VITA 



Frederick Eberson was born in New York City, February 10, 

 1892. He received his elementary and high school education in the 

 city of Brooklyn, N. Y., and his first college training at the College 

 of the City of New York, where he took the degree of Bachelor of 

 Science in June, 1912. In October, 1912, he was appointed Research 

 Assistant in the Department of Sanitary Science and Public Health 

 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston. Thence he 

 matriculated under the Faculty of Medicine and Pure Science at 

 Columbia University, specializing in Bacteriology and Biological 

 Chemistry, and received his Master degree in June, 1914. In Septem- 

 ber, 1914, he was appointed Research Fellow and Assistant Instructor 

 in the Department of Bacteriology and Hygiene at the Iowa State 

 College, where he specialized in Bacteriology and Pathology and 

 obtained his Master of Science degree in June, 1915. In September 

 of the same year he was appointed Research Scholar under the tenure 

 of a President's University Scholarship at Columbia University and 

 continued work in the Department of Bacteriology until 1916, when 

 he was appointed Research Bacteriologist to the North Manchurian 

 Plague Prevention Service, Harbin, China, and was placed in charge 

 of the Division of Bacteriology and Pathology. Toward the end of 

 1917 he was appointed to the staff of the Rockefeller Institute for 

 Medical Research in the Department of Bacteriology and Pathology. 



PUBLICATIONS 



1912 The Effect of Drying on the Viability of Bacteria (with C. E. A. 



Winslow) Proceedings Soc. for Exp. Biol. and Medicine, May 5. 

 1915 A Bacteriologic Study of Secondary Invaders in Hog Cholera. Jour- 

 nal of Infectious Diseases, Vol. 17, No. 2. 



Separation of the Antibody Fractions in Hog Cholera Serum. Jour- 

 nal of Infectious Diseases, Vol. 17, No. 2. 

 A Milk-Borne Paratyphoid Outbreak in Ames, Iowa (with M. Levine). 



Journal of Infectious Diseases, Vol. 18, No. 2. 

 1917 Plague Poisons and Virulence. Journal of Infectious Diseases, Vol. 



20, No. 2; National Medical Journal of China, Vol. 3, No. 1. 

 Transmission of Pneumonic and Septicemic Plague among Marmots. 

 Journal of Infectious Diseases, Vol. 20, No. 2; National Medical 

 Journal of China, Vol. 3, No. 2; English Journal of Hygiene, 

 Vol. 16, No. 1. 



