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Kino dina:Th . c r u st. 
Disco atro nudo 
-atra 373 

■arpophol i s H 5 ^ 

__ prosecha 344 

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Lecanora 

uniform. 


ew-p 

7^47 


HI* 

‘LgLj Ct-O-f 

3 V 7 7 ^ 


Salsaria 

3 

metabolica 

1 \ rat, 

cormftnta ta 

‘flilC 

-coarctata 

nn 

-vleucoois 


verrucosa 

o v7 ou-f 5 

peridea 

a.'itl 

sonhodes 


pyxina ■ 
colobina 

7; 77g 

niIvina 

7 j.fdtf 

fuscoatra 

3/d? 2 - 


£VJAc- 3 

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Disco d- 


-ru^osa 

Vi Uar 
C< 


colorato 

s-Al 


p 1 a u c e s c e n t i e t c 


SIX 

Mtoniae v-'STfl» 
-cenisia Hio 

-plaucoraa rx. 

— JTirtzii j~3 3 

-anpulosa - M 
—chondrotypa * tr * > 
-subcarnea ^ ^ 

- c a c o i o r ub e 11 a H t> l 
luteaeons 

—Hap . n i 


Jill! 


1 ie 


ran 

Disco va 
—albella 
pare 11 a 
tartarea 
Turneri 
St onei 
car.ncolutea 
-expallens 


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colorato nudo 
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HV~ 

—psoralis 

27d) 

rubelliana 

7/ _ 

—detrita 


- spanora 

^77 

—v ,ria 

rt** 

—intricata 

m 1 * 

—ocrinaeta 

U 

—anomala 

2 4 (, 

granulosa 

3,77 ^ 

rainutula 

3*7 I 1 

appospila 

7/3 ^ 

—spodophaea. 

- *r(b 

rubricosa 

7! u 

—effusa 

^3 t 

—trapelia 

HW 

elutina 

7U ^ 








r:ebstock 313 


4:00 r* : 


Fo o ber 17, 1942 



W I ' -:c . id'D HF'FIHATIOH. 





v" 0 


F’eIlford. Taylor 


■ 

ro-owr and n-nlan | ;r In-'; to she?', 7 chat -t* ^ re. • ? 

and . 'j e :x t t; air affects o crklular rcnctm 

. ci'voddo SI 30 11..I: s done on tk . Factor d:l h 

sor 





























Locanora 2 


inalpina 7 

; i 3 L 

haematonma 

76 0 W 

rubra 

2. 7l£ 

cerina 

7; «$” 

craspcdia 

i ;u 

bryontha 

nl 1 

-subfusca 

5 f 1 

punicea 


- epibryon 


cyrtaspis 

— 

-disti ncta 


—pol i ophaea 

ft) f 

-—thallina 

VL3 

be 11a 

51 < 

ventosa 

nil 

— sulphurea 

tnt* 

—orosthea 


salicina 

111 ' 




erythrella 
cinnabarina 
citrina 
vitellina 
incrugtana. 

Psororoa: Th 
-Ludwigii 
~-badia 
halophaea 
decipiens 
testacaa 
glaupocama 


7 ; 13 ^ 

1 > / o I 

7 ,■ fiH 

^ q (( ( 2 - 

ml 

crust.effig. 
iff 7 

•313 

jfU 

3iSr74 

■3 1 m 


46 ac^., 


chrysoleuca 
rubina 
crassa 
Mirella 
tribacia 
cartilaginea 
rutilans 
Candelaria 
hypnorum 
Ispidora 
brunnea 
licrophylla. 

PlacodiuniLh.crust 
adscensionis 





culoin ambitu radioso-stellato 



epigea 

73*0- 

aegialita 

7 :5k 1 

lentigera 


Lanascae 

WJ 

galactina 

3 l 

teicholyta 

7;iSi 

circibata 


•versicolor 

£4'!' 1 P!le~C>-^ 

myrrhina 

i.sn. \ 

rnelanaspi s 

431 J 

gelida 


Af seliana 

4 n 

elaeina 


molybdina 

1 b'i-'i O-rC ' f 

e^eutica 

1 03 ) 

aa &icola 



sublobato 













Leoa nor a 3 

strarainea ££ ( 
murorum 1 ' % ‘ i ~ a 
rnniata ' ■ : 

C1 eUlf3 1 ' l -'3'3 

chlorophana 
oxytona )£>n ■> 

callopisBia 
ful^ens 7!-u>i 





- 11 


Commerce and Finance Library 


The Lincoln library of essential information. 


Social planning council of 

City street inaex. 

310 

Saint Louis; Dept, of 



social research. 



Social planning council of 

County street inaex. 

310 

Saint Louis. Dept of 



social research. 



Rhodes, E, C. 

Elementary statistical methous. 

311 

Wold, ii. 

A study in the analysis of stationary 



time series. 

311 

Haney, L. H. 

Value and distribution. 

330 

Schumpeter, J. A. 

Business cycles. 1st ed. 1939. 2 v. 

330 

Hadley, Charles R., co., 

Manual of pathfinner truck cost system. 

657 

Ciy. o, 1.. n 

A history of the modern and contemporary 



Far East. 

950 

Mechanical 

& Electrical Engineering Departments 


Clayton, A. E. 

The performance and design of direct 



current machines. 2a ed. 1933. 

EE 

EGdy, M.F. 

Aeronautic radio. 

EE 

HclgUG j D . 

Alternating current bridge methods. 



4th ed. 1933. 


Reed, H. R. 

Electrical engineering experiments. 


Whytlaw-Gr ay, R. W. 

Smoke. 

ME 


Geology Department 


Adams, F. D. 

The birth and development of the 



geological sciences. 


Allen, V. T. 

This earth of ours. 


Baxter, Y;.T. 

Jewelry, gem cutting, and metalcraft. 


0. 

The stone industries. 


Casteret, Id 

Ten years under the earth. 


Clark, Vi. 

Photography by infrared. 


Emmon:., u. H. 

Geology; principles and processes. 


Engli.'u, G. L., comp. 

Descriptive list of the new minerals, 



1392-1933. 


Fenton, C. L. 

Our amazing earth. 


Forbes, A. 

Northernmost Labrador, mapped from the air. 


Fryxell, F. M. 

The- Tetons. 


Hager, D. 

Fundamentals of the petroleum industry. 


Huebner, V.. 

Geology onu allied sciences, v.i. 1939. 


James, H. 

Romance of the national parks. 


Jefferson, Li. 

Peopl ing the Argentine Panpa. 1939. 


Gutenberg, B., e... 

Internal constitution of the earth. 



1st. ed. 1939. 


Landon, C. E. 

industrial geography. 


Lee y u . 

Stratigraphic ana paieontoiogoic studies of 



the Pennsylvanian ana Permian rocks in 



north-central Texas. 


Legget, R. F. 

Geology ana engineering. 


Lobeck, A. K. 

Ge omorphology. 











Pannarioid 


Biatorine 
EGorticate 
Grustose 
foliose 
Corticate 
foliose 
fruticose 
Lecanorine 
Ecorticate 
Sessile 

Immersed 
Corticate above 
Corticate 

Pseudo p/a r e n chy 
sessile 
immersed 
Plectenchymat 
e t orient ose 
tomentose 
f oliose 
fruticose 


Leprocollema 
Leeiophysma 

Lemtnops i s - 
Ramalodium 


Lempho lemma 

CM* jtjJLmi*- 




Didynosporae Phragmosporae Dietyosporael 


Homotheciurn 


Licollema Syneohoblastus 

Collemodiopsis 

Pyrenocollema 

Pseudoleptogium 


L. rivale 


Leptogiopsis 


Homodium 

Leptogium 

Mallotium 
Leptolobarij 










fLu>vuJt‘ 

Yh^~z^\jrKZ. 




tx. C-GJX-B. 


a n m rLh-j) 




























OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY 


American JBoard of ©phthalmologg 

JOHN GREEN, M. D. 

3720 WASHINGTON BOULEVARD 

MISS LEA M. STELZER, Registrar ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI 

6830 Waterman Ave. St. Louis, Missouri 


August 18, 1938* 


Dear Doctor: 

The American Board of Ophthalmology will hold an examination 
at the'New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, 218 Second Ave., New York City, 
Friday, October 7th, at 8:00 A.M. Kindly register promptly at 8:00 A.M. 
with the Registrar. Your examination will cover the following subjects: 


External Diseases -Slit Lamp 
Ophthalmoscopy 
Histology and Pathology 
Anatomy and Embryology 
Refraction-Retinoscopy 


Muscles-Motility 

Perimetry 

General Diseases-Neurology 
Therapeutics - Operations 
Practical Surgery 
Optics and Visual Physiology 


The examination will occupy the entire day and unfinished subjects 
may require completion in Washington on Saturday or Sunday. Please bring with 
you any small instruments such as ophthalmoscope, retinoscope or loupe that 
you habitually use. The examination in ophthalmic surgery will consist of an 
oral quiz and surgery on animal eyes. Kindly bring with you instruments 
necessary for a combined capsulotomy extraction. 


In Refraction candidates will be required to show a thorough 
understanding of the technique' of the fogging method, of the use of astigmatic 
dials in measuring astigmatism, and of the cross-cylinder tests for strength 
and axis of astigmatism. 


A set of microscopic slides illustrating phases of ophthalmic 
histology and pathology can be obtained through this office upon deposit of 
§ 25.00 which will be refunded upon return of the slides in good condition. 

For 1939* the Board announces an examination in St. Louis in 
the Spring at the time of the meeting of the American Medical Association, 
and also at the place of the meeting of the American Academy of Ophthalmology 
and Oto-Laryngology, usually in October. 

Kindly fill in attached card and mail to me at once regardless 
of previous arrangement or correspondence. It is necessary that the Board 
know immediately the number of candidates who will appear at this examination. 


Please retain this 



yours. 


y'L 


for your information. 


IMPORTANT: 






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OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY 


American .Board of Ophthalmologu 

JOHN GREEN, M. D. 

3720 WASHINGTON BOULEVARD 

MISS LEA M. STELZER, Registrar ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI 

6830 Waterman Ave. St. Louis, Missouri 

i 

August 18, 1938* 


Dear Doctor: 


The American Board of Ophthalmology will hold an examination 
at the'New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, 218 Second Ave., New York City, 
Friday, October 7th, at 8:00 A.M. Kindly register promptly at 8:00 A.M. 
with, the Registrar. Your examination will cover the following subjects: 


External Diseases -Slit Lamp 
Ophthalmo scopy 
Histology and Pathology 
Anatomy and Embryology 
Refraction-Retinoscopy 


Muscles-Motility 

Perimetry 

General Diseases-Neurology 
Therapeutics - Operations 
Practical Surgery 
Optics and Visual Physiology 


The examination will occupy the entire day and unfinished subjects 
may require completion in Washington on Saturday or Sunday. Please bring with 
you any small instruments such as ophthalmoscope, retinoscop© or loupe that 
you habitually use. The examination in ophthalmic surgery will consist of an 
oral quiz and surgery on animal eyes. Kindly bring with you instruments 
necessary for a combined capsulotomy extraction. 


In Refraction candidates will be required to show a thorough 
tinderstanding of the technique' of the fogging method, of the use of astigmatic 
dials in measuring astigmatism, and of the cross-cylinder tests for strength 
and axis of astigmatism. 


A set of microscopic slides illustrating phases of ophthalmic 
histology and pathology can be obtained through this office upon deposit of 
$ 25.00 which will be refunded upon return of the slides in good condition. 

For 1939, the Board announces an examination in St, Louis in 
the Spring at the time of the meeting of the American Medical Association, 
and also at the place of the meeting of the American Academy of Ophthalmology 
and Cto-Laryngology, usually in October. 


Kindly fill in attached card and mail to me at once regardless 
of previous arrangement or correspondence. It is neoessary that the Board 
know immediately the number of candidates who will appear at this examination. 


IMPORTANT: 










W| 

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LEPTOGIUM IH AUSTRALASIA 
Spores bilocular, apothecia 0,2-0.7mm Victoria 
Spores 5-septate,apothecia 1-2.2mm,Philippines 
Spores muriform 

Thallus tomentose "below 


4 

Homo dium?hi1o cular e 

Lepiogiopsis pacificum 

" * 

Mallotium 
L. trichophorum 
L. plumbeum 


Thallus not tomentose below 

Thallus isidiose or microphylline 




Margin s -ertrwdB dly" e ll iuft e, n o l~crtfoS: 




Mar gi n s den sely-^jferophydd^^ 



• 


1 «-• 


•^--oangea tum ■■ 

/ ' «-• ■ *>,. • „ ; s _ ■ 

Upper surface as well as margins densely microphylline isidi 


isidiose 


^ L, trem k myriophyllum 

k 

* /^L. trem.isidiosa 


isidiose or fj jiril^ro-sw^daeeratQ_ 

-t hallus p - lieatultr-rugulo sc - In:<j ' eralulum ■- 

- ■' * v 

Margins and upper surface isidiose 

* * 

Thallus wrinkled 

Wrinkles very fine, longitudinal 

* 

*'"L.caesium trachynum 
Wrinkles reticulate 4C)-S0u high 

' / L, propaguliferum 

Thallus not conspicuously wrinkled when dry 

pychneoides 
fahtax -f i isidi -r g e r tt a 


*<L, consimile 
granulans 

















1 


Den dr is caul on urahau sense Degel, ,Ar]c.3ot. 30; 3:28.1940. 

Cornicularia imhausensis Auer sw. jHecbvigia 8:113. 1869. 

> /^ihyscia oil in. to. v, erythroca r die Degel.. Arh.Dnt . 30:3:70. 1941. 
i * oh sour?. y , erythroejardia Tuch. ,Proc.Araer .Acad.Arts Sci ,4:399*1860 



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OBSERVATIONS ON TROPICAL AMERICAN AND OTHER LICHENS. I. 
CARROLL W, DODGE 

M zgfil agjgt and Professor in the Henry Shaw School of Botany £f 

Washington University 

In connection with my lichen flora of Costa Riea 1 
Dodge, C.W. The foliose and fruticose lichens of Costa Rica [I], 


Ann, Mo, Bot.Gard. 
Peltigeraeeae. Ibid. 


1 map, 193 ; Il.Stictaceae and 
, 1939, 


I have studied many specimens from other parts of the world, mostly 

the American tropics. To discuss them adequately in that work would 

increase its size without greatly increasing its usefulness to the 

uosta Rican student; therefore it is proposed to include such ohser- 

, . . . . . 

Vdtions m uhis series, rather than holding them ^in manuscript until 
sufficient have accumulated to justify a monogra,ph of a family 
a flora of a region. 


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Since the current advertisement (enclosed) outlines the situation in 
some detail, I shall not attempt to cover it in this letter. However, 

I believe you will agree that the railroads of this country need the 
services of "a new and efficient sleeping car operating company that 
can, and will buy sleeping cars competitively in quantity and service 
them economically." Otherwise, the average sleeping car passenger 
will have a slim prospect for a comfortable ride in a car equipped 
with modern conveniences and improvements. 

It has often been demonstrated that the public can have anything it 
wants — if it makes its position clear. The public certainly did make 
its position clear on through sleeping car service and the Black Market 
in Pullman space. 

We hope and believe the public will be equally clear in its demand for 
modern sleeping cars at reasonable cost for all railroads that need them. 

Your newspaper editor, I am sure, will be as interested as I will be in 
any comments or suggestions that you may care to offer. 


Very truly yours. 





| j).. _. - " ' 


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FEBRUARY 16 to FEBRUARY 22,1947 


SUNDAY - FEBRUARY 16 

4:30 PM STUDENT VESPER SERVICES: Rev. 
William J. McCracken,Emmanuel Epis¬ 
copal Church, "The Rock and the 
Sand" - Graham Memorial Chapel 

MONDAY - FEBRUARY 17 

9 AM - 5 PM EXHIBITION: "If you Want to 
Build a House" - Givens Hall Exhib¬ 
ition Gallery (open week days thru 
March 3) 

8 PM LECTURE: Chancellor Compton , 

"UNESCO Conference"; Sponsored by 
the A.V.C. - Graham Memorial Chapel 

TUESDAY - FEBRUARY 18 

4 PM "ENGINEER IN TRAINING" LECTURE: 
Mr. C. G. Roush, President, Missouri 
Society of Professional Engineers , 
"The Engineers’ Place in and Respon¬ 
sibilities to Society" - Brown Hall 
Auditorium 

8:1 5 PM WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY ASSOCI¬ 
ATION LECTURE: Billy Bryant, "Forty 
Years of Showboating" - Soldan High 
School. Admission by subscription. 


WEDNESDAY - FEBRUARY 19 

4 PM PHYSICS DEPARTMENT COLLOQUIUM: 

Dr. James F. Nolan,"Protective Meas- 
sures Against Dangerous Radiations" 

- Crow Hall 101 

8:15 PM ILLUSTRATED LECTURE: Dr. Chas. 

H. Morgan, of Amherst Col 1 ege,"Cor¬ 
inth, City of Aphrodite"; sponsored 
by the Archaeological Institute of 
America, St. Louis Society - Givens 
Hall 116 

THURSDAY - FEBRUARY 20 

8 PM WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY ALUMNI 

BIRTHDAY PARTY: Chancellor Compton, 
Director of Athletics Blair Gull ion, 
Quad Club, the University Chorus; 
for all A1umni,Students and Faculty 

- Field House 

FRIDAY - FEBRUARY 21 

9 PM GOLD-DIGGERS BALL: Sponsored 

by Mortar Board - Field House; Ad¬ 
mission, $1.25 

SATURDAY - FEBRUARY 22 

HOLIDAY - Washington's Birthday 


COMING EVENTS 

February 23 VESPER SERVICES: Commemorat- February 28 GERMAN REALISM FILM: Showing 
ing the 94th Anniversary of the of one film, 1927 (Silent) - Brown 

Founding of Washington University; Hall Auditorium; 8:15PM. Admission 

Vice Chancellor Charles Belknap - by subscription. 

Graham Memorial Chapel; 4:30 PM 


Events listed are open to the general public and free of charge, unless the notice 

indicates otherwise. 








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WASHINGTON UNIVLRSITY 


December 2, 1942 


A meeting of the Faculty of the School of Graduate 
Studies will be held on Wednesday, December 9, 1942 in 
room 228, Robert S. Brookings Hall, at 4 o'clock. 

To facilitate taking attendance please leave your 
name with my assistant who will be stationed at the entrance 
to the room. 



•c 


Secretary 





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G o c c i f e r ae ~ - : it r am ine o -flavidae 


Podetia typically v/ith cups, 

•pro : slv yranuiose 

. n d . s q uarnu lose K +- 

Campl ill 

Island 

, • G. 

cub'd iyitata 

-odetia short, 

tips ;itn cir 

s or obtuse, esore 

diate, typically 

S'qua’ allot 
Thallus of t 

;s, K- 

ilonyate square 

ule.s, Reunion C. 

insiynis 


Thallus of • g'mailer squamules, podeti'a y'erl lo *r or yellov; 
fuseescent, iustralia---. C. firm 

■Ophrophaeae 

Unc'ialejs i; 1 l'. - - : 

-'I- 1 odetia sets ip el lucid hetv'/ecniscsittbrfcdi ver ruculae 

Reunion C. pelta-sta 

fod&tia i-rripe'llucid 

Chondroid axis v;el.l developed, xithout cups, dichotomous, 
cortex subcontinuous or are'aolat'e ■ dispersed, axils' 
closed 

•■•-oerxogonial pel hyulino, axils closed • 

G. nedusina 

Goerraoponial pel. red . ■ 

Primary thallus persistence, podetia 0.7-1,0 rare 

thioHj lo ;er axils perforate, a 1 per closed 

G. . 

Primary 1 thallus evanescent, r odetia scarcely 0„. 5rnm 
axils' closed 0. xanthoclad'a 

Ohondroid .axis lacking, •ohsolefeliy scyphiferous, corticate 
Reunion G, candelabrum 

Chasmaxiae---iicrop v y/'llae, axils open 
K y e'l l o y 


Podetia esquamose or atypically and sparingly,squamqlooe, 
ascyphous, polycho'tomous or more or leas''iTohbtomous 

C. suboubulata 

Podetia squamose, rarely only yranulosc , decorticatc , parti; 
, scyphiferous 

Primary squamule small, evanescent 

. 0 * s lib squamo sa 


K- 


lleither axils nor tips dilated 


O! en, 


o n 



tol 

' T . 0 1 

~ r r'lle 

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x ip i cl 

a" -a y 

poc 

Letia 

short 

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schis 

opora 

e. 

s quam 

0 3 3i 


sarrsentosa 


rU^o^, 

Glausae 

Polystelides 
: Helopodium 

P o d e t i a c o r t i c a t 

Ghoul ’oi ' i 1 o..e. o: o . ly " ,ts, 

cavity K irregularly subfuscescentj branched;,' 
cortex verruculose, almost esauamulose 

C. intcrmediella 

G}"joi - ' 1 oi i , 1, r d roia 

Partly sterile more or less s. uanulose, irreyularl 


Podetia terminated by apothecia,esquanulose , uiraj 

inched, K- C. enahti 


or fasti yi; 


ily 









Argopsis 2 



while his figure of the orossection of a cephalodium suggests the 
cerehriform tvpe. 

Zhalbruckner tried to reconcile the literature without a critical 
study of material of either species, resulting in misstatements such 
as citing A. me g alos pora from Kerguelen rather than from Campbell Island 
and stating that the eight small spores coalesce to form a degenerate 
brown mass. 

Fortunatel-v the type of S tereo c aulon Argus Tavl. and a duplicate 
of the tvpe collection of S. c ymosnm Cromhie are present and fruiting 
in the Taylor Herbarium at the Boston Society of Natural History. The 
former specim.en agrees with Th, Fries' description of Argopsis, the 
second, with the description of A. F riesia na Mull. Arg. Both are similar 
in podetial characters and cephalodia to Stereoc a u lon * 

S'.Argus has a hvaline parathecium and hvpothecium, asci apparently not 
more than 2-spored, of which one early degenerates, leaving a single 
large muriform spore very similar to those of Lopadium, remaining 
hyaline until late, then becoming slightly yellowish brown, not the 
deep brown muriform spore of R hizocarpon . S. cymp_sum_has a brownish 
parathecium (not carbonaceous in the apothecium sectioned), asci 4-8- 
spored; ascospores with three transverse septa and an accasional longi¬ 
tudinal or oblique septum, producing a few-c’elled muriform s^ore simi¬ 
lar tos those in Joll ema sect. Ble nnthalli a. Were it not for the ex¬ 
treme form of 3. Argus , there is little to distinguish S.cymosum from 
from Stereocaulon where the sterile material was. referred. Until 
more information is available, it is largely a master oi individual 
opinion whether the generic limits should be circumscribed to include 
only S. Argus or enlarged to include 3. cym osum. I have adopted the 
latter course. Both species seem to be endemic to small ai’eas, but it 
is possible that they have heen referred to some variety of 3. ra mulosum 


















Podetia decorticate, othecia. con 'loncratc, K a, 11 o . 

Podetia bquanulose: or iai&ioid squamulose or - ranulo;.c 
sorodiate C. squariosula 

franulose to isidioid squamosa 
-w v V th ---' 1 ' • • ■ ; G.' elegantula 


Podetia 

!Fb dll bs t i 1 i de s 






Hot proliferating dfrbii center of cups 
Podetia elongate corticate 

-Podetia sparsely grandiose ystri 


e. 




o d 1 1 . o " :-n.iatc 


3,ubar eolati 


ctove, cortex ,subc o ntinu ous 


G. cornuta 

graeilentior 

.'odd15.a - short --when corticate > or decorticate corediose 
Podc.tla s cynhiferou e, cuv : commonly broad and 

1 diluted if for • the loner, p- rt of a o'- tia, ^corticate 

crossly yfanuloae sorediosO, pyxidata_ 

Podetia semipellucid y.costata 

Po ’’tia im c Hue id - a 1 . ,y« .chloro ph$ga 


Primary thallus 

of 

t;]n icker 

s q uanu lee, p o d o t i a 1 o n;; 

or sh 

: short, with 

or 

rithout 

xcnpomodiurn. op p;j?rov 


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nper par 

t of eo.de tia, wholly de 

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; . ■estuamiilbae 

a .or 

ITcX IL ^ 

lower,par t- cprti ps.te , 

/alls 


odcrately tbi ckened. C.’ f imbr ia.ta 


Po - 

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; - t ly ir; ro ; r mlpse; , ; yitb 1 ioidioid 

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without microscopic examination in other herbaria. 


Argopsis AJtgus (Hook. f. & Tayl. ) Dodge, comb. nov. 

, V ; -.it ' , V' 

Stereocaulon Ar gus Hook, f. & Tayl., London Jour. Lot. 3:653. 1844; 

Cryptog. Antarct. SSA. 1845; FI. An tare t. : . 184 

■p/'\ . ... , ... „ \ ' : •*-.*>. •**. / ■/’ "■ •.,«• _ a 

A rgopsi s megalos^ora Th. Fr ., Leva Acta H. Soc. 8ci. Upsal. III. 

2:o25. 1858. 

\ 

Type: Campbell Island, on rocks on mountains, J. D. H ooker (Voy. 
Erebus Sc Terror in Taylor Herb, at boston Soc. Hat. Hist. Type of 
A. m eg al ospo ra based on a duplicate of this collection in Upsala. 

The sheet marked 11 Stereo caul on Argu s Tavl," contains four plants glued 
to the sheet. 7/hen thev were studied by Muller Argau in 1887, he letter¬ 
ed the plants "a" and "b" and annotated the sheet; a,. Argop si s me gal o - 
soora Th. Fr.; b. Stereoc a ulon ramulosum v. macrocarpum Lab. Hyl , 

The following description is based on the two individuals marked a 
by Muller Argau. The confusion is not surprising as the specimens 
resemble each other very closely in macroscopic characters, having the 
same type of branching and phvllocladia. The primary branches of Argog - 
s_is are somewhat flattened, the cephalodia are much less conspicuous and 
darker in colour, the exciple is verrucose 4hd the disc tenus to remain 
flatter; all characters which would hasre been*, considered trivial in 

Taylor’s time. Tavlor, however, mentions all 'these characters in his 

\ 

description although all his specimens do not show them. 

Thallus 4-5 cm. tall, branching near the base, closelv dichotomous, 
appearing sympodial, base 2.5 mm in diameter, somewhat flattened and 
obscurely striate sulcate longitudinally; decorticate, smooth, secondary 

branches more terete, verrucose, the verrucae passing into short, terete 

obtuse . , 

phvllocladia, cortex dull and peeling off, leaving a slightly tomentose 

surface; cephalodia not abundant, small, cerebriform, of the Stereocaulon 

ramulosum type. 














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WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY 


Office of the Dean 
College of Liberal Arts 

November 11, 1942. 

TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE CORPS OF INSTRUCTION 
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 


Representatives of the Joint Army-Navy-Marine Corps- 
Coast Guard College Procurement Committee will be on our campus 
on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, November 16, 17, and 18, to 
discuss with men students the provisions of the College Enlistment 
Plans. 

On Monday morning, November 16, all men students on the 
campus will be required to attend assemblies in Brown Hall Auditorium 
in accordance with the following schedule: 

9:00 a.m. - College of' Liberal Arts and University College 

10:00 a.m. - School of Business and Public Administration, 
School of Law, and School of Fine Arts 

11:00 a.m. - Schools of Engineering and Arcnitecture 

On Monday morning, November 16, all women in nine o'clock 
classes in the College of Liberal Arts and in University College will 
meet in the Court Room in January Hall. Dean Starbird will discuss 
the conference held at Northwestern University, on November 13 and 14, 
for the purpose of formulating training programs that will best fit 
college women for participation in our war effort. 


Very sincerely yours, 


Wm. Glasgow BowlingT^s 
Dean. 








































































































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