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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF CHARLES-EDWARD ARMORY WINSLOW* 1896 1 Magda; a Play in Four Acts. Transl. of Heimath by Hermann Sudermann. Boston, Lamson, Wolffe & Co.; 1899, New York & London, S. French, Ltd. 1901 2 Typhoid fever at Newport, Rhode Island, in 1900 and its relation to defective sanitation. Techn. Quart., 14, 110-23. 3 The bacteriological analysis of water and its interpretation. J. New England Water Works Asso., 15, 459-82. 1902 4 History of the Prince School in the City of Boston, 1872-1902. Boston, Publ. by the Prince School Asso. 5 (wvith Miss M. P. Hunnewell): Streptococci characteristic of sewage and sewage- polluted waters apparently not hitherto reported in America. Science, n.s., 15, 1-2. 6 (with A. G. Woodman and Paul Hansen): A study of self-purification in the Sudbury river. Techn. Quart., 15, 105-26. 7 (with W. T. Sedgwick): I. Experiments on the effect of freezing and other low temperatures upon the viability of the bacillus of typhoid fever, with considera- tions regarding ice as a vehicle of infectious disease. II. Statistical studies on the seasonal prevalence of typhoid fever in various countries, and its relation to seasonal temperature. Mem. Am. Acad. Arts & Sci., 12, 469-577. 8 A statistical study of the fatality of typhoid fever at different seasons. Quart. PubI. Am. Stat. Asso., n.s., 8, 103-25. 9 (with Miss M. P. Hunnewell): A study of the distribution of the colon bacillus of Escherich and of the sewage streptococci of Houston in polluted and unpolluted waters. J. Med. Res., 8 (n.s. 3), 502-32. 10 (with W. T. Sedgwick): On the relative importance of public water supplies and other factors in the causation of typhoid fever. Trans. Am. Pub. Health Asso., 28, 288-95. 1903 11 The war against disease. Atlantic Monthly, 91, 43-52. 12 The case for vaccination. Science, n.s., 18, 101-07. 13 (with C. P. Nibecker): The significance of bacteriological methods in sanitary water analysis. Techn. Quart., 16, 227-39. 14 The engineer in preventive medicine. Pub. Works, 2, 1-7. 15 The occurrence of the colon bacillus on the hands. J. Med. Res., 10 (n.s. 5), 463-71. 1904 16 (with D. M. Belcher): Changes in the bacterial flora of sewage during storage. J. Infect. Dis., 1, 170-92. 17 The sanitary dangers of certain occupations. J. Massachusetts Asso. Bds. Health, 14, 1-9. 18 (with P. Hansen): Some statistics of garbage disposal for the larger American cities in 1902. Am. Pub. Health Asso. Rep., 29, 27. 19 (with W. L. Underwood): The sanitary problems relating to the Fresh Pond Marshes and Alewife Brook. Appendix No. 2 to Report on Improvement of the Upper Mystic River and Alewife Brook by John R. Freeman. Boston, Metro- politan Park Comm., Sept. 21, 95-107. Prepared by Eleanor M. Watkins and Jean H. Nelbach.

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Page 1: BIBLIOGRAPHY CHARLES-EDWARD ARMORY WINSLOW*€¦ · 782 YALE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGY ANDMEDICINE 67 Technology and the public health. Advance NewEngland, 2, 188-92. 68 (with Earle B. Phelps):

BIBLIOGRAPHY OF

CHARLES-EDWARD ARMORY WINSLOW*

18961 Magda; a Play in Four Acts. Transl. of Heimath by Hermann Sudermann. Boston,

Lamson, Wolffe & Co.; 1899, New York & London, S. French, Ltd.1901

2 Typhoid fever at Newport, Rhode Island, in 1900 and its relation to defectivesanitation. Techn. Quart., 14, 110-23.

3 The bacteriological analysis of water and its interpretation. J. New England WaterWorks Asso., 15, 459-82.

19024 History of the Prince School in the City of Boston, 1872-1902. Boston, Publ. by

the Prince School Asso.5 (wvith Miss M. P. Hunnewell): Streptococci characteristic of sewage and sewage-

polluted waters apparently not hitherto reported in America. Science, n.s., 15, 1-2.6 (with A. G. Woodman and Paul Hansen): A study of self-purification in the

Sudbury river. Techn. Quart., 15, 105-26.7 (with W. T. Sedgwick): I. Experiments on the effect of freezing and other low

temperatures upon the viability of the bacillus of typhoid fever, with considera-tions regarding ice as a vehicle of infectious disease. II. Statistical studies on theseasonal prevalence of typhoid fever in various countries, and its relation toseasonal temperature. Mem. Am. Acad. Arts & Sci., 12, 469-577.

8 A statistical study of the fatality of typhoid fever at different seasons. Quart. PubI.Am. Stat. Asso., n.s., 8, 103-25.

9 (with Miss M. P. Hunnewell): A study of the distribution of the colon bacillus ofEscherich and of the sewage streptococci of Houston in polluted and unpollutedwaters. J. Med. Res., 8 (n.s. 3), 502-32.

10 (with W. T. Sedgwick): On the relative importance of public water supplies andother factors in the causation of typhoid fever. Trans. Am. Pub. Health Asso., 28,288-95.

190311 The war against disease. Atlantic Monthly, 91, 43-52.12 The case for vaccination. Science, n.s., 18, 101-07.13 (with C. P. Nibecker): The significance of bacteriological methods in sanitary

water analysis. Techn. Quart., 16, 227-39.14 The engineer in preventive medicine. Pub. Works, 2, 1-7.15 The occurrence of the colon bacillus on the hands. J. Med. Res., 10 (n.s. 5), 463-71.

190416 (with D. M. Belcher): Changes in the bacterial flora of sewage during storage.

J. Infect. Dis., 1, 170-92.17 The sanitary dangers of certain occupations. J. Massachusetts Asso. Bds. Health,

14, 1-9.18 (with P. Hansen): Some statistics of garbage disposal for the larger American

cities in 1902. Am. Pub. Health Asso. Rep., 29, 27.19 (with W. L. Underwood): The sanitary problems relating to the Fresh Pond

Marshes and Alewife Brook. Appendix No. 2 to Report on Improvement of theUpper Mystic River and Alewife Brook by John R. Freeman. Boston, Metro-politan Park Comm., Sept. 21, 95-107.

Prepared by Eleanor M. Watkins and Jean H. Nelbach.

Page 2: BIBLIOGRAPHY CHARLES-EDWARD ARMORY WINSLOW*€¦ · 782 YALE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGY ANDMEDICINE 67 Technology and the public health. Advance NewEngland, 2, 188-92. 68 (with Earle B. Phelps):

780 YALE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE

20 (with Samuel C. Prescott): Elements of Water Bacteriology with Special Refer-ence to Sanitary Water Analysis. New York, John Wiley & Sons, pp. x+ 162;1908; 1913, pp. xiv+318; 1924, pp. ix+211; also London, Chapman & Hall,1931, pp. ix+219; 1946, pp. xiv+368.

190521 (with Anne F. Rogers): A revision of the Coccaceae. Preliminary communication.

Science, n.s., 21, 669-72.22 (with Earle B. Phelps): The chemical and bacterial composition of the sewage dis-

charged into Boston harbor from the south metropolitan district: with specialreference to diurnal and seasonal variations. Contr. San. Res. Lab. and SewageExper. Sta., 1, 7; J. Infect. Dis., Suppl. No. 1, 175-208.

23 The number of bacteria in sewage and sewage effluents determined by plating upondifferent media and by a new method of direct microsopic enumeration. Contr.San. Res. Lab. and Sewage Exper. Sta., 1, 41; J. Infect. Dis. Suppl. No. 1, 209-28.

24 (with G. E. Willcomb): Tests of a method for the direct microscopic enumerationof bacteria. Contr. San. Res. Lab. and Sewage Exper. Sta., 1, 119; J. Infect. Dis.,Suppl. No. 1, 273-83.

25 A winter visit to some sewage disposal plants in Ohio, Wisconsin, and Illinois. J.Asso. Engr. Soc., 34, 335-61.

26 The deeper significance of scientific education. Techn. Rev., 7, 3-10.27 The scientific disposal of city sewage: Historical development and present status of

the problem. Techn. Quart., 18, 317-32.28 Elements of Applied Microscopy. New York, John Wiley & Sons, London, Chapman

& Hall. pp. xii+183.29 (with Earle B. Phelps): Experiments on the purification of Boston sewage, 1903-

1905. Proc. Am. Pub. Health Asso., 31, 16.

190630 (with W. T. Sedgwick): On the present relative responsibility of public water

supplies and other factors for the causation of typhoid fever. J. New EnglandWater Works Asso., 20, 51-88.

31 (with E. E. Lochridge): The toxic effect of certain acids upon typhoid and colonbacilli in relation to the degree of their dissociation. Boston, Biological Studiesby the Pupils of William Thompson Sedgwick, pp. 258-82.

32 (with Anne F. Rogers): A statistical study of generic characters of the Coccaceae.Boston, Biological Studies by the Pupils of William Thompson Sedgwick,pp. 146-207.

33 The teaching of biology and sanitary science in the Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology. Techn. Quart., 19, 416-25.

34 (with Earle B. Phelps): Investigation on the purification of Boston sewage: witha history of the sewage disposal problem. Contr. San. Res. Lab. and SewageExper. Sta., 2; Water Supply and Irrigation Paper No. 185, U. S. Geol. Surv.,Washington, pp. 163; House Document No. 70, 59th Cong., 2nd Sess.

35 (with Earle B. Phelps): The trickling filter at the sewage experiment of theMassachusetts Institute of Technology. Engr. News, 56, Aug. 16.

190736 (with Earle B. Phelps): On the use of methylene blue in testing sewage effluents.

J. Infect. Dis., Suppl. No. 3, 1-13.37 Public health and safety. 33 (Legislation) Bull. New York State Lib. Rev. of

Legislation 1905-06, 45-54.38 Disposal of sewage. Paper read at the ninth annual School for Instruction of

Health Officers, Burlington, Vermont, June 19, 1907. Vermont State Bd. Health,8, Bull. No. 1, 3-12.

39 (with Earle B. Phelps, C. F. Story, and H. C. McRae): Studies of sewage distrib-utors for trickling filters. Contr. San. Res. Lab. and Sewage Exper. Sta., Techn.Quart., 20, 325-74.

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BIBLIOGR-APHY OF CHARLES-EDWARD ARMORY WINSLOW 781

40 (with Earle B. Phelps): Investigations on the purification of Boston sewage in septictanks and trickling filters (1905-1907). Contr. San. Res. Lab. and Sewage Exper.Sta., Techn. Quart., 20, 387-452.

41 (with L. T. Walker): Note on the fermentative reactions of the B. coli group.Science, n.s., 26, 797-9.

190842 (with Earle B. Phelps): Purification of Boston sewage: Experimental results and

practical possibilities. J. Asso. Engr. Soc., 40, 28-52.43 (with S. C. Prescott): The relative value of dextrose broth, phenol broth and

lactose bile as enrichment media for the isolation of B. coli. Am. J. Pub. Hyg.,18 (n.s. 4), 19-30.

44 Some factors in the spread of typhoid fever. Am. J. Pub. Hyg., 18 (n.s. 4), 131-36.45 A new method of enumerating bacteria in the air. Science, n.s. 28, 28-31.46 (with A. F. Winslow): Systematic Relationships of the Coccaceae, With a Discussion

of the Principles of Bacterial Classification. New York, John Wiley & Sons.pp. viii+300.

47 A method for determining the number of dust particles in air. Engr. News, 60,748.

48 The cash value of factory ventilation. Contr. from the Res. Dept., Boston Schoolfor Social Workers. Proc. 6th Int. Cong. Tuberc., 3, 184-89.

190949 A statistical criterion for species and Senera among bacteria. Bull. Torrey Botanical

Club, 36, 31-9.50 (with L. T. Walker): A case of non-inheritance of fluctuating variations among

bacteria. J. Infect. Dis., 6, 90-7.51 Occupational disease and economic waste. Atlantic Monthly, 103, 679-84.52 The carriage of bacteria by air-currents in house drainage systems. Boston, Nat.

Asso. Master Plumbers of the U. S. Rep. Sanitary Committee, 1907-08-09, 4-22.53 The sanitary significance of bacteria in the air of drains and sewers. Boston, Nat.

Asso. Master Plumbers of the U. S. Rep. Sanitary Committee, 1907-08-09, 39-85.54 Sewage disposal in the United States. Zentralbl. f. Wasserversorgung u. Beseitigung

fliuissiger u. fester Ahfallstoffe, Bd. 2, 149-55.

191055 (with G. T. Palmer): A comparative study of intestinal streptococci from the horse,

the cow, and man. J. Infect. Dis., 7, 1-16.56 (with E. A. Robinson): An investigation of the extent of the bacterial pollution of

the atmosphere by mouth spray. J. Infect. Dis., 7, 17-37.57 (Chairman): Report of the committee on standard methods for the examination

of air. Am. J. Pub. Hyg., 20 (n.s. 6), 346-60.58 (with Earle B. Phelps): The new sewage experiment station of the Massachusetts

Institute of Technology. Engr. News, 63, 652-53.59 William A. Evans and the health department of Chicago. World Today, 19, 730-34.60 Water pollution and water purification at Jersey City, New Jersey. J. Western Soc.

Engr., 15, pp. 24.61 The field for water disinfection from a sanitary standpoint. Urbana, Illinois. Proc.

2nd Meeting Illinois Water Supply Asso., 185-93.62 Public health and safety. 34 (Legislation) Bull. New York State Lib. Rev. of

Legislation, 1907-08, 93-104.63 (with Leonard P. Kinnicutt and R. W. Pratt): Sewage Disposal. New York, John

Wiley & Sons. pp. xxvi+436; 1913; 1919, pp. xvii+547.64 Waste of life capital in American industries. Proc. 1st Ann. Conf. Mayors of the

Cities of New York State, 51-8.65 Unsolved problems of sewage disposal. Trans. Am. Inst. Chem. Engr., 3, 385-98.

191166 Educational opportunities of the health department. J. Am. Pub. Health Asso., 1

(o.s. 7), 77-9.

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782 YALE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE

67 Technology and the public health. Advance New England, 2, 188-92.68 (with Earle B. Phelps): Investigations on the purification of Boston sewage. J.

Infect. Dis., 8, 259-88.69 Protection of river and harbor waters from municipal wastes, with special reference

to the conditions in New York. New York, Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., No. 33 GuideLeaflet Series. pp. 27.

70 Factory sanitation and efficiency. Boston, Proc. Cong. of Techn., April 10; Technologyand Industrial Efficiency. New York, McGraw-Hill Book Co. pp. 442-48; partiallyreprinted Engr. Rec., 63, 533; Indus. Engr., 9, 459; 1912, Washington, Smith-sonian Inst. Ann. Rep., Pub. 2128, 611-16.

71 (R. S. Tracy, Chairman): Report of the advisory committee of statisticians. NewYork Bd. Health, June 20; Monthly Bull. Dept. Health, City New York, 1,153-66.

72 The scientific basis for ventilation standards. Report of Committee on Efficiencyof Janitor Service. San Francisco, Proc. Nat. Educ. Asso., July, 977-85;School Bd. J., 43, 13.

73 The role of the visiting nurse in the campaign for public health. Am. J. Nursing,11, 909-20.

74 [Articles onl E. G. Conklin, Disinfectants, Disinfection, Epidemic, Filter, Filtration,Immunity, Infection, Public Health, Public Health Association. Nelson's Loose-Leaf Encyclopedia. New York and Edinburgh, Thos. Nelson & Sons.

75 Industrial hygiene. Boston, Health Educ. League. Health Educ. Ser. No. 24. pp. 40.76 The relation between bad ventilation and infant mortality. Trans. 2nd Ann. Meeting

Am. Asso. Study and Prevention Infant Mortality, Nov. 16-18. pp. 8.77 Factors of sanitary safety in a natural ice supply. New York, Natural Ice Asso. Am.

3rd Ann. Meeting, 187-93.78 Practical possibilities in the purification of municipal sewage. Baltimore, Nat. Asso.

for Preventing Pollution of Rivers and Waterways. Dec., 19-27.79 Heredity as an experimental science. Science Conspectus, 2, 1-6.80 Disposal of city sewage. Chapter 18 in Municipal Chemistry, edit. by Charles

Baskerville. New York, McGraw Hill Book Co. pp. 276-99.

191281 An outbreak of tonsilitis or septic sore throat in eastern Massachusetts and its

relation to an infected milk supply. J. Infect. Dis., 10, 73-112.82 The movement for scientific internationalism at the Hague. Science, n.s., 35, 293-96.83 Civic biology. Am. Teacher, 1, 38-9.84 The classification of the streptococci by their action upon carbohydrates and related

organic media. J. Infect. Dis., 10, 285-93.85 (with F. Abramson): The effect of drying upon the viability of bacteria. Proc. Soc.

Exper. Biol. & Med., 9, 107-8.86 Temperature and humidity in factories. New York, Proc. 2nd Nat. Conf. on Ind.

Dis., Am. Asso. Labor Legislation. Pub. No. 17; Am. Labor Legislation Rev.,2, 297-304.

87 (with I. J. Kligler): A quantitative study of the bacteria in city dust with specialreference to intestinal and buccal forms. Am. J. Pub. Health, 2, 663-701.

88 New ideas in ventilation. Am. Teacher, 1, 136-7.89 The new art of ventilation. Med. Rev. Revs., 18, 670-7; Engr. News, 68, 996-1000;

1913. Trans. 15th Internat. Cong. Hyg. and Demog., 4, 560-70.

191390 The prevention of industrial poisonings. Original communications, 8th Internat.

Cong. Applied Chem., 26, 309-18.91 (with Hermann M. Biggs): An ideal health department. Minneapolis, Rep. to

Minneapolis Civic and Commerce Asso., and Woman's Club of Minneapolis.pp. 36.

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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF CHARLES-EDWARD ARMORY WINSLOW 783

92 The health of the worker: dangers to health in the factory and shop and how toavoid them. New York, Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., pp. 24; Les dangers auxquelsla sante est exposee dans les Manufactures et les Ateliers, et comment leseviter. New York, Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., pp. 24; 1919, Rev., pp. 23.

93 The training of nurses for public health inspection. Pub. Health Nurse Quart.,5, 43-9.

94 An insect-borne disease infant paralysis. Am. Mus. J., 13, 229-35.95 Efficiency in the public health campaign. N. Am. Rev., 192, 761-73; New York

State Dept. Health, Spec. Bull. No. 3 (Suppl. to Health News for June, 1914),pp. 14.

96 (with Charles Baskerville): The air of New York City schools. New York, Rep.Committee on School Inquiry, Bd. of Estimate and Apportionment, 1911-13, 3,607-702.

97 Fresh air and health. 4th Ann. Conf. State and Local Bds. Health in New Jersey,47-52.

98 Museum cooperation in the teaching of school hygiene and sanitation. Trans. 4thInternat. Cong. on School Hyg., 3, 52-62; Am. Mus. J., 13, 317-22.

99 School ventilation in New York City. Heat. & Vent. Mag., 10, 20-28; Am. J. Pub.Health, 3, 1158-75.

100 The place of the pure food agitation in the public health campaign. [Editorial]Am. J. Pub. Health, 3, 1022-26.

101 The public health nurse and her preparation for her calling. Bull. Nat. Organ.Pub. Health Nursing, 1, 1-10.

102 The bacteriology and sanitary significance of sewer air. Monthly J. Engr. Club ofBaltimore, 3, 3-4.

1914103 The characterization and classification of bacterial types. Science, n.s., 39, 77-90.104 Letting in the light and air. Sunday School Times, 56, 118; 128.105 Sanitation of the school building. Monthly Bull. New York State Dept. Health.

Health News, n.s., 9, 73-7 (Full Ser. 30, March).106 Pure food and public health. Proc. 39th Ann. Meeting New Jersey San. Asso., 18-28.107 The New York State commission on ventilation and its problems. J. Indust. & Engr.

Chem., 6, 255-64.108 Clean milk and safe milk. Monthly Bull. New York State Dept. Health. Health

News, n.s., 9, 157-61 (Full Ser. 30, May).109 Season and disease. Monthly Bull. New York State Dept. Health. Health News,

n.s., 9, 190-93 (Full Ser. 30, June).110 Public health education in the United States. J. Roy. San. Inst., 35, 263-71.111 Man and the microbe. Pop. Sci. Monthly, 85, 5-20.112 [Articles on] Diphtheria, Plague, Syphilis, Typhoid fever, Typhus fever, Yellow

Fever. Nelson's Loose-Leaf Encyclopedia. New York & Edinburgh, Thos. Nelson& Sons.

113 Euthenics. Wood's Reference Handbook of the Medical Sciences, 159-64.114 (with W. W. Brown): The microbic content of indoor and outdoor air. Washington,

Monthly Weather Rev., 42, 452-3.115 The importance of studying the actual condition of hospital air. J. Am. Med. Asso.,

63, 1621-3.116 Public health education in New York State. Monthly Bull. New York State Dept.

Health. Health News, n.s., 9, 359-64 (Full Ser. 30, Nov.).1915

117 (with G. F. Maglott): A study of heating and ventilating conditions in a large officebuilding. Heat. & Vent. Mag., 12, 26-31.

118 Ventilation and sanitation of school houses. School & Society, 1, 190-6.119 Guarding the health of armies. Am. Mus. J., 15, 67-71.120 (Chairman): Some results of the first year's work of the New York State Com-

mission on Ventilation. Am. J. Pub. Health, 5, 85-118.121 The pure food law in its economic and public health aspects. Proc. 5th New York

City Conf. of Charities, 20-8.

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784 YALE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE*

122 (with others): Third progress report of the Committee on Standard Methods forthe Examination of Air. Am. J. Pub. Health, 5, 250-4.

123 Mobilizing the boys for public health. Monthly Bull. New York State Dept. Health.Health News, n.s., 10, 78-81 (Full Ser. 31, March).

124 Community defense of national vitality. Pop. Sci. Monthly, 86, 319-24.125 Organizing a community for public health. Monthly Bull. New York State Dept.

Health. Health News, n.s., 10, 109-11 (Full Ser. 31, April).126 Standards of ventilation in the light of recent research. Science, n.s., 41, 625-32.127 The experimental plant of the New York State Commission on Ventilation. Proc.

Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med., 12, 111-13.128 Fresh air in the light of recent research. J. Outdoor Life, 12, 149-53; 157.129 What the individual should know about public health. Proc. 15th New York State

Conf. Charities and Correction, 148-54.130 (with G. T. Palmer): The effect upon appetite of the chemical constituents of the

air of occupied rooms. Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med., 12, 141-4.131 (with L. W. Hubbard): A contact outbreak of septic sore throat in Westchester

County. Monthly Bull. New York State Dept. Health. Health News, n.s., 10,266-70 (Full Ser. 31, Sept.).

132 Organizing a state campaign of public health education. Am. J. Pub. Health, 5,805-13.

133 Problems of public health education. Albany Med. Ann., 36, 473-9.134 The neutrality of the churches in the war against disease. Constructive Quart., 3,

834-50.1916

135 (with L. W. Hubbard): Epidemiology and symptomatology of an outbreak of septicsore throat in Westchester County, New York. J. Infect. Dis., 18, 106-17.

136 Preventive philanthropy improving the condition of the poor at long range. Pub.Health J., 7, 11-18.

137 (with James A. Miller and W. C. Noble): The effect of moderately high atmos-pheric temperatures upon the formation of hemolysins. Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol.& Med., 13, 93-8.

138 The laboratory in the service of the state. Am. J. Pub. Health, 6, 222-33.139 The kata thermometer as a measure of the effect of atmospheric conditions upon

bodily comfort. Science, n.s., 43, 716-19.140 (with James A. Miller and W. C. Noble): The effect of moderately high atmos-

pheric temperatures upon the formation of agglutinins. Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol.& Med., 13, 194-7.

141 The health budget and its apportionment. 35th Ann. Rep. New York State Dept.Health for 1914, 636-41.

142 [Articles on] Bacteria, Hygiene, Paratyphoid fever, Sanitary Science. Nelson's Loose-Leaf Encyclopedia. New York & Edinburgh, Thos. Nelson & Sons. 1916-17.

143 A garden of germs. Am. Mus. J., 16, 295-300.144 Organizing a state campaign of public health education. Am. J. Pub. Health, 6,

805-13.145 Public health in the past and in the future. J. Home Econ., 8, 513-20.146 Tests for Bacillus coli as an indicator of water pollution. J. Am. Water Works

Asso., 3, 927-46.147 Sanitary surveys of institutions. Bull. Am. Home Econ. Asso., Proc. 9th Ann. Meeting,

Ser. 4, No. 5, 36-45.1917

148 (Chairman): Final report of the Committee on Standard Methods for the Examina-tion of Air. Am. J. Pub. Health, 7, 54-72.

149 Effect of atmospheric conditions upon fatigue and efficiency. Monthly Rev. U. S.Bur. Labor Statistics, 4, 283-90; Factory, 18, 190; Am. J. Pub. Health, 7, 827-34.

150 (with others): Infantile paralysis-a round-table discussion. Am. J. Pub. Health,7, 117-43.

151- Recent advances -in--the improvement of water supplies.- Proc. 32nd Ann. MeetingConnecticut Soc. Civil Engrs., 17-27.

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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF CHARLES-EDWARD ARMORY WINSLOW 785

152 What to do first for public health. Off. Rep. 13th Bienn. Convention Gen. Fed.Women's Clubs, 389-97.

153 President's address. Rep. 6th Ann. Meeting Connecticut Soc. Social Hyg., 8-12.154 (with James C. Greenway and David Greenberg): Health Survey of New Haven;

a report presented to the Civic Federation of New Haven. New Haven, YaleUniv. Press. pp. 114.

155 Healthy Living: The Body and How to Keep it Well. New York and Chicago,Charles E. Merrill Co. pp. 385; 1918; 1920, enl. edit.; 1925, also Spanishedit., Vida Saludable.

156 Handbook of health in war and peace. A manual of personal preparedness. Am.Mus. Nat. Hist. Handbook Ser. No. 6, 1-51.

157 A biologist's reasons for belief in equal suffrage. A 5-minute talk before theNew Haven Equal Franchise League. pp. 4.

158 (Chairman): The families and genera of the bacteria. Preliminary report of theCommittee of the Society of American Bacteriologists on Characterization andClassification of Bacterial types. J. Bact., 2, 505-66.

159 The new profession of public health nursing and its educational needs. Washington,Proc. 2nd Pan American Scient. Congr. Sect. IV, Part II, 5, 330-36.

160 Herbert William Conn: Investigator, teacher, public servant. Address delivered atMemorial Service, April 29, 1917. Wesleyan Univ. Bull., 11, 17-26.

161 Fresh air and ventilation in the light of modern research. Washington, Proc. 2ndPan American Scient. Congr. Sect. VIII, Part II, 10, 232-46.

162 Universal military service and the public health. Nat. Service, 1, 386-90.163 (with others): The control of communicable diseases. Rep. Am. Pub. Health Asso.

Committee on Standard Regulations, appointed in October, 1916. Pub. HealthRep., 32, 1706-33.

164 Health in war and peace. Southern Hosp. Rec., 4, 170-2; No. 91 Reprints of Reportsand Addresses of Nat. Conf. Social Work, 1917 Meeting at Pittsburgh. pp. 5.

165 Problems of social relief in Russia. The Survey, 39, 247-9.166 Public health administration in Russia in 1917. Pub. Health Rep., 32, 2191-2219.

1918167 (Introductory statement): Health Survey of Middletown, Connecticut. New Haven.

pp. 73.168 Public health problems in Russia. Am. Mus. J., 18, 30-7.169 (with I. S. Falk): The effect of potassium bromate upon entyme action. J. Biol.

Chem., 33, 453-62.170 (with I. S. Falk): Studies on salt action. I. Effect of calcium and sodium salts upon

the viability of the colon bacillus in water. Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med.,15, 67-9.

171 (with F. W. Mohlman): The recovery of grease from city sewage. Proc. Am. Soc.Municipal Improvements, Convention of 1918. n. p.

172 (with Barnett Cohen): Relative viability of B. coli and B. aerogenes types inpolluted and unpolluted water. J. Infect. Dis., 23, 82-9.

173 (with Barnett Cohen): The distribution of B. coli and B. aerogenes types inpolluted and unpolluted water. J. Infect. Dis., 23, 90-101.

174 Notes on sanitation in Russia and Japan. Proc. Connecticut Soc. Civil Engrs.,34th Ann. Meeting, 7-26.

175 The federal campaign against venereal disease. Proc. Connecticut State Med. Soc.,126th Ann. Meeting, 99-103.

176 (with Frank E. Lutz): Insects and disease, a statement of the more important factswith special reference to everyday experience. New York, Am. Mus. Nat. Hist.,Guide Leaflet No. 48. pp. 73.

177 The public health nurse: how she helps to keep the babies well. U. S. Dept. ofLabor, Children's Bur. Pub. No. 47, Children's Year Leaflet, No. 6. pp. 7.

178 (with David Greenberg): The effect of the respiration of putrid gases upon thegrowth of guinea pigs. Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med., 15, 123-4.

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179 Social conditions in Russia. Proc. Hosp. Social Serv. Asso., New York City, 5, 28-39.180 (with I. S. Falk): Studies on salt action. II. The effect of transfer from stronger

to weaker salt solutions upon the viability of bacteria in water. Proc. Soc. Exper.Biol. & Med., 15, 131-4.

181 (with F. W. Mohlman): Miles acid treatment of sewage. Municipal J., 45, 280-2,297-9, 321-2; Engr. News Rec., 81, 1034-6.

182 (with David Greenberg): Effect of putrefactive odors upon growth and resistance todisease. Am. J. Pub. Health, 8, 759-68.

183 (Chairman): Report on the sewage disposal problem of New Haven. New Haven,Field Press. pp. 97.

1919184 (with F. W. Mohlman): Four methods of sewage treatment studied at New Haven

testing station. Engr. News Rec., 82, 32-6.185 Public health in Russia and the United States. New York State J. Med., 19, 52-6.186 (with L. Greenburg and H. C. Angermyer): Standards for measuring the

efficiency of exhaust systems in polishing shops. Pub. Health Rep., 34, 427-49.187 (with L. Greenburg and David Greenberg): The dust hazard in the abrasive

industry. Pub. Health Rep., 34, 1171-87.188 (with Dorothy F. Holland): The disinfectant action of glycerol in varying con-

centrations. Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med., 16, 90-2.189 The public health nurse. Standards of Child Welfare, A Report of the Children's

Bur. Conf., May and June, 1919, 199-210.190 The role of the public health nurse in the modern public health campaign. Monthly

Bull. New York State Dept. Health. Health News, 14, 188-93 (Full Ser. 35,Aug.).

191 Poverty as a factor in disease. Proc. Nat. Conf. Social Work. pp. 4.192 President's address. Connecticut Soc. Social Hyg., 7th and 8th Ann. Meeting.

Reconstruction No., Connecticut Soc. Social Hyg., 1917-18, 8-14, 32-9.193 (with others): What has the demonstration done? Should it be continued? Report

of the Committee on Appraisal for the Framingham Community Health andTuberculosis Demonstration. Framingham, Mass., pp. 19.

194 (with I. J. Kligler and William Rothberg): Studies on the classification of thecolon-typhoid group of bacteria, with special reference to their fermentativereactions. J. Bact., 4, 429-503.

1920195 The untilled fields of public health. Science, n.s., 51, 23-33; Modern Med., 2, 183-91.196 (with J. F. Rogers): Statistics of the 1918 epidemic of influenza in Connecticut

with a consideration of the factors which influenced the prevalence of thisdisease in various communities. J. Infect. Dis., 26, 185-216.

197 (with L. Greenburg and E. H. Reeves): The efficiency of certain devices used forthe protection of sand blasters against the dust hazard. Pub. Health Rep., 35,518-34.

198 (with William Rothberg and Elizabeth I. Parsons): Notes on the classification ofthe white and orange staphylococci. J. Bact., 5, 145-67.

199 The nurse of the future. Pict. Rev., 17, April, 67-8.200 (Chairman): Report (fourth supplementary) of the Committee on Standard

Methods for Examination of the Air. Am. J. Pub. Health, 10, 450-4.201 (Chairman): The families and genera of the bacteria: Final report of the Com-

mittee of the Society of American Bacteriologists on Characterization andClassification of Bacterial Types. J. Bact., 5, 191-229.

202 Technology in the past and in the present. Tech. Rev., 22, 355-60.203 (with L. Greenburg): A study of the dust hazard in the wet and dry grinding

shops of an ax factory. Pub. Health Rep., 35, 2393-2401.204 Sanitary Science. Chap. 2 in Nelson's Loose-Leaf Medicine, Vol. 7. New York and

Edinburgh, Thos. Nelson & Sons, 60-89.205 (with Willis E. Chandler): The tuberculosis problem in Rhode Island. A survey

conducted for the Rhode Island Tuberculosis Association. Providence, TheProvidence Press. pp. 81.

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206 Air and health-ventilation. In Public Health and Hygiene by W. H. Park. Philadel-phia, Lea & Febiger. pp. 239-92.

1921207 The importance of preserving the original types of newly described species of

bacteria. J. Bact., 6, 133-4.208 (with L. Greenburg): Industrial tuberculosis and the control of the factory dust

problem. J. Indust. Hyg., 2, Part I, 333-43; Part II, 378-95.209 (with E. L. Hewitt): Relation between katathermometer and thermometer readings

under indoor conditions. Heat. & Vent. Mag., 18, 27-31.210 (Chairman): Standardization of public health training. Report of the committee of

sixteen of the American Public Health Association. Am. J. Pub. Health, 11, 371-5.211 William Thompson Sedgwick, 1855-1921. J. Bact., 6, 255-62.212 William Thompson Sedgwick, pioneer in health work. The Nation's Health, 3, 301-2.213 The widening fields of public health. Bull. League Red Cross Societies, 2, 372-6.214 Public health problems in Europe accentuated. The Nation's Health, 3, 329-30.215 Economic problems in European health. The Nation's Health, 3, 398.216 Suggestions for a Red Cross health programme. Internat. J. Pub. Health, 2, 488-508.217 Health and the League of Nations. The Nation's Health, 3, 594-5.218 Recent progress in the reduction of the typhoid death rate and its significance.

Proc. Am. Soc. Civil Engr., 47, 664-6.

1922219 (with L. Greenburg): A useful factory inspection form. Pub. Health Rep., 37, 10-12.220 (with L. Greenburg): Notes on the efficiency of various systems of air-conditioning

in a munition factory. Pub. Health Rep., 37, 275-91.221 (Chairman): First report of the Committee on Municipal Health Department

Practice of the American Public Health Association, Nov., 1921. Am. J. Pub.Health, 12, 7-15; 138-47.

222 European health conditions. Am. J. Pub. Health, 12, 94-100.223 What is a clean home? Mod. Priscilla, 36, 22.224 Vienna. Science, n.s., 55, 363-4.225 (with L. Greenburg): A survey of natural illumination in an industrial plant. Pub.

Health Rep., 37, 876-87.226 The part of the Red Cross in combating venereal disease; its relation to government

and voluntary agencies. Proc. North European Red Cross Conf. for CombatingVenereal Dis., Copenhagen, May 20-25, 100-1.

227 (with C. C. Grove): Note on certain correlation factors of the 1918 influenzaepidemic. Am. J. Hyg., 2, 240-45.

228 Common sense in factory ventilation. The Nation's Health, 4, 359-60.229 (with I. S. Falk): Studies on salt action. IV. The mutual influence of acidity and

salt concentration upon bacteria. Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med., 19, 311-14.230 (with Margaret Hotchkiss): Studies on salt action. V. The influence of various salts

upon bacterial growth. Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med., 19, 314-15.231 (Chairman): Report of Committee on Nursing Education. The Nation's Health, 4,

1-8.232 (with L. Greenburg): Efficiency of various kinds of ventilating ducts. Pub. Health

Rep., 37, 1829-39.233 (with Grace T. Hallock): The Land of Health (Winslow Health Ser.). New York

and Chicago, Charles E. Merrill Co. pp. vi+208.234 (with A. F. Dolloff): The relative effect of certain triphenylmethane dyes upon the

growth of bacilli of the colon group in lactose broth and lactose bile. J. Infect.Dis., 31, 302-4.

235 European health problems. New Haven, Proc. Beaumont Med. Club, 1921-22.Typewritten.

236 (with Margaret R. Burkhardt): Public health nursing (chapter of the forthcomingreport of the Committee on Municipal Health Department Practice of theAmerican Public Health Association). Pub. Health Nurse, 14, 514-20.

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237 (with H. I. Harris): An ideal health department for a city of 100,000 population(Section II from the forthcoming report of the Committee on Municipal HealthDepartment Practice of the American Public Health Association). Am. J. Pub.Health, 12, 891-907.

238 The importance of subject content in health education. J. Nat. Educ. Asso., 1922,606-11.

239 (with I. V. Hiscock, H. W. Haggard, and L. Greenburg): The influence of theHeath process upon certain physical, chemical and microscopical characteristicsof ice cream. Report of an investigation into the effect of freezing ice cream inan atmosphere of carbon dioxide. Nat. Asso. Ice Cream Manufs., 28-37.

240 Window ventilation preferred for schools. The Nation's Health, 4, 757-61.241 (with Gertrude F. Baker): Tuberculosis (a chapter of the forthcoming report of the

Committee on Municipal Health Department Practice of the American PublicHealth Association). Am. Rev. Tuberc., 6, 960-73.

1923242 (with Robert Jordan): The comparative efficiency of the circular Konimeter and the

Palmer water spray apparatus for the determination of the dust content of theair. J. Indust. Hyg., 4, 375-9.

243 The practical significance of the work of the New York State Commission onVentilation. J. Outdoor Life, 20, 15-17.

244 Operating factors in industrial hygiene. Pub. Health News (Monthly Bull. Dept.Health, State of New Jersey), 8, 285-9.

245 (Chairman): Nursing and Nursing Education in the United States; report of theCommittee for the Study of Nursing Education. New York, The Macmillan Co.pp. 583.

246 The department of public health. Yale Alumni Weekly, 32, 639-40.247 (secretary): Report of the Red Cross committee on health. Red Cross Courier, 2,

1-2, 3, 7.248 (Chairman): Ventilation. Report of the New York State Commission on Ventilation.

New York, E. P. Dutton & Co. pp. xxvi+620.249 The recruiting of sanitarians for the future service of the state. Am. J. Pub. Health,

13, 355-60.250 (with I. V. Hiscock, 0. F. Rogers, and E. S. Robinson): An outbreak of food poison-

ing traced to the consumption of egg salad. Am. J. Hyg., 3, 238-46.251 (with I. S. Falk): Studies on salt action. VIII. The influence of calcium and

sodium salts at various hydrogen ion concentrations upon the viability ofBacterium coli. J. Bact., 8, 215-36.

252 (with I. S. Falk): Studies on salt action. IX. The additive and antagonistic effectsof sodium and calcium chlorides upon the viability of Bact. coli. J. Bact., 8,237-44.

253 (with I. S. Falk and M. F. Caulfield): The influence of certain electrolytes upon theelectrified charge of bacteria. Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med., 20, 428-30.

254 (Chairman): Report of the Committee on Municipal Health Department Practice ofthe American Public Health Association in cooperation with the U. S. PublicHealth Service. Pub. Health Bull. No. 136. pp. 468.

255 The Evolution and Significance of the Modern Public Health Campaign. An address.New Haven. Yale Univ. Press. pp. 65; 1935, 2nd print., also, H. Milford,Oxford Univ. Press.

256 (with I. S. Falk and M. F. Caulfield): Electrophoresis of bacteria as influenced byhydrogen ion concentration and the presence of sodium and calcium salts. J.Gen. Physiol., 6, 177-200.

257 (Chairman): Benzol poisoning. Report of a special committee. Presented at the12th safety congress of the National Safety Council, Buffalo, New York.Oct. 1-5. pp. 16.

258 Mobilizing against tuberculosis. Hygeia, 1, 583-5.

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1924259 Man and the Microbe; How Communicable Diseases are Controlled. New York and

London, Funk and Wagnalls Co. pp. 68. (The National Health Series, ed. byNational Health Council).

260 (Chairman): Report of the Committee on Municipal Health Department Practice.Am. J. Pub. Health, 14, 184-7.

261 The physiological basis of the rules for health. Public Health (monthly Bull.Michigan Dept. Health), 12, 95-9.

262 Prevalence and treatment of sense defects. Chapter 11 in The Child: His Natureand His Needs, edit. by M. V. O'Shea. Cont. The Children's Foundation, May,213-31.

263 The public health nursing supervisor, her functions and ideals. Pub. Health Nurse,16, 283-7.

264 (with H. J. Shaughnessy): The alkaline isopotential point of the bacterial cell.Preliminary note. Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med., 21, 437-8.

265 (with Z. W. Koh): The mortality of the Chinese in the United States, Hawaii andthe Philippines. Am. J. Hyg., 4, 330-55.

266 (with H. J. Shaughnessy): The alkaline isopotential point of the bacterial cell. J.Gen. Physiol., 6, 697-701.

267 (with E. 0. Jordan and G. C. Whipple): A Pioneer of Public Health, WilliamThompson Sedgwick. New Haven, Yale Univ. Press. pp. xvi+ 193.

268 Sanitation. Chapter 14 in Contributions of Science to Religion by Shailer Matthews.New York, D. Appleton Co. pp. 323-48.

269 (with Cora E. Gray): Tuberculosis mortality in relation to the pasteurization ofmunicipal milk supplies. Am. Rev. Tuberc., 10, 186-205.

270 (with Dorothea H. Sanjiyan): Acid-forming streptococci as indices of fomitespollution. J. Bact., 9, 513-25.

271 (Chairman): Second progress report of the sub-committee on benzol, ChemicalSection, National Safety Council. Nat. Bur. Casualty and Surety Underwriters.Dec., pp. 16.

272 Health legislation in colonial Connecticut. Bull. Soc. Med. Hist., Chicago, 3, 317-35;New Haven, Proc. Beaumont Med. Club 1923-24. Typewritten.

1925273 (Chairman): Municipal health department practice. Fourth report of the com-

mittee. Am. J. Pub. Health, 15, 39-44.274 Industrial tuberculosis. New York. Tuberc. Asso. Bull., 6, 1, 5-7.275 William Henry Welch: Teacher, leader. Red Cross Courier, 4, 10.276 The atmosphere and its relation to human health and comfort. Proc. Am. Soc. Civil

Engr., 35, 794-810.277 (with Pauline B. Williamson): The Laws of Health and How to Teach Them.

New York and Atlanta, Charles E. Merrill Co. pp. xiv+ 354.278 The dead hand in school ventilation. Am. School Bd. J., 70, 45-6.279 Tuberculosis in dusty trades. Survey, 54, 353-5.280 Nursing education. Its past and its future. Mod. Hosp., 25, 237-40.281 Development of the public health movement in Connecticut. In History of Connecti-

cut in Monographic Form, edit. Norris G. Osborn, Vol. 5. The States History Co.pp. 475-504.

282 Factory ventilation and industrial dusts. J. Am. Med. Asso., 85, 968-72.283 The place of public health in a university. Science, 62, 335-8.284 Social hygiene. A program for community health. Weekly Bull. St. Louis Med. Soc.,

20, 9-16.285 Football and health. Health (Monthly Bull. New Haven Dept. Health), 52, 2-4.286 School children need fresh air. The Forecast, 30, 822-3; 846; 860.287 The janitor and the school child. New York, Ventilation and Health. Metropolitan

Life Ins. Co. pp. 12.288 Open windows why. New York, Nat. Tuberc. Asso., pp. 3.

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289 (Chairman): Third progress report of the sub-committee on benzol, ChemicalSection, National Safety Council. Nat. Bur. Casualty and Surety Underwriters.pp. 15.

1926290 (with Elizabeth Fleeson): The influence of electrolytes upon the electrophoretic

migration of bacteria and of yeast cells. J. Gen. Physiol., 8, 195-214.291 (with I. S. Falk): A contribution to the dynamics of toxicity and the theory of

disinfection. J. Bact., 11, 1-25.292 (Chairman): Appraisal form for city health work, 2nd edit. New York, Committee

on Administrative Practice, American Public Health Association. pp. 68; 1929,3rd edit. rev. pp. 108; 1934, 4th edit.

293 Fresh Air and Ventilation. New York, E. P. Dutton Co. pp. xi+ 182.294 Objectives and standards of ventilation. J. Am. Soc. Heat. & Vent. Engr., 32, 113-21.295 The health officer and the state. Am. Health Cong., Ser. I, 33-44.296 The scientific aspect of school ventilation. Trans. 3rd Ann. Meeting Am. Child

Health Asso. Pt. II; Am. Health Cong., Ser. II, 73-8.297 The bases of the anti-tuberculosis program. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Tuberc. Soc.

pp. 11.298 Fresh air in the schoolroom. The Am. Schoolmaster, 19, 153-8.299 (with M. F. Upton): The electrophoretic migration of various types of vegetable

cells. J. Bact., 11, 367-92.300 (Chairman): Final report of the committee on benzol, Chemical and Rubber

Sections, National Safety Council. Nat. Bur. Casualty and Surety Underwriters.pp. 128.

301 The law and the gospel in public health. Hosp. Social Serv., 13, 515-24.302 The world war against disease. Hygeia, 4, 388-92.303 Air of the workroom. Geneva, Internat. Labor Office. Brochure 47, Occupation

and Health Encyclopedia of Hyg., Path., and Social Welfare. pp. 6.304 The appraisal of administrative health practice. J. Roy. San. Inst., 47, 133-51.305 Red Cross leadership in warfare against disease. Red Cross Courier, 5, 15-17.306 (with Katharine Tucker and I. V. Hiscock): The community health association and

its relations to Boston's health program. Boston, pp. 35.307 Public health at the crossroads. Am. J. Pub. Health, 16, 1075-85.308 Strategic position of the dispensary in the public health campaign. The Nation's

Health, 8, 736-8, 796.309 Life capital in industry. Rochester, New York. Proc. 10th Ann. New York State Indus.

Safety Cong., 176-81.310 Preventing sickness and prolonging life. Chapter 6 in Modern Science and People's

Health, edit. by Benjamin C. Gruenberg. New York, W. W. Norton & Co., Inc.pp. 183-212.

311 (with H. H. Howell, A. J. Chesley, D. L. Edsall, R. Hunt, W. S. Leathers, and J.Stieglitz): Hazard from tetraethyl lead gasoline. The use of tetraethyl leadgasoline in its relation to public health. Washington, Pub. Health Bull. 163.pp. viii+ 123.

1927312 The nursery. The strategic point in the public health campaign. Child Health Bull.,

3, 7-10.313 Summary of the National Safety Council study of benzol poisoning. J. Indust. Hyg.,

9, 61-74.314 (with Olive R. Brooke): The viability of various species of bacteria in aqueous

suspension. J. Bact., 13, 235-43.315 The viewpoint of the community. Pub. Health Nurse, 19, 301-5.316 (with I. V. Hiscock and Florence M. Patterson): The health program of Brookline.

Boston, Riverdale Press. pp. 27.317 (with H. J. Shaughnessy): The diffusion products of bacterial cells as influenced

by the presence of various electrolytes. J. Bact., 14, 69-99.318 Le lait. Rev. d'Hyg., 49, 641-62.

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319 (Chairman): Final report of the committee on spray coating, Chemical Section,National Safety Council. Chicago, Nat. Safety Council, pp. 53.

320 Public health and community well-being. Social Welfare (Toronto), 10, 11-13.321 Public health nursing. An old name for a new profession. The Forum, 78, 726-32.322 (with Louis DeAngelis): Bacteriology of the toothbrush. The Nation's Health,

9, 23-4, 68.323 Some relations of medicine to industry. New York State J. Med., 27, 1246-50.324 (with Pauline B. Williamson): Sex hygiene for teachers and parents. Am. Social

Hyg. Asso., Pub. No. 572, pp. 6; In The Laws of Health and How to TeachThem.

325 Poison hazards in industry. Am. Mutual Mag., 7, 6-8, 19.326 (Chairman, New York State Comm. Ventilation): Relation between respiratory

illness and air conditions in certain Syracuse schools. School and Soc., 26, 785-8.327 Address: Testimonial dinner to Lee K. Frankel, Hotel Biltmore, New York, Dec. 9.

pp. 13-19.1928

328 (Chairman): Report on ventilation of legislative chambers, U. S. capital. Cong.Rec., House, Jan. 5, 1106-7.

329 (Chairman): Report of Committee on Administrative Practice, 1927. Am. J. Pub.Health, 18, 180-6.

330 (with A. F. Dolloff): Relative importance of additive and antagonistic effects ofcations upon bacterial viability. J. Bact., 15, 67-92.

331 Rise and fall of bacterial populations. Chap. 6 in The Newer Knowledge of Bacteri-ology and Immunology, edit. by Edwin 0. Jordan and I. S. Falk. Chicago, Univ.Chicago Press. pp. 58-83.

332 Tenth century medicine in Japan. Bull. Soc. Med. Hist. of Chicago, 4, 121-2.New Haven, Proc. Beaumont Med. Club, 1925-26. Typewritten.

333 Program and preliminary results of the committee on the grading of nursing schools.Am. J. Pub. Health, 18, 448-58.

334 (with David Moxon): Bacterial pollution of bathing beach waters in New Havenharbor. Am. J. Hyg., 8, 299-3 10.

335 Making the school safe for the child. Element. School J., 28, 649-58.336 The relation of indoor atmospheres to human health and comfort. Trans. College

Phys. of Philadelphia, 49, 94-117.337 The larger problem of community nursing. Pub. Health Nurse, 20, 324-8.338 Twenty years of mental hygiene. Mental Hyg. News (Connecticut Soc. Mental Hyg.),

12, 504-15.339 A liberal education. Have we found it? Simmons College Rev., 10, 1-7.340 (with I. V. Hiscock, L. Greenburg, S. C. Harvey, Gertrude E. Hodgman, and

others): Health Survey of New Haven. New Haven, Quinnipiack Press, Inc.pp. 403.

341 Department of public health, Yale University. New York, The Rockefeller Founda-tion. In Methods and Problems of Medical Education (10th Ser.), Div. of Med.Educ., 31-41.

342 Mental hygiene and public health. Toronto, The Canada Lancet and Practitioner, 71,169-83.

343 World health service. Illinois Health News, 14, 372-82.344 Health. Chapter 8 in Whither Mankind. A panorama of Modern Civilization, edit. by

Charles A. Beard. New York, Longmans Green & Co. pp. 187-207.345 Sanitary science. Chapter 4 in Nelson Loose-Leaf System Preventive Medicine and

Public Health, Vol. 2. New York and Edinburgh, Thos. Nelson & Sons.pp. 97-126.

346 (with I. V. Hiscock, H. H. Walker, and W. C. Welling): A health survey ofNorth Haven. New Haven.

1929347 The nursing problem. New England J. Med., 200, 267-70.348 (Chairman): Work of Committee on Administrative Practice. Am. J. Pub. Health,

19, 377-81.

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349 Health bulletin for teachers. School Health Bur., Welfare Div., Metropolitan LifeIns. Co. Nos. 1-12, April 1929-June 1930; Nos. 13-22, 1930-31; Nos. 23-32,1931-32; Nos. 33-42, 1932-33; Nos. 43-52, 1933-34.

350 Evolution of the League's medical program. Red Cross Courier, 8, 17-19.351 Some reflections on sickness insurance in Germany and Austria. New England J.

Med., 200, 1161-63.352 The Life of Hermann M. Biggs, M.D., D.Sc., LL.D., Physician and Statesman of the

Public Health. Philadelphia, Lea & Febiger. pp. xv+432.353 The facts. How to decide what is to be told. Am. J. Pub. Health, 19, 647-50.354 Sickness insurance in Central Europe and its lessons for us in the United States.

Yale J. Biol. & Med., 1, 392-402.355 The contribution of Hermann Biggs to public health. The 1928 Biggs memorial

lecture. Am. Rev. Tuberc., 20, 1-28.356 The Road to Health; the Jayne Foundation lectures for 1929. New York, The

Macmillan Co. pp. 151.357 (with Elizabeth B. Jenkins): Stories of Health and Happiness. New York and

Chicago, Charles E. Merrill Co. pp. 163.358 (with M. L. Hahn): New Healthy Living, 2 vols. New York and Chicago, Charles

E. Merrill Co. pp. viii+312, vi+438; 4 vols. 1932, 1934, 1935, 1938.359 (with F. W. Fabian): The influence upon bacterial viability of various anions in

combination with sodium. J. Bact., 18, 265-91.360 The physician, the health officer, and the community. Univ. Minnesota Students'

Health Service. Addresses delivered at dedication exercises of Health ServiceBuilding, Oct., 5-19.

361 Winslow Health and Hygiene Series. Chicago, Denoyer-Geppert Co. 16 charts.362 Teacher's Manual Accompanying the Winslow Health and Hygiene Charts. Chicago,

Denoyer-Geppert Co. pp. 78.1930

363 The living hand: Elizabeth Milbank Anderson. New York, Milbank Mem. Fund, ameeting commemorating the 25th anniversary, April, 11-62.

364 The yardstick of health. The Survey, 44, 270-1.365 (Chairman): A study of ventilation and respiratory illness in Syracuse schools;

with an analysis of factors affecting criteria used. Am. J. Hyg., 12, 196-214.366 (Chairman): A study of ventilation and respiratory illness in Syracuse schools;

rate of air flow and room temperature in relation to the health of school children.Am. J. Hyg., 12, 215-37.

367 Some social implications of public health nursing. Hosp. Social Serv., 22, 147-59.368 Health for better adventures. World's Health, 11, 366-73. (Address Am. Red Cross,

May, 1930.)369 The health survey as a social instrument. Hosp. Social Serv., 22, 362-9.

1931370 (Chairman): A study of ventilation and respiratory illness in New York schools;

comparison of window-gravity ventilation and of unit fan ventilation withvarying air flow. Am. J. Hyg., 13, 235-54.

371 (Chairman): Administrative practice. Am. Pub. Health Asso. Yearbook, 1930-31,63-70.

372 The new leadership. Pub. Health Nurse, 23, 108-13.373 Carrying health to the country. Surv. Graphic, 18, 610-13.374 Health on the Farm and in the Village; a Review and Evaluation of the Cattaraugus

County Health Demonstration, with Special Reference to its Lessons for OtherRural Areas. New York, The Macmillan Co. pp. vii+281.

375 (Chairman): A study of rural school ventilation in Cattaraugus County. Am. J.Hyg., 14, 49-78; (Contr. No. 5 New York Commission on Ventilation).

376 (with Eloise T. Haywood): The specific potency of certain cations with reference totheir effect on bacterial viability. J. Bact., 22, 46-69.

377 (with P. L. Wang): The relation between changes in nationality stock and in-creasing death rates in adult life. Am. J. Hyg., 14, 79-88.

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378 Armistice Day address, November 11. Yale Alumni Weekly, 41, 159-60.379 Metabolic activity of the bacterial cell. Science, 74, 638.380 The business of medicine. Yale Rev., 21, 318-29.381 Amerikai Velemeny a Stefaniia Sz6setseg Munkajarol. Anya-es Csecsemovedelem, 4,

602-5.382 The future of the nurse is the responsibility of today. Mod. Hosp., 37, 124-32.383 (Chairman): School ventilation, principles and practices. Final Contribution to

the New York Commission on Ventilation. New York City Bur. Publ., TeachersCollege, Columbia Univ. pp. viii+ 73.

384 The community health program. Trans. College Phys. of Philadelphia, 53, 66.1932

385 (with L. Greenburg): Vasomotor reactions to localized drafts. Am. J. Hyg., 15, 1-35.(Contr. No. 6, New York Commission on Ventilation).

386 The changing bacteria. Science, 75, 121-3.387 The hospital as a preventive institution. Nosokomeion, 3, 222-6.388 Current tendencies in American public health. J. Roy. San. Inst., 53, 62-77.389 (with L. Greenburg): The dust hazard in air-pressure abrasive blasting (sand-

blasting). Arch. f. Gewerbepath. u. Gewerbehyg., Bd. 3, 577-99.390 Where shall we look for water supplies in the future. Proc. Connecticut Soc. Civil

Engr., 48th Ann. Rep., 27-42.391 (with H. H. Walker and Margaret Sutermeister): The influence of aeration and

sodium chloride upon the growth curve of bacteria in various media. J. Bact., 24,185-208.

392 (with H. H. Walker): The metabolic activity of the bacterial cell at various phasesof the population cycle. J. Bact., 24, 209-41.

393 (with J. H. Watkins): Factors determining the rate of mortality of bacteria ex-posed to alkalinity and heat. J. Bact., 24, 243-65.

394 The public health nursing supervisor. Pub. Health Nursing, 24, 551-6.395 (Vice-chairman): Medical care for the American people. Final Rep. Committee on

Costs of Med. Care, Pub. 28. Chicago, Univ. Chicago Press.396 The cost of medical care. Yale Alumni Weekly, 42, 265-6.397 The recommendations of the committee on the costs of medical care. New England

J. Med., 207, 1138-42.1933

398 The costs of medical care. Nat. Safety News, 27, 29-30.399 A program of medical care for the United States. Science, 77, 102-7.400 Industry in medicine. Am. J. Pub. Health, 23, 450-8.401 Dollars and lives. Surv. Graphic, 22, 407-9.402 The mental hygiene movement and its founder. Ment. Hyg., 17, 533-42.403 (with C. K. Wu): Mortality, prosperity and urbanization in U. S. counties. Am. J.

Hyg., 18, 491-542.404 (with G. T. Hallock): Health Through the Ages. New York, Metropolitan Life Ins.

Co. pp. 64.405 (with H. H. Walker) : Influences of salt upon diffusion from bacterial cells. Proc.

Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med., 30, 1033-5.406 Social hygiene program, today and tomorrow. Am. Social Hyg. Asso., Pub. 832.

pp. 27.407 (with I. V. Hiscock): The tuberculosis program of Rhode Island. A survey con-

ducted for the Rhode Island Tuberculosis Association in 1933. Mimeo. Rep.,pp. 56.

1934408 The influence of Lillian Wald reaches round the earth. Better Times, 15, 8-9.409 The epidemiology of Noah Webster. Trans. Connecticut Acad. Arts and Sci., 32,

21-109; New Haven, Proc. Beaumont Med. Club, 1933-34.410 (with H. H. Walker and M. G. Mooney): Bacterial cell metabolism under anaerobic

conditions. J. Gen. Physiol., 17, 349-57.

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411 (with L. Greenburg, L. P. Herrington, and H. G. Ullman): Design and equipmentof the Pierce Laboratory. Heating, Piping & Air Conditioning, 6, 127-31; Trans.Am. Soc. Heat. & Vent. Engr., 40, 67-76; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 1.

412 (with H. H. Walker, Evelyn Huntington, and M. G. Mooney): The physiologicalyouth of a bacterial culture as evidenced by cell metabolism. J. Bact., 27, 303-24.

413 Nurses show the way. Surv. Graphic, 23, 156-9.414 One way to reduce taxes. Am. Teacher, 18, 15.415 Standard methods and new procedures for the isolation of colon bacilli from water.

Am. J. Pub. Health, 24, 456-61.416 Birth control and public health. Am. Med., n.s., 29, 100-3.417 The challenge of today. Pub. Health Nursing, 26, 283-91.418 Book review of Red Medicine: Socialized Health in Soviet Russia, by Sir Arthur

Newsholme and John A. Kingsbury. Pacific Affairs, 7, 224-6.419 Cultural objectives of health education. School and Society, 40, 1-5.420 William Henry Welch. April 8, 1850-April 30, 1934. Milbank Mem. Fund Quart.,

12, 191-3.421 (with L. Greenburg and L. P. Herrington): The influence of heat and light upon

nasal obstruction. Am. J. Hyg., 20, 195-217; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr.No. 2.

422 The influence of cations upon bacterial viability. Quart. Rev. Biol., 9, 259-74.423 Uncared-for needs. Nat. Advisory Council on Radio in Educ. Pub. Health Ser., Lect.

No. 2. Chicago, Univ. Chicago Press. pp. 6.424 Can health be bought? Surv. Graphic, 23, 610-13, 632-3.425 A City Set on a Hill; the Significance of the Health Demonstration at Syracuse.

Garden City, New York, Doubleday Doran Co. pp. xvi+ 367.

1935426 Planning for medical care. Cur. Hist., 41, 437-42.427 (with L. Greenburg): The thermo-integrator-a new instrument for the observa-

tion of thermal interchanges. Heating, Piping & Air Conditioning, 7, 41-3;Trans. Am. Soc. Heat. & Vent. Engr., 41, 149-55; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg.Contr. No. 4.

428 National health challenges. How the public health nurse is meeting them. Pub.Health Nursing, 27, 120-4.

429 Nursing and nursing education. Penn Points (Pennsylvania State Nurses Asso.), 9,22-7.

430 What do we mean by a bacterial life cycle? Science, 81, 314-5.431 Report of round-table on public health problems. Policies and procedures in public

health. Proc. Ann. Conf. Advisory Council, Milbank Mem. Fund, March 27-8,10-24.

432 Bringing health to the child. Univ. Iowa Child Welfare Pamphlets No. 47. pp. 19;Principles and Practices in School Health Education. Am. Child Health Asso.,1935, 37-52.

433 (with A. P. Gagge, L. Greenburg, I. M. Moriyama, and E. J. Rodee): The calibrationof the thermo-integrator. Am. J. Hyg., 22, 137-56; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg.Contr. No. 5.

434 A community mental hygiene program-The next great opportunity. MilbankMem. Fund Quart., 13, 211-18.

435 A physician of two centuries ago: Richard Mead and his contributions toepidemiology. Baltimore, Bull. Inst. Hist. Med., 3, 509-44.

436 (with Grace Mooney): The metabolic activity of various colon-group organisms atdifferent phases of the culture cycle. J. Bact., 30, 427-40.

437 (with L. P. Herrington): Subjective reactions of human beings to certain outdooratmospheric conditions. Heating, Piping & Air Conditioning, 7, 551-6; Trans.Am. Soc. Heat. & Vent. Engr., 42, 119-31; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 8.

438 Fifteen years of the committee on administrative practice. II. The evolution of theprogram. Am. J. Pub. Health, 25, 1303-16.

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439 Dean Winternitz and the Yale School of Medicine. Address delivered before theAsso. of Yale Alumni in Medicine, June 17, 1935. New Haven, Yale Univ.Press. pp. 21.

1936440 Fifty fruitful years. Book review of Fifty Years in Public Health, by Sir Arthur

Newsholme. Milbank Mem. Fund Quart., 14, 98-9.441 The power of ghosts. Mental Hyg., 20, 1-10.442 (with L. P. Herrington): The influence of odor upon appetite. Am. J. Hyg., 23,

143-56; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 9.443 Report of round-table, pp. 34-46; The next steps in public health, pp. 71-7. In

Next Steps. A Review of the Conference. Proc. 14th Ann. Conf. Milbank Mem.Fund, March 26-7.

444 Shall we promote industrial health and efficiency or only industrial safety. Indust.Bull. (New York State), 15, pp. 2.

445 James Cowan Greenway, '00, and the Department of University Health. Yale AlumniWeekly, 45, 7.

446 Tuberculosis among workers between twenty and forty-five years of age. In RoutingTuberculosis from its Last Strongholds. Addresses presented at Ann. Conf. Stateand Local Committees Tuberc. and Pub. Health. New York State Charities AidAsso., May 20, 22-28.

447 When is public health? Surv. Graphic, 25, 373-5.448 The people you nurse. Johns Hopkins Nurses Alumnae Mag., 35, No. 3. pp. 8.449 (with L. P. Herrington and A. P. Gagge): A new method of partitional calorimetry.

Am. J. Physiol., 116, 641-55; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 10.450 (with L. P. Herrington and A. P. Gagge): The determination of radiation and con-

vection exchanges by partitional calorimetry. Am. J. Physiol., 116, 669-84;John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 12.

451 Our debt to the community health association. In The Hospital Without Walls,1886-1936. Pubi. in Commemoration of the 50th Anniv. Community HealthAsso. of Boston. pp. 11-18.

1937452 Housing as a public health problem. Am. J. Pub. Health, 27, 56-61.453 (with others): What does the future hold for sewage treatment? Municipal

Sanitation, 8, 54, 57.454 The international appraisal of local health programs. Milbank Mem. Fund Quart.,

15, 3-5.455 (with Evelyn Huntington): Cell size and metabolic activity at various phases of the

bacterial culture cycle. J. Bact., 33, 12 3-44.456 The drama of syphilis. J. Social Hyg., 23, 57-72.457 Address at dinner for Mr. Homer Folks on the occasion of his 70th birthday, Feb. 18,

1937. In Seventy Useful Years. A Tribute to a Leader in Health and Welfare,New York State Charities Aid Asso., pp. 8-12.

458 Report of round-table on the hygienic aspects of housing. In New Health Frontiers.Proc. 15th Ann. Conf. Milbank Mem. Fund, Apr. 29-30, 35-45.

459 (with Dorothy F. Holland): The influence of certain public health procedures uponinfant mortality. Human Biol., 9, 133-74.

460 (with A. P. Gagge and L. P. Herrington): Thermal interchange between the humanbody and its atmospheric environment. Am. J. Hyg., 26, 84-102; John B. PierceLab. Hyg. Contr. No. 17.

461 (with L. P. Herrington and A. P. Gagge): Relations between atmospheric conditions,physiological reactions and sensations of pleasantness. Am. J. Hyg., 26, 103-15;John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 18.

462 Recent advances in our knowledge of the problems of air conditioning. Am. J. Pub.Health, 27, 767-76.

463 (Committee report): The hygiene of housing: Pt. I, Report by the housing com-mission; Pt. II, Report on the hygiene of environmental conditions in thedwelling; Pt. III, Report on noise and housing. Quart. Bull. Health Org. Leagueof Nations, 6, 505-50.

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464 For control of syphilis. Review of Shadow on the Land, by Thomas Parran. YaleRev., 27, 196-8.

465 (with L. P. Herrington and A. P. Gagge): Physiological reactions of the humanbody to varying environmental temperatures. Am. J. Physiol., 120, 1-22; JohnB. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 13.

466 (with L. P. Herrington and A. P. Gagge): The relative influence of radiation andconvection upon vasomotor temperature regulation. Am. J. Physiol., 120, 133-43;John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 14.

467 (with L. P. Herrington and A. P. Gagge): Physiological reactions of the human bodyto various atmospheric humidities. Am. J. Physiol., 120, 288-99; John B. PierceLab. Hyg. Contr. No. 16.

468 Summary report, pp. 1-42; report on sanitation, pp. 74-83. In A Sarvey of Methodsof Care, Treatment and Training of the Feebleminded, together with a Programfor the Future Made at Letchworth Village. New York State Dept. Mental Hyg.Utica, State Hosp. Press. pp. xiv+ 164.

469 Air and health, Chap. 15, 314-41; Protection of water supplies, Chap. 16, 342-63;Sewage disposal, Chap. 18, 367-88; Insects and disease, Chap. 21, 407-28; Thecontrol of tuberculosis, Chap. 23, 454-71; The control of syphilis and gonorrhea,Chap. 24, 472-85. Chapters in Practitioners Library of Medicine and Surgery.XII. Hygiene and Preventive Medicine. New York and London, D. Appleton& Co.

470 (with Savel Zimand): Health Under the "El"); the Story of the Bellevue-YorkvilleHealth Demonstration in Mid-town New York. New York and London, Harper& Bros. pp. xiii+203.

1938471 Birth control as a public health problem. Birth Control Rev., 22, 31-3.472 (with L. P. Herrington and A. P. Gagge): Physiological reactions and sensations of

pleasantness under varying atmospheric conditions. Heating, Piping & AirConditioning, 10, 69-75; Trans. Am. Soc. Heat. & Vent. Engr., 44, 179-94;John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 21.

473 Heating and ventilating requirements for housing. Heat. & Vent., 35, 33-35.474 (Chairman): Basic principles of heathful housing. Preliminary report. Committee

on Hygiene of Housing, Am. Pub. Health Asso. Am. J. Pub. Health, 28, 351-72;1939 2nd edit. rev.

475 Nursing and the community. Pub. Health Nursing, 30, 230-7.476 Organizing for better community service. Am. J. Nursing, 38, 761-7.477 Preventive medicine in a cooperative health program. Cooperative Health, 1, 5-6,

14-15.478 (with A. P. Gagge and L. P. Herrington): The influence of clothing on the

physiological reactions of the human body to varying environmental temperatures.Am. J. Physiol., 124, 30-50; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 22.

479 (with L. P. Herrington and A. P. Gagge): The relative influence of radiation andconvection upon the temperature regulation of the clothed body. Am. J. Physiol.,124, 51-61; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 23.

480 Opportunities and responsibilities of the health officer in connection with thefederal housing acts. Am. J. Pub. Health, 28, 1269-76.

481 Health standards in housing. In Home Management Papers. Baltimore, WaverlyPress. pp. 99-103.

482 (with L. P. Herrington and A. P. Gagge): The reactions of the clothed human bodyto variations in atmospheric humidity. Am. J. Physiol., 124, 692-703; John B.Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 24.

483 The use of medical discoveries. Book review of The Fight for Life, by PaulDeKruif. Yale Rev., 27, 842, 843.

484 The school health program. Report of New York State Univ. Regent's inquiry intothe character and cost of public education in the State of New York. NewYork and London, McGraw-Hill Book Co. pp. xiii+ 120.

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485 Pioneers of sewage disposal in New England. Chap. 24 in Modern Sewage Disposal,edit. by Langdon Pearse. New York, Anniversary Book of the Federation ofSewage Works Associations. pp. 276-84.

1939486 (Chairman): Recent advances in physiological knowledge and their bearing on

ventilation practice. Report of the Am. Soc. Heat. & Vent. Engrs. researchtechnical advisory committee on physiological reactions. Heating, Piping & AirConditioning, 11, 54-8.

487 The public health aspects of medical care from the standpoint of public health. Am.J. Pub. Health, 29, 16-22.

488 Medical care for the nation. Yale Rev., 28, 501-20.489 Unfilled public health needs in New Haven. New Haven Register Health Suppl.,

Feb. 26, pp. 4.490 Progress in the hygiene of housing. In New Light on Old Health Problems. Proc.

17th Ann. Conf. Milbank Mem. Fund, March 23-4, 11-26.491 President's report of Connecticut Society of Mental Hygiene. 31st Ann. Meeting,

May 26. Printed Rep. pp. 4.492 Heating and ventilation of the home. In Digest of Papers Presented at the Yale-Life

Conference on House Building Technics. Dept. Architecture, School of theFine Arts, Yale Univ. pp. 38-9.

493 What is New Haven's housing problem? Housing Advocate, 1, 8-10.494 Heating and ventilation of the home. Yale Scient. Mag., 13 (Summer), 6-7, 30-31.495 (with A. P. Gagge and L. P. Herrington): The influence of air movement upon

heat losses from the clothed human body. Am. J. Physiol., 127, 505-18; John B.Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 25.

496 (with Marius Nielsen and L. P. Herrington): The effect of posture upon peripheralcirculation. Am. J. Physiol., 127, 573-80; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 26.

497 Teacher's personality and psychological atmosphere of school influence children.Ideas, 10, 1, 6. (Bull. publ. by the Nassau County Tuberc. and Pub. HealthAsso.).

498 (with H. H. Walker): The earlier phases of the bacterial culture cycle. Bact. Revs.,3, 147-86.

499 (committee report): Report of the Housing Commission, Health Organization,League of Nations, June 26-July 1. Bull. Health Org. League of Nations, 8,732-96.

500 (with C. C. Wilson and Martha McDonald): Health education problems of theelementary schools. Chap. 10 in The Changing Elementary School, Report ofthe Regent's Inquiry. New York, Inor Pub. Co. pp. 273-81.

1940501 (with Henry Sigerist and Terry M. Townsend): Does America need compulsory

health insurance? Bull. America's Town Meeting of the Air, 5 No. 15. New York,Columbia Univ. Press. pp. 33. The Interne, 6, 242.

502 The first forty years of the Society of American Bacteriologists. Science, 91, 125-9.503 Essential health services. In The 1940 White House Conference on Children in a

Democracy, by Gertrude Springer and Kathryn Close. Surv. Midmonthly, 76, 46.504 A half-century of the Massachusetts Public Health Association. Am. J. Pub. Health,

30, 325-35.505 The air-cooled human body. Heating, Piping & Air Conditioning, 12, 271-3.506 The changing front of health. Proc. 18th Ann. Conf. Milbank Mem. Fund, April 2-3,

76-82.507 Book review of Health is Wealth, by Paul DeKruif. New York Herald Tribune,

June 30.508 Housing and health. Pub. Health Nursing, 32. 434, 439.509 (with A. P. Gagge and L. P. Herrington): Heat exchange and regulation in radiant

environments above and below air temperature. Am. J. Physiol., 131, 79-92;John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 29.

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1941510 New year's message to public health nursing. Pub. Health Nursing, 33, 1.511 Medical care for the underprivileged. Connecticut State Med. J., 5, 7-9.512 Hygiene of housing. Report of the sub-committee to the committee on research and

standards. Am. Pub. Health Yearbook, 1940-41 (Suppl. to Am. J. Pub. Health),31, 61-2.

513 The strength of the nation. McCall's Mag., 68, April 18-19, 146-7.514 Medicine-past and future. Book review of Medicine and Human Welfare, by Henry

E. Sigerist and America Organizes Medicine, by Michael M. Davis. Surv. Graphic,30, 302-3.,

515 The sixth column of disease. McCall's Mag., 68, May 26, 90-1.516 (with A. P. Gagge): Influence of physical work on physiological reactions to the

thermal environment. Am. J. Physiol., 134, 664-81; John B. Pierce Lab. Hyg.Contr. No. 36.

517 (with George Feldman): The influence of sewage treatment upon the bacterialpollution of New Haven harbor. Am. J. Hyg., 34, 91-101.

518 (Chairman): Physiological influence of atmospheric humidity. 2nd Rep. Am. Soc.Heat. & Vent. Engr. Technical advisory committee on physiological reactions.Heating, Piping & Air Conditioning, 13, 774-7; Trans. Am. Soc. Heat. & Vent.Engr., 48, 1-10.

519 Health and housing, pp. 7-17; Heating and ventilation of the home, pp. 90-102;Basic principles of healthful housing, pp. 186-216. In Housing for Health, paperspresented under the auspices of the Committee on Hygiene of Housing of the Am.Pub. Health Asso. Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Science Press.

520 The future, problems and trends. In The University and Public Health Statesman-ship, Philadelphia, Univ. Pennsylvania Press. Med. Pubs. M17, 21-33.

521 Man's heat exchanges with his thermal environment. In Temperature. Its Measure-ment and Control in Science and Industry. Papers presented in New York CityNov., 1939, under the auspices of the Am. Inst. of Physics, National Bur. ofStandards and Nat. Res. Council. New York, Reinhold Pubi. Corp. pp. 509-21.

1942522 (with L. P. Herrington and J. H. Nelbach): Influence of atmospheric temperature

and humidity on the dryness of the oral mucosa. Am. J. Hyg., 35, 27-39. JohnB. Pierce Lab. Hyg. Contr. No. 35.

523 The health front in a people's war. Surv. Graphic, 31, 101-3.524 Famine and disease. Advance, 134, 164-5.525 Preventive medicine and health promotion. Yale J. Biol. & Med., 14, 443-52.526 Buttressing democracy by citizen service. An American contribution to the difficult

art of government. State Charities Aid Asso., New York News, 31, 12-14.527 Book review of Chronic Pulmonary Disease in South Wales Coalminers. I. Medical

Studies. Spec. Rep. Ser. No. 243, Med. Res. Council. II. Environmental Studies.Spec. Rep. Ser. No. 244, Med. Res. Council. London, His Majesty's StationeryOffice. Econ. Geol., 37, 435; 38, 676-7.

528 (Chairman): The improvement of local housing regulation under the law. Anexploration of essential principles. Rep. sub-committee on housing regulation ofcommittee on hygiene of housing. Am. J. Pub. Health, 32, 1263-77.

529 Acceptance speech upon receiving Sedgwick Memorial Medal for 1942. Am. J. Pub.Health, 32, 1416-17.

530 The hygiene of dwellings and other occupied spaces. Chapter 39 in PreventiveMedicine in Modern Practice, edit. by J. A. Miller, Chairman Committee onPublic Health Relations of New York Acad. Med. New York and London, PaulB. Hoeber, Inc. pp. 681-705.

531 The problem of morale in industry. Rep. of a Committee of the ConnecticutSociety of Mental Hygiene. Mimeographed. pp. 23.

1943532 Public health in war time. The Spotlight (Committee administrative practice, Am.

Pub. Health Asso.), 2, 1, 4.

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533 Health education in a democracy. Science, 97, 189-92.534 Health education grows up. From disease prevention to building bodies and minds.

Channels (Nat. PubI. Council for Health and Welfare Services), 20, 10-12.535 American standard of living. The New Pencil Points, 24, March, 72-3.536 The health of the world community. In Christian Bases of World Order. The Merrick

Lectures for 1943. New York and Nashville, Abingdon-Cokesbury Press. pp.179-200.

537 (with C. D. Spangler): The influence of the sodium ion on the viability of washedcells of Bacillus cereus. J. Bact., 45, 373-84.

538 Commission on social security urged in behalf of national planning. Letter toEditor, The Evening Star, Washington, D. C., July 20, 1943.

539 Arthur Newsholme, 1857-1943. Med. Care, 3, 289-90.540 (with Philip E. Nelbach): Health survey of New London, Connecticut. pp. 49.541 Extra-mural factors in industrial health. Lect. No. 9 in Syllabus of Lectures and

Seminars Given During the Postgraduate Course on Industrial Health andMedicine in War Time, Yale Univ. School of Medicine. Ann Arbor, EdwardsBros. Inc. pp. 31-2.

542 A new world after victory. Radio talk for Yale Interprets the News, Oct. 3. YaleAlumni Mag., 7, 4-5.

543 The evolving pattern of tomorrow's health. II. The post-war city. Am. J. Pub.Health, 33, 1408-13.

544 Public health in the Soviet Union. Public health and wartime medicine in theU. S. S. R. Am. Rev. Sov. Med., 1, 163-5; Science, 99, 114-16; Publ. in Sciencein Soviet Russia. Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Jaques Cattell Press. pp. 66-70.

545 Trends in medical care. Hosp. Yearbook, 1943, 947-8.546 The Conquest of Epidemic Disease; a Chapter in the History of Ideas. Princeton,

New Jersey, Princeton Univ. Press. pp. xii+411; 2nd print. 1944.1944

547 Public health problems in 1944. The Spotlight (Committee on AdministrativePractice, Am. Pub. Health Asso.), 4, 1, 2.

548 Housing and the health officer. Canadian J. Pub. Health, 35, 1-9.549 Social significance of the school health program. Proc. Wartime Conf. on School

Health Education, Jan. 18, 1944. Connecticut State Dept. Educ., Health andTuberc. Asso. Mimeo. Rep., pp. 25-32; J. Health and Phys. Educ., 15, 423-4, 462.

550 Eminent physician speaks for social security. J. Elect. Workers & Operators, 43,50, 75-6.

551 Greeting to Latin-American guests at American Public Health Association meeting,Oct. 14, 1943. Am. J. Pub. Health, 34, 283-4.

552 Clifford Whittingham Beers. Ment. Hyg., 28, 179-85.553 Has public health nursing reached its destination? Pub. Health Nursing, 36, 609-16.554 International organization for health. New York, Committee to study the Organiza-

tion of Peace. pp. 32.555 Liquidating the war: Problems of international health. Chap. 4 in Citizens for a

New World, edit. by E. M. Hunt. Washington, D. C., Nat. Educ. Asso. 14th Year-book of the Nat. Council for Social Studies. pp. 78-84.

556 (committee report): Principles of a nation-wide health program. New York, Rep.Health Program Conf. Committee on Research in Med. Economics. pp. 34.

557 Housing and planning. 60th Ann. Rep. Connecticut Soc. Civil Engrs. Inc. pp. 32-44.1945

558 Health care for Americans. New York, Pub. Affairs Committee Inc. Pub. AffairsPamphlets No. 104. pp. 31.

559 Landmarks of 1944. Housing and public health. Am. J. Pub. Health, 35, 18-21.560 (with R. R. Bellinger): Hippocratic and Galenic concepts of metabolism. Bull.

Hist. Med., 17, 127-37.561 Changing challenges of public health. Am. J. Pub. Health, 35, 191-8.562 (with L. P. Herrington and R. J. Lorenzi): The influence of heat capacity of walls

on interior thermal conditions and heat economy. Heating, Piping & Air Con-ditioning, 17, 207-14.

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563 Public health in the postwar world. Surv. Graphic, 34, 119-22, 140-1, 144.564 An appraisal method for measuring the quality of housing: A yardstick for health

officers, housing officials and planners. Part I. Nature and uses of the method.New York, Committee on Hyg. of Housing, Am. Pub. Health Asso. pp. 71.

565 The training of public health personnel for the Americas. Washington, D. C., Inter-American Conf. Profs. of Hyg. Pan-American Sanitary Bur. Pub. No. 212, 34-42.

566 Yale valedictory, 1945. Address at graduation exercises, Yale Univ. School ofMedicine, June 16. Yale J. Biol. & Med., 18, 1-5.

567 Postwar trends in public health and nursing. Am. J. Nursing, 45, 989-92.1946

568 Health and housing. Health (Off. Pub. Health League of Canada). (Winter)1945-46.

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570 Ten goals of public health. Speech of acceptance of Elizabeth Severence Prentissaward. Publ. as "Ten unmet challenges of public health." Am. Nat., 80, 211-13.

571 The conquest of epidemics. In New Worlds in Medicine. New York, Robert M.McBride Co. pp. 297-313.

572 The physician-priest or business man. Bull. Med. Libr. Asso., 34, 310-19.573 Florence Nightingale and public health nursing. Pub. Health Nursing, 38, 330-2.574 (with I. V. Hiscock and C. W. Munger): Health and hospital survey of Metropolitan

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