128 
Report on a European trip of the director. Brooklyn Bot. 
Gard. Record 20: 1-24. January. 
Annual report of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, 1930. Report 
of the director. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Record 20: 41-77. 
March. 
Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Brooklyn Daily Eagle. (Long 
[sland Ten-Year Plan Edition.) October 25. 
The plant world. Pp. vidi + 136. Figs. 80. The University 
Society, Inc. New York. October. 
Address in presentation of gold medal to Miss Anna Billings 
Gallup. Jour. Nat. Inst. Social Sciences 15: 56-62. Oc- 
tober. 
“At the top is magic.” Sctence 74: 569-570. December 4. 
Gundersen, Alfred 
Report of the Curator of Plants for 1930. Brooklyn Bot. 
Gard. Record 20: 91-96. March. 
Various abstracts in Biological Abstracts. 
— 
Graves, Arthur Harmount 
Forest pathology. Breeding work with the chestnut. Brook- 
lyn Bot. Gard. Record 20: 83-87. March. 
Report of the Curator of Public Instruction for 1930. Brook- 
lyn Bot. Gard. Record 20: 97-105. March. 
“ Additions to the flora of Connecticut.” (Review) Vorreya 
31: 52-53. March—April. 
Important woody plants—trees, shrubs, and woody climbers— 
of Greater New York. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Leaflets 
XIX?-*; 1-8. April. 
Additional notes on frost crystals. JVorreya 31: 113-114. 
July-August. 
‘Nature rambles—spring.”’ (Review) Torreya 31:115. July- 
August. 
“A field key to the genera of wild and cultivated trees.” (Re- 
view) Torreya 31: 115-116. July-August. 
The green rose, Gordonia, and the hardy chrysanthemums at 
the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Leaf- 
lets XIX®: 3-4. October. 
Forms and functions of leaves. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Leaflets 
X7-§: 1-11. November. 
