

COLLEGE OF FORESTRY 23 



311. FOREST UTILIZATION. Four credits. First semester. 

 For seniors and graduates. Prerequisite, 101 and one year of 

 chemistry. GRONDAL. 



Lumber and its economic uses. Building materials and 

 buildings. Proper uses of treated wood blocks. Wood pipe, silos, 

 veneers, etc. Paper making, wood distillation, tanbark, naval 

 stores and other secondary forest products. 



313-314. RESEARCH. Two credits per semester. May be taken 

 as a semester or a year course. For seniors and graduates. 

 Laboratory deposit will depend on nature of the work. 



315. SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT. Two credits. First semes- 

 ter. KIRKLAND. 



Fundamental principles of scientific management, with spe- 

 cial reference to the lumber industry. 



316. ADVANCED FOREST MANAGEMENT. Three credits. Second 

 semester. For graduate students only. Prerequisite, 151-152. 

 KIRKLAND. 



Advanced studies. About one week of field work on a tract 

 of 50,000 to 100,000 acres on which data concerning different 

 soil classes, forest types, etc., and volume of timber is already 

 available. This work will be followed by the actual formation 

 of a working plant providing for regulation of the yield and or- 

 ganization of all forest work on the area, with estimates of out- 

 lay and income. 



318. FIELD FOREST MENSURATION. Two credits. Second se- 

 mester. For seniors or graduates. Prerequisite, 305. Labor- 

 atory deposit, $2.00. CLARK. 



This course will be given in the field the second half of the 

 semester in connection with the field work in logging engineering. 

 It supplements and enlarges upon the work of timber estimating 

 and mapping as given in courses 51 and 52. 



319. WOOD ANALYSIS. Two credits. First semester. For 

 juniors in architecture. GRONDAL. 



A study of the identification, physical properties and char- 

 acteristics of all woods used in building construction and finish- 

 ing. The finishing and preserving of wood will be discussed. 



