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COLLEGE OF LETTERS.

FACULTY.

The Faculty of each College consists of the President of the University and the resident Professors, Associate Professors, Assistant Professors, and Lecturers giving instruction in the College.

UNDERGRADUATE COURSE.

The requirements for admission are given on page 63.

The undergraduate course in this College corresponds to the classical course of the leading American colleges, the prescribed study of Greek and Latin forming its distinguishing feature. It is designed to furnish a liberal education, and to afford preparation for professional studies. For details regarding the studies pursued, consult the description of the several courses of instruction in this REGISTER and in the ANNUAL ANNOUNCEMENT.

The requirements for the degree of A.B. consist of one hundred and twenty-five units, distributed as in the programme on page 100, and taken in the order announced by the several departments concerned, as explained in the detailed description of the Courses of Instruction.

The Group Elective in the College of Letters consists of twentyfour units of advanced studies in one subject, or not more than two cognate subjects, chosen from one of the following groups:

1. Philosophy: either alone or together with one subject from Group 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6.

2. Economics and Politics (including History and Law, and Courses 1 and 1A under Oriental Languages and Literatures).

3. Linguistics, the Semitic, Greek, Latin, French, Spanish, Italian, Slavic, German, English, Chinese and Japanese, languages and literatures, or any other languages and literatures that may at any time be announced among the courses of instruction.

4. Education.

5. Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Astronomy.

6. Physics, Chemistry, Geology (including Palæontology, Mineralogy, and Petrography), the Biological Sciences (including Botany and Zoology).

A statement of the courses permissible for the Group Elective is made from year to year in the ANNOUNCEMENT OF COURSES.

In general, students are not expected to take more than sixteen units during any half-year. Regular students who are free from

deficiencies will be registered for not more than nineteen units. Regular students with deficiencies will be limited to sixteen units, unless their deficiencies are of more than one year's standing, in which case they will be limited to thirteen units.

In addition to the studies enumerated above, all students are required to take the exercises in Physical Culture. Students excused from Military Science are required to make up the deficiency in hours in other departments of study.

COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES.

FACULTY.

The Faculty of each College consists of the President of the University and the resident Professors, Associate Professors, Assistant Professors, and Lecturers giving instruction in the College.

UNDERGRADUATE COURSE.

The requirements for admission are given on page 63.

Recommended graduates of California State Normal Schools will be granted the degree of B.L. upon completing the curriculum of this college, provided that subjects 6 and 7 (Latin) and 11 (Physics), of the entrance requirements, be added to the work done in the Normal Schools, if these subjects have not been included in the Normal School

course.

The undergraduate instruction in this college is designed to furnish a liberal education without Greek, and to afford opportunity for literary, linguistic, historical, and economic studies, as well as preparation for the professional schools. For details regarding the studies pursued, consult the description of the several courses of instruction in this REGISTER and in the ANNUAL ANNOUNCEMENT.

The requirements for the degree of B.L. consist of one hundred and twenty-five units, distributed as in the programme on page 100, and taken in the order announced by the several departments concerned, as explained in the detailed description of the Courses of Instruction.

The Group Elective in the College of Social Sciences consists of twenty-four units of advanced studies in one subject, or not more than two cognate subjects, chosen from one of the following groups:

1. Philosophy: either alone or together with one subject from Group 2, 3, or 4.

2. Economics and Politics (including History and Law, and Courses 1 and 1a in Oriental Languages and Literatures).

3. Linguistics, the Semitic, Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, French, Spanish, Italian, Slavic, German, English, Chinese and Japanese languages and literatures, or any other languages and literatures that may at any time be announced among the courses of instruction. 4. Education.

A statement of the courses permissible for the Group Elective is made from year to year in the ANNOUNCEMENT OF COURses.

Students in the College of Social Sciences who, by means of free electives, have fulfilled the courses prerequisite to the Group Elective in the College of Natural Sciences, may choose that Group Elective and be transferred to the College of Natural Sciences, provided they have fulfilled the matriculation requirements of that college.

In general, students are not expected to take more than sixteen units during any half-year. Regular students who are free from deficiencies will be registered for not more than nineteen units. Regular students with deficiencies will be limited to sixteen units, unless their deficiencies are of more than one year's standing, in which case they will be limited to thirteen units.

In addition to the studies enumerated above, all students are required to take the exercises in Physical Culture. Students excused from Military Science are required to make up the deficiency in hours in other departments of study.

COLLEGE OF NATURAL SCIENCES.

FACULTY.

The Faculty of each College consists of the President of the University and the resident Professors, Associate Professors, Assistant Professors, and Lecturers giving instruction in the College.

UNDERGRADUATE COURSE.

The requirements for admission are given on page 63.

The special feature in the curriculum of this college is the prominence given to the Natural Sciences as elements of culture, and the preparation afforded for a professional career in science. For details regarding the studies pursued, consult the description of the several courses of instruction in this REGISTER and in the ANNUAL ANNOUNCEMENT.

The requirements for the degree of B.S. consist of one hundred and twenty-five units, distributed as in the programme on page 100, and taken in the order announced by the several departments concerned, as explained in the detailed description of the Courses of Instruction.

The Group Elective in the College of Natural Sciences consists of twenty-four units of advanced studies in one subject, or not more than two cognate subjects, chosen from one of the following groups: 1. Philosophy: either alone or together with one subject from Group 4, 5, or 6.

4. Education.

5.

Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Astronomy.

6. Physics, Chemistry, Geology (including Paleontology, Mineralogy, Petrography), the Biological Sciences (including Botany and Zoology).

A statement of the courses permissible for the Group Elective is made from year to year in the ANNOUNCEMENt of Courses.

Students in the College of Natural Sciences, who, by means of Free Electives, have fulfilled the courses prerequisite to the Group Elective in the College of Social Sciences, may choose that Group Elective and be transferred to the College of Social Sciences, provided they have fulfilled the matriculation requirements of that college.

In general, students are not expected to take more than sixteen units during any half-year. Regular students who are free from deficiencies will be registered for not more than nineteen units. Regular students with deficiencies will be limited to sixteen units, unless their deficiencies are of more than one year's standing, in which case they will be limited to thirteen units.

In addition to the studies enumerated above, all students are required to take the exercises in Physical Culture. Students excused from Military Science are required to make up the deficiency in hours in other departments of study.

COURSE PREPARATORY FOR MEDICINE.

By reason of the recent expansion of the Medical Department, the pre-medical curriculum in the College of Natural Sciences will be considerably modified. A circular concerning the revised curriculum will be published as soon as the work of revision is complete.

Students in this course should consult members of the Joint Committee of the Academic and Medical Faculties on matters concerning their work, and especially concerning the choice of subjects in their elective work at Berkeley.

The Joint Committee is as follows:

For the Academic Council: Professors RITTER (Chairman),
O'NEILL, JAFFA, Dr. BANCROFT.

For the Medical Faculty: Professors D'ANCONA, A. E. TAYLOR,
FLINT.

COLLEGE OF COMMERCE.

FACULTY.

The Faculty of each College consists of the President of the University and the resident Professors, Associate Professors, Assistant Professors, and Lecturers giving instruction in the College.

The curriculum is intended to afford an opportunity for the scientific study of commerce in all its relations and for the higher education of business men and of the higher officers of the civil service.

UNDERGRADUATE COURSE.

The requirements for admission to this college are: The matriculation requirements of the College of Letters, or the College of Social Sciences, or the College of Natural Sciences, with the further provision that Spanish (15c) will he accepted as an equivalent for French (15a2) or German (1562), wherever either of those languages may be offered.

The undergraduate course is devoted almost wholly to those studies of an elementary or a technical nature which are deemed most appropriate as a broad preparation for commercial life. The small number of electives are to consist of such special studies as shall most directly aid the student in his preparation for the career that he intends to follow after graduation. If he desires to specialize in the direction of banking and finance, or in statistics and insurance, or in commercial practice, etc., he will find the most appropriate field for such specialization not in the undergraduate, but in the graduate department.

The one hundred and twenty-five units required for graduation, with the degree of Bachelor of Science, are grouped as follows: (1) Elementary Studies:

English

Modern Languages..

Mathematics.

History (Medieval and Modern)

Economics (Theoretical)

Geography, including 7 units in the study of the
Materials of Commerce, with the assistance of
the Pacific Commercial Museum

Military Science

Units.

6

18

8

12

6

15

-70

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