
MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 13 








TABLE II. 
Courses 1913-1914 Gr. Sen. Jun. Soph. | Fresh. Spec. Unel. Total 
Zodlogy 1 Z 4 8 20 4 1 39 
“cc 3 1 2 3 
i 4 1 3 1 1 6 
5b 1 4 1 6 
oa 6 1 1 
“8 14a 1 1 3 1 6 
re 17 i, 1 a 
he 20c 1 1 1 3 
= 209 1 1 / 2 
Sums 3 aa |: oy age i Fe) gg 


The increase in the number of students in Zodlogy I, given by 
Professor Parker, taxed the laboratory facilities, even with an 
increase in the number of sections, almost to their limit. The chief 
assistants in the Harvard courses were Messrs. L. B. Arey and 
H. D. Fish; the subassistants Messrs. A. M. Eisenberg, H. R. 
Hunt, and F. X. Williams. The assistants in Radcliffe were 
Messrs. D. H. Wenrich and P. W. Whiting. As the tables show, 
the classes most largely represented were the Freshman and Sopho- 
more. 
Zoélogy 2, by Professor Castle, was given without laboratory 
work, and to Harvard students only. More students from the 
Junior and Sophomore classes were enrolled than from the other 
classes. 
In Zodlogy 3, by Assistant Professor Rand, the laboratory work 
was limited, as in the preceding year, to the dissection of a fish, 
an amphibian, and a mammal. The assistant in the Harvard 
course was Dr. B. M. Patten; but during April and May his place 
was taken for a part of the time by Mr. W. J. Crozier, and for the 
remainder of the time by Mr. S. F. Haines. The Radcliffe assis- 
tant was Mr. L. B. Arey. Zodlogy 4 was also given, as usual, by 
Assistant Professor Rand, and to Radcliffe students as well as to 
Harvard students. The assistant in the Harvard course was Dr. 
B. M. Patten. 
Zoélogy 5b and Zodlogy 12 were given by Professor Mark, the 
assistant in both courses being Mr. A. C. Redfield. 
The course in Advanced Anatomy of Vertebrates, with Special 
Reference to the Segmentation of the Head, (Zodlogy 6) by Pro- 
