- - 2... oufiiil of Research Volume 59, No. 2 ISSN0092-6345 November, 1984 ISJRA6 59(2) 97-216 1984 LfBP./\RY DEC 10 1984 !QI//,. ·1iA-: ~ i 'ii!\'FRSITY From the Editors . .... i;{ ~C1. ~J •.cc .. ~ °JfCUi'!:Jl.G~~' · .... 97 ISELY, D. Astragalus L. (Leguminosae: Papilionoideae) II: Species Summary A-E................. .......... ........ 99 Book Review . 215 IOWA STATE JOURNAL OF RESEARCH Published under the auspices of the Graduate College of Iowa State University EDITOR .. ............................................... DUANE ISELY BUSINESS MANAGER . MERRITT E. BAILEY ASSOCIATE EDITOR ................. .... ....... KENNETH G. MADISON ASSOCIATE EDITOR ........... .......................... PAUL . HINZ ASSOCIATE EDITOR ................................. BRUCE W. MENZEL COMPOSITOR-ASSISTANT EDITOR ............... CHRISTINE V. McDANIEL Administrative Board N. L. Jacobson, Chairman M. E. Bailey, I. S. U. Press J. E. Galejs, I. S. U. Library Duane Isely, Editor W. H. Kelly, College of Sciences and Humanities W. R. Madden, Office of Business and Finance J. P. Mahlstede, Agriculture and Home Economics Experiment Station W. M. Schmitt, Information Service G. K. Serovy, College of Engineering Editorial Board G. J. Musick, Associate Editor for Entomology, University of Arkansas Paul W. Unger, Associate Editor for Agronomy, USDA, Bushland, Texas Dwight W. Bensend, Associate Editor for Forestry, Hale, Missouri L. Glenn Smith, Consultant for Education, I. S. U. Barbara E. Forker, Consultant for Physical Education, I. S. U. Gerald Klonglan, Consultant for Sociology, I. S. U. All matters pertaining to subscriptions, remittances, etc. should be addressed to the Iowa State University Press, 2121 South State Avenue, Ames, Iowa 50010. Most back issues of the IOWA STATE JOURNAL OF RESEARCH are available. Single copies starting with Volume 55 are $7.50 each, plus postage. Prior issues are $4.50 each, plus postage. Because of limited stocks, payment is required prior to shipment. The IOWA STATE JOURNAL OF RESEARCH (ISSN 0092-6435) is published quarterly in August, November, February, and May for $20.00 per year (Canada, $21.00/ other foreign countries, $25.00) by the Iowa State University Press, 2121 South State Avenue, Ames, Iowa 50010. Second-class postage paid at Ames, Iowa 50010. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE IOWA STATE JOURNAL OF RESEARCH, c/ o Iowa State University Press, 2121 South State Avenue, Ames, Iowa 50010. Printed by Graphic Publishing Co., Inc., Lake Mills, Iowa 50450. IOWA STATE JOURNAL OF RESEARCH I MAY, 1985 Vol. 59, No. 4 IOWA STATE JOURNAL OF RESEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS Volume 59 (August, 1984-May, 1985) From the Editors 1 MENZEL, B. W., J. B. BARNUM, and L. M. ANTOSCH. Ecological alterations of Iowa prairie-agricultural streams. 5 ANDRADE, F. H. and C. E. LaMOTTE. A simple physiological model for flower induction involving circadian rhythms and phytochrorne . 31 VILLALOBOS-RODRIGUEZ, E., R. SHIBLES, and D. E. GREEN. Response of stern termination types of soybean to supplemen- tal irrigation. 45 RUPNOW, A. and D. STOTLAR. In-game coaching behavior of girls' youth softball coaches . 59 BAKKEN, R. J. and D. F. STOCKDALE. Influence of teachers' sex on stereotyping of school objects and reading attitudes in first-grade boys and girls . 69 ZIOMEK, R. L. and L. G. SMITH. Relationships between philosophical attitudes and personality characteristics . 77 Notes ...................... ......................... ... 93 Book Review. 95 * * * * * * * * * * No. 2, November, 1984 From the Editors . 97 ISELY, D. Astragalus L. (Legurninosae: Papilionoideae) II: Species Summary A-E . 99 Book Review. 215 544 TABLE OF CONTENTS No. 3, February 1985 Introduction . 219 CHEATHAM, G. Imagination, Madness, and Magic:.The Taming of the Shrew as Roman tic Comedy . 221 DUBINSKI, E. R .. The Chronicling of Majesty in Perkin Warbeck....................................................... 233 McGUIRE, P. C. Silence and Genre: The Example of Measure For Measure. 241 PALMER, D. W. Entertainment, Hospitality, and Family in The Winter's Tale . 253 PREUSSNER, A. W. Chapman's Anti-festive Comedy: Generic Subversion and Classical Allusion in The Widow's Tears....... 263 ROSS, D. W. "What a Number of Men Eats Timon": Consumption in Timon of Athens.............. 273 SCHULTZ, S. C. A Director Prepares: Staging a Few Lines of Measure For Measure . 285 STANTON, K. The Disguises of Shakespeare's As You Like It.............................................................. 295 TAFT, E. M., IV. The Crown Scene in Henry IV, Part 2 . 307 Book Review. 319 * * * * * * * * * * No. 4, May, 1985 From the Editors . 323 CHANG, T. T. Principles of genetic conservation . 325 CHANG, T. T. Collection of crop germ plasm..................... 349 CHANG, T. T. Preservation of crop germplasm................. 365 TABLE OF CONTENTS 5 CHANG, T. T. Evaluation and documentation of crop germ- plasm.................................................... 379 CHANG T. T. Germplasm enhancement and utilization . 399 CHANG T. T. Crop history and genetic conservation: Rice- A case study. 425 CHANG T. T. Appendix I. 457 CHANG T. T. Appendix II. 459 CHANG T. T. Literature cited............................... 461 GOODMAN, M. M. Exotic maize germplasm: Status, prospects, and remedies . 497 KRUGMAN, S. L. Forest genetics and foreign policy. 529 Book Review.............................................. 541 IOWA STATE JOURNAL OF RESEARCH I NOVEMBER, 1984 97-98 Vol. 59, No. 2 FROM THE EDITORS "Ding" Darling's Conservation Legacy On July 2, 1984, the U.S. Postal Service issued a new postage stamp in Des Moines, Iowa, commemorating the fiftieth anniversay of the federal Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp and its associated program of wetland preservation. Issuance of the commemorative postage stamp in Des Moines, however, was more than recognition of a successful conservation program. It was also a tribute to Jay N. "Ding" Darling, who devoted a lifetime to causes of natural resources management. Generations knew Darling as the Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist of the Des Moines Register and Tribune, and it was his illustration that provided the design for the first Duck Stamp. As a youth in Sioux City, Iowa, in the late 1800s, Darling was drawn to the unspoiled streams, marshes, and prairies where he established his bond with wildlife and gained an intuitive understanding of ecology. By early manhood, Ding had also witnessed the widespread despoliation of the country's natural resources. As he earned national professional recognition and amassed substantial personal wealth, he also became an articulate and influential spokesman for conservation causes. Darling's early activity in Iowa conservation matters brought the recognition that effective natural resource conservation required professionally educated personnel, a scientific foundation, and protection from political interference. In 1932 he proposed a cooperative education and research program jointly supported by the Iowa State College in Ames, the Fish and Game Commission, and himself. His personal pledge, made during the height of the depression, was $3000 yearly for a three-year trial effort. By mid-1932, the Iowa Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit was established at the college and soon gained prominence through the contributions of its first leader, Dr. Paul L. Errington. Because of such successes in Iowa and his widespread readership, Ding became a leader of the American conservation movement. Although a conservative Republican, he was appointed by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1934 to a special presidential committee charged with recommending a program for the restoration of seriously depleted stocks of migratory waterfowl. Roosevelt, then, soon asked the cartoonist to assume the position of Chief of the Biological Survey, the nation's principal wildlife management agency. Ding agreed to a temporary appointment and quickly proved his mettle as an administrator, reshaping the bureau according to his philosophy. The Washington environment also allowed Darling to promote his Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit concept. In 1935, units based on the Iowa model were established at nine additional land-grant colleges with funding provided by the bureau, the colleges, state game management departments, and the newly formed American Wildlife Institute. This partnership prospered, and a Coop­ rative Fishery Research Unit program was added in 1965. Today, there are 98 FROM THE EDITORS fifteen wildlife units, twenty-one fishery units, and nine combined fishery and wildlife units in twenty-nine states. Thousands of graduates from the unit program have provided the backbone of technical expertise and professional leadership in American wildlife management for fifty years. And their research contributions have been prolific. The Iowa programs alone have spawned over 200 M.S. and Ph.D. graduates and approximately 2000 technical and non­ technical publications. Between 1933 and the present time, some 100 reports have appeared in this journal alone. After a productive 20-month tenure with the bureau, Darling resumed his newspaper position and continued his active involvement in state and national conservation affairs. In Iowa, he had a hand in reopening a Civilian Conservation Corps camp at the Iowa Lakeside Laboratory on West Okoboji Lake. Buildings constructed there by the CCC remain as the nucleus of that facility which has contributed to ecological research and education for many years. Later, he played a role in establishing the Iowa State Teachers'
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