BARBADOS-ANTIGUA EXPEDITION 265 
sailor of them all; nor Miss Van Wagenen watching over 
her beautiful collection of living anemones and experimenting 
tirelessly to preserve them in good condition; nor Miss Mullin, 
whose affections were fixed on bottles and pans of wriggling 
worms, and who enlisted all the able-bodied men she could com- 
mandeer to pound coral rocks for the host of annelids concealed 
therein. 
No one in Antigua will forget Wehman, the man who was 
lost in the awful storm on Sugar Loaf Mountain, nor will we 
forget his industry in collecting and sketching all sorts of sea 
‘‘eritters.’’ The undergraduate members of the party, Dwight 
Ensign and Willis Nutting, did their full share of the work and 
were responsible for the collections of crustaceans and fishes, 
besides making themselves generally useful. Willis Nutting 
also did what little was accomplished in the way of botanical 
collecting. 
Finally, that no one be unmentioned in this last roll-call of 
the expedition, it is but just to say that the youngest of us all, 
Carl Nutting, was entirely conscientious in the discharge of his 
duties, particularly at meal-time when he performed as official 
conch-blower to assemble the party for the important functions 
attended to in the dining room At other times he was eminently 
successful in keeping out of everyone’s way 
Fortunately, the director was not called upon to say goodbye 
to most of his companions at the termination of the trip, but 
meets them as colleagues in the daily task of teaching the boys 
and girls of Iowa. They, as well as he, have received an inspira- 
tion that will, I am sure, express itself in terms of better service. 
