171 
4. To study the method of reproduction of the parasite. 
5. To devise means of control of the disease. 
Personnel for Project 2: 
Dr. ArtHUR HarMountT Graves, Curator of Public Instruc- 
tion (I02I- eae Wale, 1900 "sah valem1oo7- Univ. 
of London, 1914-15. Asst. in botany, Sheffield Scientific School, 
and Forest School, Yale, 1902-04; Instructor in forest botany, 
Forest School, 1904-06; Instructor in botany, Yale, 1906-09; 
Assistant Professor, 1909-14; Associate Professor of biology, 
Connecticut College for Women, 1916-17; Pathologist and collab- 
orator, Office of Investigations in Forest Pathology, U. S. Dept. 
of Agriculture, 1918-21; collaborator, 1921- 
Hester M. Rusk, Curatorial Assistant (19 26- Ve ag IB 
Columbia (1912); A.M. (1917). Instructor in Agricultural Bot- 
any, Agricultural High School, University of Nebraska ee 
1915); Assistant in Botany, Barnard College (1915-1918); I 
structor (1918-1920) ; Technical Assistant, N. Y. Botanical Gar. 
den (1920-1926). 
PUBLICATIONS SINCE 1921 
Disease resistance in the American chestnut. Rept. 1oth Ann. 
Meeting of Northern Nut Growers Ass’n 1919: 60-67. 
1921. 
The Melanconis disease of the butternut (Juglans cinerea L.). 
Phytopathology 13: 411-435. 5 fig., 2 pl. 1923. 
A preliminary list of native and naturalized woody plants of 
Greater New York. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Leaflets 13: 7-0, 
I-I2. 1925. 
The present continued development of basal shoots from blighted 
chestnut trees. Science, N.S. 63: 1604-165. 1926. 
An unusual insect gall on scarlet oak (Quercus coccinea, Muench). 
Torreya 26: 1-2. I text fig. 1926. 
The cause of the persistent development of basal shoots from 
blighted chestnut trees. Phytopathology 16: 615-621. 1 
text figure. 1920. 
