University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
expand section 

expand section 
  
expand section 
expand section 
  
  
  
expand section 
expand section 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
  
  
  
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
collapse section 
collapse section 
expand sectionI. 
collapse sectionII. 
  
  
  
  
  
expand section 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 

  
  

Time Schedule

                                                             
9:30 to 10:30  10:30 to 11:30  11:30 to 12:30  12:30 to 1:30 
Monday  Romance C3 (Maupassant)—  Romance C13 (French XVI Century)—  Romance D3 (Cervantes)  Romance C4 (Molière)— 
Graham  Mellor  Bardin  Abbot 
Romance D7 (Old French)—  Romance C2 (Lope de Vega)—  Romance C23 (Corneille and Racine)— 
Mellor  Bardin  Abbot (Given in alternate years
with C4.) 
Tuesday  Romance C1 (Rousseau)—  Romance D1 (Theses)—  Romance D6 (Dissertations)—  Romance C14 (Contemporary Spanish
Theater)— 
Wilson  Wilson  Wilson 
Romance C12 (Pereda)—  Romance D2 (Theses and Dissertations)—  Woody 
Bardin  Bardin  Romance D4 (Rabelais)— 
Romance D9 (Old Italian)—  Romance D3 (Old Spanish)—  Abbot 
Mellor  Mellor 
Romance D10 (Old Provençal)— 
Mellor. (Given in alternate years with
D9.) 
Wednesday  Romance D7 (Old French)—  Romance C5 (Tirso de Molina)—  Romance C15 (The Spanish Short
Story)— 
Romance C19 (Baroja)— 
Mellor  Bardin  Bardin 
Galbán  Romance C21 (Dante)— 
Rinetti 
Thursday  Romance C6 (Daudet)—  Romance C20 (Petrarch)—  Romance C11 (Hugo)—  ROMANIA 
Wilson  Rinetti  Wilson 
Romance C16 (Galdós)—  Romance D8 (Old Spanish)—  Entire Romanic Faculty and all
Graduate Students 
Bardin  Mellor 
Friday  Romance D9 (Old Italian)—  Romance C10 (Calderón)—  Romance C8 (Spanish Lit. of the XVIII
and XIX Centuries)— 
The
Ormond G. Smith

French Room open to public 
Mellor  Bardin 
Romance D10 (Old Provençal)—  Romance D11 (Romanic Heritage of Virginia)—  Galbán 
Mellor. (Given in alternate years with
D9).) 
Romance D5 (Camoens)— 
Garlick  Bardin 
Romance C7 (Baudelaire and the
Symbolists)—Lee 
Saturday  Romance C9 (Balzac)—  Romance C22 (The Italian Renaissance)—  Romance C17 (Pascal)—  The
William A. Lambeth

Italian Room open to public 
Wilson  Rinetti  Wilson 
Romance C18 (Contemporary Spanish-American
Lit.)— 
Romance D12 (Theses and
Dissertations)— 
Galbán  Rinetti 

245

Page 245

The Master's Degree.—A varying number of Romance group courses,
ranging from six to ten hours a week throughout the year, a final oral
examination, and a thesis are prescribed for the master's degree. A candidate
of average ability and good training may absolve the requisite number of
courses within one year after the baccalaureate degree. The final oral
examination, however, embraces questions asked and answered in two
Romanic languages; and the candidate whose collegiate work represents one
Romanic language only will find it difficult to acquire in one year the supplementary
language and absolve other requirements. Further, the thesis
must incorporate the results (elementary, at least) of original investigation
on the part of the candidate; and unless he already have at the outset, or find
very quickly, a promising subject of investigation, nine months will prove
insufficient for the work.

The Doctorate.—A varying number of Romance group courses, ranging
from fifteen to twenty, distributed over a period of three years after the
baccalaureate degree, are prescribed for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
in Romanic Languages. The final oral examination embraces questions asked
and answered in French, Spanish, and Italian. The scope and character of
original investigation presented by the candidate's dissertation must satisfy
the Romanic Faculty as a whole. To facilitate the acquisition of a speaking
knowledge of the third, or supplementary, Romanic language, candidates are
granted the privilege of optional attendance on any French, Spanish, or
Italian course in the College.