24 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



202532. 120 archeological specimens from Bite S5-WS-5, Dalles Reservoir on 



Columbia River, Wasco County, Oreg. 

 202537. Archeological materials from the Conomaugh Reservoir, Pennsylvania, 



scattered sites in Marshall and Wetzel Counties, W. Va., and Cheatham 



and Old Hickory Reservoirs, Tenn., collected by Ralph S. Solecki, 



1950 and 1954. 

 203964. Archeological material from 2 sites in Cachuma Reservoir areas on Santa 



Ynez River, Santa Barbara County, Calif. 



205436. Archeological material in and about Broncho Reservoir, Mercer County ; 



Dickenson Reservoir Area, Stark County ; Kochler site, Heart Butte 

 Reservoir, Grant County, all in North Dakota. 



205437. 21,046 archeological specimens from 2 sites in Oahe Reservoir, Stanley 



County, S. Dak. 



205438. Archeological material from sites in and about Garrison Reservoir, in 



Dunn, Mercer, McLean, Mountrail, and Williams Counties, N. Dak. 

 205526. 797 archeological specimens from Allatoona Reservoir area, Cherokee 



County, Ga. 

 206347. 3,648 archeological specimens from Montana, collected by the Missouri 



Basin Project. 



MISCELLANEOUS 



Dr. Frances Densmore, Dr. John K. Swanton, Dr. Antonio J. 

 Waring, Jr., and Ralph S. Solecki continued as collaborators of the 

 Bureau of American Ethnology. Dr. John P. Harrington is continu- 

 ing his researches with the Bureau as research associate. On April 12, 

 1955, Sister M. Inez Hilger, an ethnologist and a teacher at the School 

 of Nursing, Saint Cloud Hospital, Saint Cloud, Minn., was appointed 

 an honorary research associate of the Smithsonian Institution. 



Information was furnished during the past year by members of the 

 Bureau staff in reply to numerous inquiries concerning the American 

 Indians, past and present, of both continents. The increased number 

 of requests from teachers, particularly from primary and secondary 

 grades, from Scout organizations, and from the general public, indi- 

 cates a continuously growing interest in the American Indian. Vari- 

 ous specimens sent to the Bureau were identified and data on them 

 furnished for their owners. 



Respectfully submitted. 



M. W. Stirling, Director. 



Dr. Leonard Carmighabl, 



Secretary^ Bmithsoniam, Institution, 



U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1956 



