8 UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON 



west. In its many sawmills and wood-working industries, the 

 student has unrivaled opportunities for studying wood utiliza- 

 tion. 



*ADMISSION TO FRESHMAN STANDING 



A student must offer for admission to freshman standing in 

 the University, fifteen units by examination or by certificate from 

 an accredited school from which he has graduated. The fifteen 

 units must include the following combinations: 



3 units of English 



2 units of mathematics (1 unit algebra, 1 unit plane ge- 



ometry). 



3 units selected from one of the following groups (or 2 units, 



if 3 units of mathematics are presented) : 



(a) Latin and Greek (not less than 2 units of Latin, or 



1 of Greek will be counted). 



(b) Modern foreign language (at least 2 units in one 



language; not less than one unit will be counted 

 in any language). 



(c) History, civics, economics, at least one unit to form 



a year of consecutive work in history). 



(d) Physics, chemistry, botany, zoology, general biology, 



physical geography, geology, physiology. (Not less 

 than one unit will be counted in physics, chem- 

 istry, or general biology. No science will be 

 counted as applying on this requirement unless it 

 includes a satisfactory amount of laboratory 

 work.) 



2 units in subjects represented in the above groups (a)-(d). 



5 units selected from any subject accepted by an approved 

 high school for its diploma; not more than 4 units, how- 

 ever, may be in vocational subjects. 



In addition to the three units of English and the two units 

 of mathematics required for admission to all colleges of the Uni- 

 versity, it is recommended that a student expecting to enter the 



* More detailed information concerning admission is furnished in a 

 separate section of the University Bulletin, known as Entrance Informa- 

 tion. (See pages 9-14.) 



