320 REPORTS ON THE STATE OF SCIENCE, ETC. 



39. HoGBEN, L. : The Nature of Living Matter (1930). 



40. Holmes, S. J. : Human Genetics and its Social Import (1936). 



41. Huxley, J., and Haddon, A. C. : We Europeans (i935)- 



42. Jennings, H. S. : The Biological Basis of Human Nature (1930)- 



43. Johnson, C. S. : The Negro in American Civilisation (1930). 



44. Leakley, L. S. B. : Adam's Ancestors (i934)- 



45. Leuba, J. H. : God or Man P (i934)- 



46. Linton, R. : The Study of Man (1936). 



47. LoRAND, S. (Edit.) : Psychoanalysis To-day (1933). 



48. LoRiMER, F., and Osborn, F. : Dynamics of Population (1934)- 



49. Mair, L. F. : Native Policies in Africa (1936). 



50. Miller, H. A. : The Beginnings of Tomorrow (1933). 



51. Muller, H. J. : Out of the Night (1936). 



52. Mumford, L. : Technics and Civilisation (1934). 



53. Newsholme, a. : The Story of Modern Preventive Medicine (1929). 



54. Nicolai, G. F. : The Biology of War (1919)- 



55. Oldham, J. H. : White and Black in Africa (1930)- 



56. Orr, J. B., et al. : What Science Stands For {i937)- 



57. Pailthorpe, G. W. : What we Put in Prison (1932). 



58. Peers, R. : Adult Education in Practice (1934). 



59. PiTTARD, E. : Race and History (1926). 



60. Popenoe, p., and Johnson, R. H. : Applied Eugenics (1933). 



61. Reuter, E. B. : Race Mixture : Intermarriage and Miscegenation (1931)- 



62. Ritchie, A. D. : The Natural History of Mind (1936). 



63. Roberts, H. : Everyman in Health and Sickness (1935). 



64. Robson, J. M. : Recent Advances in Sex and Reproductive Physiology (i934)- 



65. Royal Institute of International Affairs : World Agriculture : an 

 International Survey (1932). 



66. Russell, E. J. : The Farm and the Nation (1933). 



67. Russell, E. S. : The Behaviour of Animals (1934)- 



68. The Interpretation of Development and Heredity (1930). 



69. Sand, R. : Health and Human Progress (1935). 



70. ScHWESiNGER, G. C. : Heredity and Environment (1933). 



71. Shapera, I. (Edit.) : Western Civilisation and the Natives of South Africa 



(1934)- 



72. Stapledon, R. G. : The Land : Now and Tomorrow (i935)- 



73. Stephen, K. : Psychoanalysis and Medicine (1933). 



74. Sullivan, J. W. N. : Limitations of Science (1933). 



75. ToPLEY, W. W. C. : An Outline of Immunity (1933). 



76. Toynbee, a. J. : A Study of History (1934)- 



77. Venn, J. A. : The Foundations of Agricultural Economics (1933). 



78. Waddington, C. H. : How Animals Develop (i935)- 



79. Wells, H. G., Huxley, J., and Wells, G. P. : The Science of Life (1931)- 



80. Whitehead, A. N. : Religion in the Making (1927). 



81. Adventures of Ideas (1933). 



82. Science and the Modern World (1926). 



References to smaller books and to articles in journals will be given during 

 the lectures. 



Valuable adjuncts are the Encyclopaedia Britannica, a good Dictionary, 

 a large scale Atlas and the Statesman's Yearbook. 



Prof. W. B. Brierley. 



(Reading.) 



BIOLOGY. 

 Three Year Course in Animal Biology. 



The following suggestions for a course extending over three years fall 

 conveniently into 3 sections. 



I. The establishment of a sound basis in functional and comparative 

 morphology. 



