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UPPER DIVISION COURSES

INFANTRY, COAST ARTILLERY, AIR SERVICE, AND ORDNANCE UNITS

The general prerequisites for admission to the upper division or advanced courses are: completion of two years' training in the basic course in any unit of the R. O. T. C., selection for further training, and execution of an agreement in writing as explained in the following paragraph. Courses 103A-103B and 104A-104в are prescribed for students in the Infantry Unit, 113A-113в and 114A-114B for students in the Air Service Unit, 133A-133в and 134A-134в for students in the Ordnance Unit, and 143A-143B and 144A-144B for students in the Coast Artillery Unit, who execute this agreement.

Any member of the senior division of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps who has completed two academic years of service in that division, and who has been selected for further military training by the president of the institution and the professor of military science and tactics, and who executes the following written agreement, will be entitled, while not subsisted in kind, to the commutation of subsistence fixed by the Secretary of War in accordance with law.

192...... In consideration of commutation of subsistence to be furnished me in accordance with law, I hereby agree to continue in the Reserve Officers' Training Corps during the remainder of my course in

(Institution) to devote five hours per week during such period to the military training prescribed, and to pursue the courses of camp training during such period, prescribed by the Secretaary of War.

The course of camp training is for six weeks during the summer vacation normally following the student's completion of the first year of the advanced course. The United States furnishes uniform, transportation, and subsistence for students attending the training comp, and pays them the pay of soldiers of the seventh grade of the Regular Army during their attendance at camp.

Cadet officers and, so far as practicable, sergeants of the unit will be appointed from members of the junior and senior classes.

Students desiring to enroll in upper division courses who are unable to conform to the following schedule are advised to consult the chairman of the department.

103A-103в. Advanced Infantry Training (third year). (3-3) Yr.

NANCE, BOYD, Fiske, Condren, HOWARD, BURKE, CHAPMAN,
FERGUSON, and Assistants

M W and four F, 11; Tu Th, 1, or Tu Th, 3; six two-hour periods. Given at Berkeley and Davis.

104A-104B. Advanced Infantry Training (fourth year). (3-3) Yr. NANCE, BOYD, FISKE. CONDREN, HOWARD, BURKE, CHAPMAN, FERGUSON, and Assistants

M W and four F, 11; Tu Th, 1, or Tu Th, 3; six two-hour periods. Given at Berkeley and Davis.

113A-113B. Advanced Air Service Training (third year). (3–3) Yr. NANCE, PATRICK, and Assistants

M W, 11; F, 1-4. 114A-114B. Advanced Air Service Training (fourth year). (3-3) Yr. Tu Th, 11; F, 1-4. NANCE, PATRICK, and Assistants

133A-133в. Advanced Ordnance Training (third year). (2-2) Yr. NANCE, SPALDING M W and four F, 11; one hour to be arranged; six two-hour periods.

Limited to students in the colleges of Chemistry and Mechanics, to students in the College of Letters and Science whose major subject is chemistry; other students may be admitted only with the special permission of the instructor.

*134A-134B. Advanced Ordnance Training (fourth year). (2-2) Yr. NANCE, SPALDING

143A-143в. Advanced Coast Artillery Training (third year). (3-3) Yr. NANCE, OSTROM, and Assistants

M W, 11; M W, 4; and one hour by arrangement. Prerequisite: Civil Engineering 1A-1B; Mathematics 5; Physics 2A-2B; or their equivalents.

144A-144в. Advanced Coast Artillery Training (fourth year). (3-3) Yr. NANCE, OSTROM, and Assistants

M W, 11; and three hours by arrangement.
Prerequisite: Military 143A-143B.

MEDICAL CORPS UNIT

Courses 121A-121B and 122A-122B are basic courses. Enrollment therein does not entitle the student to commutation of subsistence. Courses 123A123B and 124A-124B are advanced courses. Students enrolled therein receive commutation of subsistence on the same terms as those indicated above for students in the infantry, coast artillery, air service, or ordnance units.

121A-121B. Medico-Military Science and Tactics (first year). (1−1) Yr. FORD

Open to first-year students in the Medical School who are eligible for R. O. T. C. training.

122A-122B. Medico-Military Science and Tactics (second year). (1-1) Yr. FORD

Prerequisite: 121A-121B. Open to second-year students in the Medical School who are eligible for R. O. T. C. training. Course 122B is given at San Francisco.

* Not to be given 1923–24; to be given 1924-25.

123A-123в. Advanced Medico-Military Science and Tactics (third year). (1-1) Yr. FORD

Prerequisite: 121A-121в and 122A-122B, or the basic courses in any R. O. T. C. unit. Open to students in the Medical School who are eligible for the third year of the course prescribed for Medical Corps units, R. O. T. C. Given at San Francisco.

*124A-124B. Advanced Medico-Military Science and Tactics (fourth year). (1-1) Yr. FORD

Prerequisite: 123A-123B. Open to fourth-year students in the Medical School who are eligible for the R. O. T. C. training.

COURSES SEPARATE FROM THE RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS
UPPER DIVISION COURSES

NANCE, ALLEN

109A-109B. Advanced Band Training (third or fourth year). (1-1) Yr.
M W and four F, 11; two two-hour periods.
May be taken for credit during two years.
Prerequisite: consent of the instructor.

190. Military Intelligence. (2) I. Tu Th, 3.

LANDON

Prerequisite: junior standing. This course is planned especially to assist American citizens who intend to live abroad, in making reports upon economic and political conditions encountered by them, which might be helpful to the government in the formulation and development of its military policy. Those who successfully complete the course, if otherwise eligible, will be considered for nomination by the University for commissions in the Officers' Reserve Corps (M. I. D.). *Not to be given 1923-24.

UA

MINING AND METALLURGY

ERNEST A. HERSAM, B.S., Professor of Metallurgy.

FRANK H. PROBERT, A.R.S.M., Professor of Mining and Dean of the College of Mining (Chairman of the Department).

WALTER S. MORLEY, B.S., Associate Professor of Metallurgy.

LESTER C. UREN, B.S., Associate Professor of Petroleum Engineering.
WALTER S. WEEKS, A.B., S.B., M.E., Associate Professor of Mining.
R. S. MCINTYRE, B.S., Instructor in Mining.

Honors. Students will be recommended for honors at graduation on the basis of the quality of work done in the regular curriculum of the senior year. Particular emphasis will be placed upon the student's capacity for original work.

Vacation Work.-All students are required to work eight weeks, prior to senior standing, in a mine, mill, smelter, oil field or oil refinery, of which two weeks shall be spent in collecting data for a report to be submitted to the Department of Mining and Metallurgy. Two units of credit will be given for this report.

Thesis. For the regulations governing thesis work see Circular of Information, Academic Departments. Candidates for B.S. in mining, metallurgical or petroleum engineering may, with the approval of the study-lists committee, submit a thesis based on field studies. The course listed as Geology 118 (summer field course) will satisfy thesis requirements for students whose major subject is economic genology.

MINING

There are no laboratory fees in mining courses.

LOWER DIVISION COURSES

la. Mine Surveying. (2) I.

WEEKS

Tu Th, 9-12. Prerequisite: Civil Engineering 1A, 1B, 3. To be taken concurrently with course 1B.

Surface and underground mine surveys; methods of traversing and collecting details.

1в. Mine Mapping. (1) I. W, 1–4.

Prerequisite: Civil Engineering 1A, 1B.

MCINTYRE

Preparation of mine maps from survey data and methods of representing geological and other features on mine maps. Drafting-room practice.

1c. Mine Mapping. (1) II. W, 1-4.

Prerequisite: course lв.

MCINTYRE

Continuation of course 1B. Preparation of stoping charts, sample maps, geologic maps and sections, and bore-hole logs. Use of special instruments.

5. Engineering Drawing. (2) II.

MCINTYRE

Sec. 1, M F, 1-4; Sec. 2, Tu Th, 1-4. Prerequisite: high school geometrical drawing.

Drafting-room practice, supplemented by occasional lectures, designed to meet the needs of mining students. Lettering; orthographic projection; preparation of working drawings and metallurgical flow sheets; graphical methods of representing engineering data; copying processes.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

101. Mine Development and Mining Methods. (3) I. M W F, 10. Prerequisite: course 103.

PROBERT

Preliminary development, prospect and assessment work; choice of permanent entry; shaft sinking, tunneling, underground exploration. Support of excavations. Factors determining methods of mining. Modern practice in surface and underground mining.

103. General Mining. (2) II. Tu Th, 11.

Prerequisite: Geology 1a, Mineralogy 1a, 1B.

PROBERT

History of mining; importance of industry in modern civilization; surface indications of commercial mineralization; scientific prospecting; classification of mining methods.

105. Mining Machinery: Compressed Air. (4) I.

WEEKS

M W, 8; M Tu, 14. Prerequisite: Mechanics 1, Electrical Engineering 100.

Lectures, computations, laboratory. The compression of air and its use in mining.

107. Economies of Mining. (3) II. M W F, 9.

Prerequisite: senior standing.

PROBERT

Mining a business. Land, labor, and capital in mining. The economic life of a mine. The public domain and acquisition of mineral lands. Company incorporation and organization; stocks, bonds, and market tendencies; mine taxation; marketing ores and metals. Labor, employment, management, labor organizations. Conservation of natural resources. Production and consumption. Political and commercial control. Relation of mining to other industries.

109. Mine Cost Accounting. (2) II. Tu Th, 8.

UREN

Lectures on mine accounting and cost-keeping from an engineering standpoint. Payment of workmen; purchase and distribution of mine supplies; production records; administrative reports; methods of filing and preparing engineering and statistical data.

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