MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 



11 



TABLE II. 



Courses 1914-1915 



Gr. 



Sen. 



Jun. 



Soph. 



Fresh. 



Unci. 



Sp. 



Total 



Zoology 1 





2 



5 



15 



32 



3 



6 



63 



2 





11 



19 



16 



22 



6 



7 



81 



3 



1 







1 



1 







3 



5a 





1 



1 











2 



la 



1 



1 





1 







1 



4 



146 



2 



4 













6 



17 





1 













1 



20c 



1 







' 







1 



2 



20e 







1 











1 



20<7 





1 













1 



Sums 



5 



21 



26 



33 



55 



9 



15 



164 



The laboratory accommodations for Zoology 1, given by Pro- 

 fessor Parker, continue to be barely adequate for the number of 

 students applying for this course. Any further increase in numbers 

 will result in turning away applicants unless a larger laboratory 

 can be secured. The chief assistants in the Harvard course were 

 Messrs. L. B. Arey and H. G. Coar, the sub-assistants Messrs. 

 J. P. Baumberger, H. E. Hamlin, H. R. Hunt, H. Jordan, and 

 D. E. Minnich. In Radcliffe the chief assistant was Mr. H. D. 

 Fish and the sub-assistants were Messrs. J. P. Baumberger and 

 A. C. Redfield. 



Professor Castle had as his assistant in Zoology 2, Mr. H. D. 

 Fish. The lectures were attended by a number of advanced 

 students not specializing in Zoology and not enrolled. On author- 

 ity of the Committee on instruction in Harvard, Zoology 2 was 

 given in Radcliffe by Dr. C. C. Little and Mr. H. D. Fish jointly. 



This is the third year since the experiment was undertaken of 

 reducing the work on the Comparative anatomy of vertebrates 

 (Zoology 3) from a full course to a half course. Professor Rand 

 is of the opinion, strengthened by each year's experience, that "the 

 time is too short for a really adequate treatment of the subject," 

 and in this opinion I concur. The chief assistant in this course 

 was Mr. A. C. Redfield, the sub-assistant Mr. H. R. Hunt. In the 

 Radcliffe course Mr. D. E. Minnich was the assistant. 



Zoology 4 under Assistant Professor Rand is consciously being 

 slowly changed in the direction of comparative histology, it being 

 the instructor's belief that such a course is needed by prospective 

 medical students as well as by students of Zoology. The assistant 

 in the course was Mr. A. C. Redfield. 



