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36_102
Berkeley
--Professor L. Blaringhem, Professor in the University of Paris and connected with the Pasteur Institute, with Madame Blaringhem, visited me today, bringing letters from Professor Sargent. He has come across the country via Florida and New Orleans and goes back to Harvard, where he is exchange professor, this winter. He has produced a corn with 2 embryos in 20- precent of the kernels, a capsella (C. vagaris) with 4 carpels which is fixed and which he says is spontaneous in his garden walks. His own special studies in heredity deal with heredity of disease mainly, especially "mosaic" diseases. He spoke very imperfect English and it was difficult to follow him closely. His wife speaks much better English and is a most charming and delightful young Frenchwoman. --Apr. 1, 1919.
36_103
Mt. Tamalpais, Apr. 5, 1919. Marin Co. SW slope above Mill Valley.
No. 8223. Ceanothus foliosus Parry.
No. 8224. Ceanothus cuneatus (Hook.) Nutt.
No. 8225. Ceanothus cuneatus (Hook.) Nutt.
No. 8226. Calochortus umbellatus Wood.
No. 8227. Melica Torreyana Scribn. This grass grew on an otherwise bare patch of sliding shaly rock area.
No. 8228. Eriodictyon californicum See p. 107. Infested with Torula glutinosa Cke. _ Hark. [Cooke and Harkness]
8228 filed in U.C. Cryptogamic Herbarium because of fungus infecting it (RB.)
-Calochortus umbellatus No. 8226. [see drawing in notebook of calochortus perianth inner base] gland and its cover scale.
No. 8229. Rhododendron californicum = R. macrophyllum. Mt. Tamal.
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