32 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 



No. 3. Reports on the Scientific Results of the Expedition to the Tropical 

 Pacific. 1899-1900. III. Medusa.'. By Alexander Agassiz and Alfred 

 G. Mayer. 40 pp. 13 Plates. 1 Chart. January, 1902. 

 Vol. XXVII. 



No. 1. Reports on the Results of Dredgings by the United States Coast Survey 

 Steamer " Blake." XXXIX. Les Dromiaces et Oxvstomes. Par Al- 

 moNSE Milne Edwards et E. L. Bouvier. 127 pp. 25 Plates. April, 

 1902. 



No. 2. Reports on the Results of Dredgings by the United States Coast Survey 

 Steamer " Blake." XL. Les Bathynomes. Par Alphonse Milne Ed- 

 wards et E. L. Bouvier. 47 pp. 8 Plates. July, 1902. 



Report : — 



1900-1901. 33 pp. November, 1901. 



[*] 



INVESTED FUNDS OF THE MUSEUM. 



In the Hands of the Treasurer of Harvard College, Sept. 1, 1901. 



Sturgis-HooperFund $100,000.00 



Gray Fund 50,000.00 



Agassiz Memorial Fund 297,933.10 



Teachers and Pupils Fund 7,594.01 



Permanent Fund 117,469.34 



Humboldt Fund 7,740.66 



Virginia Barret Gibbs Fund 5,000.00 



Willard Peele Hunnewell Memorial Fund 5,000.00 



S590,737.11 



The payments on account of the Museum are made by the Bursar of Harvard 

 College, on vouchers approved by the Keeper. The accounts are annually exam- 

 ined by a committee of the Overseers. The only funds the income of which is 

 restricted, the Gray and the Humboldt Funds, are annually charged in an analysis 

 of the accounts, with vouchers to the payment of which the income is applicable. 



The income of the Gray Fund can be applied to the purchase and maintenance of 

 collections, but not for salaries. 



The income of the Virginia Barret Gibbs Scholarship Fund, of the value of $250, 

 is assigned annually with the approval of the Faculty of the Museum, at the recom- 

 mendation of the Professor of Zoology and of Comparative Anatomy in Harvard 

 University, " in supporting or assisting to support one or more students who 

 have shown decided talents in Zoology, and preferably in the direction of Marine 

 Zoology." 



The income of the Humboldt Fund (about §300) can be applied for the benefit of 

 one or more students of Natural History, either at the Museum, the United States 

 Fish Commission Station at Wood's Hole, or elsewhere. 



Applications for the tables reserved for advanced students at the Wood's Hole 

 Station should be made to the Faculty of the Museum before the 1st of May. 

 Applicants should state their qualifications, and indicate the course of study they 

 intend to pursue. 



