Nature . ect human beings from the danger ofeating contaminated shell-fish. They had done much in theLiverpool University for the study of tropical diseases;they had ascertained much to protect the lives of theirfellow-subjects who went out to the malarial coasts of WestAfrica ; he sincerely hoped that they would be able alsoto show them how they could avoid pollution from thecontamination of shell-fish. He hoped that all who hadworked in the laboratories of the university would bestimulated to greater efforts by the better buildings in whichthey would be housed. llii Chancellor read a communi
Nature . ect human beings from the danger ofeating contaminated shell-fish. They had done much in theLiverpool University for the study of tropical diseases;they had ascertained much to protect the lives of theirfellow-subjects who went out to the malarial coasts of WestAfrica ; he sincerely hoped that they would be able alsoto show them how they could avoid pollution from thecontamination of shell-fish. He hoped that all who hadworked in the laboratories of the university would bestimulated to greater efforts by the better buildings in whichthey would be housed. llii Chancellor read a communication received from SirThomas Elliott, Permanent Secretary of the Board ofAgriculture and Fisheries, intimating that the Board werepleased to award the university a grant of 2001. for thefinancial year ending March, 1906, in respect of the zoo-logical work carried on in connection with the fishingindustry, and conveying the congratulations of the Boardon the completion of the zoological museum and labor-. LONGITUDIMAL sSECTION f Scale of , 2.—New Buildings of the Depart Feetlent of Zoclogy, Un ity of Li. going on. That work must be divided under two heads—statistical and biological. The statistical work could not,oi course, be properly performed by a university such asthat. That was a matter which must be taken in hand bythe central authority. He looked very largely to theLancashire Sea Fisheries Committee, acting in conjunctionwith the University of Liverpool, to pursue the biologicalpart of these inquiries. He was in hopes that when theexpenditure of this country upon the international investi-gation of the North Sea came to a close there might benational funds available for assisting them in the researchwhich they had undertaken for some time past, and whichhe could not doubt but with the opening of those newbuildings would be largely stimulated and increased, andthat thereby they might be assisted by them to solve prob-lems which were great and national. There was also
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