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Directors: GASTON E. BACON, JULES CASSELMAN, W. BRUCE PHILIP, K. B. BOWERMAN, CHARLES J. ABRAHAM, EDWIN DAL SCHMIDT, GEORGE BROM MELL

FACULTY

DAVID P. BARROWS, Ph.D., LL.D., President of the University of California. FRANKLIN THEODORE GREEN, Ph.G., Professor of Chemistry, and Director

of the Chemical Laboratories, and Dean.

FREDERICK WILLIAM NISH, Ph.G., Phar.B., Professor of Pharmacy, and Director of the Pharmaceutical Laboratory.

HENRY BENJAMIN CAREY, B.S., M.D., Professor of Materia Medica, Botany, and Pharmacognosy.

HADYN MOZART SIMMONS, Ph.G., M.D., Associate Professor of Materia Medica, and Lecturer on Toxicology; Associate Professor of Pharmacy.

HARLEY RUPERT WILEY, A. B. LL.B., Special Lecturer in Pharmacal Jurisprudence.

RICHARD J. DOWDALL, Ph.G., M.D., Medical Corps, U.S.A., Instructor in First Aid and Military Hygiene.

JUSTUS ENOS ZIMMERMAN, Instructor in Materia Medica, Botany and Pharmacognosy.

LEONARD SCOTT WHITMORE, Instructor in Chemistry.

CALENDAR

FORTY-NINTH ANNUAL SESSION

1920

August 5, Thursday-August 10, Tuesday-Entrance examinations at Berkeley for students to matriculate for three- and four-year courses. Permits to enter the examination room must be secured in advance from the Recorder of the Faculties at Berkeley.

August 27, Friday, 9 a.m. to 12 m.-Office hours of the Dean. Students may matriculate at the office of the Recorder of the Faculties, California Hall, University of California, Berkeley, California, or in San Francisco.

August 30-31, Monday and Tuesday-Matriculation on credentials, College of Pharmacy, San Francisco. Entrance examinations for two

and three-year courses begin.

September 2, Thursday-Assignment of seats, desks, and lockers. Apparatus given out.

November 25, Thursday-November 27, Saturday-Thanksgiving recess.

December 22, Wednesday-Christmas vacation begins.

1921

January 5, Wednesday-College work resumed.

January 8, Saturday-Applications for Directors' Scholarships to be filed with Dean.

March 23, Wednesday-Charter Day exercises in the Greek Theatre.

April 14, Thursday-April 16, Saturday-Easter recess.

April 30, Saturday-Last day of instruction.

May 2, Monday-Final examinations begin.

May 11, Wednesday-Commencement Day.

ANNOUNCEMENT FOR 1920-21

The demand for properly qualified pharmacists was never so great as it is today. Not only are salaries higher than ever before for those employed as clerks, but there are more opportunities for advancement. The demand, however, is for good men, those having business capacity, industry, integrity, and a good pharmaceutical education. There is no likelihood that there will be any material change in this respect, unless it be to intensify the present demand for the kind of pharmacists now most needed. Employers are looking for men who have a college education, and the supply is not equal to the demand. Furthermore, the national and state pure food and drug laws call for such constant care in the making of pharmaceuticals, such vigilance in the examination and testing of drugs and chemicals, that no drug store can be considered properly equipped that has not in it at least one person who is capable of applying the tests of the Pharmacopoeia. And these laws have come to stay. They may be-probably will be-modified, but they will never be repealed, because the people demand them. Pharmacists must adjust themselves to public sentiment, and the public expects pure drugs and medicines and competent persons to manufacture and dispense them.

The necessary knowledge of the sciences on which the art of pharmacy is based, and the technical skill required to practice that art, are best acquired-most economically learned in a college of pharmacy. The time has gone by when any considerable amount of teaching is done in the drug store. Little, if any, didactic instruction is presented to the junior clerk, and not much technique is acquired. The demands of trade and the somewhat factory-like method of doing the technical work of the laboratory and prescription counter are alike ill adapted to the purpose of imparting instruction. In many drug stores but little manufacturing is done. In still more, practically no drug testing or assaying is thought of, and even where this is done, the facilities for doing it are usually limited, and the work is done by the proprietor or his chief clerk, no pains being taken to teach the juniors how to do it. Clerks are hired to do certain work whereby they can add to their employer's revenue, and they are paid in money, not in teaching. Usually the employer considers what he can get from an employee, not what he can give to him, either by verbal instruction, manual training, or ethical culture.

And so, while there is more need than ever for scientific knowledge and technical skill on the part of the pharmacist, he has less opportunity for obtaining these in the daily routine of pharmacy. The college is

more than ever a necessity. Without its aid it is impossible for a young man to fit himself in a reasonable time to meet the demands made upon him.

When the California College of Pharmacy was established in 1872 it was not so much needed as it is now, because public sentiment did not demand so high a degree of qualification as is now expected. Now it is a necessity that a pharmacist have a scientific pharmaceutical education, such as he cannot obtain by working in a drug store without college instruction.

It is this kind of instruction that the California College of Pharmacy is prepared to give. For a third of a century it has been doing its work, earnestly and honestly trying to help young people to become pharmacists in the true sense of that term. Affiliated with the University of California, its internal management and nearly all its teaching have been conducted by practical and experienced pharmacists of progressive tendencies. For years it has contended for better educated and better trained pharmacists, and it has no thought of giving up this contention. And inasmuch as the feeling in favor of demanding a college diploma of every applicant for examination by the state boards is growing so rapidly that several states have enacted laws imposing this condition, it is incumbent upon all students of pharmacy to observe the signs of the times and govern themselves accordingly.

The College premises are admirably adapted to the purpose for which they were planned. The building is situated near Golden Gate Park, is spacious, conveniently arranged and well lighted. It consists of three floors, two 50 by 150 feet, and one 50 by 100 feet, entirely devoted to pharmacy, also a basement, 50 by 150 feet, for recreation. It comprises two general lecture halls, each capable of seating one hundred and fifty students; five laboratories-the Chemical, the Pharmaceutical, and the Pharmacognostical, Chemical Research, and the Bacteriological; also review class rooms, museum, library, besides offices, women's room, cloak rooms and store rooms.

The subjects taught are chemistry, pharmacy, botany, materia medica, pharmacognosy, physiology, toxicology, and bacteriology. The teaching includes the technique of the microscope, spectroscope, and other instruments of precision, as well as the manipulations involved in chemical and analytical work, and in operative pharmacy. Courses of lectures are also given in pharmacal jurisprudence, first aid, and military hygiene.

Courses of Instruction and Degrees.-(a) The completion of the twoyears' course in pharmacy, based upon the foundation of satisfactory completion of two years of high school work or its equivalent, leads to the degree of Graducate in Pharmacy (Ph.G.). The hours of instruction

are from 8 A. M. to 12 M. daily, during which hours each student is expected to be in attendance.

(b) The degree of Pharmaceutical Chemist (Ph.C.) is awarded upon completion of a three-year professional course in pharmacy; that is, a course based upon satisfactory completion of four years' standard high school preparation, or its equivalent, and including three years of work in pharmacy of collegiate grade.

(c) The degree of Bachelor of Pharmacy (Phar.B.) is conferred upon completion of the four-year professional course based upon satisfactory completion of four years' standard high school preparation, or its equivalent.

Drug Store Experience.-The California College of Pharmacy no longer demands drug store experience as a condition of graduation. Not that it does not believe in the value of such experience, but because the college should not be held to account for any experience, information, etc., which candidates for graduation may receive outside. The degree is based entirely upon the instruction given and work done at the college.

A Course in Pharmacy Preparatory to the Study of Medicine.—Those of our graduates who have become practicing physicians are unanimous in declaring that their course in pharmacy has been of great value to them in medical practice. As drug store experience is not a condition of graduation, persons intending to study medicine can receive their pharmaceutical diplomas on the completion of their course in this college.

Present Aims and Purposes.-The California College of Pharmacy provides systematic instruction in subjects pertaining to pharmacy, and has, from the first, kept abreast of the best pharmaceutical schools in this country. It has not sought to secure the greatest number of students, but to do the greatest amount of good. It has created a sentiment among pharmacists in favor of higher education. It believes that the pharmacist should be possessed of some culture before he enters upon his special training, and therefore urges him to complete his high school course, if possible, before entering college.

Extra Instruction.-For the benefit of those students who are conditioned, or who from any cause do not make satisfactory progress in any subject, arrangements have been made whereby they can receive special assistance in those studies in which they are deficient. The hours of instruction are set for a time that does not interfere with the regular college work. A nominal charge is made for this special instruction.

Special Students.-The advantages of this college are offered to qualified persons who may wish to receive instruction and perform the laboratory work but do not wish to take the regular course, or to comply with all the conditions required to obtain a degree. Such persons may enter as special students in any or all of the subjects taught by paying the fees for such courses as are taken.

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