80 BOTANICAL GAZETTE | FEBRUARY 
(c) Extensive economic collections and the Canby and Wood 
herbaria at the New York College of Pharmacy under the super- 
vision of Professor Rusby. 
(d) The Morong herbarium at Barnard College. 
Publication—The Bulletin and the Memoirs of the Torrey 
Botanical Club, and the TZyvansactions, the Annals, and the 
Memoirs of the New York Academy of Sciences offer oppor- 
tunities for papers; the University Press of Columbia Univer- 
sity will issue books. 
Remarks.—Aftter the completion of the museum building of 
the New York Botanical Garden, the graduate research work will 
be conducted at that place where all the botanical facilities are 
to be centered. 
CoRNELL UNIVERSITY. 
Stafi— George F. Atkinson, Ph.B., Professor; W. W. Row- 
lee, Sc.D., Assistant Professor; E. J. Durand, Sc.D., Instructor; 
K. M. Wiegand, B.S., Assistant; B. M. Duggar, A.M., Assistant. 
Subjects offered —i. Experimental morphology ; with special 
reference to (1) sterilization of sporogenous tissue, (2) trans- 
formation of sporophylls, (3) homology of plant members, (4) 
teratological questions. 
2. Experimental physiology, with special reference to the 
measurement of osmotic pressures. 
3. Ecology, with special reference to relation and distribu- 
tion of plants under peculiar conditions in central New York; 
distribution of fungi on hosts. 
4. Comparative embryology; (1) embryology of sporo- 
phytic organs; (2) embryology of gametophytic organs; (3) 
accompanying cytological problems. 
5. Mesphoiney of fungi; monographic studies of certain 
genera. 
of genera. 
7. Structure and development. me alge; special facilities for 
: the — of ieee on eb acTaa in | Florideae. 
6. Development of fungi; special a comparative studies — 
