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199. Special Study for Advanced Undergraduates. (2-5) Either half-year. Professor MEYER, Associate Professor BECKWITH, Assistant Professor ESTILL and Dr. SALLE

Undergraduate research problems in medical or technical mycology. Open to qualified students by special arrangement with any professor or instructor on the staff. Laboratory fee, $10.

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Professor MEYER and Assistants Lecture, Th, 2-3; laboratory, F, 2-5. Required of all medical students.

Water and milk analysis, Schick test and diphtheria diagnosis, vaccination, typhoid and meningococcus carriers, disinfection, etc.

GRADUATE COURSES

Concerning conditions for admission to graduate courses see page 3 of this announcement.

201. Special Study and Research in Problems of Medical or Technical Bacteriology, and Experimental and Comparative Pathology. Either half-year. The STAFF (Professor MEYER in charge)

205. Seminar. No credit.

The STAFF (Professor MEYER in charge)

COURSES IN OTHER DEPARTMENTS

Advanced Epidemiology. (See Hygiene 107.)
Biochemistry. (See Biochemistry 101м, 103.)
Cytology. (See Zoology 107.)

Diseases of Plants. (See Plant Pathology 120.)

Experimental Plant Physiology. (See Botany 7.)

Food Economics. (See Household Science 100, 101.)

Fruit and Vegetable Products. (See Viticulture 112A-112B.)

General Botany. (See Botany 2A, 2B.)

General Chemistry. (See Chemistry 1A-1B.)

General Cytogamic Botany. (See Botany 105A-105B.)

General Parasitology. (See Zoology.)

Histology and Microscopic Organology. (See Anatomy 101.)

Introductory Physiology. (See Physiology la.)

Medical Entomology. (See Entomology 126.)

Microscopic Technique. (See Zoology 4.)

Organic Chemistry. (See Chemistry 8, 9, 100, 101, 102A-102в, 111-111н.) Phycology. (See Botany 105A-105B.)

Physical Chemistry. (See Chemistry 110.)

Plant Histology. (See Botany 6.)

Plant Nutrition. (See Plant Nutrition 3, 103.)

Principles of Water Supply. (See Civil Engineering 124.)

Protozoology. (See Zoology 110, 110c.)

Public Health Laboratory. (See Hygiene 108A-108B.)

BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHARMACOLOGY

A division of the Medical School, L. S. SCHMITT, B.S., M.D.,
Acting Dean.

CARL L. A. SCHMIDT, Ph.D., Professor of Biochemistry (Chairman of the Division).

EDWARD S. SUNDSTROEM, M.D., Associate Professor of Biochemistry.

Assistant Professor of Pharmacology.

LEOPOLD R. CERECEDO, Ph.D., Instructor in Biochemistry.

DAVID M. GREENBERG, Ph.D., Instructor in Biochemistry.

RUDOLF GAHL, Ph.D., Research Associate in Biochemistry and Bacteriology.
NORVAL F. BURK, M.S., Assistant in Biochemistry.

OLIVER H. EMERSON, B.S., Assistant in Biochemistry.
E. S. NASSET, M.S., Assistant in Biochemistry.

T. ERIC REYNOLDS, M.D., Assistant in Pharmacology.

Letters and Science List.-All undergraduate courses in biochemistry and pharmacology except course 102M are included in the Letters and Science List of Courses. For regulations governing this list, see page 4.

THE MAJOR IN BIOCHEMISTRY IN THE COLLEGE OF LETTERS AND SCIENCE

Preparation for the Major.-Required: Chemistry 1A-1B, 8, 5, or 9t; German AB‡ or French AB; Physics 2A-2B, 3A-3B or their equivalent. Recommended: Chemistry 5, 9, 110; Mathematics 3A-3B; Zoology 1A, 1B, 100.

The Major. The major must include Biochemistry 103 (5), 104 (4) or 101м (8), 110 (4), 112 (1) and the balance of the 24 units must be chosen from one of the following groups:

I. Correlated courses emphasizing physics and chemistry. Biochemistry 105 (2), 106 (2); Chemistry 102A (3), 102в (3), 110 (3), 111 (4), 118 (2); Physics 111A (2), 111в (2).

II. Correlated courses emphasizing animal biology and nutrition: Anatomy 101 (6), 102 (3); Biochemistry 102A (3); Household Science 120A (4), 120в (4); Physiology 100A (5), 100в (5), or 101 (8); Zoology 103 (2), 106 (4), 107 (2), 107c (2), 114 (3).

No student will ordinarily be accepted as a major student in biochemistry who has not attained at least a C average in the required courses in Chemistry.

Preference should be given to German.

III. Correlated courses emphasizing plant physiology and nutrition. Biochemistry 105 (2), 106 (2); Chemistry 110 (3), 111 (4), 118 (2); Physics 111A (2); Plant Nutrition 100 (2), 101 (4), 110 (4).

IV. Correlated courses emphasizing bacterial metabolism and immunity. Anatomy 101 (6), 102 (3); Bacteriology 101A (8); Biochemistry 105 (2), 106 (2); Chemistry 110 (3), 118 (2); Ḥygiene 108A (4), 108в (4); Plant Nutrition 123 (4); Zoology 110 (2), 110c (2).

The attention of students in biochemistry is called to the fact that modern developments in this field call increasingly for a good knowledge of physical chemistry, quantitative chemical methods, and the ability to read French and German scientific literature.

Chemistry 1A-1в and 8 are prerequisite to all courses in biochemistry. It is highly desirable that the student shall have had a course in some biological subject and in physics.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

101м. Biochemistry. (8) II.

Professor SCHMIDT, Associate Professor SUNDSTROEM, Dr.
GREENBERG, Dr. CERECEDO, and Assistants

Lectures, M Tu W Th F, 1; sections, F, 9; laboratory, M Tu W, 2–5. Prescribed for all students in the first year of the Medical School. For fees charged medical students, see Medical School Announcement. For medical students the prerequisites are as prescribed for the Medical School. Courses 101м and 102м are required.

Lectures on the physico-chemical basis of life processes, a survey of those classes of substances which are to be found in animals and plants, a discussion of the changes which these substances undergo during life and during utilization as food, and a general survey of the field of nutrition and energy exchange.

Laboratory practice with the more important constituents of living matter and their chemical behavior, and in some of the routine methods such as urine analysis which are used in the study of processes in living animals, specially in man. This course fulfills the requirements of the Medical School in biochemistry. Lectures and laboratory work may be taken separately: lectures as 103; laboratory as 104; see below. NOTE. Biochemistry 103 (5) and 104 (4) are given simultaneously with Biochemistry 101м (8). They include the subject of the latter course together with certain additional material.

102м. Pharmacology and Materia Medica. (3) I.

and Assistants

Lectures, M W, 1, and, from October 3 to November 26, S, 9-12 (including reading assignments); laboratory, Sec. 1, W, 2-5; Sec. 2, 8-11.

F,

A limited number of qualified academic students will be permitted to enroll and these should register for course 102A. A laboratory fee of $6.50 is required of academic students. For fees charged medical students, see Medical School Announcement.

The properties and physiological action of drugs with illustrations derived from their therapeutic application.

103. Biochemistry. Lectures only. (5) II.

Professor SCHMIDT, Associate Professor SUNDSTROEM, Dr.
GREENBERG, Dr. CERECEDO

M Tu W Th, 1; sections, F, 9, or F, 1.

This course covers the lecture work given in Biochemistry 101м.

NOTE. When possible the student is urged to take Biochemistry 104 simultaneously with Biochemistry 103.

104. Biochemistry. Laboratory only. (4) II.

Professor SCHMIDT, Dr. CERECEDO, and Assistants

M Tu W Th, 2-5.

This course covers the laboratory work which is given in Biochemistry 101м with certain additional work. Prerequisite: course 103, completed or in progress. Laboratory fee, $11.50.

105. The Chemistry of the Proteins. (2) I. Tu Th, 11. Dr. GREENBERG

The chemical constitution of the proteins and amino acids. Methods of analysis, synthesis and isolation, their physical and colloidal behavior, the rôle which these substances play in nutrition, life processes, and immunity.

106. Protein Chemistry Laboratory. (2) I. Tu Th, 1-4. Dr. GREENBERG

The preparation of amino acids and proteins. Methods of analysis, physico-chemical properties and behavior. Open to students who are taking or have taken Biochemistry 105. Laboratory fee, $6.

110. Advanced Biochemistry. (4) Either half-year.

Associate Professor SUNDSTROEM

Lectures, S, 8; laboratory, Tu Th S, 9-12. Prerequisite: Biochemistry 101м, or 103 and 104, or their equivalents. Special methods together with correlated lectures on the normal life processes and certain pathological conditions. Intended to prepare the student for research as well as for the practical application of the subject of biochemistry. Laboratory work in blood analysis, respiratory gas analysis, gastric analysis, and other methods which illustrate the normal metabolic processes of animal life.

112. Proseminar. (1) I. M, 11.

Professor SCHMIDT

Biochemical literature and the newer developments of the subject.

199. Special Study for Advanced Undergraduates. (3-5) Either half-year. The STAFF (Professor SCHMIDT in charge)

Prerequisite: courses 101м or 103, 104, and 110.

A limited number of selected students will be given topics for investigation under the direction of some member of the department.

GRADUATE COURSES

Concerning conditions for admission to graduate courses see page 3 of this announcement.

202. Research in Pharmacology. Either half-year.

Not less than 3 units.

210. Research in Biochemistry. Either half-year.

The STAFF (Professor SCHMIDT in charge)

Not less than 4 units except by special permission of the Chairman of the Division.

212. Staff Seminar. Either half-year. No credit. Professor SCHMIDT 299. Thesis for the Master's Degree.

The STAFF (Professor SCHMIDT in charge)

COURSES IN OTHER DEPARTMENTS

Advanced Organic Chemistry. (See Chemistry 102A-102B.)
Physical Chemistry. (See Chemistry 110, 111–111н.)

Microorganisms in their Relation to Disease. (See Bacteriology 101.)
Histology and Microscopic Organology. (See Anatomy 101.)

Human Physiology. (See Physiology 101.)

Electric Discharge through Gases. (See Physics 111A.)

Agricultural Biochemistry. (See Agriculture, Plant Nutrition 101.)

Advanced Plant Nutrition. (See Agriculture, Plant Nutrition 103.)
Dietetics. (See Household Science 120A-120B.)

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