Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian InstitutionThe Institution, 1922 |
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Page 20
Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents. instruction is evident from the fact that the record of attendance has again been broken during the past year . The previous year's visitors numbered 2,220,605 , which figure was this year ...
Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents. instruction is evident from the fact that the record of attendance has again been broken during the past year . The previous year's visitors numbered 2,220,605 , which figure was this year ...
Page 44
... fact that until the beginning of the year 1920–21 no appropriation had been made for the gallery or for the purchase of art works , and no provision for the employment of a salaried curator or other employees of the gallery , all works ...
... fact that until the beginning of the year 1920–21 no appropriation had been made for the gallery or for the purchase of art works , and no provision for the employment of a salaried curator or other employees of the gallery , all works ...
Page 62
... fact that the objective activities treated in these records no longer form a part of the life of the Muskhogean peoples , and so can not be ob- tained at first hand . In addition to this material , it is designed to add as supplemen ...
... fact that the objective activities treated in these records no longer form a part of the life of the Muskhogean peoples , and so can not be ob- tained at first hand . In addition to this material , it is designed to add as supplemen ...
Page 73
... fact that an exchange of publications had been inaugurated with the Czechoslovak Repub- lic . As a matter of record it should be stated here that notification was received through the Department of State from the Belgian ambassador in ...
... fact that an exchange of publications had been inaugurated with the Czechoslovak Repub- lic . As a matter of record it should be stated here that notification was received through the Department of State from the Belgian ambassador in ...
Page 74
... fact that a shipment weighing over 25,000 pounds had been made to the library of the University of Louvain , and that that consignment was the largest single shipment ever forwarded through the Smithsonian Exchange Service to one ad ...
... fact that a shipment weighing over 25,000 pounds had been made to the library of the University of Louvain , and that that consignment was the largest single shipment ever forwarded through the Smithsonian Exchange Service to one ad ...
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Popular passages
Page 1 - England, who in 1826 bequeathed his property to the United States of America "to found at Washington, under the name of the Smithsonian Institution, an establishment for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men.
Page 2 - Institution, to be composed of the Vice President, the Chief Justice of the United States, three members of the Senate, and three members of the House of Representatives, together with six other persons, other than Members of Congress, two of whom shall be resident in the city of Washington and the other four shall be inhabitants of some State, but no two of the same State.
Page 131 - Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be transmitted to the -family of the deceased, and that they be spread upon the records of this society.
Page 119 - To the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution: Your executive committee respectfully submits the following report in relation to the funds, receipts, and disbursements of the Institution, and...
Page 43 - The gallery of art, your committee think, should include both paintings and sculpture, as well as engravings and architectural designs; and it is desirable to have in connexion with it one or more studios in which young artists might copy without interruption, being admitted under such regulations as the board may prescribe.
Page 42 - ... of plain and durable materials and structure, without unnecessary ornament, and of sufficient size, and with suitable rooms or halls, for the reception and arrangement, upon a liberal scale, of objects of natural history, including a geological and mineralogical cabinet; also a chemical laboratory, a library, a gallery of art, and the necessary lecture rooms...
Page 78 - Servia, desiring to assure the immediate exchange of the Official Journal as well as of the parliamentary Annals and Documents...
Page 67 - In 1920 and 1921 he served as chairman of the Division of Anthropology and Psychology of the National Research Council, and at various times participated in numerous committees of both the NRC and the Social Science Research Council.
Page 43 - ... of Congress as an exhibition room for the works of artists generally; and the extent and general usefulness of such an exhibition might probably be increased, if an arrangement could be effected with the Academy of Design, the Arts Union, the Artists...
Page 305 - The form of the orange-tree, the cocoa-nut, the palm, the mango, the treefern, the banana, will remain clear and separate; but the thousand beauties which unite these into one perfect scene must fade away; yet they will leave, like a tale heard in childhood, a picture full of indistinct, but most beautiful figures.