548 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY 



John Sterling Kingsley, of Somerville, to be a Resident 

 Fellow in Class II., Section 3. 



George Howard Parker, of Cambridge, to be a Resident 

 Fellow in Class II., Section 3. 



William McMichael Woodworth, of Cambridge, to be a 

 Resident Fellow in Class II., Section 3. 



Charles L. Jackson proposed certain changes in the Stat- 

 utes. This subject w^as referred to a committee, consisting 

 of C. L. Jackson, A. Lowell, and F. H. Storer. 



Henry P. Bowditch, Chairman of the Committee on the 

 Librar}^, read a statement in reference to the expenditures on 

 account of the library, during the last live years. After some 

 discussion, the matter was referred to a committee, consisting 

 of the Librarian, the Treasurer, and the Chairman of the Rum- 

 ford Committee, with instructions to consider the advisability 

 of appropriating a portion of the income of the Rumford 

 Fund toward defraying the expenses of the library. 



On the motion of Charles S. Minot, it was 



Voted, To refer the matter of expenditures both for Publi- 

 cations and for the Library to a committee, consisting of the 

 Committee of Publication and the Committee on the Library, 

 the chairman of this committee to be the Chairman of the 

 Committee of Publication. 



Edward L. Mark alluded to the " List of serial Publications 

 taken in the Principal Libraries of Boston and Cambridge," 

 published in 1878, and spoke of the need of a new and revised 

 edition of this list. After some discussion, it was 



Voted, To call the attention of the Trustees of the Boston 

 Public Library to this matter. 



Franklin B. Stephenson read a paper entitled, " Congenital 

 Spots on Annamites, a Means of Racial Identification." 



The following papers were read by title : — 



Studies on Morphogenesis, III. On the Acclimatization of 

 Organisms to High Temperatures. By Charles B. Davenport 

 and W. E. Castle. 



On the Occlusion of Baric Chloride by Baric Sulphate. By 

 T. W. Richards and H. G. Parker. 



