The matriculation examinations for the session of 1920-21 for the two years' course (Graduate in Pharmacy) will be held at the College on Saturday, August 28, 1920, at 9 a.m. Matriculation examinations for the three years' course (Pharmaceutical Chemist) and for the four years' course (Bachelor of Pharmacy), see pages 24 and 25. All communications should be addressed to the Dean, Professor FRANK T. GREEN, California College of Pharmacy, Second and Parnassus avenues, San Francisco, California. THE UNIVERSITY The University comprises the following colleges and departments: The Colleges of Letters and Science, I. IN BERKELEY Agriculture (including the courses at Berkeley, the University Farm at Davis, the Graduate School of Tropical Agriculture at Riverside, and the United States Agricultural Experiment Station, which includes stations at Berkeley and Davis, the forestry stations at Chico and Santa Monica, "Whitaker's Forest" in Tulare County, the Citrus Experiment Station at Riverside, the Imperial Valley Experiment Station near Meloland, and the M. Theo. Kearney Experiment Station at Kearney Park, Fresno County.) Mechanics, Mining, Civil Engineering, Chemistry. The Schools of Architecture, Education, Jurisprudence, Medicine (first and second years). The University Extension Division (offering instruction wherever classes can be formed or anywhere in California by correspondence, providing lectures, recitals, motion pictures and other material for visual instruction, giving guidance and suggestion to debating clubs, and offering aid to communities through its Bureau of Infor mation and Social Welfare). The California Museum of Vertebrate Zoology. DEPARTMENTS OF INSTRUCTION IN THE COLLEGES AT BERKELEY Agriculture (including Agricultural Education, Agricultural Extension, Agronomy, Pomology, Landscape Gardening and Floriculture, Viticulture, Soil Chemistry and Bacteriology, Soil Technology, Agricultural Chemistry, Nutrition, Citriculture, Genetics, Olericulture, Experimental Irrigation, Animal Husbandry, Poultry Husbandry, Veterinary Science, Dairy Industry, Farm Management, Entomology, Forestry, Horticulture, Parasitology, Plant Pathology, and Rural Institutions), Anatomy, Anthropology, Architecture, Astronomy, Biochemistry and Pharmacology, Botany, Celtic, Chemistry, Civil Engineering, Drawing and Art, Economies, Education, English, French, Geography, Geology, German, Greek, History, Home Economics, Hygiene, Irrigation, Juris prudence, Latin, Library Science, Mathematics, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering, Military Science and Tactics, Mineralogy, Mining and Metallurgy, Music, Oriental Languages, Palaeonotology, Pathology and Bacteriology, Philosophy and Psychology, Physical Education, Physics, Physiology, Political Science, Public Speaking, Romanic Languages, Sanskrit, Semitic Languages, Slavic Languages, Social Institutions, Spanish, Zoology. II. AT MOUNT HAMILTON The Lick Astronomical Department (Lick Observatory). II. AT SANTIAGO, CHILE The D. O. Mills Observatory, a branch of the Lick Observatory. IV. IN SAN FRANCISCO California School of Fine Arts, Hastings College of the Law, Medical School, third, fourth, and fifth years, including Hospitals, California College of Pharmacy, The Museum of Anthropology, Archaeology, and Art. V. IN LOS ANGELES Los Angeles Medical Department, graduate instruction only. VI. AT DAVIS The University Farm School and college instruction and research in Agronomy, Animal Husbandry, Dairy Industry, Farm Mechanics, Olericulture, Poultry Husbandry, Pomology, Soils, and Veterinary Science. VII. AT RIVERSIDE The Graduate School of Tropical Agriculture. VIII. AT LA JOLLA The Scripps Institution for Biological Research. IX. AT SWANTON The Summer School of Surveying. REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY NOTE. The regular meetings of the Regents are held at 2 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month, except July, and on the day before Commencement, at such places as may from time to time be determined, ordinarily at the California School of Fine Arts, California and Mason streets, San Francisco. The Los Angeles office of the Regents is in Room 417, Union League Building, Los Angeles. The term of the appointed Regents is sixteen years, and terms expire March 1 of the year indicated in parentheses. The names are arranged in the order of original accession to the Board. ARTHUR WILLIAM FOSTER, (1932) GUY CHAFFEE EARL, A.B. (1934) JOHN ALEXANDER BRITTON (1930) 445 Sutter st, San Francisco CHARLES STETSON WHEELER, B.L. (1928) Nevada Bank bldg, San Francisco WILLIAM HENRY CROCKER, Ph.B. (1924) Crocker National Bank, San Francisco PHILIP ERNEST BOWLES, Ph.B. (1922) American National Bank, San Francisco JAMES KENNEDY MOFFITT, B.S. (1924) 1100 Franklin st, San Francisco EDWARD AUGUSTUS DICKSON, B.L. (1926) 637 Wilton pl, Los Angeles JAMES MILLS (1926) Hamilton City CHESTER HARVEY ROWELL, Ph.B. (1936) Fresno MORTIMER FLEISH HACKER (1934) GEORGE I. COCHRAN, LL.D. (1930) West Twenty-eighth st, Los |