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looked, as a sampling of their ectoparasites is pertinent to the objectives ' 
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of the expedition. A pictorial record gfccfefagxfigkrixTi mnrktg rtiranHtyi rirtVyteit 
birds, is not contemplated, though the smaller mammals will not be over- 
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order to supplement our field notes and observations. For this purpose/ ^ ^ 
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both still and motion picture color film is to be provided. The 
photographer attached to the expedition, a well known Washington physicia^ 
Dr. Roy L. Sexton, already has the necessary photographic equipment. 
Otherwise, the personnel of the expedition will consist of Mr. and 
Mrs. Bruce Bredin, co-sponsors and recorders; Dr. George W. Wharton, 
the 
formerly of/Duke University faculty, and now head of the department of Qj 
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world's foremost authorities on the Acariria (mites and ticks); and myself_^ ^ 
as invertebrate zoologist. r . 
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The expedition is to be organized in ample time to depart on or about ^ < 
zoology at the University of Maryland, parasitologist and one if the 
April 1, 1955 from New York either by steamer direct to Matadi, or else 
by air to London or some convenient continental port, and thence by 
steamer to Matadi, The return will be made by way of the Nile Valley 
and from Cairo by air to New York. Within the Belgian Congo, so far as / 
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practicable, all travel will be by autanobile, / 
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