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COURSES OF INSTRUCTION.
  
  
  
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COURSES OF INSTRUCTION.

The Subjects of Instruction in Engineering are grouped into classes,
each designated by a distinctive number for each term, the lecture and
laboratory courses being likewise differentiated. This grouping follows the
arrangement shown below:

                 
Mathematics  100 to 199 
Physics  200 to 299 
Chemistry  300 to 399 
Geology and Mining  400 to 499 
Applied Mathematics  500 to 599 
Experimental Engineering  600 to 699 
Civil Engineering including Field-work  700 to 799 
Mechanical Engineering including Shop-work  800 to 899 
Electrical Engineering  900 to 999 

Lecture courses are listed in the first fifty numbers of all classes; laboratory
or practice courses are listed in the second fifty numbers of all
classes. The same numbers are used in schedules of lecture hours, laboratory
periods and examination days.

In addition to the courses listed above all candidates for degrees in
Engineering matriculated after June, 1919, will be required to take the following:

Freshman Year:

English Literature A3, including studies in rhetoric and composition


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and a survey of English Literature with parallel readings and practice in
composition.

Junior Year:

Economics B1, including the principles of economics followed by a
study of their bearing upon present American conditions.

Senior Year:

Business Administration, including cost-accounting, engineering contracts
and specifications, and engineering economics.

Suitable readjustments have been made in the engineering curriculum
to allow for the introduction of these new courses.