
2 Entered at the Post Office at University of Richmond, Virginia as second-class mail matter.



2 Entered at the Post Office at University of Richmond, Virginia as second-class mail matter.
UNIVERSITY of RICHMOND
VIRGINIA
SESSION 1932-1933
With Announcements for the Session 1933-1934
SEPTEMBER11TH, MONDAY,NOON-Orientation Week begins.
SEPTEMBER12TH AND 13TH, TUESDAYAND WEDNESDAY-Entrance Examinations and Registration of New Students.
SEPTEMBER12TH AND 13TH, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY,2 P. M.-Special Examinations .
SEPTEMBER14TH, THURSDAY-Session begins; Registration of Students.
SEPTEMBER15TH AND 16TH, FRIDAYAND SATURDAY-Organization of Oasses.
SEPTEMBER30TH, SATURDAY-Application .for Degrees Filed.
OCTOBER11TH, 12TH AND 13Tn-"University Week."
NovEMBER15TH, WEDNESDAY-Mid-Semester Reports.
NOVEMBER30TH, THURSDAY-Thanksgiving Holiday.
DECEMBER22n, FRIDAY,NOON-Christmas Holidays begin.
JANUARY3D, WEDNESDAY,10 A. M.-Oass Work resumed.
JANUARY 5TH AND 6TH, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY,2 P. M.-Special Examinations.
JANUARY 17TH, WEDNESDAY-Examinations begin.
JANUARY27TH, SATURDAY-Close of the First Semester
JANUARY29TH, MONDAY-Second Semester begins.
- MARCH 24TH, SATURDAY-Mid-Seme;ter Reports.
MARCH 28TH, WEDNESDAY,12 NooN'-Spring Vacation begins.
APRIL 4TH, WEDNESDAY,10 A. M.-Oass Work resumed.
APRIL 6TH AND 7TH, FRIDAYAND SATURDAY,2 P. M.-Special Examinations.
APRIL 16TH, MONDAY-Masters' Theses handed to Director Graduate Department.
--MAY 30TH, WEDNESDAY-Examinations begin.
JUNE 10TH, SUNDAY-Baccalaureate Sermon.
JUNE 11TH, MONDAY-Annual Meeting of Trustees; Alumni Reunions.
JUNE 12TH, TUESDAY-Commencement Day . ., ., .,
JUNE 18TH, MONDAY,TO FRIDAY,AUGUST 17TH
A. W. PATTERSON PRESIDENT
GEORGE BRAXTON TAYLOR VICE-PRESIDENT
B. WEST TABB SECRETARY
CLASS ONE
Term Expires June, 1933
E. C. MATHEWS.....................•Norfolk
STUARTMcGUIRE,M.D., LL.D., Richmond
Mrss LULAWINS,TON,Ph.D., Richmond
SPARKSW. MELTON,D.D .....Norfolk
JOHN STEWARTBRYAN,LL.D., Richmond
CLASS TWO
Term Expires June, 1934
A. J. MONTAGUE,LL.D .......Richmond
R. C. WrLLIAMS....................Richmond
B. T. GUNTER..........................Accomac
CLASS FIVE
Term E:rpires June, 1937
DOUGLASS. FREEMAN,LL.D., Richmond
E. M. LONG Richmond
E. B. JACKSON,D.D .....Harrisonburg
B. P. WrLLis Fredericksburg
T. RYLANDSANFORD,D.D .....Norfolk
CLASS SIX
Term Expires June, 1938
R. S. OWENS, D.D .................Roanoke
W. H. BAYLOR,D.D .........Portsmouth
Miss ALTA FOSTER Petersburg
A. R. LoNG···············-·········Lynchburg
R.H. A.NGELL..........................Roanoke
CLASS THREE
Term Expires June, 1935
GEORGET. WAITE, D.D .......Richmond
A. W. PATTERSON,LL.D Richmond
GEORGEB. TAYLOR,D.D Hollins
C. J. BILLUPS........................Richmond
FRANCISA. DAVIS................Baltimore
CLASS FOUR
Term Expires June, 1936
R. M. SMITH........................Richmond
T. B. McADAMS,LL.D .......Richmond
W. S. JENKINS......................Leesburg
J. T. STINSON,D.D ...Bluefield, W. Va.
MRs. G W. McDANIEL, University of Richmond
J. C. METCALF,LL.D. ········university
HENRYTAYLOR....................Richmond
CLASS SEVEN
Term Expires June, 1939
J. HUNT HARGRAVE................Chatham
R. H. P:rTT,D.D., LL.D .....Richmond
H. W. STRALEY......Princeton, W. Va.
W. E. BARRETT............Newport News
RoBiERTN. PoLLARD..............Richmond
CLASS EIGHT
Term Expires lune, 1940
L. How ARDJENKINS..........Richmond
GEORGESWANN Trenholm
H. LEE BOATWRIGHT Danville
J. E. HICKS, D.D .................Baltimore
WILMERL. O'FLAHERTY....Richmond
The By-Laws provide that the President of the Board of Trustees and the President of the University shall be members of all standing committees, and that the Treasurer of the University shall be a member of the Executive Committee. The Secretary of the Board is e,i- officio Secretary of all standing committees of the Board.
ExECUTIVE-E. M. Long, Thomas B. McAdams, Russell C. Williams, R. H. Pitt, L. Howard Jenkins, B. West Tabb, A. W. Patterson, F. W. Boatwright.
LIBRARY-A. J. Montague, Stuart McGuire, Miss Alta Foster, R. S. Owens, J. C. Metcalf, J.E. Hicks, Professor Goode, Professor Keller, Robert N. Pollard.
Am FuNns-(Scholarships and Donations)-R. M. Smith, B. P. Willis, H. W. Straley, W. E. Barrett, Mrs. G. W. McDaniel, George T. Waite, H. Lee Boatwright, Francis A. Davis.
NOMINATIONOF NEW TRUSTEES-B. T. Gunter, A. R. Long, G. B. Taylor, T. Ryland Sanford, W. H. Baylor, Henry Taylor.
NOMINATIONFORHONORARYDEGREES-]. H. Hargrave, E. B. Jackson, E. C. Mathews, Douglas Freeman, W. S. Jenkins, Professor R. E. Gaines.
FREDERIC WILLIAM BOATWRIGHT, M.A., LL.D. President
BENJAMIN WEST TABB, B.A. Vice-President and Treasurer
RAYMOND B. PINCHBECK, PH.D. Dean
R. E. GAINES, M.A., LITT.D. Director Graduate Department
Lucy T. THROCKMORTON Acting Librar£an
CULLEN PITT, M.A., M.D. College Physician
FREDERIC WILLIAM BOATWRIGHT-1887
1 Bostwick Lane, Campus Professor of Modern Languages
M.A., Richmond College; LL.D., Mercer University, Georgetown College and Baylor University. Graduate Student, Halle, Sorbonne, and Leipsic.
ROBERT EDWIN GAINES-1890
3 Bo stw i ck Lane, Campus Professor of Mathematics
M.A., Furman University; Litt.D., Furman University. Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University, Harvard University.
SAMUEL CHILES MITCHELL-1895 University of Richmond Professor of Histor31 and Political Science
M.A., Georgetown College; Ph.D., Chicago University; LL.D., Brown Univer~ity.
WILLIAM ASBURY HARRIS-1901 2 College Avenue
Professor of Greek and Latin
M.A., Richmond College; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND
ROBERT EDWARD LOVING-1908
2 Bostwick Lane, Campus Professor of Physics
M.A., Richmond College; Ph.D .. , Johns Hopkins University; Cornell University, 1919-20.
FRANK M. DOBSON-1913
713 Byrd Park Court, Richmond Director of Athletics
HENRY BRANTLY HANDY-1914
Three Chopt Road, Westhampton Professor of English
B.A., Richmond College; M.A., Richmond College; M.A., Harvard University; Columbia University, 1915.
GARNETT RYLAND-1917
University of Richmond Professor of Chemistry
M.A., Richmond College; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.
WILLIAM LOFTIN PRINCE-1920
2423 Grove Avenue, Richmond Professor of Education
B.A., Richmond College; M.A., Columbia University.
HAYNIE H. SEAY, JR.-1920
University of Richmond Professor of Economics
B.A., Richmond College; M.A., Columbia University; Johns Hopkins University, 1917-19; Princeton University, 1919-20.
ROBERT COLLINS ASTROP-1920
343 Albemarle Avenue, Stonewall Courts Professor of Psychology
A.B., Randolph-Macon College; M.A., University of Virginia; Columbia University, 1914-15; Columbia University, 1923, 1926-27.
CLEMENT ORESTES MEREDITH-1920
University of Richmond Professor of German
A.B., Guilford College; A.B., Haverford College; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University; Berlin, 1908-10; American School of Philology at Rome, 1910.
ROLVIX HARLAN-1922
University of Richmond
Professor of Sociology and Social Ethics
A.B., George Washington University; M.A., ibid.; Ph.D., University of Chicago.
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND
CLEMENT TYSON GOODE-1924
4112 Stuart Avenue, Richmond
James A. Bostwick Professor of English
A.B., Wake Forest College; A.M., Harvard University; Ph.D., Cornell University.
HUGH SAGER MEAD-1924
5816 York Road, Westhampton
Professor of Business Administration
A.B., Kalamazoo College; A.B., University of Chicago; University of Michigan, University of Chicago, 1923-24.
RALPH C. McDANEL-1926
University of Richmond Professor of American History
B.A., University of Richmond; M.A., Columbia University; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.
WILLIAM ROBERT CORNTHWAITE-1927
University of Richmond Professor of Chemistry
A.B., DePauw University; Ph.D., Ohio State University.
JOHN H. RUSSELL-1928
3506 Grove Avenue, Richmond Professor of Accounting
A.B., Emory and Henry; M.A., Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.
JOHN WENDELL BAILEY-1929
University of Richmond Professor of Biology
B.S., M.S., Mississippi A. and M. College; A.B., A.M., Cornell University; M.A., Ph.D., Harvard University.
BENJAMIN CLARK HOLTZCLAW, JR.-1929
1600 Monument Avenue, Richmond
James Thomas, Jr., Professor of Philosophy
A.B., Mercer University; B.A., M.A., Oxford; Ph.D., Cornell University.
RAYMOND BENNETT PINCHBECK-1929
21 Libbie Avenue, Richmond
Professor of Business Administration
B.S., M.S., Ph.D., University of Virginia.
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND
SOLON B. COUSINS-1932
7 W. Franklin Street, Richmond
Acting Professor of B : ible
On the George and Sallie Cutchin Camp Memorial Foundation
B.A., D.D., Mercer University; University of Edinburgh.
WOODFORD BROADUS HACKLEY-1924
2120 Lakeview Avenue, Richmond
Associate Professor of Latin
A.B., University of Virginia; M.A., Northwestern University; A.M., Harvard University; Columbia University.
HERMAN P. THOMAS-1927
1107 W. Grace Street, Richmond
Associate Professor of Economics and Business Administration
B.A., Richmond College; M.A., Ph.D., University of Virginia.
WILLIAM FREDERICK CAYLOR-1928
2618 ldlewood Avenue, Richmond
Associate Professor of Spanish
M.A., Mercer University.
*CHARLES H. WHEELER-1928
University of Richmond
Associate Professor of Ma thematics
B.S., Washington and Jefferson College; Johns Hopkins University, 1926-28, 1931-33
CHARLES LEONARD ALBRIGHT-1929
1535 West Avenue, Richmond
Assoc , iate Professor of Physics
B.S., Coe College; M .S., Ph.D., University of Iowa.
ROBERT FORTE SMART-1929
University of Richmond
Associate Professor of Biology
A.B., Mississippi College; A.M., Harvard University.
WILLIAM JUDSON GAINES, JR.-1930
University of Richmond
Associate Professor of French
M
.A., Ph.D., University of Wisconsin; Graduate study at Sorbonne, Paris.
SAMUEL WHITEFIELD STEVENSON
University of Richmond
Associate Professor of English
B.A., University of North Carolina; M.A., Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.
*Leave of absence, 1932-33.
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND
DAVID J. MAYS-1926
Law Building, Richmond
Instructor in Business Administration
Randolph-Macon College, 1914-16, 1919-20; LL.B., T. C. Williams School of Law, University of Richmond.
SHERLOCK BRONSON-1928 Westhampton
Instructor in Business Administration
LL.B., T. C. Williams School of Law ,, University of Richmond.
RALPH P JOHNSON-1931
University of Richmond Instructor in Mathematics
B.A., University of Richmond; M.A., University of Virginia.
NORMAN CURTIS GIDDINGS--1931
University of Richmond
Instructor in Romance Languages
A.B., Hamilton College; A.M., Harvard University.
HAROLD A. BONER-1931
117 N. Crenshaw Avenue, Richmond Instructor in English
A.B., University of Colorado; M.A., Columbia University.
LIBRARY STAFF
MARTHAF. SNODGRASS,B.A., B.S., Assistant Librarian and Cataloguer.
MARY WINSTON MONTAGUE,B.A., Assistant Cataloguer.
F. ELIZABETHTnoMAS, Periodicals and Files.
CoRA BUTTERFIELDDECKER,B.A., Westhampton Reading Room.
SECRET ARIES
ELIZABETHL. THOMASSON,M.A., Secretary to the President.
HELEN A. MoNSELL, M.A. ,, Assistant Registrar and Secretary to the Dean.
EDITH KEESEESHELTON,B.A., Cashier and Secretary to the Treasurer.
VIRGINIAW. PRINCE,B.A., Secretary to Faculty Personnel Committee.
BUSINESS OFFICERS
R. M. STONE,LL.B., Assistant Business Manager.
MRs. L. S. WOODWARD,Manager of Refectory.
MRS. R. P. GORDON,Director of Dormitories.
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND
GRADUATE ASSISTANTS
Physics-JOHNS. CLAYTON,B.S.
Chemistry-EARL JORDAN,B.S.
Biology-MARY M. RYLAND,B.A., Lucy ANN TAYLOR,MS.
SUPERVISOR CHEMISTRY STOCKROOMS FREDERICKMOORE
STUDENT ASSISTANTS
Physics-E. M. BAROODY,MARIONE. CLARK,0. B. FALLS,JR., HAROLDVAN ALLEN.
Chemistry-HENRY VRANIAN.
Biology-LEE ScoTT BARKSDALE,STUARTW. CooK, .AiIDENHowELL, JR., R. s. OWENS,JR.
Mcuhematics-JosEPH R. PERKINS.
Infirmary-D. B ; TERRY.
Library-R. E. ABBITT,B. L. BRITTON,F. J. PARKER,C. E S. RIOOWAY.
FACULTY COMMITTEES FOR 1933-34
Representatives on University Senate-R. E. GAINES,MITCHELL,HARRIS,SEAY, LoVING,RYLAND,GOODE,HARLAN,HOLTZCLAW,BAILEY,PRINCE.
Courses and Degrees-LOVING, R. E. GAINES,GooDE,HoLTZCLAW,and SEAY.
Personnel-HoLTZCLA w, LovING,MITCHELL,GOODE,and PRINCE.
Athletics-HANDY, HARLAN,CAYLOR,and McDANEL.
Fraternities-CAYLOR, HARRIS,and CoRNTHWAITE.
Public Lectures-RussELL, SMART,DouBI.ES,MEAD,and HACKLEY.
Student Affairs-HARLAN, AsTROP,HACKLEY,and SMART.
Alumni-RYLAND, HARRIS,PRINCE,McDANEL,and THOMAS , Chapel and Religious Life-HARRIS, LoVING,W. J. GAINES,BAILEY,McDANEL, and RYLAND.
Student Employment~THOMAS, CAYLO~and DoUBlES . Faculty Socials-CoRNTHWAITE, STEVENSON,and GIDDINGS.
Catalogue-BONER, WHEELER, and ALBRIGHT
Marshals-RYLAND and McDANEL.
Richmond College, a college of liberal arts and sciences for men, was founded in 1832, and celebrated its first centennial in May, 1932. Around this college as a nucleus have grown up the T. C. Williams School of Law ( organized 1870); Westhampton College, a college of liberal arts and sciences for women ( 1914) ; the Summer School (1920); the Graduate Department (1921); and the Evening School of Business Administration ( 1924). These several colleges or departments constitute the University of Richmond. Each college has its own dean or director, its own faculty and its own institutional life. Each college has its separate student body, which is limited to a number which will insure every student intellectual and social contacts with his professors and within his own academic group. The University Senate, on which sit representatives of all the faculties, provides for intercollegiate co-operation.
The legal name of the corporation is "University of Richmond." The Board of Trustees of the University of Richmond controls all endowment and other funds and makes all appropriations. The several colleges award no degrees, but all degrees for work done in any one of the colleges are conferred by the University of Richmond. Ultimate authority is vested in the Board of Trustees and in the President of the University.
The campus of Richmond College embraces one hundred and fifty acres, somewhat equally divided between open spaces and woodlands, situated in the western suburbs of Richmond, and separated by a lake from Westhampton College. The grounds are five and a half miles from the center of the city, and are reached by paved driveways and by street cars.
All buildings are of substantial fireproof construction, in brick and stone with steel frames encased in concrete. The floors are reinforced concrete overlaid with cypress; the partitions are hollow tile;
the stairways have steel frames with stone treads; and the window casements are bronze. Everywhere attention has been paid to safety, health and comfort, in surroundings of striking landscape and architectural beauty.
Robert Ryland Hall contains the offices of administration and a number of lecture rooms; Charles H. Ryland Hall houses the library, and Brunet Hall provides for the college refectory. Jeter Hall and Thomas Hall are dormitories divided into nine noncommunicating sections that furnish comfortable lodgings for two hundred and forty-six students. The Roger Millhiser Gymnasium contains a memorial and trophy room, offices, a gymnasium floor 71x103 feet, and an equal space for baths, dressing rooms and lockers. On the Athletic Field adjoining is a concrete stadium with seats for four thousand spectators. The Henry M. Cannon Memorial Chapel seats eight hundred, besides the seats on the platform and in the choir.
The year 1932-33 marks the completion of the group of Science Buildings, including the Chemistry Building, Richmond! Hall (Physics) and Mary land Hall (Biology) . These three buildings represent an investment of half a million dollars. There are six residences for professors on the campus, a central power house, and three temporary structures-the Dramatic Workshop, the Student Activities Building, and the College Store.
The libraries of the University contain about fifty-five thousand volumes, not including pamphlets, arranged and catalogued by the Dewey System. The most recent and useful bibliographical aids are provided, and the best periodicals and reviews, daily and weekly papers are currently received. As a depository of the United States Government, the Library acquires annually hundreds of publications especially valuable fur reference in social and political science. The students have direct access to the shelves during ten hours each day, and the Librarian and assistants are always on hand to give help in any line of reading or research.
The main Library occupies the southern wing of Ryland Hall. The interior is panelled in oak, and the book-cases arranged in
alcove plan. There is, at each end, a five-fold Gothic window of striking size and beauty, and in each alcove a casement window, the whole affording natural light at all hours of the day. In convenience and harmony of effect, the Library is the culmination of the collegiate Gothic, that exquisite perpendicular type made familiar by the English colleges, to which all the University buildings strictly conform.
The University is peculiarly fortunate in its nearness to several great collections of books. Through the courtesy of the officials the resources of the Virginia State Library, the Richmond Public Library, and the Virginia Historical Society have been made accessible to our students, both for consultation and withdrawal. These afford exceptional facilities for research, not only in general subjects, but especially in Virginia and American history. It should be mentioned that our nearness to Washington enables us to make constant use of the Congressional Library, from which rare books and pamphlets invaluable for theses and debates may be quickly obtained, through a national loan system.
Excellent provision is made for care of the health of all students resident on the campus. During orientation week a thorough physical examination by the University medical staff is required of all new students. Dormitory students receive the daily attention of the college physician and his assistants. Infirmary rooms are provided to which students are removed whenever necessary. There is no extra charge for the use of infirmary rooms or for the attendance of the physician's assistants who look after the needs of the sick.
In 1917 Rev. W. Thorburn Clark and Mrs. Clark, of Richmond, donated two hundred dollars to be loaned to worthy students at the discretion of the president of the University. Recently Mr. Charles T. Bagby, of Baltimore, gave eighteen hundred dollars on similar conditions. The firm of Meyer Greentree, Inc., of Richmond, has given one thousand dollars to establish the "Meyer Greentree Loan
Fund." Other gifts bring the total to seven thousand five hundred dollars. Preference in loans is given to Juniors and Seniors of high standing. These gifts have enabled several of the finest students in Richmond College to continue their work for degrees. The money is usually loaned in sums of fifty to one hundred dollars.
Scholarships established in Richmond College shall be use<l under the following regulations :
1. A major scholarship becomes available for use when not less than two thousand five hundred dollars has been paid into the College treasury.
2. Scholarships established since January 1, 1914, are open to use in either Richmond or Westhampton College unless limited by the donor.
3. A major scholarship pays the annual tuition of the holder. This fee is at present one hundred and fifty dollars, which is therefore the present annual value of a scholarship.
4. Recipients of scholarships must meet the usual entrance requirements that are demanded of students who pay tuition.
S. Donors of scholarships who wish to nominate students to receive the benefit of their scholarships are informed that it is a rule of the College to make its appointment for one year at a time, and then repeat the appointment as often as may be needful and desirable.
6. Donors of scholarships are requested to nominate beneficiaries by April 1st preceding the opening of the session when the scholarship is to be used, and to notify the President of the College of the nomination. If the donor has reported no nomination by September 1st, the College will appoint a beneficiary for the current session.
7. It is sometimes desirable to divide a scholarship and to appoint two persons each to enjoy the benefits of a minor scholarship. In such case the holder of a minor scholarship pays half of the tuition fee, or $37.50 for each half session.
8. Reports of studt::nts' class and examination standing arc mailed at regular intervals to parents or guardians, and a transcript of a beneficiary's report will be mailed to the donor of a scholarship, provided request is made at the Dean's office.
The committee in charge has general instruction, in making award of all Aid Funds, to give the preference:
I. To applicants already at College, who have maintained a good standing in character, conduct and study.
II. To other fully prepared applicants who shall present satisfactory testimonials from the school last attended, or from other persons who have had opportunity to judge, certifying to health, attainments, habits of study and moral character.
III. To those of either class who give reasonable assurance that they will complete a course of study leading to one of the degrees of the College.
IV. The College reserves the right to make any of the scholarships in its control "Service Scholarships," which means that the student will be expected to make some return in service to the College while holding the scholarship.
The recipients of aid are expected to prove, as students, not only above censure in all respects, but actively helpful to the College by example and by earnest work. Students who do not maintain these standards will forfeit their scholarships.
The student self-government organization, known as the Student Council of Richmond College, was voluntarily established by the students themselves to further the best interests of the student body and of the College in general. It is vitally concerned with maintaining the honor system in the institution. There is cordial co-operation between the Student Council and the constituted College authorities. Every matriculate of the College is a member of this organization.
The Honor System of Richmond College requires that a man shall in all the relations of student life act honorably. Among breaches of the Honor Code art cheating in classroom ; violation of athletic pledges; attending pledged University dances intoxicated; willfully or knowingly cashing bad checks; defacing or damaging property of another; stealing, cheating and lying, in varying forms; and, in general, breaking one's word of honor under any circumstances. Upon conviction by the Honor Committe, which is composed of members of the Student Senate, of any breach of the Honor Code, students are either dishonorably dismissed from the University or are severely penalized in some other form commensurate with the seriousness of the offense committed. The pledge in classes on quizzes, examinations, written problems and exercises means that the work which a student hands in to his professor is his own, which he himself has done in accordance with the requirements of the course as laid down by the professor. The faculty will cooperate in establishing a clear understanding of these requirements.
The Honor System requires, in the second place, that when a student sees another student in suspicious circumstances he shall investigate the matter as secretly and as speedily as possible, and if he finds evidence of guilt shall immediately report the same to the Student Senate. It is important that every one recognize this duty of protecting the Honor System and the student body. Any one who sees a fellow student in suspicious circumstances and fails to investigate the matter is himself guilty of a breach of honor.
It is also important that every one should exercise the greatest care to keep himself free from the suspicion of evil. Such practices as leaving the examination room for any length of time unaccompanied, or taking an examination alone, or bringing tests and notebooks into the examination room or carelessly glancing toward another student's paper-these are heartily condemned by the Honor Committee. While they do not of themselves constitute infringements of the Honor Code, such practices are harmful both to the individual and to the continued well-being of the Honor System. New students especially should take every opportunity of acquainting themselves with the working of the Honor System in
detail as well as with these general principles. An important open letter appears in the first issue of the Collegian, and a further explanation of the Honor System is presented before the various classes.
There are three literary societies-the Mu Sigma Rho and the Philologian Societies, on the campus, and the Samuel Chiles Mitchell Society, which meets at the T. C. Williams Law School Building for the convenience of town students. The societies hold weekly meetings for declamation, debate, and other literary exercises.
Representatives of each society, with three members at large and a faculty adviser, form the Forensic Council, which sponsors and correlates their activities, including a series of inter-society debates each spring.
The University, through the Forensic Council, holds membership in the Virginia State Inter-collegiate Oratorical Association, an organization of the leading colleges and universities of the State. This group holds a statewide oratorical contest in May of each year. The Forensic Council likewise sponsors a Varsity Debate Team, which regularly engages with teams of other colleges in and out of the State.
The M essenger.-A monthly magazine devoted to the development of literary activity among all the students of the University. In this periodical are published short stories, poems, essays, book reviews and editorials on questions of local academic interest. This magazine has for over fifty years maintained a high standard of literary excellence among college monthlies.
The Richmond Collegian.-This is a weekly newspaper of eight pages, in which are published up-to-date news articles of every phase of university life. It has a working staff of about thirty students distributed in the three schools. The Collegian is a student organ and has not only proved of interest to the resident students and faculty , but has a wide circulation among alumni as well.
The W eb.-This is an annual volume issued usually in May or June, abundantly illustrated and forming a transcript of a year of college life.
The University Band, composed entirely of students, has added much to the spirit of the campus. It plays for all athletic contests and for many other student functions. Prospective students who are interested in this organization are invited to bring their instruments.
An active Young Men's Christian Association is maintained in the College. Its object is to promote the spiritual and moral welfare of the students. Meetings, addressed by representative students, faculty members, and prominent men from Richmond, are held weekly. The Association has as its headquarters a building which was used during the war as a Red Cross building. All students of the College are invited to make the Y. M. C. A. a recreation center. Biennially, the Association co-operates with the State Y. M. C. A. in sponsoring the Christian World Education Institute lectures in Virginia colleges.
The Athletic Association of the College is an organization of Faculty and students. This Association has monthly meetings for the transaction of business. Details of management are entrusted to the Athletic Association, composed of students and professors, but general control is exercised by the Athletic Council, composed of representatives from the Trustees, Faculty, Alumni and Students.
Richmond College was among the first colleges in Virginia to have an organized Glee Oub.
This club, under the leadership of Charles Troxell, offers opportunity to learn to read at sight, and the experience gained enables many of the members to lead other groups in singing. It also sings at Chapel and Vesper services.
The University Players is an organization composed of students from Richmond College and Westhampton College. The objects of the group are ( 1) to develop dramatic talent and the art of acting; (2) to cultivate a taste for the best in drama; and ( 3) to foster the cultural values which dramatics develop.
During the year several plays, long and short, are produced under the direction of a profesional coach. About once a year a series of one-act plays, primarily to try out new students, are given under the direction of the students themselves.
There is abundant opportunity for students to train themselves in staging, lighting, -and make-up, as well as in acting.
Students are eligible to membership after they have succesfully portrayed roles in a limited number of plays. Each year keys are presented to those members in the two upper classes who have given conspicuous service to the organization.
Every candidate for a degree must offer two semester hours in physical training. He may also offer two additional hours in either physical training or extra-curricular activities. In computing credit for extra-curricular activities, the following scale is used:
Literary Society-,½ semester hour for each semester's work.
Glee Club-,½ semester hour a session.
Choir-,½ semester hour a session.
Inter-collegiate Debating-,½ semester hour a session.
Band-,½ semester hour a session.
To obtain such credit, a student must meet the qualifications set up for the activity in which he is engaged and be certified for credit to the Dean's office by the faculty adviser of that activity.
I. THE TANNER MEDAL.-Founded by Colonel William E. Tanner, of Richmond; Va., in honor of his parents, John F. and Harriet L. Tanner, is given to the student most proficient in Greek.
11. THE JAMES D. CRUMP PRIZE.-Founded by the gentleman whose name it bears, is a prize of twenty dollars in gold, given for excellence in Courses 5-6 in Mathematics. It is awarded in part on the regular class work and in part on extra work.
III. THE J. TAYLORELLYSONMEDAL IN HisTORY.-Lieutenant-Governor J. Taylor Ellyson, of Richmond, established in 1912 a prize to be awarded to the student in the Department of History and Political Science, who presents the best piece of original investigation in Virginia or Southern History.
IV. THE CHARLEST. NORMANMEDALfor the best graduate in the department of English has been endowed by Mr. Norman, and is awarded annually.
V. THE CHARLEST. NORMANMEDALfor the best graduate in the department of Business Administration has been endowed by Mr. Norman, and is awarded annually.
Elections to this society are from the honor students of Richmond College and of Westhampton College. These elections take place immediately following the close of the first semester of the student's Senior year.
Omicron Delta Kappa-for the recognition of high attainments in scholarship, athletics, literary endeavor and social leadership, with high emphasis on character.
Tau Kappa Alpha-for the recognition of forensic and debating attainments.
Pi Delta Epsilon-for the recognition of attainment in journalistic activities.
Sigma Pi Sigma-for the recognition of attainment in the field of Physics.
The Phoenix Society-for the recognition of attainment in the field of Biology.
Alpha . Psi Omega-for the recognition of attainment in dramatic activities.
The Chemistry Club-for the recognition of attainment in the field of Chemistry.
The Economics Club-for the recognition of attainment in the field of Economics.
Early in the second semester the University holds an honors convocation, under the joint auspices of the several honor societies. At this convocation elections to the several honor societies are made public, and formal announcement is given of students attaining Intermediate Honors.
Intermediate Honors are conferred upon Third Year students who, during their first two years, have completed sixty semester hours of work with a minimum of 120 quality credits.
S t udents have easy access to all the advantages afforded by the various city and suburban churches, with their Bible classe s and Sunday schools. Prayer meetings conducted by the student s themselves are held once, or oftener, every week. On Sundays, at 7 :00 P. M., Richmond College and Westhampton College unite in a Vesper Service for praise and prayer and a brief spiritual me ssage.
Students and Faculty attend the College assembles from 12 :30 to 1 :20 o'clock on Wednesdays and Fridays. The Wednesday meeting is for Richmond College only; that of Friday a convocation of Richmond and Westhampton Colleges. Attendance on two designated assemblies a month is required of each student. Exercises are conducted by the President, Dean, or other members of the Faculty. From time to time, prominent visiting speakers address these assembles on educational, civic and religious themes.
These Lectures are provided by "The Thomas Museum Lecture Endowment" of $11,000 donated by his family in memory of the late president of the corporation, James Thomas, Jr. They are
delivered annually by eminent m·en on Science, Philosophy, Art or Literature and are open to the public without charge. Among the distinguished scholars who have delivered lectures on this Foundation are:
President Woodrow Wilson, Sir Robert Ball, Dr. Henry Van Dyke, Dr. B. L. Gildersleeve, Dr. Walter Hines Page, Dr. George E. Vincent, Dr. Robert A. Millikan, Dr. J. Holland Rose and Dr. Stephen B. Leacock.
University Week was organized in 1927, and has become an annual event. The object of .University Week is to bring to the campus friends of the University, particularly alumni, and to offer them intellectual stimulus and entertainment. The dates for University Week in 1933 are October 11th, 12th and 13th.
The Alumni of the College have long been organized into a Society, which holds annual meetings to renew old associations, maintain a close connection with Alma Mater, and further the cause of education and letters. The Association engages the services of an Alumni Secretary and publishes an Alumni Magazine. The officers of the Society are: Richard W. Vaughan, M.D., Richmond, Va., President, and M. U. Pitt, Richmond, Va., Secretary.
In May, 1898, there was organized in Louisville, Ky., a local chapter of the General Society of Alumni, to be called the "Kentucky Chapter." Since that time other chapters have been organized in several states and in most of the cities of Virginia. The president of the University or Mr. M. U. Pitt, Secretary, will be glad to correspond with alumni in other places who desire to organize local chapters.
The list of local alumni chapters is as follows:
LOUISVILLE,KY.-"The Kentucky Chapter"-Professor W. 0. Carver, LL.D., President.
NORFOLK, V A.-"The Norfolk-Portsmouth Chapter"-A. 0. Lynch, President.
NEWPORTNEWS, V ~.-"The Peninsula Chapter"-A. D. Jones, President.
RICHMOND,VA.-"The Richmond Chapter"-Henry C. Taylor, President.
LYNCHBURG,VA.-"The Lynchburg Chapter"-A. R. Long, Esq., President.
ROANOKE,VA.-"The Roanoke Chapter"-R. S. Owens, D.D., President.
NEW YoRK CITY-"The New York Chapter"-F. Morris Sayre, President.
DANVILLE,VA.-"The Pittsylvania Chapter"-Claude S. Whitehead, President.
BALTIMORE,MD.-"The Maryland Chapter"-Dr. Allen W. Freeman, '99, President.
PETERSBURG,VA.-"The Petersburg Chapter"-Ro. Gilliam, Jr., President.
BIRMINGHAM,ALA.-"The Alabama Chapter"-B. W. Lacy, Jr., President.
TAMPA, FLA.-"Tfie Florida Chapter"-Giddings E. Mabry, President.
BLUEFIELD,W. VA.-"The Southwest Virginia Chapter"-E. M. Louthan, First Vice-President.
BRISTOL,V A.-S. T. Bowman, President.
EASTERNSHORE-Geo. J. Oliver, President.
MARTINSVILLE,VA.-Dr. J.P. McCabe, President.
WASHINGTON,D. C.-Oscar W. Underwood, Jr., President.
For admission to Richmond College the general requirements are as follows :
1. The applicant must be at least sixteen years of age.
2. The applicant must present a certificate of honorable dismissal and the principal's recommendation from the last school attended.
3. The applicant may be admitted ( 1) on a certificate from an accredited secondary school; (2) on a written examination; (3) on a transcript from another colle11:e.
The entrance requirements are stated in Carnegie units. A unit represents a standard session's study in any subject, and constitutes approximately a quarter of a year's work. The requirements are graduation from an accredited secondary school, with not less than fifteen acceptable units distributed as follows : English, 3; Algebra, 1¼; Plane Geometry, 1; History, 1; Science, 1; the remaining units elective from high school graduation requirements, except that not more than four units of vocational work will be accepted, and no credit will be allowed for less than two units in any foreign language. ( See footnote, page 39.)
Entrance examinations will be held at the College on the two days immediately preceding the opening of the session. Application for such examination should be made to the Dean not less than four weeks previous to the time at which the examination is desired. There will be no charge for entrance examinations taken on the scheduled dates, but a fee of two dollars will be charged if they are taken at any other time.
All high schools or academies listed as accredited by the State Departments of Education of their respective States are recognized by the College as accredited schools. A certificate from the principal of such a school, filled out on the form provided by the College, is accepted as sufficient evidence of the completion of the courses reported therein. A high school student who contemplates entering Richmond College should obtain this certificate of admission, have it filled out by the principal of the school he attended, and forward it to the Dean during vacation.
A candidate for admission to advanced standing from an institution of collegiate rank may receive credit for work completed there subject to the following conditions:
1. He must present a catalogue of the institution from which he comes, together with an official certificate showing (a) his entrance credits at that institution; (b) his college record, including grade of scholarship attained in each subject taken; ( c) honorable dismissal. A student required to withdraw from another college on account of poor scholarship may not register here except under the same conditions imposed by the college from which he was required to withdraw.
2. He must spend at least two sessions in residence in Richmond College before receiving a degree, and must complete at least sixty semester hours of work.
3. He must satisfy the entrance requirements of Richmond College, using his advanced credits for this purpose if necessary.
4. Credit is allowed only for work equivalent to courses in Richmond College.
5. Credit for such courses is regarded as provisional at the time of the applicant ' s admission to college, and will not be considered as final , nor will the applicant be given final class rating,
until he has satisfactorily completed at least one semester's work in Richmond College.
6. Certificates from other colleges are not accepted for the final required work in any department except by special action of the Faculty. Students who hold such certificates may satisfy the final requirements of any department either by examination or hy taking in course further work in that department.
Matriculation of freshmen and new students begins Tuesday, September 12th. Classes meet for organization Friday and Saturday, September 15th and 16th. Every applicant for admission, upon arriving at the College, should report promptly at the Dean's office. If he has been a student at any other college, he should present a detailed certificate of work accomplished there, as well as a statement in regard to his character. If he comes from an academy or high school, he should bring with him, in case he has not already sent it, an admission certificate duly filled out and signed by the principal of the school he last attended. Admission certificates should be in the hands of the Dean, for reference to the proper committee, during the summer.
When the certificate of admission has been approved, the student, in consultation with the Committee on Courses and Degrees, decides upon a course of study ·and fills out the matriculation card. When this has been approved by the Dean, it should be presented to the Treasurer of the College, who, upon the payment of the required fees, will deliver to the student his registration cards and complete his matriculation.
Students who fail to complete matriculation by 12 :00 o'clock, noon, of the third day of the session, September 16th, will be charged an extra fee of $5.00.
Personnel W ork.-The personnel work is in the charge of the Personnel Committee, a standing committee of the Faculty, with a permanent office and staff. This committee seeks to co-operate with the Dean and other administrative officers in bringing about a closer and more personal relation between students and Faculty; in keeping permanent records of the various students, including scholastic records, records of extra-curricular activities, and complete personal histories; in advising the students with regard to their courses, their college life, and their life-careers; and in assisting the students to secure positions after graduation. Two special interests of the Personnel Committee are connected with the orientation of Freshmen and the supervision of the Faculty Adviser System.
Freshman Orientation W eck.-All Freshmen are required to be present several days in advance of the formal opening of the college in the autumn for what is known as Freshman Orientation Week. During this period the Freshmen attend various lectures and meetings acquainting them with the ideals of the College, the nature of the work that will be required of them, and the various activities of college life. The Faculty and many of the leading students take part in this program. The Freshman class is organized, and the Freshmen begin to feel at home in the college before the arrival of most of the student body. The program closes with the matriculation of Freshmen, one day in advance of that of the upper-classmen. Freshman Orientation Week occurs this year from September 11th to September 14th. All Freshmen are required to be present on September 11th.
The Faculty Adviser Systeni.-Every student on entrance into the College is assigned a Faculty member as his adviser, the object being that each student may have at least one member of the Faculty with whom, on a friendly footing, he may discuss his problems, both personal and scholastic, and may receive such advice as may enable him to adjust himself better to college life. Ordinarily the student may choose his own Faculty Adviser, if there is a faculty member whom he especially desires in this capacity. Usually he
keeps the same adviser during his Freshman and Sophomore years. In the Junior and Senior years the professor in the course which the student has chosen as his major subject serves as adviser. Frequent conferences with the adviser are urged. Normally the student should go to see his adviser at least once a month. The Personnel Office exercises general supervision over the adviser system. It appoints the faculty advisers, receives regular reports from the advisers regarding their advisee students, and keeps records of these repo1is.
A student is required to take at least fourteen hours of scholastic work a week, and is not allowed to take more than six classes totaling twenty hours a week.
If a student desires to make a change in his course of study or class sections he should make his application in writing to the Dean, who will advise him. No student is permitted to add or drop fl. study without the approval of the Dean.
No change in a course of study will be permitted later than one week from the opening date of the semester, except in unusual cases recommended by the Dean.
For any course dropped after the first week of the semester, the grade F will be recorded. This will not be done, however, if the course is dropped on the advice of the Dean.
No credit will be given for a course if the student has been absent more than four times during a semester except ( 1) that additional absences may be allowed if due to the student's being away from the college in some representative capacity, authorized by the administration before leaving, and (2) that absences due to prolonged sickness will be excused upon presentation of a physician's certificate to the Dean, within one week after the last day of illness. In all cases of absence a student will be held responsible for the work of the class during his absence, and may be required to take special examination on such work. Students are warned
not to be absent from class except in cases of emergency. A student who absents himself for trivial reasons in the early part of the semester may have emergencies later which will cause him to lose credit for the course.
Absence from the last meeting of a class or laboratory period before a holiday or from the first meeting after a holiday shall be counted as two absences.
Reports are sent to parent or guardian four times a session-at mid-semester and in February and June. These include a record of the student's class and examination standing, with such other information as may be deemed important. Whenever it seems desirable more frequent reports are sent. Prompt co-operation on the part of those to whom they are addressed will make these reports of real value in improving a student's work.
The standing of students in class work and in examinations is indicated as follows : The letter A indicates that the work has been excellent (95-100); B, that it has been very good (86-94); C, that it has been average (80-85) ; D, that it has been just passing, (75-79) ; E, that the work has been unsatisfactory ( 65-74), and that a condition has been incurred; F indicates failure. Besides frequent oral and written tests, there is held in every class a general written examination at the close of the first and second semesters. All examinations are limited to three hours, and recitations and lectures are suspended during the examination period. The valuation of the examination is combined with the average of the student's class standing for the semester.
A freshman who at the end of his first semester has failed to make a minimum grade of "D" on at least nine hours of work must appear promptly before the Personnel Committee of the Faculty by whom his request to matriculate for the succeeding semester will be considered and either granted or refused.
After the first semester of his freshman year a student automatically severs his connection with the college if at the end of any semester he has failed to make a minimum grade of "D" on at least nine hours of work. No application for the readmission of such a student will be considered unless it has been endorsed by his parent or guardian.
All re-instated students will be on probation for the succeeding semester, but in cases where the mid-semester reports show good grades, the dean of the college may remove the probation at that time.
A student whose class work is deficient should give extra time to study. Consequently, while on probation, he is not permitted to participate in student activities, such as athletics, debating, dramatics and musical organizations, or to represent the college in any public capacity. He is required to report periodically to his faculty adviser as to his progress in his studies.
When a student is put on probation, his parent or guardian will be immediately notified.
A student who has been conditioned on a semester's work must remove this condition before the beginning of the corresp0ncling semester in the following college year, or the condition automatically becomes a failure. If both semesters of a course are conditioned, no special examination is allowed. The course must be repeated. Special examinations for the removal of conditions may be given only on the elates specified in the college calendar, and upon authorization from the Dean's office, preceded by the payment of a fee of two dollars. All arrangements for special examinations must be made at least two weeks before the date of the examination. A student is permitted only one special examination on any condition. Failure to pass this converts the condition into a failure. No quality credits may be earned by a special examination, but if it is successfully passed, full credit will be given in semester hours.
All Seniors must make up all conditions of previous sessions by the end of the first semester. A Senior may not make up by special
examination a deficiency on more than one subject taken in the Senior year, and this examination may not be given until the end of the second semester. If at the end of the first semester a Senior has been conditioned on as many as two subjects, he cannot remain a member of the Senior Class without special action of the Faculty.
1. The President of the University has general oversight and control of athletics, and is authorized to forbid any features in these exercises which endanger the health or morals of the participants.
2. Each team is allowed four trips from College, provided that these four trips do not involve being away from College more than seven days, and that no one trip shall require more than three days' absence from College duties. At least one day before the departure of any team the coach, through the manager, must furnish the Dean of the College a list of the men who will compose the team.
3. Athletic teams are permitted to engage in contests away from Richmond only with teams from other institutions of learning.
Richmond College holds membership in the Virginia Inter-Collegiate Athletic Conference, and members of all teams are expected to conform to the following by-laws of the Conference:
BY-LA WS---Article III
SECTION1. Bona Fide Students
-Only bona fide students shall play in this Conference. A bona fide student is one who is pursuing regularly a course of at least twelve hours of work a week in the college at which he is matriculated, and who shall have offered for college entrance at least fifteen Carnegie units made up from those subjects announced in the current catalogue of the college at which the student is matriculated as accepted for entrance.
SEC 2. The One-year Residence Rule -No student shall participate in any varsity contest until he has been in residence one college year. A "college year'' shall be construed to mean enrollment from September to June or from February to February without counting the summer session . For the sessions of 1931-32 and 1932-33, any member college is granted the option of playing Freshmen on its varsity teams, provided it notify the President of the Conference in due time that it intends to take advantage of such option. "Due time" is interpreted as meaning not later than June 1 preceding the session in which the option is to be exercised. No college which fails to so notify the President of the Conference prior to June 1, 1931, may play Freshmen on its varsity teams
for the session of 1931-32, and no college failing to so notify prior to June 1, 1932, may play Freshmen on its varsity teams during the session of 1932-33. In either or both sessions (1931-32, 1932-33), if a member college notifies the President of the Conference that it will exercise its option to play Freshmen, the option shall apply to all sports.
For purposes of this rule, a "Freshman" is interpreted to be a first-year matriculate in a member college who enters the college from a high school or preparatory school, without prior matriculation in any institution of higher learning ( either four-year or two-year college). Except for graduates of a Junior college (see Sec. 3) , any student who transfers to a member college after matriculating in any other institution of higher learning must remain in the college to which he has transferred for one college year (from September to June or from February to February without counting the summer session) before he is eligible to participate in any varsity game or contest, regardless of whether or not the college to which he has transferred is exercising its option to exemption from the one-year residence rule for Freshmen.
SEC. 3. The Migratory Riile.-No student who has attended an institution of collegiate grade and while there participated in ;my Freshman or varsity game or contest and thereafter enters a college of this Conference shall be eligible. An institution of collegiate grade shall be understood to be one offering four years of college work. Transfers from a Junior college, or other institution not offering a four-year course, who are non-graduates of the institution from which they transfer may be allowed to continue their athletic careers at the institution to which they transfer , after they have been in residence one college year. Graduates of a Junior college, or any other institution not offering a four-year course, may play in this Conference during their first year of residence in a member college, but their total time of participation in both Junior and Senior colleges combined shall be limited to four years.
SEC 4. Date of Matriculation.-No student shall play in this Conference during the college year unles s he has matriculated for the current session on or before October 1st.
S EC.5. Leaving College.-No student who has participated in interc ollegiate athletics and who for any cause fails to remain in college the entire sess ion may thereafter participate in intercollegiate athletics until he has been in residence an entire college year reckoned from the date of his return to college. A "college year" shall here be construed to mean two consecutive semesters, or three quarters. Attendance at a summer session shall not be counted for the purpose of this rule.
SEC. 6. Three-year Lim i t.-No student shall be eligible in this Conference who has participated in varsity contests three years, irrespective of the branch of sport. No student who has completed the requirements for a bachelor's degree shall be eligible.
SEc. 7. Organized Baseball.-No student shall be eligible in this Conference who has participated in part of a baseball game as a member of a team in organized bas~ball. "Organized baseball" shall be construed to mean the leagues classified as Majors, Class AA, Class A, Class B, Class C, Class D, of the National Association of Professional Ba 'seball Clubs.
SEC. 8. Remuneration.-No student shall play in this Conference who receives from other than those on whom he is naturally dependent for financial support , money, or the equivalent of money, such as board or lodgings, etc., unle ss the source and character of these gifts or payments to him shall be approved by the President of the Conference. This shall not apply in the matter of tuition scholarships.
SEC. 9. Scholarship Requirements.-To be eligible for membership on any varsity team a student must pass nine session hours his first year in college, and twelve session hours each subsequent year (or the equivalent in semester or quarter hours). Hours passed in any year in excess of the requirements for that year shall not be substituted for a deficiency in the requirement for a subsequent year. Not more than one-third of the hours required under this rule shall be made up by re-examination or summer school work.
SEC. 10. Eligibility Cards.-No student is eligible for participation in athletics until he has filed his eligibility card with the faculty chairman of athletics of his college. The eligibility cards shall be filled out by the student, certified by a college officer, and returned to the Secretary of the Conference on or before the following dates : for football, October 1st; for basketball, December 15th; for baseball and track, March 1st. The cards after examination by the Secretary shall be forwarded to the President of the Conference.
SEC. 11. Games with Non-Conference Teams.-In all games played by teams representing colleges in this Conference the foregoing eligibility rules shall be binding, whether the opposing teams represent colleges belonging to this Conference or not.
SEC. 12. Freshman Athletics.-Freshman teams shall be composed of members of the freshman class only, who shall compete as such for one year only, and shall be eligible under the rules of this Conference except the one-year rule. For the purpose of this rule a Freshman is a student who enters the institution from a high school or preparatory school.
Freshman teams shall be limited to six games in football; ten in basketball; ten in baseball, and to five track meets. One-half of the contests in each sport must be played at home. There shall be no athletic contests between Freshman teams of the member institutions of this Conference.
The deportment of a Christian gentleman is the standard to which every student is expected to conform. All appropriate means are used to develop and confirm a sense of personal honor and sacred regard for truth, as upon these rests the best reliance for good conduct. A few plain and reasonable rules are prescribed, and each matriculate must pledge himself to obey them.
1. Occupants will be held responsible for the good order of their rooms and for any damage or defacement. Changes from one room to another may be allowed by the Dean, but must not be made without his consent.
2. A resident student desiring to leave the premises during the hours when, by the schedule of recitations, he should be in his classes, shall get permission from the Dean. Any student desiring to be absent from college must get the Dean's permit in writing and show it to each of his professors.
3. If a student destroys, defaces, or in any way damages college property, or aids and abets others in so doing, he shall within twenty-four hours report the fact to the Dean. Students will be charged pro rata for all damages not individually accounted for.
4. No club or society may be formed unless the Faculty approves its plan and purpose, the rules by which it proposes to be governed, and the hours of meeting.
5. Students desiring to room and board elsewhere than on the college premises must first obtain the approval of the Dean. No boarding houses can be approved whose meal hours do not conform to the college schedule.
In the observance of these rules and in all matters not specifically mentioned, the deportment of a gentleman and a student is the standard to which every one is expected to conform. His sense of honor is the main reliance, and his word in matters touching his own conduct will be called for at the discretion of the Dean or President. In matriculating students, the right is reserved to require the immediate withdrawal from college of any student whenever the faculty decides that such action is desirable.
1. All first-year students who have met the entrance requirements, and all students who in previous sessions have made less than twenty-four hours, shall be classed as Freshmen.
2. All students who in previous sessions have completed at least twenty-four hours of college work shall be classed as Sophomores.
3. All students who in previous sessions have completed at least forty-eight hours of college work shall be classed as Juniors.
4. All students who lack only one possible year's work for the completion of all degree requirements, and who matriculate for such required courses, shall be classed as Seniors, subject to the following provision :
A student before admission to the Senior Class must have achieved at least ninety quality credits. A student transferring with advanced standing from another institution must average at least fi£teen quality credits a semester while a student in Richmond College.
5. All students who are twenty-one years of age or older and who have not as many as fifteen entrance units, but who have given satisfactory evidence of fitness to pursue college studies, shall be classified as Special Students.
Students who expect to continue their studies in professional or graduate schools should, on entering college, seek the advice of the Dean in the choice of courses that will meet the specific requirements of the institutions they intend to enter later.
For entrance to any standard school of Medicine, the applicant must offer a minimum of sixty semester hours of college work. These must include: General Chemistry-8 hours; Organic Chemistry-4 hours; Physics-8 hours; Biology-8 hours ; English-6 hours. Certain medical schools require, and all advise that the pre-medical student take three years in college ( ninety semester hours), to better meet the exacting demands of the modern science of Medicine. Attention is called to the opportunity of substituting
one year's work at the Medical College of Virginia for twenty-four of the required hours for the degree of Bachelor of Science, as stated in detail on pages 40-41.
For entrance to any School of Law approved by the American Bar Association and the Association of American Law Schools, the applicant must offer a minimum of sixty semester hours of college work. These may be so chosen that, together with forty additional hours in Richmond College and the first year in the T. C. Williams School of Law of the University of Richmond, they will meet the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts, as stated on pages 39-40.
The entrance requirements for standard schools of Dentistry are a minimum of thirty semester hours, including: Chemistry-6 hours; Biology-6 hours; English-6 hours, and Physics-6 hours, if the student has not had a unit of Physics in high school. If the three sciences have to be taken, the minimum time required is a regular session and a summer school session. Two full years in college are advised.
By choosing the proper courses in Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, English, Languages, and Economics, a student may transfer at the end of the sophomore year to a school of Engineering without loss of credits or class standing. It is advised that he ask the Engineering school to which he will transfer to map out a suggested course for him.
The following degrees are offered in Richmond College : Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Science in Business Administration.
The academic requirements for the several degrees are stated in semester hours, one class period per week through a semester being the unit. Quality credits are calculated from academic hours on the following basis : A semester hour passed with grade A shall count three quality credits; with grade B, two quality credits; with grade C, one quality credit; with grade D, no quality credit. It is further required that the Senior year and at least one other shall have been spent in Richmond College.
It is to be noted that the work of the first two years is specified as to groups of related subjects and in some cases as to subjects; the work of the junior and senior years is mainly elective, except as to the choice of a major and a minor, and the further general principle that Juniors and Seniors may not elect courses intended for Freshmen and Sophomores.
The candidate must have completed one hundred and twentyfour semester hours, two of which must be, and four of which may be, in physieal training. He must also have attained one hundred and twenty quality credits.
The distribution of work is as follows :
I. REQUIRED SUBJECTS;
(a) Foreign Languages-eighteen hours in two languages, based on four secondary school units.*
(b) Mathematics-six hours.
( c) Laboratory Science-ten hours in each of two sciences.
( d) English-twelve hours.
( e) Social Science-six hours in each of three subjects.
( f) Physical Training-two hours.
Of these seventy-six hours of required work, at least fortyeight must be taken in the Freshman and Sophomore years, and the remaining twenty-eight hours must be taken not later than the Junior year.
II. ELECTIVE SUBJECTS :
(g) Major-During the spring semester of the Sophomore year, a student must choose a Major subject and a related Minor. This choice must be made under the guidance of the head of the department in which he wishes to major, and is subject to the approval of the committee on courses and degrees. A minimum of twenty-four semester hours shall be offered in the major subject, and eighteen hours
*Students who enter college with less than four units in language will be required to take an additional semester course in college, without degree credit, for each unit lacking.
in the minor. In the laboratory sciences, these shall be thirty and twenty semester hours, respectively.
(h) The remaining hours required for the degree are free electives.
III. PROFESSIONAL SUBJECTS:
A candidate for the degree of Bachelor of Arts who, at the end of his Junior year, has one hundred hours of college work and at least one hundred and twenty quality credits, may substitute for electives, totaling twenty-four hours, the completion of the first year's work in the T. C. Williams School of Law.
The candidate must have completed one hundred and twentyfour semester hours, two of which must be, and four of which may be, in physical training. He must also have attained one hundred and twenty quality credits.
The distribution of work is as follows:
I. REQUIRED SUBJECTS:
(a) Foreign Languages-twelve hours in two modern languages, based on four secondary school units*.
( b) Mathematics-twelve hours.
( c) Laboratory Science-ten hours in each of two sciences.
( d) English-twelve hours.
( e) Social Science-six hours in each of two subjects.
( f) Physical Training-two hours.
Of these seventy hours of required subjects at least fortyeight must be taken in the Freshman and Sophomore years, and the remaining twenty-two must be taken not later than the Junior year.
II. ELECTIVE SUBJECTS:
(g) Major-During the spring semester of the Sophomore year, a student must choose a Major subject and a related Minor from subjects included under (b) and ( c). This choice must be made under the guidance of the head of the department in which
*See footnote, page 39.
he wishes to major, and is subject to the approval of the committee on courses and degrees. A minimum of twenty-four semester hours shall be offered in the major subject, and eighteen hours in the minor. In the laboratory sciences, these shall be thirty and twenty semester hours, respectively.
(h) Remaining hours for the degree are free electives.
III. PROFESSIONAL SUBJECTS:
A candidate for the degree of Bachelor of Science who, at the end of his Junior year, has one hundred hours of college work, and who has at least one hundred and twenty quality credits, may substitute for electives, totaling twenty-four hours, the completion of the first year's work in the Medical College of Virginia. He may also substitute for the second year's work in Mathematics, stipulated under I (b), a year's work in a third Laboratory Science, and the foreign language requirements may be satisfied in one language.
The candidate must have completed one hundred and twentyfour semester hours, two of which must be, and four of which may be, in physical training. He must also have attained one hundred and twenty quality credits.
The distribution of work is as follows:
I. REQUIRED SUBJECTS:
(a) Foreign Languages-twelve hours in two modern languages, based on four secondary school units.*
(b) Mathematics-six hours.
(
c) Laboratory Science-ten hours in one science'.
( d) English-twelve hours.
(
e) Social Science-eighteen hours in at least two Departments other than those included under ( f).
( f) Economics and Business Administration-forty-eight hours, including Economics 1-2, Mathematics 3-4, and Business Administration 3-4 and 5-6.
(g) Physical Training-two hours.
II. ELECTIVE SUBJECTS:
(h) The remaining hours are free electives.
*See footnote, page 39
BACHELOR OF ARTS
Freshman:
English 1-2
Science 1-2
Mathematics 1-2
Social Science
Foreign Language ( offered for entrance) 3-4
Sophomore:
English 3-4
Second Science 1-2
Second Foreign Language 1-2
Second Social Science
Third Social Science
Junior: Major Subject
Minor Subject
Second Foreign Language 3-4 Electives
Senior:
Major Subject
Minor Subject (if necessary) Electives
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE
Freshman:
English 1-2
Science 1-2
Mathematics 1-2
Social Science
Foreign Language (offered for entrance) 3-4
Sophomore:
English 3-4
Second Science 1-2
Second Foreign Language 1-2
Second Social Science
Mathematics 5-6
Freshman:
Junior:
Major Subject
Minor Subject
Second Foreign Language 3-4
Electives
Senior:
Major Subject
Minor Subject (if necessary) Electives
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
English 1-2
Business Administration 1-2
Mathematics 1-2
Social Science
Foreign Language (offered .for entrance) 3-4
Sophomore:
English 3-4
Science 1-2
Second Foreign Language 1-2
Economics 1-2
Business Administration 5-6
µunior:
Business Administration 3-4
Mathematics 3-4
Second Social Science
Second Foreign Language 3-4
Business Administration
,Senior:
Elective Business Courses
Third Social Science Electives
Fi;eshman:
Major in Science, Minor in Medicine, Leading to the Bachelor of Science Degree
English 1-2
Chemistry 1-2
Mathematics 1-2
Physics 1-2
Sophomore:
English 3-4
Chemistry 3-4
German 1-2
Biology 1-2
Freshman:
Junior: Science Major
Chemistry 5-6
German 3-4 Electives
Social Science
Senior: Medicine
Major in Academic Subject, Minor in Law, for the Bachelor of Arts Degree
English 1-2
Science 1-2
Mathematics 1-2
Social Science
Foreign Language (offered for entrance) 3-4
Sophomore:
. English 3-4
Second Science 1-2
Second Foreign Language 1-2
Second Social Science
Third Social Science
Junior: Second Foreign Language 3-4 Major Completed Electives Senior: Law
The expenses of students residing in College dormitories, payable at the Treasurer's office, which also include room and board, vary from $510 to $535 for the college session, September to June, and are divided as follows :
room and table board, depending on size and location of
to
(This charge includes medical attention, heat, light, etc.)
Payable February 1st:
*Students who have been awarded major scholarships receive credit for the entire tuition charge of $150; those who have been awarded minor scholarships receive credit for one•half, or $75. tDeduct this charge if no laboratory is taken.
In making an estimate of cost for the session, the student should also take into consideration other expenses which are not paid at the Treasurer's office, such as books, laundry and personal incidentals.
2. NON-RESIDENT STUDENTS
Expenses of the College Session: College fee --------------------------------------------------------$ 50.00 Contingent fee--------------------------------------------------5.00
*Tuition -----------------------------------------------------------150.00
tLaboratory fee, Biology, Physics, Chemistry, each --------------------------------------------------------10.00 (Advanced Chemistry, $15.00)
Student Activities fee______________________________________ 20.00
Terms of Payment
Payable on entrance :
College fee, in full ------------------------------------------$ 50.00 Contingent fee, in full...___________________________________ 5.00 *Tuition, one-half ___:________________________________________ 75.00 t Laboratory fee, one-half --------·-----------------------5.00
Student Activities fee, in full________________________ 20.00
Payable February 1st:
3. STUDENTS ENTERING IN FEBRUARY FOR THE SECOND SEMESTER PAY ONE-HALF OF THE REGULAR CHARGES.
4. SPECIAL CHARGESStudio fee ( art students) ........ __..... __.. $ 10.00 Bachelor's diploma fee.
5.00 Master's diploma fee and hood.
The diploma fees are payable thirty days preceding the date of graduation.
Notes
In order to avoid delay in matriculation, parents are urged to provide their sons with the amount due on entrance. Make checks payable to University of Richmond.
*Students who have been awarded major scholarships receive credit for the entire tuition charge of $150.00; those who have been awarded minor scholarships receive credit for one-half, or $75.00. tDeduct this charge if no laboratory is taken.
The University has an arrangement with several banks whereby worthy and dependable students, who may not have sufficient funds at hand to pay all that is due the Treasurer on entrance, may obtain short-term loans. The student himself, however, must be in a position to pay a substantial part of the amount due before the loan is approved. In addition to this, the President of the University has at his disposal several small loan funds with which to assist needy students.
The College fee is an entrance charge paid by all students to cover the privileges of the campus and buildings, including the use of library, and is not subject to deduction or in any case refunded.
The Contingent Fee of $5.00 is charged each student to cover unnecessary damage to college property, loss of books from the library, use of medicine from the infirmary, etc. Such part of this fee as is unused is returned to the student at the close of the sess10n.
The Student Activities Fee of $20.00 was established upon petition of students and alumni. The fee covers membership in the Athletic Association, admits to all games played by the College teams on home ground and finances various student organizations and publications. The fee is not refundable.
The dormitories and boarding department are conducted as a unit and assignments made by the semester. Ordinarily no adjustment is made on account of withdrawal. In case of sickness, however, or when a student can show good and sufficient reason for withdrawal from college, proper adjustment will be made for board. Notice of withdrawal must be given in advance and approved by the Dean and the Treasurer before any adjustment is made.
The charge for room includes medical attention by the College Physician, general services of the medical assistant in the dormitory, heat, light, etc. This charge does not cover cost of medicines, expense of a city hospital, or the services of any additional physie1an or nurse.
The dormitories, including the boarding department, will be closed during the Christmas and spring vacations. Students who wish to remain at College during the spring holiday are requesteel to confer with the Dean.
The College supplies students' rooms with bedstead, mattress, dresser, chairs, and clothes closet. Each student provides his own bed furnishings and toilet articles.
Students are matriculated for a full session. In the event of withdrawal on account of the student's sickness, proportionate deduction will be made in the charge for board, but not in other charges or for other causes.
Students are given until October 1st of the first semester and March 1st of the second semester to adjust their laboratory work and no refund is made for laboratory fees after these dates.
No diploma is granted or credit given for session's work until all charges have been satisfactorily settled.
Ministers of the Gospel of all denominations, and young men duly approved by their churches as pre-ministerial students are admitted free of charge for tuition. They pay all other fees. The Board of Missions and Education of the Virginia Baptist General Association will render further assistance to worthy young men recommended by churches which contribute to the Board, and accepted after examination. For further information on this matter, address Mr. Frank T. Crump, Secretary, Education Committee, Grace-American Building, Richmond, Va.
The college dormitories open for reception of students Sunday evening, September 10th. Students are advised not to arrive earlier than this date.
Rooms in dormitories will be assigned in the order of application after May 1st. Application should be addressed to the Dean of Richmond College. A deposit of ten dollars must be made by each applicant in order to hold a particular room. This fee will be deducted from the student's bill upon entrance to college, but is not refundable after August 1st of the sessional year. Checks should be made payable to University of Richmond, and enclosed in the letter of application to the Dean. On account of the increase in attendance it is important that students who wish to live in the dormitories make early application for rooms.
Charges for furnished rooms, including medical attention, heat , light, and care of rooms, vary from $70.00 to $80.00 for each of the two occupants of a double room, and from $75.00 to $95.00 for the occupant of a single room. It is understood that a single occupant of any room intended for two students shall be responsible for the full rent of the room. In case two students are permitted to occupy a room intended for one student, or three a room for two students, the minimum charge for each occupant is seventy dollars. No student is allowed to sub-let his room, take another student in with him, or move from one room to another withou t permission from the Dean. A charge of five dollars is made fo r changing from one room to another after October 1st, except that students are permitted, without paying this charge, to change rooms at the end of the first semester provided request for such change is filed with the Dean on or before January 20 of the current session. The charge will be enforced after the opening of th e second semester.
All odd numbered courses are given during the first semester and even numbered courses in the second semester. Double numbers indicate full session courses, where no credit may be given for one semester without the other. Figures in parenthesis indicate the number of semester hours credit allowed.
PROFESSORHARRIS ASSOCIATEPROFESSORHACKLEY
Greek
The object of this Department is to introduce the student to the literature of ancient Greece, to give him an appreciation of the precision of the language, and a consciousness of the Greek love for artistic beauty and proportion.
1-2 ( 6) BEGINNER'SCouRSE. Beginning with the alphabet, the class is occupied in securing a knowledge of forms, a working vocabulary and fundamental points of syntax. College credit only when followed by Greek 3 and 4.
3 (3) XENOPON'sANABASIS.Grammar reviewed and extended.
4 ( 3) HOMER. Reading of selected portions of Iliad or Odyssey. Study of Homeric forms and inflections. Conferences on mythology.
5 ( 3) LYSIAS.Selected orations. Introduction to Greek oratory. Oral or written exercises. (Hours to be arranged.)
6 (3) HISTORY. One book of Thucydides read and selected portions of others. Conferences on and readings from Herodotus and other historical writers. (Hours to be arranged.)
7 (3) ORATORY. Demosthenes' De Corona. Conferences on Greek oratory or orators. Lectures on grammar. (Hours to be arranged.)
8 ( 3) DRAMA. A play of Sophocles or Euripides read. Study of the development of the drama. Parallel reading. Lectures on Greek literature. (Hours to be arranged.)
9 (3) GREEK LITERATUREIN ENGLISH TRANSLATION. This course is designed to meet the demands of those who wish an acquaintance with the masterpieces of Greek literature both for their cultural values and as an aid to the appreciation of our own literature, but who have not the time to pursue them in the original. Text: Howe & Harrer's, Greek in Translation.
10 ( 3) ANCIENT CLASSICALART. This course will deal with Greek art from earliest times through the best periods of Greek and Roman art, and an attempt will be made to gain an appreciation of those great works of art that have been an inspiration to artists through the ages.
Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See description of graduate work, page 99.
1-2 ( 6) CICEROANDVIRGIL. Cicero's orations, with prose composition the first semester. Virgil's Aeneid, with Greek mythology the second semester. College credit only when followed by Latin 3-4.
3-4 (6) ROMANHISTORYANDPOETRY. Livy, prose composition, and Roman private life the first semester. Selections from Horace, Catullus, and the elegiac poets, with Roman private life the second semester. Prerequisite Latin 1-2 or equivalent.
5 (3) ROMAN SATIRE AND PHILOSOPHY. Authors read: Horace, Juvenal, and Cicero. Prerequisite Latin 3-4 or equivalent. Studies in the history of Roman Literature.
6 (3) ROMAN PHILOSOPHY AND CoMEDY. Authors read: Seneca, Plautus, and Terence. Studies in the history of Roman Literature. Prerequisite Latin 3-4 or equivalent.
7 (3) EARLY ROMAN PHILOSOPHY. of the Greek background. equivalent. Lucretius, with a study Prerequisite Latin 3-4 or
8 (3) RoMAN ORATORYAND MEDIAEVALLATIN. Tacitus, Dialogus. Selections from Mediaeval Literature. Advanced prose composition. Prerequisite Latin 3-4 or equivalent.
9 ( 3) THE Ro MAN EPISTLE. Authors read : Horace, Cicero, and Pliny. Collateral reading. Studies in textual criticism. Prerequisite Latin 3-4 or equivalent.
10 (3) ROMAN LIFE IN PROSE AND VERSE. Short selections from the principal Latin authors from Ennius to Aulus Gellius, illustrating life at ancient Rome. Collateral reading. Prerequisite Latin 3-4 or equivalent.
[ Of the above courses only one of the three, 5-6, 7-8, or 9-10, will be offered in 1933-34. The content of these courses may be varied to suit the needs or desires of the class. Some prose composition will be required in each of these courses.]
Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See description of graduate work, page 99.
A course in Drawing and Figure Sketching and an advanced course in Figure Sketching are offered primarily for students of Westhampton College, but students from Richmond College, who have the approval of the Instructor and the two Deans, may be admitted as regular students with the privileges of degree credit.
1 ( 3) OLD TESTAMENT. A study of the Hebrew people, their early religious and political institutions, and the character and contents of their sacred literature, especially the historical books of the Old Testament.
2 (3) OLD TESTAMENT. A continuation of course 1, dealing with the later history of the Hebrews, their wisdom literature and books of prophecy and poetry.
3 (3) NEW TESTAMENT. A study of the life and teachings of Jesus, as presented in the Gospels.
4 (3) NEW TESTAMENT. A continuation of Course 3. A study of the apostolic age as presented in Acts and the Epistles; Paul's life and letters; the development of the early Christian institutions and customs.
5 (3) MODERNCHURCH PROBLEMS. Problems of education in the local church; principles and ideals of the Sunday School ; the co-ordination and unification of the teaching and training activities of the church as a whole. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
6 (3) MODERNCHURCH PROBLEMS. A continuation of course 5. Modern church management; efficient church organization, with applications to churches of various types. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
7 (3) CHURCH HISTORY. An outline survey of Christian church history from New Testament times to the present. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
8 (3) COMPARATIVERELIGION. A study of the world's living religions with especial reference to the problems of Christian missions in pagan lands. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
PROFESSORBAILEY ASSOCIATEPROFESSORSMART
• The work in this d epartment falls into two divisi on s : Zoology and Botany. The foundati on work of th e department lies in G eneral Biology. The courses are planned with a view to providing such knowledg e of the science as is important from a purel y cultural standpoint, and also to afford adequate training for students preparing to enter any profession or occupation based upon biological science. Student s who expect to specialize in Biology are urged to arrange their program of study to include appropriate courses from other departments , to provide the fundamental preparation necessary for their intended careers.
To complete a major in Biology, the candidate must offer three full years ( 30 hours) in the department, viz.: one full year ( 10 hours) in General Biology and two full years (20 hours) in Zoology or Botany, or one full year ( 10 hours) in each.
Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See description of graduate work, page 99
2 ( 5) GENERALBOTANY. This course is designed to acquaint the student with plants as living organisms. It includes a general study of the structure and functions of the organs of representative seed-bearing plants, and presents a survey of the principal plant groups composing the plant kingdom. Three lecture-recitation periog,s and two laboratory periods a week.
3 (5) ANATOMYAND MORPHOLOGYOF THE HIGHER PLANTS. Botany 3 includes a detailed study of the anatomy and morphology of the vegetative organs and the organization of the reproductive parts of the vascular plants. Special emphasis is placed upon a comparison of different types of wood structure. Instruction in the sectioning and staining of plant tissues for microscopic study will be offered in the laboratory. Two lecture-recitation periods and three laboratory periods a week.
4 (5) INTRODUCTIONTO CRYPTOGAMICBOTANY. This course gives a general acquaintance with the non-flowering plant groups. Special consideration is given to Cryptogams in their relation to man, for example, to bacteria and fungi as agents of decay and as causes of disease in animals and plants. The structure and reproduction of representative bacteria, moulds, mushrooms, seaweeds, mosses, and ferns will be studied in the laboratory. The student will be introduced to the methods employed in culturing microorganisms. Two lecture-recitation periods and three laboratory periods a week.
5-6 ( 10) CLASSIFICATIONAND DISTRIBUTIONOF THE FLOWERING PLANTS.
Botany 5 is intended to give the student familiarity with the most characteristic Spermatophytes of this region, and an appreciation of the general laws controlling the distribution of plants. The laboratory work will consist of the study of specimens in the laboratory, together with the preparation of a private collection of the plants found on and about the campus. During the year several excursions will be planned for the class as a whole. Two lecture-recitation periods and three laboratory periods a week. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
13-14 SPECIALPROBLEMS.For graduates or for seniors who have completed a Botany major. A subject for research will be assigned or chosen, and pursued under supervision. The results of the research must be embodied in a thesis.
Hours and credit to be arranged with the instructor.
1 (5) GENERALZooLOGY. A comprehensive study of the structure, development, habits, and life of animals. Three lecture-recitation periods and two laboratory periods a week.
3-4 (10) COMPARATIVEANATOMYANDMORPHOLOGYOF VERTEBRATES.A thorough dissection and comparative study of the several systems of organs of representative vertebrates. This course is intended for those who are particularly interested in Zoology, and also for prospective medical students. Two lecture-recitation periods and three periods of laboratory work a week throughout the year.
9 (3) HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY.A study of the human body with reference to structure, function and care. Attention is given to both the anatomic and the hygienic aspects. Three lecture-recitation periods a week, with
assigned topics for outside reading and reports. Meets the requirements of the "West Law" for Virginia Public School teachers.
10 ( 5) HISTOLOGYAND EMBRYOLOGY.A course in general histology and the fundamentals of embryology, introductory to the more specialized courses in these subjects in medical schools. (Two lecture-recitation periods and three periods of laboratory work a week. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
13-14 SPECIAL PROBLEMS. For graduates or for seniors who have completed a Zoology major. A subject for investigation will be chose or assigned, and pursued under supervision. The results of the investigation must be embodied in a thesis.
Hours and credit to be arranged with the instructor.
PROFESSORSEAY
PROFESSORMEAD PROFESSORRUSSELL
PROFESSORPINCHBECK
ASSOCIATEPROFESSORTHOMAS
MR. MAYS
MR. BRONSON
1 ( 3) INDUSTRIALHISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES. A brief survey is made of the industrial development of Europe and England to the period of American colonization. This is followed by a study of the growth of American industries up to 1860.
2 (3) INDUSTRIALHISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES. A continuation of the above course. A study of the industries of the United States from 1860 to the present time.
Business Administration 1-2 is open to all the students of Richmond College. It is prerequisite to the B.S. in Business Administration degree.
3-4 (6) BUSINESSLAW. Practically all business relationships have a legal background in that they involve some contractual undertaking. Business Law, therefore, constitutes an essential part of business training. The first semester will include the study of contracts sales, agency, negotiable instruments and insurance During the second semester, partnerships, corporations, property, wills, etc., will be covered. This course is required for the degree. Not open to Freshmen. Prerequisite, Business Administration 1-2.
5-6 (6) PRINCIPLESOF ACCOUNTING.An introduction to the study of accounting, designed to meet the needs of the general student of business as well as of those seeking to specialize in accounting. The first semester: the uses of accounting, the preparation and interpretation of financial statements and practice in making the application of the principles of double entry bookkeeping to the sole proprietorship and to the partnership forms of business organization. In the second semester, work upon financial statements is continued in relation to the manufacturing type of business and to the corporate form of organization. Throughout these courses the practice set will constitute an important part of the student's work.
7-8 (6) ADVANCEDAccOUNTING. Advanced theory applicable to the accounting process is set forth in the text and fully illustrated and supplemented with graded problems. Subjects studied in the first semester will include: comparative financial statements, partnership reorganization and liquidation, issuance of corporate stocks and bonds, declaration of dividends, correction of statements and books, and statement of application of funds. The second semester is a continuation of the work of the first, with attention to causes of variation in net profits, accounting for insolvent concerns, fixed assets, appraisal and depletion, intangible assets, reserves, and consolidated statements. Prerequisite, Business 5-6.
( 3) INTRODUCTORYCosT AccoUNTING. A semester subject covering methods of finding the cost of specific orders, the accounting procedure necessary for connecting the cost records with the general books, with practice in the use of forms common in cost accounting. Practice set, problems and questions. Prerequisite, Business 5-6, Economics 1-2; also Business 7-8, except by permission of the Head of the Department.
10 ( 3) AUDITING. A study of the principles and practice of auditing, the text being supplemented with problems and questions applicable to the various classes of audits, but more especially to the balance sheet audit. Working papers and reports upon investigations are required; attention is given to procedure in closing an audit and in the construction of an audit report. Prerequisite, same as for Business 9 above.
11 (3) ADVANCEDAccouNTING PROBLEMS . The course is designed to extend the work in general accounting and as a review of advanced accounting theory. Although intended for those students only who are preparing to make accounting a vocation and who have completed 5-6-7-8, it is not offered as a C. P.A. coaching course, being limited to the field of general accounting theory and practice. Selected problems from published C. P. A. examinations will, however, be used to supplement the problems of the text. Prerequisite, average grade of B in Business 7-8, or upon examination. [Hours to be arranged.]
12 ( 3) AccouNTING FORFEDERALTAXES. A general course in Federal taxes in which emphasis is laid on the current law and the preparation of income tax returns for individuals, partnerships, corporations, and fiduciaries.. The course should be of special interest to those who plan to beoo:me public accountants. Prerequisites, Business administration 5-6, Economics 5-6. [Hours to be arranged.]
13 (3) TRANSPORTATION. A study of the development, organization and service of the railroads of the United States. Other transportation agencies are considered as they supplement or compete with railroads.
14 (3) TRAFFICANDRATES. This course is a continuation of course 13. In it a careful study is made of the theory of railroad rates, classification, rate structures, governmental regulation and special railroad problems. Prerequisites, Business Administration 1-2 and 13.
15 (3) EcoNOMIC GEOGRAPHY.This course includes a study of the natural environment and the economic development of the countries with which the United States has large oommercial relations and a detailed consideration of the international trade of each of these countries. The time is about equally divided among Europe, Latin-America and the Far East. Prerequisites, Business Administration 1-2, Economics 1-2.
16 ( 3) FOREIGNTRADE. This course begins with a consideration of the theory of foreign trade. Analysis is made of our foreign trade, both imports and exports. The technical requirements for carrying on such trade and peculiar conditions affecting different markets are studied. Prerequisites, Business Administration 1-2, Economics 1-2, Business Administration 15 except by permission of the Head of the Department.
17 ( 3) MARKETING.This oourse aims to give a comprehensive knowledge of efficient methods for the distribution of both agricultural and manufactured products. A special study is made of the marketing of a variety of commodities. Attention is given to specific marketing problems. Prerequisite, Business Administra1-2.
18 ( 3) ADVERTISING.This course is studied in its relation to modern ·marketing. The course includes the principles of advertising, the preparation of advertise-
ments, advertising media, the advertising organization and specific advertising campaigns. Prerequisites, Business Administration 1-2 and 17.
21 (3) LIFE INSURANCEPRINCIPLESANDPRACTICES.A study of the uses of insurance, its fundamental principles, types of insurance organizations, organization and management of the insurance business, types of life insurance policies, the computation of life insurance premiums, reserves, surrender values, loan values, surplus and dividends. Special forms of life insurance, accident and health insurance, and liability and compensation insurance will be studied during the first semester.
22 (3) PROPERTYANDCASUALTYINSURANCES.A study of fire and property insurance, marine insurance, and casualty insurance, including automobile, title, credit and casualty insurance. Careful study will be made of the contracts, laws, salesmanship, settlement of claims, reserves, rates, investments and management of fire, marine and casualty insurance businesses. Prerequisites, Economics 1 and 2.
23-24 (6) CORPORATIONFINANCE. This is an advanced course dealing with the financial problems confronting business men as a result of the tremendous growth in the size of modern industrial organizations. The first semester comprises a study of underlying problems: conditions to be met, capitalization, types of securities, legal aspects encountered, etc. The second semester is devoted more to security marketing and the functions of underwriting, brokerage houses and stock exchanges. Prerequisities, Business Administration 1-2, 3-4, 5-6, Economics 1-2. Three hours a week.
27 ( 3) SocIAL AsPECTS OF INDUSTRY.A study of the nature and history of modern capitalism and industrialism;
population and immigration as related to labor supply; wages and the distribution of the national wealth and income; human conservation problems and legislation; unemployment; labor organizations; industrial strife, and the settlement of labor disputes; cooperation, socialism, communism, and fascism as types of social reform.
28 (3) LABOR LEGISLATION AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT.
A study of the labor laws and court decisions of the State and Federal governments, and other nations; the relations of employer and employee; agencies and methods for promoting industrial peace and democracy; and personnel systems for the organization and management of labor.
29 (3) OWNERSHIP ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT. A study of capital as the legal foundation of ownership organization; legal fundamentals of ownership organization; personal ownership organizations, including the single proprietor and the variations of the partnership; security issuing organizations, including the joint stock company, the corporation, and the business trust; business combinations through associations, factors' agreements, pools, kartels and syndicates; investment trusts and other security substituting organizations ; finance and assumption companies; ownership and organization abuses; legislation and other remedies for abuses ; and proposed reforms.
30 (3) OPERATING ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT. A study of the internal organization of manufacturing companies, from a production viewpoint, including plant layout, construction, the planning of departments, routing of work through the plant, control and regularization of output, sales management, personal relations. Prerequisites, Economics 1 and 2.
UNIVERSITYOF RICHMOND
CHEMISTRY
PROFESSORRYLAND
PROFESSORCORNTHWAITE
1 (5) GENERALCHEMISTRY. An introduction to the phenomena, methods, principles, history and applications of the science of Chemistry. Prerequisite, high school Physics or Physics 1. Three class hours and two laboratory periods.
2 (5) GENERAL CHEMISTRY. A continuation of course 1 with emphasis on the fundamental theories. Three class hours and two laboratory periods.
3 (5) QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS. Systematic laboratory procedure based on the study of modern theories of analytical methods. Two class hours and three laboratory periods.
4 (5) QUANTITATIVEANALYSIS. The elementary principles of gravimetric and volumetric analysis and the solution of problems. One class hour and four labwatory periods.
5 ( 5) ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. An introduction to the study of the hydrocarbons and their substituted derivatives covering the aliphatic series, with emphasis on biochemical and synthetic applications. Three class hours and two laboratory periods.
6 ( 5) ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. The cyclic compounds. A continuation of Chemistry 3, covering the important reactions and applications of compounds in the aromatic series. Three class hours and two laboratory periods.
7 (5) TECHNICAL ANALYSIS. Select and commercial methods. One class hour and four laboratory periods.
8 (5) PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY. An introduction to physicochemical properties, generalizations and theories. Three class hours and two laboratory periods.
11-12 (2) HISTORYOF CHEMISTRY. A survey of the development of the science and of its literature. One class hour. Required of students completing majors in Chemistry. Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See description of graduate work, page 99.
ECONOMICS
PROFESSORSEAy
ASSOCIATEPROFESSORTHOMAS
1 (3) PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS. The underlying theories of Economics are developed by reference to specific conditions. Partial list of topics for discussion include Production, Consumption, Value, Price, Monopoly, Money and Banking. Not open to first year students except upon permission of Head of this Department.
2 (3) CURRENTECONOMICPROBLEMS.Distribution, Transportation, Insurance, Labor, Tariff, etc.
3 (3) MONEY. The course deals with the history of exchange, and the evolution of money. Especial attention is given to a study of various monetary standards, and particularly that of the United States. The principles of note issue, the value of money, the business cycle, the desirability of the control of credit, and foreign exchange are some of the problems discussed.
4 ( 3) BANKING. A course on the history of banking in the United States, with emphasis upon the national banking and the Federal Reserve systems. Among the problems considered are deposits, the collection of checks, primary and secondary reserves, loans and discounts, the bank statement, recent banking changes, and international banking relations.
5-6 (6) PUBLIC FINANCE. The first semester is devoted to a study of the history of public finance, the increase in public expenditures, and certain form of public revenues such as those from the public domain. State and municipal industries, and administrative revenues.
During the second semester various types of taxes are examined, particularly income taxes and taxes on corporations. Special attention is given to an examination of public credit and such subjects as the nature
and uses of public credit, principles of public credit, forms, redemption and refunding of debt, and the making of a budget.
The course is so arranged as to admit students for the second semester's work. Economics 1-2 prere- quisite.
Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See de- scripllion of graduate work, page 99.
1 (3) AN INTRODUCTIONTO EDUCATION.A course dealing with some of the major theories and practices in education, stress- ing the general rather than the professional point of view. The course is designed to serve as a beginning course for those just entering upon professional study in education, and as a course of general information for those who desire a more general contact with this field of study.
2 (3) EDUCATIONALPSYCHOLOGY.A general course of Educa- tional Psychology, dealing with the original nature and development of children, and the major factors that facilitate their learning. These factors will include laws of learning, transfer of training, motivation, individual differences, spe- cial abilities and disabilities, mental hygiene, etc.
3 (3) PRINCIPLESOF SECONDARYEDUCATION. A course present- ing the major principles underlying a sound philosophy of secondary education. These principles include population, organization, aims, functions, social outcomes, etc. ( [Not offered in 1933-34.]
4 (3) METHODSIN SECONDARYEDUCATION. A course presenting a characteristic range of the most effective group and in- dividual methods appropriate for educational activities on the secondary level, including their relationships, values and applications. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
5 (3) HISTORYOF EDUCATION.A general course pointing out the larger educational movements and theories of the past in their historical settings, and tracing their subsequent rela-
tionships and influences to their bearings on present educational theory and practice. Emphasis will be placed on the history of education in the United States.
6 (3) EDUCATIONALADMINISTRATION. A course of public school administration from the standpoint of the teacher, portraying the organization of the major functional units in such a way as to enable the teacher to adjust himself in his various relationships with greater understanding and higher ethical considerations.
NoTE: Course 1-2 will be given each year; 3-4 and 5-6 will be given alternate years.
ENGLISH
PROFESSORGOODE
PROFESSORHANDY
ASSOCIATEPROFESSORSTEVENSON
MR. BONER
Course 1-2 is prerequisite to all other courses in the department. Course 3-4 is prerequisite to all other courses in literature in the department.
Course 9-10 or 13-14, and course 7 or 8 unless other evidence of good writing is offered, are required for major work in the department. Before beginning major work in the department the student should have completed a course in English history. A working knowledge of French and German should accompany major work in English.
· 1-2 (6) RHETORICAND COMPOSITION. The elements of writing in theory and practice. Selections from literature for illustration and example. Parallel reading. Individual conferences. Exposition is mainly the subject of study for the first semester, Description and Narration for the second.
3-4 (6) SURVEYOF ENGLISH LITERATURE. English literature from the beginnings to the present time. Selections for study, lectures and recitations, critiques, parallel reading. For the first semester the study is continuous from the beginnings to about 1780, and for
the second, from about 1780 to the period of the World War.
5-6 (6) AMERICANLITERATURE.The literature of America from the early settlements to the present time. Sec- tional developments, relationships with English literature, individual writers and productions. From the period of colonization to the Civil War, for the first semester : from the Civil War to the present time, for the second.
7 (3) ADVANCEDCOMPOSITION-THE SHORT STORY. The technique of the Short Story, exercises in the ele- ments of the type, complete short stories. Class instruction, copious reading, individual conferences.
8 (3) ADVANCEDCOMPOSITION-CREATIVEWRITING. Instruction and criticism for students who wish to write for publication. Several genres are carefully ana- lyzed. Reading in current periodical literature, indi- vidual con£erences.
9-10 (6) OLDENGLISH. Anglo-Saxon grammar and phonology, with readings in West Saxon prose, for the first semester: systematic reading and study of Beowulf, for the second semester. Recommended for Seniors and Graduates. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
11 ( 3) ENGLISHDRAMA. The development of English drama from the beginnings, through the early types, to Shakespeare and his contemporaries, and the de- cline to the closing of the theaters in 1642. Lectures, wide reading reports.
12 (3) ENGLISH DRAMA. English drama from 1660 to the present time, with emphasis on the Restoration, Vic- torian, and Modern periods. Lectures, wide reading, reports.
13-14 (6) CHAUCER. Introductory study in the pronunciation, language, and meter of Chaucer. Close reading of some of the Canterbury Tales, from the linguistic standpoint primarily, for the first semester: appre- ciative reading of other works of Chaucer, and of
the period, for the second semester. Recommended for Seniors and Graduates.
15-16 (6) SHAKESPEARE. Intensive study of a few plays, for the first semester : comprehensive reading and study of others, for the second semester. Emphasis mainly upon linguistic and literary elements. Lectures and recitations.
17 ( 3) THE CLASSICALREGIME. English literature from the Restoration to the Tattler and Spectator papersdrama, satire, journalistic prose, etc., with individual studies in Milton, Bunyan, Dryden, Evelyn and Pepys, Defoe, and Steele and Addison. Lectures, extensive reading, critiques. [Not offered in 193334.]
18 ( 3) THE CLASSICALREGIME. The classical tradition from the appearance of Pope to the death of Johnson. Lectures, extensive reading, critiques. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
19 (3) THE ROMANTICMOVEMENT. English poetry approximately from 1780 to 1825. Studies in Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, arid Keats, with some attention to such as Cowper, Burns, and Scott. Reports on the minor poets of the time. Lectures and class discussions.
20 (3) VICTORIANPoETRY. Studies in the poetry of Arnold, Tennyson, Browning, Rossetti, Morris, and Swinburne, with some notice of Mrs. Browning, Fitzgerald, James Thomson, and Miss Rossetti. Reports on the minor poets of the period. Lectures and class discussions.
21-22 (6) THE ENGLISHNovEL. A rapid survey of prose fiction in England before the novel proper. The great novelists and types of the novel from Defoe to Conrad. Lectures, wide reading, class papers. The first semester is devoted to a study of the novel before the appearance of Scott, and the second semes-
UNIVERSITYOF RICHMOND 67
ter, from Scott to Conrad. Three hours a week. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
Gr~duate courses will be arranged to suit tbe needs of the individual student. See descnptlon of graduate work, page 99.
ASSOCIATEPROFESSORHACKLEY
1-2 (6) ELEMENTARYGERMAN. A beginning course for those students who have never studied German or whose preparation is inadequate for more advanced work. It includes Elementary Grammar and Composition; special training in pronunciation and simple conversation German; the reading of simple texts in class and assigned parallel. First semester, Brief German Grammar by Heffner; second semester, grammar continued and An Elementary German Reader in Deutschland by Alexis and Pfeiler. College credit only when followed by German 3-4.
3-4 (6) INTRODUCTIONTO GERMAN LITERATURE. Open to students who have taken Course 1-2 or its equivalent. It includes a review of German forms, a more careful study of syntax, drill in pronunciation based on texts read, the reading of modern prose and dramatic works in class and as assigned parallel. First semester centers about the following authors : Storm, Heyse, VonHillern, Benedix; second semester, Wildenbruch, Keller, Riehl, Baumbach.
5-6 (6) GERMANLITERATUREOF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY.
Open to students who have taken 3-4 or its equivalent. The works of the great poets, dramatists and novelists, as well as the main currents and forms of expression from the rise of Romanticism to the ascendancy of Naturalism are presented in this course as fully as time permits. Texts used, Liptzin's Anthology "From Novalis to Nietzsche." [Not given in 193334.]
7-8 (6) GERMANCOMEDY.In the first semester selections from Freytag and Moser are read in class, with parallel reading from Fulda and Benedix. In the second semester, selections from Schiller and Lessing are read in class, with parallel reading from Hauptman and Wilhelmi. Prerequisite, Course 3-4 or its equivalent.
9-10 (6) GERMAN SERIOUSDRAMA. The work of this course centers especially about the following authors : Lessing, Schiller and Goethe. In the first semester, the lives and works of these three dominant figures are studied and selections from Lessing read in class. In the second semester representative dramas from Schiller and Goethe are read in class, others read as parallel. Prerequisite, Course 5-6 or 7-8. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
11 (3) GERMANLYRICPOETRY. Selections will be studied from those poets who stand out as pre-eminent in this field. Prerequisite, Course 5-6 or 7-8. [Not offered in
12 (3) 13-14 (4) 1933-34.]
GoETHE's FAUST. Analytical and critical study of the whole drama, its sourc~s and development are outstanding features of this course. Prerequisite, Course 9-10. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
SCIENTIFICGERMAN. This course is designed for the students of science who are studying the language for its practical value to the investigator. Prerequisite, Course 3-4 or its equivalent. Two hours a week.
PROFESSORMITCHELL
PROFESSORMcDANEL
1 (3) GENERALEUROPEANHISTORY. Civilization in the Middle Ages will be studied as fully as time permits, but special stress will be laid upon the period from the
Reformation to the French Revolution. Four sections. For Freshmen and Sophomores.
2 (3) RECENT AND CONTEMPORARYEUROPEANHISTORY will be surveyed. Four sections. For Freshmen and Sophomores.
3 ( 3) HISTORY OF E:i-;GLANDwill be studied, up to the Congress 6£ Vienna in 1815. For Juniors and Seniors.
4 (3) THE BRITISH COMMONWEALTHOF NATIONS will be viewed in its various aspects. For Juniors and Seniors.
5 ( 3) AMERICAN HISTORY from its beginning through the Civil War. The treatment of the Colonial period will be brief, with more attention paid to the political and social development after the Revolution. For Sopho- . mores and Juniors.
6 (3) AMERICAN HISTORY from the Civil War to the present time will be studied in detail. For Sophomores and Juniors.
7 (3) INTERNATIONALLAW. The public laws of nations studied through text and cases. For Juniors and Seniors. [Not offered in 1933-34. ]
8 (3) AMERICAN DIPLOMATIC HISTORY. This will include a detailed study of American foreign relations, from the Revolution to the present time. This course is designed primarily for those majoring in History or Government. For Juniors and Seniors. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
9 (3) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT will be discussed, National, State and Local, both in theory and practice. For Sophomores and Juniors.
10 (3) INTERNATIONALRELATIONS will be studied. An effort will be made to articulate important happenings of the day with the course of study. Special attention will be given to such agencies as the League of Nations and Permanent Court of International Justice. For Sophomores and Juniors.
11 (3) THE FAR EAsT. A c·ourse in the modern history of China, Japan, and the Pacific area. For Juniors and Seniors.
12 (3) LATIN AMERICANHISTORY.The republics of Latin American will be studied, with special attention being given to their political history and international relations and to their relations with the United States.
Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See description of graduate work, page 99.
PROFESSORGAINES
ASSOCIATEPROFESSORWHEELER
MR. JOHNSON
1 ( 3) COLLEGEALGEBRA. This course includes quadratic equations, determinants, logarithms, solution of higher equations, permutations and combinations, probability, and infinite series.
2 (3) MATHEMATICSANALYSIS. An elementary course including functions and graphs, rate problems, simple differentiation and integration, trigonometry, and rectangular coordinates. Given in the second semester.
3 (3) MATHEMATICSOF FINANCE. Annuities, amortization of debts, sinking funds, bond valuation, depreciation and life insurance.
4 ( 3) STATISTICS. The mathematical principles of statistics and the application of statistical methods in various fields.
5 (3) ANALYTICALGEOMETRY. Construction and discussion of loci and a detailed study of the straight line and circle and of the simpler properties of the parabola, ellipse and hyperbola.
6 ( 3) CALCULUS. An elementary course in differential and integral calculus.
7 (3) CALCULUS. An advanced course in differential and integral calculus.
8 (3) ANALYTICAL GEOMETRY. Advanced course following Course 5.
9 (3) DIFFERENTIALEQUATIONS. Open to students who have completed courses 7 and 8.
10 (3) INFINITE SERIES AND PRODUCTS. Courses 7 and 8 are prerequisite to this course.
Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student See de- scription of graduate work, page 99. ·
1 ( 3) INTRODUCTIONTO PHILOSOPHY. A general survey of the field of philosophy, its aims, methods and meaning; a study of the various types of metaphysical theory; and an introduction to the major problems of philosophy, such as the nature of matter, life and mind; the existence of God; the relation of mind and body; freedom and determinism; and the status of values in the cosmos.
2 ( 3) ETHICS. A study of the development of moral conceptions, an examination of the different types of ethical theory, and an attempt to determine the valid principles of right conduct.
3 (3) HISTORY OF ANCIENT AND MEDIEVALPHILOSOPHY. This course offers a survey of the doctrines of the great thinkers of classical antiquity and of the middle ages, with especial emphasis on the teachings of Plato and Aristotle and a study of selections from their writings.
4 ( 3) HISTORYOF MODERNPHILOSOPHY. A study of the development of European philosophy since the Renaissance; the philosophy of Descartes and the rationalistic movement on the continent; English empiricism; the system of Kant and the German idealistic movement; Schopenhauer and Spencer.
S ( 3) PHILOSOPHYOFRELIGION. This course includes a brief survey of comparative religion and the psychology of the religious experience, and seeks to determine the validity of fundamental religious ideas, examining such questions as the existence and nature of God, His relation to the world, the problem of evil, human freedom, salvation and immortality.
6 (3) CONTEMPORARYPHILOSOPHY. A study of recent movements in philosophy; idealism since Hegel; James, Dewey
UNIVERSITYOF RICHMOND
and the pragmatic philosophy; Bergson's vitalism; and contemporary realism.
7 ( 3) EsTHETICS. A study of the various types of esthetic theory and their leading exponents, with an attempt to determine the nature and function of art in human experience. [Not given in 1933-34.]
8. ( 3) LOGIC. A study of the methods by which the mind arrives at scientific truth; the rules and presuppositions of inductive and deductive thinking, with an introduction to the various types of logical theory. [Not given in 1933-34.]
Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See description of graduate work, page 99.
M.
F. M. DOBSON,Director
U. PITT, Associate Director
A minimum of two semester hours in physical training or athletics is required of all degree candidates, and a maximum of four semester hours may be offered. All first and second-year students are required to enroll for some form of physical training. The following credits are offered:
Compulsor~ Track-First and second years, 1 sem. hr. each year.
Freshman Sports-Football, ¼ sem. hr.; baseball, ¼ sem. hr.; basketball, ¼ sem. hr.; boxing, ¼ sem. hr.; track, ¼ sem. hr.; tennis, ¼ sem. hr.
Varsity Sports-Football, ¼ sem. hr.; baseball, ¼ sem. hr.; basketball, ¼ sem. hr.; boxing, ¼ sem. hr.; track, ¼ sem. hr.; tennis,¼ sem. hr.
Intramural Sports-Boxing, ¼ sem. hr.; fraternity and class basketball,¼ sem. hr.; fraternity and class track meet, ¼ sem. hr.; volleyball, ¼ sem. hr.
PROFESSORLOVING
ASSOCIATEPROFESSORALBRIGHT
1 ( S) GENERAL PHYSICS. This course embraces Mechanics, Wave Motion and Sound, and Heat. Lectures, demonstrations, and problems. Three lecture hours and two laboratory periods per week.
2 ( 5) GENERALPHYSICS. A continuation of course 1, embracing Light, Electricity, and Magnetism. Three lecture hours and two laboratory periods per week.
3 (3) MODERNPHYSICS. Atomic Structure, Electron Theory of Matter, Discharge Tube Phenomena, and Cathode Rays. Prerequisites,Physics 1 and2,and Mathematics 1 and 2. Three lecture hours per week.
4 ( 3) MODERNPHYSICS. A continuation of course 3, embracing Thermionic Effect, Photoelectric Effect, X - rays, Crystal Structure, and an Optional Subject. Prerequisites, same as for course 3. Three lecture hours per week .
5 ( 5) ELECTRICITYAND MAGNETISM. Theory and Measurements. Prerequisites, Physics 1 and 2, and Mathematics 1 and 2. Three lecture hours and two laboratory periods per week.
6 ( 5) DIRECT CURRENTCIRCUITS. Theory and Testing. Prerequisites, same as for course 5. Three lecture hours and two laboratory periods per week.
7 (5) MECHANICS. Fundamental Laws of Force and Motion. Prerequisites, Physics 1 and 2, and Mathematics 5 and 6. Three lecture hours and two laboratory periods per week.
8 (5) HEAT AND LIGHT. Thermodynamics and Wave Theory. Prerequisites, same as for course 7. Three lecture hours and two laboratory periods per week.
9 (S) ELECTRICALWAVESANDOSCILLATIONS.Theory andMeasurements. Prerequisites, Physics 1 and 2, and Mathematics 5 and 6. Three lecture hours and two laboratory periods per week. [Not given in 1933-34.]
10 (5) ALTERNATINGCURRENTCIRCUITS. Theory and Testing. Prerequisites, same as for course 9. Three lecture hours and two laboratory periods per week. [Not given in 1933-34.]
N. B. : Courses 7 and 8 are required for all majors in Physics, and are essential to all students who will take graduate work in Physics or Engineering. Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See description of graduate work, page 99.
UNIVERSITYOF RICHMOND
PSYCHOLOGY
PROFESSORAsTROP
1-2 (6) GENERALPSYCHOLOGY.Normal adult human psychology. The work of the first semester will be given over to a study of the anatomy, histology, and physiology of the nervous system and the simpler psychological functions, sensation and perception. During the second semester, the more complex psychological processes involved in human consciousness and behaviour will be considered; imagination, attention, reasoning, will, instinct, habit, feeling, and emotion. Stress will be put upon experimental findings throughout. Not open to Freshmen.
3 ( 3) ABNORMALPSYCHOLOGY.A brief account of the history and changing conceptions of mental disorder followed by a study of the contemporary viewpoints and of feeblemindedness, the psychoneuroses, and the psychoses with occasional clinics at neighboring institutions for mental and nervous disorders. Prerequisite, Psychology 1-2.
4 (3) CONTEMPORARYPSYCHOLOGY.A brief historical sketch of psychological thought and achievement passing quickly to a general survey of the contemporary vie~points ; the outstanding psychologists and their schools-introspective , "Self," psychoanalytic, behaviouristic, and "Gestalt." Prerequisite, Psychology 1-2.
5 (3) PSYCHOLOGYOF PERSONALITY.A study of the human personality and the many factors that influence it such as worry, day-dreaming, the inferiority . complex, compensation, and the like and an analysis of the personality of many of the great figures of literature and history form the angle of the psychologist. Prerequisite, Psychology, 1-2. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
6 (3) SocIAL PSYCHOLOGY.A study of the interaction of man upon man and the psychology of groups. Such phenomena as fads, crazes, fashion, mob and crowd mind, custom, convention, language, prejudice will be studied and some time will be given to the study of criminal psychology. Prerequisite, Psychology: 1-2. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
9r:1duate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See de• scnpt10n of graduate work, page 99.
PROFESSORHANDY
75
A course in the principles and practice of Public Speaking. The training of students in accuracy of thought, in correctness of expression, and in ease of delivery will be stressed. Practical speaking necessary for successful accomplishment is the aim of this instruction.
In addition to oral practice there will be wide reading and critical study of examples of the various forms of public speechdeliberative, forensic, occasional.
1 ( 3) A study of the general principles of Public Speaking. Voice Correction. Reading aloud with emphasis upon proper breathing. Daily practice in the delivery of short memorized selections.
2 ( 3) The oration as a form. Analytical study of a number of modern orations as to structure, style and diction. Writing of two original orations and delivery of them before the class.
Prerequisite, English 1-2.
ASSOCIATEPROFESSORCAYLOR
ASSOCIATEPROFESSORGAINES
MR. GIDDINGS
1-2 (6) ELEMENTARYFRENCH. This course is intended for students with little or no knowledge of French. The work will include pronunciation on phonetic basis; careful training in the elements of French grammar; reading of simple selections; vocabulary building; dictation and simple composition. Practice in speaking the language. Composition books required. The work of the second semester is a continuation of the first. College credit only when followed by French 3-4.
3-4 (6) COMPOSITION,READING,CoNVERSATION.A systematic and thorough review of French grammar. Composition of moderate difficulty; dictation. Reading of a considerable amount of modern prose and poetry ( 450-600 pages). Text to vary. Conversation based on texts. The purpose of this course is to give the student a reasonable command of the written and spoken language and to enable him to assimilate easily a literary text.
Assigned reading. Composition books required. Prerequisites, French 1-2 or the equivalent.
5-6 (6) A GENERALSURVEYOF FRENCH LITERATUREfrom the sixteenth century to the present time. Selected readings from representative authors, class discussions and lectures, supplemented by collateral reading and reports. A portion of the time, depending upon the need of the students, will be devoted to conversation and composition in French. The second semester continues the work of the first. Prerequisites, French 3-4 or the equivalent.
7 (3) THE FRENCH NOVEL. A study of the most important writers from Rousseau to the present time. Analysis of texts. Collateral reading and reports. Conducted largely in French. Prerequisites, French 3-4, or the equivalent, and a complete reading knowledge. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
8 (3) HISTORYOF FRENCH LYRIC POETRY. The principles, elements and evolution of French versification with emphasis upon the leading poets will be studied. Discussion of the general tendencies in French poetry. Memory work, lectures. Collateral reading. Reports. To be conducted largely in French. Prerequisites, French 3-4, and a complete reading knowledge. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
9 (3) ADVANCEDFRENCH COMPOSITIONAND CONVERSATION. Conducted in French, this course is intended to develop a practical mastery of the spoken and written
language. There will be assigned exercises, compositions and discussions in French, and a certain amount of careful study of selections from the masters of French prose style. Occasional lectures will be given in French on the history and civilization of France. Prerequisites, French 5-6, although students who have completed French 3-4 with a grade not less than B may be admitted ·
10 (3) FRENCH
Reading in class the principal writers of the seventeen century ( Corneille, Racine, Moliere, La Fontaine, Pascal, Boileau, Bossuet, the women writers, and the writers of memoirs and maxims) ; discussions and lectures in French, parallel reading and reports. Prerequisite, French 5-6 or equivalent.
One of the professors will be in the office late in the afternoons, twice a week, to give a course in oral French which may be taken without credit by those interested in the spoken language.
Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See description of graduate work, page 99.
1-2 (6) ELEMENTARYSPANISH. A course for students of little or no knowledge of Spanish. It deals with the elements of grammar and simple composition. Special attention is paid to pronunciation, conversation, dictation, fluency in reading and practical use of the language. College credit only when followed by Spanish 3-4.
3-4 (6) INTERMEDIATESPANISH. This course deals with a systematic review of grammar, dictation and composition of moderate difficulty. Reading of typical works by modern poets and prose writers ( 450-600 pages). Text to vary. Attention is given to conversation and discussion in Spanish, based upon the texts
studied and upon topics of practical every-day Spanish. Assigned reading. Spanish will be the language of the classroom.
Prerequisites, Spanish 1-2 or the equivalent.
5 (3) ADVANCEDREADING,CONVERSATIONAND COMPOSITION. A study of the modern Spanish writers, such as Galdos, Alarcon, Valera, Valdes and Ibanez. The outstanding works of the above authors will be used as texts. Students are expected to write themes and reading reports in Spanish. Collateral Reading. To be conducted largely in Spanish.
Prerequisites, Spanish 3-4 or the equivalent.
6 (3) MODERNSPANISH DRAMA AND POETRY. A study of the drama and poetry in the XVIII, XIX, and XX centuries. Assigned collateral reading, reading reports, lectures. The themes must be written in Spanish.
7-8 (3) EL SIGLO DE ORo. A study of the most prominent writers and their works. Special attention is placed on the works of Cervantes., Calderon and Lope de Vega. Lectures, collateral reading, reading reports, themes in Spanish.
Prerequisites, Spanish 3-4 or the equivalent. [Not offered in 1933-34.]
9 (3) COMMERCIALSPANISH. A study of the Spanish of commerce. This course is designed to give the student indispensable information on commercial subjects and to give him practical knowledge, instead of theory. As the student progresses he will become acquainted with the technical terms and styles that characterize the language used in the Spanish business world of today.
Prerequisite, Spanish 3-4 or the equivalent. First semester.
10 (3) SPANISH CORRESPONDENCE. A study of all types of letters. In this course the student will become familiar with the commercial expressions and everyday idioms used in Spanish correspondence. Prerequisites, Spanish 3-4 or the equivalent. Second semester.
A course in elementary Italian will be offered if a sufficient number of students request it.
PROFESSORHARLAN
1 (3) PRINCIPLESOF SocIOLOGY. A study of human nature and the social order ; social contacts ; social interaction; social forces ; social control ; collective behavior ; social progress. Textbook, lectures, research.
2 ( 3) CULTUREAND SOCIAL PROGRESS. An examination of the biological and historical factors in the origin and development of culture. A measurement of progress in terms of advancing culture. Textbook, lectures.
3 (3) SOCIALADJUSTMENT. A study of some of the outstanding social problems and the agencies which have been created to adjust them. Textbook, lectures, research. [Not given in 1933-34.]
4 (3) THE SocIOLOGYOF THE CITY. A study of the city as a human group with geographical, ecological and social-functional area. [Not given in 1933-34.]
5 (3) THE FAMILY. The historical development and present status of the family. Sex and civilization with its problems. Textbook, lectures and readings.
6 (3) RURAL SocIOLOGY. A study of the Country Life Movement; of rural institutions, economic, social, educational and religious. Such problems as rural health, education, morals and religion will be studied an d examination made of programs of rural rehabilitation. Textbook, lectures, field work.
7 ( 3) SocIAL ETHICS. A study of the contribution of past civilizations to moral ideals; analysis of the present social order in the light of moral values. Textbo ok , lectures, research.
8 (3) CONTEMPORARYSOCIAL THEORIES. An examination o f the theories to account for social origins, social chan ge and interrelations of social phenomena.
9 (3) ADVANCEDSOCIOLOGY.
10 (3) ADVANCED SOCIOLOGY.
11 (3) GATEWAYTO THE SocIAL SCIENCES.An orientation cours e in the social sciences and in social problems for Freshmen
12 ( 3) PROBLEl\ISOF CITIZENSHIP. A continuation or supplementary course to Course 11. Both 11 and 12 are intended to lay the foundation for further interest and work in Social Science.
Graduate courses will be arranged to suit the needs of the individual student. See description of graduate work, page 99.
W1 iam Fout Brott ..............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Leonard David Carmack ..............................................................Silver Spring, Md.
Samuel Cecil Childress ..................................................................................Fife, Va.
Clinton Bassett Clarke, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va.
Edward Malcolm Collier .................................................................... La Crosse, Va.
Rufus Hart Darden ................................................................................Franklin, Va.
Elbert White Dodd, Jr .........................................................................Buchanan, Va.
Earl Howerton Doggins ..............................................................................Caret, Va.
Joseph Carlyle Ellett ..........................................................................Pocahontas, Va.
Lester Wright Fallin .......................................................'......................0ldhams, Va.
Watkins Fugate
Ga.
William Yates Garrett ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
John Garnett Gouldman ..............................................................Fredericksburg, Va.
John Ashton Harris ........................................•.....................................Richmond, Va.
Horace Edward Henderson ..................,...........................................Alexandria, Va.
Joseph Benjamin Holland ....................................................................Franklin, Va.
Hatcher Byrd Kincheloe ............................................................Rocky Mount, N. C.
Frank Knight Lord, Jr .........................................................................Richmond, Va.
La Grande Martin ......................................................................................Chester, Va.
Carl Wise Meador
Va.
William Carey Newton, Jr ...............................................................Tsingtao, China
*Edward Oagett Nininger ....................................................................Roanoke, Va.
Rafael Angel Nunez ................................................................San Jose, Costa Rica
Claude Johnson Overstreet ....................................................................Bedford, Va.
William Creth Page
Va.
Charles Pelham Parker ....................................................................Vernon Hill, Va.
John Leroy Pearce ................................................................................Edenton, N. C.
Edward Cronin Peple ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
George Weston Schools ........................................................................Farnham, Va.
Robert Franklin Soyars, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va.
William Moseley Stewart ....................................................East Falls Church, Va.
Samuel Rollins Stone, Jr ....................................................................... Mt. Airy, Va.
Horace Rudolph Wilber Vial... .........................................................Richmond, Va.
Charles Talbott Wakefield, Jr. ..........................................................Richmond, Va.
• As of 1931.
Luther Coleman W ells Richmond, Va.
Virginius Goodwyn Welsh ..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Emmett Allen Williams, Jr .......................................................Warm Springs, Ga.
Chee Wing Wong ..................................................................................Canton, China
Benjamin Randolph Allen ..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Robert Gunn Bremner ........................................................................Dumbarton, Va.
Lawrence Franklin Coppage Richmond, Va.
Blake Wilson Corson, Jr .....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Clifton Bernard Cosby .......................................... - Richmond, Va.
Arthur Hume Cox ................................................................... - ...........Richmond, Va.
Lee Gary Crutchfield, Jr .............................................................South Norfolk, Va.
William Chesley Decker Fredericksburg, Va.
Sam Elfmon ..........................................................................................Richmond, Va.
Frank Howard Harris, Jr ...................................................................Richmond, Va.
Isadore Jarin ....................................................................................New York, N. Y.
Thomas Carter Jefferis ..................................................................Gordonsville, Va.
Samuel Paul Kaminsky ....................................••·····-·························Richmond,Va.
Edgar William Ligon, Jr .....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Thomas Allan Ligon ............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Sam Milchin ......................................................................................Richmond, Va.
Edward Greydon Pickels Richmond, Va.
Russell Christian Proctor, Jr .............................................................Richmond, Va.
Edgar Bryan Quarles ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
William Schulze ..........................................................................•-·······Monroe, La.
Dudley Byrd Selden ........................................................................Kent's Store, Va.
Robert Tabb Stewart... .........................................................East Falls Church, Va.
Abe Irving Whitenfish ........................................................................Richmond, Va.
John Ross Atkinson ..............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Winfrey Carlton Bloxom ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
James Holmes Britton, Jr ...................................................................Richmond, Va.
Charles Hampton Carson ..............................·-·······························Bluefield, W. Va.
Lewis Estes Chittum Richmond, Va.
Henry Shelton Earp, J r .......................................................................Baltimore, Md.
Herbert Oliver Gates ............................................................Highland Springs, Va.
Jacob Paul Glick Richmond, Va.
Herman Gross ......................................................................................Richmond, Va.
John Edward Hamilton ........................................................................Richmond, Va.
UNIVERSITY
83
Raymond Martin Hudson ......................................................................Moseley, Va.
George Leonard Huffman ........................................................................Orange, Va.
Benjamin Denbeigh Hurley ........................................................................Wake, Va.
Louis Krapin
Max Laster ·································································
George Meade Lee ................................................................•······-···········Milldale, Va.
Christopher Lawrence McRae ............................................................Richmond, Va.
Herbert Burton Pregnall ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Charles Wi11ard Puckett ......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Jacob Kenneth Rader ........................................................................... Nace, Va.
Francis Henry Robertson ..................................................................Petersburg, Va.
Thomas Burwell Robinson ..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Walter Raleigh Robins, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va.
Edward Lorraine Ruffin ......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Joseph Ball Shue
Jack Gwaltney Stallings
Russell Mitchell Whalen
Pa.
Albert Jack Wright ......................................................................................Crewe, Va.
Va.
Va.
Va.
Anderson, Robert Reynolds, Jr
Va. Bonneville, Richard Eugene
Va. Booth, Charles Theodore
Hill, N. C. Bowers, Gamble McAllister Richmond, Va. Buffenstein, Louis ................................................................·-···············Richmond, Va. Burkholder, Cary Wilson .................................................... Richmond, Va. Canada, Randolph Patrick. .................................................·-···············Richmond,Va. Cale, William Franklin, Jr ..........- .........................................................Tyner, N. C. Chapman, Frederick William, J
Va. Chinitz, William ..................................·-····-··················~·················N
York, N. Y. Chisolm, Harold Vincent ........................................................................Norfolk, Va. Cohen, Edwin Samuel... .......................................................................Richmond, Va. Couch, Sam Oarence ............................................................................Cleveland, Va. Cox, George William, Jr ...........................·-················-·······················Culpeper, Va. Cowley, John Robert Richmond Hill, N. Y. Dodd, James Woodfin Richmond, Va. Ellis, Bolling Hatch ............................·-··-··········•·······························Richmond, Va. Epstein, Mortimer ..............................................................................Brooklyn, N. Y. Evans, William Hughes
Va. Ewell, Oaude Russell... ...........................................................................Parksley, Va. Falls, Howard Parker ..................................•··-···································Richmond, Va. Fidler, William Frederic Richmond, Va. Ferrell, Ralph Harris, Jr ...·-················································•·····Coral Gables, Fla. Fox, Robert Pollard -,..........•...............................West Point, Va. Gellrich, James Anthony New York, N. Y. Gilmore, John Spencer ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Good, Welty Cecil.. ..........................................•...................................Penn Laird, Va. Grasty, Taylor Pierce ............................................................................Orange, Va. Gray, Clarence Jones ............................................................................Red Bank, N. J. Halsey, Victor Conley ... Mouth of Wilson, Va. Hannan, Richard Charles ..............................................................West Haven, Conn. Harlan, Howard Harper.. Washington, D. C. Hash, Albert Garland ..............................................................................Kindrick, Va. Heflin, Aubrey Newbill... .............................................................Colonial Beach, Va. Henkel, David Seabury ...........................•...........................................Burkeville, Va. Hickman, Walter Braddock. ...............................................................Baltimore, Md. Hobson, Richard Milton ..........................................Richmond, Va. Hoover, William Benjamin .................................Richmond, Va. Hopkins, Marbry Benjamin, Jr Irvington, Va. Howell, Arden, Jr .......................................................................•.................Vinita, Va. Hudgins, William Jesse, Jr Richmond, Va.
Hunter, Ashby Exall ..............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Hutcheson, Harold Houston ..............................................................Richmond, Va.
Jacobson, Abe Meyer ............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Katz, David Henry, Jr. ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Kincheloe, Wildman Suddath, Jr. ............................................................Crewe, Va. Lapsley, Alberti Fraser ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Lazarus, Sam .....................................................................•.................Richmond, Va. Luning, Euclid Burton ..................................................................Newport News, Va.
McConnaughey, Joseph ............................................................................Amelia, Va. McGinnis, Harrill ..........................................,.......................................Richmond, Va. Marks, Gordon Ellis ..............................................................................Richmond, Va. Miller, Christopher Poppenheim ........................................................Richmond, Va. Newell, Thomas Ovid .....:..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Nuckols, Hodgdon Christian ..............................................................Richmond, Va. Owens, Maurice E. Broadus, Jr. ..................................................Cumberland, Md. Owens, Richard Spurgeon, Jr .................................................................Roanoke, Va. Perkins, Joseph Ross ............................................................................Richmond, Va. Perlowski, Edward Lawrence ....................................................West Haven, Conn. Pettus, \Villiam Henry, Jr ...........................................................Charleston, W. Va. Rice, Charles Rudolph ........................................................................Heathsville, Va. Roberts, Aaron Gene ............................................................................Richmond, Va. Ruffin, Herbert Grayson .......................................................................Richmond, Va. Sartorius, Norman Ellis ............................................................Pocomoke City, Md. Sherman, Ludwell Ellett ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Shetter, George Andrew ............................................................. Richmond, Va. Simmons, Willard Russel... .....................................................................Meadow, Va. Smith, Francis Percival, IIL. ...............................................................Madison, Va. Snellings, Emmett Livingston .............................................................Alexandria, Va. Stoneburner. Lewis Tilghman .............................................................Richmond, Va. Taliaferro, Samuel Spottswood ................................................................Hustle, Va. Van Sickler, Francis Lake ................................................................Purcellville, Va. V ranian, Henry ......................................................................................Richmond, Va. Wall, Furman Gresham ..................................................................King William, Va. Weinfeld, Benjamin William, Jr .... ..................................................Richmond, Va. Whalen, Henry Joseph, Jr .................................................................Cranford, N. J. Whitley, George Franklin, Jr .............................................................Smithfield, Va. Wilcox, Samuel.. ...........................,........................................................Richmond, Va.
Abbitt, Raymond Edgerton ....................................................................Victoria, Va. Baird, Hugh Holcombe, Jr .............................................•.........................Chester, Va.
Barksdale, Lee Scott .......................................'...................................Petersburg, Va. Bass, David Edward, Jr .........................................................................Richmond, Va.
86
Blankenship, James Leonard ..............................................................Richmond, Va. Bornstein, Harry ....................................................................................Richmond, Va. Bottoms, Delmas Alton .......................................................................Richmond, Va. Bousman, Gary Alfred ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Booker, Erasmus Derwin ......................................................................Farnham, Va. Boorde, Eugene Kesel... ...........................•.. - ...................................Washington, D. C. Butler, L. V. Winfrey ....................................................................·-·····Culpeper, Va. Brothers, Henry Lewis, Jr ............................................-···················Richmond,Va. Brooks, Welford Addison ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Bryant, Harold Wonderley Richmond, Va. Cavedo, William Fitzgerald ................................................................Richmond, Va. Carter, Allen Eldridge ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Carroll, John Francis, Jr ......................................West Haven, Conn. Campbell, Robert Bailey ................................ ....................................Richmond, Va. Cain, William James ....................................................................Newport News, Va. Cahoon, Edgar Benjamin .................................Norfolk, Va. Chaltain, Victor Hugo .............................................................Bronxville, N. Y. Chapman, Wi11ie Thomas .....................................Richmond, Va. Charnock, Rodger Homer Cape Charles, Va. Clary, Beverley Boyden ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Cleveland, Curtis Peyton ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Collins , Lewis Garland ...........~.·-·································································Ideal,Va. _ Connors, David J ames ...........................................Saybrook, Conn. Cook, Stuart We1lford ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Crenshaw, Robert Smither ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Crose, Ro1lin Patchin ........................................................ Waterbury, Conn. Cumby, Mott A11en..............................................................................Blackstone, Va. Diamond, David Richard ..............................................................New Haven, Conn. Diedrich, RQbert Char !es...... Waverly, Va. Daley, John .......................................................................... New Haven, Conn. Dunlop, Walter Scott, Jr ...............................................................Alderson, W. Va. DuVal, Oscar Oarke .............................~··············-···•························Richmond, Va. Edwards, William Pope ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Ellis, John William, Jr .........................................................................Richmond, Va . Essex, Homer George ............................................................................Detroit, Mich. Estes, Melvin Wyatt Richmond, Va. Evans, Ernest Edward Richmond, Va. Falls, Oswald Benjamin,, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va. Ferlazzo, Alfred Joseph ..........................................................................Norfolk, Va. Ferrell, Robert Willingham ..........................................................Coral Gables, Fla. Fisher, William Halder ................................ Richmond, Va. Foster, Guy Alex
·Richmond, Va. Fowlkes, William Hyde
Va. Frazer, John W
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND
87
Freeman, Darwin Kingsley ..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Freund, Frederick Reinert ..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Frost, Carlyle Tennant ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Gibbs, Charles Glynwood ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Glick, William Wolfe ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Goldston, Ralph Lawrence ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Grant, Roger Williams, Jr .................................................................South Hill, Va. Greene, Abe Albert Richmond, Va.
Grossman, Leon ....................................................................................Richmond, Va.
Gunn, Julien, Jr Richmond, Va.
Haberer, Frederick William Evansville, Ind. Hardcastle, Aaron Bascom Sutherlin, Va.
Hecker, Sidney Marc ........................................................................New York, N. Y.
Hening, John Burwell ........................................................................Pittsburgh, Pa.
Hess, Eugene Howard Richmond, Va.
Hill, Walter Launcelot.. ........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Hope, George Carlton Parksley, Va.
Hurst, William Alexander. ...................................................................Logan, W. Va. Ingalls, Parker William ......................................................................Richmond, Va.
johnson, Henry Satterwhite ........................................................................Hylas, Va. Johnson, James Mercer ..............................................................Fort Spring, W. Va. Joynes, Randolph Waverly ........................................................Newport News, Va.
Kamsky, David ......................................................................................Richmond, Va.
Kegley, George Barnard ..............................................................................Bland, Va.
Kelley, Bernard Joe ................................................................................Roanoke, Va.
Koslow, Herman Richmond, Va.
Kovacs, Sandor Bodonsky Kiskoros, Hungary Lamb, Anderson Wade, Jr Dumbarton, Va. Levin, Martin Leonard Brooklyn, N. Y. Ligon, John Dickey ..........................................................................College Park, Ga. Lingamfelter, Charles Scott ..............................................................Dumbarton, Va. McKenney, Louis Earl ......................................................................Thornburg, Va. Maher, Joseph Franklin Richmond, Va. Mallonee, Guy V ernon ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. May, John Howard, Jr .........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Meade, Fay Emet ........................................................................................Pound, Va. Mercer, Eugene Garnett, Jr Richmond, Va. Miles, Waldo Garland Bristol, Va. Moore, John Armead ........................................................................Bronxville, N. Y. Neblett, Orison Trine ............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Nye, Paul Washington ..................................................................Ellwood City, Pa.
Palmore, Carlyle Harris ......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Pearman, Roland Luther ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Peele, Benjamin Thomas, Jr .............................................................Portsmouth, Va.
88
Pointer, Emmett Haywood ................................................................South Hill, Va. Puckett, Roy N elson ..............................................................................Richmond, Va. Quong, Sidney W ................................. ........................Norfolk, Va. Randolph, Ward Reed .......................................................+···················Richmond, Va. Rasche, Henry Richardson .............................. ..............................Blacksburg, Va. Ravdin, Alexander J unius ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Rescinito, Frank Nicholas ..............................................................Wierton, W. Va .. Reynolds, Morgan Boaz ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Roberts, Harry Agee ..............................................................................Richmond, Va. Rowland, Homer E .........................................................................Hagerstown, Md. Seay, Louis Porter, Jr ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Seward, William Ward, Jr. ........................................................................Surry, Va. Sheppard, Melvin Omar ....................................................................•...Richmond, Va. Sidelman, Sidney ................·-·····························································New York, N. Y Slaydon, Claude Allen ......................................................................Martinsville, Va. Smith, John ......................................................................................Worcester, Mass. Smith, Marshall Washington ..........................................................Alexandria, Va. Snead, Howard Garnett.. ....................................•+·•·····························Morattico,Va. Snellings, Robert Henning, Jr ....................... Richmond, Va. Stevenson, Vernon Hearne ...................... .................................Pocomoke City, Md. Stockdell, Hugh ......................................................................................Richmond, Va. Stone, George Perkins ............................................................Winston-Salem, N. C. Straus, Clifford Allen ..................................... ...............Richmond, Va. Street, John R. Williams ....................................................................Richmond. Va. Strong, James Donald ........................................................................Appalachia, Va. Swanson, George Sinclair ........................................................................Miami, Fla. Taylor, Beverley Douglas ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Terry, Daniel Brunson ............................. ........Richrnond, Va. Terry, William Parker ........................................................................Burkeville, Va. Thomas, James Beckman ............................................................ N orth Emporia, Va. Tinsley, Charles Thomas, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va. Torrence, Carl ....................................................................................Petersburg, Va. Trawick, MacEldin ....................................................................Bellefontaine, Ohio Tw1stall, James Monroe, J r .............................................................Baskerville, Va. Tyler, Gilman Rackley ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Van Allen, Harold .................................
Va. Vaughan, Bryan Wilson ....................................................................Woodford, Va. Walker, John Edwin, Jr .......................................................................Richmond, Va. White, Edward Street ................................................................................Cadiz, Ky. Williams, Ernest Newsom ...........................................'.........................Franklin, Va. Wilson, Homer' Sterling ...................................................... ........Richmond, Va. Wilyot, Joe, Jr ...................................................................................Bluefield, W. Va. Wright, Elbert Lee ..............................................................................Richmond, Va. Wright, Samuel Anderson ............... ........................ Richmond, Va. Wright, William Wiatt ..........................................................................Norfolk, Va.
Ackerman, Fred Westfa11..............................................................Bronxville, N. Y.
Adams, Roger Brooke, Jr ..................................................... Va. Allen, George Ira ....................................................................................Richmond, Va.
Allen, Robert Wilson ........................................................................,...Richmond, Va. Alley, James Lindsey .....................................,................................Bluefield W Va
Anderson, George Hunt ........................................................................Ric~ond, Va: Anderson, John Marshall .........•.·-·······················································Richmond,Va.
Arendall, Char !es Baker, J r. .................... .............................. ........Mobile, Ala. Bagby, Ernest Lynwood ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Bagby, Samuel Adams .................•.
Bagley, Anthony J oseph ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Ballou, Billy Witt ......................................................•..........................Richmond, Va.
Baroody, Eugene Michael ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Bass, Howard Aubrey, Jr .......................................................................Moseley, Va. Bates, Richard Frank. ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Berkley, Julius Lyons ...................................................................Charleston, W. Va. Bethel, Vivian Ransone ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Booker, James Motley ..................................,.......................................Lottsburg, Va. Bowles, Bowlman Tarleton. .......................................................Chattanooga, Tenn. Bowling, Wallace Cannon ..........................................................Fredericksburg, Va. Branch, Garland Harold ............................................................... Richmond, Va. Britton, Beverley Lyle .........................................................................Richmond, Va. Brooking, Raymond Edward ...............................................................Richmond, Va. Bryant, Robert Murray, Jr ...................................................................Richmond, Va. Buck, Walter Roger, III..
Glass, Va. Capps, John Talbot, Jr .............................................................................Norfolk, Va. Cardoza, Hugh Latimer ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Carr, David Turner ............................................................................•...Richmond, Va. Carter, Woodrow Earl... ..................................................................Martinsville, Va. Casey, Thomas Francis ....................................................................Worcester, Mass. Cavan, Richard Harvey, Jr .............................................................Greensboro, N. C. Clarke, William Frederick. .................................................................Richmond, Va. Clayton, Walter William ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Cofer, Ernest Betts ................................................................................Bristol, Tenn. Cooke, Lawson Hill, Jr .......................................................................Richmond, Va. Corder, Charles Henry, Jr .........................................................................Hume, Va. Cosby, Clifton David .............................................................Powhatan, Va. Courtney, John Wilfred .................... ...............................West Point, Va. Covey, Slover Ray ...............................................................................Richmond, Va. Crenshaw, George Winston ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Crisp, William Walter, Jr .............................................................Washington, D. C.
Va.
90
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND
Crouch, Thomas Cullen, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va.
Denoon , Oarence England, Jr .................................. .................Richmond, Va.
Dickinson, Charles William ..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Diedrich, John Ruffing·······································-·····································Waverly,
Dobson, John William .............................. ..................Richmond, Va.
Dodd, Bruce Granger ......................... .................................Richmond, Va.
Drinard, Charles Edward, J r ...............................................................Richmond, Va.
Farley, Edwin Starke ......................................................................•.....Richmond, Va.
Farrar, Richard Austin ........................................................................ } etersville, Va.
Fink, Stanley J ohn ............................................................................Philadelphia, Pa.
Fishback, Aubrey Astar ..................................... ..................... Warrenton, Va.
Flatow, William, Jr .......................................·-·····································Richmond, Va.
Fleet, James William
Va. Fox, Robert Jeremiah ....................... ..............................................Aylett, Va. Franklin, Martin Aubrey .....................................................................Richmond, Va. Frayser, Franklin, Aubrey, Jr .............................................................Richmond, Va. Frazer, David McCoy ..............................................................................Marshall, Va. Garrison, Edgar Paul... ...............................................................Pennington Gap, Va..
Gemski, Henry John ................................·-···································NewHaven, Conn . Gilfillan, William Johnston
Pa. Gill, James Thomas ............................................................................•...Richmond, Va. Godfrey, Kenneth Eugene ....................................................................Richmond, Va Gold, Harry ........................................................................................New York, N. Y. Goodman, Harold Marshall. ...............................................................Richmond, Va Grammer, Randolph Johnson ..................................................................Waverly, Va. Grenoble, William Luster ..................................... .......................Richmond, Va. Griffith, John Edward ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Grinnan, William Cecil. .............................·-······················~···············Richmond, Va Haddock, Edward Ellis ................................................ .................Richmond, Va. Haw, George Ruffin ....................................................................................Chester, Va. Hepler, Oliver Megs ............................................................................Richmond, Va. Heinrich, Arno Carl, Jr ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Hicks, Richard Adams ....................... ....................................... Schuyler, Va. Holland, Alvin Eugene ................................................••···············-·······Richmond, Va. Hubbard, Harry Carter ··························································-··········Richmond, Va. Hulcher, Bernard Matthews ................................................................Richmond, Va James, Ellis Mellen. ..............................................................................Medina, N. Y. Joyce, Harold Valentine
Mass. Karsh, Morton Alexander ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Katz, Gabriel.. ............................................................................•.........Brooklyn, N. Y. Keister, Samuel H ..................... _....Stuart's Draft, Va. Kern, Oeveland Craddock ................................... Richmond, Va. Lane, Allan Herbert, Jr
Va. Lange, Henry Edward, J r. ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Lanier, Raymond Ray, J r. ...............................................................Modest Town, Va.
Lawrence, Richard Farrell... ...............................................................Richmond, Va.
Leitch, William White ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Leverton, Roger Walker ........................................·-····+••·············Washington,D. C.
Lockery, Jack O'Connor ..............................................................West Haven, Conn.
Long, Henry Pollard ..............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Longan, Robert Coleman, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va.
McConnaughey, William Cary Amelia, Va.
McCrone, Richard Thomas ........................•.........................................Richmond, Va.
McGehee, Thomas Edmund ............................................................Kent's Store, Va.
Macfarland, Mitchell Yetter ........................................................Barnesville, Penn.
Meador, Meredith Leake Richmond, Va.
Meredith, Edward Clement ..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Miller, Charles Ellis ..............................•...............................................Richmond, Va.
Miller, David Hentshel. .......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Millner, Pryor Reynolds - .............................Martinsville, Va.
Montgomery, Robert Starling, Jr ...................................................Richmond, Va.
Morris, Thomas Hilly ......................................................................Martinsville, Va.
Morris, William Smithson Martinsville, Va.
Neathery, Owen Lee ............................................................................Falconer, N. Y.
Nelson, Carl ....................................................................................Battle Lake, Minn.
Nenon, Ulmer Hunt ..................................................................................Lenoir, N. C.
Norfleet, John Edward ..........................................................................J etersville, Va.
Nuckolls, George Durwood ......• Richmond, Va.
Parker, Fred Joseph ..........................................................................Portsmouth, Va.
Pastore, John Nick. .........................................................................Bluefield, W. Va.
Pearman, William Warren ..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Peterson, Charles Wilbur ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Pittaro, Ernest Michael... New York, N. Y.
Poage, Richard Conduff ........................................................................Roanoke, Va. Poehler, Paul Henry, Jr ..........•.................... Richmond, Va.
Proffitt, Meredith \Vendenburg Hopeful, Va.
Randall, Charles Alexander ..................................................................Boston, Mass.
Ratcliffe, Clyde Harvie, Jr ...................................................................Richmond, Va.
Rayhorn, Leroy Elmer, Jr ...................................................................Richmond, Va.
Redford, Andrew Cornelius ................................................................Richmond, Va. Richardson, Vernon Britt. .................................................................Portsmouth, Va.
Ridgway, Charles Edward Sylvester.. ............................................Baltimore, Md.
Robertson, Elmer Shackleford ............................................................Richmond, Va.
Roper, George Byrd ..............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Ross, Ralph Ardis, J r. Pocomoke City, Md.
Rudlin, Samuel Edwin ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Ryland, William Herman ....................................................................South Hill, Va.
Sanford, Fillmore Hargrave ..................................................................Norfolk, Va.
Sauer, Enno Thieme ..........................•...................................................Richmond, Va. Scarborough, John Thomas ................................................................Disputanta, Va. Schmidt, William Charles, Jr .............................................................Richmond, Va. Schools, Maxwell Rock. .......................................................................Farnham, Va. Schulz, Perry Kenneth ..........................................................................Riverside, Ill. Scott, David Neill... .....................................................Mt. Lebanon, Pittsburgh, Pa. Seay, Andrew Taylor, Jr .....................................................................Richmond, Va. Sinsheimer, Joseph ................................................................................Richmond, Va. Smith, Howard Carlisle ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Snead, John Elwood ................................................................vVinston-Salem, N. C. Snipes, William Elwood, J r .................................................................Franklin, Va. Sollod, Norman .......................................................................................Petersburg, Va. Stoutamire, Frederick Ashton ............................................................Richmond, Va. Straus, Samuel Frank. .........................................................................Richmond, Va. Study, George N elson ..........................................................................Littlestown, Pa. Swann, Sydney Chaille, Jr.. .................................................................Richmond, Va. Taylor, Henry Farrar ............................................................................Richmond, Va. Thompson, Julian Ferguson ..............................•.......................................Jarratt, Va. Troxell, William Shearer ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Turner, Cowles Anthony Davis ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Turner, Walker Earl... .......................................................................Martinsville, Va. Vaughan, Frederick J ............................................................................Covert, Mich. Wade, Arthur Coleman, Jr. ................................................................Richmond, Va. West, Robert Granger. ...............................................................Newport News, Va. Wexler, Ralph Richard ...................................................'.......................Carteret, N. J. Whitehurst, DuPuy Elridge ..................................................................Norfolk, Va. Whitley, Claud Minton ........................................................................Smithfield, Va. Williams, Hazael J oseph ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Williamson, John Thomas ................................................................Petersburg, Va. Wilson, Robert Miles ..........................................................Jackson Heights, N. Y. Woodley, Malvin Tyler ..........................................................................Hampton, Va. Worsham, John Gibson ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Wright, Roland · Sylvester ....................................................................Richmo?d, Va.
Acree, Russell Garnett ..............................................................................Sharps, Va. Akin, William Josiah
J. Alexander, Joseph Audrey ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Allen, Henry Baughton ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Anderson, Paschal Lanier ......................................................................Danville, Va. Angus, Kenneth Douglas ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Apperson, Julian Ruffin........................................................................Richmond, Va. Austin, Roland Childrey, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va. Bagley, Isham Trotter
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND 93
Bailey, John Macon, Jr......................................................................... Louisa Va
Baker, Samuel Harvey, Jr. ."...............................................................Ri~hmond: Va:
Baldwin, James Gilbert... .....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Ball, Samuel Bates ................................................................................Lauraville, Va.
Ballowe, Lloyd Dabney ........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Beck, Hilaire Emil.. ..............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Benjamin, Donald Frederick. .............................................................Richmond, Va.
Bernhard, Alfred Henry ....................................................................Richmond Va
Black, Fred Whitfield, Jr ...................................................................Richmond: va:
Blair, Hugh Henry, J r .......................................................................Flushing, N. Y.
Bledsoe, Adam Clarke ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Blunt, John Samuel, J r. ......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Bosher, Charles Ashworth ................................................................Dumbarton, Va.
Botts, George Winston ............................................................................Norton, Va.
Bowers, William Robert. ...........................................................................Penola, Va.
Branch, Robert Winfield ..........................................................................Amelia, Va. Bristow, John Christian ......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Brown, Ernest Winfrey ............................................................Fredericksburg, Va.
Brown, Edward Guthrie ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Brown, Jacob ........................................................................................Richmond, Va.
Brown, Robert Leon ............................................................................Carteret, N. J.
Brugh, Rex ......................................................................................Terra Alta, W. Va.
Buck, Max ............................................................................................Richmond, Va.
Bunting, Freddie Roland ..........................................................Temperanceville, Va.
Burton, Mahlon Lee, Jr .......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Butler, William Doggett, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va.
Campbell, Ben Logan ..........................................................................Petersburg, Va.
Chappell, Amos Thornton
Va.
Cherry, Kenneth Jerome ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Childress, Dennis Ralph
Va.
Christensen, Gordon Martin ..........................................................Kent Cliffs, N. Y.
Ciecko, Stanley John ....................................................................New Haven, Conn.
Clark, Woodrow Wilson - .............................................Gladys, Va.
Clary, Edward Jefferson ......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Coleman, William Tredway, Jr ...........................................................Cascade, Va. Collier, Forrest Leonard, Jr .............................................................Petersburg, Va.
Compton, William Rufus ..................................................................Henderson, Ky. Conrad, Stewart Plummer ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Cook, Joseph Wilbur.. ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Cottingham, Levin Bruce, Jr ...........................................••·············-···Richmond, Va.
Councill, Benjamin Redwood ..................................................... - ...........Holland, Va.
Coward, Herman Pickett ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Crenshaw, Douglas Walford ..............................................................Richmond, Va. Daughtrey, Ashburn James, Jr. ........................................................Richmond, Va.
Davis, Aubrey Murray ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Deets, Frank Doutrich ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Dickinson, William Derwood ............................................................Richmond, Va. Diggs, Gaius Weston, Jr .....................................................................Richmond, Va. Dobrinsky, Dave ......................................................................................Norfolk, Va. Dorsey, Benny Rench ......................................................................Hagerstown, Md. Drum, Robert Plemley ........................................................ Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Dutrow, David Andres ........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Earle, Samuel Macatee ·····················-···················································Milldale,Va. Edmondson, John Davis ..................................................................Purcellville, Va. Edwards, Walton Lamar ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Elmore, Louis Joseph, Jr ......................................... .......Richmond, Va.
Enslow, William Hamilton ...............................................................Richmond, Va. Evans, Oarence Meredith, Jr .................... .....................................Forksville, Va.
Fallis, William J oseph ............................................................................Roanoke, Va. Ferlazzo, Julius Caesar .......................... ...............................Norfolk, Va.
Finney, Stanford C............ ..................... .............................Bassett, Va.
Flax, Herman Jacob ............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Fugate, Robert Smith ............................... ........................................Richmond, Va. Garber, Russell Nels en ........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Gardner, Edwin Lewis ........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Garnett, Griffin Taylor ............. ...........................................Richmond, Va.
Garrett, Edward Chaisty ..............................................................King William, Va.
Garrett, Gordon Lee ..............................................................................Richmond, Va. Garwood, Samuel Leidich ..............................................................Burlington, N. J. Gaston, George McClure ..............................................................New Haven, Conn. Gearheart, Ernest Theodore, Jr .........................................................Richmond, Va. GJ!bert, Gerald Isaac ............................................................................Richmond, Va. Gill, Jesse W eston .............................................................. Richmond, Va. Gleason, William Lewis ........................................................................Hampton, Va. Green, Beverly Montague ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Greenway, Walter Samuel ................................................................Jenkintown, Pa. Gregory, Sherwood Vanderslice, Jr .................................................Richmond, Va. Gregory, Wilfred Bland, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va. Griffin, James Arthur ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Haddock, William Kenneth ................................ ....................Richmond, Va. Haden, Walter Linwood, Jr.
Ham, William Cogbill................................................... - ..................Richmond, Va. Hamrick, James Nathaniel... ...................................................Rutherfordton, N. C. Hancock, William Frank
Va. Hardin, Daily Mays ..........................................................................Berwind, W. Va. Harris, Robert Bryan ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Harris, William Edward ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Hart, James M .............................................................·-·······················Pendleton, Va.
Hash, Herbert Howard ......................................................................Chancellor, Va. Hatcher, Harold Peery ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Haynes, Oaude Pittman ....................................................................Petersburg, Va. Henderson, Robert Gowen ..............................................................Kilmarnock, Va. Hockman, Peachy Lawson ................................................................Winchester, Va. Holland, Carlyle Peerman, Jr .................................................................Suffolk, Va. Hopson, William Stevenson, Jr .........................................................Richmond, Va. Horne, Richard Briggs ...................................................................... - Yale, Va . Houseman, Julian Cary ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Howe, Murrill Norton ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Hryharrow, John Stanley ............................................................New Haven, Conn. Humphries, Ural Reed ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Jett, Frank Ashton, Jr.. .......................................................................Richm.ond, Va.
Jones, Daniel Mason ......................................... - .................................N. Troy, N. Y. Jones, Gordon Willis ............................................................................Richmond, Va. Kellogg, Jonathan Hobbs ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Kellum, Robert Branch Forbes ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Kibler, Vernon Clark. .........................:............-••···································Wilson, N. C. Kilpatrick, Robert Allen ....................................................................Midlothian, Va.
Kincheloe, Garland Broaddus ..................................................Rocky Mount, N. C. King, Harry Lee, Jr ...................................................................................Henry, Va. King, Leon Fleming ..............................................................................Richmond, Va. Krapin, David ......................................................................................Richmond, Va.
Lacy, George Byron ........................................................................McDonald, Tenn. League, William Yates ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Lee, Richard H ...........................................................·-······-·······Pleasantville,N. Y.
Lesnik, Milton Jack. ..............................................................................Newark, N. J. Levinson, Sidney Barnard ......................................................................Norfolk, Va.
Levy, David ..............................................................................................Clifton, N. J. Lovenstein, Harold Arnold ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Lucas, George Harold ........................................................................Winchester, Va. McCabe, Allen Goodwyn, Jr. ............................................................Richmond, Va. McGuire, Hugh Emmett ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Macfarlane., Charles Evans ......·-····················································-···Richmond, Va. Magid, David Herbert ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Marks, Frank Perry ..............................................................................Richmond, Va. Martin, Stephen Du Val, Jr ...............................................................Lynchburg, Va. Matthews, Sidney Thomas, Jr. ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Mears, James Lloyd, Jr. ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Meredith, Owen Wood ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Merkle, Sidney Louis
Va. Miller, Ellis
Mallen, Harry ......................................................................................Richmond, Va. Moore, Leroy Vernon, Jr .....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Munday, Harry Benjamin ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Nauman, Charles Anton ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Newsom, Norwood Nathaniel... ....................................................Lawrenceville, Va.
Nichols, Malcolm Rogers Lilburn, Va.
Noel, John Calhoun, Jr .......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Nunnally, Moses Didymus, Jr ...........................................................Richmond, Va.
Odell, Howard Emory Carmel, N. Y. O'Rork, Elmer Ternan Sandston, Va.
Overton, Ross Stuart ............................................................................Allegan, Mich.
Pannill, Henry Banks ......................................................................Martinsville, Va.
Parker, Dave Allen ..............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Parkinson, James Fendall, Jr. Richmond, Va.
Parrish, Fred Newman Kent's Store, Va.
Parrish, Robert Taylor ........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Passamaneck, Sidney Bernard Richmond, Va.
Pates, Carl Stansbury Fredericksburg, Va.
Patteson, Harry Owen ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Pendleton, John Baylor.. ......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Peters, John Lomax ................................................................................Franklin, Va.
Phillips, Ralph Thomas, Jr .................................................................Vineland, N. J. Pierotti, Joseph John ............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Powell, Jackson Moseley ........................................................................Boykins, Va.
Powell, Leslie Stagg ............................................................................Richmond, Va.
Rasmussen, Frank Wilbert ....................................................................Meadow, Va.
Reith, James Reginald, Jr Richmond, Va.
Rich, Arthur William Mountcastle, Va.
Richards, Stuart Keith Richmond, Va.
Ricks, James Hoge, Jr Richmond, Va.
Riegel, Robert Francis ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Rivenbark, Wilburn Harley Hopewell, Va.
Robertson, Archie ..............................................................................Petersburg, Va.
Robinson, Max ......................................................................................Richmond, Va.
Rose, Edward Lawrence Portsmouth, Va.
Ryan, Edward Lawrence, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va.
Ryland, Charles Hi11..................................................University of Richmond, Va.
Sanders, George Washington, Jr .................................................White Stone, Va.
Sandler, Herman Jack. Petersburg, Va.
Saunders, Luther Younger South Hill, Va.
Saville, Robert Lamb, Jr .....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Schaaf, Edward Matthew, Jr Richmond, Va.
Schimberg, Henry E11is........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Schneck, Oarence Eugene ..................................................................Pottsville, Pa.
Schultheis, Harry Douglas ..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Seaton, William Edgar Richmond, Va.
Shiflett, Pendleton McKinney ............................................................Richmond, Va.
Shipe, James Roland ....................................................................·-·····ThePlains, Va.
Smerda, Anthony N eal........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Smith, Ralston Kemper ......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Snelson, Wesley Lynn ........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Stokes, Henry ......................................................................................Blackstone, Va.
Stone, John McLaughlin, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va.
Strang, Harvey Lee, Jr .......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Sussman, George ..................................................................................Plainfield, N. J.
Swartwout, James De Witt ..................................................................Richmond, Va.
Tabb, Douglas Cowles ..................................................................Wilmington, N. C.
Tabb, Randolph Porter ..............................................................Newport News, Va.
Talman, William Henry ........................................................................Sandston, Va.
Tamer, Kitts Louis .................................................................................... N orton, Va.
Taylor, George Thomas ......................................................................Richmond, Va.
Taylor, John Daniel, J r .................................·-···································Richmond, Va.
Taylor, John Murray ....................................................................Morristown, Tenn.
Tenore, Bartholomew Griffin........................................................Bronxville, N. Y.
Timberlake, Fred Hill ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
Tobias, Alter Louis ............................................................................Petersburg, Va.
Townsend, Braxton Bryan ................................................................Petersburg, Va.
Tragle, Henry Irving ........................................................,.................Richmond, Va.
Trevvett, Robert Lewis ..............................................................................School, Va.
Tuck, Woolridge Thomas ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Tucker, William Pearson ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Upshaw, Ludolph Kidd ............................................................................Gether, Va.
Van Lear, Robert Perry ................................................................Clifton Forge, Va.
Vincent, Gene Thomas ..........................................................................Emporia, Va.
Walker, Stewart Tinsley ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Webb, Jack Graham ............................................................................Richmond, Va.
West, James Claibourne ............................................................Newport News, Va.
Whaley, William Bernard ......................................•-·························Richmond, Va.
Wheat, Curtis Snead, Jr ..................................:..................................Richmond, Va.
Whitehurst, Bernard Marshall... .......................................................Richmond, Va.
Williams, Donald Deitrick. .................................................................Richmond, Va.
Williams, Frank Spencer ..................................................................Alexandria, Va.
Wills, Clyde Lewis ................................................................................Richmond, Va.
Wills, Willis Henry ............................................................................Petersburg, Va.
Winslow, Walter Gillespie ..............................................................Bronxville, N. Y.
Witt, Andrew Lee, Jr .................................................................Big Stone Gap, Va.
Wood, Charles Henry, Jr ...................................................................Richmond, Va.
Woodson, George Stuart ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
Wrenn, Lewis James ....................................................................Clifton Forge, Va.
Alvarez, Ramon ............................................................................ N ewport News, Va. Atlee, Frank Vincent ............................................................................Richmond, Va. Barney, Jack ......................................................................................Petersburg, Va. Burel), Edward Lee ............................................................................Petersburg, Va. Bryan, Stewart ......................................................................................Richmond, Va. Chairsell, Julius Frederick. .................................................................Richmond, Va. Crighton, Charles Nevins ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Crosier, Joseph Andrew ..........................................................................Chatham, Va. Ford, Horace Lee ..................................,...............................................Richmond, Va. Hudkins, Paul Dickinson ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Miller, Henry Frederick, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va. Smith, Edward Nelson ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Waters, Leland Hubert ........................................................................Richmond, Va.
F. W. BOATWRIGHT,M.A., LL.D., President
R. E. GAINES, M.A., LITT.D., Director
The University of Richmond has recently made important changes in the character of its graduate studies and in the requirements for advanced degrees. For many years the degrees of Master of Arts and Master of Science have been offered. The courses of study leading to these degrees, while considerably more extensive, were not essentially different in character from the more advanced work required for the B.A. or B.S. degree. Under the revised requirements, while it is still possible for a capable student to complete the work for the degree of Master of Arts or Master of Science in one year, the major portion of his course is, in method and spirit, graduate work which demands more of independent investigation on tfle part of the student.
Graduates of Richmond College and of Westhampton College (the two colleges of liberal arts and sciences of; the University of Richmond), and of other standard colleges whose degree requirements are substantially equivalent to those which obtain here, may be admitted as graduate students of the University. Men and women alike are received and are registered as students of the University of Richmond, and not of the separate colleges as is the case with undergraduates. Such students, therefore, may choose courses in either college or in both colleges. A graduate student may be admitted to candidacy for the degree of Master of Arts or Master of Science if, in the judgment of the Committee on Graduate Studies, the applicant's previous work has been of such quality as gives reasonable assurance of ability to do creditable graduate work. Both the Master of Arts and Master of Science are cultural rather than vocational degrees. A student who has a vocational Bachelor of Science degree may be admitted to candidacy for a Master's degree if his undergraduate c;ourse included a sufficient amount of cultural courses to make his degree approximately equivalent in this respect to the regular B.A. or B.S. degree. Any deficiency that may appear must be made up by the student's taking, without credit, such courses as may be prescribed by the Committee on Graduate Studies.
All candidates for graduate degrees must make application to the Director of the Graduate Department for approval of their admission as graduate students and of their courses of study for a Master's degree. For the degree of Master of Arts a minimum of one full year's work in residence is required as follows: one Major subject, including a thesis, one Minor subject, and two electives. The Major constitutes at least one-third of the entire course, while the Minor, which must be in a field related to the Major, is slightly less extensive. The two electives may be chosen from the more advanced courses which are designed primarily for undergraduates. The requirements for the Master of Science are identical with the foregoing except that the Major and Minor courses must be chosen from the departments of Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Mathematics. For either degree the candidate must have had in his undergraduate course at least as much foreign language as is required for the Bachelor's degrees in the University of Richmond. Graduate courses are offered in Greek, Latin, French, English, History, Political Science, Economics, Sociology, Philosophy, Psychology, Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Mathematics. Courses are arranged for the individual student in accordance with his previous training and in line with his future plans. In all cases the choice of subjects is restricted to fields of study in which the student has previously done sufficient work to qualify him for pursuing the graduate courses desired.
The University of Richmond is in a locality which affords unusual opportunities for study in certain fields. For example, a student of history will, in the city of Richmond, have access to a wealth of historical source materials which are nowhere else to be found. Similar opportunities would be afforded a student of the science of government. Furthermore, the rapid industrial growth of Richmond and its surrounding territory has brought within the reach of the University of Richmond industrial plants in great number and variety which illustrate the increasing application of modern science to the field of industry.
College and contingent fees in full and half of other charges are payable at entrance; balance February 1. Graduate students may board away from the campus if they prefer, and in that case will make their own arrangements for room and board. A few tuition scholarships are available for exceptionally prepared students. Application should be made before July 1 to the President of the · University.
Detailed information in regard to graduate studies will be sent upon request. Persons desiring such information should write to R. E. Gaines, Director Graduate Department, University of Richmond, Va.
Eugene Blachschleger, B.A., University of Cincinnati ....... Richmond, Va.
Thesis: "The Establishment of the Jewish Synagogue in Virginia."
Hugh Irvin Myers, B.A., Mississippi College Brandon, Miss.
Thesis: "The Muscular and Skeletal Systems of Opsanus Tau."
Edward Clagett Nininger, B.A., University of Richmond Roanoke, Va.
Thesis : "The Administration of Lieutenant-Governor Alexander Spotswood."
Elmer Clyde Prichard, B.A., Mississippi College ..................Barboursville, Ky.
Thesis: "The Trees of the University of Richmond Campus."
Frances Armistead Schofield, B.A., University of Richmond ....Richmond, Va.
Thesis: "An Attempt to Synthesize Dihydroxy Acetone by Oxidation of Glycerol."
Margaret Gillespie Willis, B.A., University of Richmond ..............Lignum, Va.
Clyde Eugene Moss, B.S., Duke University ........... ......................Richmond, Va.
Thesis : "Singular Solutions of Differential Equations."
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND
Bull, Margaret Gertrude ............................................ ...........................N or folk, Va.
B.A., Agnes Scott College.
Burns, Bessie Mae ...............................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.A., University of Richmond, 1932
Chittum, Lewis Estes ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.S. in Business Administration, Universityof Richmond, 1932
Oayton, John Stuart ............................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.S., Vnrginia Polytechnic Institute, 1932
Coen, Ruth Dunn ··················•·····•··························-·····························Richmond,
B.A., University of Richmond, 1932
Davis, Calvin Grier ..............................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.A., Davidson College, 1927; Th.B., Union Theological Seminary, 1931
Fong, Wellington "David ...................................................................Quebec, Canada
B.A., Guilford College, 1932
Gill, Elizabeth Nelsen ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.A., University of Richmond, 1931
Glick, Jacob Paul ..................................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.S. in Business Administration, University, of Richmond, 1932
Irby, Luther Anderson, Jr .............................................................................Java, Va.
B.A., University of Richmond, 1931
Jordan, I. Earl... ........................... ..........................................................Tyner, N. C.
B.S., Atlantic University, 1931
'Krapin, Louis ........................................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.S. in Business Administration, University of Richmond, 1932
Lee, St. George Tucker ........................................................................Concord, Mass.
B.A., University of Virginia, 1932
Minor, Carroll Ryland ..............................................................................Newton, Va.
B.A., University of Richmond, 1930
Perkinson, Marion Phyllis ................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.A., University of Richmond, 1932
Quarles, Edgar Bryan ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.S., University of Thichmond, 1932
Roberts, Katherine Mae .....................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.A., University of Richmond, 1932
Ryland, Mary McClintock. .................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.A., University of Richmond, 1932
Sanford, Anne Louise ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.A., University of Richmond, 1932
Tatum, Mary Armstrong ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.A., University of Richmond, 1931
Taylor, Lucy Ann Gilmer ....................................................................Richmond, Va.
B.S., College of William and Mary, 1925; M.S., University of Virginia, 1932
Tiedemann, Edgar George ................................................................Brooklyn, N. Y.
B.A., College of the City of New York, 1929; University of Ma.ine
and Friday, 8:30·10:30.
5·6.............. Tuesday and Thursday, 2 :00•4 :00. Physics 7•8 ........... .. Wednesday and Fr•day, 2:00•4:00. LOCATION OF ROOMS
3·4 ................... Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 3 :00•5 :00.
3•4 .............. ... Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 3 :00•5 :00.
Pb-Physics Building. Cb-Chemistry Building.
and Friday, 10:30·12:20. Tuesday and Thursday, 9 :30·11 :20. Tuesday, and Thursday, 11 :30·1 :20. Chemistry 1·2 ............. Wednesday and Friday, 2:00•4:30. Tuesday and Thursday, 2 :00·4 :30. 3 ................ Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 2 :00 •5 :00. 4 & 7 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Fr , iday, 2:00•5.00. 5, 6 & 8 ..... Tuesday and Thursday, 2:00•5.00.
B·S-Administration Building. Bb--Biology Building.
Professo,r and Office
C. L. Albright, M.W.F. Lab.
14, Phys. Bldg. T.T.S.
R. C. Astrop, • M.W.F.
109, Biol. Bldg. T. T. S.
J. W. Bailey, M.W.F. Zool. d
101, Biol. Bldg. T.T.S.
H. A. Boner, M.W.F.
S, Admn. Bldg. T. T. S. Eng. 3-4d
S. Bronson, M.W.F. iitis.":is:24
T. T. S . W. F. Caylor, M.W.F. Span. ·3--4b
Gr. Fl., Chem. Bldg. T.T. S.
Chem. 7-4 2d Fl., Chem. Bl g. T.T.S.
W. R. Cornthwait'a M.W.F. Che·~: a:.8
S. B. Cousins, M.W.F.
207, Phys. Bldg. T.T.S.
R. E. Gaines, M.W.F. Math. 1-2a Math."s:4 Math. 7-8 Math. 9-10 205, Phys. Bldg. T.T.S.
W. J. Gaines, M.W.F. Fr. 3-4a Fr: i:.2a:
Gr. Fl., Chem. Bldg. T. T. S.
N. C. Giddings, M.W.F.
Gr. Fl., Chem. Bldg. T.T. S.
C. T. Goode, M.W.F.
S, Admn. Bldg. T.
W. B. Hackley, M.W.F.
212, Biol. Bldg.
H.B. Handy,
S, Admn. Bldg. T. T. S.
R. Harlan,
207, Phys. Bldg. T.T.S.
W. A. Harris , , M..W.F.
109, Biol. Bldg. T.T. S.
B. C. Holtzclaw, M.W.F.
L, Admn. Bldg. T.T.S.
R. E. Loving,
112, Phys. Bldg.
R. C. McDanel,
Gr. Fl., Chem. Bldg.
H. S. Mead,
2, Biol. Bldg.
D. J. Mays
C. 0. Meredith,
212,, Biol. Bldg.
S. C. Mitchell,
R, Admn. Bldg.
R. B. Pinchbeck,
W. L. Prince,
L, Admn. Bldg
J. H. Russell,
3, Biol. Bldg.
G. Ryland,
1st Fl., Chem. Bldg.
H. H. Seay
Gr. Fl., Chem Bldg
R. F. Smart,
206, Biol. Bldg. T.T. S.
S. W. Stevenson, M.W.F.
S, Admn. Bldg. T.T. S.
H. P. Thomas, M.W.F.
Gr. Fl., Chem. Bldg. T.T. S.
1-0c 205, Phys. Bldg. T.T.S.
C. H. Wheeler,, M.W.F. Math. 5-6
For other laboratory sections, see schedule of classes. *Other hours by appointment .
F. W. BOATWRIGHT, President.
In addition to the Richmond College catalogue, the University publishes the following separate catalogues which will be mailed upon request to the Dean or Director:
1. Westhampton Callege ( for Women).
May L. Keller, Ph.D., Dean, University of Richmond, Va.
2. The T. C. Williams School of Law.
M. R. Doubles, J.D., Dean, 601 N. Lombardy Street, Richmond, Va.
3. The Evening School of Business Administration.
H. H. Seay, Jr., A.M., Director, 601 N. Lombardy Street, Richmond, Va.
4. The Summer Session.
W. L. Prince, M.A., Director, University of Richmond, Va.
B.A.,
B.S.,