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125. Perspective.

Assistant Professor WYTHE.

Continuation of course 2B, intended for those preparing to teach and

for students of architecture.

3 hrs., second half-year; 2 units. M, 1-4.

GRADUATE COURSE

224A-224B. Seminar in Mechanical Drawing.

Associate Professor KOWER, Assistant Professor WYTHE,
and Mr.

Advanced work in mechanical drawing for graduate students.
Hours and units to be arranged.

GRAPHIC ART

LOWER DIVISION COURSES

A-B. Elementary Free-hand Drawing.

Mr. NAHL.

Drawing in pencil from models, embracing the study of light and shade and perspective; drawing from memory; with lectures.

3 hrs., throughout the year, beginning either in August or January; 1 unit each half-year. Three sections: I, M, 1–4; II, W, 1–4; III, F, 1-4. This course is equivalent to matriculation subject 16.

1. General History of Art.

Assistant Professors WASHBURN and NEUHAUS. Lectures on the development of art in the western world from the palaeolithic age to the present century. The first half-year's work extends through the art of Egypt, Mesopotamia, Greece and Rome to the early Christian and Byzantine periods. The second halfyear deals with the art of the Renaissance and modern periods. Sections will be provided for class study and a final examination given at the end of each half-year. Students will profit by a knowledge of general history.

3 hrs., throughout the year. M W F, 3.

6. Elementary Design.

Assistant Professor NEUHAUS. The principles that govern design. Geometrical forms as the basis of all design; the various laws of rhythm, balance, harmony, etc. Lectures, discussions and blackboard illustration; class problems in pencil and ink.

4 hrs., first half-year; 2 units. M F, 9-11. Prerequisite: course A-B, and Drawing C-D.

7. Color Theory.

Assistant Professor NEUHAUS.

A theoretical study of color problems with practical application in water color, tempera and crayons.

3 hrs., first half-year; 1 unit. W, 1-4. Prerequisite: course A-B and Drawing C-D.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

102. Teacher's Training Course in Freehand Drawing.

Mr. NAHL.

A presentation of freehand drawing for students preparing to teach. Relation of drawing to other subjects, methods of teaching and selection of material.

1 hr., second half-year; 1 unit. M, 4. Prerequisite: senior or graduate standing for students who make drawing their major.

114A-114B. Advanced Work in Freehand Drawing.

Assistant Professor JUDSON.

6 hrs., throughout the year; 2 units each half-year. Three sections: I, M F, 8-11; II, Tu Th, 9–12; III, Tu Th, 1-4. Prerequisite: course A-B or matriculation subject 16.

115A-115B. Drawing from Model; Composition.

Assistant Professor JUDSON.

3 hrs., throughout the year; 1 unit each half-year. Tu, 9–12. Prerequisite: course 114A-114B.

116A-116в. Still-life Painting.

Assistant Professor JUDSON.

3 hrs., throughout the year; 1 unit each half-year. Tu, 1-4. Prerequisite: course 114A-114B.

117A-117B. Advanced Color Study.

Assistant Professor NEUHAUS.

Practical problems in all mediums except oils, applied to decorative purposes.

3 hrs., throughout the year; 1 unit each half-year. First half-year: F, 1-4; second half-year: F, 8-11. Prerequisite: courses 6 and 7.

118A-118B. Advanced Design.

Assistant Professor NEUHAUS.

A study of natural objects and their translation into conventional forms. Practical application of design in pencil and water color. Stenciling, wood-block printing.

3 hrs., throughout the year; 1 unit each half-year. First half-year: M, 1-4; second half-year: M, 8-11. Prerequisite: courses 6 and 7. 127A-127B. Art Anatomy.

Mr. NAHL.

A study of the proportions and the general appearance of the human form.

1 hr., throughout the year; 1 unit each half-year. F, 4. Prerequisite: course 114A.

128A-128B. Art Anatomy Practice.

Mr. NAHL.

Drawing in charcoal from bones and anatomical casts, in light and shadow, direct and foreshortened.

3 hrs., throughout the year; 1 unit each half-year. Th, 9–12. Prerequisite: course 127A-127B.

GRADUATE COURSES

217A-217B. Continuation of course 117A-117B.

Assistant Professor NEUHAUS.

Hours to be arranged.

218A-218B. Continuation of course 118A-118B.

Assistant Professor NEUHAUS.

Hours to be arranged.

DOMESTIC ART

INFORMATION FOR LOWER DIVISION STUDENTS

Students who intend to make domestic art their major subject must have completed the high school course in advanced sewing and dressmaking or equivalent. These courses are not offered during the fall or spring sessions of the University, but are frequently offered in the summer session. Lower division work at the University should include Graphic Art 1, 6, and 7; Economics 1A-1B, Botany 1A-1B. Courses strongly recommended as elective work are History 1A-1B, Architecture 5, Political Science 1A, 1B, Drawing 9. Students who intend to specialize in house furnishing should take in addition Drawing C-D.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

NOTE.-With course 194A it is strongly recommended that parallel courses be chosen from the following group: Graphic Art 114A-114B, 115A-115B, 117A-117B, 118A-118B, 127A-127B.

Students who intend to elect the seminar in costume design, course 294A-294B, must have completed these courses and 193A-193B, 194A-194B. (Courses 104A-104B, 104c-104D offered in 1914-15 will be accepted as the equivalent of 193A-193B, 194A-194B.)

It is recommended that Architecture 110 and Civil Engineering 125 precede course 195, and that Graphic Art 117A-117B, 118A-118B, be elected as parallel courses.

193A-193B. The History of Costume. Assistant Professor PATTERSON. (a) From Ancient Times to the Seventeenth Century.

(B) During the Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries.

Lectures illustrated with stereopticon. Students will be required to make a "Style Book" and a charge will be made for the small photographs so used.

2 hrs., throughout the year; 2 units each half-year. Tu Th, 10. Prerequisite: Graphic Art 1, 6, 7, or their equivalents.

194A-194B. History of Costume: Laboratory Course.

Assistant Professor PATTERSON. Analysis of styles; drawing and color work from photographs and reproductions. Original problems. Course 193 is required as a parallel course.

3 hrs., throughout the year; 1 unit each half-year. requisite: Graphic Art 1, 6, 7, or their equivalents.

*195A-195B. House Furnishing.

Lectures and laboratory work.

Tu, 1-4. Pre

Assistant Professor PATTERSON.

4 hrs., throughout the year; 2 units each half-year. Lectures, M, 11; laboratory, M, 1-4. Prerequisite: Graphic Art 1, 6, 7, and Drawing C-D.

GRADUATE COURSE

294A-294B. Seminar in Costume Design.

Assistant Professor PATTERSON. Designing of costumes in materials and in color drawing. A practical application to present-day dress of the theories of design and color.

3 hrs., throughout the year; 1 unit. Hours to be arranged.

ALLIED COURSES WHICH MAY BE INCLUDED IN MAJOR WORK IN DOMESTIC ART WITH THE CONSENT OF THE DEPARTMENT

Graphic Art 114. [Advanced Work in Freehand Drawing.]

Assistant Professor JUDSON.

Assistant Professor NEUHAUS.

Graphic Art 117. [Advanced Color Study.]

Graphic Art 118. [Advanced Design.] Assistant Professor NEUHAUS.
Graphic Art 127, 128. [Art Anatomy.]
Agronomy 122. [Textile Raw Materials.]

Mr. NAHL. Professor GILMORE.

Landscape Gardening 101. [The Ornamentation of Home Grounds.]

Professor GREGG.

Architecture 110. [Housing.]

Assistant Professor HAYS.

Economics 152. [The Household as an Economic Agent.]

Philosophy 36A. [Aesthetics.]

By special arrangement only.

Chemistry 144. [Chemistry of Textiles.]

Associate Professor PEIXOTTO.

Assistant Professor POPE.

Assistant Professor BOOTH.

Assistant Professor GRISWOLD.

Civil Engineering 125. [Plumbing, Heating, Ventilating and Lighting.]

*Not to be given, 1915–16.

ECONOMICS

CARL C. PLEHN, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Finance, on the Flood Foundation.

HENRY R. HATFIELD, Ph.D., Professor of Accounting, on the Flood Foundation; Secretary of the College of Commerce.

Stuart DaggeTT, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Railway Economics, on the Flood Foundation.

LINCOLN HUTCHINSON, M.A., Associate Professor of Commerce, on the Flood Foundation.

JESSICA B. PEIXOTTO, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Social Economics. LUCY W. STEBBINS, A.B., Assistant Professor of Social Economics. CARLETON H. PARKER, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Industrial Economy. IRA B. CROSs, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Economics, on the Flood Foundation.

CHARLES E. BROOKS, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Insurance.

LEWIS LILLY, A.B., Instructor in Accounting.

JOHN F. FORBES, Certified Public Accountant, Lecturer in Accounting.
HERBERT S. SHUEY, B.S., Lecturer in Economics.

J. EVAN ARMSTRONG, Instructor in Stenography and Typewriting.
M. W. DOBRZENSKY, B.L., Assistant in Economics.
LOUISE MORROW, A.B., M.D., Assistant in Social Economics.

Facilities for Graduate Study.-The University Library is well supplied with works on economic subjects, and in particular with official statistical publications of the chief commercial countries of the world. These materials, with the official trade documents of the San Francisco Customs House, afford opportunity for the study of the trade, resources, and economic geography of particular countries and ports. The unique collection of local materials in the Bancroft Library is available for research in the economic history of the Pacific Coast. A collection of state reports and documents on public finance, complete for the last nine years, and in some instances extending over a longer period, may be consulted in the private library of Professor Plehn.

Special facilities also exist at Berkeley for the study of economic problems at first hand. San Francisco is the banking center of the Coast; and the banking system here is peculiar because of the actual circulation of gold coin, direct Oriental and European exchange, and crop movements practically continuous throughout the year. San Francisco is also the terminus of three great railways. The distance of California from the Middle West has given great importance to questions of transportation, and rate questions are subjects of constant interest.

2 In residence second half-year only, 1915-16.

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