October 23, 1914] 



SCIENCE 



587 



Group VII. Sanitary Engineering 



Sanitary Engineering. Professor G. C. Whipple 

 and Assistants. 



Sanitary Engineering — Summer Ckiurse. Pro- 

 fessor G. O. Whipple and Assistants. 



Water Supply Engineering. Professor G. C. 

 Whipple. 



Sewerage Engineering. Professor G. C. Whipple. 



Limnology. Professor G. C. Whipple, Dr. J. W. 

 M. Bunker and Assistants. 



Sanitary Eeseareh Laboratory. Mr. M. C. 

 Whipple. 



Eural Sanitation. Dr. J. W. M. Bunker. 



Hydraulic and Sanitary Engineering. Professor 

 Dwight Porter. 



Advanced Hydraulic and Sanitary Engineering. 

 Professor Dwight Porter. 



Engineering of Water and Sewage Purification. 

 Professor Dwight Porter. 



Theory and Practise of Water and Sewage Puri- 

 fication. Professor E. S. Weston. 



Groiip VIII. Demography 

 Demography. Professor G. C. Whipple and As- 

 sistants. 

 Sanitary Biometrics. Professor S. M. Gunn. 

 "Vital and Sanitary St8,tistics. Professor D. E. 



SPECIAL COURSES AND LECTURES 



Group I. Preventive Medicine 

 Infant Mortality. Professor J. L. Morse. 

 Genetics and Eugenics. Professor W. E. Castle. 

 Social Service Work. Professor E. O. Cabot and 



Miss Ida Cannon. 

 Tropical Dermatology. Professor E. P. Strong 



and Dr. H. P. Towle. 



Group II. Personal Hygiene 

 School Hygiene. Dr. T. P. Harrington. 

 Mental Hygiene. Professor E. E. Southard and 



Associates. 

 Venereal Prophylaxis. Professor E. H. Nichols. 

 Tropical Sunlight. Professor Theodore Lyman. 

 Posture and Deformities. Professor E. W. 



liovett. 

 Ocular Hygiene. Dr. P. H. VerhoefE. 

 Oral Prophylaxis. Professor W. H. Potter. 

 Prevention of Diseases of the Ear. Dr. H. P. 



Mosher. 



Group III. PutUe Health Administration 

 Sanitary Law — ^Legal Powers of Health OfScers. 

 Professor Eugene Wambaugh. 



Medical Inspection of Immigrants. Dr. M. V. 



Safford. 

 Municipal Sanitation. Dr. C. V. Chapin. 



Group IV. Sanitary Biology and Sanitary Chem- 

 istry 

 Venomous Animals. Dr. Thomas Barbour. 

 Poisonous Plants of the Tropics. Professor W. J. 

 V. Osterhout. 



Climatology. Professor E. DeC. Ward. 



Group VI. Communicable Diseases 

 Tuberculosis. Dr. J. B. Hawes, 2d. 



Group IX. Medical and Other Sciences 

 The following courses are also open to students 

 registered in the School for Health Officers: 

 At Harvard Medical School: 



Anatomy, gross and microscopical. 



Embryology. 



Physiology. 



Biological Chemistry. 



Pathology. 



Bacteriology. 

 At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology: 



General Bacteriology. Professor S. G. Pres- 

 eott. 



General Physiology. Professor P. G. Stiles. 



Physiological Laboratory. Dr. E. 0. Howe. 



Vertebrate Anatomy. Professor E. P. Bige- 

 low. 

 At Harvard University: 



Elementary Bacteriology. Dr. J. W. M. 

 Bunker. 



This intellectual bill of fare is not as com- 

 plicated as it looks, but the long list of courses 

 shows the opportunities offered by the educa- 

 tional institutions in Boston for students of 

 public health. In fact, the resources of one 

 of the oldest and best medical schools and the 

 first great engineering school of the country 

 are available, and to these should be added 

 the opportunities presented for cooperation 

 with the Massachusetts State Board of 

 Health, the Board of Health of the City of 

 Boston, the various hospitals in the city, and 

 the excellent medical and engineering li- 

 braries. 



It is not the food which is put upon the 

 table, but that which is eaten and digested, 

 which nourishes. It is not what the student 

 has opportunity to learn, but what he does 



