PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPARTMENT During 1950, this department has had a very successful production year. Negative and photostat totals are below 1949 levels, but the increased call for prints and microfilming has taken more of our time. Negatives 1,710 Prints 9,096 Enlargements (11" x 14" to 30" x 36") 1,001 Lantern Slides 176 Microfilm Exposures 2I>°73 Color transparencies (8" x 10" interiors) 19 Photostats totaled 3,511, of which 1,941 were made for sales. Since September, Mr. Michael Lazlo has devoted a great deal of his time to microfilming the American Fur Company's letter books and papers. For completion the project wiU require approximately 40,000 exposures. Finished during the year was the microfilming of our full collection of Broadsides, of which 4" x 6" photographic catalogue cards were also made for Map & Print Room files. StiU to be done are the enlargements of the Broadsides from the microfilm negatives. Trips outside the Society were two—one to East Haddam, Connecticut, for the Editorial Department, the other to Mrs. Katharine Prentis Murphy's Westbrook, Connecticut, home, for a series of color shots, some of which were reproduced in Antiques magazine and wiU appear in the April issue of our own Quarterly. Five additional 8" x 10" color shots were made of our own gaUeries. Charles T. Miller Photographer THE BINDERY For the report of Joseph Schwarz, Head of the Bindery, see Appendix under Staff Activities—Bindery.