Page Eight 



Clarence Halter called at the Museum last week. 



The auditors are busy on our books again. 



Museum calendars are being mailed to the Directors of all the Mu- 

 seinns listed in the Directory of Museums. 



David Greenberg, formerly of the Department of Public Health, 

 was a welcome visitor at the Museum on January 17th. He had not 

 been back for a long time, and renewed acquaintance with members of 

 various departments. He is now a student at Columbia University. 



Mrs. Fulda was kept away from the Museum for several days during 

 January by tonsilitis. 



A choice skeleton of Gorgosaurus has been installed in the Tertiary 

 Hall. 



New installations and rearrangements are being made in the Hall of 

 the Age of Man, in connection with the proboscidean exhibit. 



Dr. Dean returned during the first week in January from his ex- 

 tended trip abroad. Although very busy at the Metropolitan Museum, 

 he finds time to make frequent hurried trips to our Department of 

 Ichthyology, where work on the Subject Volume of his Bibliography of 

 Fishes is going forward at a rapid pace. 



Dr. Hrdlicka of the National Museum visited the Museum on 

 January 24th. 



Mr. Irving B. Kingsford, a graduate of Princeton, class of 1913, 

 joined the Department of Vertebrate Palaeontology on January 26th as 

 volunteer assistant. He will assist in the work on fossil specimens, in the 

 laboratory. He is also taking Dr. Gregory's course on mammalian 

 ])ateontology. 



Arrangements are being made for the transportation, from the Cauca- 

 sian Museum in Tiflis, to this institution, of the collection of Thibetan 



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