ANNALS 



OF THE 



CARNEGIE MUSEUM 



N'OLUMEVII. N OS. 3-4. 



Editorial Notes. 



The celebration of Founder's Day, which look phice on April 

 the 27th, was a memorable occasion. The principal speakers were 

 Dr. A. Lawrence Lowell, President of Harvard University; Governor 

 Augustus Everett W'illson of Kentucky; and IVIr. Andrew Carnegie, 

 the Founder. The latter, accompanied by Mrs. Carnegie, arrived 

 in Pittsburgh on the day before the celebration, and remained until 

 the morning of the 29th. The visit of Mr. and Mrs. Carnegie will 

 always be remembered with i)rofound pleasure, and it is hoped that it 

 may be followed by many other visits. The great enterprises which 

 Mr. Carnegie has established, and which are massed under the common 

 name of the Carnegie Institute, will certainly be profited should the 

 Founder be able to devote to them a small portion of his time, giving to 

 those in charge of them the benefit of his counsel and helpful criticism. 



The work in the Carnegie quarry on Dinosaur Peak, Utah, has been 

 resumed under the direction of Mr. Earl Douglass, who returned to 

 the quarry early in April. He reports continued success in the re- 

 covery of the remains of the great animals which last summer had 

 been partially uncovered, and he reports also that he has found an 

 impression of the skin of a Stegosaurus, the skull of a large carnivorous 

 dinosaur, an early Jurassic mammal, and many other things of im- 

 portance. 



Dr. F. X. ScHAFFER of the K. K. Hofmuseum inX'ienna spent the 

 months of March and April at the Museum, studying the Tertiary 



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