Courses in Forestry 



FOURTH YEAR 



Forestry, courses 2a and 2b; Botany 9 3hrs. 



3a and 3b, and 6 15hrs. Law (Real Property) 4hrs. 



Zoology courses 6 and 7 ... .4hts. Political Economy 1 4hrs. 



Mineralogy 1 2hrs. 



SUMMER Between 4th and 5th Year 



Field Course in Forestry 9 6 -weeks 



FIFTH YEAR 

 Forestry, courses 2c, 4, 5a, Law, (Real Property and 



5b, and 8 15hrs. Contracts) 5hrs. 



Political Economy 29 Mrs 



The sequence of stuJies as above outlined is recommended, will 

 usually prove feasible and should be adhered to. 



DESCRIPTION OF COURSES. 



A. PRELIMINARY WORK 



The general scope of the courses of study above enumerated is 

 indicated, in brief, as follows: 



Spanish, French and German. A study of the grammar, with the 

 reading of modern prose and practice in speaking and writing. 



Rhetoric. Practical work in English composition* writing and 

 criticising essays. 



Political Economy. Elementary treatment of such topics as Pro- 

 duction, Exchange, Distribution, and the History of Industrial Society. 



Mathematics. Advanced Algebra, together with the Elements of 

 Plane Trigonometry and Analytical Geometry. 



Physics. A year of advanced study of the subjects of Mechanics, 

 Sound and Light, Heat and Electricity. 



Chemistry. A year's work in general inoganic chemistry, re- 

 quiring attendance upon lectures, recitations, and laboratory exercises. 



Mineralogy and Geology. The instruction in these subjects is de- 

 signed to acquaint the student with the most characteristic properties 

 of common rocks and minerals, and with some of the most prominent 

 features of geological structure of the earth's crust. 



General Biology. A study of typical species of plants and ani- 

 mals with reference to structure, function, development, and relation- 

 ship, designed as introductory to the more advanced work in botany 

 and zoology. 



