless, Dr. Theodore K.
Lawton, Robert M.
Lax, John Franklin
Layden, Michael J.
Layfer, Seymour J.
121
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Lazar, Maurice
Leadbetter, Gordon
Leahy, George J.
Leahy, James F.
Leavell, James R.
Leavitt, Mrs. Nathan
Le Baron, Miss Edna
Lebold, Samuel N.
Lebolt, John Michael
Lederer, Dr. Francis L.
Lee, Bernard F.
Lee, David Arthur
Leekley, Philip A.
Lefens, Miss Katherine J.
Lefens, Walter C.
Lehmann, Robert O.
Leichenko, Peter M.
Leight, Mrs. Albert E.
Leighton, George N.
Leith, John A.
Leland, Miss Alice J.
Leland, Mrs. Rosco G.
Lello, Herbert F.
Lennon, George W.
Leonard, Arthur T.
Lerch, William H.
Leslie, John H.
Lessman, Gerhard
LeTourneau, Mrs.
Robert
Levering, J. E.
Levi, Julian H.
Levi, Stanley B.
Levin, Mrs. Edward M.,
Jr.
Levin, Robert E.
Levin, Sidney D.
Levinson, Mrs. Salmon O.
Levitan, Benjamin
Levitan, Mrs. Dorothy R.
Levitt, Dr. Le Roy P.
Levy, Alexander M.
Levy, Arthur G.
Lewis, Mrs. J. J.
Ley, Robert J.
Liebenow, J. Gus
Liebenow, Robert C.
Liebenson, Harold A.
Liesendahl,
Mrs. Richard W.
Lietz, J. T.
Liffshin, Reuben J.
Liguori, Sister Mary
Lilien, Mrs. K. K.
Lill, George, II
Lillyblade, Clarence 0.
Lindar, Albert J.
Lindberg, Le Roy A.
Lindell, Arthur G.
Linden, John A.
Lindgren, Erik A.
Lindsay, Mrs. Martin
Lingle, Harrison C.
Linn, Howard
Linn, Mrs. W. Scott
Lipinski, M. G.
Lippman, Mrs. William
Litten, Chapin
Littig, Howard L.
Little, Mrs. E. H.
Littler, Harry E., Jr.
Livingston, Mrs.
Milton L.
Lizzardo, Joseph F.
Llewellyn, Mrs. Ross
Lloyd, William Bross, Jr.
Lodge, Robert H.
Loeb, Mrs. Ernest G.
Loeb, Hamilton M.
Loebl, Jerrod
Loewenberg, Israel S.
Loe wen berg, M. L.
Loewenherz, Emanuel
Loewenherz, Walter B.
Loewenstein, Richard M.
Loewenthal,
Mrs. Richard J.
Loewy, Dr. Arthur
Logan, Seymour N.
Long, R. E.
Long, William E.
Loomis, D. P.
Loomis, Reamer G.
Lorance,
Mrs. Luther M.
Lorber, Herbert J.
Lord, Arthur R.
Lord, John S.
Lord, Mrs. Russell
Lorentz, Arthur G.
Lotz, Philip W.
Loucks, Charles O.
Louer, Albert E. M.
Louis, Mrs. John J.
Loundy, Mrs. Mason A.
Lourie, Donald B.
Lovgren, Carl
Lowe, William H.
Lowell, Arthur J.
Lowrie, Mrs. John M.
Lowrie, Raymond P.
Lucey, Patrick J.
Ludgin, Earle
Ludolph, Wilbur M.
Lundberg, Robert
Lundy, Dr. Clayton J.
Luria, Herbert A.
Lurie, George S.
Lusk, R. R.
Lustgarten, Samuel
Lydon, Robert R.
Lyford, Harry B.
Lynch, J. W.
Lynch, William J., Jr.
Lyon, Charles H.
Mabee, Mrs. Melbourne
MacArthur, Donald
MacCarthy, Richard B.
MacCowan, Hervey L.
MacDonald, E. K.
MacFarland, Lanning
MacGregor, Donald
Macias, William George
Maclntyre, Mrs. M. K.
MacKay, Dr. Roland P.
MacKenzie, William J.
Mackey, Frank J.
Macki, Carl Gunnar
MacKiewich, Justin
Mackinson, Dr. John C.
Mackoff, Mrs. Saul
MacLean, Mrs.
John A., Jr.
MacLellan, K. F.
MacLellan,
Kenneth F., Jr.
MacMurray, Mrs.
Donald
Macomb,
J. deNavarre, Jr.
Madden, John
Madlener, Mrs.
Albert F., Jr.
Madlener, Otto
Madrin, Mrs. Charles
Maehler, Edgar E.
Magerstadt, Madeline
Magid, Cecil E.
Magnus, Albert, Jr.
Magnuson, Mrs. Paul
Mah, George G.
Maher, Dr.
David Bremner
Maher, Mrs. D. W.
Maher, James P.
Main, Walter D.
Maison, Mrs. L. G.
Majka, F. L.
Major, Ross O.
Majors, Mrs. B. S.
Makler, Joseph H.
Maley, Alexander B.
Maling, Albert
Mailer, Dr. Adolph M.
Malmsten, Clarence C.
Malugen, Jack C.
Manasse, De Witt J.
Mandel, Mrs. Aaron W.
Mandel, Edwin F.
Mandel, Miss Florence
Mandel, Mrs. Robert
122
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Manegold, Mrs.
Frank W.
Manierre, Louis
Mann, John M.
Mannette,
Mrs. Russell L.
Manz, Mrs. Carolyn D.
Maragos, Samuel C.
Marchant, Miss Lilian
Maremont, Arnold H.
Mark, E. E.
Mark, Griffith
Marker, Van E.
Markham, Mrs.
Herbert I.
Markle, Mathew J.
Markus, Alfred S.
Marovitz, Sydney R.
Mar quart, Arthur A.
Marquardt, Dr.
Gilbert H.
Marsh, A. Fletcher
Marsh, E. S.
Marsh, Mrs. Marshall S.
Marsh, Peter John
Marshall, Jay
Martin, Eldon
Martin, Mrs. George B.
Martin, George F.
Martin, Samuel H.
Martin, Wells
Martsolf, Philip, Jr.
Marx, Adolf
Marx, Victor E.
Marzola, Leo A.
Mason, Arnold D. K.
Mason, Willard J.
Masse, B. A.
Massey, Richard W.
Masters, Eugene W.
Masters, Keith
Masterson, Peter
Mathesius, Mrs. Walther
Mathis, Allen W.
Matson, J. Edward
Maurer, Dr. Siegfried
Maxant, Basil
Maxwell, A. K., Jr.
Maxwell, Robert E.
Maxwell, W. Stirling
Mayer, Frank D.
Mayer, Herman J., Jr.
Mayer, Isaac H.
Mayer, Leo
Mayer, Oscar G.
Mayer, Robert B.
Mazurek, Miss Olive
McAlvin, Mrs. James H.
McArthur, A. Peter
McArthur, Billings M.
McCabe, Frank J., Jr.
McCahey, James B.
McCallum, W. W.
McCarl, David N.
McCarthy, Joseph W.
McCausland, Mrs.
Clara L.
McClellan, John H.
McCloska, Fred W.
McCloud, Thomas W.
McClun, John M.
McCord, Mrs.
Katheryn L.
McCormick, Mrs.
Chauncey
McCormick, Howard H.
McCormick, Lenader J.
McCormick,
Robert H., Jr.
McCormick, Roger
McCray, Dr. R. M.
McCrea, Mrs. W. S.
McCreight, Louis Ralph
McCurry, Paul D.
McCutcheon, Mrs.
John T.
McDavid, Raven I., Jr.
McDermott, Franklin
McDonald, E. F., Jr.
McDougal, C. Bouton
McDougal, David B.
McDougal, Mrs.
Edward D., Jr.
McDougal, Mrs. James B.
McDougal, Mrs. Mary
McDougal, Mrs. Robert
McErlean, Charles V.
McGowen, Thomas N.
McGregor, John M.
McGuffin, James P.
McGurn, Matthew S.
McKay, Miss Mabel
McKeldin, Mrs. S. Bennet
McKellar, Donald
McKenna, Charles H.
McKibbin,
Mrs. George B.
McKinney, Mrs. Hayes
McKittrick, C. E.
McLaren, Mrs. Robert J.
McLennan, Mrs.
Donald R., Sr.
McLennan, William L.
McManus, J. L.
McMenemy, Logan T.
McMillan, John
McMillan, W. B.
McNair, F. Chaloner
McNamara, Louis G.
McNamara, Robert C.
McNamee, Peter F.
McNulty, Joseph D.
McPherson, Cleo Edwin
McQuarrie, Mrs. Fannie
McReynolds, Mrs.
Ruth M.
Means, John L.
Medsker, Dr. Ora L.
Meek, Cecil P.
Meers, Henry W.
Mehan, Mrs. Georgette
Mehn, Dr. W. Harrison
Meidell, Harold
Meier, Paul
Meiszner, John C.
Melcher, George Clinch
Mellody, Miss Margaret
Melnick, Leopold B.
Mendelsohn,
Dr. Robert S.
Merriam, Miss Eleanor
Merricks, Mrs. James W.
Merrill, Miss Marion E.
Merritt, Thomas W.
Mesenbrink, Paul H.
Metcalfe, Mrs. Charles
Mettenet, Francis X.
Metz, Dr. Arthur R.
Metz, Carl A.
Metzger, Roswell W.
Meyer, Mrs. A. H.
Meyer, Charles A.
Meyer, Dr. Charles A.
Meyer, Charles Z.
Meyerhoff, A. E.
Meyers, Erwin A.
Meyers, Jonas
Michaels, Allen C.
Michaels, Everett B.
Michalko, Edward
Michel, D. Daniel
Michel, Dr. William J.
Michels, Robert D.
Michet, Dr. Clement J.
Middleton, J. A.
Midowicz, C. E.
Mielenz, Robert K.
Milburn, Miss Anne L.
Milgrom, H. T.
Milhening, Frank
Milhoan, F. B.
Miller, Bernard
Miller, Byron S.
Miller, Dr. Cecelia E.
Miller, Mrs. Clayton W.
Miller, C. R.
Miller, Creighton S.
Miller, Mrs. Donald J.
Miller, Mrs. Ellen C.
Miller, Frank A.
Miller, Mrs. George
Miller, Glenn R.
Miller, Mrs. Harvey O.
123
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Miller, Hyman
Miller, John S.
Miller, John W.
Miller, Mrs. Olive
Beaupre
Miller, Oren Elmer
Miller, Mrs. Thomas S.
Miller, William H.
Milligan, John J.
Milliken, John F.
Mills, Allen G.
Mills, Mrs.
Dorothy Stone
Mills, Lloyd Langdon
Mills, Wesley K.
Milne, Mrs. David H.
Milnor, George B.
Miner, Dr. Carl S.
Minkler, Ralph R.
Mitchell, John J.
Mitchell, Oliver L.
Mizen, Dr. Michael R.
Mock, Dr. Harry Edgar
Moderwell,
Mrs. Horace M.
Moeller, George
Mohr, Albert, Jr.
Moinichen, Peter
Moist, Mrs. Samuel E.
Mojonnier, Timothy
Mollan, Mrs. Ferae T.
Mollendorf, J. D.
Molloy, David J.
Mong, Mrs. C. R.
Monheimer, Henry I.
Montgomery, P. B.
Moody, Robert A.
Moore, Chester G.
Moore, Edwin R.
Moore, Harold A.
Moore, Dr. Josiah J.
Moore, Oscar L.
Moore, Paul
Moore, Philip Wyatt
Mordock, John B.
Morgan, John Alden
Morgan, Miss
Elizabeth W.
Morgan, K. P.
Moro, Gerald Scott
Moroni, Aldo L.
Morrison, D. K.
Morrison, Mrs. Gertrude
Morrison, Mrs. Harry
Morrison, James C.
Morrow, Mrs. John, Jr.
Morse, Mrs. Charles J.
Morse, Leland R.
Morse, Mrs. Milton M.
Morse, Robert H.
Moses, Howard A.
Mosher, Edward A.
Moss, Jerome A.
Moss, John T.
Mossman, John E.
Mostek, Raymond
Mouat, Andrew J.
Moulding, Mrs. Arthur T.
Moxon, Dr. George W.
Moyer, Mrs. David G.
Moyer, Mrs. Paul S.
Mudd, Mrs. J. A., Jr.
Muehlstein, Mrs.
Charles
Mueller, Austin M.
Mueller, J. Herbert
Mulcahy, Mrs.
Michael F.
Mulhern, Edward F.
Mullaney, Paul L.
Mullen, Mrs. Esther T.
Mullen, Dr. Joseph J.
Mundstock, Robert W.
Munnecke, Wilbur C.
Munnecke, Mrs.
Wilbur C.
Munroe, Moray
Murphy,
Carroll Dean, Jr.
Murphy, Charles F.
Murphy, Edward F.
Murphy, Joseph D.
Murphy, O. R.
Murphy, Robert E.
Murphy, W. Richard
Muszynski, John J.
Myers, Harold B.
Myrland, Arthur L.
Nachman, H. S.
Naess, Sigurd E.
Nafziger, R. L.
Nagel, Mrs. Frank E.
Nagler, Karl B.
Nance, Willis D.
Nardi, Victor G.
Nath, Bernard
Nathan, Joseph E.
Nault, Dr. William H.
Nebel, Herman C.
Neely, Mrs. Lloyd F.
Nehls, Arthur L.
Nelson, Arthur W.
Nelson, Charles G.
Nelson, Charles M.
Nelson, James S.
Nelson, Victor W.
Nelson, William H.
Neskow, Dr. Peter S. Y.
Nessler, Robert P.
Neuman, Sidney
Neumann, Arthur E.
Newberg, Paul K.
Newberger, Arnold
Newberger, Joseph
Michael
Newcombe, Leo
Newhouse, Karl H.
Newman, Mrs. Albert H.
Newman, Charles H.
Newman, Ralph G.
Newsome, James E.
Newton, C. G.
Nichols, Frank Billings
Nichols, J. C.
Nicholson, Dwight
Nieland, Mrs. Mollie B.
Nielsen, George
Nietschmann, Walter
Nilson, Alfred R.
Nilsson, Mrs.
Goodwin M.
Nishkian, Mrs.
Vaughn G.
Nitze, Mrs. William A.
Noble, Daniel E.
Noble, Samuel R.
Noonan, Edward J.
Norell, Elmer G.
Norem, Mrs. Lawrence E.
Norian, Richard
Norman, Harold W.
Norris, Mrs. Lester
Norton, Christopher D.
Novak, Charles J.
Noyes, Mrs. May Wells
Nusbaum, Mrs.
Hermien D.
Oberlander,
Dr. Andrew J.
Obermaier, John A.
O'Brien, Miss Janet
O'Connell, Edmund
Daniel
O'Connell,
Dr. Franklin T.
O'Connor, Hugh J.
O'Connor, John B.
O'Connor, Thomas S.
Odell, Miss Audrey
Oden, Dr. Joshua, Jr.
Oester, Dr. Y. T.
Offield, Mrs. James
Offield, Wrigley
Oglesbee, Nathan H.
O'Hara, Arthur J.
O'Keeffe, William F.
O'Kieffe, De Witt
Okner, Dr. Henry B.
Olaison, Miss Eleanor O.
Oldefest, Edward G.
Oleson, Wrisley B.
124
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Olin, Carl E.
Olin, Edward L.
Oliver, Dr. Marguerite
Oliver, Mrs. Paul
Olsen, Miss Agnes J.
Olsen, Mrs. Arthur O.
Olson, Albert M.
Olson, Benjamin
Franklin
O'Neil, Dr. Owen
O'Neill, J. W.
Onofrio, Mrs. Michael J.
Oppenheimer, Seymour
Orb, John A.
Orndoff, Dr. Benjamin H.
O'Rourke, Albert
O'Rourke, Mrs. Harry J.
Orr, Hunter K.
Orr, Mrs. Robert C.
Orr, Thomas C.
Ortmayer, Dr. Marie
Osann, Edward W., Jr.
Oscar, Robert E.
Oser, Nelson A.
Osgood, Mrs. Gilbert H.
Ostrom, Mrs. J. Augustus
O'Sullivan, James J.
Otis, Joseph Edward, Jr.
Otis, Peter Witherspoon
Otis, Stuart Huntington
O'Toole, Donald
Ott, Mrs. Fentress
Ott, John Ekern
Ott, John Nash
Ott, Wendel Fentress
Owens, Harry J.
Paasche, Jens A.
Packard, Dr. Rollo K.
Paffhausen, J. V.
Page, John W.
Pagel, Mrs. William H.
Pagels, George A., Jr.
Pallasch, Dr. Gervaise P.
Palm, Felix
Palmer, James L.
Palmer, O. Earl
Palmgren, Mrs.
Charles A.
Paluch, Edward J.
Pandaleon, Costa A.
Papierniak, Dr. Frank B.
Paradee, Sidney A.
Pardee, Harvey S.
Park, R. E.
Parker, Miss Edith P.
Parker, Norman S.
Parker, Troy L.
Parkin, Mrs. J. L.
Parks, C. R.
Parks, Mrs. Ruth S.
Parmelee, Dr. A. H.
Parrillo, Mrs. Mark
Parry, Mrs. Margaret
Parry, Mrs. Norman G.
Partridge, Lloyd C.
Paschen, Mrs. Henry
Paschen, Herbert C.
Pasco, Frank J.
Pashkow, A. D.
Pasko, Walter P.
Patchen, Dr. Paul J.
Patrick, Harry H.
Patterson, Grier D.
Patterson, R. Curtis
Patterson, Thomas A.
Patton, A. E.
Patzelt, Miss Janet
Peabody, Howard B.
Peabody, Miss Susan W.
Peacock, Charles D., Ill
Pearl, Allen S.
Pearson, George
Albert, Jr.
Peasley, Mrs. John R.
Peirce, Albert E.
Pellettieri, Dr. D. J.
Pellicore, Dr.
Raymond J.
Pellouchoud, Vernon J.
Pencik, Jan M.
Percy, Mrs. Charles H.
Pereira, Morton
Perel, Harry Z.
Perkins, Harry D.
Perkins, L. B.
Perlman, Alfred B.
Perlman, Daniel
Perlman, Henry
Perlman, Raymond L.
Perrigo, Charles R.
Perry, Mrs. I. Newton
Peskin, Bernard M.
Peterkin, Daniel, Jr.
Peters, Harry A.
Petersen, Jurgen
Petersen, William 0.
Peterson, Mrs.
Elizabeth F.
Petriskey, Mrs. Helen
Petty, P. E.
Pfaelzer, Miss
Elizabeth W.
Pflaumer, Robert E.
Pflock, Dr. John J.
Philipsborn,
Herbert F., Sr.
Philipsborn,
Col. M. M., Jr.
Phillips, Dr. Herbert
Morrow
Phoenix, George E.
Piatek, Stanley R.
Pick, Frederic G.
Pierce, Berlyn
Pierce, J. Norman
Pierce, Paul, Jr.
Pierson, Joseph B.
Pierson, Roy J.
Pikiel, Mrs. A. J.
Pillsbury, Mrs. Charles S.
Pink, Mrs. Ira M.
Pinsof, William
Pirie, Mrs. Gordon L.
Pirie, Mrs. John T.
Pirie, Mrs. S.jC, Jr.
Piszczek, Dr.1 Edward A.
Pitts, Henry L.
Plapp, Miss Doris A.
Piatt, Mrs. Robert S.
Plochman, Cordelia G.
Plummer, Comer
Plunkett, Paul M.
Pobloske, Albert C.
Podell, Mrs. Beatrice
Hayes
Poister, John J.
Polatsek, Robert D.
Pollak, Charles A.
Pollock, Dr. G. H.
Polyak, Stephen, Jr.
Pond, Mrs. Harold M.
Pope, Mrs. Henry, Jr.
Pope, Herbert
Pope, John W.
Poppell, Tyson E.
Poppenhagen, Henry J.
Porter, Edward C.
Porter, Mrs. Frank S.
Porter, Henry H.
Porter, Louis
Porter, Mrs. Sidney S.
Posey, Chester L.
Post, Myron H.
Pottenger, William A.
Potter, Howard I.
Potter, Dr. Robert Morse
Potts, Albert W.
Poulson, Mrs. Clara L.
Powills, Michael A.
Prall, Bert R.
Pray, Max
Preble, Robert C.
Price, Mrs. Edward S.
Price, Frederick J.
Price, John McC.
Prince, Mrs. Arthur C.
Prince, Harry
Prince, Rev. Herbert W.
Prince, Kenneth C.
Prince, Leonard M.
Pritikin, Marvin E.
Pritzker, Mrs. Jack
125
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Probst, Marvin G.
Prosser, Mrs. John A.
Prussing, Mrs. R. E.
Pucci, Lawrence
Purcey, Victor W.
Putterman, A. Jerry
Puttkammer, E. W.
Puzey, Russell V.
Pyshos, Basil N.
Quick, Miss Hattiemae
Quigley, Jack A.
Racheff, Ivan
Radebaugh, Richard J.
Radford, George
Radford, Mrs. W. A., Jr.
Radovich, Miss Bessie
Raff, Mrs. Arthur
Raftree, Miss Julia M.
Ragan, Alvin J.
Railton, Miss Frances
Ramis, Leon Lipman
Randall, Irving
Raney, Mrs. R. J.
Rankin, Miss Jessie H.
Rathburn, M. Hudson
Rathje, Frank C.
Ratner, Walter B.
Ray, Harold R.
Ray, Hugh L.
Rayfield,
Master Russell P.
Rayfield,
Master Rutherford P.
Raymond, Mrs.
Howard D.
Reach, Benjamin F.
Ready, Charles H.
Reals, Miss Lucile
Farnsworth, Jr.
Redfield, William M.
Reed, John Shedd
Reed, Mrs. John Shedd
Reed, Mrs. Lila H.
Reed, Mrs. Philip L.
Reeder, Howard C.
Refakes, A. J.
Regan, Miss Lucy
Regan, Mrs. Robert G.
Regenstein, Joseph, Jr.
Regenstein, Miss Ruth
Regnery, Frederick L.
Reid, Mrs. Bryan
Reid, Bryan S., Jr.
Reid, Robert H.
Reilly, George A.
Reilly, Vincent P.
Reinecke, Lester W.
Reisch, Mrs. Louis J.
Remien, Miss
Marie Katherine
Renaldi, George J.
Renn, Mrs. John A.
Renouf, William
Renshaw, Mrs. Charles
Rentschler, Mrs.
William H.
Replogle, Dr. Fred A.
Re Qua, Mrs. Charles
Howard, Jr.
Rew, Mrs. Irwin
Reynolds, Mrs.
G. William
Reynolds, Harold F.
Reynolds, James A., Jr.
Reynolds, Thomas A.
Rhines, James E.
Rhodes, Charles M.
Rice, Mrs. Charles R.
Rice, Laurence A.
Rich, Elmer
Rich, Franklin J.
Rich, Harry
Richards, Mrs. Bartlett
Richards, Donald
Richards, Longley
Richards, Marcus D.
Richardson, Irving
Richman, Charles P.
Richter, Mrs. Adelyn W.
Rickcords, Mrs.
Francis Stanley
Ridley, Douglas K.
Rieg, George S.
Rieser, Leonard M.
Rietz, Elmer W.
Rietz, Walter H.
Riker, Dr. William L.
Riley, John H.
Rinaldo, Philip S., Jr.
Rinder, George G.
Rindfleisch, Keith P.
Ring, Leonard M.
Risdon, Russell R.
Ritchie, Mrs. John
Robb, James T.
Roberts, Charles S.
Roberts, Harry V.
Roberts, William
Munsell
Robertson, Scott
Robinson, Edward
Robinson, Milton D.
Robinson, R. W.
Robinson,
Theodore W., Jr.
Robinson, William S.
Roddewig, Clair M.
Roderick, Solomon P.
Rodgers, Dr. David C.
Rodman, Mrs. Hugh
Rodman, Thomas
Clifford
Roe, Frederick
Roebuck, Mrs. A. S.
Roehling, Mrs. Otto G.
Roehm, George R.
Roehrborn, Ernest R.
Rogers, Miss Annie T.
Rogers, Mrs. George P.
Rogers, Lester C.
Roggenkamp, John
Rohloff, Paul F.
Rolnick, Dr. Donald
Romane, Julian J.
Rome, Samuel
Romer, Mrs. Arthur C.
Roos, Miss Virginia M.
Root, John W.
Root, Robert A.
Rosborough, Dr. Paul A.
Rose, Miss Evelyn
Rosen, M. R.
Rosenbaum, Arthur
Rosenbaum, Mrs.
Edwin S.
Rosenbaum, Mrs.
Harold A.
Rosenblatt, S. L.
Rosenfeld, M. J.
Rosenfels, Mrs. Irwin S.
Rosenstone, Nathan
Rosenstone, Samuel
Rosenthal, Gerson M., Jr.
Rosenthal, J. F.
Rosenthal, M. A.
Rosenthal, Samuel R.
Rosenwald, Richard M.
Ross, Mrs. Doris Serrins
Ross, Earl
Ross, Melville, Jr.
Ross, Robert C.
Ross, Thompson
Rosset, Harry
Rotchford, J. Stuart
Rotenberry, Dean
Roth, Mrs. Donald I.
Roth, Mrs. Margit
Hochsinger
Roth, Walter L.
Rothacker, Watterson R.
Rothschild, A. Frank
Rothschild, George
William
Rothschild,
Melville N., Jr.
Routh, George E., Jr.
Rowan, Mrs. Paul
Rowe, John R.
Rozelle, Mrs. Emma
Rubinson, Kenneth Alan
126
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Rubloff, Arthur
Rubnitz, Dr. Myron E.
Rubovits, Mrs. Frank E.
Ruettinger, John W.
Rummler, Charles W.
Runions,
Mrs. Eugene Smith
Runnells, John S.
Ruppert, Max K.
Russell, Mrs. Mary H.
Russell, Robert S.
Rutledge, George E.
Ryan, Arthur
Ryan, Eugene F.
Ryerson, Mrs.
Donald M.
Sacco, Anthony E.
Sachar, Bernard
Sachs, Jack L.
Sackett, Samuel J.
Sage, W. Otis
Saks, Benjamin
Salak, C. James
Salk, Erwin A.
Salk, Dr. Melvin R.
Salmon, Mrs. E. D.
Saltzberg, Gerald B.
Salzman, Charles N.
Sample, John Glen
Sampsell, Marshall G.
Sampson, H. R.
Samuelson, George
Sandler, George S.
Sandidge, Miss Daisy
Sandquist, Elroy C, Jr.
Sandquist, Dr. Robert W.
Sands, Mrs. Frances B.
San Filippo, Dr. Paul D.
Sang, Bernard G.
Sanow, Harry R.
Santini, Mrs. Randolph
Sargent, Chester F.
Sasser, Mrs. Fred H.
Sauter, Fred J.
Sawyer, Dr. Alvah L.
Sawyier, Calvin P.
Sax, Leonard B.
Scalbom, G. Trumbull
Scarborough, Mrs. Henry
Schact, John H.
Schaefer, Fred A.
Schafer, Mrs. Elmer J.
Schaffner, Mrs. L. L.
Schanfield, Leonard
Scharin, Mrs. J. Hippach
Scheinman, Jesse D.
Schelly, Mrs. Herbert S.
Schenck, Frederick
Schenk, Miss Marion H.
Scheu, Ralph
Schick, Dr. Armin F.
Schild, Mrs. Gerhart
Schiller, Donald H.
Schlatter, Miss Nina E.
Schlichting, Justus L.
Schloer, Harold J.
Schloss, Harold W.
Schmidt, Dr. Charles L.
Schmitz, Dr. Henry
Schneider, D. G.
Schneider, F. P.
Schnering, P. B.
Schnering, Robert B.
Schnur, Ruth A.
Schnute, Dr. William J.
Schoenhofen, Leo H.
Scholl, Dr. William M.
Schonne, Mrs.
Charles W.
Schoonhoven, Ray J.
Schreiber, L. D.
Schreiner, Sigurd
Schrey, Dr. Edward L.
Schuck, E. H.
Schueren, Arnold C.
Schulenberg, Raymond F.
Schulman, Dr. Jerome L.
Schultz, Chester H.
Schulze, Mrs. Mathilde
Schumaker, Lawrence C.
Schupp, Philip C.
Schurig, Robert Roy
Schuyler, Mrs.
Daniel J.
Schwab, Laurence E.
Schwander, J. J.
Schwandt, Miss Erna
Schwanke, Arthur
Schwartz, Charles F.
Schwartz, Charles K.
Schwartz, Charles P.
Schwartz, Charles P., Jr.
Schwartz, Edward H.
Schwartz, Joseph H.
Schwartz, Leo J.
Schwartz, Milton H.
Schwartz, Nathan H.
Schwartz, Dr. Otto
Schwartz, Dr. Steven O.
Schweitzer,
Mrs. William E.
Schwinn, Frank W.
Sciaky, Sam
Scott, Miss Maud E.
Scott, Willis H.
Scribner, Gilbert
Scribner, Gilbert H., Jr.
Scudder, Mrs.
William M.
Seaholm, A. T.
Seaman, Irving, Jr.
Searle, Daniel C.
Searle, Mrs. Nell Y.
Searle, William L.
Searles, Donald K.
Sears, Miss Betty J.
Sears, Miss Dorothy
Sears, J. Alden
Searson, R. V.
Seaton, G. Leland
Seaverns, Louis C.
Sedgwick, C. Galen
Sedlacek, Frank
See, Dr. Agnes Chester
Seeburg, Justus P.
Seeburg, Noel M., Jr.
Seeley, Miles G.
Segal, Myron M.
Segal, Victor
Seibert, William R.
Seibold, Mrs.
Arthur B., Jr.
Seidel, Walter H.
Seifert, Mrs. Walter J.
Seip, Emil G.
Seipp, Clarence T.
Seipp, Edwin A., Jr.
Seipp, William C.
Selfridge, Calvin F.
Selig, Lester N.
Selseth, Ole
Selz, Miss Denise
Sembower, John F.
Seng, Francis A.
Senne, John A.
Sensibar, Mrs. Ezra
Serota, Dr. H. M.
Sethness, C. H., Jr.
Sevic, Mrs. William
Sewell, Allen K.
Sexton, Mrs. Sherman J.
Sexton, Thomas G.
Shafer, Dr. Sid John
Shanahan, Mrs. David E.
Shapiro, Henry
Sharp, Carl J.
Sharrow, H. N.
Shaw, Alfred P.
Shaw, John I.
Shedd, Mrs. Charles C.
Sheesley, Jay R.
Sheldon, James M.
Shelton, Dr. W. Eugene
Shepherd, Mrs. Edith P.
Shepherd, Miss Olive M.
Sherman, Mrs. W. W.
Shillestad, John N.
Shillinglaw, David L.
Shoan, Nels
Shoemaker, M. M.
Shoemaker, Paul B.
Sholes, DeVer
127
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Shorey, Clyde E.
Shroyer, Malcolm E.
Shuart, Karl P.
Shumway, Edward D.
Shumway, Mrs. Edward
De Witt
Shumway, Spencer
Thomas
Shure, Myron B.
Sibley, Joseph C, Jr.
Siebel, George E.
Siebert, C. Stuart, Jr.
Sieck, Herbert
Siemund, Roy W.
Sieracki, Mrs. Anton
Silander, A. I.
Silberman, Charles A.
Silberman, David, Jr.
Silberman, David B.
Silberman, Hubert S.
Silberman, N. M.
Sill, Vincent D.
Sills, Budd
Sills, Clarence W.
Silverstein, Raymond
Simmonds, Mrs.
George L.
Simond, Robert E.
Simonds, Dr. James P.
Simonson, Burton E.
Simpson, Lyman M.
Sims, Edwin W., Jr.
Sims, William W.
Sinaiko, Dr. Edwin S.
Sincere, Henry B.
Sinclair, Dr. J. Frank
Singer, Mrs. Mortimer H.
Singer, William A.
Sinsheimer, Allen
Siragusa, Ross D.
Sittler, Edwin C.
Sivage, Gerald A.
Skleba, Dr. Leonard F.
Skudstad, Richard L.
Slater, Frederick J.
Sloan, Dr. Noah H.
Smallberg, Dr.
William A.
Smeeth, William B.
Smick, Robert W.
Smigiel, Chester W.
Smith, Bruce M.
Smith, Edgar H.
Smith, Dr. Edward C.
Smith, Harold Byron
Smith, Mrs. Hermon
Dunlap
Smith, J. P.
Smith, Jens
Smith, John F., Jr.
Smith, Mrs.
Katharine Walker
Smith, Mrs. Kinney
Smith, L. Richard
Smith, Lynwood
Smith, Miss Marion D.
Smith, Miss Ollie M.
Smith, Paul C.
Smith, Philip E.
Smith, R. L., Jr.
Smith, Mrs. Ruth B.
Smith, Mrs. Theodore
White
Smith, Z. Erol
Smuk, Dr. J. E.
Smullan, Alexander
Snodell, Walter S., Jr.
Snow, Lendol D.
Snyder, Harry
Snyder, Richard E.
Sobel, Mrs. Herbert H.
Sola, Joseph G.
Solinsky, R. S.
Solomon, Alfred B.
Somerville, Mrs. William
Sonntag, Dr. Joseph F.
Sopkin, Mrs. Setia H.
Sorensen, Howard C.
Sorensen, Stanley M.
Sorensen, T. R.
Spacek, Leonard P.
Spalding, Mrs.
Vaughn C, Jr.
Spanjer, Henry J., Jr.
Spaulding, J. B.
Specht, Mrs. F. W.
Speer, Robert J.
Speigel, Dr. I. Joshua
Spelman, Harold J.
Spencer, Mrs.
Frederich L.
Spencer,
Mrs. Humphrey Orr
Spencer, William M.
Spencer, Mrs. William M.
Sperry, Mrs. Leonard M.
Sperry, Oliver R.
Spertus, Herman
Spiegel, Mrs. Arthur H.
Spiegel, Mrs. Gatzert
Spiegel, Dr. Manuel
Spiegel, Peter J.
Spiel, Mrs. Robert E.
Spielmann, Willson
Spinka, Dr. Harold M.
Spitz, Joel
Spooner, Dr. Bruce A.
Sporrer, M. J.
Sprague, Dr. John P.
Spray, Cranston
Spreyer, F. L.
Sprtel, Dr. Simon L.
Squires, John G.
Staack, Dr.
H. Frederick, Jr.
Staat, Richard A.
Staehle, Jack C.
Stagman, Nathan
Staley, Miss Kate
Stanhaus, Wilfrid X.
Stanley, Justin A.
Stannard, F. J.
Starbird, Miss Myrtle I.
Starrels, Joel
Starzyk, Dale
Stateler, C. B.
Staub, E. Norman
Steadry, Frederick O.
Steele, Henry B., Jr.
Steele, Mrs. Walter D.
Steepleton, A. Forrest
Stefan, Joseph J.
Stein, Mrs. Henry L.
Stein, Dr. Irving
Stein, Sydney, Jr.
Steinberg, Dr. Milton
Steiner, George R.
Steiner, Harold C.
Stenn, Dr. Frederick
Stenson, Frank R.
Stepelton, Norman A.
Stephan, Mrs. John
Stephani, Edward J.
Stephens, W. R., Jr.
Sterba, Dr. Joseph V.
Stern, Mrs. Alfred
Stern, Gardner H.
Stern, Oscar D.
Stetson, William C.
Steuer,
Mrs. Joseph True
Stevens, Mrs.
Clement D.
Stevens, Delmar A.
Stevens, Elmer T.
Stevenson, Engval
Stewart, John
Stiglitz, Reuben
Stine, Francis B.
Stine, Orrin B.
Stiner, Mrs. Norman J.
Stipp, John E.
Stirling, Miss Dorothy
Stitt, Robert B.
Stoffels, Edgar O.
Stoker, Nelson D.
Stone, J. McWilliams, Jr.
Stone, Mrs. Theodore
Storer, E. W.
Stough, Mrs. Jay
Strand jord, Dr. Nels M.
Stratton, Paul
128
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Straus, Frederick W.
Straus, Henry H.
Straus, Martin L.
Straus, Melvin L.
Strauss, Dr. Alfred A.
Strauss, Mrs.
Herman A.
Strauss, Ivan
Strauss, John L.
Straw, Mrs. H. Foster
Strickfaden, Miss
Alma E.
Stromberg, Charles J.
Strong, Edmund H.
Strong, M. D.
Strotz, Harold C.
Stuart, Robert D., Jr.
Stuebner, Erwin A.
Stulik, Dr. Charles
Stults, Allen P.
Sturgis, John C.
Sturtevant, Roy E.
Sturtevant, Mrs. Roy E.
Sudler, Carroll H., Jr.
Summer, Mrs. Edward
Sundin, Ernest G.
Suomela, John P.
Surpless, Mrs. James L.
Sutherland, Mrs. Robert
Sutherland, William
Sutter, William P.
Sutton, Dr. George C.
Swain, David F.
Swanson, Holgar G.
Swartchild, William G.
Sweet, Philip W. K.
Swett, Israel
Swett, Robert Wheeler
Swibel, Charles R.
Swift, Mrs. Alden B.
Swift, Edward F„ Jr.
Swift, George H., Jr.
Swift, Gustavus F., Jr.
Swinford, James C.
Swonk, Wayne
Sykes, Aubrey L.
Sykes, Byron M.
Sykes, Mrs. Wilfred
Symons, John
Synek, Henry Thrush
Szymanski,
Dr. Frederick J.
Talbot, Mrs. C. Conover
Talbot, Stuart
Talbot, Mrs. Stuart
Tallman, John Emil
Talmage, Mrs. Harry
Tanan, Stanley J.
Tarrant, Ross
Tax, Dr. Sol
Taylor, Mrs. A. Thomas
Taylor, E. Hall
Taylor, Herbert J.
Taylor. L. S.
Taylor, Orville
Taylor, Robert C.
Taylor, William L., Jr.
Teach, Gordon L.
Tellschow, H. B.
Temple, Charles Vach6
Tenney, Henry F.
Terrill, Dean
Terry, Fos Bell
Tessem, Nels
Thatcher, Everett A.
Thatcher, Dr. Harold W.
Thelen, Floyd E.
Thillens, Melvin
Thomas, Mrs. Florence T.
Thomas, W. E.
Thomas, Dr. William A.
Thompson, A. M.
Thompson, Arthur H.
Thompson, Ernest H.
Thompson, Floyd E.
Thompson, John E.
Thompson, Dr. W. V.
Thon, Warren H.
Thoren, Mrs. J. N.
Thome, Hallett W.
Thornton, Roy V.
Thorson, Reuben
Thorson, Mrs. Reuben
Thrasher, Dr. Irving D.
Thresher, C. J.
Thulin, F. A.
Thullen, Henry M.
Tibbitts, Douglas E.
Tibbetts, Mrs. N. L.
Tiberius, George
Tideman, S. N., Jr.
Tieken, Theodore
Tilden, Louis Edward
Tippens, Mrs. Albert H.
Tobey, William Robert
Tockstein, Miss
Mary Louise
Todt, Mrs. Edward G.
Tolpin, Paul H.
Tonn, George
Toomin, Philip R.
Topaz, Martin
Torbet, A. W.
Torff, Selwyn H.
Torosian, Peter G.
Torrence, George P.
Touchstone, John Henry
Tourtellot, Gair, III
Towler, Kenneth F.
Tracy, Wilfred
Trainor, H. J.
Trask, Arthur C.
Traut, Bernard H.
Travelletti, Bruno L.
Traver, George W.
Travers, Vernon
Travis, Eugene C.
Traylor, Mrs.
Melvin A., Sr.
Traylor, Mrs.
Melvin A., Jr.
Trees, George S.
Treffeisen, Gustave
Trenkmann, Richard A.
Trentlage, Richard B.
Trienens, Howard J.
Trimarco, Ralph R.
Trimble, Mrs. M. B.
Tripp, Chester D.
Trombly, Dr. F. F.
Trowbridge, Mrs.
A. Buel, Jr.
Trude, Mrs. Mark W.
True, Charles H.
Trumbull, William M.
Tubergen, Harry F., Jr.
Tumpeer, Joseph J.
Turner, G. H.
Turner, Mrs. Horace E.
Turney, Kenneth R.
Turow, Dr. David D.
Twerdahl, Edward A., Jr.
Tyler, Thomas S.
Tyrrell, Miss Frances
Ughetti, John B.
Uihlein, Edgar J., Jr.
Ullmann, Herbert S.
Ullmann, S. E.
Ulrich, Norman A.
Upham, Mrs.
Frederic W.
Urbain, Leon F.
Uriell, Francis H.
Ustick, Robert W.
Utter, Mrs. Arthur J.
Vacha, Dr. Victoria B.
Vail, Dr. Derrick T.
Vale, Mrs. Murray
Valentine, Andrew L.
Valentine, Patrick A.
Van Artsdale, Mrs.
Flora D.
Vance, Dr. Graham A.
Van Cleef, Felix
Van Cleef, Mrs. Noah
Van Cleef, Paul
Van Dellen, Dr.
Theodore R.
VanderLaan,
Dr. Cornelius A.
129
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Van Deventer,
Christopher
Van Duzer, John B.
Vanek, John C.
Van Hagen, Miss
Elizabeth
Van Kirk, Mrs. R. D.
Van Mell, Herman T.
Van Ness, C. Radford
Van Nice, Errett
Van Ryzen, Joel G.
Van Schaak, R. H., Jr.
Van Tassel, Karl R.
Van Winkle, James Z.
Van Zwoll, Henry B.
Varel, Mrs. C. D.
Vaughan, Norman
Vawter, William A., II
Vehe, Dr. K. L.
Venema, M. P.
Venerable, Mrs. James T.
Vernon, John T.
Verson, David C.
Veverka, Dr. Frank J.
Vette, J. L.
Vial, Charles H.
Vickery, Miss Mabel S.
Vil Dr. Charles S.
Vogel, James B.
Vogl, Otto
Vogt, Mrs. Albert
Volid, Peter
Volkober, J. A.
Von Colditz, Dr.
G. Thomsen
von Leden, Dr. Hans
Von Wolforsdorf, Paul
Voorhees, H. Belin
Voosen, John C.
Vorreiter, C. W.
Vose, Mrs. Frederic P.
Voynow, Edward E.
Wacker, Frederick G., Jr.
Wade, Albert G., II
Wadsworth,
Robert Woodman
Wager, William
Wagner, Mrs. David H.
Wagner, Mrs. Frances B.
Wagner, Fritz, Jr.
Wagner, John Alexander
Wagner, Richard
Wahl, Arnold Spencer
Wahl, Orlin I.
Wakefield, Dr. Ernest H.
Wakerlin, Dr. George E.
Walbert, Richard
Waldman, Seymour C.
Walgreen, C. R., Jr.
Walgreen, Mrs.
Charles R.
Walker, James
Walker, Mrs. Paul
Walker, Samuel J.
Walker, Ward
Walker, William E.
Walkowiak, Dr. Lydia
Waller, Mrs. Edward C.
Waller, Fletcher C.
Wallin, Mrs. G. W.
Walsh, Dr. Eugene L.
Wang, Dr. S. Y.
Wanner, Arthur L.
Ward, Mrs. David Harris
Ward, Mrs. N. C.
Ward, William Parker
Ware, Mrs. Robert R.
Ware, Mrs. Thomas M.
Wares, Mrs. Helen Worth
Warfield, Edwin A.
Warner, Mrs. John Eliot
Warren, Ben O.
Warren, Paul S.
Warren, Walter G.
Warsh, Leo G.
Was, Dr. Harold H.
Washington, Laurence W.
Wasick, Dr. Milan M.
Wasleff, Mrs. Alexia
Wassell, Joseph
Wasson, Mrs. Isabel B.
Waterbury, Donald O.
Waterman, French
Watkins, George H.
Watkins, William A. P.
Watkins, W. W.
Watson, Harry P.
Watson, Norman E.
Watson, William Upton
Watt, Andrew J.
Watt, Richard F.
Watts, Amos H.
Watts, Harry C.
Watzek, J. W., Jr.
Waud, Morrison
Weary, Rollin D., Jr.
Weaver, John M.
Weaver, Robert P.
Webb, Dr. Edward F.
Weber, Paul W.
Weber, Warren J.
Webster, Frederick F.
Webster, Henry A.
Webster, Mrs. R. S.
Weeks, Kenneth L.
Wegrzyn, Dr. John T.
Wegrzyn, Joseph
Weichselbaum, Dr.
Paul K.
Weigel, George K.
Weigle, Mrs. Maurice
Weil, Alfred J.
Weil, Martin
Weiner, George
Weinress, Morton
Weinress, S. J.
Weinstein, M. A.
Weinstein, Dr. M. L.
Weinzimmer, Dr. H. R.
Weir, Paul
Weisbrod, Benjamin H.
Weisbrod, Maxfield
Weiss, Dr. Edward
Weiss, Dr. Leon H.
Weiss, Mrs. Morton
Weiss, Siegfried
Weissbrenner, A. W.
Weissman, Dr. Irving
Weitzel, Carl J.
Welch, M. W.
Weldon, Richard H.
Welfeld, Marvin J.
Welles, Mrs. Donald P.
Welles, Mrs. Edward
Kenneth
Wells, Arthur H.
Wells, C. A.
Wells, Miss Cecilia
Wells, Mrs. John E.
Wells, John Warren
Wells, Preston A.
Welton, Arthur D., Jr.
Wendel, George E.
Wendell, Barrett
Wendell, F. Lee H.
Wendell, Miss
Josephine A.
Wendorf, Herman
Wentworth, Mrs.
Mary T.
Wentworth, Mrs.
Sylvia B.
Wentz, Peter L.
Wenzel, Alfred C.
Werelius, Dr. Carl Y.
Wertheimer, Joseph
Wesby, Charles F.
Wesby, Vernon L.
Wesley, C. N.
West, Thomas H.
Westbrook, Frank
Wetmore, Horace O.
Wharton, Dr. Donald C.
Wheary, Warren
Wheaton, David H.
Wheeler, E. Todd
Wheeler, George A.
Wheeler, Leslie M.
Wheeler, Mrs. Seymour
Whipple, Mrs. Charles J.
Whiston, Jerome P.
130
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Whitaker, R. B.
White, Mrs. James C.
White, Richard T.
White, Sanford B.
Whitfield, George B.
Whiting, Lawrence H.
Whitnell, William W.
Whitney, Jack M., II
Whitney, Lafeton
Whitt, Virgel E.
Wicks, Dr. Mark
Wicks, Russell M.
Widdicombe, Mrs. R. A.
Wieland, Mrs.
George C.
Wienhoeber, George V.
Wies, H. M.
Wiggins, Kenneth M.
Wilbrandt, Robert A.
Wilcox, Robyn
Wild, Lydon
Wilder, Harold, Jr.
Wiles, Mrs. Russell
Wiley, Mrs. Clarence F.
Wilhelm, Dr. Emanuel C.
Wilker, Mrs. Milton W.
Wilkey, Fred S.
Wilkinson, Mrs.
George L.
Wilkinson, John C.
Willems, Dr. J. Daniel
Willens, Joseph R.
Willett, Howard L., Jr.
Willey, Mrs. Charles B.
Willey, Lawrence V., Jr.
Williams, Emory
Williams, Mrs.
G. Reynolds
Williams, Harry J.
Williams, Dr. Jack
Williams, Dr. Jasper F.
Williams, Kenneth
Williams, Robert J.
Williams, Rowland L.
Williams, Thomas L., Jr.
Williams, W. J.
Williamson, George H.
Williamson, Mrs. Jack A.
Willis, Paul, Jr.
Willis, Thomas H.
Willner, Benton Jack, Jr.
Wilms, Hermann P.
Wilson, Allen B.
Wilson, D. H.
Wilson, Edward Foss
Wilson, Miss Helen A.
Wilson, John P., Jr.
Wilson, Mrs. John R.
Wilson, Joseph J.
Wilson, Morris Karl
Wilson, Philip Servis
Wilson, Robert H.
Winans, Frank F.
Windchy,
Mrs. Frederick O.
Windsor, H. H., Jr.
Winston, James H.
Winston, Mrs. James H.
Winter, Irving
Winter, Munroe A.
Wirth, J. W.
Wiseman, William P.
Wishnick, Dr.
Seymour D.
Witkowski, Dr. Lucjan L.
Witter, William M.
Wlochall, Arthur
Wolbach, Murray, Jr.
Wolfe, Lloyd R.
Wolfson, Miss Nancy
Wolfson, Rudolph A.
Wolnak, George
Wood, Mrs. Gertrude D.
Wood, Mrs. Hettie R.
Wood, Mrs. Kay
Wood, Mrs. R. Arthur
Wood, Robert E.
Wood, Mrs. Phylys
Wood, Mrs. Rollin D.
Woodall, Lloyd
Woods, Frank H.
Woods, Weightstill
Woolard, Francis C.
Woolman, John S.
Wright, George L.
Wronski, Casimir
Pulaski
Wulf, Miss Lydia
Wulf, Miss
Marilyn Jean
Wyatt, Harry N.
Wygert, Edwin E.
Wupper, Benjamin F.
Yager, Mrs. Vincent
Yarnall, Frank H.
Yates, T. L.
Ylvisaker, L.
Yondorf, John David
Yondorf, Milton S., Jr.
Yonkers, Edward H.
Yorkey, Mrs. Margaret
Yost, Miss Karyl
Young, B. Botsford
Young, Dr. Donald R.
Young, E. Frank
Young, J. L.
Young, William T., Jr.
Zabel, Max W.
Zabel, Mrs. Max W.
Zadek, Milton
Zapel, Elmer J.
Zawacki, Robin L.
Zeisler, Mrs. Ernest B.
Zeiss, Dr. Fred R.
Zelinsky, S. F.
Zerler, Charles F.
Ziebarth, Charles A.
Zimmerman, E. W.
Zimmermann, Frank O.
Zimmerman,
Dr. Harold W.
Zimmerman, Louis W.
Zimmermann, Russell A.
Zinke, Otto A.
Zitzewitz, Mrs. Elmer K.
Zitzewitz, Mrs. W. R.
Zivin, Mrs. Alma M.
Zurcher, Mrs. Suzette M.
Zwiener, Kenneth V.
131
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS (continued)
Barkhausen, Louis H.
Bichl, Thomas A.
Bruckner, William T.
Combs, Earle M., Jr.
Conlin, Andrew F.
Deslsles, Mrs. Carrie L.
Dimmer, Miss
Elizabeth G.
Dubbs, C. P.
Dunbar, James H., Jr.
Eisenbrath, Miss Elsa B.
Engberg, Miss Ruth M.
Folsom, Mrs. William R.
Frank, Arthur A.
Gaertner, William
Ginther, Miss Minnie C.
Groot, Cornelius J.
Hamm, Fred B.
DECEASED 1962
Harris, Mrs. Abraham
Hintz, Mrs.
Aurelia Bertol
Hoyt, Mrs. Phelps B.
Hunter, Mrs. Florence H.
Jackson, Mrs. W. A.
Jetzinger, David
John, Dr. Findley D.
Johnston, Miss Fannie S.
Jones, Dr. Fiske
Jones, Melvin
Kearney, A. T.
Langhorne, George
Tayloe
Magan, Miss Jane A.
Mead, Dr. Henry C. A.
Megan, Graydon
Miller, Miss Bertie E.
Ooms, Casper William
Pettibone, Holman D.
Pritchard, Richard E.
Randall,
Rt. Rev. Edwin J.
Schmidt, Mrs. Minna M.
Sencenbaugh, Mrs. C. W.
Sisskind, Louis
Stacey, Mrs. Thomas I.
Strong, Mrs. Walter A.
Swartchild, Edward G.
Towne, Mrs. John D. C.
Traer, Glenn W.
Vacin, Emil F.
Washburne, Hempstead
Webster, Miss Helen R.
Wrigley, Mrs. Charles W.
Young, George W.
132
NON-RESIDENT ASSOCIATE MEMBERS
Those, residing fifty miles or more from the city of Chicago, who have
contributed $50 to the Museum
Baum, Mrs. James
Baxter, George R.
Bradley, Mrs. Oma M.
Brown, Walter F.
Bruce, Richard H.
Buchanan, Warren
Carlson, Elmer G.
Colby, Carl
Cruttenden,
Walter W., Jr.
Droste, Albert C.
Elbersen, William J.
Fairman, Fred W., Jr.
Gooch, Cecil D.
Graham, Thomas A.
Hagerty, Kenneth A.
Hanson, Martin W.
Johnson, Perry Charles
Johnson, Dr. Sydney J.
Johnson, Mrs. Sydney J.
Lindboe, S. R.
McBain, James H.
Meevers, Harvey
Merker, George E., Jr.
Montagu, Austin Phillips
Niederhauser, Homer
Oates, James F., Jr.
O'Brien, Ward
Pain, F. W.
Palais, Gordon K.
Pearce, Thomas H.
Pearson, Mrs. Emma
Phillips, Montagu Austin
Piper, Warren Peter
Porter, Dr. Eliot F.
Risto, Herbert
Soanes, Dr. Sidney V.
Stark, Ralph W.
Stevens, Edmund W.
Trott, James Edwards
Vas, Gabriel N.
Whipple, Miss Velma D.
Winslow, Seth L.
Wujcik, Robert
SUSTAINING MEMBERS
Those who contribute $25 annually to the Museum
Adler, Robert S.
Angle, Dr. Paul M.
Banks, Dr. Sam W.
Bell, Arthur Joel
Beukema, Miss Hermine
Bowen, Carroll G.
Callahan, Dr. James J.
Coulter, Mrs. J. R.
Crown, Irving
De Butts, J. D.
Dodge, John V.
Don, Daniel
Duncan, Kent W.
Eckhouse, Richard H.
Evans, Dr. Florence L.
Ewen, Gordon H.
Fagan, Mrs. Abel E.
Farley, Preston
Fentress, David W.
Fickes, Robert O.
Fink, Sam
Gabriel, Rudolph R.
Gelman, Dr. Renee L.
Gore, Budd
Guilbault, Joseph E.
Hall, J. Parker
Hepburn, R. J.
Hill, David A.
Kaiser, Dr. George D.
Keith, Donald K.
Kimmel, J. Myron
Knight, Arthur B.
Krulik, Michael
Lee, Edward J.
Martin, C. Virgil
Martin, Dr. Stanley
Melamed, Dr. Myron
Meythaler, Robert J.
Minas, Karl K.
Moore, David W.
Mueller, William J.
Nathan, Thomas
Nolan, W. P.
Patinkin, Norman J.
Peterson, Lawrence A.
Plunkett, Paul M.
Price, Mark
Quackenbush, John L.
Renner, Carl
Roberts, William J.
Sale, Robert C.
Schaffner, Arthur B.
Schram, Frederick R.
Sebastian, Jerome R.
Scheffner, Miss
Elizabeth B.
Schulze, Paul III
Stout, Miss Phyllis A.
Swanton, John R.
Thomas, Robert B.
Van Koert, Lewis I.
Waddington, Dr.
Harry K.
Wallerich, George M.
Warner, J. E.
Wehrmacher, Dr.
William H.
Weisman, Jack
Windes, Guilford R.
Wren, David
133
ANNUAL MEMBERS
Those who contribute $10 annually to the Museum
Abbott, James S., III
Abel, Miles L.
Abel, Robert B.
Abeles, Alfred T.
Abrahams, Harry
Abrahamson, Robert A.
Abrams, Burton R.
Abrams, Irving S.
Achtner, Raymond H.
Ackerberg, Robert, Jr.
Ackermann, Kurt J.
Ackerson, Carl
Adams, Cyrus H.
Adams, Eaton
Adams, Hall
Adams, Harvey M.
Adamson, Henry
Norcross
Addington, Mrs. Keene H .
Addis, Donald J.
Addison, Edward A.
Adelman, R. J.
Ader, David L.
Adler, Charles
Adler, David
Adler, Howard
Adler, Richard F.
Adler, William H.
Agar, Mrs. Katherine D.
Agnew, Dr. Paul C.
Ahern, Edwin W.
Ahlfeld, William J.
Ahnquist, Elwyn T.
Ahrens, Mrs. Russel F.
Aigner, A. C.
Aishton, Richard A.
Akerhaugen, Alfred
Akers, Milburn P.
Akre, Dr. Osmund H.
Alberding, Charles
Howard
Albus, Kent
Alden, John E.
Alderdyce, D. D.
Aldige, Miss Esther
Aldrich, Howard A.
Alexander, Fred W.
Alford, Lore W.
Allen, Amos G.
Allen, Dale C.
Allen, F. Denby
Allen, Gerald C. F.
Allen, Greer
Allen, M. T.
Allison, Anthony G.
Allison, Dr. James M., Jr.
Alschuler, Mrs.
Alfred S., Sr.
Alschuler, Richard H.
Alsin, Dr. Clifford L.
Alter, James
Altman, Julian A.
Altschul, Mrs. A. Robert
Altschul, Gilbert
Amberg, Mrs. Thomas
Ames, Mrs. John D.
Amling, Raymond O.
Amon, John W.
Amren, Stanley C.
Amtman, Dr. Leo
Andalman, Michael
Andelman, Dr. Samuel L.
Anderson, A. B.
Anderson, Corliss D.
Anderson, Ellis B.
Anderson, J. Arthur
Anderson, John H., Jr.
Anderson, John L.
Anderson, Kenneth H.
Anderson, Leonard W.
Anderson, Robert
Anderson, Robert W.
Anderson, Roy P.
Anderson, Roy R.
Anderson, Mrs. Stanley D .
Anderson,
Theodore W., Jr.
Anderson, W. A.
Andreas, Osborn
Andrews, C. Prentiss
Andrews, Frederick B.
Andrews, Mrs. Roy E.
Angevin, John J.
Angres, Dr. Erwin
Anixter, Edward F.
Annan, Ormsby
Anson, Dr. Barry J.
Antonczyk, Raymond
Antonow, Joseph P.
Appelbaum, Mrs. Henry
Apple, Dr. Carl
Applegate, Ralph W.
Appleton, Mrs. Albert I.
Appleton, Mrs. Arthur I.
Archer, Dr. E. A.
Arenberg, Albert L.
Argoe, Dimitri T.
Arieff, Mrs. Alex J.
Arkema, Edward L. S.
Arkin, Dr. Aaron
Armanetti, Guy
Armour, Mrs. Monroe
Armour, Norbert F.
Armstrong, Dr.
Charles H.
Armstrong, Mrs. John M.
Arnkoff, Dr. Morris
Arnold, Alex
Arnold, Charles S.
Arnold, David R.
Arnold, Donald R.
Arnold, G. E.
Arnold, Dr. Robert A.
Arnold, Robert S.
Aronson, Harry
Aronson, M. R.
Aronson, Mrs. Zelda G.
Arquilla, George, Jr.
Arrington, Mrs.
W. Russell
Arthur, Robert S.
Arthur, Thomas
Arthur, Mrs. W. R.
Arvey, Erwin B.
Aschman, Mrs.
Frederick T.
Ashbrook, Charles G.
Ashburne, Dr. L. Eudora
Ashcraft, Edwin M., Ill
Ashenhurst, Robert L.
Asher, Dr. Carl A.
Ashmore, Harry S.
Askounis, Mrs. Homer
Askow, Irwin J.
Astrin, Marvin H.
Athanas, Arthur
Atkinson, Mrs.
Wallace G.
Audo, Peter D.
Auer, Stuart F.
Auerbach, Mrs. Julius
Auerbach, Stanley I.
August, K. C.
Augustus, Mrs. B. Birks
Aurelio, Anthony J.
Autenrieth, Glenn E.
Austin, Mrs. Henry
Warren
Austin, William F., Ill
Avalon, Mrs. George M.
Averhoff, Mrs. Charles C.
Averitt, Arthur C.
Avery, Mrs. Howard
Ayers, Dr. George W.
Ayers, William P.
Ayres, Willard
Babel, Edmund F.
Bach, Mrs. Louis S.
Backman, C. E.
Badger, Mrs. James G.
Baehr, William B.
Baer, Arthur A.
Baer, Arthur J., Jr.
Baer, Mrs. Joseph W.
Baer, Mrs. Robert A.
Bagan, Bernard
134
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Baggot, Mrs. James E.
Bagley, A. B.
Bagley, Hughes A.
Bailes, W. L.
Bailey, Albert C.
Bailey, Ronald
Bailey, Mrs. Warren G.
Bair, Mrs. David R.
Baird, Mrs. Andrew
Baird, John W.
Baird, Russell M.
Baker, Bruce
Baker, Donald
Baker, Donald R.
Baker, Frank M.
Baker, George D.
Baker, Mrs. Herbert
Baker, John Francis
Baker, John L.
Baker, Mrs. Marion
Herbert
Baker, Robert C.
Balaban, Elmer
Balagot, Mrs. Reuben
Baldridge, Holmes
Balikov, Dr. Harold
Balin, Meyer C.
Ball, Edward H.
Ball, William H.
Ballard, Mrs. E. S.
Ballengee, Lee
Baltz, William S.
Bankard, E. Hoover, Jr.
Banning, Thomas A., Jr.
Bannister, Daniel R.
Barasa, J. Laurence
Barasch, Dr. C. J.
Barbero, Mrs. Claudia
Barboro, Alfred J.
Barclay, Miss Cheryl
Barclay, Harold
Barclay, Wendell F.
Bard, Jack J.
Bard, Ralph Austin, Jr.
Barke, Oscar A.
Barker, Cleveland A.
Barker, Mrs. C. R.
Barker, James M.
Barker, M. G.
Barker, Robert Clyde
Barlett, Robert C.
Barlow, Mrs Gordon Alan
Barnes, Mrs. Cecil
Barnes, George E.
Barnes, Mrs. Harold
Osborne
Barnes, William H.
Barnett, Mrs. George
Barnett, Herbert H.
Barnett, Mark R.
Barnett, Stephen D.
Barnhart, Harry
Barnhart, Tom E.
Barnow, David H.
Barr, Charles L.
Barr, G. Lance
Barr, Warren N., Jr.
Barr, Warren S.
Barrash, Dr. Meyer
Barrett, Charles R.
Barrett, Mrs. Wilson
Barrick, Dr. Robert G.
Barricks, Arthur G.
Barrowclough,
Miss Jane S.
Barron, Raymond M.
Barry, David J.
Barry, Gerald A.
Barry, Norman J.
Barsy, Herbert
Bartels, Miss Nell
Bartelson, Lyle W.
Barth, Dr. Earl E.
Barth, Hec
Bartholomay,
William, Jr.
Bartkus, Eugene A.
Bartlett, George S.
Bartling, Martin L., Jr.
Barton, Arthur H.
Barton, J. V.
Barton, Thomas J.
Bartsch, Helmuth
Baskin, Isadore
Bash, Mrs. Philip E.
Bass, Charles
Bass, Samuel B.
Bassett, Robert C.
Batalia, Donald C.
Bates, Bennitt E.
Bates, Edwin R.
Bates, William A.
Batko, Dr. B. B.
Batson, Burnham L.
Bauer, John A.
Baughman, Ernest E.
Baughman, M. Eugene
Baum, Bernard H.
Baum, Jack W.
Bauman, P. J.
Baumgartner, John C.
Baxter, Arthur K.
Baxter, Miss Edith P.
Baxter, John H.
Bay, Dr. Emmet B.
Bayer, George L.
Baylin, Dr. Ralph
Bazell, Dr. S. R.
Beach, James
Beach, Milton B.
Bean, Ferrel M.
Beaner, P. D.
Beart, Robert W.
Beasley, Milton R.
Beattie, Orville C.
Beatty, Ross J., Jr.
Beaumont, D. R.
Beber, Sam
Beck, Mrs. Edward S.
Becker, David
Becker, Eugene J.
Becker, Oscar J.
Bedford, Jesse
Beduhn, Irving J.
Beers, Zenas H.
Beers-Jones, L.
Behr, Carl
Behr, John L.
Beilin, Dr. David S.
Beirne, T. J.
Beisel, Ervin E.
Bell, Donald R.
Bell, Mrs. John C.
Bell, Dr. Julius N.
Belle, Walter C.
Bellows, Charles A.
Bellows, Dr. John G.
Benestante, Frank
Benjamin, Edward
Benke, Carl E.
Bennett, Dwight W.
Bennett, Myron M.
Bennett, Richard M.
Bennett, Russell O.
Bennett, Walter F.
Benninghoven,
Edward D.
Benningsen, Edward
Bensinger, Robert F.
Benson, George R., Jr.
Bent, Gordon
Bent, Mrs. Maurice H.
Benthin, Howard A.
Bentley, E. William
Benton, Mrs. Charles W.
Bere, Paul
Berens, Edward P.
Berentson, Benjamin H.
Bergdahl, Hal A.
Bergen, Alfred L.
Berger, Paul H.
Berger, William B.
Bergman, Edwin A.
Bergsten, Mrs. Ralph A.
Bergstrom, Del V.
Bergstrom, Robert W.
Berk, Alex M.
Berk, Benjamin
Berkos, Manuel J.
Berkowitz, Ralph A.
Berkson, Norman N.
Berkwits, Dr. Edward
Berman, Harvey
135
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Bernardi, Joseph L.
Berns, Barney
Berns, Robert E.
Bernstein, Dr. Arthur
Bernstein, Arthur J.
Bernstein, Dr. Max M.
Bernstein, Russell
Bernston, Stanley M.
Berry, Arthur L.
Berry, Dr. Leonidas H.
Berry, Russell T.
Bert, Vernon J.
Bertrand, Eugene F.
Best, Gordon
Beton, Conrad A.
Bettman, Ralph B.
Betz, Dr. William P.
Betzer, N. A.
Beug, Theodore C.
Beven, T. D.
Beyer, Theodore A.
Beyerman, Fred
Bick, Carl A.
Biddle, Robert C.
Bidwell, Dr. Charles L.
Bieg, E. J.
Biesen, Joseph
Bigane, Joseph F., Jr.
Billik, Richard J.
Billings, Dr. Arthur A.
Billings, Fred G.
Billings, Marshall L.
Billings, Mrs. Wyly, Jr.
Billman, Charles R.
Binford, W. H.
Binkley, John D.
Birch, Dr. George W.
Birch, H. Ward, Jr.
Bird, Frederick H.
Bird, Philip L.
Bird, T. S.
Birks, Z. S.
Birnbaum, Irving
Birndorf, B. A.
Bish, Raymond H.
Bishop, Edward, Jr.
Bishop, Mrs.
James R. T.
Bishop, James W.
Bissell, Cushman B.
Bixler, John Donovan
Bjorkman, Carl G.
Black, Dr. Arnold
Black, Benjamin H.
Black, E. J.
Black, James H.
Black, John T.
Blackburn, John W.
Blackwell,
Mrs. Eugene E.
Blaha, Ralph C.
Blaine, George A.
Blair, Mrs. Arthur M.
Blair, Mrs. Harold 0.
Blair, Henry A.
Blair, Mrs.
Wm. McCormick
Blaisdell, Philip H.
Blake, Thomas J.
Bland, Lee
Bliesener, Larry David
Block, E. French
Block, Irwin D.
Block, Kenneth L.
Blomberg, Roy E.
Blomquist, Alfred
Bloom, Irving D.
Bloom, Raymond P.
Blossom, Mrs.
George W., Jr.
Blouke, Miss
Martha Coucher
Blowitz, Milroy R.
Bluhm, Al
Bluhm, Harold J.
Blum, Professor
Irving D.
Blumberg, Nathan S.
Blume, Ernest L.
Blumenfeld, Robert
Blumenthal, Mrs. M. H.
Blunck, Carl J.
Boardman, Newell S.
Boberg, I. E.
Bockley, Philip F.
Boden, Robert W.
Bodine, Earl C.
Bodmer, Dr. Eugene
Boehm, Mrs. George M.
Boggis, James A.
Boggs, Dr. Joseph D.
Bogie, Duane C.
Bohrer, Mason L.
Boissy, Gilbert E.
Boitel, A. C.
Bokman, Dr. A. F.
Bolen, Earl P.
Boiling, Henry
Bolognesi, Giulio
Bolton, William M.
Bookshester, David
Boone, Douglass M.
Boone, William A.
Bopp, Andrew R.
Bopp, Frank H.
Borchardt, Miss Shirley
Borg, Alvin
Borge, Michael
Borghi, H. F.
Bornemeir, Dr. Walter C.
Borre, Mrs. Edward M.
Borta, Frank W.
Boruszak, Mrs. Melvin
Bosky, Joseph B.
Bosley, Harold E.
Bossov, Samuel V.
Boswell, Arlie O., Jr.
Bottler, J. S., Jr.
Bovyn, Paul F.
Bowe, Mrs. William J.
Bowen, Dr.
Edward H., Jr.
Bowers, Lloyd W.
Bowers, John C.
Bowes, Frederick M.
Bowes, W. R.
Bowles, Dr.
Joseph A., Jr.
Bowman, J. C.
Bowman, Jay
Bowman, John S.
Bowman, Ralph S.
Boyd, Charles W.
Boyd, Darrell S.
Boyer, Dick
Boyle, Wallace J.
Brace, Frederick F., Jr.
Brach, Edwin J.
Brachman, Dr. P. R.
Brack, Clarence G.
Bradburn, Robert F.
Bradford, William S.
Bradley, Charles C.
Bradley, Charles W.
Bradley, Robert S.
Bradley, Thomas C.
Brady, Harold S.
Brady, Mrs. Laban J.
Brady, Michael J.
Brameyer, Henry A.
Bramson, David J.
Brand, Theodore
Brandt, Mrs. Robert C.
Brandt, William M.
Branigar, Harvey W., Jr.
Brannan, Robert H.
Brannin, David P.
Brashler, Richard J.
Braude, Mrs. Michael
Braun, E. J.
Breckinridge, Miss Mary
Breen, Thomas
Brehm, Mrs. Lula A.
Bremer, Robert S.
Breneman, Gerard J.
Brent, John F.
Brent, Stuart
Breuer, Grant W.
Breuer, Mrs. Grant W.
Breuer, Dr. Hans R.
Brewer, Dr. Charles W.
Brewer, Curie L.
136
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Brewer, James E.
Brice, James J.
Brickman, A. W.
Bridge, Arthur
Bridgen, Mrs. Clarence J.
Briehl, Dr. Walter
Briggs, Edward A., Jr.
Bright, Mrs. Orville T.
Brightman, Mrs.
C. Gordon
Brislen, Dr. Andrew J.
Brock, William N.
Brockett, R. M.
Brod, Raymond M.
Brodie, Dr. Allan G.
Brody, Mrs. A. L.
Brody, Merton B.
Brogan, John C.
Bronner, Maurice H.
Bronson, Beckwith R.
Bronson, E. A.
Bronson, Walter D.
Brook, H. C.
Brooks, Gerald W.
Brooks, Dr. James M.
Broska, Joseph
Brosnan, Dr.
Jerome M.
Brosseit, George E.
Brostoff, Ben C.
Brousard, Rollen N.
Brown, Edward I.
Brown, George F.
Brown, Glenn E.
Brown, Grant A.
Brown, Harry
Brown, James, IV
Brown, John A.
Brown, Mrs. Roger O.
Brown, W. A., Jr.
Brown, William R.
Brownell, B. B.
Brownell, Miss
Beryl Ann
Browning, Miss Elizabeth
Bruce, A. D.
Bruce, Miss Kathryn
Bruce, Roy A.
Bruckner, Aloys L.
Brum, Miss Ida L.
Brusslan, Dan
Bryan, Charles W., Jr.
Bryant, Mrs. Daniel C.
Bryg, John E.
Buchanan, Donald P.
Buchanan, R. M.
Bucholz, Mrs. S.
Buck, Mrs. Nelson L.
Buck, Norman W.
Buckingham, Mrs.
George T.
Buckley, Robert C.
Buckley, Robert W.
Bucy, Dr. Paul C.
Budinger, William G.
Budzinski, Henry A.
Buehler, E. Marvin
Buenger, Theodore H.
Bueter, Norman E.
Buhring, Albert G.
Buik, Donald W.
Buik, George C.
Bules, Floyd W.
Bulger, John C.
Bulger, Thomas S.
Bullock, Walter E.
Bunday, Alvah S.
Burch, A. T.
Burckert, F. D.
Burdett, Robert J.
Burdick, Dr.
Allison L., Jr.
Burditt, George M.
Burg, Charles J.
Burge, Philip W.
Burgert, Woodward
Burgeson, Walter C.
Burgess, Cyril G.
Burgess, Kenneth F.
Burgess, Ted H.
Burgmeier, William T.
Burgy, Mrs. Edna W.
Burian, Lee
Burk, W. C.
Burke, Alfred L.
Burke, James E.
Burke, Philip D.
Burkema, Harry J.
Burkey, Lee M., Jr.
Burkill, Edward W.
Burlage, Thomas D.
Burman, Craig A.
Burman, Marshall
Burman, Merwin R.
Burn, Felix P.
Burno, Mrs. Ruth
Burnette, Mark C.
Burns, Mrs.
Dulcie Evans
Burns, Kenneth J., Jr
Burns, Stephen J.
Burns, Miss Teresa Ann
Burns, William J.
Burnside, Robert H.
Burow, Richard E.
Burrell, Basil S.
Burrows, Arthur A.
Burson, Robert G.
Burtis, Clyde L.
Burtis, Guy S.
Burton, Scott F.
Burwell, Romeo
Bushnell, Richard
Butler, F. P.
Butler, Hartman L., Jr.
Butler, John Meigs, Jr.
Butler, Rush C, Jr.
Butterworth, Louis H.
Buttitta, Joe J.
Button, B. B., Jr.
Butts, Benjamin F.
Byrne, Dr. M. W. K.
Byrnes, William Jerome
Byron, Robert B.
Cabeen, Richard McP.
Cacherat, Albert A.
Cadmore, R.
Cadwell, Charles S.
Cady, Kendall
Cady, Paget K.
Caesar, O. S.
Cahan, Haskell
Cahill, Mrs. C. N.
Cahill, William E.
Cain, Byron A.
Cairnes, W. E.
Caldini, Floyd A.
Calkins, Gilbert R.
Calkins, Ned W.
Callahan, Charles D.
Callan, Mrs. Joe M.
Callanan, Charles J.
Caloger, Philip D.
Calvert, Robert D.
Calvin, Mrs. Frank J.
Camino, Dr. Rudolph
Camp, Jack L.
Campbell, C. B. G.
Campbell, Colin L.
Campbell, Donald W.
Campbell, E. R.
Campbell, Irving B.
Campbell, Keith T.
Campbell, Powell M.
Campbell, R. Craig
Campbell, Mrs. Samuel J.
Campbell, Stanley W.
Campbell, W. C.
Canaday, Raymond
Canby, Caleb H., Ill
Cannon, Charles B.
Cannon, Le Grand
Canmann, David L.
Capek, Charles A.
Capozzo, John G.
Capulli, Leonard R.
Carbonaro, Joseph I.
Carbonaro, Louis
Carbonell, John
Carder, Gustave G.
Carl, Jack
Carl, Otto Frederick
137
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Carlman, Carl
Carlson, Mrs. LeRoy T.
Carlton, Howard A.
Carpenter, Mrs.
Herbert R.
Carpenter, Lyman E.
Carr, Albert J.
Carr, Claude E., Jr.
Carr, Ernest J.
Carr, Joseph P.
Carroll, Ralph
Carroll, Wallace E.
Carroll, Dr. Walter W.
Carrow, Dr. Leon A.
Cascino, Dr. Joseph P.
Case, Leland D.
Casey, Donald E.
Casey, Joseph
Cassidy, Clayton G.
Castanes, John C.
Castle, Alexander J.
Castle, Sidney L.
Catt, Mrs. Vy Radman
Cavanaugh, Roger M.
Cavenaugh, Robert A.
Caylor, Harry E.
Cella, John L.
Cerami, Ned J.
Cerf, Floyd D., Jr.
Cerrone, Carmen A.
Cesar, Mrs. D.
Chadwell, John T.
Chalifoux, Mrs. Robert S.
Chalupa, Charles F.
Chandler, Emmerson T.
Chandler, Henry T.
Chandler, Malcolm A.
Chandler, Russell J., Jr.
Chaplicki, Norbert L.
Chapman, Ralph
Charlton, Samuel E.
Charone, Sheldon M.
Chartoc, Shepard
Chase, Thomas B.
Cheatham, Banks H.
Cheresh, Sidney N.
Cheskin, Mrs. Louis
Chesrow, David S.
Chesrow, Dr. Eugene J.
Chidley, Harry J.
Chinnock, Ronald J.
Chodash, Benjamin B.
Christener, Ernest W.
Christensen, Christian
Christensen, Earl
Christensen, John W.
Christensen, Joseph M.
Christianson, Mrs. J.
Russell
Christopher, Gale A.
Churlin, Edward
Chutkow, R. I.
Ciesar, John, Jr.
Claar, Mrs. Elmer A.
Claghorn, Arthur U.
Clair, Ralph W.
Clare, Fred W.
Claire, Richard S.
The Clark Children
Clark, Dean M.
Clark, John H.
Clark, Mrs. Ralph E.
Clark, Robert O.
Clark, William N.
Clarke, Mrs. Bernice
Clarke, Ernest E.
Clarke, John Walter
Clarke, Mrs. Philip R.
Clarke, Thomas M.
Clarkson, John L.
Clausing, Mrs. George W.
Cleaver, J. Benjamin
Clemensen, Arthur C.
Clements, Howard P., Jr.
Clements, Mrs. Olen R.
Clifford, Jack F.
Clifton, Elliott S.
Clinton, Mrs. Duane, L.
Clorfene, Bruce
Close, Gordon
Cloud, Hugh S.
Cloud, Marion D.
Clyne, Howard J.
Coates, James E.
Cobb, Raymond W.
Cobb, Sanford
Cobden, George
Coburn, John T.
Cochran, Harold W.
Cockrel, Orvel H.
Cody, Arthur C.
Cody, Joseph M.
Coe, Lester
Coen, Thomas M.
Coesfeld, Harry M.
Cogan, Bernard J.
Cogan, John J.
Coggeshall, Dr. Chester
Cohen, Harry
Cohen, Abraham H.
Cohen, A. Jess
Cohen, Maxim M.
Cohen, Milton
Cohen, Nathan M.
Cohen, Dr. Sidney
Cohn, Albert H.
Cohn, Eugene L.
Cohn, Louis J.
Cohn, Nathan M.
Cohn, Mrs. Rose B.
Cohn, Sanford
Cohon, Jack A.
Coladarci, Peter
Colbert, Leonard
Colby, Bernard G.
Cole, Franklin A.
Cole, Jack Z.
Cole, John I.
Cole, Sander W.
Cole, Dr. Warren H.
Cole, Willard W.
Colegrove, Miss
Charlotte A.
Coleman, Dr. John M.
Colin, Edward C, Jr.
Collins, Julien
Collins, Michael W.
Collins, Paul F.
Collins, William M., Jr.
Collinsworth, E. T., Jr.
Colmar, John L.
Coltman, Bertram W., Jr.
Compere, Dr. Edward L.
Comstock, Dr. F. H.
Concannon, John T.
Condon, E. J.
Condon, J. J.
Condon, James G.
Conger, Edwin H.
Conglis, Nicholas P.
Conklin, Clarence R.
Conley, Charles P.
Conley, Edwin B.
Conlon, Mrs. F. Patrick
Conn, Minor C.
Conn, Warner S.
Connelly, John J.
Connette, Richard P.
Conrad, C. Budd
Conser, Mrs. Eugene P.
Considine, Dan J.
Considine, Miss Doris G.
Consoer, Arthur W.
Consoer, George O.
Conway, Hayden F.
Conway, James P.
Cook, Mrs. Albert C.
Cook, Mrs. Donald F.
Cook, Everett R.
Cook, Gordan
Cook, Robert G., Jr.
Cooke, Edwin Goff
Cooke, James F.
Cooke, Dr. Pauline M.
Cooke, Roger A.
Cooke, Thomas Edward
Cookman, Aubrey O.
Cooley, Charles C.
Cooley, Mrs. Kenneth G.
Coolidge, W. K.
Cooper, Edward A.
Cooper, George J.
Corbett, Dr. Maxwell M.
138
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Corbett, Paul M.
Corbett, Dr. Robert
Corbin, Harold
Harlow, Jr.
Corbin, Mrs. H. Clark
Corby, Francis M.
Cordin, N. S.
Cordwell, John D.
Corman, Thomas G.
Corper, Philip
Corrington, Louis E., Jr.
Corthell, Charles K.
Cortwright, H. E.
Cory, Dr. C. D.
Cosbey, Dr. Robert C.
Cossman, Maurice B.
Costello, Thomas F.
Cotey, James A.
Cotsworth, Albert, III
Cotterman, I. D.
Coulter, Thomas H.
Coultrap, James W.
Courtney, William B.
Coveney, E. L.
Covert, Robert M.
Cowan, John R.
Co whey, William P.
Cowles, Alfred
Coy, Harry I., Jr.
Cragg, Mrs. George L.
Cragg, Richard T.
Craigmile, Charles S.
Cramer, Kenneth E.
Crane, Earl D.
Cravens, Mrs. Thomas R.
Crawford,
Mrs. Elizabeth Y.
Crawford, Mrs. Louis
Crawford, Wallace L.
Cray, Glenn F., Jr.
Crean, Dr. C. L.
Creber, Walter H., Jr.
Crockett, Newell
Croke, Edward J., Jr.
Cromie, Robert A.
Cronin, J. Philip
Cropper, Mrs. Wendell P.
Cross, Dr.
Roland R., Jr.
Crossley, Richard C.
Crowley, George D.
Crowson, George M.
Crowther, Fred D.
Crutchfield, Henry W.
Cruttenden,
Walter W., Sr.
Cyr, Miss Elaine M.
Cuca, James A.
Culbertson, John Carey
Culbertson, S. A., II
Culhane, Frank J.
Culhane, Martin A.
Cullicott, George E.
Culver, Bernard W.
Culver, Richard D.
Cummings, Tilden
Cummings, Thomas N.
Cummins, Dr.
George M., Jr.
Cunningham, Bernard J.
Cunningham, Francis V.
Cunningham, Robert D.
Curran, William W.
Currie, Ernst
Curry, James L.
Curtis, Ellwood F.
Curtis, Paul
Cushman, Mrs. A. W.
Cushman, Dr. Beulah
Cushman, L. Arthur, Jr.
Cushman, Robert S.
Custer, Charles F.
Dabney, Mrs. Charles O.
D'Addio, G. S.
Daggett, Miss Dorothy
Daggett, Walter R.
DahTberg, John K.
Dahlberg, Theodore L.
Daidone, Benjamin
Dalbke, Warren E.
Dalton, Arthur T.
Dalton, Stanley C.
Daly, Robert E.
D'Amico, Joseph S.
Damon, Robert J. C.
Danciu, Earl A.
Danforth, George Edson
Daniels, Draper
Danielson, Mrs. John
Darby, Phillips M.
D'Arcy, John
Darfler, Mr. Donald
Darfler, Walter L.
Daro, August F.
Darr, Milton F., Jr.
Darrow, William W.
Dashow, Jules
Daspit, Richard W.
Daspit, Walter
Dato, Edwin E.
Datro, George L.
Daut, Miss Myrnie Lee
David, Sigmund W.
Davidow, Leonard S.
Davidson, Carter
Davidson, David
Davidson, William D.
Davis, Mrs. A. D.
Davis, Alvin G.
Davis, Benjamin B.
Davis, Carlos Lewis
Davis, Charles A.
Davis, Charles O.
Davis, Mrs. Charles P.
Davis, Mrs. De Witt, III
Davis, Howard J.
Davis, Hugh
Davis, James N.
Davis, Joseph
Davis, Paul H.
Davis, Ray A.
Davis, Robert C.
Dawson, John W.
Dawson, Dr. I. Milton
Day, Wesley H.
DeAlbani, Mrs. Mary
Deaver, Wilds, P.
DeBacher, Jack R.
De Baets, M. R.
DeBolt, K. J.
Debs, Mrs. Jerome H.
DeCesare, Joseph
Dechert, Curt H.
Decker, Dr. Ann
Decker, Darrell D.
De Costa, H. J.
Dedmon, R. Emmett
Defrees, Donald
Deinhardt, Dr. Friedrich
Deknatel, Frederick H., II
de la Torre, Dr. Alberto
Delcher, Mrs. Edwin S.
De Lee, Dr. Sol T.
De Leuw, Charles E.
Dellow, Reginald
DeLorenza, Charles
Del Papa, Joseoh R.
De Lue, Ross
Demain, Steve L.
De Ment, George L.
De Motte, R. J.
Denemark, A. F.
Denman, Walter W.
Denning, George S.
Dennis, Marvin D.
De Normandie, John B.
Denton, Earl A.
Dentz, Frank R.
De Pencier, Mrs.
Joseph R.
Derby, Mrs. William B.
Dernehl, James U.
De Santis, Anthony O.
Despres, Leon M.
Dess, William
Deutsch, Richard H.
Devery, John J.
De Vry, Edward B.
Dewey, Clarence J.
De Witt, E. J.
Diaz-Perez, Dr. Luis E.
Dichter, Miss Joan
139
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Dick, Mrs. Edison
Dicke, Robert L.
Dicken, Mrs. Clinton O.
Dickerson, Earl B.
Dickman, Frank
Didricksen, J. W.
Diebolt, Norman
Dienhart, John W., Jr.
Diezel, John B.
Diffenbaugh, Dr.
Willis G.
Dilibert, S. B.
Dill, Dr. Loran H.
Dillman, David
Dillon, Mrs. Lucille M.
Dimiceli, Vincent, Jr.
Dirda, Dr. L. A.
Dispenza, N. R.
Distenfield, Leo
Dixon, Arthur
Dixon, Lyman W.
Dobbin, Robert A.
Doberstein, Robert R.
Dobro, Henry
Doctoroff, John
Dodson, James R.
Doern, Philip
Doherty, John P.
Dole, Arthur, III
Dolin, Albert H.
Dombek, Benny D.
Donahue, Russell B.
Donald, Mrs. Alanson J.
Donigan, Robert W.
Donoghue, James V.
Donovan, John J.
Dooley, James A.
Dooley, Mrs. Robert D.
Doris, Edward
Dorn, Thomas E.
Dougherty, Mrs. Jean E.
Doughty, William H.
Douglas, Kenneth J.
Dove, John R.
Dovenmuehle, George H.
Dover, David J.
Downey, William K.
Downs, Charles S.
Downs, James C, Jr.
Downs, John R.
Doyle, Mrs. Phil A.
Doyle, Thomas J.
Drake, Miss Alvertta
Drake, Lyman, Jr.
Drebin, Bernard V.
Dreher, George
Drell, Leonard
Drennan, Walter R.
Dresser, Thorpe
Drevs, Robert M.
Drew, Joseph D.
Driscoll, George E.
Driscoll, William M.
Druse, Richard C.
DuChateau, M. F.
Duensing, M. C.
Duff, Philip G.
Duffey, Richard
Duffy, George E.
Dulla, Steven J.
Dunbeck, Mrs.
Norman J.
Duncan, Charles W.
Duncan, Mrs. H. F.
Duncan, J. Russell
Dundas, William A.
Dunkle, Raymond M., Jr.
Dunkleman, Gabriel
Dunlap, Leonard E.
Dunlop, Mark L.
Dunnell, Ransom P.
Dunning, Mrs. W. S.
Dunsmore, A. J.
Durgin, Richard L.
Durham, F. J.
Durham, William E.
Durrie, Paul H.
Duschene, Joseph P.
Dusek, B. W.
Dutt, James L.
Duty, J. E.
Dvorak, Stanley J.
Dwyer, Robert A.
Eagan, S. F.
Earlandson, Ralph O.
Eastman, A. D.
Eastman, Mrs. Walker P.
Eastwood, Mrs. Agnes R.
Eaton, William P.
Eberhart, A. Dryden
Ebin, Mrs. Dorothy
Mylrea
Echt, George
Eck, Mrs. Carl
Eck, Robert J.
Eckert, Fred W.
Eckert, Philip G.
Eddy, George A.
Eddy, J. E.
Edelman, Daniel J.
Edelstone, Benjamin J.
Edens, Robert L., Jr.
Ederer, E. A.
Edes, Francis D.
Edgar, Robert F.
Edge, Peter
Edgerly, Daniel W.
Edleman, Alvin
Edmonds, C. George
Edwards, Dr. Eugene A.
Edwards, Herman C.
Egan, A. J.
Egan, Mark
Egdorf, John E.
Eggan, Burton M.
Eggleston, Raymond C.
Eglit, Nathan N.
Egon, Basil G.
Ehrmann, Walter H.
Eichstaedt, Dr. John J.
Eigelsbach, Carl P.
Eikelbarner, Mrs. Lyle F.
Eisenberg, David B.
Eisendrath, David C.
Eisenhuth, George A.
Eisenstein, Dr. Milton W.
Eiserman, Irving W.
Eisman, John M.
Eismann, William
Eklund, Roger
Ekstrand, Richard L.
Elden, A. D.
Elenz, Robert J.
Elfenbaum, William
Elfring, George E.
Eller, John C.
Ellickson, Dr. Bruce E.
Elling, Winston
Ellingsen, E. Melvin
Ellis, Cecil Homer
Ellis, Hubert C.
Ellis, Ralph E.
Ellison, Jack
Ellman, A. R.
Ellman, Harold R.
Elrick, George S.
Elson, Alex
Elver, Thomas
Ely, Maurice R.
Embree, John W., Ill
Emrich, C. Lyman, Jr.
Emrich, Milton S.
Endicott, De Witt
Engebretson, Einar N.
Engh, Harold V., Sr.
Englehaupt, William M.
English, Maurice
Englund, Fred W.
Engstrom, L. E.
Enzweiler, W. P.
Ephraim, Max, Jr.
Epple, Louis R.
Epsteen, Dr. Casper M.
Erickson, William N.
Erikson, Bertil G.
Ersfeld, Dr. John G.
Erzinger, Howard F.
Eshbaugh, C. Harold
Esko, Sampson
Eskuchen, Frank G.
Esten, Miss Virginia
Evans, Mrs. Bergen
140
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Evans, C. H.
Evans, Clyde H.
Evans, John W.
Evans, Keith J.
Evans, Thomas N.
Everett, Richard M., Jr.
Everote, Warren
Evers, Clifford F.
Exum, Ray E„ Jr.
Ezra, Max R.
Fagan, Miss Judith
Fagan, Peter
Fager, Raymond Alton
Fagerson, Harold R.
Fahey, Mrs. Edward W.
Fahey, F.
Faierson, Stanley W.
Fairbank, Livingston, Jr.
Fairs, C. Ronald
Faissler, John J.
Falk, Mrs. C. B.
Falkenberg, Charles V.,
Jr.
Fallon, Mrs. Jerome F.
Falls, Dr. F. H.
Fanning, Mrs. L. S.
Fantus, Ernest L.
Faraone, S. L.
Farber, Dr. Harry H.
Farber, Lynn C.
Farlow, Arthur C.
Farmer, Lee R.
Farns worth, Gordon F.
Farr, A. V.
Farrar, Holden K.
Farwell, Francis C.
Fasano, Joseph F.
Faulkner, Earle C.
Faulks, Mrs. Herbert R.
Faurot, Robert S.
Faverty, Clyde B.
Fay, Clifford T., Jr.
Fay, William E., Jr.
Feagans, D. G.
Fegles, Donald
Feldman, Maurice
Feldman, Max
Felker, C. V.
Fellers, Francis S.
Fellingham, Paul
Fellowes, Harry L.
Fellowes, H. Folger
Fenchen, John A.
Fenn, John F.
Fentress, James, Jr.
Fergus, William D.
Ferguson, William E.
Fern, J. M.
Ferrall, James
Ferreri, Frank
Ferry, Mrs. Frank
Feulner, Edwin
Fey, Edward J.
Fey, Dr. Richard W.
Fick, Mrs. Raymond W.
Field, Miss Mariana
Fifielski, Edwin P.
Fillinsky, Edmund A.
Finch, Herman M.
Finch, Lindley
Fine, Irving A.
Finkl, Alfred F.
Finlayson, James K.
Finston, Albert Leo
Fisch, Maurice C.
Fischer, H. Robert
Fischer, William D.
Fischman, King J.
Fish, Mrs. Sigmund C.
Fishburn, Mrs. Alan
Fisher, Bernard M.
Fisher, David J.
Fisher, Harry N.
Fisher, Maurice
Fisher, Rauland C.
Fishman, Isadore
Fishman, Dr. Jerome
Fishman, Julius
Fishman, Louis
Fishman, W. S.
Fiske, Mrs. Donald W.
Fiske, Kenneth M.
Fiske, Thomas E.
Fistell, Mrs. Harry
Fitch, Marvin
Fitch, Morgan L., Jr.
Fitzgerald, George J.
Fitzgerald, J. Cushing
Fixman, I. M.
Flaherty, Miss Helen
Flanagan, Dr. James B.
Fleischman, Bernard
Fleming, Dr. James F.
Flemming, Miss A.
Fletcher, James E.
Floreen, Adolph R.
Florsheim, Miss Lillian H.
Florsheim, Leonard S.
Floyd, Fred S.
Flynn, Leo M.
Fogel, Mrs. William
Ford, Dr. Charles A.
Ford, Donald A.
Fordtran, Henry C.
Forrest, William R.
Forgue, Norman W.
Forst, Miss Eveline M.
Fosse, Irwin A.
Fossler, G. O.
Foster, Mrs. John N.
Foulks, E. E.
Foulks, William
Foute, Kenneth
Fowler, Clifford C.
Fowler, Glenn C.
Fowler, Harold E.
Fox, Arthur E.
Fox, Dr. Benum W.
Fox, Earl B.
Fox, George J.
Fox, John Jay, Jr.
Fragomeni, Joseph S.
Fraker, Charles D.
Frale, Anthony M.
Framburg, Stanley
Francik, Albert M.
Franczak, Albert J.
Frankart, William F.
Frank, Augustus J.
Frank, Clinton E.
Frank, Curtiss E.
Frank, George
Frank, Irving
Frank, John M.
Frank, Maurice A.
Frank, Mrs. Robert B.
Frankel, Adolph
Frankel, Marshall
Frankenbush, Robert
Franklin, Ben L.
Franks, Maurice R., Jr.
Frauen, Hermann
Freedman, Edward H.
Freeman, Charles A., Jr.
Freeman, C. R.
Freeman, David A.
Freeman, Earl
Freeman, Jack
Freeman, James E.
Freeman, John
Freeman, Kernal
Frei, Robert R.
Frei, Russell H.
Friefeld, Samuel D.
Fremont, Miss Ruby
French, Henry S.
Freudenfeld, Mrs. Silvia
Frick, William G.
Friedeman, Richard F.
Friedland, Sidney
Friedlich, John
Friedman, Hans A.
Friedman, Morton B.
Friedsam, A. C.
Friedlander, Max B.
Friedlob, Fred M.
Frisbie, Richard P.
Fritch, Mrs. Louis C.
Froman, Abel
Frost, Allan
Frost, Henry C.
Fruh, Arthur W.
141
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Fuchs, J. D.
Fuelling, John A.
Fugard, John R.
Fugett, George C.
Fuhry, Joseph G.
Fuller, Mrs.
Eugene White
Fuller, Mrs. Harry H.
Fullmer, Paul
Furlong, Clair W.
Furlong, Phil
Furth, Lee J.
Gabel, Walter H.
Gadau, Harry L.
Gadshe, Mrs. R. E.
Gage, John N.
Gage, W. S.
Gaines, Aaron G.
Gaines, Dr. R. B.
Gallagher, Arthur J., Jr.
Gallagher, Daniel
Gallagher, Frederick H.
Gallagher, Mrs.
Geraldine
Gallagher, Mrs. James B.
Gallagher, William J.
Gallarneau, Hugh H.
Gallas, Mrs. Marie
Gallauer, William
Galley, Mrs. H. William
Gallo, Alfred E.
Galvin, Richard J.
Gammie, George
Gannett, Gordon H., Jr.
Gannon, Edward P.
Gansbergen, R. H.
Garbe, Raymond
Garber, Maurice H.
Garcia, Miss Mary
Gardner, Dr. Burleigh B.
Gardner, William B.
Gardner, W. Kelly
Garr, L. A.
Garrabrant, Norbert T.
Garretson, Robert H.
Garrick, Dr. Samuel
Gartner, Max L.
Garver, George P.
Garvey, Thomas J.
Garwacki, Dr. John H.
Gary, Charles V.
Gasch, Robert H.
Gasper, T. F., Jr.
Gast, Dr. Carl L.
Gasul, Dr. B. M.
Gates, Mrs. Henry C.
Gathany, Van R.
Gaudian, Chester M.
Gaudio, James C.
Gaul, Michael F.
Gavron, Joseph P.
Gawthrop, Alfred
Gearen, John J.
Gebhard, Paul
Gehlbach, H. Hunter
Geiger, C. Gregg
Geilman, Harold
Gelling, James B.
Gelperin, Dr. Jules
Genematas, William N.
Gent, Mrs. Dennis
Genther, Charles B.
Geocaris, James A.
George, Clark B.
George, Robert M.
George, Nelson C.
Gerathy, E. Carroll
Geraghty, James K.
Geraghty, Miss
Margaret G.
Geraghty, Mrs.
Thomas F.
Geraghty, Thomas F., Jr.
Germaine, Daniel
Germaine, Jerry R.
Gerometta, Miss Jean
Gerson, Irving B.
Gertstner, Edward W.
Gertz, Dr. George J. D.
Geter, Howard D., Sr.
Getz, Oscar
Getz, John G., Jr.
Giangreco, William F.
Giase, Joseph S.
Gibbs, Dr. Frederic A.
Gibbs, William T.
Gibson, James T., Jr.
Gibson, Miss Margaret
Gibson, Robert F.
Gibson, W. B.
Gidwitz, Gerald
Giesecke, R. H.
Gifford, Chester
Gilbert, Allan A.
Gilbert, Alvin J.
Gilbert, Arnold M.
Gilbert, Thomas L.
Gilbert, W. P.
Gilmer, Frank B.
Gilmore, Mrs.
William Y.
Gimbel, Stanley D.
Giordano, Frank L.
Giovacchini, William T.
Girardi,
Mrs. Elizabeth-Louise
Gish, S. M.
Gitelson, Dr. Maxwell
Glade, Mrs.
George H., Jr.
Glatt, Jack E.
Glazer, Daniel
Gleasner, Lee E., Jr.
Gleave, Winston
Gleiss, Henry O.
Glick, Edward R.
Glickauf, Joseph S., Jr.
Glockner, Maurice
Glore, Charles F., Jr.
Glore, Hixon
Glover, Grange J.
Gocke, Robert E.
Godlowski, Dr. Z. Z.
Godshall, Ammon B.
Goebel, John
Goebel, Louis H.
Goff, James M.
Goldberg, Arthur J.
Goldberg, Bertrand
Goldberg, Mrs.
Samuel L.
Golden, John R.
Goldring, Norman
Goldsmith, E. G.
Goldsmith, Howard
Goldsmith, Dr. Julian
Goldstein, Eph.
Goldstein, Sidney J.
Gomberg, Arthur S.
Gomberg, Dr. David
Gomberg, Miss Lauri
Good, James W., Jr.
Goodenough, S. W.
Goodhart, Mrs. H. J.
Gooding, Robert E.
Goodrich, Miss Juliet T.
Goodrich, Paul W.
Gordan, Marvin N.
Gordon, Mrs. Debora
Gordon, Herman J.
Gordon, Leonard
Gordon, Miss Maude
Gordon, Norman
Gore, Mrs. Roston
Gorham, Willett N.
Gorham, Sidney S., Jr.
Gorman, Mrs. Joseph K.
Gorman, Richard F.
Gornick, Francis P.
Gornstein, Dr. H. C.
Gorsline, Frank D.
Gossett, Lorn
Gottlieb, David
Gottlieb, Jacob
Gottschall, Robert V.
Gottschall, Walter L.
Gougler, Lawrence W.
Gould, Harold H.
Governale, Dr. Samuel L.
Grader, George T.
Graf, Paul A.
Graff, Edward
142
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Graffis, Herbert
Grage, William
Graham, Bruce J.
Graham, Donald M.
Graham, Dr. James F.
Graham, Dr. John P.
Graham, W. Crosby
Graham, Mrs. William B.
Granger, Mrs. Denise
Grant, George G.
Grant, Meyer Z.
Grant, Louis Z.
Grant, Paul
Grant, William H.
Grantham, Joe P., Jr.
Grass, A. Irving
Grauer, Milton H.
Gray, Cola A.
Gray, John D.
Gray, Thomas C.
Gray, William Scott, III
Grazian, Leonard R.
Greeley, Samuel S.
Green, Albert
Green, Chester R.
Green, Mrs. Dwight H.
Green, Mrs. George L.
Green, J. W.
Green, Ken
Green, Mrs. Robert A.
Green, Thomas
Greenaway, Donald
Greenbaum, Michael
Greene, Dr. Harry G.
Greenberg, S. U.
Greenfield, Paul J.
Greenfield, Michael C.
Greenwood, Marvin
Gregg, Miss Doris M.
Gregor, Frank
Gregory, Dr.
Benjamin J.
Gregory, Stanley O.
Griffin, Edwin J.
Griffin, James T.
Griffith, George
Griffith, Melvin J.
Griffiths, G. Findley
Grimes, Douglas A.
Grimes, J. Frank
Grimm, Leo J.
Grinker, Dr. Roy R., Jr.
Grinstead, M. W.
Grisham, William F.
Groble, Edward B.
Groen, Mrs. F. H., Jr.
Groen, Fred H.
Groenwald, F. A.
Grohe, Robert F.
Grossman, Dr. Burton J.
Grossner, Joseph
Grossnickle, Myron D.
Groves, Mrs. Northa P.
Gruendel, George H.
Guerrant, David E.
Grumhaus, Harold
Grunow, Elmer W.
Grunsfeld, Mrs. Mary
Jane
Guelich, Robert V.
Gullickson, Rollo
Gumbinger, Miss Dora
Gunderson, Gunnar E.
Gunn, Buckingham W.
Gunness, Robert C.
Gunther, Dr. Meyer S.
Gurewitz, Solomon
Gurke, Mrs. Florence
Gurley, Mrs. Fred G.
Gurvey, Harry E.
Gustus, Dr. Edwin L.
Guttosch, Rudolph J.
Guzik, Mathew R.
Gwinn, H. C.
Gwinn, Dr. R. P.
Haaksma, Wallace H.
Haas, Howard
Haberman, Morton
Hachtman, George E.
Hackett, Joseph J.
Haebich, Dr. Arthur T.
Haefner, Col. Earl W.
Haerther, W. W.
Haessly, Dr. Marvin M.
Hafner, Andre B.
Hagedorn, William R.
Hagey, Harry H., Jr.
Hagey, J. F.
Hahn, Bernard J.
Hahn, Mrs. Dorothy
Ullrich
Haider, Donald H.
Haigh, Arthur H.
Haigh, D. S.
Haight, Edward A.
Haines, Charles J.
Haines, Walter
Hajduk, Dr. J. M.
Hakanen, Paul A.
Hakanson, Richard
Hakenjos, Miss Sophia F.
Hale, Edwin A.
Hale, John B.
Haley, James F.
Halfpenny, Harold
Hall, Arthur B.
Hall, Clifford F.
Hall, Graham
Hall, Harry
Hall, Harry C.
Hall, Miss Helen
Hall, John L.
Halla, Mrs. Joseph, Jr.
Hallberg, Parker
Franklin
Halleen, Harold P.
Haller, Louis P.
Hallihan, Edward E.
Hallmann, Ernest H.
Halper, Dr. Louis
Halvorson, Harold L.
Ham, Mrs. Harold
Hambleton, Chalkley J.
Hamill, Mrs. Robert W.
Hamilton, Andrew C.
Hamilton, Mrs.
Gurdon H.
Hamilton, Mrs. John
Hamilton, Lamont
Hamilton, Stuart
Hammerman, Jerome
Hammond, James W.
Hammond, L. F.
Hamper, Sidney C.
Hampson, Philip
Hank. John J.
Hanley, R. Emmett
Hanley, Vincent J.
Hanlon, Robert T.
Hanna, John C.
Hannaford, Miss
Mildred L.
Hannibal, Donald V.
Hannon, James J.
Hansen, Mrs. C. E.
Hansen, Donald W.
Hansen, James
Hansmann, Mrs. Elwood
Hansmann, Henry B.
Hanson, Fred B.
Hanson, Mrs. George
Hanson, J. L.
Hanson, Robert F.
Harbaugh, Watson D.
Harden, Clyde, Jr.
Hardies, Melvin A.
Harding, Frank
Harding, Harold R.
Harding, William H.
Hardwicke, Harry
Hardy, Charles L.
Hardy, Mrs. Edward K.
Hardy, Julian H.
Hargrave, Homer P.
Harig, Karl
Harkness, Mrs. Samuel,
Jr.
Harley, Theodore H.
Harlow, Miss Johnnie
Harland, Mrs. D. Foster
Harper, H. Mitchell
Harper, Harry H.
143
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Harper, Paul C.
Harper, Mrs. Paul V.
Harper, Philip S.
Harper, Mrs. Philip S.
Harper, Philip S., Jr.
Harrington, J. J., Jr.
Harrington, John
Harris, Benjamin R.
Harris, Chauncey D.
Harris, Harold
Harris, Irving B.
Harris, Thomas J.
Harrison, Earle
Harrison, Dr. R. Wendell
Harrison, Solomon E.
Harrison, William H., Jr.
Harrow, Joseph
Hart, Mrs. Augustin S.
Hart, Chester C.
Hart, Henry A.
Hart, Herbert L.
Hart, L. Edward
Hart, Mrs. H. G.
Hart, Miss Marguerite D.
Harte, William J.
Hartenfeld, Myron
Harter, Dr. J. A.
Hartigan, Miss Catherine
Hartigan, L. J.
Hartman, Mrs. Irvin H.
Hartman, Milton C.
Hartung, Miss
Elizabeth M.
Harty, Richard B.
Hartz, Dr. Wilson H., Jr.
Harvey, Emmett C.
Harvey, Com. Norman C.
Harwood, Donald
Harwood, Robert I.
Hasler, Mrs. Edward L.
Hassel, Mrs. Henry C.
Hasselbacher, H. H.
Hassen, Samuel
Hassinger, Dent
Hassmer, Joseph L.
Hatcher, Dr. David B.
Hatfield, W. A.
Hauck, Cornelius J.
Haugan, Charles M.
Hauge, Clarence
Hauger, R. H.
Hauser, William G.
Hausler, Mrs. M. G., Jr.
Hausner, Robert Otto
Havey, Robert W.
Hawkins, Kenneth B.
Hawley, F. W., Jr.
Hawrysz, Walter
Hay, Lawrence J.
Hayd, Michael
Hayes, Daniel T.
Hayes, David J. A., Jr.
Hayes, Mrs. Edith C.
Hayes, Edward G.
Hayes, James F.
Haynes, Charles Webster
Haynes, Gideon, Jr.
Hayley, Lewis Y. L.
Haynie, Miss Nellie V.
Haynie, R. G.
Hazel, B. F.
Hazel, Dr. George R.
Head, Russell N.
Healy, Charles L.
Heath, James E.
Heath, William O.
Hebenstreit, Dr. K. J.
Hebenstreit, Mrs. K. J.
Heckel, Edmund P., Jr.
Heddens, John W.
Hedeen, Ernest W., Jr.
Hedeen, Dr. Robert A.
Hedges, Dr. Robert N.,
Sr.
Hedges, Dr. Robert N.,
Jr.
Hedrich, Mrs. Otto H.
Heffner, Dr. Donald J.
Heidemann, Herbert E.
Heifetz, Samuel
Heikes, Neil E.
Hein, Leonard W.
Heinekamp, Raymond A.
Heineman, Ben W.
Heinen, Dr. J. Henry, Jr.
Heinsimer, W. R.
Heinze, Mrs.
Bessie Neuberg
Heirich, Bruneau E.
Helgason, Ami
Hellerick, Leonard P.
Hellman, Milton E.
Helmer, Hugh J.
Helmick, Lawrence J.
Hemb, D. M.
Hemery, Mrs. Jack L.
Hemphill, Luther D.
Henderson, B. E.
Heniken, Graham E.
Henke, Henry J.
Henkle, Herman H.
Henner, Mrs. Robert
Henner, William Edward
Henningsen, Jack
Henri, W. B.
Henriksen, H. M.
Henriksen, Kai
Henry, C. Wolcott, Jr.
Henry, Dr. James W.
Hensley, Mrs. Stuart K.
Hepburn, J. W.
Heras, Miss Elva
Herbert, W. T.
Herdrich, Ralph C.
Herkes, S. R.
Herman, Maurice
Herman, Sol W.
Hernandez, Nicholas M.,
Jr.
Herold, Lloyd G.
Herrick, Walter D.
Herring, H. B.
Herrschner, Frederick
Hersey, James R.
Hersh, Charles K.
Herst, Perry S., Jr.
Hess, Sidney J., Jr.
Hesseltine, Dr. H. Close
Hetreed, Dr. Francis W.
Hewes, Mrs. W. F.
Heyne, Norman E.
Heywood, Mrs. O. C.
ckey, Frank E.
ckey, Mrs. Lawrence
cks, Thomas D.
gbee, Robert F.
gdon, Harry J.
gginbotham, William B.
ggins, Collin O.
ggins, Russell G.
ghstone, Mrs.
William H.
kawa, Richard K.
lborn, John T.
leman, Ronald L.
If, J. Homer
Ikevitch, Dr.
Benjamin H.
11, Charles W.
11, Mrs. Cyrus G.
11, Herbert L.
11, Hoyt S.
11, James J.
lis, George B., Jr.
lis, Thomas M.
Her, Rembrandt C, Jr.
llmer, Miss Louise
me, Horace C.
nek, H. George
ndmarch, Alan
ne, Clarke F.
nes, Mrs. Clarence W.
ngson, George D.
nko, Michael
nman, Burton, Jr.
nshaw, Joseph H.
rsch, Erich
rsch, Dr. Lawrence L.
rsch, Samuel
rsh, Herbert W.
rsh, Morris
tshew, R. M.
x, Miss Elsie
144
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Hixson, Hebron
Hjermstad, H. U.
Hlad, Harold D.
Hoag, Dr. Walter C.
Hoage, Earl W.
Hoagland, Miss Helen
Hoban, Dr. Eugene T.
Hobscheid, Fred J.
Hobson, Richard
Hochberg, Jerome J.
Hochfeldt, William F.
Hocking, Charles H.
Hockman, Miss
Miriam L.
Hodges, Colonel Duncan
Hodgkins, William P., Jr.
Hodlmair, Charles A.
Hoefer, A. J.
Hoehler, Fred K.
Hoekelman, Harold
Hoell, Frank H.
Hoellen, John J.
Hoeltgen, Dr.
Maurice M.
Hoermann, John W.
Hofeld, Edwin A.
Hofgren, Axel A.
Hoffman, A. C.
Hoffmann, Clarence
Hoffmann, Miss E.
Gertrud
Hoffmann, Miss Ruth L.
Hofstetter, Charles A.
Hogenson, William
Hogquist, Mrs. Mary
Hogsten, Mrs. Yngve
Hohbaum, Mrs. Rosa M.
Hohman, Dr. Ned U.
Hokenson, Gustave
Hokin, Barney E.
Holabird, William
Holcomb, H. H., Ill
Holcomb, Mrs. R. R.
Holcombe, Mrs. Stuart K.
Holden, Harold M.
Holland, Arthur M.
Holland, Daniel E.
Holland, Harry J.
Holland, Lewis J.
Holland, Morris Z.
Hollander, Alvin B.
Hollander, Jack
Hollender, Dr. S. S.
Holleran, L. F.
Hollerbach, Joseph
Holliday, Preston H.
Hollinger, Mrs. Theda M.
Hollingsworth, Thomas
Hollis, Raymond
Hollis, Dr. Robert H.
Hollobow, Irving E.
Holloman, L. C, Jr.
Holmes, John B.
Holmes, John S.
Holmes, R. W.
Holson, Evar W.
Holt, Dr. Helen
Holub, John
Holubow, Harry
Homan, Mrs. Hubert A.,
Jr.
Homan, Joseph
Honor, Dr. Harold L.
Hooper, A. F.
Hooper, Walter P.
Hoover, James C.
Hopfear, Dr. D. A.
Hopkins, John L.
Hopkins, Raymond
Horak, Joseph E.
Hord, Stephen Y.
Horner, Dr. Imre E.
Hornthal, William J.
Horrell, Frank J.
Horstman, James A.
Horton, Mrs. Arthur
Horton, Warren C.
Horwich, Herbert F.
Horwich, Philip
Horwitz, Samuel C.
Houchins, Charles W.
Houda, Dr. Leonard J.
Houston, J. C, Jr.
Howard, John K.
Howard, Philip L.
Howe, Walter L.
Howe, William J.
Howington, Robert P.
Howlett, Mrs. Michael J.
Hoyt, N. Landon, Jr.
Huber, Dr. Earl B.
Huber, H. Dana
Huddleston, J. W.
Hudson, George L.
Hudson, H. Kenneth
Huebner, Joseph A.
Hughes, Dr. Charles W.
Hughes, Robert D.
Huguelet, Robert J.
Huizinga, A. T.
Hullsiek, William L.
Hulman, Harry L.
Humm, Joseph
Hummel, Mrs. Fred E.
Hummel, J. W.
Hummer, William B.
Humphrey, Eugene X.
Humphrey, Mrs. H. D.
Humphrey, Robert C.
Humphreys, J. Ross
Humphreys, Robert E.
Huncke, Miss Ada
Hungerford, Becher W.
Hunt, Jerry J.
Hunt, Michael
Hunter, Charles J.
Hunter, E. R.
Hunter, J. N.
Hurley, G. B.
Hurst, Miss Mercedes
Huston, Mrs. Charles E.
Hutcheson, M. F.
Hutchings, Harold E.
Hutchings, John A.
Hutchins, Chauncey K.
Hyde, Milton E.
Hyde, Mrs. Willis O.
Hyer, W. G. T.
Hyman, Henry F.
Hyman, Harold
Igasaki, Masao, Jr.
Impey, Charles E.
Indelli, William A.
Inger, Jacob
Ingeman, Robert L.
Insolia, James V.
Interlandi, Dr. Joseph
Ireland, Robert
Ireneus, Dr. Carl., Jr.
Irey, Miss Margot
Irons, Dr. Edwin N.
Irons, Robert B.
Irvin, John C.
Irwin, A. J.
Isaac, Eric
Isaacs, Edgar E.
Isaacs, Dr. Harry J.
Isaacs, T. J.
Isaacson, Herbert
Isett, G. Richard
Israelstam, Alfred W.
Iversen, Lee
Ives, Robert W.
Izui, Dr. Victor
Jablonsky, Anthony J.
Jack, Martin L.
Jacker, David
Jacker, Norbert S.
Jackman, Warren
Jackson, Harold
Jackson, Mrs. Osmond A.
Jackson, R. W.
Jacobi, Frank C.
Jacobs, Miss Barbara
Jacobs, Ben
Jacobs, E. G.
Jacobs, Harry
Jacobs, Maurice H.
Jacobs, Robert J.
Jacobsen, C. E.
Jacobshagen, Alfred
145
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Jacobson, Evans M.
Jacobson, Harold L.
Jacobson, S. P.
Jaffe, Harry
Jaffe, Julius C.
Jaffe, Louis
Jaicks, Frederick S.
James, Miss Alice
James, Miss Gladys
James, Russell B.
Janes, Otto
Janis, Robert F.
Jansen, Bruce
Jansen, Walter
Januchowski, E. D.
Jarecki, Mrs. Robert A.
Jarrow, Stanley L.
Jay, Richard H.
Jecha, Irwin
Jeffris, Rufus R.
Jehn, Mark
Jenkins, Evan
Jenner, Albert E., Jr.
Jenner, Mrs. H. B.
Jennings, B. J.
Jennings, Mrs.
James W.
Jensen, George B.
Jensen, Harald, Jr.
Jensen, Henry J.
Jensen, James A.
Jetter, William E.
Jiede, Edward
Jobe, E. C.
Joffe, M. H.
Johns, George G., Jr.
Johnson, Miss Agnes E.
Johnson, D. Gale
Johnson, Carl H.
Johnson, Miss
Donna Lee
Johnson, Mrs.
Doris Hurtig
Johnson, Edmund G.
Johnson, Edward L.
Johnson, Emil T.
Johnson, Everett C.
Johnson, George F.
Johnson, Harry G.
Johnson, Henry A.
Johnson, Iver C.
Johnson, James P.
Johnson, Miss Janice C.
Johnson, Mrs. Mabel S.
Johnson, Peter W.
Johnson, R. C.
Johnson, R. W.
Johnson, Ray Prescott
Johnson, Robert E.
Johnson, Robert K.
Johnson, Sidney R.
Johnson, Wesley R.
Johnston, A. J.
Johnston, Mrs. John M.
Johnston, Leith
Johnston, Logan T., Jr.
Johnston, Thomas G.
Jolls, Thomas H.
Jones, Clark H.
Jones, E. Willis
Jones, George R.
Jones, James F.
Jones, Kenneth A.
Jones, Loring M.
Jones, Owen Barton
Jones, Vaughn M.
Jordan, Dr. John W.
Jordan, W. Beaumont
Jordon, Castle W.
Joseph, Dr. Paul
Jospey, Mrs. Sheldon
Jost, William
Joy, Eugene P., Jr.
Joyce, Robert E.
Juhre, Russell H.
Juley, John
Jung, C. C.
Junkunc, B. B.
Jurczak, Dennis Michael
Jurica, Rev. Hilary S.
Juron, Marvin
Kachigian, Michael M.
Kahn, Nat M.
Kahoun, John A.
Kaine, Eugene D.
Kaiser, Carl A.
Kaiser, Robert
Kalcheim, Henry A.
Kaleta, Charles J.
Kalish, J. Barton
Kallick, Joseph M.
Kalnin, Jacob
Kamin, Alfred
Kaminski, Dr. M. V.
Kammholz, T. C.
Kandlik, Edward A.
Kane, George H.
Kane, Mrs. Marion O.
Kanelos, Frank S.
Kaner, Leo L.
Kannapell, Jack E., Jr.
Kanter, Dr. Aaron E.
Kanter, Melvin
Kaplan, Alvin L.
Kaplan, Mrs. Frank
Kaplan, Harvey
Kaplan, John
Kaplan, Mrs. Julius F.
Kaplan, Dr. Lawrence
Kaplan, Samuel
Kapnick, Harvey E., Jr.
Kapov, Anthony F.
Karacic, Thomas J.
Karafotias, Christ
Karasik, Sidney Z.
Karlin, Daniel
Karlin, Irving M.
Karlin, Leo S.
Karlin, Leonard
Karlin, Norman
Karstens, James W.
Kart, Eugene
Katz, Alan D.
Katz, Bernard
Katz, Edwin M.
Katz, Mrs. Harold A.
Katz, Miss Jessie
Katz, Meyer
Katz, Norman
Katzin, Samuel N.
Kaufman, Daniel D.
Kaufman, Miss Francis J.
Kaufmann, Fred R., Jr.
Kaulas, Joseph
Kausel, John F.
Kawabata, S.
Kayser, Victor P.
Kearney, E. L.
Kearney, Marshall V.
Kearney, William P.
Keating, Edward
Keator, Harry F., Jr.
Keck, George
Keck, Richard B.
Keck, Dr. W. L.
Kedzie, Daniel P.
Keebler,
Miss Florence M.
Keefe, John F.
Keehn, Mrs. Leroy
Keeler, Carl R., Jr.
Keister, G. E.
Keith, David L.
Keith, Elbridge
Keller, Harry F.
Keller, M. J.
Kelley, Alfred J.
Kelley, Elijah B.
Kellogg, James G.
Kellogg, John Payne
Kelly, Clyde
Kelly, Dr. Frank B.
Kelly, Frank S.
Kelly, George Gilman
Kelly, J. Edgar
Kelly, John E., Jr.
Kelly, John J., Jr.
Kelly, William D.
Kernel, Mrs. Margaret P.
Kemp, Miss Ola
Kemp, Richard B.
Kemp, Wallace B.
146
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Kemper, Mrs. Malcolm
Kendall, Claude
Kendall, G. R.
Kennedy, Mrs. Ardis M.
Kennedy, James W.
Kennedy, Mrs. Joseph C.
Kennedy, Richard L., Jr.
Kennel, William E.
Kenyon, Dr. A. T.
Kepecs, Dr. Joseph
Keranen, George M.
Kern, George H.
Kerpec, Miss Susan
Kerr, Leslie H.
Kerr, William D.
Kerrigan, W.
Kesler, Howard F.
Kesler, Dr. R. L.
Kesses, Rev. Niketas
Kessler, Ben H.
Kettel, Dr. Louis John
Ketting, Howard B.
Kettner, K. J.
Keyser, Clell W.
Kiddoo, Guy C.
Kieffer, Ralph C.
Kight, Robert F.
Kihlstrum, Elmer E.
Kilcullen, Edwin J.
Kiley, Francis T.
Killen, Mrs. Joan
Kimball, Charles H. G.
Kimball, Kenneth J.
Kimball, Ronald M.
Kincannon, Jack F.
Kincheloe, Samuel C.
Kindahl, John 0.
King, Dale E.
King, Forest A.
King, H. R.
King, Lynwood B., Jr.
King, Robert H.
King, Warren J.
King, Willard L.
Kingham, J. J.
Kinne, Harry C, Sr.
Kinsella, Mrs. John H.
Kipnis, Daniel D.
Kipper, Walter C.
Kirby, Dr. William
Kirkland, William S.
Kirschbaum, Irving H.
Kirshbaum, George A.
Kirson, Leonard
Kissock, John R.
Kittleson, Dr. K. D.
Kiven, Norman M.
Kjelstrom, Paul C.
Klauer, Verne
Kleeman, Richard E.
Klehm, Howard G.
Klein, Dr. David
Klein, Dr. Ernest L.
Klein, Dr. Erwin
Klein, Richard
Kleinstein, Walter H.
Klemperer, Leo A.
Klepak, John J.
Klicar, Mrs. Frank G.
Klikun, Z. P.
Klinger, Dr. Alfred D.
Klontz, Kenneth V.
Klooster, Howard H.
Kneibler, Mrs. Arthur R.
Kneip, Elmer W.
Knoebel, Mrs. Walter H.
Knorr, Amos K.
Knott, Lawrence T.
Knowles, D. H.
Knudsen, Glenn M.
Knuepfer, C. A.
Kobrin, Mrs. Robert R.
Kodros, Dr. Andreas G.
Koehn, Carl W.
Koehnemann, Renard A.
Koff, Dr. Robert H.
Kogut, Walter
Kohler, Robert W.
Kohn, Le Roy L.
Kohn, Louis
Kohn, Mrs. Sylvan
Kolarik, Frank J.
Kolflat, Alf
Komie, Lowell B.
Koplin, Mrs. Harry
Koppelman, Dr. Ray
Koranda, Hugo
Kordsiemon, William M.
Koretz, Edgar E.
Koretz, Robert J.
Korn, Bernard M.
Korschot, Benjamin C.
Korshak, Marshall
Korshak, Saul
Korsvik, W. J.
Kos, Victor A.
Kosdon, A.
Kosterlitz, Mrs. S.
Kot, Henry C.
Kotas, Rudolph J.
Kovalick, W. W.
Kraft, Florian R.
Kraft, Maurice M.
Kraft, Ralph B.
Krag, Franz K.
Kramer, Harry G., Jr.
Kramer, Mrs. L. A.
Kramer, L. H.
Kramer, Melvin A.
Kramer, Robert
Krane, Leonard J.
Krasner, David P.
Krattebol, A. Marshall
Kraus, Mrs. Esther S.
Krause, Adolph
Krause, Miss Pearl
Krebs, D. F.
Kreer, Henry B.
Kreger, Leon A.
Krehl, Rico B.
Kremer,
Miss Jeannette G.
Krensky, Arthur M.
Kreuger, C. W.
Kriel, Miss Lucille
Kriewitz, Harry C.
Krimsin, Leonard
Kringel, Leon H.
Krinsley, Lazarus
Kritchevsky, Jerome
Kroeschell, Mrs. Roy
Kroll, Harry
Krueger, Roy H.
Krumdieck, Leo
Krupp, David J.
Kruskal, William
Krzeminski, Stanley J.
Kuchar, Mrs. Marie
Kuechmann, A. M.
Kuehne, E. Richard
Kuhajek, Eugene J.
Kuhnen, C. W.
Kuhnen, Mrs. George H.
Kuhns, Mrs. H. B.
Kullby, Roy S.
Kullman, Mrs. Alfred
Kullman, F. H., Jr.
Kupcinet, Irv
Kupfer, Dr. Ernest B.
Kurtz, George H.
Kurz, Walter C.
Kurzka, Keith F.
Kushell, Charles J.
Kushner, Dr. Abraham
Kusswurm, Armin H.
Kuta, Stanley J.
Kutner, Luis
Lachman, Harold
Ladany, William
Ladd, Joseph C.
Laegeler, J. C, Jr.
La Fortune,
Mrs. Louis A.
Lage, Gerald E.
Lagerstedt, John H.
Laggren, Mrs. Robert I.
Laidlaw, John, Jr.
Laird, Kenneth
Lamb, M. J., Jr.
Lampe, J. B.
Lampert, Walter W.
Lance, O. C.
147
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Landahl, Mrs. Herbert D.
Landau, S. J.
Landis, Eugene
Landis,
Mrs. Maurice N.
Lane, George A.
Langan, Harley B.
Lange, Otto H.
Langford, Joseph P.
Langworthy, Jack N.
Lanterman, Joseph B.
Larcher, Dr. Val
Larkin, J. D.
Larmee, Donald H.
Larson, Elmer W.
Larson, Simon P.
LaRue, Victor E.
Lasch, Charles F.
Lash, Dr. A. F.
Lasher, Willard K.
Lau, Mrs. M. K.
Lauder, T. E.
Laurion, J. L.
Lauth, Fred P.
Lavezzorio, John M.
Law, Mrs. Fred Edward
Law, M. A.
Lawrence, Dr. Charles H.
Laws, Theodore H.
Lazar, Buryl J.
Lazarski, Ben R.
Lazzaro, Paul
Leach, T. Royce
Leander, Russell J.
Le Beau, Carter N.
Le Beau, Jack T.
Le Boy, T.
Lechler, E. Fred
Leek, Walter C.
Le Comte, A. John
Ledbetter, James L.
Ledder, Edward J., Jr.
Lee, Mrs. Agnes
Lee, Bernard F.
Lee, Bertram Z.
Lee, Mrs. Raymond E.
Leedy, Dr. Haldon A.
Leeper, Harold B., Jr.
Leffler, F. O.
Le Goff, Montgomery
Lehecka, Clarence J.
Lehman, Lloyd W.
Lehmann, Robert O.
LeHockey, D. M.
Leibhardt, Mrs. Maidi
Leigh, Kenneth G.
Leighton, Mrs. Arthur J.
Leighton, Robert
Lekis, Robert H.
Lemer, Benjamin
Lenon, Richard A.
Lensing, Edward C, Jr.
Lentz, Dr. Roland G.
Leonard, Mrs. Ray W.
Leopold, Herbert R.
Leopold, Robert L.
LeRoy, Dr. George V.
Lesch, John F.
Lesinski, Irwin B.
Leslie, Conrad
Leslie, Orren S.
Lesparre, James N.
Lester, Mrs. Robert
Levatino, Jerome J.
Levin, Lawrence
Levine, William
Levine, William D.
Levinson, Julius Y.
Levitan, Moses
Levy, Bennett S.
Levy, Jacob
Lewis, Edward J.
Lewis, Harold W.
Lewis, Louis J.
Lewis, Marshall
Lewis, M. E.
Lewis, Thomas A.
Lewis, W. Wilson
Lieb, Jack H.
Lieber, Maury J.
Lieber, Philip A.
Liechty, G. Frederick
Lifvendahl, Dr.
Richard A.
Lill, George, II
Lilliander, Ernest E.
Limarzi, Dr. Louis R.
Lind, Paul B. N.
Lindberg, Donald F.
Lindgren, Erik A.
Lindquist, A. J.
Lindquist, Howard G.
Lindsley, A. J.
Lineberry, Fred C.
Link, Wendell H.
Lippincott, R. R.
Liss, Mrs. Sarah G.
List, Stuart
Liston, Thomas P.
Liszka, Stanley J.
Litschgi, Dr. J. J.
Litsinger, Fred G.
Little, G. P.
Littman, Benson
Livermore, Charles P.
Livezey, Mrs. K. Trees
Livingood, Mrs. John J.
Llewellyn, Karl N.
Lloyd, Carl S.
Lloyd, G. Blair
Lloyd, Georgia
Lloyd, Thomas J.
Locke, Edwin A., Jr.
Lockwood, Mrs.
Maurice H.
Loeb, Herbert A., Jr.
Loeb, Theodore R.
Loebe, Edward E.
Loebel, Clarence J.
Loeffler, Julius
Loewenstein, Mrs. Sidney
Loftus, Jack
Logan, James E.
Logelin, Edward C.
Logeman, Mrs. John III
Long, H. Dale
Long, Marshall R.
Loomis, Miss Marie
Looney, Charles C.
Loose, Arthur J.
Lopina, Lawrence T.
Lorant, B. H.
Loughead, Miss Ruth
Loughlin, Sydney
Loughnane, John P.
Love, John T.
Love, H. Norris
Love, Harold
Loventhal, William G.
Loverde, Dr. Albert A.
Lowden, James E.
Lowe, Dr. Edmund W.
Lowe, Rev. Leonard H.
Lowy, Walter H.
Luce, Richard
Luckow, Russell Q.
Lueders, Ralph J.
Lufkin, Miss Bernardine
Luft, John L.
Luick, Mrs. D. J.
Lund, Bjarne, Jr.
Lunde, Marvin C.
Lundgren, Sten J.
Luotto, Stefano
Lupfer, William B.
Lurie, Howard J.
Lurie, S. C.
Lusk, Miss Helen
Luskin, Bert L.
Lutterbeck, Dr.
Eugene F.
Lydon, Eugene K.
Lyman, Henry H., Jr.
Lynch, Richard
Lynch, William
Lynch, Miss Zoe D.
Lynn, Chester B.
Lynn, Mrs. Robert H.
Lyon, Mrs. Jeneva A.
Lyon, Dr. Samuel S.
Lyons, Michael H.
Lyons, Richard H.
148
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
MacArthur, Roger
MacChesney, Mrs.
Branson
Macdonald, Angus
MacDonald, H. E.
MacFall, Russell P.
MacFarland, Hays
Macholz,
Reverend Ignatius
Maciunas, Dr. A.
Mack, Edward E., Jr.
Mack, Herbert
Mack, John J.
Mack, Dr. Ronald B.
Mackay, Kenneth B.
Mackel, Dr. Audley M.
MacKenzie, David O.
MacKenzie, William J.
MacKinnon,
Mrs. Cyrus L.
MacKrell, F. C.
MacLeod, Albert H.
MacNamee, Merrill W.
MacPhee, Paul A.
MacRae, Robert H.
Macomb, J. deNavarre
Madden, Francis J.
Madden, Mrs. Margaret
Madden, Robert J.
Madderom, Ray A.
Madson, Stanford A.
Maduff, Sidney
Magers, Donald D.
Magill, Miss Hallie
Magill, John
Magnuson, Hugo E.
Mahon, D. Lee
Main, Charles 0.
Maino, N. L.
Maisel, Jack W.
Majerus, Paul W.
Majonnier, John J.
Major, Frank A.
Malato, Stephen A.
Maiden, Samuel
Mai en, Samuel
Malone, John L.
Mamby, Dr. Audley R.
Mandel, Sidney W.
Mangier, Fred J.
Mangier, Robert J.
Mango, Joseph R.
Mann, Douglass L.
Mann, Donald N.
Mann, Dr. Philip
Mann, Robert E.
Manning, Dr. John J.
Mannion, John F.
Manthey, Will E.
Manz, Mrs. George R.
Mapp, Eugene T.
Maranz, Leo S.
Marcellus, E. F.
Marchetti, Mrs. Alfred
Marcin, Mrs. Anthony
Marcus, H. L.
Marcus, Jules A.
Marcus, Maurice
Marcus, Dr. Richard E.
Mardorf, Miss Mae F.
Margolis, Dr.
Bernard S.
Mark, William B.
Markey, Howard T.
Markle, Mathew G.
Markley, Don G.
Markman, Simeon K.
Marks, Ira G.
Marks, Melvin C.
Marks, Stanford D.
Markus, Henry A.
Marlatte, Robert J.
Marley, John L.
Marling, Mrs.
Franklin, Jr.
Marlowe, Dr. John J.
Marohn, James A.
Marquart, Arthur A.
Marquis, Chalmer H.
Marron, Dr. James W.
Marshall, Benjamin H.
Marshall, Charles A.
Marshall, Frank G.
Marshall, Lee J.
Marshall, Prentice H.
Marshitz, Miss
Grace Elaine
Marslek, Emil J.
Marsteller, William A.
Marston, T. E.
Martin, Alvah T.
Martin, George S.
Martin, Glenn E.
Martin, Mrs.
Louise CM.
Martineau, Pierre D.
Martineau, Robert J.
Marwood, R. L.
Marx, Milton
Marx, Samuel A.
Maschgan, Dr. Erich R.
Mashek, V. F., Jr.
Mason, Dan V.
Mason, Mrs. Geri
Mass, Marvin L.
Masur, Dr. Walter W.
Matchett, Hugh M.
Mather, Mrs. Robert S.
Matera, Dr. Charles R.
Mathey, H. C, Jr.
Mathieu, Auguste
Matson, H. M.
Matter, Joseph A.
Matteson, Edward K.
Matthews, Francis E.
Matthews, J. H.
Matthews, Miss Laura S.
Matthias, Walter N.
Mattingly, Fred B.
Mauer, Dr. William J.
Maulin, Ralph H.
Mauritz, Waldo
Maxon, R. C.
Maxwell, John M.
Maxwell, W. R.
Maxwell, Dr. William L.
May, Sol
Mayer, Frederick
Mayer, Harold M.
Mayer, Mrs. Sidney R.
Maxson, Raymond D.
Maynard, Robert W.
McAdams, Edward J.
McArthur, Mrs. S. W.
McBrady, John W.
McCabe, Edward J., Jr.
McCaffrey, J. L.
McCall, Dr. I. R.
McCallister, Frank
McCallister, James
Maurice
McCallister, Ward
McCally, Frank D.
McCann, Charles J.
McCarthy, John F.
McCarthy, Mrs.
Theris V.
McCarthy, Mrs. Vern I.
McCarthy, Vern I., Jr.
McCloud, Bentley G., Jr.
McClow, Lloyd L.
McCollum, Giles B.
McCormack, Mrs.
Thierry L.
McCormick, Richard D.
McCoy, Charles S.
McCoy, George R.
McCoy, John L.
McCracken, John W.
McCracken, Kenneth
McCreery, C. L.
McCurdy, Frank C.
McDermott, H. T.
McDermott, William F.
McDonald, James T.
McDonald, John M.
McDonnell, Morgan F.
McDonnell, William H.
McDougall, Dugald S.
McDougall, Mrs.
Edward G.
McDougall, John A.
McDowell, Remick
149
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
McDowell, Thomas E.
McElvain, Clifford A.
McEwan, Mrs.
Thomas S.
McEwen, C. Logan
McGarr, Frank J.
McGee, Henry W.
McGibbon, Edmund L.
McGovern, John E., Jr.
McGovney, Warren C.
McGowan, Carl
McGowen, Edward J., Jr.
McGrady, J. A.
McGraw, Durmont W.
McGreevy, Robert J.
McGrew, Edwin H.
McGuire, Simms D.
Mclntyre, James
McKean, John J.
McKenna, Dr. Arthur E.
McKinney, William K.
McKinsey, Joseph S.
McKinzie, William V.
McKittrick, William
Wood
McKnight, Gordon L.
McKnight, John F.
McKnight, L. G.
McKy, Keith B.
McLain, Stuart
McLaren, Richard W.
McLaughlin, James P.
McLaughlin, L. B.
McLaury, Mrs.
Walker G.
McLean, Edward C.
McLeod, William
McMahon, Mrs.
Daniel P.
McMahon, Miss
Dorothy
McMahon, Earl J.
McMahon, James P.
McManus, John A.
McNair, Frank
McNally, Andrew, III
McNamara,
Donald McC.
McNamara, Thomas P.
McNitt, W. C.
McNulty, Joseph M.
McSurely, Mrs.
William H.
McTier, Samuel E.
McWeeny, Douglas L.
Mead, Dr. Irene T.
Meador, Miss Geraldine
L.
Means, Kenneth L.
Meccia, D. D.
Mecklenburger,
Mrs. Albert
Meeks, Robert G.
Megowen, E. J.
Mehaffey, Robert V.
Meier, Mrs. Florence K.
Meine, Franklin J.
Meinert, Richard J.
Meissner, John F.
Melcarek, Dr. T. A.
Mele, J. F.
Mellinghausen, Parker
Mellody, Mrs.
Andrew R.
Melton, B. H.
Meltzer, A. L.
Melville. Mrs. R. S.
Memmel, Mrs. William E.
Menides, Byron
Menzner, Mrs.
Howard B.
Merens, Seymour H.
Merrill, Frederick L.
Merrill, Raymond K.
Mervis, David C.
Mervis, Jack N.
Mesirow, Abner J.
Mesirow, Norman
Metcalf, Gordon M.
Metcoff, Eli
Metelnick, John W.
Method, Dr. Harold L.
Metz, Jerome L.
Meyer, Albert F.
Meyer, Mrs. Carl
Meyer, Mrs. Clara K.
Meyer, Harold W.
Meyer, Dr. Karl A.
Meyer, L. E.
Meyer, Sebastian
Meyer, Stanton M.
Meyer, Wallace
Meyers, David X.
Meyers, S. E.
Michaels, F. W.
Michaels, Joseph M.
Michaels, Ralph
Michalaros, Demetrios
Michels, Henry W., Jr.
Middleton, R. Hunter
Mietke, Miss Dorothy
Migely, Robert J.
Milbrook, A. T.
Milburn, James F.
Mildren, Miss Sarah E.
Millard, A. E.
Millard, Mrs. E. L.
Miller, Arthur J., Jr.
Miller, F. L.
Miller, Mrs. Grace
Edwards
Miller, Harold M.
Miller, Henry E.
Miller, Herbert A.
Miller, John E.
Miller, Leo A.
Miller, M. Glen
Miller, Milton T.
Miller, Miss Roberta
Miller, Miss Ruth
Miller, R. W.
Miller, Robert H.
Miller, Wesley C.
Miller, William Bricen, Jr.
Miller, William H.
Miller, William S.
Miller, Mrs. William W.
Milligan, Robert L.
Milliken, John F.
Millington, Dr.
George H.
Millman, George W.
Mills, Irving
Mills, Ralph, Jr.
Mills, Walter B.
Milne, James W.
Milner, Robert A.
Minns, Elbert W.
Mints, Thomas W., Jr.
Mintz, Arthur M.
Mishlove, Stuart H.
Mitchell, Donald H.
Mitchell, George
Mitchell, John E.
Mitchell, John L.
Mittleman, Eugene
Mix, Clarence E.
Mo burg, Gerry
Moch, Frank J.
Moeller, Fred O.
Mohl, Arthur F.
Mohr, Clarence
Mohr, Richard F.
Moinichen, Sigfred L.
Molina, Dr. Francisco A.
Molnar, Charles
Mommsen, John C.
Monsen, Myron T.
Montana, James S.
Montgomery, Mrs. R. C.
Mont-Pas, Westley F.
Moore, Arthur J.
Moore, Edward F.
Moore, Dr. E. M.
Moore, Harvey K.
Moore, Howard P.
Moore, Kenneth W.
Moore, R. E.
Moore, Mrs. Ruth
Moorman, Sylvester D.
Moran, J. Alfred
Moran, John H.
150
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Morava, John H.
Moreland, James C.
Morey, Albert A.
Morgan, Mrs. Carter W.
Morgan, Dr. Freda
Morgan, G. Walker
Morgan, Mark C.
Moriarty, M. J., Jr.
Morley, Robert T.
Moroni, Harry E., Jr.
Morris, Milton H.
Morrison, Clinton
Morrow, Mrs. C. Allen
Morrow, James P.
Morstadt, Arthur H.
Mortensen, Clyde C.
Mortenson, Steven M.
Mortimer, Charles A.
Morton, Howard C.
Morton, J. W.
Morton, Kenneth
Mose, Mrs. Einar H.
Moser, Ralph
Moss, C. Malcolm
Moss, Curtis F.
Moss, Jerry
Mottek, C. T.
Mottier, C. H.
Moulder, Dr. Peter V.
Moyer, Mrs. Harold E.
Mouzakeotis,
Dr. Theodore C.
Muckley, Robert L.
Mueller, Douglas
Muenster, William R.
Mugg, Charles L.
Muldoon, John A., Jr.
Mullen, J. Bernard
Mullen, J. Bernard, Jr.
Mullery, Donald C.
Mulligan, George V. R.
Mundy, Peter
Munnecke, Robert C.
Munnecke, Mrs.
Wilbur C.
Murphy, H. C.
Murphy, Howard Dudley
Murphy, James P.
Murphy, J. P.
Murphy, Michael P.
Murphy, Stephen M.
Murray, Cecil J.
Murray, Edwin A.
Murray, Dr. William
H. T.
Musham, William C.
Musick, Philip Lee
Muss, Joshua A.
Mutter, Mathias S.
Muzzy, H. Earle
Myers, Herbert L.
Myers, W. L.
Myerson, Raymond K.
Nadler, Charles Fenger
Naghten, John Mullin
Nagy, Dr. Andrew
Naser, Charles F.
Nash, Mrs. Herbert
Natchett, Webster
Nathan, Dr. Lester A.
Naughton, Dr. Thomas J.
Naven, Benjamin S.
Nayder, Thomas J.
Neal, John W.
Nedoss, Dr. H. P.
Nechine, Leonard M.
Neely, C. W.
Neer, Clyde F.
Neiberg, Al
Neiburger, Herman A.
Neigoff, Miss Anne
Neisser, Mrs. Walter R
Nellis, Frank Post
Nelsen, Clifford D.
Nelson, Mrs.
Arnold C, Jr.
Nelson, Carl J.
Nelson, C. E.
Nelson, Emerson S.
Nelson, Mrs. John Ben
Nemec, Thomas F.
Nemerovski, Leo
Ness, J. Stanley
Nettnin, L. H.
Neubauer, Floyd T.
Neufeld, Dr.
Evelyn A. Rinallo
Neukuckatz, John
Newberger, Kenneth
Newbrough, E. Truett
Newburg, C. Frank
Newman, Charles H.
Newman, Dr. Marcus M.
Newton, Ernest L.
Newton, Lee Craig
Niblick, James F.
Nice, Dr. Leonard B.
Nichols, Owen H.
Nicholson, John W.
Niefeld, Dr. Jaye S.
Nierman, Leonard G.
Nilles, B. P.
Nilson, Alfred R.
Nilsson, Erik
Nippert, Louis
Nisen, Charles M.
Nisson, Dr. Philip S.
Niven, Dr. Charles F.
Nixon, Charles A.
Noble, Fred G.
Noel, Albert E.
Noel, Emil
Noonan, T. Clifford
Noonan, William A., Jr.
Noone, John P.
Norby, William C.
Nordberg, C. A.
Nordenburg, Seymour
Nork, Theodore J.
Norman, Gustave
Norris, Mrs. Bruce A.
North, William S.
Northam, Mrs. Harold K.
Northrup, Lorry R.
Norton, Mrs. Carl R.
Norton, Charles E.
Norton, George H., Jr.
Norton, Michael J.
Nowaczyk. Alfred
Nugent, Dr. Oscar B.
Nugent, Richard H.
Nygren, Henry C.
Oakhill, Frederic
Oakley, Kenneth E.
Oakley, Mrs. Sterling A.
O'Bannon, William T.
Oberhelman, Dr.
Harry A.
Oberhuber, Mrs. Anton
Oberlander, James C.
Obermaier, Mrs.
John Burton
O'Boyle, C. Robert
O'Brien, Dale
O'Brien, Dr. Donald E.
O'Brien, Donald J.
O'Brien, Dr. George F.
O'Brien, John J.
O'Brien, Mrs.
Mae Sexton, Jr.
O'Brien, Maurice James
O'Brien, P. J.
O'Conner, P. K.
O'Connor, F. E.
O'Connor, John J.
O'Connor, Michael J.
Odell, Dr. Clarence B.
O'Dell, William
O'Haire, Harry J.
O'Hearn, Dr. James J.
O'Keefe, John F.
Okerberg, Philip E.
Old, Adm. Francis P.
O'Leary, Daniel J.
Olhausen, Miss Alice
Oliver, William S.
Ollendorff, Klaus
Olmstead, C. V.
Olson, Mrs. Amanda C.
Olson, C. W., Jr.
Olwin, Dr. John H.
151
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
O'Malley Patrick L.
O'Neil, C. Roderick
O'Neil, George M.
O'Neill, Dr. Eugene J.
O'Neill, J. W.
Opie, Earle F.
Oppenheimer, Paul
O'Reilly, Frank E.
O'Reilly, R. Patrick
Orlikoff, Richard
Orner, Mrs. Rhoda
Orr, Mrs. Reuben
Orschel, A. K.
Orstrom, Albert Z.
Osborne, Nathan G.
Osborne, W. Irving, Jr.
Ose, Odale J.
Osgood, Stacy W.
O'Shaughnessy, James B.
O'Shaugnessy, John E.
Osmanski,
Dr. William T.
Osmond, Harvard R.
O'Toole, John J.
O'Toole, Paul
O'Toole, Robert H.
Ott, John C.
Ottke, Dr. Robert C.
Otto, Dr. George H.
Otto, Walter C.
Ovenu, Dr. Harold
Overton, George W., Jr.
Owen, John E.
Owen, Mrs. Ralph W.
Owen, S. C.
Owens, Stanley
Ozinga, Martin
Pabich, Mrs. George E.
Pacer, T. S.
Pachman, Dr. Daniel J.
Packard, Miss
Emmy Lou
Packer, Mrs. Charles W.
Padrick, E. B.
Page, Mrs. William H., II
Pagenkopf, Miss
Gertrude
Pagenta, Dan
Paidar, Mrs. Leonard J.
Paisley, W. W.
Pakel, John, Sr.
Paleczny, C. N.
Paley, Mrs. David
Pallardy, C. M.
Pallasch, B. Michael
Palm, Mrs. Ralph D.
Palm, Mrs. Stanley F.
Palmer, Roland E.
Paltzer, Martin
Pancoast, Robert L.
Panerali, Joseph M.
Papierniak, Dr. Frank B.
Parker, Lee N.
Parker, Sam T., Jr.
Parkhurst, Marshall M.
Parks, Robey
Partlow, Charles W.
Patten, Harry O.
Patterson, M. W.
Patterson, W. A.
Pattis, S. William
Patton, Ralph E.
Pattou, Brace
Pauker, David H.
Paul, Stanley G.
Pauley, Clarence O.
Paulsen, Richard E.
Paulus, Mrs. Max G.
Paveza, Charles
Payes, William J., Jr.
Payne, Ned
Payson, Randolph
Peabody, Mrs.
Stuyvesant, Sr.
Pearce, Charles S.
Pearl, Ward C, Jr.
Pearson, Elmer R.
Peck, Miss Constance L.
Peck, Mrs. David B. II
Peck, David B., Ill
Peck, Nelson C.
Peck, Stewart T.
Peckler, Dr. David A.
Pehrson, Gordon O.
Pellettiere, Joseph J.
Pelz, William W.
Pendexter, J. F.
Penn, Kurt G.
Penner, Louis L.
Penner, Richard J.
Penner, Samuel
Pennigsdorf, Lutz
Pepich, Stephen T.
Peregrine, Moore W.
Peregrine, Roy I.
Perin, Donald W.
Perkins, Donald S.
Perkins, Fred A.
Perkins, M.D., George L.
Perkins, John H.
Perkins, Lawrence B.
Perkins, Mrs. Robert H.
Perlitz, Robert H.
Perlman, Harold L.
Perlman, Harvey
Perlstein, Miss Sarah M.
Perls, Walter M.
Perry, Archie N.
Petacque, Max W.
Peters, Dr. Albert G.
Peters, Tom J.
Peters, Victor S.
Petersen, Carl
Peterson, Clifford J.
Peterson, C. W.
Peterson, Dr. Daniel D.
Peterson, David D.
Peterson, Eugene A.
Peterson, H. R.
Peterson, O. C.
Peterson, O. Ewald
Peterson, Melvin 0.
Peterson, Richard F.
Peterson, Victor H.
Petherbridge, Roy E.
Petry, Charles J.
Pettersen, Jack F.
Petty, Dr. David T.
Pfarrer, W. H.
Pfleger, Frank
Phalin, Howard V.
Phelps, Miss Elizabeth
Phelps, William Henry
Philip, James G., Jr.
Philipsborn, Herbert F.
Philley, Mrs. W. B.
Picha, Edward F.
Pick, O. M.
Piehl, Melvin W.
Pierce, Allen E.
Pierce, Berlyn
Pierce, Mark E.
Pierson, D. Robert
Pierson, Robert R.
Pieters, Graeme Stewart
Pilchard, Elwin S.
Pilkington, Thomas A.
Pillsbury, Theodore R.
Pilot, Dr. I.
Pink, Mrs. Harold
Pinsof, Philip
Pipkin, C. M.
Pirofalo, James C.
Pirruccello, Dr. Frank W.
Pistona, Mrs. Margaret C.
Pitt, Gavin A.
Plachota, Dr. J. J.
Piatt, Henry R., Jr.
Piatt, Nathan M.
Piatt, Reuvan N.
Piatt, Sherwood K.
Pletsch, George B.
Plotnick, Dr. I. Robert
Pochter, Irwin P.
Poe, Miss Frances
Pohl, Dr. Carl M.
Polales, John C.
Polikoff, Mrs. Barbara
Polk, Morris G.
Pollack, Sheldon S.
Pollock, Miss Dora
Pollock, Mrs. Lewis J.
152
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Pontius, Andrew L.
Pontius, Mrs. G. V.
Pool, E. J.
Poole, George A.
Poolos, Nick J.
Poore, Taylor
Pope, J. W.
Porter, L. W.
Porterfield, Henry A., Jr.
Portes, Dr. Caesar
Portis, Henry R.
Posner, Harry R.
Poss, Mark A.
Postweiler, William L.
Potter, George D.
Potter, Charles S.
Potts, Dr. Willis J.
Powers, Carl J.
Powers, John W.
Powers, William F.
Praeger, Charles H.
Pratt, Harold W.
Prebensen, Harold J.
Preble, Mrs. Robert, Jr.
Prellwitz, Miss T. L.
Prentice, J. Rockefeller
Prentice, Robert
Preskill, Alfred W.
Press, Robert M.
Preston, Mrs. Bradford
Preston, Charles D.
Price, Mrs. Griswold A.
Price, J. H.
Price, Miss Mary Ann
Priebe, Frank A.
Prince, Robert M.
Prince, William Wood
Prindiville, Frank W.
Pritchard, N. H.
Pritikin, Mrs. Sara Z.
Pritzker, Abraham N.
Profili, Mrs. Giacomo
Prohaska, Dr. John Van
Prokop, Joseph
Prokop, Richard A.
Psik, Mrs. Paul R.
Puccetti, Harry W.
Puestow, Dr. Charles B.
Putze, Louis
Pullman, Frederick C.
Purdy, John P.
Purvis, Miss Sadie
Pushkin, Dr. E. A.
Putnam, Alfred L.
Putnam, Edmond D.
Pye, Harold C.
Pyle, Howard
Quackenboss, Thomas C.
Quackenbush, John L.
Quarles, Albert M.
Quateman, Joseph I.
Quayle, Robert
Querl, Paul
Quin, George Robert
Quindry, Frank
Quinlan, Sterling C.
Quisenberry, Mrs. Ann C.
Quisenberry, John A.
Quisenberry, T. E.
Raab, S. S.
Raaen, John C.
Rabb, Stuart W.
Radack, Mrs.
Dorothy W.
Radebaugh, Brye J.
Rahe, Rolland A.
Rahl, Mrs. James A.
Raines, Mrs. Dale S.
Raleigh, Dr. William T.
Ramsey, Lon W.
Rand, John B.
Randell, A. C.
Rank, Emil T.
Ranney, George A., Jr.
Ransom, Lyle H.
Ransom, Robert C, Sr.
Rardon, Mrs. Eva B.
Rasin, Rudolph S.
Rasmussen, Carl A.
Rathfelder, Carl A.
Raubitschek, Dr.
Howard A.
Rauch, Richard
Rautbord, Clayton L.
Rawleigh, James N.
Rawson, Miss Georgia C.
Rawsthorne,
Mrs. John W.
Ray, Fred W.
Rayl, Richard B.
Rayner, Lawrence
Raysa, Richard S.
Read, Frank S.
Read, Freeman C.
Rearick, Arden J.
Reckard, Dale W.
Redcliffe, R. L.
Redding, Bert J.
Redfield, C. Truman
Redmond, Hugh
Redmond, William A.
Reed, Mrs. Charles A.
Reed, Mrs. Frank C.
Reed, Harold V.
Reed, L. F. B.
Reeder, Dr. Clifton L.
Reese, Edward H.
Reeves, George C.
Regan, James A.
Regnery, Mrs. Henry
Reich, Lewis W.
Reichmann, William D.
Reicin, Frank E.
Reid, Alf F.
Reid, Fred T.
Reid, John E.
Reid, Roy
Reidy, T. Hamil
Reiff, David
Reiffel, Dr. Leonard
Reilly, W. J.
Rein, Lester E.
Reiners, Otto A.
Reinschreiber,
Mrs. M. Robert
Renald, Joseph P.
Rennicke, Norbett G.
Resnikoff, George J.
Reuscher. Charles J.
Revnes, Richard
Reynell, Robert L.
Reynolds, H. J., Jr.
Reynolds, Harold P.
Reynolds, James A., Jr.
Reynolds, Mrs. Ruth B.
Reynolds,
Thomas A., Jr.
Rhead, Dr. Clifton C.
Rhoads, Clarence C.
Rhodes, C. Harker, Jr.
Rice, Dr. Frank E.
Rice, J. E.
Rice, Dr. Orlin W.
Rich, Joseph E.
Richards, Miss Catherine
Richards, Harper
Richards, Miss Irma L.
Richards, John C.
Richards, Mrs. Oron E.
Richards, Miss Shary
Richards, William Bruce
Richardson, Irving
Richardson, LeMont K.
Richman, Mrs. Irvin F.
Richman, Ruben A.
Richmond, Herbert J.
Rick, Robert C.
Rickard, Frank W.
Rickard, L. E.
Ricker, Joseph A.
Rickher, Mrs. Judy
Ridley, Douglas
Riederer, Frank W.
Riegler, Eugene
Ries, Max H.
Riggs, I. S.
Riggs, Mrs. Joseph A.
Riggs, W. R.
Riha, Frank J.
Riley, Earl K.
Riley, Edward C.
153
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Rim, Joseph
Rinaker, Samuel M.
Ringenberg, Wade R.
Rink, Dr. Arthur G.
Rink, George A.
Rink, Joseph J.
Rioff, Harry A.
Ripley, James J.
Riskin, Murray
Rissman, Gerald H.
Ritter, Charles E.
Ritterskamp,
James J., Jr.
Riva, Joseph P.
Rivkin, William R.
Roach, 0. R.
Roach, Rollin W.
Robandt, Al
Robb, Mrs. Margaret H.
Robbins, Burr L.
Robbins, Fred J.
Robbins, Laurence B.
Robbins, Miss Linda
Robbins, Fred A.
Roberts, Mrs. Charlene G.
Roberts, John W.
Roberts,
Shepherd M., Jr.
Roberts, William E.
Robertson, Dr. Robert C.
Robinson, Angus
Robinson, C. Snelling
Robinson, Ernest N.
Robinson, Paul H., Jr.
Robinson, W. H.
Rochetto, Mrs. Evelyn
Rodell, Herbert L.
Rodger, John H.
Rodman, George E.
Rodriguez, Dr. Arthur A.
Rodwick, Frank P.
Roecker, Howard G.
Roefer, Henry A.
Roembke, R.
Roettger, Don E.
Rogers, Alfred M.
Rogers, George B.
Rogers, James Waller
Rogers, Owen
Rohn, Mrs. Esther E.
Rold, Dr. Dale
Rolfe, John M.
Rolfing, Mrs. R. C.
Rollman, Justin A.
Romain, William A.
Roman, B. F.
Romano, Michael R.
Rondenet, Dr. L. E.
Ronning, Magnus I.
Rooks, R. Newton
Root, John O.
Rootberg, Philip
Rosberg, J. Wesley
Rose, George E., Jr.
Rose, Jack
Rose, Ralph
Roseland, J. G.
Rosen, Harold J.
Rosen, Roger H.
Rosenberg, Ben L.
Rosenberg, H. E.
Rosenberg, Jack M.
Rosenbloom, Ronald
Rosenblum, Mrs. Louis
Rosenheim, H. H.
Rosenson, Herzl
Rosenthal, Albert J.
Rosenwald, Mrs.
Milly M.
Roshkind, Allan I.
Rosner, Manuel
Ross, Dr. Chester John
Ross, Earl
Ross, Mrs. Joseph F.
Ross, Mrs. K. B.
Ross, Dr. Martin T.
Ross, Peter H.
Ross, Ralph H.
Rossi, Matthew L.
Rossit, George G.
Rossman, Theodore
Rossow, Mrs. Phylis
Roth, Raymond M.
Roth, Sylvan A.
Rothermel, Stephen W.
Rothfield, Norman
Rothschild, Edward
Roulette, Mrs. Cecil H.
Roulston, Robert J.
Rowe, F. B.
Rowland, Clarence, Jr.
Rowley, Mrs. Curtis W.
Rowley, Dr. W. F.
Royds, Arthur V.
Rozene, Arthur E.
Rozmarek, Charles
Rubert, William F.
Rubin, Jack B.
Rubin, Sidney S.
Rudd, N. H.
Rudolph, Mrs. Bertha
Rudolph, Mrs. David P.
Rudolph, Walter D.
Rudin, Louis E.
Ruecking, Harry W.
Ruff, J.
Ruhl, Robert H.
Rummell, Darwin M.
Rumsfeld, Herbert W.
Rundin, Walter C, Jr.
Rush, Charles M.
Rush, Richard B.
Rusin, Bron J.
Ruskin, Mrs. Harry H.
Russell, Harold S.
Russell, John W.
Russell, Mrs. Paul
Russell, W. Hunter
Ruth, Philip F.
Rutherford, James E.
Rutherford, M. Drexel
Rutstein, Martin I.
Ruttenberg, Derald H.
Ryan, Arnold W.
Ryan,
Mrs. Bernadette T.
Ryerson, Anthony M.
Ryker, John
Rynberk, Gilbert J.
Ryser, Frank
Ryser, Werner
Saalfeld, Harry H.
Saar, Robert P.
Sabshin, Dr. Edith G.
Sacco, Anthony E.
Saccone, Joseph A., Jr.
Sachs, Irving J.
Sack, Bernard N.
Sack, Don
Sackheim, Sol
Sadauskas, Miss
Frances H.
Sadler, Kenneth P.
Sagan, Bruce
Sage, Andrew
Sage, Miss Mary E.
Sager, Mrs. S. Norman
Sailor, Mrs. Charles M.
Salano, Mrs. Eugenia
Saldivar, Dr. Ricardo E.
Salins, Sidney
Sally, John R.
Salm, Raymond C.
Salmon, Mrs. Charles S.
Salomon, Ira
Salsman,
Mrs. Thomas J.
Salvador, Rupert D.
Sampson, Robert L.
Sampson, William D.
Samuels, Albert
Sanborn, Mrs. V. C.
Sandberg, John V.
Sandberg, Richard H.
Sanders, Dr. Alexander
Sanders, Frank B.
Sanders, Robert L.
Sanders, Stephen P.
Sanderson, Gerald
Sandler, Martin N.
Sandrik, Stephen
Sandrok, Edward G.
154
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Sanfilippo, Dr. John A.
Sappanos, Michael
Sauer, James H.
Sauerman, John A.
Saunders, Richard S.
Saupe, Mrs. Anna
Savage, Mrs. Stanley
Savard, Gonzague A.
Savin, Bernard
Savin, Victor R.
Sawyer, Percy
Sax, Harold W.
Sax, Jerome M.
Sayers, Miss Edith E.
Sayre, Dr. Loren D.
Scala, Mrs. Florence
Scalise, Joseph W.
Scallon, John W.
Scandiff, Jerry R.
Scanlan, Thomas P.
Scanlon, Charles J.
Scanlon, Miss Marjorie
Scelzo, George P.
Schaar, B. E.
Schade, George Carl
Schaden, Harry
Schaden, Tobias
Schaefer, W. A.
Schaffer, Miss Catharine
Schaffer, Donald L.
Schaffner, Miss Marion
Schageman, R. V.
Schaller, George J.
Schallerer, Mrs. Mary
Beth
Schallman, David A.
Schallmoser, Joseph
Schanck, Francis R.
Schanck, Francis R., Jr.
Schatzman, Marvin E.
Schau, Ernest G.
Scheele, A.
Scheer, Harry
Scheiner, Edward F.
Scheinfeld, Aaron
Schelthoff, John W.
Scheman, Dr. Louis
Schiff, Max
Schildt, Fred H.
Schiller, Dr. A. L.
Schiltz, M. A.
Schipfer, Dr. L. A.
Schlegel, Russel A.
Schleitwiler, Hal
Schlesinger, Richard B.
Schlessinger, Dr. Nathan
Schlicht, B. J.
Schlienz, Richard W.
Schlossberg, John B.
Schlossman, Norman J.
Schmeal, Howard A.
Schmehil, Dr. Edward J.
Schmeling, Evans S.
Schmidt, Charles E.
Schmidt, Fred H.
Schmidt, Richard P.
Schmidt, Mrs.
Siegfried G.
Schneider, Charles I.
Schnipper, Michael
Schoch, M. G.
Schoeneberger, Charles A.
Schooler, Lee
Schorn, Arnold N.
Schrader, John P.
Schraeder, Mrs. Harry H.
Schrager, Charles L.
Schreyer, Carl G.
Schroeder, Carl V.
Schroeder,
Mrs. Herbert C.
Schroeder, Paul A.
Schroeder, Dr. Paul W.
Schuessler, Walter E.
Schuknecht, Thomas R.
Schulien, Charles
Schultz, Arthur L.
Schultz, Eugene B., Jr.
Schulz, Dr. E. H.
Schurman, Jacques D.
Schuster, Amos M.
Schuth, O. D.
Schuttler, Mrs. Peter
Schwalm, Harold E.
Schwartz, Ben E.
Schwartz, U. S.
Schwartzberg, Irving
Schweich, Anderson M.
Schwemm, Earl M.
Scofield, Clarence P.
Scott, A. Charles
Scott, Frederick H.
Scott, J. Grant
Scott, Mrs. J. Russell
Scott, Mrs. Marion R.
Scott, Robert M.
Scott, Walter B.
Scott, William W.
Scrimgeour, Miss
Gladys M.
Scully, Charles F.
Scully, Thomas F.
Seaman, H. Gilbert
Seaman, Henry L.
Seator, Douglas S.
Seaverns, George A., Jr.
Seay, Thomas
Seckler, Samuel A.
Seelmay er, Miss Helen M .
Segal, J. Herzl
Segal, Max
Segman, Walter W.
Seibel, Mrs. Julia F.
Seif, Joseph V.
Sell, N. J.
Selle, Miss Pearl C.
Selleck, Robert W.
Sellers, Dr. Donald W.
Sellers, Paul A.
Seminatore, George
Seng, Francis A.
Sengstacke, John H.
Seno, Salvatore Dante
Sensenbrenner, O. K.
Serwat, Leonard H.
Sevcik, John G.
Severance, George S.
Seward, Robert M.
Sewart, Whitney M.
Seymour, Fletcher
Shafer, Frederick C.
Shannon, Daniel J.
Shannon, Peter M.
Shanower, Malcolm
Shantz, Marc A.
Shapiro, Alvin R.
Shapiro, Arthur M.
Shapiro,
Mrs. Joseph R.
Share, J. R.
Sharp, Harry
Shearer, James, II
Shedd, Jeffrey
Sheehan, Mrs. Robert R.
Sheehan, Thomas J.
Sheeran, James J.
Shepard, Kenneth E.
Shepherd, Ronald J.
Sher, Raymond
Sherer, Mrs. Albert W.
Sheridan, Donald T.
Sheridan, Leo J.
Sheridan, Raymond M.
Sheridan, Robert P.
Sherman, Gordon
Sherman, John H.
Sherman, Robert T.
Sherman, Mrs. Robert T.
Sherman, William S.
Shervanian,
Dr. Christy C.
Shetler, Stanley L.
Shields, G. A.
Shields, John W.
Shilton, Earle A.
Shine, Joseph J.
Shimer, William B.
Shipley, M. L.
Shlaes, Harry L.
Shlopack, Wallace B.
Shoemaker, F. Wells
Short, Jeffrey R., Jr.
Short, William H.
155
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Shrader, Frank K.
Shuflitowski, Joseph T.
Shure, Arnold I.
Shuster, Leroy C.
Shutack, John T.
Shriver, Robert
Sargent, Jr.
Shy, Ira O.
Sicilian, Dan
Sieber, Paul E.
Siegan, B. H.
Sierocinski, E. John
Sieron, Robert D.
Silber, Newton E.
Silver, Dr. Jerome M.
Silvers, Earl
Silverstein, Mrs. Milton
Silverthorne, Mrs.
George
Simanski, Mrs. Julia
Simjack, Miss Marybeth
Simmon, Dr.
Nicholas M.
Simmons, George H.
Simmons, Dr. Nicholas L.
Simon, Mrs. Arnold B.
Simon, Charles H.
Simon, George E.
Simon, Robert A.
Simons, Syd.
Simpson, Bruce L.
Simpson, Mrs. Donald J.
Simpson, E. A.
Simpson, John B.
Simpson, Justin
Simpson, Richard B.
Sims, David K.
Sinclair, Mrs. J. Hoffman
Singer, Carl N.
Singer, Morris T.
Singleton, Thomas B.
Sippel, Edward A.
Sisler, George F.
Sitek, John A.
Sittler, Dr. W. Walter
Sivyer, Warner
Sjostrom, Robert A.
Skaff, Mrs. Ernest
Skamfer, Robert
Skan, Leon N.
Skeie, Kermit A.
Skibinski, Chester
Sklansky, Mrs. M. A.
Sklar, N. Raoul
Skoczek, Mrs. Roman A.
Skoner, Ralph
Skorup,
Mrs. Emil A., Jr.
Skudera,
Miss Blanche D.
Skweres, Thomas W.
Slater, Milton E.
Sledz, Adam P.
Slepvan, Dr. Albert H.
Sloan, Dr. Jack H.
Slottow, Richard S.
Smalley, B. L.
Smalley, Dr. Charles J.
Smalley, John H.
Smart, Robert E.
Smart, S. Bruce, Jr.
Smerling, Manuel
Smith, C. D.
Smith, Charles L.
Smith, F. Gordon
Smith, George P. F.
Smith, Goff
Smith,
Miss Grace Frances
Smith, H. Kellogg
Smith, H. William
Smith, Harold A.
Smith, Harrison C.
Smith, Harry C.
Smith, Harry T.
Smith, Hawley L., Jr.
Smith, Howard A.
Smith, John Justin
Smith, Kenneth P.
Smith, L. L.
Smith, Dr. Manuel
Smith, Norbert
Smith, Owen
Smith, Mrs. Raymond F.
Smith, Robert C.
Smith, Roland K.
Smith, Mrs. Solomon B.
Smith, S. S.
Smyth, David B.
Snitoff, Howard J.
Snow, Dr. Adolph I.
Snyder, Bernard A.
Snyder, James E.
Sokolec, Maurice
Sollis, Edwin B.
Sollitt, Sumner S.
Solomon, Ezra
Sommers, Bert Edward
Sondel, G. W.
Sonderby, Max E.
Sonne, Fred T.
Sonoda, Miss Louise
Sorensen, Christ J.
Sorensen, L. W.
Sorrelle, E. Courtney
Sosin, Marvin P.
Sosin, Sidney
Souder, W. F., Jr.
Southwick, Dr. Harry W.
Sowa, Frank
Spang, Ralph M.
Spangler, James C.
Spanik, Miss Anne
Spanuello, Leo J.
Sparberg, Sidney J.
Spark, David I.
Spaulding, George E.
Spencer, Asbury L.
Spencer, Charles M.
Spencer, Mrs. I.
Spencer, James M.
Spencer, William N.
Sperry, Oliver R.
Spertus, Philip
Spiegel, Miss
Katherine J.
Spiehler, Adolph F.
Spitz, Lawrence S.
Spooner, Dr. Bruce A.
Sprinker,
Donald Herbert
Squires, Vernon T.
Stade, Hans A.
Stafford, Mrs. Richard W.
Stagman, Dr. Joseph
Stahl, Harold A.
Stahl, John
Stahl, T. R.
Stair, H. Bowen
Stamm, Mrs. Elmer J.
Stanbery, J. N.
Standen, Charles R.
Stang, J. I.
Stanley, E. V.
Stanton, Mrs. Francis R.
Stanton, John
Star, Alvin D.
Starshak, A. L.
Starkweather, M. F.
Stauffacher, E. L.
Stavenhagen, Fred A.
Stavish, Emanuel G.
Stayman, Clarke C.
Steans, Dr. George L.
Stebbins, Mrs. A. L.
Steele, Mrs. Chester B.
Stefany, Henry
Steffen, Philip N.
Steffey, O. O.
Stegman, Mrs. Walter W.
Steiger, Aaron A.
Steigmann, Dr.
Frederick
Stein, A. D.
Stein, Mrs. Louise K.
Stein, Melvyn E.
Steiner, Miss Joanne
Steinhorn, Mrs. S. R.
Steinman, R. E.
Steinmann, Mrs. F. H.
Steins, Mrs. Halsey
Stekly, Harold
156
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Stenhouse, Miss
Bessie C.
Stenn, Dr. Frederick
Stenson, William A.
Stepan, Alfred C, Jr.
Stephan, Edmund A.
Stephens, Dr. Natalie
Stephens, Norval
Stephens, Russell F.
Stern, Gerald J.
Stern, Henry
Stern, Jerome H.
Stern, John W.
Stern, Herbert L.
Stern, Herbert L., Jr.
Stern, Lawrence F.
Stern, Russell T.
Stern, Russell T., Jr.
Sternberg, Arthur
Sternberg, Edward
Stetson, F. Winslow, Jr.
Stevens, John Paul
Stevens, William E.
Stevenson, Ben T.
Stevenson, Mrs. Borden
Stevenson, James R.
Stevenson,
Miss Lillian
Stewart, Brendan J.
Stewart, George W.
Stewart, Stanley C.
St. George, George Q. M.
Stickler, L. R.
Stiggleman, James H.
Stikkers, Alex
Stind, C. J.
Stirling, Miss Dorothy
Stix, Lawrence C., Jr.
Stoaks, Richard O.
Stocker, Frederick B., Jr.
Stocking, George T.
Stoeffhaas, W. F.
Stoesser, John N.
Stofft, Edmond B.
Stohl, Milton R.
Stokesberry, Paul W.
Stolar, Burton I.
Stollery, Mrs. Harry
Stolz, Leon
Stone, Mrs. E. J.
Stone, Harry L.
Stone, Herbert Stuart
Stone, J. McWilliams
Stone, Marvin N.
Stone, Peter
Stone, W. Clement
Storey, Smith W.
Storkan, Mrs. James
Stormont, Dr. D. L.
Stout, Frederick E.
Stover, Frank C.
Strafer, Guy H.
Straight, Mrs. Madeline
Joyce
Strathearn, Donald, Jr.
Stratton, Robert C.
Stratz, Albert E.
Straus, Mrs. Robert E.
Strauss, Eugene O.
Strauss, Frederick W.
Stresen-Reuter, A. P.
Strieker, Henry J.
Strobeck, Roy A.
Stroben, Donald R.
Strom, Norman N.
Stryck, Paul W.
Stuart, La Rhett L.
Stuart, Lyman J.
Stuart, Robert
Stuart, William M.
Stubenrauch, E. H.
Stuckey, M. A.
Stuckslager, Walter N.
Study, Dr. Robert S.
Study, Mrs. Robert
Stueckemann, Mrs.
FredC.
Sturdy, Franklin D.
Sturla,
Harry L., Jr.
Sturm, Arthur
Stutz, George L.
Succa, Roy J.
Sugar, Dr. Oscar
Suiter, Harold W.
Sujack, Edwin T.
Sule, Charles J.
Sullivan, Eugene T.
Sullivan, Joseph J.
Sultan, Dr. Nathan A.
Sulzberger, Mrs.
Frank L.
Summers, Wayne M.
Sundell, Miss Grace B.
Sundt, E. V.
Supplee, Charles B.
Suyker, Hector
Svec, Anton E.
Svensson, Olof
Swain, Mrs. Henry
Swan, Jack
Swanson, H. G.
Swartz, Harry B.
Swartzberg, Irvin
Sweeney, Mrs. Leo P. A.
Sweet, Mrs. Carroll
Sweet, David M.
Swenson, Gayle
Swenson, R. E.
Swett, Warren C.
Swett, William O.
Swift, John C.
Swift, Phelps Hoyt
Swift, T. Philip
Swihart, J. R.
Swingle, Roy E.
Swoiskin, Dr. Irving
Szarakaika, William
Taaffe, C. R.
Taber, Edwin M.
Taber, John Anderson
Tabin, Mrs. Adrian
Tabin, Julius
Taft, Mrs. John Ailes
Talalay, Dr. Paul
Talbot, Dr. Eugene S.
Talbott, John B.
Tank, Marvin H.
Tannenbaum, Saul O.
Tappendorf, Robert H.
Targ, Mrs. Max
Tarnopol, Emil
Tarrson, Albert J.
Tarrson, Sidney A.
Tatge, Paul W.
Taub, Charles
Taylor, Harold L.
Taylor, John W.
Taylor, Mrs. John W., Jr.
Taylor, Mrs. Sam G., Ill
Taymor, Aaron
Tecson, Joseph A.
Teitel, Charles
Teitelbaum, Joseph D.
Telfer, Bruce T.
Tellefsen, Ralph, Jr.
Teller, Sidney A.
Telser, Eugene
Temple, Jack B.
Temple, John
Templeman, William I.
Temps, Leupold
Teninga, Alfred J.
Tennant, Don
Tennyson, Alfred R.
Terker, Sam
Terrell, Richard L.
Terry, Willis E.
Tesuaro, Dominic A.
Teter, Park
Theiss, Arthur W.
Thiele, Edward M.
Thiele, George C.
Thoelecke, L. C.
Thomas, Mrs. B. Russell
Thomas, Frank
Thomas, Miss Martha
Thomas,
Mrs. Norbert J.
Thomas, Norman L.
Thompson, C. Harold
Thompson, Dr. Charles E.
157
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Thompson, H. Hoyt
Thompson, Jack E.
Thompson, Jack W.
Thompson, Dr. John R.
Thompson, Russell W.
Thompson, Warren E.
Thompson,
Dr. William R.
Thorek, Dr. Philip
Thoresen, H. B.
Thrush, George H.
Thurber, Joseph G.
Thurston, John F.
Tibbs, Harry M.
Tice, Winfield
Tichenor, Arthur G.
Tiersky, Dr. Morris D.
Tikander, Wilho
Tilden, Merrill W.
Timmings, G. H.
Tinen, John, Jr.
Tinkham, Leo V.
Tinsley, Dr. Milton
Tintiangco, John Jose
Tittle, Vernon
Tobey, Newton H.
Tobin, Paul E.
Todd, Mrs. E. L.
Todd, William T.
Toelle, R. Maynard
Tolpin, Dr. Samuel
Tomei, Felix J., Jr.
Topercer, Mrs. Sylvia
Topolinski, J. J.
Torgerson, Ray G.
Totsch, Marvin D.
Tower, Robert C.
Towns, R. E.
Toyomura, Dennis
Trace, Dr. Herbert D.
Tracy, T. J.
Tracy, Wheeler
Trager, D. C.
Train, Jack D.
Trainor, Mrs. Minita
Trammel, Dr. Henry M.
Travers, Claude R.
Traynor, William
Treadway, Cecil E.
Tread well, George P.
Treasurer, Mrs. Henry J.,
Jr.
Tremper, Robert
Tresley, Dr. Ira J.
Trestenjak, Harold G.
Triggs, Warren
Triner, Joseph
Troeger, Miss E. M.
Troeger, Louis P.
Troxel, Dr. J. C.
Troxell, R. L.
Trueblood, Robert M.
Tucker, Irwin R.
Turek, A. O.
Turgrimson, Charles D.
Turkevich, Nicholas L.
Turner, Dr. Herbert A.
Turner, Oliver S.
Turner, William S.
Tuzin, C. F.
Tyk, Warren G.
Tyson, John
Ufferman, William
Uhlmann, Richard F.
Ultsch, W. Lewis
Underwood, Richard C.
Uaro, Gerard M.
Unger, Mrs. Dan
Unkovskoy, Mrs. Simon
Urann, E. B.
Urban, Andrew
Urban, Frank
Urban, John T.
Uretz, Daniel A.
Urick, Delbert N.
Uriell, Frank G.
Urnes, Dr. M. P.
Ushijima, Mrs. Ruth
Utz, Miss Martha
Vacante, Dr. Anthony B.
Vail, Donald P.
Vail, J. Dean, Jr.
Valentine, Mrs. Joseph L.
Valentine, Paul H.
Van Auken, Paul S.
Van Buskirk, M. G.
Vance, Norman, Jr.
Vance, S. M.
Vanderkloot, Dr. Albert
Vander Kloot,
Nicholas J.
Vander Laan, Dr.
Cornelius A.
van der Meulen, John H.
Vander Ploeg,
Mrs. Frank
Vanderwicken, Mrs.
Edwin P.
Van Deventer,
William E.
Van Dyk, S. A.
Vanecko, Dr. M.
Van Epps, Dr. James
Van Etten, Floyd G.
Van Gorkom, Mrs. J. W.
Van Hagen, Mrs.
George E., Ill
Van Kampen, A. H.
Van Ness, A. L.
Vanness, Charles E.
Van Oosten, L. L.
Van Scheltema,
John K., Jr.
Van Stanten, James
Varese, Anthony A.
Varley, John S.
Varnum, Edward E.
Vaughan, A. W.
Vaughn, Wilbert T.
Veeder, Mrs. Melvin N.
Veeger, Jack
Velvel, Charles
Velvel, H. R.
Venrick, Mrs. Charles F.
Vergeck, Bruno J.
Verhaag, Dr. Joseph E.
Ver Nooy, Miss Winifred
Vernon, Leroy N.
Verros, Harry Peter
Verson, Melvin D.
Vetter, Paul G.
Vicari, Dr. Frank A.
Vick, Michael D.
Victor, George E.
Victorine, Vernon E.
Vietsch, Grant C.
Viger, James W.
Vihon, Charles H.
Vilas, Mrs. Royal C.
Vilsoet, William
Vincenti, Anthony P.
Vivas, Julio
Vlcek, Dr. Anton J.
Vogel, David A.
Vogt, Karl
Voigt, Mrs. Wilbur R.
Vollmer, Karl F.
Von Brauchitsch,
Frederick C.
Vondrasek, Earl A.
Von Gehr, George
Voorhis, Jerry
Voris, Dr. Harold C.
Vose, Hamilton, Jr.
Voysey, Frank E.
Voytech, Charles F.
Vratny, Thomas J.
Vyse, T. A. E.
Wach, Dr. Edward C.
Wachter, Frederick J.
Wack, Mrs. Edwin O.
Wack, Mrs. Otis
Wade, Paul M.
Wade, Wendell W.
Wagner, Mrs. James F.
Wagoner, William F.
Waitkus, E. Algerd
Wakesfield, W. J.
Waldie, Benjamin D.
Waldman, Dr. Albert G.
158
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Waldner, Arthur L.
Waldo, C. Ives, Jr.
Waldron, Thomas F.
Walgren, Lawrence C.
Walker, Dr. Alfred O.
Walker, Frank R.
Walker, Dr. Maggie L.
Walker, Malcolm M.
Walker, Reno R.
Wallace,
Dr. James C, Jr.
Wallace, William B.
Wallace, Zearl B.
Wallenstein, Sidney
Waller, Marshall S.
Wallerstedt, R. W.
Wallerstein, David B.
Wallgren, Eric M.
Walling, Mrs.
Willoughby G.
Wallingford, Donald H.
Walters, Dirk R.
Walters, Gary G.
Waltman, C. E.
Waltman, Charles T.
Walton, Arthur K.
Wanda, Dimitry
Wands, Mrs. Thomas F.
Wanger, David E., Jr.
Wanzer, H. Stanley
Warady, Dr. Seym ore C.
Ward, Mrs. Herbert S.
Ward, Kenneth J.
Warde, Frederick A.
Wardwell, Allen
Wardwell, Henry
Ware, James R.
Ware, Willis C.
Wareham, Robert S.
Warman, Winfield C.
Warner, Kenneth O.
Warner, Mason
Warner, Peter B.
Warren, Joseph R.
Warren, Richard C.
Warshawsky, Roy I.
Warshell, Henry L.
Washburn, Dr.
Kenneth C.
Wasson, Theron
Waterfield, John R.
Waterman, Mrs. Alex H.
Watling, John
Watrons, David C.
Watson, D. R.
Watson, Donald S.
Watson, George
Watson, Mrs. Thomas S.,
Jr.
Watson, William D.
Watts, G. W.
Watts, James A.
Wayne, Albert E.
Weatherby, George W.
Weathers, Everett A.
Webb, Dr. A. C.
Webb, Dr. J. Lewis
Webber, Mrs. Gayle M.
Webber, Mrs. Harriet P.
Weber, James E.
Weber, Miss Laura M.
Webster, Dr. Augusta
Webster, N. C.
Webster, Wesley G.
Weeks, Andrew G.
Weeks, Harrison S.
Weidert, William C.
Weil, Mrs. Carl H.
Weil, David Maxwell
Weiner, Aaron B.
Weiner, Charles
Weiner, George M.
Weiner, Irwin S.
Weinstein, Harold
Weinstein, S. M.
Weintroub, Benjamin
Weisbrod, Mrs.
H. Johnstone
Weisman, Morton
Weisman, Mrs. Nat
Weiss, Dr. Arthur M.
Weiss, Dr. Marvin A.
Weiss, Louis J.
Weiss, Miss Viola Y.
Weisz, William J.
Welch, Raymond W., Jr.
Weldon, Clarence W.
Wellman, Lester R., Jr.
Wells, Sidney
Welsh, Vernon M.
Wendt, Mrs. M. R.
Wenner, Mrs. David, Jr.
Wenninger, William C.
Werner, Mrs. A. J.
Werner, Charles S.
Werner, Dr. Howard L.
Werrenrath, Reinald, Jr.
Wessling, Richard
West, Arthur
West, James D.
West, Mrs. James W.
West, Lawrence J.
Westbrook, Charles H.
Westerfield, Harry G.
Westerhold, Mrs.
Lenora C.
Westfall, Dr. Robert E.
Westin, Glenn V.
Wetherell, Warren
Whall, Arthur L.
Wharton, Mrs.
Joseph P., Jr.
Wheeler, Henry P.
Wheeler, John B.
Wheeler, W. L.
Whipple, Mrs. Jay N.
White, Gordon
White, Dr. Gregory J.
White, John, Jr.
White Lester B.
White, Miss Naomi
White, Dr. Philip C.
White, Philip M.
White, Dr. Ralph P.
White, Richard H.
White, Robert P.
White, Willard A.
Whitehead,
Adm. Richard
Whitelock, John B.
Whiteman, Weston K.
Whiting, Lawrence H.
Whitney, Russell C, Jr.
Whitsell, Dr. F. M.
Whittaker, Otto
Wickersham, Mrs. Lucille
Widduck, Louis G.
Wiegel, George E.
Wiersum, Jack
Wieser, Walter J.
Wiesman, Clarence K.
Wiggins, Stanley F.
Wilby, A. C.
Wiles, Bradford
Wilkes, Mrs. R. M.
Wilkie, Goodrich
Wilkow, William W.
Will, Philip, Jr.
Willard, Nelson W.
Wille, James H.
Williams, Albert D.
Williams, Bennett
Williams, Miss Diane
Williams, Donald B.
Williams, Mrs.
Ednyfed H.
Williams, Lynn A.
Williams, Dr. O. B.
Williams, Dr. Philip C.
Williams, Ralph E.
Williams, R. Arthur
Williamson, Harold A.
Willing, Mrs. Mark S., Jr.
Willis, George H.
Willis, Ivan L.
Willson, Charles F.
Willy, Dr. Ralph G.
Wilmouth, Robert K.
Wilsey, Dr. H. Lawrence
Wilson,
Miss Christine
Wilson, Christopher W.
159
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Wilson,
Christopher W., Jr.
Wilson, Dana F.
Wilson, Dr. Earle E.
Wilson, E. W.
Wilson, Miss Emily C.
Wilson, H. B.
Wilson, Harold E.
Wilson, Mrs. James B.
Wilson, Robert J.
Wilson, Robert M.
Wilton, Mrs. Oliver N.
Winkenweder, V. O.
Winkler, Edward
Winograd, Dr. Alvin M.
Winston, Farwell
Winter, Mrs. Gibson
Winter, Ted
Winterbotham, John R.
Winters, Ernest J.
Wise, Dr. Sidney S.
Wishingrad, Dr. Lester
Wisner, David E.
Wiss, Dr. Edward J.
Witcher, Mrs. E. K.
Withall, H. H.
Withall, Mrs. William E.
Witt, Robert J.
Witte, Lester
Witty, Dr. Drake R. A.
Wlocholl, Arthur
Wojnarowsky, Dr.
Emilia
Wolcoff, Phillip
Wolf, Albert M.
Wolf, Andrew
Wolf, C. W.
Wolf, Morris E.
Wolf, Albert M.
Wolfe, Edward
Wolfe, Hubert J.
Wolff, Arnold R.
Wood, A. E.
Wood, Alexander M.
Wood, Arthur M.
Wood, C. A.
Wood, Harold F.
Wood, Kenward T.
Wood, Reverend
Walter S.
Wood, William A.
Wood, Mrs. William J.
Woodall, Lloyd
Woodman, Dudley J.
Woodruff, Donald E.
Woods, Dr. A. W.
Woods, Robert A.
Woodside, William S.
Woodson, William T.
Woodward, Miss
Mary H.
Woody, Warren V.
Woolley, Murray B.
Woolpy, Max
Workman, S. L.
Works, Nelson C, Jr.
Works, Mrs. Nelson C, Jr.
Wormser, Walter
Worthy, James C.
Wozniak, Raymond E.
Wray, Franklin C.
Wray, Glenn
Wright, John A.
Wright, C. G.
Wright, Dr. F. Howell
Wright, Lewis J.
Wright, Miss
Margaret J.
Wrightson, William F.
Wyatt, William R.
Wydra, Henry
Wyman, Austin L., Jr.
Wyne, Walter
Wynne, Mrs. Lloyd
Xelowski, Dr. Thad
Yacullo, Dr. William A.
Yager, Richard Sidney
Yavitz, Sidney M.
Yellin, Morris
Yentzer, Leighton E.
Yeoman, George W.
Yeretsky, Norman M.
Yesnick, Dr. Louis
Ylvsaker, L.
Yntema, Dr. Leonard F.
Yohe, C. Lloyd
Young, C. S.
Young, George B.
Young, Rollin R.
Young, Samuel H.
Young, William T., Jr.
Youngblood, John V.
Youngquist, C. Harry
Youngren, W. W.
Ytterberg, Victor E.
Zabor, Dr. Robert C.
Zaczek, Miss
Genevieve A.
Zahn, Louis
Zarish, Mrs. Joseph F.
Zartman, James N.
Zehr, Ores E.
Zeiss, Dr. Chester R.
Zeitlin, Dr. N. S.
Zeitlin, Samuel E.
Zekman, Dr. Theodore N.
Zelinsky, Mrs. S. F.
Zeller, Charles B.
Zerega, Joseph J.
Ziegler, Dr. George E.
Zielinski, Dr. Victor J.
Zigler, John D.
Zimmerman, Austin M.
Zimmerman, Charles W.
Zimmerman, Herbert
Zimmerman, Irving
Zimmerman, Dr. Nathan
Zimmerman, Otto H.
Zimmermann, Frank O.
Zimmermann, Mrs. P. T.
Zisook, Edmond N.
Zitmore, Albert
Zitzewitz, Arthur F.
Zoll, William F.
Zurek, Anthony A.
Zurek, Francis J.
Zusser, Maurice M.
Zuvers, Howard E.
Zylstra, Clifford H.
160
ANNUAL MEMBERS (continued)
Archambault, J. E.
Barsky, Dr. Frieda
Grigorovitch
Both, Mrs. William C.
Caro,
Dr. Marcus Rayner
Chessman, Stanley L.
Dee, P. J.
Emery, Mrs. Fred A.
Feeley, James P.
Fitzgerald, Mathew J.
Frieder, Edward
DECEASED 1962
Goren, Lew
Gorman, Joseph K.
Hattis, Robert E.
Holmes, Ralph
Johnson, Ernest L.
Keck, Mathew
King, Mrs. Calvin P.
Kling, Leopold
Knourek, Wm. M.
Laidlaw, John
MacKechnie, Hugh N.
Maier, Dr. Roe J.
McLary, M. R.
Pantelis, A. A.
Pleck, Joseph H.
Prins, D. J. B.
Saltiel, Dr. Thomas P.
Sandberg, C. A.
Skudera, Mrs. Marie
Spitz, Milton J.
Taylor, Fitzhugh
Vander Ploeg, Frank
Van Hazel, Dr. Willard
Varde, Chris M.
Vick, Maurie B.
Vogt, Robert F.
West, Richard H.
161
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
AMENDED BY-LAWS
Articles of Incorporation
STATE OF ILLINOIS
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
William H. Hinrichsen, Secretary of State
To All to Whom These Presents Shall Come, Greeting :
Whereas, a Certificate duly signed and acknowledged having been filed in the
office of the Secretary of State, on the 16th day of September, a.d. 1893, for the
organization of the COLUMBIAN MUSEUM OF CHICAGO, under and in
accordance with the provisions of "An Act Concerning Corporations," approved
April 18, 1872, and in force July 1, 1872, and all acts amendatory thereof, a copy
of which certificate is hereto attached.
Now, therefore, I, William H. Hinrichsen, Secretary of State of the State of
Illinois, by virtue of the powers and duties vested in me by law, do hereby certify
that the said COLUMBIAN MUSEUM OF CHICAGO is a legally organized
Corporation under the laws of this State.
In Testimony Whereof, I hereto set my hand and cause to be affixed the
Great Seal of State. Done at the City of Springfield, this 16th day of September,
in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-three, and of the
Independence of the United States the one hundred and eighteenth.
W. H. HINRICHSEN,
[Seal] Secretary of State.
TO HON. WILLIAM H. HINRICHSEN,
Secretary of State:
Sir:
We, the undersigned citizens of the United States, propose to form a cor-
poration under an act of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois, entitled
"An Act Concerning Corporations," approved April 18, 1872, and all acts amenda-
tory thereof; and that for the purposes of such organization we hereby state as
follows, to- wit:
1. The name of such corporation is the "COLUMBIAN MUSEUM OF
CHICAGO."
2. The object for which it is formed is for the accumulation and dissemi-
nation of knowledge, and the preservation and exhibition of objects illustrating
Art, Archaeology, Science and History.
3. The management of the aforesaid museum shall be vested in a Board of
Fifteen (15) Trustees, five of whom are to be elected every year.
4. The following named persons are hereby selected as the Trustees for the
first year of its corporate existence:
Edward E. Ayer, Charles B. Farwell, George E. Adams, George R. Davis,
Charles L. Hutchinson, Daniel H. Burnham, John A. Roche, M. C. Bullock,
Emil G. Hirsch, James W. Ellsworth, Allison V. Armour, O. F. Aldis, Edwin
Walker, John C. Black and Frank W. Gunsaulus.
5. The location of the Museum is in the City of Chicago, County of Cook,
and State of Illinois.
{Signed)
George E. Adams, C. B. Farwell, Sidney C. Eastman, F. W. Putnam, Robert
McCurdy, Andrew Peterson, L. J. Gage, Charles L. Hutchinson, Ebenezer
165
Buckingham, Andrew McNally, Edward E. Ayer, John M. Clark, Herman H.
Kohlsaat, George Schneider, Henry H. Getty, William R. Harper, Franklin H.
Head, E. G. Keith, J. Irving Pearce, Azel F. Hatch, Henry Wade Rogers, Thomas
B. Bryan, L. Z. Leiter, A. C. Bartlett, A. A. Sprague, A. C. McClurg, James W.
Scott, Geo. F. Bissell, John R. Walsh, Chas. Fitzsimmons, John A. Roche, E. B.
McCagg, Owen F. Aldis, Ferdinand W. Peck, James H. Dole, Joseph Stockton,
Edward B. Butler, John McConnell, R. A. Waller, H. C. Chatfield-Taylor, A.
Crawford, Wm. Sooy Smith, P. S. Peterson, John C. Black, Jno. J. Mitchell, C. F.
Gunther, George R. Davis, Stephen A. Forbes, Robert W. Patterson, Jr., M. C.
Bullock, Edwin Walker, George M. Pullman, William E. Curtis, James W.
Ellsworth, William E. Hale, Wm. T. Baker, Martin A. Ryerson, Huntington
W. Jackson, N. B. Ream, Norman Williams, Melville E. Stone, Bryan Lathrop,
Eliphalet W. Blatchford, Philip D. Armour.
State of Illinois
Cook County
I, G. R. Mitchell, a Notary Public in and for said County, do hereby
certify that the foregoing petitioners personally appeared before me and acknowl-
edged severally that they signed the foregoing petition as their free and voluntary
act for the uses and purposes therein set forth.
Given under my hand and notarial seal this 14th day of September, 1893.
G. R. Mitchell,
[Seal] Notary Public, Cook County, III.
CHANGE IN ARTICLE 1
Pursuant to a resolution passed at a meeting of the corporate members held
the 25th day of June, 1894, the name of the COLUMBIAN MUSEUM was
changed to FIELD COLUMBIAN MUSEUM. A certificate to this effect was
filed June 26, 1894, in the office of the Secretary of State for Illinois.
CHANGE IN ARTICLE 1
Pursuant to a resolution passed at a meeting of the corporate members held
the 8th day of November, 1905, the name of the FIELD COLUMBIAN
MUSEUM was changed to FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY.
A certificate to this effect was filed November 10, 1905, in the office of the Secretary
of State for Illinois.
CHANGE IN ARTICLE 3
Pursuant to a resolution passed at a meeting of the corporate members held
the 10th day of May, 1920, the management of FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL
HISTORY shall be invested in a Board of Twenty-one (21) Trustees, who
shall be elected in such manner and for such time and term of office as may be
provided for by the By-Laws. A certificate to this effect was filed May 21, 1920,
in the office of the Secretary of State for Illinois.
CHANGE IN ARTICLE 1
Pursuant to a resolution passed at a meeting of the corporate members held
the 15th day of November, 1943, the name of FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL
HISTORY was changed to CHICAGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM. A
certificate to this effect was filed November 23, 1943, in the office of the Secretary
of State for Illinois.
166
Amended By-Laws
JANUARY 1962
ARTICLE I
MEMBERS
Section 1. Members shall be of twelve classes, Corporate Members, Hon-
orary Members, Patrons, Corresponding Members, Benefactors, Contributors,
Life Members, Non-Resident Life Members, Associate Members, Non-Resident
Associate Members, Sustaining Members, and Annual Members.
Section 2. The Corporate Members shall consist of the persons named in
the articles of incorporation, and of such other persons as shall be chosen from
time to time by the Board of Trustees at any of its meetings, upon the recom-
mendation of the Executive Committee; provided, that such person named in
the articles of incorporation shall, within ninety days from the adoption of these
By-Laws, and persons hereafter chosen as Corporate Members shall, within
ninety days of their election, pay into the treasury the sum of Twenty Dollars
($20.00) or more. Corporate Members becoming Life Members, Patrons or
Honorary Members shall be exempt from dues. Annual meetings of said Corporate
Members shall be held at the same place and on the same day that the annual
meeting of the Board of Trustees is held.
Section 3. Honorary Members shall be chosen by the Board from among
persons who have rendered eminent service to science, and only upon unanimous
nomination of the Executive Committee. They shall be exempt from all dues.
Section 4. Patrons shall be chosen by the Board upon recommendation of
the Executive Committee from among persons who have rendered eminent serv-
ice to the Museum. They shall be exempt from all dues, and, by virtue of their
election as Patrons, shall also be Corporate Members.
Section 5. Any person contributing or devising the sum of One Hundred
Thousand Dollars ($100,000.00) in cash, or securities, or property to the funds
of the Museum, may be elected a Benefactor of the Museum.
Section 6. Corresponding Members shall be chosen by the Board from
among scientists or patrons of science residing in foreign countries, who render
important service to the Museum. They shall be elected by the Board of Trustees
at any of its meetings. They shall be exempt from all dues and shall enjoy all
courtesies of the Museum.
Section 7. Any person contributing to the Museum One Thousand Dollars
($1,000.00) or more in cash, securities, or material, may be elected a Contributor
of the Museum. Contributors shall be exempt from all dues and shall enjoy all
courtesies of the Museum.
Section 8. Any person paying into the treasury the sum of Five Hundred
Dollars ($500.00) at any one time, shall, upon the unanimous vote of the Board,
become a Life Member. Life Members shall be exempt from all dues, and shall
enjoy all the privileges and courtesies of the Museum that are accorded to mem-
bers of the Board of Trustees. Any person residing fifty miles or more from
the city of Chicago, paying into the treasury the sum of One Hundred Dollars
($100.00) at any one time, shall, upon the unanimous vote of the Board, become
a Non-Resident Life Member. Non-Resident Life Members shall be exempt
from all dues, and shall enjoy all the privileges and courtesies of the Museum that
are accorded to members of the Board of Trustees.
Section 9. Any person paying into the treasury of the Museum the sum of
One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) at any one time, shall, upon the vote of the Board,
167
become an Associate Member. Associate Members shall be exempt from all dues,
and shall be entitled to tickets admitting Member and members of family, includ-
ing non-resident home guests; all publications of the Museum issued during the
period of their membership, if so desired; reserved seats for all lectures and enter-
tainments under the auspices of the Museum, provided reservation is requested in
advance; and admission of holder of membership and accompanying party to all
special exhibits and Museum functions day or evening. Any person residing fifty
miles or more from the city of Chicago, paying into the treasury the sum of Fifty
Dollars ($50.00) at any one time, shall, upon the unanimous vote of the Board,
become a Non-Resident Associate Member. Non-Resident Associate Members
shall be exempt from all dues, and shall enjoy all the privileges and courtesies
of the Museum that are accorded to Associate Members.
Section 10. Sustaining Members shall consist of such persons as are selected
from time to time by the Board of Trustees at any of its meetings, and who shall
pay an annual fee of Twenty-five Dollars ($25.00), payable within thirty days
after notice of election and within thirty days after each recurring annual date.
This Sustaining Membership entitles the Member to free admission for the Mem-
ber and family to the Museum on any day, the Annual Report and such other
Museum documents or publications issued during the period of their membership
as may be requested in writing. When a Sustaining Member has paid the annual
fee of $25.00 for six years, such Member shall be entitled to become an Associate
Member.
Section 11. Annual Members shall consist of such persons as are selected
from time to time by the Board of Trustees at any of its meetings, and who
shall pay an annual fee of Ten Dollars ($10.00), payable within thirty days after
each recurring annual date. An Annual Membership shall entitle the Member
to a card of admission for the Member and family during all hours when the
Museum is open to the public, and free admission for the Member and family
to all Museum lectures and entertainments. This membership will also entitle
the holder to the courtesies of the membership privileges of every museum of note
in the United States and Canada, so long as the existing system of co-operative
interchange of membership tickets shall be maintained, including tickets for any
lectures given under the auspices of any of the museums during a visit to the cities
in which the co-operative museums are located.
Section 12. All membership fees, excepting Sustaining and Annual, shall
hereafter be applied to a permanent Membership Endowment Fund, the interest
only of which shall be applied for the use of the Museum as the Board of Trustees
may order.
ARTICLE II
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Section 1. The Board of Trustees shall consist of twenty-one members.
The respective members of the Board now in office, and those who shall here-
after be elected, shall hold office during life. Vacancies occurring in the Board
shall be filled at a regular meeting of the Board, upon the nomination of the
Executive Committee made at a preceding regular meeting of the Board, by a
majority vote of the members of the Board present.
Section 2. Regular meetings of the Board shall be held on the third Monday
of the month. Special meetings may be called at any time by the Chairman of the
Board or the President, and shall be called by the Secretary upon the written
request of three Trustees. Five Trustees shall constitute a quorum, except for
the election of officers or the adoption of the Annual Budget, when seven Trustees
shall be required, but meetings may be adjourned by any less number from day
to day, or to a day fixed, previous to the next regular meeting.
Section 3. Reasonable written notice, designating the time and place of
holding meetings, shall be given by the Secretary.
ARTICLE III
HONORARY TRUSTEES
Section 1. As a mark of respect, and in appreciation of services performed
for the Institution, any Trustee who by reason of inability, on account of change
168
of residence, or for other cause or from indisposition to serve longer in such capac-
ity shall resign his place upon the Board, may be elected, by a majority of those
present at any regular meeting of the Board, an Honorary Trustee for life. Such
Honorary Trustee will receive notice of all meetings of the Board of Trustees,
whether regular or special, and will be expected to be present at all such meetings
and participate in the deliberations thereof, but an Honorary Trustee shall not
have the right to vote.
ARTICLE IV
OFFICERS
Section 1. The officers shall be the Chairman of the Board, the President,
a First Vice-President, a Second Vice-President, a Third Vice-President, a Secre-
tary, an Assistant Secretary, and a Treasurer. They shall be chosen by ballot
by the Board of Trustees, a majority of those present and voting being necessary
to elect. The Chairman of the Board, the President, and the Vice-Presidents shall
be chosen from among the members of the Board of Trustees. The meeting for
the election of officers shall be held on the third Monday of January of each year,
and shall be called the Annual Meeting.
Section 2. The officers shall hold office for one year, or until their succes-
sors are elected and qualified, but any officer may be removed at any regular
meeting of the Board of Trustees by a vote of two-thirds of all the members of
the Board. Vacancies in any office may be filled by the Board at any meeting.
Section 3. The officers shall perform such duties as ordinarily appertain
to their respective offices, and such as shall be prescribed by the By-Laws, or
designated from time to time by the Board of Trustees.
ARTICLE V
the treasurer
Section 1. The Treasurer shall be custodian of the funds of the Corpora-
tion, except as hereinafter provided. He shall make disbursements only upon
warrants, signed by such officer, or officers, or other persons as the Board of
Trustees may from time to time designate.
Section 2. The securities and muniments of title belonging to the Corpora-
tion shall be placed in the custody of some Trust Company of Chicago to be desig-
nated by the Board of Trustees, which Trust Company shall collect the income
and principal of said securities as the same become due, and pay same to the
Treasurer, except as hereinafter provided. Said Trust Company shall allow access
to and deliver any or all securities or muniments of title to the joint order of the
following officers, namely: the Chairman of the Board, the President or one of
the Vice-Presidents, jointly with the Chairman, or one of the Vice-Chairmen, of the
Finance Committee of the Museum. The Chairman of the Board, the President
or any one of the Vice-Presidents, jointly with either the Chairman or any one of
the other members of the Finance Committee, are authorized and empowered
(a) to sell, assign and transfer as a whole or in part the securities owned by or
registered in the name of the Chicago Natural History Museum, and, for that
purpose, to endorse certificates in blank or to a named person, appoint one or more
attorneys, and execute such other instruments as may be necessary, and (b) to
cause any securities belonging to this Corporation now, or acquired in the future,
to be held or registered in the name or names of a nominee or nominees desig-
nated by them.
Section 3. The Treasurer shall give bond in such amount, and with such
sureties as shall be approved by the Board of Trustees.
Section 4. The Harris Trust and Savings Bank shall be custodian of "The
N. W. Harris Public School Extension of the Chicago Natural History Museum"
fund. The bank shall make disbursements only upon warrants signed by such
officer or officers or other persons as the Board of Trustees of the Museum may
from time to time designate.
169
ARTICLE VI
THE DIRECTOR
Section 1. The Board of Trustees shall elect a Director of the Museum,
who shall remain in office until his successor shall be elected. He shall have im-
mediate charge and supervision of the Museum, and shall control the operations
of the Institution, subject to the authority of the Board of Trustees and its Com-
mittees. The Director shall be the official medium of communication between the
Board, or its Committees, and the scientific staff and maintenance force.
Section 2. There shall be four scientific Departments of the Museum —
Anthropology, Botany, Geology, and Zoology — each under the charge of a Chief
Curator, subject to the authority of the Director. The Chief Curators shall be
appointed by the Board upon the recommendation of the Director, and shall serve
during the pleasure of the Board. Subordinate staff officers in the scientific Depart-
ments shall be appointed and removed by the Director upon the recommendation
of the Chief Curators of the respective Departments. The Director shall have
authority to employ and remove all other employees of the Museum.
Section 3. The Director shall make report to the Board at each regular
meeting, recounting the operations of the Museum for the previous month. At
the Annual Meeting, the Director shall make an Annual Report, reviewing the
work for the previous year, which Annual Report shall be published in pamphlet
form for the information of the Trustees and Members, and for free distribution
in such number as the Board may direct.
ARTICLE VII
THE AUDITOR
Section 1. The Board shall appoint an Auditor, who shall hold his office
during the pleasure of the Board. He shall keep proper books of account, setting
forth the financial condition and transactions of the Corporation, and of the
Museum, and report thereon at each regular meeting, and at such other times as
may be required by the Board. He shall certify to the correctness of all bills
rendered for the expenditure of the money of the Corporation.
ARTICLE VIII
COMMITTEES
Section 1. There shall be five Committees, as follows: Finance, Building,
Auditing, Pension, and Executive.
Section 2. The Finance Committee shall consist of not less than five or more
than seven members, the Auditing and Pension Committees shall each consist of
three members, and the Building Committee shall consist of five members. All
members of these four Committees shall be elected by ballot by the Board at the
Annual Meeting, and shall hold office for one year, and until their successors are
elected and qualified. In electing the members of these Committees, the Board
shall designate the Chairman and Vice-Chairman by the order in which the mem-
bers are named in the respective Committee; the first member named shall be
Chairman, the second named the Vice-Chairman, and the third named, Second
Vice-Chairman, succession to the Chairmanship being in this order in the event of
the absence or disability of the Chairman.
Section 3. The Executive Committee shall consist of the Chairman of the
Board, the President, the Chairman of the Finance Committee, the Chairman
of the Building Committee, the Chairman of the Auditing Committee, the Chair-
man of the Pension Committee, and three other members of the Board to be
elected by ballot at the Annual Meeting.
Section 4. Four members shall constitute a quorum of the Executive Com-
mittee, and in all standing Committees two members shall constitute a quorum.
In the event that, owing to the absence or inability of members, a quorum of
the regularly elected members cannot be present at any meeting of any Com-
mittee, then the Chairman thereof, or his successor, as herein provided, may
summon any members of the Board of Trustees to act in place of the absentee.
170
Section 5. The Finance Committee shall have supervision of investing the
endowment and other funds of the Corporation, and the care of such real estate
as may become its property. It shall have authority to make and alter investments
from time to time, reporting its actions to the Board of Trustees. The Finance
Committee is fully authorized to cause any funds or investments of the Corpora-
tion to be made payable to bearer, and it is further authorized to cause real estate
of the Corporation, its funds and investments, to be held or registered in the name
of a nominee selected by it.
Section 6. The Building Committee shall have supervision of the con-
struction, reconstruction, and extension of any and all buildings used for Museum
purposes.
Section 7. The Executive Committee shall be called together from time
to time as the Chairman may consider necessary, or as he may be requested to
do by three members of the Committee, to act upon such matters affecting the
administration of the Museum as cannot await consideration at the Regular
Monthly Meetings of the Board of Trustees. It shall, before the beginning of
each fiscal year, prepare and submit to the Board an itemized Budget, setting
forth the probable receipts from all sources for the ensuing year, and make recom-
mendations as to the expenditures which should be made for routine maintenance
and fixed charges. Upon the adoption of the Budget by the Board, the expendi-
tures stated are authorized.
Section 8. The Auditing Committee shall have supervision over all account-
ing and bookkeeping, and full control of the financial records. It shall cause
the same, once each year, or oftener, to be examined by an expert individual or
firm, and shall transmit the report of such expert individual or firm to the Board
at the next ensuing regular meeting after such examination shall have taken place.
Section 9. The Pension Committee shall determine by such means and
processes as shall be established by the Board of Trustees to whom and in what
amount the Pension Fund shall be distributed. These determinations or findings
shall be subject to the approval of the Board of Trustees.
Section 10. The Chairman of each Committee shall report the acts and
proceedings thereof at the next ensuing regular meeting of the Board.
Section 11. The Chairman of the Board and the President shall be ex-officio
members of all Committees, and the Chairman of the Board shall be Chairman
of the Executive Committee. Vacancies occurring in any Committee may be
filled by ballot at any regular meeting of the Board.
ARTICLE IX
nominating committee
Section 1. At the November meeting of the Board each year, a Nomi-
nating Committee of three shall be chosen by lot. Said Committee shall make
nominations for membership of the Finance Committee, the Building Committee,
the Auditing Committee, and the Pension Committee, and for three members
of the Executive Committee, from among the Trustees, to be submitted at the
ensuing December meeting and voted upon at the following Annual Meeting
in January.
ARTICLE X
Section 1. Whenever the word "Museum" is employed in the By-Laws of
the Corporation, it shall be taken to mean the building in which the Museum
as an Institution is located and operated, the material exhibited, the material in
study collections, or in storage, furniture, fixtures, cases, tools, records, books,
and all appurtenances of the Institution and the workings, researches, installa-
tions, expenditures, field work, laboratories, library, publications, lecture courses,
and all scientific and maintenance activities.
Section 2. The By-Laws, and likewise the Articles of Incorporation, may
be amended at any regular meeting of the Board of Trustees by a vote in favor
thereof of not less than two-thirds of all the members present, provided the
amendment shall have been proposed at a preceding regular meeting.
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CHICAO
NATURAL
HISTORY
MUSEUM