I laugh every time I think of it. It's too had. it was only rehearsal. 
I think a gem like that should have gone out on the regular program! 
He said he's going to he on with Stoopnagel and Budd a week from Sunday 
and he's going to write and tell me all about it, so I'll be sure to 
listen. He said, "We're going to have a hell of a good time." I 
don't believe he felt at all inhibited talking to me. The air was 
pretty blue! 
The Clarks took Miss Deichmann and her mother home to dinner 
night before last. Mr, Clark told me about it yesterday morning. He 
said they ran into Bartlett somewhere and he introduced than him to the 
Deichmanns, thinking that the '‘Greenlanders" would enjoy meeting one 
another. Bartlett was very much pleased, so Clark asked him to come 
along home for dinner if he was free. He was free and was delighted to 
go. He turned to the Deichmanns and said, "Gee, we'll have a hell of a 
good time." Yesterday morning while he was here, Miss Deichmann went 
through the room. She stopped to speak when she saw him, and he said, 
"Didn't we have a hell of a good time last night 7 " 
Clark told me that Bartlett had a reel of l6 mm. colored 
movies of Greenland. He went over to the Racquet club where he was 
staying and got them, Clarks borrowed a projector, and got the young 
Boeving boy to run it and they had movies. Clark said they were grand. 
I remarked about it to Bartlett and said I wish I could have seen them. 
He said, "You'll see them some time. I'll show them to you." I said, 
"What you ought to do — you ought to bring them down here some Saturday- 
night and show them to the Biological Society." he said, "oay, xl do 
that." I told him you were on the program committee, and he said 
he'd, be glad to do it some time next fall. As ne left, I said, Are 
you sure you'll want to come down in the fall for Biological .society^ 
and he said he certainly would. So there, I got you a program if you 
want it! First, I was going to call Walker, and then I thought better 
of it. It's your thunder, not his. 
Mss !, {unroe sent all 50 copies of the Explorations pamohlet 
to Bartlett direct and I didn't get a chance to extract the ten copies 
for you. I asked Bartlett if he could let you have 10, and he said 
he didn't know, he had had so many requests, but he would let you have 
all he could. He said he will surely send you five.. He felt very sorry 
and said he should have ordered more; he didn't realize so many people 
would want copies. I'm sorry I let them get away from me; it happened 
before I knew it. The first I knew of it, he wrote me Monday thanking 
me for them. Maybe you can scrape up enough others. You may have my 
copy. I suppose I'll get a copy of the Explorations pamphlet; I racl 
always have . 
Day before yesterday I planned to have lanch with Miss Cab--s 
and then talk to Dr. Hildebrand afterward about Longley and Panama. 
When I got to his office Mrs. HildebraM was there with a young lady 
from Beaufort whom they all had known before* Me sat around and talked 
