CELLS AND J ISSUES 1 j., 



live system, which has to do witli the contiiiuaiice of Hfc It is on 

 the structural development of these systems, ({('velojx'd to ;i greater 

 or lesser extent in all of the many-celled animals, that the various 

 groups of the metazoa are classified. 



SUGGESTED READINGS 



Dahlgren, U., and Kepner, W. A., Textbook of the Principles of Animal 

 Histology, The Macmillan Co., 1908. Chs. I, II. and \'. 



Holmau, K. M., and Robbins, W. W., Elements of Jiotany, 2iul cd., John 

 Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1928. Ch. III. 



Maximow, A. A., Textbook of Histology, edited by W. Bloom, W. B. Saunders 

 Co., 1930. 

 Rather technical. Chapters I and II useful. 



Stohr, Philip, A Textbook of Histology, .')th ctl. (arranged by J. L. Bremer), 

 P. Blakiston's Son & Co., 193(3. 

 Chapters I and II make excellent reading. 



Wilson, E. B., The Cell in Development and Heredity, 3rd cd., The Mac- 

 millan Co., 1925. 



The most authoritative text on the cell. Rather advanced, but with 

 excellent figures. Chapters I and II especially us(>ful. 



