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LOWER DIVISION COURSES

1. Introductory Physiology.

Assistant Professor BURNETT.

A general outline of physiology with special reference to the human; designed for non-medical students.

8 hrs., first half-year; 4 units. Section 1: lectures, Tu Th, 1; laboratory, Tu Th, 2–5; section 2: lectures, M W, 1; laboratory, M W, 2-5.

2. Introductory Biology.

Dr. WULZEN.

General survey of the field of biology, with experimental work on various life phenomena. Free elective.

8 hrs., second half-year; 4 units. Lectures, Tu Th, 10; laboratory: sec. 1, M W, 1-4; sec. 2, Tu Th, 1-4.

5. Elementary Biochemistry.

Dr. BENNETT. This course is intended for general university students and not for those preparing for medicine. It will deal with physiological processes from a chemical standpoint. The simpler aspects of the chemistry of respiration, muscular exercise, nutrition, reproduction, secretion, and excretion will be considered.

4 hrs., first half-year; 3 units. Lectures, M W, 1; laboratory, F, 1-3. Prerequisite: a knowledge of general inorganic chemistry.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

103M. Biochemistry. Associate Professor ROBERTSON and Dr. BENNETT. Chemistry of the constituents of living matter; chemical dynamics of life phenomena; chemical physiology of the blood, digestion and metabolism.

Lectures 5 hrs., laboratory 12 hrs., second half-year; 8 units. Open only to students matriculated in the Medical School.

103A. Same as 103м except that laboratory work will be adjusted to meet the special needs of academic students; open to academic students; will not be credited as part of the medical curriculum.

104M. Physiology.

Associate Professor MAXWELL, Assistant Professor BURNETT, and
Dr. WULZEN.

Physiology of muscle, nerve, central nervous system and sensation, circulation, respiration, and secretion.

Lectures 6 hrs., laboratory 15 hrs., second half-year; 10 units. Lectures, M Tu W Th S, 11; F, 10. Laboratory, M Tu W Th S, 8–11. Open only to students matriculated in the Medical School.

104A. Description same as for 104M.

Lectures 5 hrs., laboratory 12 hrs., 10 units. Open to academic students; will not be credited as part of the medical curriculum.

Associate Professor ROBERTSON.

106. Pharmacology.

Lectures 3 hrs., laboratory 3 hrs., second half-year; 4 units. Hours to be arranged.

107. Physiology.

Assistant Professor BURNETT.

A general course in human physiology designed for students in public health.

Lectures, 2 hrs., laboratory, 6 hrs., first half-year; 4 units. Hours to be arranged.

110. Experimental Biology.

Dr. WULZEN.

Experimentation on cell processes and the tropic reactions.

6 hrs., first half-year; 2 units. Tu Th, 1-4. Prerequisite: course 2 or Zoology 1A and matriculation chemistry.

111A. Advanced Physiology.

Associate Professor MAXWELL. Laboratory three afternoons a week, with occasional lectures; first half-year; 4 units.

111B. Advanced Chemical Biology. Associate Professor ROBERTSON. Laboratory three afternoons a week, with occasional lectures; second half-year; 4 units.

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Discussion of important advances in physiology, reports of research in the department, and abstracts of current papers. Open only to advanced students who have a reading knowledge of French and German. Application for membership should be made to Professor Maxwell.

1 hr., first half-year; 1 unit. M, 4.

POLITICAL SCIENCE

DAVID P. BARROWS, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Political Science. BERNARD MOSES, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of History and Political Science, Emeritus.

THOMAS H. REED, A.B., LL.B., Associate Professor of Government. EDWARD ELLIOTT, Ph.D., Lecturer in Political Science and International Law.

Three Teaching Fellows.

The general prerequisites to courses in the upper division are Political Science 1A and 1B or satisfactory equivalent.

1A. Government.

LOWER DIVISION COURSES

Associate Professor REED.

The government and parties of Great Britain, France, Italy, Belgium, and other countries having a parliamentary form of government. 3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 3.

1B. Government.

Associate Professor REED.

The governments and parties of Switzerland, Austria-Hungary, Germany and the United States.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 3.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

101. Theory of the State.

An introductory study of the fundamentals of politics. 2 hrs., first half-year. Tu Th, 11.

102. American Political Institutions.

Dr. ELLIOTT.

Dr. ELLIOTT.

A study of the origin and development of political institutions in the United States. Recommended for students whose major is political science and for students seeking a major recommendation to teach government in high schools.

2 hrs., second half-year. Tu Th, 11.

*103. The Government of Dependencies.

Professor BARROWS.

A brief general survey of modern colonial government, followed by more detailed study of one or more dependent possessions.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 9. 1916-17 and alternate years.

*Not to be given 1915-16.

105. International Relations: Spanish America.

Professor BARROWS. Special attention is given to the government and politics of Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean, and the relations of these regions with the United States.

3 hrs., first half-year, 1915-16, and alternate years. M W F, 9.

Professor BARROWS.

106. International Relations: the Far East. Governments of China and Japan; interests and dependencies of European states; American policy in the Orient.

3 hrs., second half-year, 1915–16, and alternate years. M W F, 9.

110A. Local Government. Associate Professor REED. The relations of local and central government in western Europe and America, with a comparative study of the forms of rural local government. Prerequisite: courses 1A and 1B, or the consent of the instructor.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 2.

110B. The Government of Cities.

Associate Professor REED.

The growth, causes of growth, and structure of population of modern municipalities; the development and present status of the governmental organization and activities of German, French, British, and American cities.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 2. Prerequisite: course 110A or the consent of the instructor.

*112. State Government; Political Parties.

Professor BARROWS.

The first half of the course is based on a study of the government of California. The second half is devoted to party organization and activities.

3 hrs., second half-year, 1916-17, and alternate years. M W F, 9.

*113. Legislative Procedure and Problems. Associate Professor REED. A study of the method of procedure of legislative bodies, together, with a consideration of important state problems and the prepar ation of bills.

2 hrs., second half-year, 1916-17 and alternate years. Tu Th, 9. Prerequisite: courses 1A and 1B, or the consent of the instructor.

115A-115B. The Principles and Law of Public Administration.

Professor BARROWS and Associate Professor REED. The development of public administration, especially in the United States: the organization of administrative departments, obligations of administrative officers, and the methods by which administrative action is reviewed and controlled.

1 hr., throughout the year. Tu, 9.

*Not to be given 1915-16.

GRADUATE COURSES

The scope of instruction in this department includes modern governments, their administration and internal politics; international relations, particularly of the Far East and of Spanish America and the Caribbean; the government of dependencies; state government and administration; local and municipal government in Europe and America; political theories; adminstrative and legislative methods and problems. Courses in public law are offered in the department of jurisprudence, and candidates for the doctor's degree who offer political science as a major are expected to take courses in Constitutional Law of the United States and International Law, with study of leading cases. Candidates for the master's degree may receive credit toward that degree for any upper division or graduate courses. The department will recommend for certification as high school teachers of government, students who have satisfactorily completed courses in national, state, local, and municipal government, including one graduate course.

The department is prepared to direct advanced study and research in the following fields: Administrative development in state and municipal government in the western states of the Union; comparative American legislation; the government of the Mexican Republic; the government of American dependencies; international relations in the Pacific; the government of England.

The University Library is equipped for the study of the government and politics of Western Europe, the United States and Spanish America. Its collections are being added to for the study of the Far East and the Pacific. The Bancroft Library contains extensive materials, which are being increased, for study of the institutions and politics of Spanish North America.

Advanced students have the privileges of the Political Science Seminar Room in the University Library.

201A. Political Science.

Dr. ELLIOTT.

A reading course in political writings of first importance: Aristotle's Politics; Macchiavelli's Prince and Discourses; Hobbe's Leviathan; Spinoza's Tractatus Theologico-Politicus; Locke's Essay on Government; Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws; Rousseau's Social Contract; and other writings of the eighteenth century.

3 hrs., first half-year. Tu Th S, 9.

201B. Political Science.

Dr. ELLIOTT.

The reaction against the doctrines of the eighteenth century, as represented by the writings of De Maistre and Burke; Godwin's Political Justice; Bentham's Fragment on Government, and Principles of Morals and Legislation; Austin's Province of Jurisprudence; Mill's Essay on Liberty and Representative Government; the social and political doctrines of August Comte; Bagehot's Physics and Politics; exponents of scientific anarchism and of state socialism; modern writers, chosen according to preference of the class. 3 hrs., second half-year. Tu Th S, 9.

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