4 » eh Eee iy whey +b ny avg ss ae x2 aisle is i yy ta) se: weer yy Fa thy Hi P™ NOV 21 1¥06 NY aL- C artrncte< || Museum of Comparative Zoology — MAIKVAK UD NEWSLETTER UNIVERSITY 15 July 1964 I \,\ u | Harvard University Published Now and Then Chait oa Cambridge, Mass. 02138 No MCZ staff members or students are planning trips to the moon this summer, but we will have representatives almost every- where else. Giles Mead, on an expedition to the Indian Ocean, has been sending back colorful picture post-cards marked Nairobi, Dar es Salaam, Zanzibar, Bombay, etc. Bryan Patterson is going to Kenya again, taking with him graduate student, Bill Sill. Barbara Lawrence has been in the Near East. Bill Newman has been ~- to Florida and Puerto Rico on crustacean business. The Cottrells, on a trip around the world, plan to give special attention to New Guinea, Australia, and the Philippines. Dr. Chickering, Associate in Arachnology, has just returned from Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Trinidad and Panama, bringing with him gallons of spiders. Allen Brady, Paolo Tongiorgi, Jon Reiskind, and Michael Dix have been to Florida to pick up any spiders left behind by the Levis and Joe Beatty in March. Dave Hill, Francois Vuillermier, and Dave Norton are in Ecuador. We hope the trav=— ellers take time out from their field work to write newsworthy notes for the next issue. Tilly Edinger, in honor of her retirement, was féted by the museum staff at a Faculty Club luncheon on 15 May. Dr. Edinger is now in Europe, where she attended the 50th Anniversary celebration of the University of Frankfurt am Main (her Alma Mater), and received an honorary if.D. Philip Darlington has been elected to the National Academy of Science. Ernst Mayr participated in a symposium on "The Genetics of Colonizing Species,” under the auspices of. the Intemational Union of Biological Sciences, held at Asilomar Beach in Calif- ornia in February. Dr. ifayr is now in Europe, combining work and vacation. He is to lecture in Frankfurt and in Prague, where he is attending the IUBS Symposium, and plans to round out his trip doing some field work with E.B. Ford in Cornwall, England. Dr. wlayr was recently elected to honorary membership in the Asociacion Ornitologica del Plata, in Buenos Aires, which publishes the journal, El Hornero. Dr. Romer spent three weeks in England, mainly in connection with a revision of his Vertebrate Paleontology textbook, and later lectured at the Sorbonne. He visited three former students: John Chase, exchange professor at Newcastle; Bob Carroll, working at the British Museum; and Keith Thomson, now at University Col- lege. In November he will go to Argentina with ifrs. Romer, Arnie Lewis and James Jensen, formerly of the preparation department here, now at Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah. Dr. Romer was elected a corresponding member of the Bavarian Academy of Science. s f t ry o* 2 rot Shue + or, f r ¥ = - ‘AA ¢ a : ws f ; Lee: 6p ote : val 7 ee ¢ - , ow & Sexe ' A> oh es ri Se) t J ~ Rite f #) » Ti e: » a So ae ye a v p si : sit iv* 26L > « + <2 rer 4 “= « ms , tre ~ fi , “0-9 i k a Le , «i be 7 * sf a 7 bo 1 4 * P . a 7 oe ‘ ! alt ’ . ; PO ; —— tye “yh oo ya ‘ 34 Al a ; ; 3t Aes O¢ Lon? j on . . J .; + Fe ¢ ‘ ‘ nd , i eat ‘ os a ' ae ‘4’ - : ft - I ee w i, » & ne > 2 Oe Vatliee 4 ¢ il in@ at y % ie " a pope ox 4 pi. vd “o lin 5 4 i , O PT omeeiwe { : geht fe J 4G * Py : r ya Pe Re. SP Vive ade | ee Cer ‘€ - ; at S ie ‘- * a AB Pe ’ o> = Pt 1en Bos vex * "" - i “ ‘ ceili J to Sasa + SO Re > | el cf. Sei SS * noviststasesuce*s evad Seer (FT ot OF MOL atone So ie ‘ taoq exorohe TUR SR kos Semis : out ¥ Pea De . Vise -y ‘ute @tenbers ake As te IRIS, Bo COfs oP tart bis phiee 2 i awty ,Sixow ord Sips: Gis) ees vi saat qredieunioetA ae peer inte 2.7 bers oF food. ovat i herr ak yao sovdomeh, eut5 ax (vast B Fee Fas, ¥is ZIevVs 9 eit. 25 Reg ta : % i Palatas ‘ft haaeed th ora Hes af af°¢ i TS 4k tg oe ; ibe sol Dae paat [ uh shoe ‘eg Lor vos fay 43 etdorge¥ Se egal ho ttaly Sh a Pay one s 1 pg SOBmey £2. AT LSK ; J pasbutg "oO ~~ cat ces sce: noad. 2 ae: md cen Se Fenton Sip oy f ct zea sik ees wed ITA fas CE) 7 qf rity pou 4 bah Ln a) i te So ee io? oilget i495 wel LA. yz eo% py Da 2 EN re robes &h oth eReme iow Piel®: me uit nog? rings ga ~ ; eats eo ‘ot tom Xe -toqod me gs non - dab di Sia one-eyvede 28Qgoted ok: wot e iT Ceres & hy Vis © Coe: sy et eta Let ave 2: T, ontr> : aie ieee al tant Ses al See pioct ‘same: \ hed a ae taddoy ONS te Oghe ee te i nS 2 ‘ iv covet «ua fete bape *! é ig ~~ a vin Yas . De ee ie | Thar Menara 6 ihe a at (A. oem - Be ee Howard Barraclough Fell was appointed Curator of Invertebrate Zoology as of 1 March 1964. Dr. Fell comes to us from Victoria University in Auckland. Rooms and cabinets in his fourth floor MCZ headquarters have been painted and research equipment is being assembled. The Fells and their three children are living at Whittingtons while the latter are on Sabbatical. Dr. Newman is collaborating with Willard Hartman in a summer invertebrates course at the Peabody Ifuseum, Yale. "Barnacle Bill" went for a dip in Puerto Rico a few weeks ago and came up with a species of barnacle that has not been seen since Darwin described it. Andy Meyerriecks is teaching a field course this summer at Drumlin Farm in South Lincoln, Mass. Every spare minute he spends in the MCZ library, catching up. There will be several newcomers to the Mollusk Department in September. Dr. Barry Wilson, from the University of Western Australia, Nedlands, will be with us for a year on an Evolutionary Biology grant to study Indo-Dacific Mytilids. Mr. José Stuardo, from the Instituto Central de Biologia of the Universidad de Con- cepcion, Concepcion, Chile, is a special student and will be here for at least a year working on South American marines, especially eastern Pacific Mytilids, though his first year will probably be confined to course work. Ken Boss is with the US Fisheries in Washington, working in the mollusk department at the USNM. He will be going on cruise 7 of the Indian Ocean Expedition on the "Anton Brunn.” Joe Rosewater and Bob Robertson were on the "Te Vega," participating in the Indian Ocean Expedition. Joe is now Associate Curator in the mollusk department at the USNM, and Bob is at the Philadelphia Academy. We were sorry to hear that R. Tucker Abbott of the Philadelphia Academy lost his wife this past year. Don and Helen McMichael are as busy as ever. Don has been moving into new quarters in thc Australian ifuseum and revamping exhibits, along with his research work. Arthur Clarke is now Curator of Mollusks at the National Museum of Canada. He had a profitable trip to the Hudson Bay area tast year and will work on the drainage systems of the western side of Hudson Bay this summer. _ doe Vagvolgyi has been at the University of Florida in eee lie, but next year will be at Brooklyn College, closer to ong. : Tom Pulley writes that the new Natural History Museum in ‘Houston is coming along. . 2 ae etprdefteval to 1osexpw0 betatoqgs anw {fei ¢ Ofer atrotervy most ew of semoo [Let .aa- ered dows . soft dtuiot eid ME efentdeo bas amook | .Baakwemm gnted af tasmatupes dorssesx Sas betutsq aeed svar TTB. "te gatvil ste @exbiido sexi? tied? bas eiiet-e ae | ,feebtedds? ao.-ota tettel: eer ec re! ur sLion ae sommus 8 1k oeodrad bus llig At tw yiths eos hee eae wee. "Cites eiosi reg" -sisyY ,mueev: yhodsos addy fs 6 ist i 6 dite, qu omad bas ogs saeor wot 8 ooh otvestonh gtk we .tk bedixvoseh cbwied conte tees: seed ton ead sade. atoswrag % = = ts teomve esidd setsoo biort B ai rhdoset ek. sicorrrovall 4 ehasaa ed etunta eiBYs virova *,eseh ,tiooshi dtsoe ab 4 [ ad gntdorss - “cuaedbe i “ hems raged fol otf of -etemoowadt Laxevee od Sine cretes! to ytieteviat sav mo ct ,coeliv yrene. rn yrstoitulovd 18 16 tsoy Ss Sot ey so iw “ed LLbw , ebra: rs obrart2 bSe0% «sc 6+ ebELiSye obtbea®. ~obitt - vote en: a -to3 oh babterevinat. eat to etyolota of lextiusS otnbties’ sien od fiw brea toesenuwge [sfoege &° FB d ~ eLiio | fetog vai ane ‘fatosaas ,senitas dsot £ oni itvee mo pkittow tasy Ss iidaderq Libw sney setit- eft duyons ,ebkitagi ‘obh. | tow Seto s of | < rofarties! ot eeitedelrt @U sity Bete ek et ea Lia i , eefsro antos od [fiw sh .MMGU ‘eas 34 + "musa motaa* odd go okt Lhoqxa. A200 " sasV ef" oft mo stew aoatredon dod fas tots ,b ao -s wor ek ool, .10 23 BbSqxs ns900 asibat edt af bess ,MMGU ont Ja’ a tous tsqoh tenifom edt af tors | _ «ynohsad anh | rer atdalefaltdt eft to ttoddA towout- fi tad? xaed of yrzoe! caov teeq shit oLiw eid: ma pt x7 eye: esd esn aod TSvVe 6s youd 28 SiS festio boll: seloll . suitqusvet Dis swoetl natlectesa Sis at esefisup — , Ath sarow dorseeet sic Sie: [anoitel At 78 exaxS Lom to -toteus) wom: ab: ‘etzol (2 ¥edi noebsil edd of qi efidstitorq s- bed eh «abee ite sesteow oft to emeveye syen ists ed mo AoW! kkbw be | _ stecuwe, b mbixok4 tov yi tereviatl edt. to coed end ik ot nonaie .egellod ayistoowd ta od chim ey oxen & 4 ae = . wm ° ES gs : : } 4 ak myeesi yxotekh feaueell wer eds sad? 389, on Dick Johnson spent a few weeks in spring examining Unio types at the University of ilichigan and will be doing some fresh- water collecting with his family in the Southeastern states during the summer. Dick Foster participated in Indian Ocean cruise 4b from Bombay to the Guif of Oman last fall and brought 90 gallons of material back for the collection. In August, after visiting museums in London, Copenhagen, Leiden, Amsterdam anu Rome, he will snend some time at the marine lab at Inhaca Id., near Lorenco IMarques, © Mozambique, and will be on board the "Anton Brunn" for Indian Ocean Cruise 8, trawling and dredging in the Mozambique Channel up to Somalia and ending at .jombasa, Kenya. Patricio Sanchez recently paid a visit to the WCZ, as well as to the National Museum and several California institutions. He is astonished to see how rapidly refurbishing is progressing at the MCZ and fears that the special atmosphere of the ifuseum will soon be lost. Garth Underwood writes from the University of the West Indies that he has received the first award of one of the newly instituted Principal Research Fellowships, tenable at a government institution in the United Kingdom. He plans to spend the three years working on Colubridae, especially, in the Reptile Section of the British Museum, Natural History. Beverley Holloway Kuschel writes from 156A Cleveland Terrace, Nelson, New Zealand, that her small daughter and large house and garden leave her little time for beetles. However, she hopes to arrange for a regular baby-sitter so that she can continue work on her revision of New Zealand Anthribidae. James iioulton, Associate Professor of Biology at Bowdoin College, writes that after the International Congress of Zoology last summer, where he enjoyed meeting many old MCZ friends, he participated in a Conference at Beaufort on the Biology of Estuarine Animals at the Marine Lab of Duke University. He also taught at the NSF Summer Institute in Biology ut Bowdoin. Dr. Moulton's research is in acoustical biology. Isa Farfante Canet's book on zoology was published in Cuba after she left. She succeeded in getting a few copies through her brother, who is still in Cuba, and kindly gave one to the MCZ library. Isa is now in Wasliington working at the USNM and in the Smithsonian Oceanographic Sorting Center. The Laurents have left for Tucumdn, Argentina, where Dr. Laurent has accepted a position at Instituto Lille. Friends bade them faresell at a party given by the Mayrs and Ernest ‘/illiams. Andrew Konnerth, of the preparation department, has left the museum to accept a position at Woods Hole. - t oe! I Ag otal) sarinimaxe gakzye mt etoow wel & vance sea ~Hesst soos aobob od Iitw Sue ae to ‘i ri hteeb eetsta sretenedtuor ett ab ue eid dtaw: ; oc'5 Af “eS aa 2 s 7 ss on yedmou mort d& seieto mseo0 na dba’ at. becaqtoctxan 3 4 2 fatresan Yo astbi lea OC tiaword baw List teak nem ‘ro ci ames attttetv tetis .cevgwr af _ fib LO AF emoa biece LLiw on {ooo ves sabred em .~f? i .eeuprai oome tol ss0em ,-bT soatial os dai. me teen) meatball vot "mmr cotaA” ed? biped.ao of: kw bo ot qs {ecussid eupiduecok edd. ab gotgbexh bam! ; 2% | £ynMe ,eeadmol, $8). are oe Lil! es flew as SOM oritwos Jieiv «@ bkaq ciinoce serio soniqcmcd:3 t eh .eaotiudttes? ato votifad Leteves Dos ameamii oft tg aiteeornotq ef yietdeddsuTer. glbtgqes wor soos. {Liw meek eft ‘to sreiqeomias Laconge anit shed =F ala thal t#ev ont to ytterevial) edd trers'h eat iw hoow rat tteant viwen of¢ to ea0 to beams sexkt onde Rew motvus ft ent + temertevo 2 , #2 tea eldaned st Same ners Bs antirow exeey, eetds sede Sneqe oF rpre Sars tobynks Beds deitivi edt to motsooe shitqeh ong “ute, 4 syrota sosrist Bosfevefd AdtL mott setiuw Iedoeudd awoi Loli) base easond enrel drip sed figueb [Lame ted tadd “,bns ot aecod ofe ,xevowodl - nak aed Tot. amiv oltibk: wath ow exsnisguoo ms80 ade tad? on sett ie~ydad = aor ; niohwok 2s vue te iS to toeestond atusoomed uf re ofook to sretaccd Isaorteorstql ed stevie tit yi, Bhs ixk & mB fo yoam gotteem heyotae ed it satcauted Yo yroloté orld mo dxolumek te Sons TSLAOD me fs tdsgest oaia eit .yitexrevial eaind to dad. entuel pen e'gotivuel «ta ake bw ts ygotot mk otnegitangl st »gotoid emer cr . ‘eng we Bdu3 at bodatl dig 28w 1 -ygo Loos to xood a hentn®* = ; dusorlt eetdos wet e athives ab bebeeoswa e082 © % SOM od¢ o¢ emo ovay- Ylbatl oas ,ecy0 os Libs = iit aarp ent at bos MMU ot ta: uikdtow sot eeW af wort Terme) aatisoe2-o _ <0 evedw.,anttnegtA .mbaurou? tok trek. ved 4 chad ehbaeitt .ofLai otuticent da modeioog es baitq ¥, any ameiffis.!) tees bos saya ead ue OVE ECS BD : oe OA - rete ieee Oa &. eiy ttel ead ,tasmtreges aolistaqes edt to: AT Te 0, weed | -eloH: ebhooW io notihkaog. : r Tehabaal y : Ae 1 aly ny a bobs vin as M Pai : ° tits Mahe ~~ iu a en Ol rm on ii ok: | A iu — Guy Bush and Allen Bredy completed their Ph.D. work during the winter. Guy is now studying chromosomes with Prof. Ii.J.D. White at the Department of Zoology, University of Melbourne, Parkville N2, Victoria, Australia. Allen will leave in fall to take up teaching and research duties at Hope College in Holland, Michigan. In the meanwhile he is continuing his lynx spider revisions. After completing his thesis, Ira Rubinoff left for Panama for two or three months. In a letter of June 4th he wrote: "We arrived safely in Panama after only nominal delays at the hands of Pan American. Everything seems perfectly quiet and stable in Panama although bullet holes, gutted buildings, and anti-yankee slogans serve as grim reminders that things were pretty serious in this "non-violent" place not too long ago. The Smithsonian has sunplied us with a station wagon which was recently given to them by the Army. I should have been apprehensive of anything the Army gave away. It has been a constant source of trouble and irritation but undoubtedly will be operating perfectly by the time we are through with it. For several days I couldn't believe that were were back in Panama because things were operating so smoothly but then I realized that it was an artifact of all administrative offices being closed because of the holiday. Everything is back to infuriating normalcy." John Smith and Francois Vuillermier deserted the ranks of desirable bachelors by taking wives this spring. Mrs. Beryl Simpson Vuillermier is continuing her graduate botanical studies at the Herbarium. Betsy Witte spent a "potentially mute" two months at the Goethe Institute in Murnau, Germany, where German was the only common language spoken in a large international group. However, she discovered she was quite fluent in German when she spent a week in Rome, before returning to Cambridge. Our librarian, Jessie Bell MacKenzie, became the wife of Capt. Edwin A. ifacDonald, USN, ret., on 11 April in Appleton Chapel. Participating in the ceremony were MCZ friends, Robert Cushman Murphy of the AMNH, who served as best man, and Hudson Hoagland of the Worcestor Institute, who took his place as "father" of the bride. Capt. MacDonald, a graduate of Annapolis, served as command- ing officer of two destroyers during World War II. He was Deputy Commander of Deep Freeze operations in the Antarctic and head of the Antarctic ship group during the last six years of his naval Career. Recent awards for his polar work and services include the Belgian Government's "Order of Leopold," the Royal Geographic's "Patrons iiedal," and the US Navy "Legion of Merit." He is the author of numerous articles concerning icebreaking, exploration, Charting and adventure in the polar regions. Capt. and Mrs. WlacDonald enjoyed a brief holiday in the British Isles, including Some fishing in the Outer Hebrides. irs. Marjorie Ainsworthlas rejoined the library staff, after an absence of eight years, as Assistant for Circulation and Reference. Linda Kaplan, formerly of the Boston Univ. Library is now in charge of Exchanges. ‘aabioh drow «fs Aa tLoazt 29 etidW .2.bei ~tord dtiw geno SU ellivitet. ,ocxvodiol . to yitere i ot ‘gitdoset. qu eat of List ae. pee noite g ait al . .anaytdoki. ,fdelfod ak peice sqoi “te aed i Oo tecvert vebicae 3 sey ete an tumbre oo +% ‘ot snetesS TOT Stel Tionivan ati ~aceods: abd 5)" .sstotw ed dvs aout to tectel 6 al om to eband oft ta-eyaheh tenktmoea Blao tests: SIMBABT. & ‘gmaans ak efdste bes teiwg yitosiveg at © & oe AS . ~~" co aids aL ewoltes Viset¢ Low Pron ey sacl UG: *tu98 ony ine . evin’ Wl neste egw dots {w svat yor: oat: sabkdoves’ to evkemetetqoe per “sotiatkiert baa eldweas 26 soreiee. jaaveioo # & (5 ow ests oft vd yitootes@ gabtetege ed tite row tsilt ovelfee Ftadivoo I ‘awed faxevee to'd*: ¢f yficcteome of gaitareqo stew “egal gauaoed - eae eviterteraloabs (fs to tostivts ms)eawee tadS\8 d et higyrovn .vyebiiod et to seugoed Deseo " YOLAarZOHt § c edt baetteasb vefarrellivy a get Hin bute: ty (This . 2’ PL ts © te 4 8 ek& rat per tase ci tist 3 thyte ([scinstod staeubeig jee. gabiatsaoo 6h et te edinew ows “edam vat attnetoq"™ inated etollw. .WARMTSO Ww v9 fenotitansetar egrets abe 6 » one sofw sacred af treult etinup eawé -oubixndmsd of getoiwiot 6 ot iw ensoed .gtsasiaamt Died otesel Sieh. fencer! ofecs mb Liuch £1 20 4sFOt = te (bincodesh | " gandes) tredoh -.ebnoftt 29M 6 2ew neve ais of % to hiafssoH nosbul Sas .aan feed ae Revises omw HUA edt to “ ° ’ . . h wionk yeelel deks ing en ' ct nae Pee mid f d ‘one oy ‘vetts ,Ytete yusrdti odd pentotex ats pe bia tO rt} tafwory pe A ete) sot hie nage , 3 at yvrardid «vind motgoe eat: cade oR Connie Carter's trip to Great Britain and France this summer will include a course on slugs and snails given by John Peake of the British Museum (Natural History) at the Juniper Hall Field Centre in Dorking, Surrey. A visit with Myra Smith, a punt on the Cam, and a tromp through Regent's Park are also on the docket. Dr. Simpson's new book, This View of Life, was published in March by Harcourt, Brace and World. Harvard Press has published a facsimile of the lst edition of Darwin's Origin of Species, with an introduction by Ernst Mayr. Volume X of "Peters" Check-List of Birds of the \orld, in- cluding Babblers, Thrushes, and Gnatcatchers, is now available. Berlese's Acari, Myriopoda et Scorpiones, a rare item that the Library has lacked, has recently been acquired. The publications committee announces a new look for the Bulletin. Starting with a new volume this summer, it will be printed by the Allen Press in Lawrence, Kansas and will be similar in format to Evolution. At a winter meeting of the Natural History Seminar, Tilly Edinger jotted down the following tribute to that institution: "One MCZ participant at the International Congress of Zoology was Surprised at how much she understood, even knew, of topics discussed and papers read outside her own field, then realized, always learned at the Lunch-Seminar, which, actually, constantly serves the motto of the Congress: "reunion of Zoology from its separate specialties." If any of them should happen to find a spare moment, the museum ladies can now relax in the new Ladies Lounge, Room 302-A, next to the elevator. We are indebted to the generosity of a good friend for the funds necessary to furnish the room. Are you doing anything this summer ? Going somewhere? Thinking about something ? Your MCZ friends would like to hear about it. Drop a line to the NEWSLETTER and we'll promise you good press notices. Lorna Levi, editor o@ « bay a $e ’ s were [+ Bee ne) Yikes rT) 93 Fone 7 sine dol vd vis efiess boa egets ae bo tz is tnedr 27 AIT HSs rt aot ype loos to So -~t-~ i ooneT ons ateéind Jeet” 0) qtut pLert’ tis teq best 2 ts (yxotetn Lomnvall fo tivh-« ~it ioc ore! dtiw thebv a (erm: say ; aff no coals eta At e8 s'iagpon: WYO} tidva 228 tia to wet¥ wkd? aloo? Wen e's bite) Sis. sold gf c+ts f odd Ye : ec omonees & bodeticue esr cour Nxe vd jorbottak as dttw . 20 Loeg@ % rey bixco' edt to ebxda ko feLicloodd weeeten! ke (fave Woot oL...@serlo tBet ao daa odesdy it meti orst SB .et roman? 08 te shocoixy ,fteon s | beytsposiseed Yiiagqoes een 4! mi adit got aoel wom 8 eoomionmts aad? Limaros boagasbe { {Shy th ,temure eid? aguioy wee & din Cts w bitte agecned _eomenwad mk avesg tte. etotenLe vile? . anion x1 teil fersteu edit to galtoem | ‘soft. Jttenk todd 6 studint gatwolied env ayee- / ygoloés to seexga00 Leaoltnntedal ea2 a6 disqi ‘fh estes? to wont, meve ,hootarebar evewlm ,festices godt , bie fl myo 2am ented a ¥ } ied he a 200) raSemnoa 8 isgs Ss ‘patt of neqgadt fe wg of ,sgevol selbsa Wor ent SE xs worm ft sShaorenon ot of betdeiak eta 87 636 “woot eid detuwwt et Greeeacen Siavz ene ‘3 (ophwomak * 3 who 9 Semawe ais , yon. RL Raee adaokst SOM sweY. #2 sada t4 Les ATTOLOCTA aft-o¢ emkl 6. gow: ~egoLlton Geng x09 spe: \ytyed saree + & J ’ 4 a os **i, * ‘ . : ve i CR ee a. AG! i 8 TUR jn die ; ; “ara a, tr eo eS ome . ; Py 7 4 im ‘ . i 2 ¢ é pe” Pa S. = a | Av. 4 a. | y= . ,/ q 7 s 3 ey i P ty ‘ ” + + § LL A + ey ; a i i . 7 + ‘ : i b» «) } ' - ‘ 4 os ¥ abe 7 1 ‘or : ; i ‘ ' “ Pp.’ he ; pe a pheese nd: EOE ee REATARD A AOr boa) bi nigh aah i + ‘ f | ts J eb feats ae 5 asia. Asa te SAL is face % Ls aSt7ah Mores 24 PreeResasies a = bs bi bef ete tx pie Saas rant Fee means AM yet } ‘ *etae =S = ay: Wao : pake eye ie sh SAA ‘ fe Ysa i pam me Aero Zz fat ate in OS a ig fight eS = peeves -. TAR can ae ot en ek. sere BO 259 add sea aN Avby Gq Tem hat ‘ heeiae ae agtee tcl 2 MAY 4 ai, ny Vow of ink Fibs yea sag aGi oF 2% Pst " ¥, A uae ati) re \ why ‘ ; ! iy thay j Me : } 4 “the Sih ic ean PRED uate) 5 : ‘ r 4 1 Lyf wey ideas a : ? ‘ 1 A ne i ee : +L SANS ny in Stes iy } eae vA ts “A NEN tat