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122B. Enological Laboratory II. Mr. BONNET. Microscopical and chemical examination of wine and by-products of wine-making and laboratory study of the processes of wine handling.

7 hrs., second half-year; 3 units. Lecture, Th, 4; laboratory, Tu Th, 1-4. Prerequisite: course 122A.

The following courses are designed for students who have finished the corresponding undergraduate courses and who desire to study special problems. The hours and units are to be arranged with the instructors concerned.

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ANATOMY

HERBERT MCLEAN EVANS, B.S., M.D., Professor of Anatomy.
ROBERT O. MOODY, B.S., M.D., Associate Professor of Anatomy.
GEORGE W. CORNER, A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Anatomy.
PHILIP E. SMITH, B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Instructor in Anatomy.
FELIX H. HURNI, B.S., Instructor in Anatomy.

KATHERINE J. Scott, A.B., M.D., Assistant in Anatomy.

EDWARD F. MILLER, Technical Assistant.

The department is equipped for investigation in the fields of systematic anatomy, neurology, histology and embryology. The equipment includes a departmental library and facilities for experimental work.

MICROSCOPIC ANATOMY

101. Histology and Microscopic Organology.

Professor EVANS, Assistant Professor CORNER, and Dr. SCOTT. First year, first half-year; 3 laboratory periods, 3 lectures a week; 6 units. M W, 8-12; F, 8-11; S, 11-12.

103. Organs of Special Sense and Neurology.

Assistant Professor CORNER and Dr. SCOTT.

First year, second half-year; 2 lectures, 1 laboratory period a week; 3 units. F, 8-9 and 1-5.

2. Histological Technique.

Mr. MILLER.

An elective course for those who wish to familiarize themselves with the special technical methods in embryological and histological investigations. Hours to be arranged.

SYSTEMATIC HUMAN ANATOMY

102. General Human Anatomy.

A study of the architecture and structure of the human body. Lectures and laboratory demonstrations with models and prepared human dissections. Designed for non-medical students. 3 units. Second half-year. Lectures, Tu Th, 8; laboratory, S, 8-11.

105. Head and Neck.

Dr. SMITH.

First half-year, Tu Th, 8-12; S, 8-11; M Tu W Th F, 1-5; 3% units.

103. Arm and Thorax.

Associate Professor MOODY and Mr. HURNI. First half-year, Tu Th, 8-12; S, 8-11; M Tu W Th F, 1-5. 3% units.

107. Leg and Abdomen.

Associate Professor MOODY and Mr. HURNI. First half-year, Tu Th, 8-12; S, 8-11; M Tu W Th F, 1-5. 3% units.

108. Regional and Topographical Anatomy.

Associate Professor MOODY and Dr. SCOTT. Living models, special dissections, and sections of the body are used in this course, to enable the student to become more familiar with structural relations and to assemble information obtained in preceding dissections. Students who are accepted for course 210 may substitute that course for course 108.

First half-year, section I, Tu, 8; `F, 8–11; II, Tu, 9; W, 1–4. 3 units. Prerequisite: course 105, 106, and 107.

109. Anatomy for Physicians and Advanced Students.

Professor EVANS and Associate Professor MOODY.

Hours to be arranged.

GRADUATE COURSES

210. Original Investigation.

Professor EVANS and Members of the Staff. Students and others who are prepared to undertake research in any of the anatomical sciences will be given facilities and encouragement by members of the staff. Time devoted by the majority of the second-year class to course 108 may be applied here by those specially qualified. Hours to be arranged.

211. Seminar.

Topics will be discussed by the staff and those electing the course. For the year 1915-16, topics will be chosen from the field of human and comparative embryology. Hours to be arranged.

ANTHROPOLOGY

*A. L. KROEBER, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Anthropology and Curator of the Anthropological Museum.

F. W. PUTNAM, Sc.D., Professor of Anthropology, Emeritus.

DAVID P. BARROWS, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Political Science.

T. T. WATERMAN, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Anthropology.

EDWARD W. GIFFORD, Associate Curator of the Anthropological Museum. W. D. WALLIS, M.A., Instructor in Anthropology.

Teaching Fellow in Anthropology.

Students who graduate with anthropology as a major subject must have taken courses 1A, 1B, 103A, 103в. Students who expect to take only one course in anthropology during their college career are advised to elect courses 1A, 1B.

LOWER DIVISION COURSES

1A. General Anthropology: Origin and Antiquity of Man.

Assistant Professor WATERMAN, Mr. WALLIS,
Mr. GIFFORD, and Mr.

Man as an animal; heredity; races and their distribution; earliest culture.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 9, and section meetings.

1B. General Anthropology: Origin and Development of Civilization.

Assistant Professor WATERMAN, Mr. WALLIS,
Mr. GIFFORD, and Mr.

The source and growth of institutions, arts, customs, industries, language, and religion.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 9, and section meetings.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

103A. Ethnography.

MAJOR COURSES

Assistant Professor WATERMAN.

The native tribes and nations of the New World. The distribution of races in Asia: the three great centers of civilization. Lectures and conferences.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F. 4.

* Absent on leave, 1915-16.

103B. Ethnography.

Assistant Professor WATERMAN.

The white peoples of North Africa; the negro tribes and their status; dwarf black races. The three races of Europe; the population and languages of the political divisions; the history of the earliest European civilization. The peoples of the Philippines and the south Pacific. Lectures and conferences.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 4.

104A. Antiquity of Man.

Mr. WALLIS.

Evolution; transitional forms; the earliest human remains; influences of heredity and environment; use and disuse of bodily structure. 3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 10.

104B. Prehistoric Archaeology. Mr. WALLIS. The rudiments of civilization in the stone ages: implements, geological antiquity, associated animals; the bronze age: lake dwellings, growth of culture; the iron age and transition to the historical period; prehistoric trading and trade routes.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 10.

105A. Ethnology of North America.

Assistant Professor WATERMAN.

The native peoples and indigenous civilizations of America north of Mexico. Lectures, recitations, and the preparation of a paper.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 2. Open to students who have received a grade of at least two in courses 1A, 1B.

105B. Ethnology of Mexico.

Assistant Professor WATERMAN.

The native peoples of Mexico and Central America, past and present, and the more important archaeological sites. Lectures, recitations, and the preparation of a paper.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 2. Open to students who have received a grade of at least two in courses 1A, 1B.

124. Primitive Religions.

Mr. WALLIS. Magic and religion; the function of religion in social life. New religions: messianic manifestations; religious experience of the individual. Ceremony and ritual; prayer and offering; ethics; the sacred and the supernatural.

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

127. Social Organization.

Mr. WALLIS.

Kinship: relationship terms; the clan. The family: marriage; exogamy. Totemism; marriage classes; marriage rites; position of woman.

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

*130. Types of Linguistic Structure.

Associate Professor KROEBER.

The nature and peculiarities of speech, based on inductive examination of languages of different type.

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

*Not to be given, 1915-16.

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