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For Undergraduates.
  
  
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For Undergraduates.

Economics B1: The Principles of Economics.—A survey of the principles
of economics in the first and second terms is followed in the third term by


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Page 115
a study of the bearing of these principles upon present American conditions.
Instruction will be given by lectures, assigned readings, reports, and discussions.—(B.A.
or B.S. credit, 3 session-hours.) Monday, Wednesday, Friday,
9.30-10.30. Cabell Hall. Professor Page and Mr. Hart.

Government B1: Constitutional Government.—A description and comparison
of the theories and essential features of the governments of the United
States, England, France, Germany, and Switzerland, with the greatest stress on
the government of the United States and the work of Congress. Instruction
by lectures, textbook study, assigned readings, written reports, and conferences
with the instructor.—(B.A. or B.S. credit, 3 session-hours.) Tuesday, Thursday,
Saturday, 12.30-1.30. Minor Hall. Adjunct Professor Rogers and Mr.
Hart.

Commercial Geography B1: General Survey.—The agricultural, industrial
and artistic production of the various nations of the world, the conditions
governing the markets, the laws of international exchange, the development of
trade relations and a summary of the history of commerce and the shifting,
with time, of trade routes.—(B.A. or B.S. credit, 3 session-hours of electives-at-large.)
Adjunct Professor Bardin. Omitted in 1918-1919.

Commercial Geography B2: Economics Geography of Latin America.
Will be given if as many as thirty men apply for it at registration. No one
will be admitted after the first term. A general survey of the civilization, past
and present, of the republics of South and Central America and Mexico. First
term: A study of the physical geography and climate of the region, with
map-making and parallel reading; the history and ethnology of the native races.
Second term: The Spanish Conquest and Colonial Empire, and the South
American Revolution; the growth of the modern states, the origins of republicanism,
and the consequences of the economic and political anarchy of this
epoch. Third term: The economic and racial status of the present-day republics,
and the tendencies of their growth and development, as predicated by
history and economic conditions.—(B.A. or B.S. credit, 3 session-hours of
electives-at-large.) Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, 10.30-11.30. Rotunda, S. E.
Adjunct Professor Bardin.

Commercial Law B1: Not Open to First-Year Students.—A detailed study
of the fundamental and important, rather than the technical, principles of those
subjects of which some knowledge is necessary in ordinary commercial transactions,
including contracts, negotiable instruments, agency, partnerships, bailments
and carriers, sales of personal property, insurance. Instruction is given
in the practical drafting of business documents, such as simple contracts, powers
of attorney, articles of copartnership, mortgages, deeds of trust and bills of
sale.—(B.A. or B.S. credit, 3 session-hours of electives-at-large.) Monday,
Wednesday, Friday, 12.30-1.30. Cabell Hall. Mr. Hyde.