Notes To Part VIl 
1. Minutes of Meeting, 17 December 1957, BDMB September 21, 
1954-n.d., 818. 
2. See, C. W. O’Key to Fred Hume, 29 January 1958, BDMB September 
21, 1954-n.d., 829. 
3. Minutes of Meeting, 21 October 1958, BDMB September 21, 
1954-n.d., 861. 
4. See , “Proposed Exhibit Program For the Museum of Science and 
Natural Hiseory: Goldman House,’’ BDMB September 21, 1954, n.d., 
907-909. 
5. Murl Deusing, ‘‘Deusing Talking,’’ Your Museum (September, 
1959): 3 
6. The e permanent exhibit galleries included ‘‘Hall of Man,”’ *‘Hall of 
Space,’’ ‘‘Morton Hall of Lighting,’’ ‘‘Hall of Ecology,’’ ‘‘Man and Nature 
of Matter,’’ ‘‘Teeth In Animals and Man,”’ and a ‘‘Transparent Woman’’ 
theater. Some traveling and temporary exhibits shown at the museum were: 
‘“‘The Summary of Atomic Energy,’’ ‘‘You and the Atom,” “‘Atoms In Ac- 
tion,’’ ‘‘The Beginnings of Flight,’’ ‘“The se hemetany of Calculators,’’ and 
_ Sagtaphy From Five Years In Space.’ 
7. See, ‘‘Verbatim Transcript,’’ Minutes of Meeting, 22 February 1961, 
BDMB 1953- 1976, Inc., n.p. 
8. Your Museum (February, 1961): n 
9. Minutes of Meeting, 8 September 1959, DMB 1953-1976, Inc., n.p. 
10. In the late 1940s, Arthur Compton estimated that it would cost 
$200,000 or more to put the library in good condition. 
11. Since 1959, only two papers including this one have been published 
by the Academy. 
12. Other donors were J. Lionberger Davis, Mr. and Mrs. 
Mahlon B. Wallace, Jr., and Joseph Desloge. 
13. Albert P. Greensfelder died in 1955. During his lifetime he served 
as a member of the Academy’s Board. The ‘‘Hall of Ecology’’ was named 
the ‘‘Albert P. Greensfelder Hall’’ in his honor. 
14. For an example of the pleas the Academy made to its membership, 
see Your Museum (December, 1962). 
15. Robert B. ie to Stratford Lee Morton, 12 February 1964, in 
BDMB 1953-1976, Inc., 
16. ‘‘What Does It bia To Keep Your Museum Open?’’ The First Five 
Years (Bound with Your Museum, 1959-1966, AAS.) 
17. Minutes of Meeting, 15 December 1964 BDMB, 1953-1976, Inc., 
n.p. 
18. For a complete description of permanent and temporary exhibits, see 
James G. Houser, Record of Exhibits In Oak Knoll Museum Buildings at 
Closing, December, 1986. Xerox copy, AAS. 
19. The bones were those of ‘‘Phil,”’ a popular attraction at the St. Louis 
Zoo until his demise from natural causes. 
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