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THE COURSE LEADING TO THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARCHITECTURE.

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Not leading to a degree, but a certificate will be issued upon satisfactory completion of the following course. Candidates proficient in any of the subjects scheduled in this course will be allowed to substitute other architectural subjects in their stead. For entrance requirements address the Professor in charge of the College of Archi

tecture.

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drawn and rendered in India Ink and in Color. Fall and winter

nine draughting hours per week.

Spring twelve draughting hours

and one lecture per week. Professor TROWBRIDGE.

Nine

2. Freehand Drawing. Charcoal drawing from the cast. hours per week throughout the year. Assistant Professor BRAUNER. 3. Shades and Shadows. One lecture and six draughting hours per week. Winter term. Professor TROWBRIDGE.

4. Perspective. One lecture and six hours draughting per week. Spring term. Water color rendering of perspectives is a part of this course. Professor TROWBRIDGE and Assistant Professor MARTIN.

Sophomore Year.

20. History of Architecture. Fall: Egyptian, Greek and Roman Architecture. Winter: Romanesque and Byzantine, Architecture. Spring: Gothic Architecture. Three lectures per week throughout the year. Tu., Th., Sat., at nine. Mr.

21. Design. Periodical competitive problems arranged to occupy about twenty-four draughting hours per week throughout the year. Criticisms four times per week throughout the year and one lecture per week in winter and spring. Assistant Professor VAN PELT.

22. Drawing from the Antique. Charcoal and pencil drawing from plaster casts. Nine hours of drawing per week through fall Assistant Professor BRAUNER.

and winter terms.

23. Masonry Construction. Spring term. Three hours. Lectures, discussions and drawing. Assistant Professor MARTIN.

24. Sketching from Nature. Two afternoons per week in spring term in out-of-door sketching in pencil and water colors. In bad weather this class works from still life groups indoors. Professor BRAUNER.

Assistant

Junior Year.

30. History of Architecture. Fall. Renaissance Architecture. Winter. Modern Architecture. Three lectures per week in these

terms. Mr.

31. History of Art. One lecture per week throughout the year on Friday afternoon at four o'clock. Assistant Professor BRAUNER. 32. Working Drawings. Fall. Fourteen hours. From 3 to 5 lectures and from thirty-five to forty hours drawing each week throughout the term. The term's work begins with a series of problems requiring sketch plans for a number of residences of the various classes both country and city, after which some good type of building is selected and the students are required to make preliminary sketches, complete quarter scale working drawings, several sheets of full size details, etc. During the latter half of the term and in conjunction with the scale and full size detail drawings one hour a day is given to a careful and thorough discussion of specifications, and the work pertaining to the various trades represented in building domestic structures. Assistant Professor MARTIN.

33. Design. Periodical competitive problems arranged to occupy about thirty-six hours per week in the winter and about forty-two hours per week in the spring. Criticisms four times a week and one lecture per week in the winter and spring term. Assistant Professor VAN PELT.

34. Seminary. Reviews of current technical journals. Papers and discussions upon subjects of professional interest not covered by other courses. One hour per week throughout the year. Assistant

Professor MARTIN.

35. Modeling. Six hours per week in clay modeling from busts, architectural ornaments, animals heads, etc. Assistant Professor BRAUNER.

36. Heating and Ventilation. Two lectures per week through spring term. Professor CARPENTER.

Senior Year.

40. Design. Periodical competitive problems arranged to occupy about thirty-nine hours per week in the fall, forty-two hours in the

winter and fifty-four hours in the spring. Criticism four times per week throughout the year and one lecture per week in the winter and spring terms. Assistant Professor VAN PELT.

41. Construction. Five hours. This course consists of lectures and drafting room work and deals with the problems of special foundations, underpinning, steel buildings, fireproofing, etc. Assistant Professor MARTIN.

42. Modeling. A continuation of course 35, consisting of six hours per week in clay modeling. Assistant Professor BRAUNER.

43. Seminary. Papers on legal questions, disputes and judgments, contracts, competitions, professional practice, office methods, superintendence, etc. Spring term. One two hour session on one evening of each week. Professor TROWBRIDGE and Assistant Professor MARTIN.

COLLEGE OF CIVIL ENGINEERING.

FACULTY.

JACOB GOULD SCHURMAN, A.M., D.Sc., LL.D., President. ESTEVAN ANTONIO FUERTES, Ph.D., C. E., M.A.S.C.E., Director of the College, Dean of the Faculty, and Professor of Sanitary Engineering.

IRVING PORTER CHURCH, C.E., Professor of Applied Mechanics and Hydraulics, in charge of the College Library and the Hydraulic Laboratories.

CHARLES LEE CRANDALL, C.E., Professor of Railway Engineering and Geodesy, in charge of the Geodetic Laboratory and Instrumental Equipment.

HENRY SYLVESTER JACOBY, C.E., Professor of Bridge Engineering and Graphics, in charge of the Museums.

GARDNER WILLIAMS, C.E., Professor of Experimental Hydraulics, in charge of the Hydraulic Laboratory at Fall Creek.

HENRY NEELY OGDEN, C.E., Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, in charge of the Sanitary Laboratory and Civil Constructions, and Secretary of the College Faculty.

WILLIAM ELTON MOTT, S.B., Instructor in Civil Engineering, in charge of the Junior Laboratory, and Registrar of the College. JOHN THOMAS PARSON, Instructor in Civil Engineering, in charge of the Photographic Laboratory and Drawing Collections. ELMER JAMES MCCAUSTLAND, C.E., M.C.E., Instructor in Civil Engineering, and Assistant in the Laboratories.

CLAUDE WILLIAM LEROY FILKINS, C.E., M.C.E., Instructor in Civil Engineering, in charge of the Astronomical Equipment. IRA WELCH MCCONNELL, C.E., Instructor in Civil Engineering, and Assistant in the Laboratories.

EDGAR KAY, C.E., Instructor in Civil Engineering, and Assistant in the Laboratories.

Instructor in Civil Engineering, and Assistant in

the Laboratories.

FRANK W. SKINNER, C.E., Lecturer in Field Engineering.
EBENEZER TURNER, C.E., Lecturer in Meteorology.

Members of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences who are heads of the departments in whose courses the students of this College receive non

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