-15-
being planned for evening class attendance by teachers
and graduate students during the academic year
In this latter course,
1960-61.
demonstrations will have to be
substituted for laboratory participation because of an
unfortunate lack of laboratory space for the preparation
of radioactive samples and counting of radioactivity.
Each course is made up of four parts which are presented sequentially,
as
follows:
physics to radiation biology;
(2)
chemistry to radiation biology;
fects of radiation;
biological studies.
and
(4)
(1)
the relationship of
the relationship of
(3) the biological ef-
the use of radioisotopes
in
The course is taught by a number of
specialists from the Laboratory of Radiation Biology,
Hanford Laboratories Operation, and the University of
Washington.
Thus the teaching load is distributed as
widely as possible so as not
with research commitments.
to interfere excessively
the