Page Fourteen 



be as ('omj)rchcn8ive as the Flah Blbiioyraphy. Those who are working 

 on the Armor Bibliography have profited much I)}' the experience of the 

 workers on the Fish Bibliography. 



Mr. James C. Bell, of our Department of Preparation, has been 

 seriously ill with jmeumonia. 



Dr. Wisslcr paid his two-days' visit to the Museum in March. 



Miss Inez Lofberg was absent from the Museum most of March 24th , 

 She had im])ortant business to attend to at the dock of the Scandinavian- 

 American Line. , 



Mrs. Bardwell has been transferred to the Department of Ornithol- 

 ogy, where she will relieve Mrs. Fraser of some of her duties. The 

 growth and development of the department have greatly increased the 

 volume of secretarial work there. 



During April, the Architectural League will hold an exhibition in the 

 new wing of the Metropolitan Museum. Mr. Taylor will be represented 

 by a section of his mural for the south end of the North 

 Pacific Coast Hall; Mr. Knight will have the sketches for four murals 

 for the Age of Man Hall on view; and Mrs. Sterling will also have work 

 there. 



On April 11th, the Allied Artists of America will hold an exhibition, 

 at which Mrs. Sterling will show two busts and a figure and a series of 

 silhouettes of Dr. Matthew's three older children. 



Since Bill Buckley has taken to attending Dr. Copeland's ''Own 

 Your Own Home League" meetings, he has been kept busy explaining 

 to the near-millionaires of the Attendants' Force and other departments 

 of the Museum all the pros and cons of Dr. Copeland's arguments. 



Dr. Goddard, with his two sons, motored up to his farm in Dart- 

 mouth and spent several days there during March. 



It has been commented that the serious illness of Mr. Nichols prove« 

 the inadvisability of having one's appendix in the wrong j^lace. 



