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113A-113B. Taxonomy and Phylogeny of the Phaenogams.

Associate Professor JEPSON. Characters and affinities of the classes and more important orders of seed plants, accompanied by informal discussions of phylogenetic problems.

6 hrs. throughout the year; 3 units each half-year. M W, 9-12; field work to be arranged. Prerequisite: courses 104A-104в and 105A105B.

116. Economic Botany.

Assistant Professor HALL and Mr. KENDALL. Laboratory work on the morphology, classification, geographical distribution, and properties of plants which furnish commercial products and agricultural crops, accompanied by lectures on the origin, collection, uses, and commerce of plant products.

6 hrs., first half-year; 3 units. Lectures, M W, 8; laboratory, M W, 10-12. Prerequisite: courses 2 and 3; Chemistry 1A-1B.

GRADUATE COURSES

The equipment of the botanical department is fairly complete, permitting of a wide range of studies. It includes the following collections:

(1) A phaenogamic herbarium of 150,000 sheets of mounted specimens and a large quantity of unmounted material which is available for use by responsible investigators. The flora of Western America is here better represented than in any other collection, which permits of satisfactory work in preparing revisions or monographs of these plants. The economic section contains representatives of the more common cultivated plants, particularly of those grown in California.

(2) A cryptogamic herbarium consisting of 25,000 mounted sheets. The representation of the west coast algae is undoubtedly the most complete in existence. These collections, together with the ease with which the marine forms may be collected, render the study of cryptogams, and particularly of algae, very satisfactory.

(3) A botanical museum containing valuable sections of woods, barks, cones, etc., available for class and research work.

(4) A botanic garden where native plants are grown and where cultural experiments may be carried on by qualified students.

225A-225B. Advanced Cryptogamic Botany.

Professor SETCHELL.

Advanced and research work on the cryptogamic plants of California, particularly on the algae.

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226. Advanced Phaenogamic Botany.

Associate Professor JEPSON.

Special problems requiring the original investigation of some particular order or smaller group of flowering plants; involves work in the field as well as in the laboratory. M W, 9-12.

227. Advanced Plant Physiology.

Dr. GOODSPEED. Special problems in plant physiology will be assigned to properly prepared students. M F, 1-4.

228A-228B. Advanced Economic Botany.

Assistant Professor HALL.

Special problems involving the investigation of some groups of plants yielding commercial or agricultural products.

9 hours., throughout the year; 3 units each half-year. M W F, 1-4.

230. Botanical Seminar.

Professor SETCHELL and Staff. Graduates and advanced undergraduates meet once a week for the discussion of special topics. The head of the department should be consulted.

CELTIC

WILLIAM W. LYMAN, Jr., M.A., Instructor in Celtic and English.

LOWER DIVISION COURSE

1A-1B. Elementary Modern Irish.

Mr. LYMAN.

Essentials of grammar; short stories and poems by contemporary writers.

3 hrs., throughout the year. Hours to be arranged.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

102A-102B. Modern and Early Welsh.

Mr. LYMAN.

This course is designed to give the student a reading knowledge of the language.

2 hrs., throughout the year. Hours to be arranged.

Either course 1A-1B, or 102A-102B will be given, depending upon the needs and wishes of the students.

103. Welsh Novelists.

Mr. LYMAN.

Study of one or more of the Welsh works of fiction of the later nineteenth century.

2 hrs., second half-year. Hours to be arranged.

104. Advanced Modern Irish.

Fiction and poetry of the nineteenth century. 2 hrs., first half-year. Hours to be arranged.

105. The Anglo-Celtic Poets.

Mr. LYMAN.

Mr. LYMAN.

The poets of the so-called Celtic Renaissance, centering in Yeats and the modern school of Irish writers. Lectures, reading and reports.

3 hrs., first half-year. Tu Th, 2, and a third hour to be arranged.

106. Old and Middle Irish.

Mr. LYMAN.

A study of the old forms of the Irish tongue together with the reading of several of their chief literary monuments.

2 hrs., second half-year. Hours to be arranged. Open to qualified students without a previous knowledge of Celtic.

CHEMISTRY

GILBERT N. LEWIS, Ph.D., Professor of Physical Chemistry and Dean of the College of Chemistry.

EDMOND O'NEILL, Ph.B., Professor of Inorganic Chemistry and Director of the Chemical Laboratory.

WALTER C. BLASDALE, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Chemistry.
HENRY C. BIDDLE, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
EDWARD BOOTH, Ph.B., Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
WILLIAM C. BRAY, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
RICHARD C. TOLMAN, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
JOEL H. HILDEBRAND, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
LUDWIG ROSENSTEIN, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry.
GEORGE E. GIBSON, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry.
ELLIOT Q. ADAMS, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry.
WILLIAM L. ARGO, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry.

GERALD E. K. BRANCH, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry.
MERLE RANDALL, Ph.D., Research Associate in Chemistry.
Two Teaching Fellows.

Fourteen Assistants.

Matriculation chemistry, subject 12b, is usually prerequisite to all courses in chemistry, excepting courses 1c, 1D and 1E. To students who have not taken chemistry in, the high schools an opportunity of taking an equivalent course is offered during the summer session of the University.

Either matriculation chemistry or course lc is ordinarily prerequisite to courses 1D and 1E. Credit will not be given for both 1D and 1E, nor will credit be given for 1c, 1D, or le to a student who at any time receives credit for 1A-1B.

Course 1A-1B is prerequisite to all further courses in chemistry. Either course 5 or 6A-6в is prerequisite to all upper division courses in chemistry. A thorough training in mathematics and physics should not be neglected. Students who desire to become familiar with the fundamentals of chemistry should take courses 8A-8B, 9 and 111A.

Candidates for the teacher's certificate, in order to receive a recommendation with chemistry as a major must take the following courses: 1A-1B, 5 (or 6A-6B), 8A-8B, 9, 161, and either 111A or five further units of major work, including course 121, and must pass with credit a final written examination covering the general field of chemistry.

Candidates for the master's degree in chemistry must devote their time for one full graduate year to chemistry and allied subjects. Only those candidates whose work is completely satisfactory in the elected courses and in research leading to the prescribed thesis will be recommended for the master's degree.

For every laboratory course there will be charged each half-year a laboratory fee of $5 per unit of laboratory work. Fee for course. 1A, $10; 1B, $10. In addition, a deposit of $5 must be made for each course at the beginning of each half-year to cover breakage. Such part of this deposit as is unused will be returned to the student. A student who takes upper division courses only, will at no time be required to pay laboratory fees for more than 4 units; that is, the maximum fee in such cases, exclusive of deposits, will be $20.

The chemical laboratory is well equipped for research work, and is open to properly qualified graduate students, not only throughout the college year, but also during the summer vacation.

LOWER DIVISION COURSES

1c. Elements of Chemistry.

Professor O'NEILL.

Lectures on the general principles of chemistry, with experimental illustration.

2 hrs., first half-year. Tu Th, 10.

1D. Elements of Chemistry.

Professor O'NEILL.

The principles of chemistry with special consideration of applications to the manufacturing industries. Lectures, fully illustrated by experiments.

2 hrs., second half-year. Tu Th, 8.

1E. Elements of Chemistry.

Assistant Professor BIDDLE.

Chemistry in every-day life, particularly its application to household problems and to matter of daily experience. Lectures, fully illustrated by experiments.

2 hrs., second half-year. Tu Th, 10.

1A-1B. General Inorganic Chemistry and Qualitative Analysis.

3 hrs., lectures and quiz, and 4 hrs. laboratory work, throughout the year; 5 units each half-year.

Lectures and quiz.

Assistant Professor HILDEBRAND; Professor LEWIS, Assistant Professors BOOTH, BRAY, and TOLMAN, Drs. ROSENSTEIN, GIBSON, ADAMS, ARGO and BRANCH.

Two sections: M W F, 9; M W F, 10.

Laboratory.

Assistant Professors BOOTH and BRAY, Professor LEWIS, Assistant Professor HILDEBRAND, Drs. ROSENSTEIN, GIBSON, ADAMS, ARGO and BRANCH.

Four sections: I, M F, 1-3; II, Tu Th, 9-11; III, Tu Th, 1-3; IV, W, 1-3; S, 9-11. Prerequisite: matriculation chemistry, subject 12b. In special cases students who have credit for matriculation physics may be allowed to take this course without the chemistry prerequisite, but in no case without the written consent of the instructor.

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