106 ANNUAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1963 



published by the Bureau, some as entire bulletins and others composing 

 bulletins in the Anthropological Papers and the River Basin Surveys 

 Papers series. The work included the drawing or redrawing of maps, 

 diagrams, charts, and other text figures, and effectively combining and 

 mounting photographs, all covering the fields of anthropology, arche- 

 ology, and ethnology. Approximately 500 illustrations were prepared. 



MISCELLANEOUS 



Dr. M. W. Stirling, Dr. A. J. Waring, and Sister Inez Hilger con- 

 tinued as research associates. Dr. Wallace L. Chafe, linguist on the 

 staff of the Bureau from April 4, 1959, resigned on August 20, 1962, 

 to accept an associate professorship in the department of linguistics at 

 the University of California in Berkeley. 



In addition to the usual extensive correspondence answering specific 

 questions, many of which were of a technical nature, the Bureau pre- 

 pared several bibliographies to provide reference material for which 

 there has been recurrmg demand. Among those recently compiled, 

 the following were printed by the multilith process : 



SILr-2, 3d rev., 6/63: Selected bibliography on arrowheads. 5 pp. 



SIL-105, rev., 7/62 : Selected bibliography on Cherokee customs and history. 



6 pp. 

 SIL-174, rev., 6/63: Selected references on the Indians of Southeastern North 



America. Compiled by William C. Sturtevant. 17 pp. 

 SIL-363, 4/63 : Bibliography of wild food plants of Canadian Indians. Compiled 



by F. R. Irvine. 13 pp. 



Other bibliographies prepared are in typescript. 



More than 100 specimens, both ethnological and archeological, were 

 received by mail or brought to the office for identification and such 

 information as could be provided by Bureau specialists. 



Respectfully submitted. 



Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr., Director. 

 Dr. Leonard Carmicuael, 



Secretary^ Smithsonian Institution. 



