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HYGIENE

ROBERT T. LEGGE, Ph.G., M.D., F.A.C.S., Professor of Hygiene and University Physician.

WILBUR A. SAWYER, A.B., M.D., Secretary, California State Board of Health.

JOHN N. FORCE, M.D., M.S., Gr.P.H., Assistant Professor of Epidemiology. ROMILDA P. MEADS, B.S., M.D., Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physician for Women.

JAMES GORDON CUMMING, M.D., M.S.P.H., Dr.P.H., Director, Bureau of Communicable Diseases, State Hygienic Laboratory.

ALBERT M. MEADS, B.S., M.D., Lecturer in Hygiene and Associate University Physician.

KATE GOMPERTZ, B.S., M.D., Physician for Women.

MILTON H. SCHUTZ, A.B., M.D., Ophthalmologist in University Infirmary. RUTH C. RISDON, B.S., M.D., Assistant Physician for Women.

CHARLES L. MCVEY, A.B., M.D., Physician for Men.

RUBY L. CUNNINGHAM, M.D., M.S., Instructor in Hygiene and Assistant Physician for Women.

ALVIN POWELL, B.S., M.D., Roentgenologist.

GERALD FREDERICK STOODLEY, D.D.S., Dental Surgeon.

BENJAMIN GERRY NEFF, D.D.S., Dental Surgeon.

FRANK L. KELLY, M.D., M.S., Gr.P.H., Assistant Epidemiologist, State Board of Health.

LAURA CAIRNS, M.S., Assistant in Hygiene.

IDA M. STEVENS, M.A., Assistant in Hygiene.

ETHEL SHERMAN, Superintendent of Infirmary.

Laboratory fees are $5 for courses 102 and 108; $5 additional deposit is required in each laboratory course and will be refunded, less deduction for breakage, at the end of the half-year..

Professional Course in Public Health.-The professional course in public health comprises a curriculum in medicine, sanitary engineering, hygiene, economics, political science, veterinary science, entomology, zoology, and nutrition, the completion of which leads to the degree of Graduate in Public Health (Gr.P.H.). For details of the curriculum the student is referred to the Circular of Information, Academic Departments.

Honor-students in the Upper Division.-Students in the honor-group may receive honors at graduation either

1. Upon presenting a satisfactory report on a field investigation of a public health activity, or,

2. Upon a thesis based on a laboratory investigation, or,

3. Upon the completion of a course of reading on a special topic in public health.

Candidates for honors must prepare a programme at the beginning of their candidacy in consultation with the Committee on Public Health Study-Lists. In most cases the junior year will be spent in preliminary reading. In the senior year, those students who desire to take honors on the basis of reading alone will prepare for a final oral examination; while those who desire to engage in laboratory or field investigations will prepare a thesis, or report embodying their results.

The work done by honor-students must be consistently of high quality. The committee will recommend the exclusion from the honor-group of all students who do not maintain each half-year an average of at least 60 per cent of first and second grades in all their courses and who do not complete their courses in public health with high credit.

Candidates must complete 24 units in major courses chosen from the first two years of curriculum A in Public Health, and must include in their studies 12 units of major courses in hygiene.

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2 hrs., first half-year. M W, 11. Prescribed for all undergraduate women during their first year of residence.

3. Elementary Epidemiology.

Assistant Professor FORCE.

Communicable diseases now prevalent in California; their control through individual and community endeavor. General problems of food, water, insect, contact, and carrier control. Lectures, readings, recitations, and papers.

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

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

FREE ELECTIVE COURSES

4. Domestic Hygiene.

Miss CAIRNS.

Lectures on home sanitation. Primarily for students in home economics. 2 hrs., first half-year. Tu Th, 11.

5. Home Care of the Sick.

Assistant Professor MEADS, Dr. GOMPERTZ, Dr. RISDON, Dr. CUN-
NINGHAM, and Miss SHERMAN.

A course for women in general therapeutic measures of use in caring . for individuals at home. Instruction in First Aid will be included.

Class limited to seniors.

2 hrs., second half-year. Sec. I, Tu Th, 9; II, Tu Th, 10; III, Tu Th, 2.

6. Industrial Hygiene. Professor LEGGE. For engineering, commerce, and forestry students. General problems in the control of epidemic and occupational diseases and sanitation of labor camps and factories, accident prevention, employees' welfare and compensation laws. Lectures, recitations, papers, and field

surveys.

2 hrs., second half-year. M W, 11.

7. First Aid.

Dr. MEADS.

A course for men in the recognition and emergency treatment of common accidents. Class limited to eighty.

2 hrs., second half-year; 1 unit. Tu Th, 10.

8. Mine Sanitation.

Professor LEGGE.

For students in mining. Sanitation of mines; methods of rescue and accident treatment.

1 hr., second half-year. Tu, 4.

MAJOR COURSES

101. Child Hygiene.

Professor LEGGE.

Primarily for students who intend to become teachers, but open also to students of economics. The hygiene of early child life; the cause and prevention of infant mortality; health supervision of school children and the practical sanitation of schools. Lectures, readings, recitations, papers, and field assignments.

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

102. The Teaching of Hygiene.

Dr. CUNNINGHAM and Miss STEVENS.

A laboratory course in methods of presenting the elements of hygiene and sanitation to children in graded schools. Primarily for persons preparing to teach hygiene.

6 hrs., first half-year; 2 units. Sec. I, Tu Th, 8-11; II, Tu Th, 1–4.

104. Health Surveys.

Assistant Professor FORCE.

Lectures, readings, individual reports and class field assignments on public health administration and procedures.

5 hrs., second half-year; 3 units. M W, 9; S, 9-12. Prerequisite: Bacteriology 1 and Chemistry 1A-1B.

107. Advanced Epidemiology.

Assistant Professor FORCE.

Lectures, readings, and individual reports on communicable diseases. 3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 9. Prerequisite: Bacteriology 1 and Chemistry 1A-1B.

108A-108B. Public Health Laboratory.

Assistant Professor FORCE and Miss STEVENS.

Instruction in standard methods of examination of air, water, and milk. Laboratory practice in the detection of communicable diseases.

9 hrs., throughout the year; 3 units each half-year. M W F, 1-4. Prerequisite: Bacteriology 1 and Chemistry 1A-1B.

GRADUATE COURSE

201. Research in Hygiene. Assistant Professor FORCE and Miss STEVENS. Special problems worked out in the field or in the laboratory of hygiene. Credit value to be fixed in each case.

IRRIGATION

BERNARD A. ETCHEVERRY, B.S., Professor of Irrigation Engineering.
SIDNEY T. HARDING, B.S., Assistant Professor of Irrigation.

Courses 101, 102A, 102B, 103, 104, and 112 are designed to meet the needs of engineering students who wish to make a specialty of irrigation. They appear as part of the course in Irrigation Engineering in the College of Civil Engineering. Courses 101, 104, 105A, 105B, 113 and 115 are designed for students in the College of Agriculture. Courses 101, 103, 113, are also open to other students who have junior standing.

Students will be recommended for honors on the same basis as in civil engineering.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

Assistant Professor HARDING.

101. Irrigation Institutions and Economics.

Water rights, irrigation institutions and organizations.

3 hrs., second half-year. Sec. I, M W F, 10, for engineering students only; Sec. II, M W F, 8, open to non-engineering students. Prerequisite: course 103 or 113.

102A. Irrigation Engineering.

Professor ETCHEVERRY.

Investigation and general planning of irrigation systems; conveyance of water; silt problems; designs of canals, tunnels, flumes, pipe-lines, inverted siphons.

2 hrs., second half-year. Tu Th, 8. Prerequisite: Civil Engineering 110 or Mechanical Engineering 103A.

*102B. Irrigation Engineering.

Professor ETCHEVERRY.

Principles of design of diversion weirs, headworks, wasteways, sand boxes, falls, checkgates, lateral headgates, road crossing, special types of distribution systems, measuring devices.

2 hrs., first half-year. Tu Th, 9. Prerequisite: course 102A.

103. Agricultural Use of Water and Irrigation Practice.

Professor ETCHEVERRY.

Sources of water supply; disposal of irrigation water applied to the soil; water requirement of crops; duty of water; preparation of land and methods of irrigation; small pumping plants.

2 hrs., first half-year; 2 units. Tu Th, 11. For engineering students, but open to other students excepting those in the College of Agriculture, for whom course 113 is offered. Prerequisite: junior standing.

*Not to be given, 1917-18.

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