10 



ANNUAL REPORT OF THE 



TABLE II. 



Courses 

 1915-1916 



Gr. 



Sen. 



Jun. 



Soph. 



Fresh. 



Unci. 



Spec. 



Trop. 

 Med. 



Total 



Zoology 1 



2 



2 



6 



9 



11 



5 



— 



1 



36 





' 2 



— 



7 



18 



11 



— 



3 



— 



— 



39 





3 



— 



— 



1 



1 



1 



2 



1 



— 



6 





4 



1 



1 



3 













5 





5a 



1 



1 



2 













4 





1 146 



1 



2 















3 





17 



— 



1 















1 





' 20a 



1 

















1 





' 20c 



2 

















2 





1 20g 



— 



1 















1 



Sums 



8 



15 



30 



21 



12 



10 



1 



1 



98 



Reserve Officers Training Corps, and likewise of those credited 

 with the courses on a "short year" on account of war service are 

 indicated in separate columns of Table I, which, as usual, shows 

 the number of students from each class, or other division of the 

 University, enrolled in each of the Harvard courses. Table II 

 gives like information about the number of students from Radcliffe 

 College. 



The enrollments in Zoology 1 and Zoology 3 were larger than in 

 any previous year, and about thirty-five applicants were excluded 

 from Zoology 1 for want of adequate laboratory accommodations. 

 The assistants in the several courses were : — Zoology 1, Harvard : — 

 chief-assistants, Messrs. S. Hecht and D. E. Minnich; sub- 

 assistants, Messrs. J. P. Baumberger, S. W. Chase, A. B. Dawson, 

 H. Jordan and P. H. Pope; Radcliffe: — chief -assistant, Mr. S. W. 

 Chase, sub-assistant, Mr. A. B. Dawson. Zoology 3, Harvard: — 

 chief-assistant, Mr. J. M. D. Olmsted; sub-assistants, Messrs. 

 S. W. Chase and S. Hecht; Radcliffe: — assistant, Mr. A. B. 

 Dawson. Zoology 4, Harvard : — assistant, Mr. J. M. D. Olmsted; 

 Radcliffe: — assistant, Mr. A. B. Dawson. Zoology 5, Harvard 

 and Radcliffe: — assistant, Mr. A. C. Walton. Zoology 8, assist- 

 ant, Mr. L. C. Dunn. 



The courses designated as Zoology 7a, 7b, 7c, and 10 were given 

 at the Bussey Institution, the others in Cambridge. Eight of 

 the students in Zoology 8 took laboratory work, the others were 

 instead assigned reading with weekly conferences. Of the students 



