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sible assistance will be given the students in making them, and 
in preserving and preparing them for shipment home. 
Ammunition, and material for taxidermy and other means of 
preserving specimens, stationery and drawing materials, will be 
carried in stock, and furnished at cost. As the vessel will carry 
no cargo but its outfit, there will be abundant room for the 
storage of the largest collections of curiosities and specimens 
of natural history that can be made. 
Any student sent from our Universities, or by others, for the 
purpose of making scientific collections, will receive special 
attention from the members of the faculty, in order that such 
collections may be of value, and a credit alike to the students . 
and to the expedition. 
It will always be optional with the students to accompany any 
of the excursions that may be organized, or remain with the ves¬ 
sel. When there are two or more excursions contemplated or 
in progress at the same time, each student may choose which, 
if any, he will take part in. 
The amount of baggage allowed each student, m excess of 
what is usually kept in state-rooms, is 500 pounds, which will be 
securely kept in a room appropriated to that use, and accessible 
at stated times during the day. 
Extra expenses need be very slight, if the student confine 
himself to those excursions the expenses of which are paid by^ 
the Director, These, as the plan of the route shows, are numer¬ 
ous and interesting, and alone will make him a traveler of greater 
experience and wider observation than many who have fairly 
earned renown as travelers. Opportunity, however, will be 
given, as already stated, to those who desire other and wider 
in 
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