RCC 1942

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CATALOGUE OF

Richmond College

SESSION, 1941-1942 WITH ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR 1942-1943

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

VIRGINIA

COLLEGE CALENDAR

FIRST SEMESTER

SEPTEMBER14TH, MoNDAY, NooN-Orientation Week begins.

SEPTEMBER15TH AND 16TH, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY-Orientation exercises and registration of new students.

SEPTEMBER15TH AND 16TH, TUESDAYAND WEDNESDAY,2 :00 P. M.-Special examinations.

SEPTEMBER16TH AND 17TH, WEDNESDAYAND THURSDAY-Registration of former students.

SEPTEMBER18TH AND 19TH, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY-Formal class meetings begin.

SEPTEMBER26TH, SATURDAY-Applications for degrees filed.

NOVEMBER16TH, MONDAY-Mid-semester reports filed in the dean's office.

NOVEMBER25TH, WEDNESDAY,5 :00 P. M.-Thanksgiving holiday begins.

NOVEMBER30rH, MONDAY,8:30 A. M.-Oasswork resumed.

DECEMBER 11TH THROUGH 17TH, FRIDAY THROUGH THURSDAY-December tests.

DECEMBER17TH, THURSDAY,I :20 P. M.-Christmas holidays begin.

DECEMBER28TH, MONDAY,8 :30 A. M.-Classwork resumed.

JANUARY lsT, FRIDAY,2 :00 P. M.-Special examinations.

JANUARY 18TH, MONDAY-Semester examinations begin.

JANUARY23RD, SATURDAY-Close of first semester.

SECOND SEMESTER

JANUARY 26TH, TUESDAY-Second semester begins.

MARCH 20TH, SATURDAY-Mid-semester reports filed m the dean's office.

MARCH 26TH, FRIDAY,1 :20 P. M.-Spring vacation begins.

MARCH 30TH, TUESDAY, 8:30 A. M.-Classwork resumed.

MARCH 31ST, WEDNESDAY,2:00 P. M.-Special examinations.

MAY 17TH, MONDAY-Semester examinations begin.

MAY 23RD, SUNDAY-Baccalaureate sermon.

MAY 24TH, MONDAY-Annual meeting of trustees; alumni .reunions.

MAY 25TH, TUESDAY-Commencement Day.

Board of Trustees

DOUGLAS s. FREEMAN Rector

*GEORGE BRAXTON TAYLOR Vice-Rector

CHARLES H. WHEELER, III Secretary

Class One

Term expires June, 1942

R. C. Williams ....................Richmond

John W. Edmonds, Jr Accomac

Hunter Miller ..........................Bedford

Garland Gray ..........................Waverly

F. Morris Sayre ..................New York

Class Two

Term expires, June, 1943

Overton D. Dennis ..............Richmond

*George B. Taylor, D.D Hollins

J. Vaughan Gary ..................Richmond

Mrs. Charles B. Keesee ..Martinsville

Elizabeth N. Tompkins Richmond

Class Three

Term expires June, 1944

T. B. McAdams, LL.D .......Baltimore

Mrs. G. W. McDaniel... ...Richmond

T. Justin Moore, LL.D Richmond

E. W. Hudgins ..................Chase City

Emily Gardner, M.D .........Richmond

Class Four

Term expires June, 1945

D. S. Freeman, Ph.D., LL.D. Richmond

E. B. Jackson, D.D .......Harrisonburg

B. P. Willis ................Fre<lericksburg

S. P. Ryland ..........................Richmond

M. M. Long ..............................St. Paul

*Deceased.

Class Five

Term expires June, 1946

R. S. Owens, D.D .................Roanoke

W. H. Baylor, D.D .....Baltimore, Md.

J. C. Metcalf, LL.D.

University of Va.

Henry M. Taylor ................Richmond

E. B. Sydnor ........................Richmond

Class Six

Term expires June, 1947

W. R. Broaddus, Jr .......Martinsville

Julian L. Rawls, M.D .............Norfolk

Robert N. Pollard ................Richmond

Thomas W. Ozlin ................Richmond

J. B. Woodward, Jr ...Newport News

Class Seven

Term expires June, 1948

L. Howard J enkins ............Richmond

J. P. McCabe, D.D .........Martinsville

J. E. Hicks, D.D .......................Bristol

Wilmer L. O'Flaherty Richmond

J. G. Holtzclaw ....................Richmond

Class Eight

Term expires June, 1949

Stuart McGuire, M.D., LL.D. Richmond

Mrs. H. W. Decker ............Richmond

Sparks W. Melton, D.D .......Norfolk

John Stewart Bryan, LL.D. Richmond

H. Hiter Harris ..................Richmond

Standing Committees of the Board

THE BY-LAWSprovide that the Rector 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 ex officio Secretary of all standing committees of the Board.

Executive-Overton D. Dennis, Russell C. Williams, L. Howard Jenkins, T. Justin Moore, S. P. Ryland, H. Hiter Harris, and the three ex officio members.

A sub-committee, known as the Investment Committee, is composed of S. P. Ryland, Russell C. Will}ams, Overton D. Dennis, H. Hiter Harris and the Treasurer of the University.

Library-}. C. Metcalf, L. Howard Jenkins, Emily Gardner, W.R. Broaddus, J. G. Holtzclaw, J. Vaughan Gary, Julian L. Rawls, J. W. Edmonds, Jr., Elizabeth N. Tompkins, Professor Pinchbeck, Professor Keller.

Aid Funds (Scholarships and Donations)-Hunter Miller, Mrs. H. W. Decker, B. P. Willis, Mrs. G. W. McDaniel, E. B. Jackson, Robert N. Pollard, E. B. Sydnor, J.P. McCabe, Mrs. Charles B. Keesee.

Nomination of New Trustees-Sparks W. Melton, W. H. Baylor, Henry M. Taylor, W. L. O'Flaherty, Thomas B. McAdams, Thomas W. Ozlin.

Nomination for Honorary Degrees-}. E. Hicks, R. S. Owens, J.C. Metcalf, E.W. Hudgins, J.B. Woodward, Jr., F. Morris

Sayre, Professor R. E. Gaines.

Administrative Officers

FREDERIC WILLIAM BOATWRIGHT, M.A., LL.D., President

CHARLES H. WHEELER, III, PH.D., Treasurer

RAYMOND B. PINCHBECK, PH.D., Dean

BENJAMIN CLARK HOLTZCLAW. JR., PH.D., Director, Student Personnel Relations

CULLEN PITT, M.A., M.D., College Physician

Lucy T. THROCKMORTON, Acting Librarian

HELEN A. MoNSELL, M.A., Registrar

Faculty of Instruction

FREDERIC WILLIAM BOATWRIGHT, 1887 .. Professor of Modern J Bostwick Lane, Campus. Languages

M.A., Richmond College; LL.D., Mercer University, George- town College, and Baylor University; Graduate Student, Halle, Sorbonne, and Leipsic.

*ROBERT EDWIN GAINES, 1890 3 Bostwick Lane, Campus.

Prof essor of Ma thematics

M.A., Furman University; Litt. D., Furman University. Grad- uate student, Johns Hopkins University, Harvard University.

*SAMUEL CHILES MITCHELL, 1895 . Professor of History on the University of Richmond w illiam B. Vest Memorial Foundation

M.A., Georgetown College~ Ph.D., University of Chicago; LL.D., Brown University.

ROBERT EDw ARD LOVING, 1908 . 2 Bostwick Lane, Campus. . Professor of Physics

M.A., Richmond College; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University; Graduate student, Cornell University.

*Retired, but elected to teach certain classes in 1942-3

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

EDITH M. HARKER, 1916

Professor of Vocal Music Chatham Hills, Richmond.

B.A., Westhampton College; Pupil of Frederick Zuchtmann, Max Spicker; summer courses with Frank La Forge, George Ferguson, Sergi Klibansky, and Westminster Choir School.

*GARNETT RYLAND, 1917

Professor of Chemistry University of Richmond.

M.A., Richmond College; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.

WILLIAM LOFTIN PRINCE, 1920 . . Professor of Education 2423 Grove Avenue, Richmond.

B.A., Richmond College; M.A., Columbia University.

ROBERT COLLINS ASTROP, 1920 . 343 Albemarle Avenue, Richmond.

Professor of Psychology

A. B., Randolph-Macon College; M.A., University of Virginia; Graduate Student, Columbia University.

tRoLVIX HARLAN, 1922 University of Richmond.

Professor of Sociology and Social Ethics

A.B., M.A., George Washington University; Ph.D., University of Chicago.

RALPH C. McDANEL, 1926 . . Professor of American History University of Richmond.

B.A., University of Richmond; M.A., Columbia University; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University; Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva.

MALCOLM RAY DouBLES, 1926

Acting Professor of 3 Edmondstone Avenue, Richmond. Applied Economics

B.S., Davidson College; LL.B., University of Richmond; J.D. , University of Chicago .

tCHARLES H. WHEELER, 1928 University of Richmond.

Professor of Mathematics

S.B., Washington and Jefferson College; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.

JOHN WENDELL BAILEY, 1929 27 Willway Avenue, Richmond

Professor of Biology

B.S., M.S., Mississippi State College; A.B., A.M., Cornell University; M.A., Ph.D., Harvard University.

*Retired, but elected to teach classes in 1942-3

tOn furlough, 1941-42

tElected University Treasurer to take office Jan. 1, 1942.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

BENJAMIN CLARK HOLTZCLAW, JR., 1929, James Thomas, Jr., Professor of Philosophy Ampthill Road, Richmond .

A.B., Mercer University; B.A., M.A., Oxford University; Ph.D., Cornell University.

RAYMOND BENNETT PINCHBECK, 1929

University of Richmond.

B.S., M.S., Ph.D., University of Virginia.

ROBERT FORTE SMART, 1929

University of Richmond.

Professor of Applied Economics

Professor of Biology

B.A., Mississippi College; M.A., Ph.D., Harvard University.

WILLIAM JUDSON GAINES, 1930

University of Richmond.

Professor of Romance

Languages

A.B., University of South Carolina; M.A., Ph.D., University of Wisconsin; Graduate Student, Sorbonne.

SOLON B. CousINs, 1932

Professor of Bible on the George and Sallie Cutchin Camp Memorial Foundation 4215 Stuart Avenue, Richmond.

B.A., D.D., Mercer University; Student, University of Edin- burgh.

*GLENN F. THISTLETHWAITE, 1934

University of Richmond. Professor of Physical B.S., Earlham College; University of Wisconsin. Education

CHARLES B. WRAY, 1937

4110 Patterson Avenue, Richmond.

Professor of Accounting

B.B.S., North Georgia Agricultural College; M.B.A., New York University; C.P.A.

GRACE STARR WENDT, 1937

3430 Grove Avenue, Richmond.

Professor of Music

Pupil of Max Swarthout, Alexander Raab, Luther Conradi, John Powell, in piano; Eric DeLamarter, in organ; Graduate of Chicago Musical College; Master Classes, 1928, 1931; Summer School, Comb's College of Music, Philadelphia, 1936.

"Retires July 1, 1942.

GEORGE MATTHEWS MODLIN, 1938 Professor of Economics and Director of the School of Business Administration

51 Lock Lane, Richmond.

B.A., Wake Forest College; M.A., Ph.D., Princeton University.

HENRY H. FUCHS, 1940 Professor of Musical Theory

500 West Franklin Street, Richmond.

A.B., Mus.B., Columbia University; Graduate Student, Columbia University; composition, orchestration, and symphonic form with Dr. Cornelius Rybner and Dr. Rossetter G. Cole; violin with Laendner, Rybner, and Schradieck; member of leading orchestras and chamber-music organizations in New York City.

WOODFORD BROADUS HACKLEY, 1924

2120 Lakeview Avenue, Richmond.

Associate Professor of Latin

A.B., University of Virginia; M.A., Northwestern University; A.M., Harva::d University; Graduate Student, Columbia University.

tHERMAN P. THOMAS, 1927 . Associate Professor of Economics

212 s. Colonial Avenue, Richmond. and Applied Economics

B.A., Richmond College; M.A., Ph.D., University of Virginia.

WILLIAM FREDERICK CAYLOR, 1928 . 1226 Windsor Avenue, Richmond.

M.A., Mercer University.

CHARLES LEONARD ALBRIGHT, 1929 33 Willway Road, Richmond.

Associate Professor of Spanish

Associate Professor of Physics

B.S., Coe College; M.S., Ph.D., University of Iowa.

SAMUEL WHITEFIELD STEVENSON, 1932 . Associate Professor of University of Richmond. English

B.A., University of North Carolina; M.A., Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.

MERTON E. CARVER, 1935 Associate Professor of Psychology University of Richmond. and Sociology

A.B., M.A., University of Rochester; Ph.D., Harvard University.

tOn furlough, 1941-42.

8

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

FRED C. AHRENS, 1935 . . Associate Professor of German University of Richmond.

B.A., University of Western Ontario; M.A., Columbia University; Graduate Student, Universities of Berlin and Heidel- berg.

JOHN STANTON PIERCE, 1937

Associate Professor of 813 Roseneath Road, Richmond. Chemistry

B.S., Georgetown College; M.S., Ph.D., University of Illinois.

F. BYERS MILLER, 1941 45 Lock Lane, Richmond.

Associate Professor of Applied Economics

B.S., Baldwin-Wallace College; M.B.A., Ohio State University.

WALTER F. SNYDER, 1941

31 Towana Road, Richmond.

Associate Professor of Classics

B.A., Swarthmore College; Ph.D., Yale University. Classical Fellow, American Academy at Rome.

ALTON WILLIAMS, 1935

Assistant Professor of English University of Richmond.

M.A., University of North Carolina. in Charge of Drama

HUGH I. MYERS, I 935 .

Assistant Professor of Biology University of Richmond.

A.B., Mississippi College; M.A., University of Richmond; Ph.D., Brown University.

ABRAM I. WHITTEN, 1935

Assistant Professor of Chemistry 3518 Hanover Avenue, Richmond.

B.S., University of Richmond; M.A., Ph.D., Duke University.

LEWIS F. BALL, 1937

Assistant Professor of English 3319 West Grace Street, Richmond.

Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.

THOMAS E. LAVENDER, 1937 . Assistant Professor of Romance University of Richmond. Languages

B.A., University of Alabama; M.A., Ph.D., Harvard Uni- versity.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

EDWARD CRONIN PEPLE, 1937 Assistant Professor of English 3308 Loxley Road, Richmond.

B.A., University of Richmond; Ph.D., Harvard University.

REUBEN EDWARD ALLEY, JR., 1940 4307 Stuart Avenue, Richmond

Assistant Professor of Physics

B.A., University of Richmond; B.S.E.E., Princeton University; M. I. T.

tWILLMORE KENDALL, 1941 4630 Grove Avenue, Richmond

Assistant Professor of Political Science and Gov ernment

B.A., University of Oklahoma; M A., Northwestern University; Ph.D., University of Illinois; Rhodes Scholar; B.A., Oxford.

MARCIA SILVETTE, 1935 . . . 805 West Franklin Street , Richmond

. Instructor in Art

Student of Ellis M. Silvette and at National Academy of Design; exhibited in National Academy of Design, N . Y., Corcoran Gallery of Art , Washington, D. C., and other galleries in New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia.

N. WILFORD SKINNER , 1937 . . Instructor in German University of Richmond.

B.A., Ohio University; M.A., Indiana University.

FLETCHER ORPIN HENDERSON, 1939

5600 Cary Street Road, Richmond .

Instructor in English

B.A., George Washington University; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University.

JosEPH E. NETTLES, 1940 . . . Instructor in Journalism 1111 Essex Avenue , University Heights. Former Staff Writer, Associated Press.

E. SHERMAN GRABLE, 1941

3115 Monument Avenue, Richmond.

Instructor in Math enia.tics

B.A., M.A. , Washington and Jefferson College; Yale University.

Instructor in Mathematics

FRANCIS B. KEY, 1941

6732 Stuart Avenue, Richmond.

B.S., Washington and Lee University; M .A., Duke University

tSession 1941-42

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

tE. F. MACDONALD, 1941 Instructor and Acting Associate 6411 Three Chopt Road, Richmond Professor of Economics

B.A., University of Virginia; Graduate Student, University of Virginia.

SIDNEY T. MATTHEWS, 1941 Instructor in History 3000 W. Grace Street, Richmond.

B.A., M.A., University of Richmond; Johns Hopkins University.

tJoHN MARSHALL SNELLING, 1941 4309 Grove Avenue, Richmond

B .A., M.A ., University of Richmond.

FRANKLIN MADISON CROUCH, 1941 512 North 24th Street, Richmond

B.S , University of Richmond.

ALYS LEONTINE D'AvESNE, 1941 421 North Boulevard, Richmond.

B.A., University of Richmond

Instructor and Acting Professor of Sociology

Instructor in Aeronautics

Instructor in Biology

tRoswELL G. TOWNSEND , 1942 . Instructor in Applied Economics 213 Wood Road, Richmond.

B.A., M.A., Duke University; University of North Carolina.

DAVID Row ARBENZ, 1942 Instructor in Aeronautics 3311 West Franklin Street, Richmond

Parks Air College; Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics.

*MALCOLM u. PITT, 1928 university of Richmond.

Athletic Director

tSession 1941-42.

*To take office July 1, 1942

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

GRADUATE ASSISTANTS

CATHERINE BIRD HoovER, B.A., Assistant in Biology.

WILLIAM RosE MAYNARD,B.A., Assistant in Biology.

JOHN H. Wonz, B.S., Assistant in Chemistry.

LIBRARY STAFF

Lucy T. THROCKMORTON,Acting Librarian.

JOSEPHINE NUNNALLY, B.A.; B.S. in L.S., Columbia University; M.A. in L.S., University of Michigan; Assistant Librarian and Cataloguer.

LOUISE BLACK, B.A.; B.S. in L.S , Columbia University; Librarian in Charge of Government Documents

E. ELIZABETH THOMAS, B.A. ; Circulation Librarian.

ETTA WHITEHEAD NACHMAN, B.A.; Circulation Librarian.

OLIVE DAVIDSONSKINNER, B.A.; B.S. in L.S., Western Reserve University: Westhampton Reading Room Librarian.

FRANCES FARMER, B.A., LL.B.; T. C. Williams Law School Librarian.

SECRETARIES

ELIZABETH L. THOMASSON, M.A., Secretary to the President.

HELEN A. MoNSELL, M.A., Secretary to the Dean.

EDITH KEESEE SHELTON, B.A., Cashier.

MARIA SAVEDGE,B.A ; Secretary to the Treasurer.

ELIZABETH W. LucE, Secretary to Faculty Personnel Committee

BUSINESS OFFICERS

R. M. STONE, LL.B., Business Manager.

FREDERICK MooRE, Supervisor of Chemistry Stockrooms.

MRs. L. S. WOODWARD,Manager of Refectory.

MRS. R. P . GORDON,Director of Dormitories.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

FACULTY COMMITTEES for 1941-42

Representatives on University Senate-LOVING, RYLAND, HARLAN, HOLTZCLAW, BAILEY, PRINCE, WRAY, MODLIN, w. J. GAINES, McDANEL, CousINS.

Acade111,ic Council-LOVING, w. J. GAINES, vVHEELER, McDANEL, HOLTZCLAW, CARVER, M 'oDLIN, STEVENSON, CousINS.

Personnel-HOLTZCLAW, PEPLE, PRINCE, COUSINS, CARVER.

Integration-SMART, MODLIN, STEVENSON.

Athletics-HARLAN, BAILEY, CAYLOR, PITT, MYERS.

Public Lectures-HACKLEY, DOUBLES, LAVENDER, WHITTEN.

Fraternities-THOMAS, McDANEL, CAYLOR.

Alumni-PRINCE, RYLAND, McDANEL, NETTLES.

Vespers and Religious Life-Cousrns, BAILEY, RYLAND, PIERCE, with WESTHAMPTON COLLEGE COMMITTEE and certain student officers.

Student Employment-PERSONNEL COMMITTEE.

Convocation-WILLIAMS, W. J. GAINES, McDANEL, HARLAN, MILLER, WRAY, with President of Student Government and President of 0. D. K.

Faculty Socials-SKINNER, WILLIAMS, ALBRIGHT, SNYDER.

Catalogue-STEVENSON, SMART, MYERS, BALL, AHRENS.

Students' Use of English-PEPLE, STEVENSON, BALL , Student Social Life-HACKLEY, LAVENDER, AsTROP, ALBRIGHT and certain student officials.

Conimittee on Scholarships and Student Aid-HOLTZCLAW, and administrative officers of RICHMOND and WESTHAMPTON COLLEGES.

Arts-PEPLE, WILLIAMS, with WESTHAMPTON COLLEGE COMMITTEE.

Marshals-RYLAND, McDANEL.

The President and Dean are ex officio members of all committees.

General Information

ORGANIZATION

RICHMONDCOLLEGE, a college of liberal arts and sciences for men, was founded in 1832 Around this college as a nucleus have grown up the T. C. Williams School of Law (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 to 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.

GROUNDS AND BUILDINGS

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, electric cars, and omnibuses.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

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.

LIBRARY FACILITIES

The libraries of the University contain approximately 100,000 volumes. The main collection of the University Library is housed in the Charles Hill Ryland Building.

The University collections are classified by the Dewey Decimal System, and the students have direct access to the shelves. Formal instruction in the use of the Library is required of all freshmen.

SCHOLARSHIPS

The University of Richmond holds a number of scholarships which pay in whole or in part the tuition or other fees of students who are appointed to receive their benefits.

Persons seeking scholarship appointment should make application by April 1 each year for the session opening the following September. Application should be made on a printed form which may be obtained from the UNIVERSITYCOMMITTEE ON SCHOLARSHIPS,University of Richmond, Va. Most of the scholarship appointments are made in April, and the complete list is made up by July 1. New students must also submit an entrance certificate duly filled in, or other satisfactory evidence of scholastic fitness.

The University provides a number of "Service Scholarships" which require the holder to make some return in service to his college while he holds the scholarship. Service Scholarships are rarely granted to freshmen.

A student who has been granted a scholarship must, in order to make his appointment effective, deposit with the University Treasurer before August 1, the sum of $25. In the case of a non-

resident student, this deposit will be applied in full to his entrance fees at matriculation. The dormitory student who makes a room deposit of $10 need make a deposit, on account of his scholarship, of only $15 additional.

The University also holds several loan funds from which loans not exceeding $150 in any one year may be made to worthy members of the junior and senior classes

STUDENT GOVERNMENT

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 yitally 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

The Honor System requires that a man shall in all the relations of student life act honorably. Breaches of Honor Code are cheating, violation of signed pledges, stealing, lying, and, in general, breaking one's word of honor under any circumstances.

REGULATIONS GOVERNING ENFORCEMENT

1. Organization of the Council: The Council of Honor shall consist of seven members appointed by the President of Student Government. The President of Student Government shall serve as ex officio member, and, in the absence of one of the Councilmen , he shall exercise the right of franchise. The Secretary shall keep minutes of the proceedings in a minute book, which shall be filed for safe-keeping.

2 Infractions: Infractions of the Honor Code shall be dealt with as follows: Any person suspecting a student of having violated the Honor Code shall report the offense to a member of the

Council of Honor, who shall make such investigation as he sees fit. If this member considers the charges well grounded, he shall request the Chairman of the Council to call a meeting as soon as possible. The name of the person reporting the offense shall not be divulged under any circumstances.

3. Procedure: The members of the Council shall have the privilege of asking a witness questions. but only such questions as shall tend to bring out the facts of the case. The accused shall have every opportunity to defend himself.

If, after thorough trial, the Council of Honor, with not more than one dissenting opinion, are convinced of the guilt of the accused and so cast their votes in secret ballot, the sentence pronounced shall become effective immediately. In case the accused is found innocent, the minutes of the proceedings shall be immediately destroyed.

4. Penalties: If the accused is found guilty, the members of the Council shall vote as to whether the offense has been a minor or major. If minor, the accused shall be sent home for one week with a letter to his parents mailed directly from the Chairman and the Dean. If major, the accused shall be dismissed from school. In case of two minor offenses, the accused shall be dismissed from school.

The decision of the Council on all cases shall be posted, but the name of the accused shall not be made public.

All decisions of the Council shall be approved by the Dean before becoming effective.

GENERAL EXPLANATION

1. The Pledge: "On my honor as a gentleman, I have neither given nor received aid."

2. Meaning of the Pledge: The pledge on quizzes, examinations, written problems, and exercises means that the work which the student hands in to his professor is his own, which he himself has done in accordance with the requirements laid down by the Faculty in the regulations set forth below.

3. Exercise Care: It is also important that everyone should exercise the greatest care to keep himself free from suspicion of evil. Such practices as leaving the examination room for any length of time unaccompanied or too frequently, or taking an examination alone, or bringing texts and note books into the examination room, or carelessly glancing toward another student's paper-these are discouraged by the Council of Honor. While they do not of themselves constitute infringements of the Honor Code, such practices are dangerous for both the individual and the continued well-being of the Honor System.

All students should take every opportunity of acquainting themselves with the working of the Honor System in detail as well as with these general principles.

The Honor System is a principle of conduct and not a set of rules for conduct. It should be understood that the following statement is intended only to cover the chief and most easily misunderstood applications of that principle, and not to serve as a substitute for it.

Pledged Work

I. No test, examination, theme, term paper, or parallel reading report will be accepted which does not have the customary pledge written out in full and signed.

II. The placing of the pledge on a test or examination paper means that the student has used no books, notes, or other aids except by explicit permission of the instructor.

A. When a book is used by permission of the instructor, it must be free from annotations in that part of the book used.

B. When an oral test is given, no books or notes are to be used except by explicit permission of the instructor.

III. The placing of the pledge on a term paper or theme means that the work is the student's own and contains no plagiarism-that is, theft from another writer. There are two kinds of plagiarism: copying the ideas or facts belonging to another ; and copying his words.

A. To avoid the first kind, it is necessary, whenever the student consults any reference work or other source, that he give in the body of his paper or in a footnote the name of the reference work or author.

B. To avoid the second, it is necessary, whenever the student uses the words of another, that he enclose them in quotation marks and give in his paper or in a footnote the name of the author.

C. Plagiarism is not avoided by using the words of another with a few alterations.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

D. In general, it is not undesirable for students to co-operate or to help one another in the preparation of their themes, or even in the shaping of the material for their themes. It must be clearly understood, however, that the actual papers must be written without aid.

IV. The placing of the pledge on a parallel reading test or report means that the student has actually read the book or number of pages claimed.

Unpledged Wark

On all unpledged work it is understood that the student's signing the paper with his name means that he has observed the following principles :

I. A student may work and discuss his home work with other students, but may not turn in, as his own, work which he has merely copied from another and to which he has not substantially contributed.

II. A student must make laboratory reports only on work .which he has actually done in the laboratory and on results actually obtained there.

LITERARY SOCIETIES AND FORENSIC ACTIVITIES

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 School of Law Building for the convenience of town students. The societies hold weekly meetings for declamation, debate, and other literary exercises.

STUDENT PUBLICATIONS

The Messenger-This is a 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

The Richmond Collegian-This is a weekly newspaper in which are published up-to-date news articles on every phase of university life.

The Web-This is an annual volume issued usually in May or June, abundantly illustrated and forming a transcript of a year of college life.

The student publications of the University are controlled by the administration and the students jointly through an incorporated board, whose legal title is "University of Richmond Publications, Incorporated."

THE UNIVERSITY BAND

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.

YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION

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.

GLEE CLUB

This club offers opportunity to learn to read music at sight, and the experience gained enables many of the members to lead other groups in singing.

UNIVERSITY PLAYERS

The University Players is the University dramatic organization, open to all students in Richmond and Vvesthampton Colleges, and working in conjunction with the Department of Dramatic Arts.

The University Playhouse and the Luther H. Jenkins Greek Theatre are fully equipped for all manner of experimentation and production. The well equipped workshop offers the technical :;tudent every opportunity for experimentation in the dramatic field. Each year keys are presented to those members of the two upper classes who have rendered conspicuous service to the organization.

SOCIAL FRATERNITIES

There are eleven national Greek-letter social fraternities in Richmond College. Two representatives from each of these fraternities and the faculty committee on fraternities constitute the Rich-

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

mond College Interfraternity Council. The operation and conduct of all fraternal groups are subject to the strict regulation of the administration and faculty of Richmond College.

ATHLETIC COUNCIL

The University of Richmond Athletic Council is composed of two members of the Board of Trustees, two members of the faculty, three members of the General Alumni Association, and two members of the student body. The student members shall be the President of the Student Government Association and one student elected at large. This organization serves in an advisory capacity to the President and faculty in the control of intercollegiate athletics.

PRIZES

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.

II. THE JAMES D. CRUMP PRIZE, founded by the gentleman whose name it bears, is a prize of twenty dollars, given for excellence in Mathematics 301-302. It is awarded in part on the regular class work and in part on extra work.

III. THE J. TAYLOR ELLYSON MEDAL IN HISTORYLieutenant-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. NORMANMEDAL for the best graduate specializing in applied economics in the Department of Economics and Applied Economics has been endowed by Mr. Norman and is awarded annually.

VI. THE McADAMSPRIZE of fifty dollars in gold has been established by Col. Thos. Branch McAdams, of Baltimore, for the student in the Junior Class of Richmond College who has rendered the most outstanding service to the University and to his fellow students. It is awarded by vote of a committee of official student representatives.

PHI BET A KAPPA

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.

OTHER HONOR SOCIETIES

Omicron Delta Kappa-for the recognition of high attainments in scholarship, athletics, literary endeavor, and social leadership.

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.

Beta Beta Beta-for the recognition of attainment in the field of biology.

The Chemistr)' Club-for the recognition of attainment in the field of chemistry.

Alpha Mu Omicron-for the recognition of attainment in the field of the social sciences.

Rho Eta Sigma-for the recognition of attainment in the field of history.

HONORS CONVOCATION

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 at least sixty semester hours of academic work, and have a net average of at least two quality credits for every hour they have taken.

RELIGIOUS SERVICES

Students have easy access to all the advantages afforded by the various city and suburban churches, with their Bible classes and Sunday schools. Prayer meetings conducted by the students 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 message.

ASSEMBLIES AND CONVOCATIONS

Students and Faculty attend the College assemblies from 12 :30 to 1 :10 o'clock on the first and third Wednesdays and each Friday. The Wednesday meetings are for Richmond College only; that of Friday is a convocation of Richmond and Westhampton Colleges. Exercises are conducted by the President, Dean, or other members of the Faculty. From time to time, prominent visiting speakers address these assemblies on educational, civic, and religious themes. These assemblies give opportunity for announcements of interest and importance to the students and for presentation of student affairs.

Attendance on assemblies and convocations is required of all students. Three unexcused absences are permitted each semester. For each unexcused absence in excess of three, a student is required to add a half-semester hour to the requirements for the degree for which he is a candidate.

THE THOMAS LECTURES

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 men on science, philosophy, art, or literature and are open to the public without charge.

SOCIETY OF ALUMNI

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 associat~on engages the services of an alumni secretary and publishes an alumni magazine.

The officers of the society are: W. Richard Broaddus, Jr., Martinsville, Va., President; Overton D. Dennis, Richmond, Va., Chairman, Alumni Council; and Joseph E. Nettles, Richmond, Va., Secretary.

LOCAL CHAPTERS

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. J.E. Nettles, Alumni 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:

ALUMNI CHAPTERS

Lou1sv1LLE, KY.-"The Kentucky Chapter"-Professor W. 0. Carver, LL.D., President. NORFOLK,VA.-"The Norfolk-Portsmouth Chapter"-Lucian B. Cox, President.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

RICHMOND,V A.-"The Richmond Chapter"-E. Douglas Gunter, President.

LYNCHBURG,VA.-"The Lynchburg Chapter"-Sam H. Bennett, President.

ROANOKE,VA.-"The Roanoke Chapter" -The Rev. R. S. Owens, D.D., President.

NEW YORKCITY-"The New York Chapter"-Victor H. Chaltain, President.

DANVILLE,VA.-"The Pittsylvania Chapter"-Mrs. Jesse R. Hite, President.

BALTIMORE,MD.-"The M'aryland Chapter"-Dr. Allen W. Free- man, President.

PETERSBURG,VA.-"The Petersburg Chapter"-William E. White, President.

TAMPA, FLA.-"The Florida Chapter"-Giddings E. Mabry, Pres- ident.

BLUEFIELD,W. VA.-"The Southwest Virginia Chapter"-James S. Kahle, President.

BRISTOL,VA.-TENN.-"The Bristol Chapter"-S. T. Bowman, President.

MARTINSVILLE,VA.-"The Patrick Henry Chapter"-William F. Carter, President.

WASHINGTON,D. C.-"The Washington Chapter"-The Rev. M. P. German, President.

PIEDMONT,VA.-"The Piedmont Chapter"-The Rev. E.T. Cox , President.

BOWLINGGREEN,VA.-"The Caroline Chapter"-The Rev. L. M. Ritter, D.D., President.

LAWRENCEVILLE,VA.-"The Lawrenceville-Emporia Chapter"- Mrs. George Short, Secretary.

SUFFOLK,VA.-"The Nansemond-Isle of Wight Chapter"-John Henry Powell, President.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND 25

WINCHESTER,VA.-"The Northern Virginia Chapter"-}. H. Massie, President.

PITTSBURGH,PA.-"The Pittsburgh Chapter"-David N. Scott, President.

COLUMBIA,S. C.-"The South Carolina Chapter"-Dr. J. Elwood Welsh, President.

PHILADELPHIA,PA.-"The Philadelphia Chapter"-Norwood G. Greene, President.

TAPPAHANNOCK,VA.-"The Northern Neck Chapter"-Charles H. Ryland, Acting President.

NEWPORT NEWS,VA.-"The Peninsula Chapter"-

BIRMINGHAM, ALA.-"The Alabama Chapter"-

EASTERNSHORE-"The Eastern Shore Chapter"_.:

FRANKLIN, V A.-"The Southampton County Chapter" -

Administration

ADMISSION TO COLLEGE

For admission to Richmond College, the general requirements are as follows :

1. The applicant must be at least sixteen years of age.

2. He must present a certificate showing that he is a graduate of an accredited high or secondary school, with the grade required by that school for recommendation for college work. Preference will be given to students ranking in the upper half of their graduating classes. Others, if admitted at all, are admitted only on strict probation.

3. His secondary school work must include a minimum of fifteen high-school units, distributed as follows: English, 3; algebra, 1,½; 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. A student who enters college without two units in foreign languages will be required to take in college without degree credit a first-year foreign language to remove his deficiency.

ACCREDITED SCHOOLS

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 .

ADVANCED STANDING

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. No credit may be transferred in courses on which the student earned a grade below the equivalent of "C" i11-the Richmond College grading system.

6. Credit for all 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 session's work in Richmond College.

7. 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 by taking further work in that department.

MATRICULATION

Matriculation of freshmen and other new students begins Monday, September 14th. Classes meet regularly on Friday and Saturday, September 18th and 19th.

The program of Orientation Week, which is mailed early in September to all applicants for admission, outlines the steps in matriculation. It is particularly urged that all freshmen report promptly on the 14th and attend all meetings on this program. To miss these meetings places a man under a real handicap.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Certificates of admission should be filed with the dean as early in the summer as possible in order to avoid confusion in the opening days.

Upperclassmen may matriculate on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, September 15th, 16th, and 17th. All upperclassmen are urged to fill out their matriculation cards before leaving college in . the spring .

Students who fail to complete matriculation by 12 :00 o'clock, noon, Saturday, September 19th, will be charged an extra fee of $5.00.

THE PERSONNEL WORK, FRESHMAN ORIENT ATION WEEK, AND THE FACULTY ADVISER SYSTEM

The personnel work is in charge of the Personnel Committee, a standing committee of the faculty, with a permanent office and staff. The committee assembles material and keeps on file in the office personnel histories of all students, showing their various activities and details of their college careers. It advises students regarding their courses, problems of college life, and choice of a career, and assists students to secure positions after graduation.

This work is begun with the freshmen, who, at the beginning of each session, are required to attend four days devoted to various activities seeking to acquaint them with college life and to prepare them better to become good members of the student community. This is called Freshman Orientation Week and begins this year on September 14th.

The work is continued through the system of Faculty Ad- visers for all students and Student Advisers for freshmen. Each adviser has a small group of students with whom he tries to enter into especially friendly relations in order to assist them in their life at college and in their preparation for a career Frequent conferences with the adviser are urged, and normally the student should have a conference with his adviser at least once a month.

The Personnel Committee plans and supervises all this work.

LIMITS OF WORK

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, except upon special permission from the dean.

CHANGE OF COURSE OR SECTION

A student desiring to make a change in his course of study or class sections should first consult his adviser or major professor and secure from him a change slip to be submitted to the dean for approval. No student is permitted to add or drop a study or change his section 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, e~cept 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.

RULES GOVERNING CLASS ABSENCES

1. Each faculty member shall notify the dean as soon as a student has four unexcused absences in a class.

2. A student shall be excluded from a class immediately upon getting five unexcused absences, and the dean shall be notified of this action at once.

3. The dean shall accept only those excuses for illness which have been signed by a physician, parent, or officer of a rooming house designated by the dean.

4. Excuses for illness must be presented to the dean within one week after the last day of illness, and to the professor within two days after the dean has issued the excuse If the student fails to present an excuse within these limits, the absences shall he counted as unexcused.

5. An absence from a class or laboratory period the last meeting before or the first meeting after a holiday shall be counted as two absences.

6. The members of each team or group of students shall be excused from classes while away representing the college, provided the trips of any one team or group do not necessitate its members' being away from college for a total of more than seven days. At least one day prior to the departure of any group or team a list of the men composing it must be presented to the dean.

7. No credit will be given for a course in which the class meets three hours a week if the student has more than four unexcused absences. In classes meeting fewer than three times a week unexcused absences must not exceed the number of class meetings per week.

8. 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.

9. 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.

SEMESTER REPORTS

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 cooperation on the part of those to whom they are addressed will make these reports of real value in improving a student's work.

GRADING

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 (88-94) ;

C, that it has been average (80-87) ; D, that it has been just passing ( 7 5-79) ; E, that the work has been unsatisfactory ( 6574), and that a condition has been incurred ; F indicates failure.

The relation of this grading system to the quality credits which must be earned for graduation is explained under the heading "Degrees," on page 35.

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.

DEFICIENT STUDENTS

First-year students, to remain in college, must pass at least nine hours per semester.

Second-year students, to remain in college, must pass at least nine hours per semester and, to return to college for the third year, must earn a minimum of fifteen quality credits for the full session.

Third-year, fourth-year, and all other students, to remain in college, must pass at least nine hours per semester ; and, to return to college for a subsequent year, must earn a minimum of twenty quality credits for the full session.

Any student who at the end of the first semester has failed to pass at least nine hours of work must appear before a faculty committee by whom his request to matriculate for the second semester will be considered. No application from an upperclassman will be considered unless it has been endorsed by his parent or guardian.

All reinstated 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.

Students who earn a grade of D, E, F, or I in the work of any basic class in any month will be required to attend additional afternoon tutorial periods until their work is satisfactory.

PROBATION

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, dramatic 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.

REMOVAL OF CONDITIONS

A student who has been conditioned or has received an incomplete grade, on a semester's work must remove this condition before the beginning of the corresponding semester in the following college year, or the condition automatically becomes a failure. If both semesters of a continuous 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 dates 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.

HEALTH DEPARTMENT

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 and fraternity house 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.

ATHLETICS

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.

The University holds membership in the Southern Athletic Conference, and all intercollegiate sports are subject to the rules and regulations of the Conference. A committee of the faculty has charge of the enforcement of these regulations and also determinates the number of times any team may be absent from the campus.

Athletic teams are permitted to engage in contests away from Richmond only with teams of other institutions of learning.

GENERAL REGULATIONS

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. 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.

3. 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.

4. Students desiring to room and board elsewhere than on the college premises must first obtain the approval of the dean.

5. Any student who resides in a dormitory, fraternity house, or residence other than the home of his parent or guardian, and who wishes to maintain and operate an automobile while enrolled in the College, must file in the dean's office his parent's or guardian's written approval before this will be permitted.

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 everyone 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.

CLASS RATING OF STUDENTS

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 fifteen 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 so many as fifteen entrance units, but who have given satisfactory evidence of fitness to pursue college studies, shall be classified as special students.

PRE-PROFESSIONAL STUDIES

Students who expect to continue their studies in medicine, dentistry, law, or engineering 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.

DEGREES

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.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

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.

DEGREE CREDIT FOR EXTRA CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES

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-¼ semester hour for each semester's work. Publications-¼ semester hour for each semester's work.

Glee club--1 semester hour for each semester's work.

Choir-¼ semester hour a session.

Intercollegiate debating-¼ semester hour a session. Band-1 semester hour for each semester's work.

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 .

DEGREE REQUIREMENTS

Following are the requirements for the three degrees offered in Richmond College.

I. The candidate must have completed one hundred twentyfour semester hours and one hundred twenty quality credits.

II. REQUIRED SUBJECTS:

(A) Foreign Languages: ( for all degrees) Six hours in each of two languages in courses numbered above 101-02.*

(B) Mathematics:

B.A.-Mathematics 101-2-:---sixsemester hours.**

B.S.-Mathematics 101-2, 201-2-twelve semester hours.

B.S. in Bus. Adm.-Mathematics 101-2, 203-4twelve semester hours.

(

C) Laboratory Science :

B.A.-ten hours in each of two laboratory sciences.

B.S.-ten hours in each of two laboratory sciences

B.S. in Bus. Adm.-ten hours in one laboratory science.

(D) , English (for all degrees) English 101-2, 203-4twelve semester hours.***

(E) Social Sciences:

B.A.-six hours in each of three subjects other than applied economics

B.S.-six hours in each of two subjects other than applied economics.

B.S. in Bus. Adm.-eighteen hours in at least two subjects other than economics and applied economics, with not less than six hours in any one subject.

(F) Physical Training and Hygiene. (for all degrees) Biology 111, and two hours in physical training or exercise.

( G) For the B.S. in Business Administration, fortyeight hours in economics and applied economics, including Economics 201-2, Mathematics 203-4, Economics 301-2, Applied Economics 203-4, Applied Economics 301-2, and in the senior year Applied Economics 325-26.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

III. ELECTIVE SUBJECTS:

(A) Major:

B.A. and B.S.-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 de- partment in which he wishes to major, and his entire course is then subject to the approval of the divisional chairman. A minimum of twenty-four semester hours shall be offered in the major sub- ject and eighteen hours in the minor. In the laboratory sciences, these shall be thirty and twenty semester hours , respectively . For the B.S. degree, the major and minor must be chosen from the laboratory sciences and mathematics.

B.S. in Bus. Adm.-During the spring semester of his sophomore year, the student must choose a field of concentration in the Department of Eco- nomics and Applied Economics which will complete the forty-eight hours listed under II. ( G). This choice must be made under the guidance of the head of the department, and the student's entire course is then subject to the approval of the di- visional chairman. Possible fields of concentration for this degree include accounting, finance, mer- chandising, insurance, business management , public regulation and public administration A number of courses in the Evening School of Business Ad- ministration, some of which complement the pro- grams in the various fields of concentration in the department, may be elected toward the degree of Bachelor of Science in Business Administration. ( B) The remaining hours required for all degrees are free electives .

IV. PROFESSIONAL SUBJECTS:

A candidate for the degree who at the end of his junior year has demonstrated his superiority by the completion of one hundred

hours of college work, with at least two hundred quality credits, and who ranks in the upper two-thirds of his professional class, may offer professional work in lieu of certain degree requirements, under the following conditions :

(A) A candidate for the B.A. may offer, in lieu of a minor and electives totaling twenty-four hours, the first year's work in the T. C. Williams School of Law.

(B) A candidate for the B.S. may offer, in lieu of a minor and electives totaling twenty-four hours, the first year's work in medicine or the first two years' work in dentistry in the Medical College of Virgmia. The third laboratory science will be accepted in lieu of the second year's work in mathematics. The foreign language requirements may be satisfied in one language.

(C) A candidate for the B.S. in Bus. Adm. may offer in lieu of eighteen of the unspecified hours in II (G) and other electives totaling twenty-four hours, the first year's work in the T. C. Williams School of Law.

A student who contemplates the substitution of professional studies for the work of the fourth academic year must at the end of his sophomore year have completed sixty hours of college work, with at least one hundred twenty quality credits. Before registration for his third year, the course to be pursued must be approved by the Academic Council.

• Students who enter college without two units in language will be required to take in co)iege without degree credit a first-year foreign language to remove their deficiency.

** A student by passing a special examination on high-school plane geometry and algebra through quadratics, or by validating his high-school courses in these subjects by completing Mathematics 51-52 without college credit, may thereby satisfy the mathematics requirement for the B.A. degree. Mathematics 101-2, however, is a prerequisite for all advanced science courses.

•--Every student is required to use acceptable English in his written work in all aubjccts, Hi• writing must be above reproach in grammar and syntax and in logical acquence. A faculty committee will consider all deficiencies. Requirements imposed by this committee must be absolved before the student can qualify for graduation.

SUGGESTED CURRICULA

These curricula do not state the requirements of the various majors that may be offered for the several degrees. Students may find out the requirements of their majors by consulting the sections on their major departments under "Courses of Instruction."

BACHELOR OF ARTS

Freshman:

English 101-102

Science

Mathematics 101-102

Foreign Language ( offered for entrance) 103-104

Biology 111

History 103

Physical Education

Junior:

Major Subject

Minor Subject

Second Foreign Language 103-104

Social Science

Electives

Freshman:

English 101-102

Science

Mathematics 101-102

Sophomore:

English 203-204

Second Science

Second Foreign Language 101-102

Social Science

Elective

Physical Education

Senior:

Major Subject

Minor Subject (if necessary)

Social Science

Electives

BACHELOR OF SCIENCE

Sophomore:

English 203-204

Second Science

Second Foreign Language 101-102

Foreign Language (offered for entrance) 103-104

Biology 111

History 103

Physical Education

Junior:

Major Subject

Minor Subject

Second Foreign Language 103-104

Social Science

Electives

Social Science

Mathematics 201-202

Physical Education

Senior:

Maj or Subject

Minor Subject (if necessary)

Electives

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Freshman:

BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

English 101-102

Economics 101-104

Mathematics 101-102

Foreign Language ( offered for entrance) 103-104

Biology 111

History 103

Physical Education

Junior:

Applied Economics 301-302

Major Subject

Mathematics 203-204

Social Science

Second Foreign Language 103-104

Sophomore:

English 203-204

Science

Second Foreign Langua:;e 101-102

Economics 201-202

Applied Economics 203-204

Physical Education

Senior:

Applied Economics 325-326

Economics 301-302

Major Subject

Social Science

Social Science

Electives

PRE-LAW COURSE

Major in Academic Subject, Minor in Law, for the Bachelor of Arts Degree

Freshman:

English 101-102

Science

Mathematics 101-102

Social Science

Foreign Language ( offered for entrance) 103-104

Biology 111

History 103

Physical Education

Junior:

Second Foreign Language 103-104

Major Completed

Social Science

Electives

Sophomore:

English 203-204

Second Science

Second Foreign Language 101-102

Social Science

Elective

Physical Education

Senior: Law

1. RESIDENT STUDENTS

The regular expenses of students residing in college dormitories, which also include room and board, vary from $575 to $600 for the college session, September to June, and are divided as follows:

*Laboratory fees:

Terms of Payment

Laboratory fees, one-half.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Paya1ble January 15th: Tuition, one-half ............................................ Student Activities fee, one-half.. ..................

*All Laboratory fees, one-half.

room and table board, one-half .... 75.00

In making an estimate of cost for the session, the student should also take into consideration other e~penses 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:

*Laboratory fee, Biology, Physics, Chemistry, each .................................................... .10.00

Terms of Payment

Payable on entrance: College fee, in full ..........................................

Payable January 15th: Tuition, one-half ......................................'...... Student Activities fee, one-half .................... *Laboratory fees, one-half.

3. STUDENTS ENTERING FOR THE SECOND SEMESTER PAY ONEHALF OF THE REGULAR CHARGES.

*See preceding page for special laboratory fees. Deduct this charge if no laboratory i• taken.

4. SPECIAL CHARGES

in piano, voice, or violin ..........$125.00

The above special charges are payable one-half on entr ance and one-half January 15th.

Registration fee for non-matriculated candidates for graduation . .................$ Bachelor's diploma fee, payable thirty days preceding the date of graduation .. ...... Fee for special examination, each ................. Fee for late registration ..............

In order to avoid delay in matriculation , parents are urged to provide their sons with the amounts due on entrance. Make checks payable to University of Richmond.

The University has an arrangement with a Richmond bank 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, $11.50 for the Athletic

Association and $8.50 for the Student Government, admits to all games regularly scheduled and played by the University teams on home grounds, 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 physician 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 requested to confer with the dean.

The college supplies students' rooms with bedstead, mattress, pillow, dresser, study desk, chairs, and clothes closet. Each student provides his own bed furnishings and linens.

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 until February 15th of the second semester to adjust their laboratory work. No refund is made for laboratory fees after these dates. No diploma is granted or credit given for the 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

• An adjustment will be made if a student is called into the armed forces of the country by Selective Service.

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 who are recommended by churches contributing to the Board, and who are accepted after examination. For further information on this matter, address Mr. Frank T. Crump, Secretary, Education Committee, Grace-American Building, Richmond, Va.

DORMITORY ASSIGNMENTS AND CHARGES

The College dormitories open for reception of students Sun- day evening, September 13th. Students are advised not to arrive earlier than this date.

Rooms in dormitories will be assigned in the order of ap- plication 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. The charge of $85.00 for each occupant of a dormitory room includes medical attention, heat; light, and janitor service. 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 stu- dent, or three a room intended for two students, the minimum charge for each occupant is eighty-five dollars. No student is allowed to sublet his room, take another student in with him, or move from one room to another without permission from the dean. A charge of five dollars is made for 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 Janu- ary 10th of the current session. The charge will be enforced after the opening of the second semester.

COURSES of INSTRUCTION

ALL odd-numbered courses are gwen during the first semester and even-numbered courses during the second semester except where otherwise indicated. Courses enclosed in square brackets will not be offered in 1942-1943. Courses numbered in the one hundreds are intended primarily for freshmen; those in the two hundreds, for sophomores ; and those in the three hundreds, for juniors and seniors. Hours of meeting and locations of classrooms for all courses will be found in the schedule near the end of the catalogue.

PHYSICAL EDUCATION

Professor Thistlethwaite

Mr. Pitt

Mr. Fenlon

The aims of the department are :

(a) To provide an opportunity for and to create an appreciation of bodily health and physical development through wholesome activity, exercise, play, and recreation.

(b) To provide a program of intra-mural and intercollegiate athletics.

( c) To offer instruction in the teaching of athletic skil 1 ~ for those who intend to enter the teaching profession.

( d) To serve the interests of national defense by achieving and maintaining a high degree of physical fitness for all students.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

PHYSICAL EDUCATION 103-104. GENERAL PHYSICAL EDUCATION

Credit, one hour

Calisthenics, games, and other forms of physical and corrective exercises. Required of all freshmen. May be repeated with full credit.

PHYSICAL EDUCATION 201-202. INTRA-MURAL ATHLETICS

Credit, one hour

Participation in at least two intra-mural sports three hours per week and the demonstration of a satisfactory efficiency in individual and game skills. Prerequisite, Physical Education 103-104 and the successful completion of standard attainment tests.

PHYSICAL EDUCATION 203-204. PHYSICAL TRAINING

Credit, one hour

Participation at least three days per week in athletic and recreational programs approved and prescribed by the department. Prerequisite, Physical Education 103-104 and the successful completion of standard attainment tests. Required of all students except freshmen.

PHYSICAL EDUCATION 301-302. TEACHERS' TRAINING

Credit, six hours

Instruction in teaching football, basketball, baseball, and track. Open to juniors and seniors who have completed at least six semester hours in the Department of Education.

PHYSICAL EDUCATION 303-304. TEACHERS' TRAINING

Credit, four hours

Practice in class instruction in football, basketball, baseball, and track. Open to juniors and seniors who have completed Physical Education 301-302 and six semester hours in the Department of Education. This course to be taken concurrently with Physical Education 301-302 only upon approval of the dean.

Division of Languages Literature and Fine Arts

AssocIATE PROFESSOR S. W STEVENSON, Chairman

ANCIENT LANGUAGES

Associate Professor Hackley

Associate Professor Snyder

GREEK

Requirements for major: Greek 101-102, 201-202, 301, 302, 303, and 304 or their equivalent. Parallel reading will be assigned and reported upon.

Requirements for minor: Greek 101-102, 201-202, 301, and 302 or their equivalent.

GREEK 101-102. BEGINNERS ' GREEK

Credit, six hours

College credit only when followed by Greek 201-202 or when taken as a third language for elective credit.

GREEK 201-202. XENOPHON'S ANABASIS Credit, six hours

GREEK 301. HOMER Credit, three hours

GREEK 302. HISTORY Credit, three hours

GREEK 303 DEMOSTHENES' DE CORONA Credit, three hours

GREEK 304. DRAMA Credit, three hours

GREEK 305-306. PLATO Credit, six hours

For the present this course is offered for one semester only, with credit of three hours.

LATIN

Requirements for major: Latin 201-202, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, and 306 or their equivalent A paper designed to show the methods of research in the field.

Requirements for minor: Latin 201-202 and any four of the following courses: Latin 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, and 306 or their equivalent.

(Note: Latin 103-104 maJ7 count toward a major or minor, if taken in Richmond College.)

LATIN 101-102. ELEMENTARY LATIN Credit, six hours

College credit only when followed by Latin 103-104 or when taken as a third language for elective credit

LATIN 103-104. CICERO AND VERGIL Credit, six hours

Prerequisite, Latin 101-102 or its equivalent.

LATIN 201-202 . ROMAN LIFE Credit, si:r hours

Prose and poetry with special attention to Livy and Horace Prerequisite, Latin 103-104 or its equivalent.

LATIN 301. ROMAN SATIRE Credit, three hours

LATIN 302 ROMAN PHILOSOPHY AND COMEDY Credit, three hours

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

LATIN 303. EARLY ROMAN PHILOSOPHY

Credit, three hours

LATIN 304. ROMAN ORATORY AND MEDIAEVAL LATIN Credit, three hours

LATIN 305. THE ROMAN EPISTLE Credit, three hours

LATIN 306. ROMAN HISTORY Credit, three hours

Prerequisite for all courses numbered in the three hundreds, Latin 201-202 or its equivalent. Of these courses (Latin 301 to 306 inclusive) only two will be offered in 1942-43. The content of these courses may be varied to suit the needs of the class .

ENGLISH

Associate Professor Stevenson

Assistant Professor Williams

Assistant Professor Peple

Assistant Professor Ball

Mr. Nettles

Mr. Hender son

English 101-102 is prerequisite to all other courses in the department. English 203-204 is prerequisite to all other courses in literature in the department.

Requirements for major: twenty-four hours, including English 309-310 or 313-314

English 328

English 223-224, or 307 or 308, unless other evidence of good writing is offered.

Only one of the courses, English 223-224 or 307-308, may be offered for major work in the department. Before beginning major work in the department , the student should have completed

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

a course in English history. A working knowledge of French and German should accompany major work in English. Neither English 101-102 nor English 225-226 may be counted in major or minor work in the department.

ENGLISH 101-102. RHETORIC AND COMPOSITION Credit, six hours

ENGLISH 203-204. SURVEY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE Credit, six hours

[ENGLISH 223-224. ADVANCED COMPOSITION] Credit, six hours

ENGLISH 225-226. NEWS WRITING Credit, six hours

[ENGLISH 305-306. AMERICAN LITERATURE] Credit, six hours

ENGLISH 307-308. CREATIVE WRITING Credit, six hours

[ENGLISH 309-310. OLD ENGLISH] Credit, six hours

[ENGLISH 311-312. ENGLISH DRAMA] Credit, six hours

ENGLISH 313-314. CHAUCER Credit, six hours

ENGLISH 315-316. SHAKESPEARE Credit, six hours

ENGLISH 317-318. THE CLASSICAL REGIME Credit, six hours

ENGLISH 319. THE ROMANTIC MOVEMENT Credit, three hours

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

ENGLISH 320. VICTORIAN POETRY Credit. three hours

[ENGLISH 321-322. THE ENGLISH NovEL] Credit, six hours

ENGLISH 328. HISTORICAL ENGLISH GRAMMAR Credit, three hours

For the session 1942-1943 this course will be offered in the first instead of the second semester.

For courses in public speaking, see Dramatic Arts 101 and 102

GERMAN

Associate Professor Ahrens Mr. Skinner

Requirements for major: twenty-four hours ( exclusive of German 101-102) and such special work in a field of German literature as the department may require.

GERMAN 101-102. ELEMENTARY GERMAN Credit, six hours

College credit only when followed by German 103-104, or when taken as a third language for elective credit.

GERMAN 103-104. INTERMEDIATE GERMAN Credit, six hours

Prerequisite, German 101-102 or its equivalent. German 103-104 or its equiv alent is pr erequisite to all courses nunibered above 300.

[GERMAN 301-302. THE CLASSIC AGE] Credit, six hours

GERMAN 303-304. NINETEENTH CENTURY PROSE Credit, six hours

A study of the N ovelle from romanticism to naturalism .

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

[GERMAN 305-306. NINETEENTH CENTURY DRAMA] Credit, six hours

[GERMAN 307. LYRIC POETRY] Credit, three hours

[GERMAN 308. GoTHE's FAUST] Credit, three hours

GERMAN 311-312. ADVANCED CONVERSATION AND COMPOSITION Credit, six hours

A practical course in spoken and written German.

GERMAN 313-314. SCIENTIFIC GERMAN Credit, six hours

ROMANCE LANGUAGES

Professor Gaines Associate Professor Caylor Assistant Professor Lavender

Requirements for major: in French or Spanish, a minimum of twenty-four hours, together with such special work in the senior year as the major professor may require. Requirements for minor : eighteen hours. In courses more advanced than 103-104, either semester may _ be taken without the other.

Course 103-104 or its equivalent is prerequisite for all more advanced courses.

FRENCH

FRENCH 101-102. ELEMENTARY FRENCH Credit, six hours

College credit only when followed by French 103-104 or when taken as a third language for elective credit.

FRENCH 103-104. INTERMEDIATE FRENCH Credit, six hours

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND 55

[FRENCH 201-202. FRENCH LITERATURE IN THE SEVENTEENTH AND EIGHTEENTH CENTURIES]

Credit, six hours

FRENCH 203-204. NINETEENTH CENTURY FRENCH LITERATURE

Credit, six hours

[FRENCH 301-302. ADVANCED CONVERSATION, COMPOSITION, AND READING]

Credit, six hours

FRENCH 303-304. A SURVEY OF FRENCH DRAMA

Credit, six hours

SPANISH

SPANISH 101-102. ELEMENTARY SPANISH

Credit, six hours

College credit only when followed by Spanish 103-104 or when taken as a third language for elective credit.

SPANISH 103-104. INTERMEDIATE SPANISH

Credit, six hours

SPANISH 201. COMMERCIAL SPANISH

Credit, three hours

SPANISH 202. SPANISH CORRESPONDENCE

Credit, three hours

Special emphasis upon commercial correspondence.

[SPANISH 301. ADVANCED READING, CONVERSATION, AND COMPOSITION]

Credit, three hours

[SPANISH 302. MODERN SPANISH DRAMA AND POETRY]

Credit, three hours

SPANISH 303-304. EL SIGLO DE ORO

A study of the most prominent writers, especially Cervantes, Calderon, and Lope de Vega.

ITALIAN AND PORTUGUESE

Elementary courses in these languages, especially important in view of the international situation, will be offered if requested by a sufficient number of students. They may be taken only for elective credit unless followed by the intermediate course the following year. Application may be made to the head of the department or in the office of the dean.

FINE ARTS

Professor Harker

Professor Lutz

Professor Ragland

Professor Wemit

Professor Fuchs

Associate Professor Turnbull

Assistant Professor Williams

Miss Silvette

Requirements for major: thirty hours, at least twelve of which must be in courses numbered 200 or above in one division of the Department of Fine Arts; consultation with a member of the faculty of the Department of Fine Arts.

Requirements for minor: eighteen hours.

For special requirements in certain divisions of the Department of Fine Arts, see Dramatic Arts, Music, and Painting.

APPRECIATION OF ART*

ART APPRECIATION 309. INTRODUCTORY COURSE IN THE HISTORY OF ART Credit, three hours

ART APPRECIATION 310. THE PAINTING OF THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCE Credit, three hours

* See Department of Philosophy for course in Aesthetics.

DRAMATIC ARTS*

Requirements for both major and minor include Dramatic Arts 101-102 and English 311-312.

DRAMATIC ARTS 101-102. EFFECTIVE SPEAKING

Credit, six hours

DRAMATIC ARTS 201-202. PLAY PRODUCTION

Credit, six hours

DRAMATIC ARTS 205-206. SPEECH IN RADIO BROADCASTING

Credit, six hours

[DRAMATIC ARTS 301-302. PLAY WRITING]

Credit, six hours

DRAMATIC ARTS 303. ADVANCED DIRECTING

Credit, three hours

DRAMATIC ARTS 304. ADVANCED SCENIC DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION

Credit, three hours

*See Department of English for course in History of Drama.

MUSIC

Requirements for major:

In pianoforte: Musical Theory 101-102, 103-104, 201202, 301-302, 303-304, 305-306, and thirteen hours in Applied Music.

In vocal music: Musical Theory 101-102, 103-104, 201202, 203-204, 301-302, 303-304, and thirteen hours in Applied Music. Ability to play piano accompaniments of moderate difficulty. A minor in English or a modern foreign language recommended, no beginning course in modern language being accepted toward the minor.

Requirements for minor: eighteen hours, including Musical Theory 101-102, 103-104, and 201-202.

Musical Theory

MUSICAL THEORY 101-102. ELEMENTARY HARMONY Credit, four hours

MUSICAL THEORY 103-104. SIGHT SINGING Credit, two hours

MuscIAL THEORY 201-202. ADVANCED HARMONY Credit, two hours

Prerequisite, Musical Theory 101-102.

MusicAL THEORY 203-204. THE LITERATURE OF Music Credit, two hours

MUSICAL THEORY 301-302. COUNTERPOINT Credit, two hours

Prerequisite, Musical Theory 101-102.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

MusicAL THEORY 303-304. ANALYSIS OF Music FoRM

Credit, two hours

Prerequisite, Musical Theory 201-202.

MUSICAL THEORY 305-306. ADVANCED COUNTERPOINT

Credit, two hours

Prerequisites, Musical Theory 201-202 and 301-302.

MUSICAL THEORY 307-308. COMPOSITION

Credit, two hours

Prerequsite, Musical Theory 201-202.

MUSICAL THEORY 311-312. ADVANCED COMPOSITION

Credit, two hours

Prerequisite, Musical Theory 307-308.

Applied Music*

APPLIED Music 151-152. PIANOFORTE

Credit, two hours. Two half-hour lessons a week and one hour practice a day.

APPLIED Music 161-162. VocAL Music

Credit, two hours. Two half-hour lessons a week and one hour practice a day.

APPLIED Music 251-252. PIANOFORTE

Credit, three hours. Two half-hour lessons a week and one and one-half hours practice a day.

APPLIED Music 261-262. VocAL Music

Credit, three hours. Two half-hour lessons a week and one and one-half hours practice a day.

*No credit for courses in Applied Music will be given unless accompanied by a theoretical course. Special arrangements may be made for lessons in organ or stringed instruments. Under the direction of the professor of vocal music, choral music is furnished for the Sunday vesper services. Students with good natural voices are eligible to participate in choral music in the University Choir or Glee Club. Particular care is taken that the music and training shall be of permanent educational value. Credit of one-half semester hour is granted each year upon recommendation of the Department of Music.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

I

APPLIED Music 351-352. PIANOFORTE

Credit, four hours. Two half-hour lessons a week and two hours practice a day.

APPLIED MUSIC 353-354. PIANOFORTE

Credit, four hours. Two half-hour lessons a week and two hours practice a day.

APPLIED Music 355-356. ENSEMBLE

Credit, one hour. One half-hour lesson a week.

APPLIED Music 361-362. VocAL Music

Credit, four hours. Two half-hour lessons a week and two hours practice a day.

APPLIED MUSIC 363-364. VOCAL MUSIC

Credit, four hours. Two half-hour lessons a week and two hours practice a day.

PAINTING

Requirements for major : all courses in portrait and figure painting, Sculpture 103-104, Sculpture 203-204, and Art Apprecia- tion 309-310.

Requirements for minor: Art Appreciation 309-310

PAINTING 101-102. PORTRAIT AND FIGURE PAINTING, DRAWING, AND COMPOSITION

Credit, four hours

PAINTING 201-202. PORTRAIT AND FIGURE PAINTING, DRAWING, AND COMPOSITION

Credit, four hours

PAINTING 301-302. PORTRAIT AND FIGURE PAINTING, DRAWING, AND COMPOSITION

Credit, four hours

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND 61.

PAINTING 305-306. PORTRAIT AND FIGURE p AINTING, DRAWING, AND COMPOSITION

Credit, four hours

SCULPTURE

SCULPTURE 103-104. PORTRAIT, FIGURE, AND ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

Credit, four hours

SCULPTURE 203-204. PORTRAIT, FIGURE, AND ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

Credit, four hours

SCULPTURE 303-304. PORTRAIT, FIGURE, AND ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

Credit, four hours

SCULPTURE 307-308. PORTRAIT, FIGURE, AND ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

Credit, four hours

Division of Sciences

BIOLOGY

Professor Bailey

Professor Smart

Assistant Professor Myers Miss d'Avesne

Requirements for major: Biology 101-102 and any other twenty hours of biology with laboratory, and one full year of col- lege chemistry; an average grade of C or better for courses taken in the department; a comprehensive examination covering the general field of biology to be taken during the spring semester of the senior year.

BIOLOGY 101. GENERAL BOTANY

Credit, five hours. Three lecture-recitation periods and two laboratory periods a week.

BIOLOGY 102. GENERAL ZOOLOGY

Credit, five hours. Three lecture-recitation periods and two laboratory periods a week.

BIOLOGY 111. BIOLOGY OF MAN

Credit, three hours

Lectures on the biological and anatomical bases of human physiology and on personal and community hygiene. Meets the specific requirements of the "West Law" for all teachers in the State of Virginia. Required of all freshmen. Offered both semesters.

BIOLOGY 303-304. COMPARATIVE ANATOMY AND MORPHOLOGY OF VERTEBRATES

Credit, ten hours. Three lecture-recitation periods and two three-hour laboratory periods a week.

[BIOLOGY 305. BIOLOGY OF THE HIGHER PLANTS]

Credit, five hours. Two lecture-recitation periods and two three-hour laboratory periods a week.

BIOLOGY ~06. SYSTEMATIC BOTANY

Credit, five hours. One conference-recitation period and eight hours of laboratory work a week.

[BIOLOGY 307. GENERAL ENTOMOLOGY]

Credit, five hours. Two lecture-recitation periods and two three-hour laboratory periods a week.

[BIOLOGY 308. ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY]

Credit, five hours. Two lecture-recitation periods and two three-hour laboratory periods a week.

BIOLOGY 309. INTRODUCTION TO BACTERIOLOGY

Credit, five hours. Two lecture-recitation periods and two three-hour laboratory periods a week.

[BIOLOGY 310. GENERAL MYCOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY]

Credit, five hours. Two lecture-recitation periods and two three-hour laboratory periods a week.

BIOLOGY 311. HISTOLOGY

Credit, five hours. Three lecture-recitation periods and two laboratory periods a week.

BIOLOGY 312. EMBRYOLOGY

Credit, five hours. Three lecture-recitation periods and two laboratory periods a week.

[BIOLOGY 313. HISTORY OF BIOLOGY]

Credit, three hours. Three lecture-recitation periods a week.

[BIOLOGY 314. GENETICS AND EUGENICS]

Credit, three hours. Three lecture-recitation periods a week.

UNIVERSI'l' "£ OF RICHMOND

[BIOLOGY 315. ANIMAL TAXONOMY AND ECOLOGY]

Credit, five hours. One conference-recitation period and eight hours of laboratory work a week.

[BIOLOGY 316. AQUATIC BIOLOGY]

Credit, five hours. One lecture-recitation period and eight hours of laboratory work a week.

BIOLOGY 317. HUMAN PAROSITOLOGY AND MEDICAL ENTOMOLOGY

Credit, five hours. Two lecture-recitation periods and two three-hour laboratory periods a week.

BIOLOGY 320. BACTERIOLOGICAL AND HISTOLOGICAL TECHNIQUES

Credit, five hours. Two lecture-recitation periods and two three-hour laboratory periods a week.

CHEMISTRY

Professor Ryland

Associate Professor Pierce

Assistant Professor Whitten

Requirements for maJor: Chemistry 201, 202, 303, 304, 305, 306, 311, and 312.

CHEMISTRY 201-202. GENERAL CHEMISTRY

Credit, ten hours. Three class hours and two laboratory periods a week.

Prerequisite, high-school physics or Physics 101.

CHEMISTRY 303. QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS

Credit, five hours. Two class hours and three laboratory periods a week.

Modern theories and semi-micro technique.

CHEMISTRY 304. QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS

Credit, five hours. Two class hours and three laboratory periods a week.

CHEMISTRY 305. ORGANIC CHEMISTRY

Credit, five hours. Three class hours and two laboratory periods a week.

CHEMISTRY 306. ORGANIC CHEMISTRY

Credit, five hours. Three class hours and two laboratory periods a week.

A continuation of Chemistry 305.

CHEMISTRY 308. TECHNICAL METHODS

Credit, five hours. Two class hours and three laboratory periods a week.

CHEMISTRY 309. PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY

Credit, five hours. Three class hours and two laboratory periods a week.

CHEMISTRY 310. PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY

Credit, five hours. Three class hours and two laboratory periods a week.

A continuation of Chemistry 309.

CHEMISTRY 311-312. HISTORY OF CHEMISTRY

Credit, two hours. One class hour a week.

A survey of the development of the science.

CHEMISTRY 320. INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH

Credit, two to five hours. Two to five laboratory periods a week.

Open only by permission.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

MATHEMATICS

Professor Wheeler

Professor Gaines Mr. Grable Mr. Key

Requirements for major: Mathematics 101, 102, 201, 202, 301, 302, 303, 304, and 312; for minor: Mathematics 101, 102, 201, 202, 301, and 302 or 304.

*MATHEMATICS 51. ALGEBRA

No credit Algebra through quadratics.

*MATHEMATICS 52. PLANE GEOMETRY No credit Plane geometry.

MATHEMATICS 101. COLLEGE ALGEBRA

Credit, three hours

MATHEMATICS 102. TRIGONOMETRY

Credit, three hours

MATHEMATICS 107. ENGINEERING DRAWING

Credit, two hours. Two laboratory periods a week. Elements of mechanical drawing. Offered both semesters.

MATHEMATICS 108. ENGINEERING DRAWING

Credit, two hours. Two laboratory periods a week. A continuation of Mathematics 107. Offered both semesters. Prerequisite, Mathematics 107.

*The fee for Mathematics 51 and 52 is $15.00 per semester for all students except freshmen, who may enroll without additional charge. The mathematics requirement for the A.B. degree may be satisfied by passing Mathmatics 51 and 52 Students desirin\l' to take any advanced science course must, however, take Mathematics 101 and 102, stncc they are prerequisite to all advanced courses in science.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

MATHEMATICS 201. ANALYTICAL GEOMETRY

Credit, three hours

Prerequisites, Mathematics 101 and 102.

MATHEMATICS 202. CALCULUS

Credit. three hours

Prerequisite, Mathematics 201.

MATHEMATICS 203. MATHEMATICS OF FINANCE

Credit, three hours

Prerequisites, Mathematics 101 and 102. ·offered both semesters.

MATHEMATICS 204. STATISTICS

Credit, three hours

Prerequisites, Mathematics 101 and 102. Offered both semesters.

MATHEMATICS 207-208. PLANE SURVEYING

Credit, si.x-hours. Two lectures and one laboratory period a week.

Theory and field work of practical problems in surveying. Prerequisites, Mathematics 101 and 102.

MATHEMATICS 209. DESCRIPTIVE GEOMETRY

Credit, three hours

Descriptive geometry applied to practical engineering problems.

MATHEMATICS 210. CARTOGRAPHY

Credit, two hours. One lecture and one laboratory period a week.

Topographical mapping by use of the plane table. Prerequisite, Mathematics 102.

MATHEMATICS 212. SPHERICAL TRIGONOMETRY AND NAVIGATION

Credit, two hours

Prerequisites, Mathematics 101 and 102.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

MATHEMATICS 301. CALCULUS

Credit, three hours

An advanced course in differential and integral calculus. Prerequisites, Mathematics 201 and 202.

MATHEMATICS 302. ANALYTICAL GEOMETRY

Credit, three hours

An advanced course in plane analytical geometry. Prerequisites, Mathematics 201 and 202.

MATHEMATICS 303. INFINITE SERIES AND PRODUCTS

Credit, three hours

Prerequisites, Mathematics 301 and 302.

MATHEMATICS 304. DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Mathematics 301.

MATHEMATICS 305-306. HIGHER ALGEBRA

Credit, six hours

An advanced course in algebra. Prerequisites, Mathematics 201 and 202.

MATHEMATICS 307-308. PROJECTIVE GEOMETRY

Credit, six hours

Prerequisites, Mathematics 201 and 202.

MATHEMATICS 309. SOLID ANALYTIC GEOMETRY

Credit, three hours

Prerequisites, Mathematics 201 and 202.

MATHEMATICS 310. THEORY OF EQUATIONS

Credit, three hours

Prerequisites, Mathematics 201 and 202.

[MATHEMATICS 312. HISTORY OF MATHEMATICS]

Credit, one hour

(NOTE : Only one of the following courses will be offered in 1942-43: 305-306, 307-308, 309-310.)

PHYSICS

Professor Loving

Associate Professor Albright

Assistant Professor Alley

Requirements for major: thirty semester hours, including Physics 303-304; requirements for minor: twenty semester hours.

PHYSICS 101-102. GENERAL PHYSICS

Credit, ten hours. Three lectures and two laboratory periods a wrek.

PHYSICS 207-208. ELECTRICITY AND MAGNETISM

Credit, ten hours. Three lectures and two laboratory periods a week.

Prerequisites, Mathematics 101-102 and Physics 101-102.

PHYSICS 211. ELEMENTS OF METEOROLOGY

Credit, three hours

Meteorology with special reference to aviation. Prerequisites, Mathematics 101-102 and Physics 101-102.

PHYSICS 215. PRINCIPLES OF PHOTOGRAPHY

Credit, three hours. One lecture and two laboratory periods a week.

PHYSICS 303. MECHANICS

Credit, five hours. Three lectures and two laboratory periods a week.

Prerequisites, Physics 101-102 and Mathematics 201-202.

PHYSICS 304. HEAT AND THERMODYNAMICS

Credit, five hours. Three lectures and two laboratory periods a week.

Prerequisites, same as for Physics 303.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

PHYSICS 305-306. OPTICS AND SPECTROSCOPY

Credit, six hours. Two lectures and one laboratory period a week.

Prerequisites, Physics 101-102 and Mathematics 201-202.

[PHYSICS 307-308. INTRODUCTION TO THEORETICAL PHYSICS]

Credit, six hours. Three lectures a week.

Prerequisites, Physics 303-304 and Mathematics 301-302.

AERONAUTICS

Mr, Crouch

Mr. Arbenz

AERONAUTICS 201-202. ELEMENTS OF AERONAUTICS

Credit, four hours

A course of primary ground instruction in aviation, conducted under the regulations of the Civil Aeronautics Authority. Instruction in the history of aviation, theory of flight and aircraft, civil air regulations, practical air navigation, meteorology, parachutes, aircraft power plants, aircraft instruments, and radio uses and terms. A practical course in flight training at a local airport offered to students selected under the regulations of the Civil Aeronautics Authority.

AERONAUTICS 301-302. SECONDARY AERONAUTICS

Credit, six hours

Given under the auspices of the Civil Aeronautics Authority. Prerequisite, Aeronautics 201-202 or its equivalent.

Division of Social Sciences

BIBLE and RELIGION

Requirements for major: twenty-four hours. Essay on topic assigned by head of the department. Requirements for minor: eighteen hours. ·

BIBLE 101-102. OLD TESTAMENT Credit, si.x hours

BIBLE 103. NEW TESTAMENT Credit, three hours Christianity according to Christ.

BIBLE 104. NEW TESTAMENT Credit, three hours

The apostolic age as presented in Acts and the Epistles, the life and letters of Paul, and the development of the early Christian institutions and customs.

[BIBLE 105. THE RELIGION OF THE HERBEW PROPHETS] Credit, three hours

[BIBLE 201. THE BIBLE AS LITERATURE] Credit, three hours

BIBLE 301. THE MINISTER IN THE MODERN WORLD Credit, three hours

The minister's responsibility considered in the light of contemporary thought and trends.

BIBLE 304. COMPARATIVE RELIGION

Credit, three hours

BIBLE 305-306. RELIGION rn BIOGRAPHY

Credit, six hours

The appreciation of religion through the lives of great personalities. Open to juniors and seniors.

ECONOMICS and APPLIED ECONOMICS

Professor Modlin

Professor Pinchbeck Professor Doubles

Professor Wray

Associate Professor Thonws

Associate Professor Miller

Mr. MacDonald Mr. Townsend

Requirements for major: for the B.A. degree, twenty-four hours in economics, including Economics 201-202, Economics 301-302, and a thesis in the senior year. Students who are planning to pursue graduate work in economics are urged to elect Mathematics 203-204 and Applied Economics 203-204.

For the B.S. in Business Administration degree, see pages 36-37. A candidate for this degree must elect forty-eight hours in economics and applied economics, including Economics 201-202, Economics 301-302, Mathematics 203-204, Applied Economics 203-204, Applied Economics 301-302, and in his senior year Applied Economics 325-326.

All students majoring in the department are requested to confer with members of the departmental faculty concerning their programs of courses, which must be approved by the head of the department. Candidates for the degree of B.S. in Business Administration must choose a field of concentration in one of the following: accounting, finance, merchandising, insurance, business management, public regulation, and public administration.

ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 101. ECONOMIC HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES Credit, three hours

ECONOMICS 104. FUNDAMENTALS OF ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY

Credit, three hours

ECONOMICS 201. PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS

Credit, three hours

ECONOMICS 202. ECONOMIC PROBLEMS AND POLICIES

Credit, three hours

ECONOMICS 301. MONEY

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

ECONOMICS 302. BANKING

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

ECONOMICS 303. FINANCIAL ORGANIZATION OF GOVERNMENT

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

ECONOMICS 304. CURRENT TAX PROBLEMS

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

[ECONOMICS 307. FOREIGN TRADE]

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Ec~nomics 201-202.

ECONOMICS 309. GOVERNMENT REGULATION OF BUSINESS

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

ECONOMICS310. ECONOMICSOF TRANSPORTATIONAND PUBLIC UTILITIES

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

APPLIED ECONOMICS

APPLIEDECONOMICS203-204 PRINCIPLESOF ACCOUNTING

Credit, six hours. Two class periods and one two-hour laboratory period a week.

APPLIED ECONOMICS206. INDUSTRIALACCOUNTING

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Applied Economics 203.

APPLIEDECONOMICS301-302. BUSINESSLAW

Credi t, six hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

APPLIEDECONOMICS303-304. INTERMEDIATEACCOUNTING

Credit, six hours

Prerequisite, Applied Economics 203-204.

APPLIEDECONOMICS305-306E . INTRODUCTORYCOSTACCOUNTING

Credit, six hours

Prerequisites, Applied Economics 203-204 and 303-304, except by permission of the professor.

APPLIEDECONOMICS306. AUDITING

Credit, three hours

Prerequisites, Applied Economics 203-204 and 303-304, except by permission of the professor, offered first semester.

APPLIED EcoNOMics 307-308. ADVANCEDAccoUNTING PROBLEMS

Credit, six hours

Prerequisites, Applied Economics 203-204 and 303-304, or an examination.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

APPLIED ECONOMICS 311. MARKETING

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

APPLIED ECONOMICS 312. ADVERTISING

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Applied Economics 311.

*APPLIED ECONOMICS 313 LIFE INSURANCE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

APPLIED ECONOMICS 314. PROPERTY AND CASUALTY INSURANCE

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202

APPLIED ECONOMICS 315. CORPORATION FINANCE

Credit, three hours ,

Prerequisites, Economics 201-202 and Applied Eoonomics 203-204.

[APPLIED ECONOMICS 317. LABOR PROBLEMS AND LEGISLATION]

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202. Credit not allowed for both Applied Economics 317 and Sociology 309.

APPLIED ECONOMICS 318. PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

APPLIED ECONOMICS 319. BUSINESS ORGANIZATION AND PROCEDURE

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

APPLIED ECONOMICS 320. INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Economics 201-202.

*Insurance courses in the Evenin~ School of Business Administra tion leading to the degree of Chartered Life Underwriter can also be elected and credited toward the degree of Bachelor of Scien ce in Business Administration

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

APPLIED ECONOMICS 323-324. C. P.A. REVIEW

No credit

A review of the most important phases of accounting and auditing practice, designed to aid the student in preparing for the Virginia Certified Public Accountant's examination. ( Given only in the Evening School of Business Administration)

APPLIED ECONOMICS 325-326. SEMINAR IN BUSINESS PROBLEMS

Credit, two hours

Required of all seniors who are candidates for the degree of B.S. in Business Administration.

Note: Mathematic• 203 and 204 are required of all candidates for the Bachelor of Science in Business Administration degree and may he taken for credit as a course in economics

EDUCATION

Professor Prince

Requirements for major: Psychology 201-202 and six semester courses in education with at least one course in a related field-sociology or philosophy-or an advanced course in psychology.

[EDUCATION 301. AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF EDUCATION]

Credit, three hours

Open to sophomores approved by the professor.

EDUCATION 302. PRINCIPLES OF TEACHING AND LEARNING

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Psychology 201-202.

EDUCATION 303. PRINCIPLES OF SECONDARY EDUCATION

Credit, three hours

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND 77

EDUCATION 304. ADMINISTRATION AND TEACHING IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Psychology 201-202.

EDUCATION 305. HISTORY OF EDUCATION rn THE UNITED STATES Credit, three hours

[EDUCATION 306. ADMINISTRATION AND SUPERVISION OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS]

Credit, three hours

The administration and supervision of the individual district, county, city, and state school. Intended to meet the needs of teachers, principals, board members, and superintendents.

Note: Educational Psychology is offered in the Department of Psychology; Educational Sociology in the Department of Sociology; and Physiology, meeting the "West Law" requirements for teacher's certificate, in the Department of Biology.

HISTORY and POLITICAL SCIENCE

Professor Mitchell Professor M cDanel

Assistant Professor Kendall

Mr. Matthews

GOVERNMENT

Requirements for major: twenty-four hours , including Government 205-206, and History 317-318.

GOVERNMENT 205-206. NATIONAL GOVERNMENT IN THE UNITED STATES Credit, six hours

GOVERNMENT 207-208. MODERN GOVERNMENTS OF EUROPE Crrdit. six ho1rrs

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

[GoVERNMENT 301. INTERNATIONAL LAW] Credit, three hours

[GoVERNMENT 302. AMERICAN DIPLOMATIC HISTORY] Credit, three hours

[GOVERNMENT 303. STATE GOVERNMENT] Credit, three hours

[GoVERNMENT 304. LOCAL GOVERNMENT] Credit, three hours

[GoVERNMENT 307. POLITICAL PARTIES AND POLITICS] Credit, three hours

[GoVERNMENT 308. POLITICAL THEORY] Credit, three hours

[GoVERNMENT 309-310. PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION]

Credit, six hours

HISTORY

Requirements for major: twenty-six hours, including History 205-206 and 317-318; and in the senior year an essay in original research and a comprehensive examination.

HISTORY 101. HISTORY OF EUROPE, 1500-1815 Credit, three hours

HISTORY 102. HISTORY OF EUROPE, 1815-1918 Credit, three hours

HISTORY 103. TRENDS IN MODERN WORLD HISTORY Credit, three hours

Open to freshmen only. Offered both semesters.

HISTORY 201-202. HISTORY OF ENGLAND Credit, six hours

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

HISTORY 203. ANCIENT HISTORY, EGYPT AND GREECE Credit, three hours

HISTORY 204. ANCIENT HISTORY, THE ROMAN REPUBLIC AND EMPIRE Credit, three hours

HISTORY 205. AMERICAN HISTORY, TO 1865 Credit, three hours

HISTORY 206. AMERICAN HISTORY, SINCE 1865 Credit, three hours

HISTORY 207-208. MEDIAEVAL HISTORY Credit, three hours

HISTORY 301. THE FAR EAST Credit, three hours

HISTORY 302. LATIN-AMERICAN HISTORY Credit, three hours

HISTORY 317-318. AMERICAN HISTORY SEMINAR Credit, two hours

HISTORY 319. EUROPE SINCE 1918 Credit, three hours

HISTORY 320. ECONOMIC HISTORY OF EUROPE Credit, three hours

[HISTORY 322. HISTORY OF THE SOUTH] Credit, three hours

[HISTORY 323. HISTORY OF COLONIAL AMERICA] Credit, three hours

PHILOSOPHY

Professor Holtzclaw

Requirements for major: twenty-four hours in philosophy; or, with the consent of the head of the department, eighteen hours in philosophy and six hours in a closely related field in education, psychology, or sociology; in the senior year an essay embodying the results of some special line of investigation in philosophy.

PHILOSOPHY 201. INTRODUCTION TO/ PHILOSOPHY

Credit, three hours

Open to freshmen.

PHILOSOPHY 202. ETHies

Credit, three hours

Open to freshmen.

PHILOSOPHY 301. HISTORY OF ANCIENT AND MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY

Credit, three hours

PHILOSOPHY 302. HISTORY OF MODERN PHILOSOPHY

Credit, three hours

[PHILOSOPHY 303. PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION]

Credit, three hours

[PHILOSOPHY 304. CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY]

Credit, three hours

PHILOSOPHY 305. AESTHETICS

Credit, three hours

[PHILOSOPHY 306. SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY]

Credit, three hours

PHILOSOPHY 307. LOGIC

Credit, three hours

Offered in the second semester in 1942-43.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

PSYCHOLOGY

Requirements for major: eighteen hours in psychology, including Psychology 301 and 316, supplemented by six semester hours in philosophy, sociology, or education, and a special project approved by the department.

PSYCHOLOGY 201-202. GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY

Credit , six hours

PSYCHOLOGY 301. EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY

Credit, three hours. One lecture-discussion period and two laboratory periods a week.

Prerequisite, Psychology 201-202.

[PSYCHOLOGY 304 . APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY]

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Psychology 201-202.

!'sYCHOLOGY 306. SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

Credit , three hours

Prerequisite, Psychology 201-202.

PSYCHOLOGY 307. ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Psychology 201-202.

PSYCHOLOGY 308. PSYCHOLOGY OF PERSONALITY

Credit , three hours

Prerequisite, Psychology 201-202.

[PSYCHOLOGY 310. EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY]

Credit, three hours

Psychology 201-202 strongly recommended for admission to this course.

PSYCHOLOGY 316. CONTEMPORARY PSYCHOLOGY

Credit, three hours

Prerequisite, Psychology 201-202.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

SOCIOLOGY and SOCIAL ETHICS

Professor Harlan

Associate Professor Carver Mr. Snelling

Requirements for major: twenty-four hours in the department.

SOCIOLOGY 201-202. PRINCIPLES OF SOCIOLOGY

Credit, six hours

[SOCIOLOGY 301. THE SOCIOLOGY OF THE CITY] Credit, three hours

[SOCIOLOGY 302. RURAL AND REGIONAL SOCIOLOGY] Credit, three hours

SOCIOLOGY 303. THE FAMILY Credit, three hours

SOCIOLOGY 304. CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL PROBLEMS Credit, three hours

[SOCIOLOGY 305. SOCIAL ETHICS] Credit, three hours

SOCIOLOGY 306. CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL THEORIES Credit, three hours

SOCIOLOGY 307. CRIMINOLOGY AND PENOLOGY Credit, three hours

[SOCIOLOGY 308. ANTHROPOLOGY AND ETHNOLOGY] Credit, three hours

SOCIOLOGY 309. SOCIAL ASPECTS OF INDUSTRY Credit, three hours

Credit cannot be allmrued for both Sociology 309 and Applied Economics 317.

Degrees Conferred in Richmond College

August, :r940

BACHELORS OF ARTS

E rn est Linw ood Brandie s, Jr. (Phil.) .......................................... Richmond , Va .

Ha rry McMillan Darden (Bi ol.) .............. ......... ................. Smithfield , Va.

I r vin Lu ca s (S oc.) .................. ........... .............................................Richmond, Va .

Hunt er Watkins Martin (Hi st. ) ........................... .................... .....Ri chmond , Va

Fe rdinand Hurxthall M ort on, Jr. (Bi ol. ) ........................ .......Winifrede, W. Va .

J ohn Jo seph N oonan ( Eco n .) .... ......... .......................... ....Richmond, Va.

George R obert Mar shall Rumn ey ( En g.) . ............... ............ Baltimore, Md.

Clai borne Ho ward Stok es ( Biol.) ...... ....................................Blackstone, Va.

V in cent Sharpe Tiller (B iol.) ...... ........ ....................P ennington Gap, Va.

Bru ce Pear son Van Bu skirk (En g .) ................................ ........Bronxville, N. Y.

BACHELOR OF SCIENCE

Jam es Edward J ohn , Jr. (Chem ) ............. ........................ ..Roanoke, Va.

BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

V inc ent Re ed Adam s, Jr. .... .............. ........... ....... ......Red Oak , Va.

William F ernley Kayh oe ........... ........... ........................... Richmond, Va.

June, ][94][

BACHELORS OF ARTS

Elie Maynard Adams (Phil.) ............................ ......... .........Clarkt on, Va.

Raymond Atwell Adams (Biol.) .. ....... ........... ....... .....Redoak, Va.

Leon Harper Alexander (Biol.) ............. ........ ......... ...........Peter sburg, Va .

Gordon Hutson Andrews (Econ ) . .............. ....... ...... Ri chmond, Va.

Edgar Mullins Arendall (Eng.) ...... ....................... ...................Mobile, Ala.

Murray M. Barr (Eng.) . ...... ........ ......... ........ Brooklyn, N. Y .

Thomas Roderick Benton, Jr. (Govt.) ....... ........ .......Richmond , Va.

Lucien Warner Bingham, Jr (Ch em ) ............ ......... .......... Richmond, Va

Charles Robert Booth, Jr. (Biol.) . ......... ....... ...........Danville, Va.

Frank Henry Britton, II (Econ.) ............... .......................... ...Ri chmond, Va.

UNIVERSITY

OF RICHMOND

Henry Epes Cake (Hist.) ......................................................................Norfolk, Va.

Salvatore Vincent Casale (Biol.) ....................................................Baltimore, Md.

Gordon Martin Christensen (Hist.) ....................................................Carmel, N. Y.

Frank Maxwell Conner, Jr. (Econ.) ..................................................Ellerson, Va.

John Carrington Cross (Eng.) ............···-·······································Richmond, Va.

Rawley Fleet Daniel (Eng.) ........................................................Cape Charles, Va.

James Henry Donohue, III (Bus.) ....................................................Richmond, Va.

Robert William Durrett, Jr. (Eng.) ............................................Hartsville, S. C.

Winfred Hugo Elder (Eng.) ..............................................................Clarkton, Va.

Gaetano Thomas Fattaruso (Psych.) .............................................Newark, N. J.

Charles Joseph Ferneyhough, Jr. (Biol.) ........................................Richmond, Va.

James Matthew Fogg (Bible) .... .......................................................Richmond, Va.

Earl Russell Fox (Biol) ......................................................................Richmond, Va.

Herbert Winston Frostick (Math.) ......................................Fredericksburg, Va.

Edgar Clyde Garber, Jr. (Biol.) ... ............................................Greensboro, N. C.

John Bentley Gilmer (Zool.) ....................................................Washington, D. C.

Clarence Willard Gladding (Hist.) ................................,......................Mears, Va.

William Alexander Grant, Jr. (Econ.) ............................................Richmond, Va.

William Day Gravatt (Phys.) ............................................................Ellerson, Va.

Richard Stuart Grizzard (Hist.) ........................................................Danville, Va.

Nathanael Bernard Habel (Hist.) ........................................................Amelia, Va.

Paul Julian Harrell (Hist.) ................................................................Edenton, N. C.

William Meredith Herndon (Biol.) ........................................Fredericksburg, Va.

Lawrence Hilgeman, Jr. (Psych.) .................................................Baltimore, Md.

Ira Durwood Hudgins (Eng.) ..................................................Washington, D. C.

John Frederick Burchardt Jurgens, Jr. (Biol.) ..........................Richmond, Va.

William Ward Kersey, Jr. (Biol.) ..............................................Bluefield, W. Va.

Charles William McNutt (Hist.) ......................................................Staunton, Va.

Jesse William Markham (Econ.) ......................................................Richmond, Va.

Martin Markowitz (Biol.) ..............................................................Brooklyn, N. Y.

William Rose Maynard, Jr. (Biol.) ....................................................Norfolk, Va.

John Kelso Moore (Eng.) ..................................................................Onancock, Va.

William Philip Morrissette (Biol.) ................................................Midlothian, Va.

Harold Graves Owens (Hist.) ..........................................................Richmond, Va.

William Francis :Parkerson, Jr. (Eng.) ........................................Richmond, Va.

Marshall Jackson Phillips (Eng.) ....................................................Hopewell, Va.

Thomas Edward Pugh (Eng.) ................................................Fredericksburg, Va.

George Emory Roberts (Hist.) ....................................................Nassawadox, Va.

William Stanhope Ryan (Eng.) ......................................................Baltimore, Md.

Alvan Lee St. Clair (Eng.) ................................................................Roanoke, Va.

John Pershing Sanders (Econ.) ........................................................Richmond, Va.

William Partin Schaffer (Econ.) ......................................._.Drewry's Bluff, Va.

William Osmar Seifert (Govt.) ........................................................Denver, Colo.

William Henry Snyder, Jr. (Biol.) ......................................Staten Island, N. Y.

Owen Farley Tate (Eng.) ....................................................................Danville, Va.

Emilio Francisco Trilla (Chem.) ........................................Carolina, Puerto Rico

James Arthur Wagner (Soc.) ..........................................................Richmond, Va.

Joe Wheeler Wiggins, Jr. (Biol.) ............................................Fayetteville, N. C.

Aubrey Simpson Williams, Jr. (Hist.) ............................................Richmond, Va.

Samuel Joseph Wornom, Jr. (Soc.) ................................................Hampton, Va.

Woodrow Wilson Wren (Psych.) ....................................................Richmond, Va.

Erick Falk Yarchin (Psych.) ............................................................Richmond, Va.

BACHELORS OF SCIENCE

Ralph Wilson Allen (Chem.) ............................................................Richmond, Va.

William Page Andrews (Chem.) ......................................................Richmond, Va.

Milton Beirne Baroody (Chem.) ......................................................Richmond, Va.

Alvin Francis Beale, Jr. (Chem.) ....................................................Richmond, Va.

Benjamin Franklin Bowles (Chem.) ................................................Richmond, Va.

Gershon Gerald Ediss (Chem.) ............................................................Norfolk, Va.

Oscar Green Gilbert, Jr. (Math.) ......................................................Richmond, Va.

Morris David Grandis (Chem.) ........................................................Richmond, Va.

Waverly Sydnor Green, Jr. (Chem.) ..............................................Burkeville, Va.

Harry Egbert Griffin, Jr. (Biol.) ........................................................Dillwyn, Va.

James Ridout Harris (Phys.) ............................................................Richmond, Va.

Melvin Clyde Hawkins (Chem.) ......................................................Richmond, Va.

George Henry Landers, Jr. (Chem.) ................................................Richmond, Va.

George Edmond Massie, 3d (Math., Phys.) ....................................Richmond, Va.

Herman Samuel Rockoff (Biol.) ................................................Bridgeport, Conn.

William Harry Shaia (Chem.) ..........................................................Richmond, Va.

William Harman Surber, Jr. (Phys., Math.) ................................Richmond, Va.

William Sanford Terry (Biol.) ............................................................Chatham, Va.

Werter Gregory Wright, Jr. (Chem.) ..................................................Acorn, Va.

BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

Edward Reeves Adams ........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Richard Young Bristow ....................................................................Petersburg, Va.

Robert Thomas Brogan ............................................................................Atlanta, Ga.

Norman Brown ..................................................................................Richmond, Va.

Hugh Stuart Crisman ........................................................................Winchester, Va.

Ashley Dunn DeShazor ......................................................................Blackstone, Va.

Branch Antonio Dinwiddie, Jr ...........................................................Richmond, Va.

John Antony Doumlele ........................................................................Richmond, Va.

William Robert Harton, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va.

William Henry Hemby, J r .................................................................Richmond, Va.

Earl Sidney Holman ............................................................................Richmond, Va.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Chastine Wal ton Jones, J r ..... ................ ....... .........Richmond, Va.

William Henry Jones, Jr ................................. .......... Midlothian, Va.

Robert A. KeiL. ...... ........ ........ ........ Oeveland Heights, Ohio

John Ray Kellison ............... .................. .......... .............. ..Richmond, Va

William Livingston Kirby, J r .. ....... ......... ............... ..Richmond, Va.

John Howard Locke .... ................ .......... ................. .........Boyce, Va.

Ben Harris McGehee ........ ......... ........ ......Wilmington, Va.

Charles Henkle Miller ........ ......... .......Kearneysville, W. Va

Blanton Lynn Price ..... .......... .......... ................... ......Richmond, Va

George Hill Shackelford ......... ........ .......... .............Hampton, Va

Robert Earle Stanley .... ............... ....... ...........................Ri chmond, Va

Henry Lester Steiner .. .......... ....... ........ ................Richmond, Va.

William James Turkingston ......... ............. .....Avon-by-the-Sea, N. J

Robert Pendleton Van Buren ........ ........... ................Richmond, Va .

Frederick Alexander Waddington, Jr ..... ........... ........Richmond , Va

William Harry Widener .... .......... ......... ....... .R1chmond, Va .

John William Wright , Jr ........... ......... ....... .........Lynchburg, Va

August, I94I

BACHELORS OF ARTS

Louis Ray Broughman (Soc.) .. .......... ......... .......Buchanan , Va

Gordon Cooper Haines (Econ.) .........

......... .Leesburg, Fla.

Albert Lee Philpott (Econ .) ....... .......... ........... ............Philpott, Va

William Neil Raney (Soc.) ... ....... ..............................Morgan Hill, Cal.

Granville Harding Steinmetz (Chem .) .... ............. .......Richmond , Va

John Tivis Wicker (Psych.) ........... .......... .......... Richmond , Va

Bolling Gay Williams (Phil. & Biol.) ......... ....... ......... ..Ri chmond, Va.

BACHELOR OF SCIENCE

Marion Lee Rice, Jr. (Chem.) .. .............. ......... .........Richmond, Va

BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

Jack Chester Kervan . ........... ........ ......... ............Scarsdale, N Y

Samuel Miller Moody, Jr ... ........ ........ .......... ......Richmond, Va

Lester Martin Sauer .......... ........

..........Richmond, Va.

Roster of Richmond College, :r94:r=:r942

SENIOR CLASS

Amrhein, John Leonard (Bus.) ........................................................Richmond, Va.

Amrhein, Joseph Alexander, Jr. (Hist.) ........................................Richmond, Va.

Batten, Caleb Livingston (Hist.) ......................................................Smithfield, Va.

Baughan, Alfred Riffe (Bus.) ................................,...........................Covington, Va.

Betts, Norvel Wilson (Bus.) ..............................................................Richmond, Va.

Beville, William Goode, (Eng.) ......................................................Petersburg, Va.

Bingham, William Harrison (Chem.) ..............................................Richmond, Va.

Black, Robert Stuart (Bus.) ..............................................................Richmond, Va.

Brauer, Harral Andrew, Jr. (Eng.) ................................................Richmond, Va.

Bristow, William Edward (Bus.) ....................................................Petersburg, Va.

Bruch, William Mark (Biol.) ......................................................Bluefield, W. Va.

Bullock, Henry Armistead, Jr. (Chem.) ........................................Richmond, Va. Burgess, Melvin Dwight (Bus.) ........................................................Richmond, Va.

Burnette, Melvin Waldo (Chem.) ....................................................Richmond, Va.

Clarke, Austin Braxton (Eng.) ..........................................................Manakin, Va. Cline, Bernard Gibson, Jr. (Biol.) ..................................................Alexandria, Va.

Cotten, Robert Claude, Jr. (Govt.) ..................................................Richmond, Va. Cox, George Edwin (Chem.) ............................................................Covington, Va. Croxton, Hardy Winburn (Econ.) ................................................Monticello, Ark. *Dumville, David Milton ......................................................................Mathews, Va.

Ellis, William DeWitt, Jr. (Eng.) ....................................................Richmond, Va.

Etheridge, John William (Dram. Arts) ..................................South Norfolk, Va. Ferramosca, Oreste (Hist.) ................................................................Richmond, Va. Forberg, Fred Claude (Bus.) ............................................................Richmond, Va. Fronczek, Andrew Anthony (Chem.) ..................................................Harvey, Ill. Gambill, Walter Ray (Bible) ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Gary, Robert Armistead, III (Bus.) ................................................Richmond, Va. Gilbert, Alfred Rachels ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Giragosian, Archie (Fr.) ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Goode, Aylett Woodson (Bus.) ........................................................Richmond, Va. Gordon, John Newton (Biol) ............................................................Richmond, Va. Green, Thomas Wal ton (Chem.) ............................... - .....................Burkeville, Va. Griffith, Robert Bruce, Jr. (Phil.) ....................................................Arlington, Va. Hall, Randolph Brooks (Psych.) ........................................................Norfolk, Va. Hardman, John Marcellus (Eng.) ........................................................Ettrick, Va. Haydon, Alvah E., Jr. (Bus.) ............................................................Irvington, Va.

* Applicant for degree at Lynchburg College.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Hayley, Derek (Bus.) .........................................................:............Winchester, Va. Haynes, George Garnett ( Hist. & Govt.) ........................................Richmond, Va. Heflin, William Nelson (Soc.) .............................................Hopewell, Va. Hepler, William Paul (Bible) ....................................................Jordan Mines, Va. Herndon, Thomas Overton (Eng.) ..................................................Ore Bank, Va. Higginbotham, Earnest Leland (Eng.) ........................................Alexandria, Va. Hill, Rowland Braxton, Jr. (Bus.) ......................................................Suffolk, Va. Holland, Willis Dabney (Chem.) ....................................................Richmond, Va. Hooten, Claude Gibson, Jr. (Chem.) ..............................................Lynchburg, Va. Hough, Mac Johnson (Chem.) ............................................. Roanoke, Va. Jones, Arthur Leake (Phys.) ............................................................Richmond, Va. Jones, Raymond Edwin (Biol.) ..................................................Bluefield, W. Va. Kardian, Richard William (Chem.) ................................................Richmond, Va. Kellam, Albert Staness (Math.) ......................................................Richmond, Va. King, Henry Eugene (Psych.) ................................................Wilmington, Va. Kinsey, Ralph Ellsworth (Bus.) ............................................. ......Richmond, _Va. Klaffky, Richard Carroll (Bus.) ................................................Huntington, N. Y. Krause, Charles Willard (Soc.) ......................................................Baltimore, Md. Laird, Douglas Winfield (Bus.) ........................................................Richmond, Va. Lankford, Vernon Thomas (Eng.) ......................................................Bloxom, Va. Lee, Walter Buckner (Phys.) ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Long, Alvin Penrose (Chem.) .............................................Richmond, Va. Lovenstein, Irvin (Govt.) ..................................................................Savannah, Ga. Lowry, Mann Terrell (Chem. & Biol.) ........................................Beaverdam, Va. Lumsden, Virgil Mason, Jr. (Econ.) ..........................Richmond, Va. Mack, Joseph Henry (Biol.) ......................................................Runnemede, N. J. Major, Clarence Edward (Eng.) ......................................................Stormont, Va. Manahan, Harold Lockwood (Bus.) ................................................Richmond, Va. Mason, Philip Benjamin (Psych.) ...........................................Hampton, Va. Miller, Alvin Hudson (Econ.) ..............................................................Locklies, Va. Milling, Bert William (Bus.) ................................................................Mobile, Ala. Morgan, Charles Albert, Jr. (Eng.) ..................................................Rockville, Va. Murphey, Robert Stafford (Chem.) ................................................Richmond, Va. Nathan, Matthew .......... ..................................................Brooklyn, N. Y. Parker, Harold Wayne (Bible) ....................................................Cartersville, Va. Pauli, Edwin Findlay (Hist.) ...........................................................Richmond, Va. Peters, James Linwood (Bus.) ..........................................................Sandston, Va. Phillips, Robert Macon (Chem.) ..................................................Petersburg, Va. Pickels, Ralph Knight (Phys.) ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Piper, Robert Elmo, Jr. (Phys.) ......................................................Richmond, Va. Pitt, Malcolm Upshur (Eng.) ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Purdy, Leonard Alfred (Biol.) ............................................Richmond, Va. Rea, Tony Russell (Bible) ....................................................................Spencer, Va. Re Mine, Philip Gordon (Biol.) .......................................................Richmond, Va. Roberson, William Lamar (Biol.) ..................................................Hopewell, Va.

Robertson, Donald Kent (Math., Phys.) ............................................Matoax, Va. Robinson, Charles (Chem.) ................................................................Richmond, Va. Ross, Zane Grey (Bible) - ...............................................................Chilhowie, Va.

Routon, Charles Ray (Bus.) ..............................................................Richmond, Va. Saunders, Leander Thomas, Jr. (Eng.) ....................................................Ivor, Va. Schapiro, Edward Robin (Eng.) ......................................................Richmond, Va. Schrieberg, Eli Irving (Soc.) ............................................................Richmond, Va.

Sease, Robert Hammond (Biol.) ...............................·-·····................Richmond, Va. Sheffield, Lawrence Browning, Jr. (Biol.) ....................................Richmond, Va.

Sisson, Hugh Hamilton (Bus.) ........................................................Richmond, Va. Snow, William James (Phys.) ........................................................Richmond, Va. Spain, Charles Everett (Bible) ......................................................Petersburg, Va. Steinberg, Ephraim (Chem.) ............................................................Richmond, Va. Taylor, Jackson Johnson (Phys., Math.) ..................................Winnabow, N. C. Taylor, William Alexander (Bus.) .....................................................Spencer, Va. Trump, Donald Ellsworth (Eng.) ..................................................Baltimore, Md. Uzzle, Frederick Booth (Eng.) ......................................................Petersburg, Va.

Walthall, Charles Timothy (Econ.) ..................................................Matoaca, Va.

Warriner, Thomas Emmett, Jr. (Eng.) ..................................Lawrenceville, Va.

Washer, Roy Jordan (Bus.) ..............................................................Richmond, Va.

Williams, Stuart Lee (Hist.) ............................................................Richmond, Va. Williams, Thomas Nelson (Chem.) ................................................Richmond, Va. Willis, Lawrence Haywood (Chem.) ..............................................Richmond, Va. Wingo, Charlie Francis (Chem.) ....................................................Richmond, Va.

Winn, Julian Overly (Econ.) ............................................................Keysville, Va. Wymbs, Roy Paul (Chem.) ....................................................Fredericksburg, Va.

JUNIOR CLASS

Adams, Richard Linwood (Bus.) ....................................................Richmond, Va. Alvis, Vance Quentin (Bus.) ....................................................................Sabot, Va. Ankers, Richard (Eng.) ....................................................................Arlington, Va. Asbell, George Thomas, Jr. (Eng.) ..............................................Portsmouth, Va. Aull, Roscoe Sease, Jr. (Chem.) ................................................Washington, D. C. Bain, John Warren (Hist.) ............................................................Brooklyn, N. Y. Baker, Frank Joseph, Jr. (Bus.) ................................................Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Baker, Ivon Ray, Jr. (Eng.) ................................................................Norfolk, Va. Balderson, Joseph Randall (Bible) ................................................Petersburg, Va. Bareford, William Thornton (Govt.) ..................................................Ozeana, Va. Barnes, James Hamilton (Eng.) ......................................................Richmond, Va. Barnett, James Harmon, III (Phys.) ..............................................Richmond, Va. Barr, Robert Greig (Govt.) ..............................................................Richmond, Va. Beacham, Arthur Douglas (Psych.) ............................................Greenville, S. C. Bellis, Charley Robert (Chem.) ..............................................................Apollo, Pa.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Belsches, Shelton Thomas (Eng.) ........................................................Carson, Va. Binford, Hinton Clay, Jr. (Econ.) ....................................... Richmond, Va. Binns, Edgar Mallary (Bible) ............................................................Roanoke, Va. Birchett, Thomas Daniel (Bus.) ....................................................Petersburg, Va. Blanton, Wyndham Bolling, Jr. (Econ.) ........................................Richmond, Va. Bowen, Courtney Cox (Bus.) ............................................................Tazewell, Va. Brandon, Sidney Jenkins (Biol.) ....................................................Blackstone, Va. Britt, Samuel Skinner, Jr. (Hist.) ....................................................Abingdon, Va. Brook,:;, Edwin Beverly, Jr. (Bus.) ..................................................Richmond, Va. Brown, Arthur Henry, Jr. (Hist.) ............... ..................Bangor, Pa. Bull, George Nelson, Jr. (Econ.) ........................................................Norfolk, Va. Burnette, Howard Olsen (Biol.) ....................................................Boulevard, Va. Burns, Rowland Harvey (Chem.) .....................................................Lebanon, Va. Burton, Willard White (Chem.) ........................:.............................Richmond, Va. Camden, Aubrey Snead (Biol.) ..................................................... Chatham, Va. Carter, Robert Barnett, J r ...................................................................Richmond, Va. Clarkson, Fred Wallace (Psych.) ......................................................Roanoke, Va. Cole, Marvin Frederick (Govt.) ......................................................Richmond, Va. Collins, Vincent Williams (Bus.) ................................................Appomattox, Va. Conner, Billy Bruce (Bible) ................................................................Roanoke, Va. Cottrell, George Alvin, Jr ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Covey, Frank Stuart (Chem.) ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Cranshaw, Robert Henry ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Crawford, Robert Ritchie (Biol.) ....................................................Richmond, Va. Dalton, Henry Addison (Eng.) ........................................................Richmond, Va. Davis, William Franklin (Eng.) ........................................................Blantons, Va. Decker, John Laws (Hist.) ................................................. White Plains, N. Y. DiVico, Louis Paul (Biol.) ..................................................N. Tarrytown, N. Y. Dix, Fitchett Trower (Soc.) ..............................................................Eastville, Va. Dudley, Jack Saunders (Biol.) ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Dvorschak, Carl Kissel (Biol.) ....................................................Wallington, N. J. Eck, Sherwood Baker (Bus.) ............................................................Richmond, Va. Euting, George Lee (Bible) .............................................................Richmond, Va. Faris, Wilson Lee (Biol.) ........................................................................Keene, Va. Farnum, George Langster (Econ.) ..................................................Richmond, Va. Fenlon, Robert William ......................................................... Washington, D. C. Ferebee, Frederick Marshal (Econ.) ..............................................Richmond, Va. Filer, Robert James (Bible & Eng.) ..............................................Richmond, Va. Finnegan, William Joseph (Hist.) .................................................Richmond, Va. Fitzgerald, John Robert (Chem.) ................................... Pittsburgh, Pa. Fitzgerald, Lemuel Woodrow (Biol.) ............................................Covington, Va. Flippo, Arthur Pound ..............................................................................Doswell, Va. Fortunato, Joseph Anthony (Bus.) ..............................................Montclair, N. J. Foster, John Rhoid, Jr .........................................................................Richmond, Va. Franklin, Ralph Woodford (Bible) ........................................Fredericksburg, Va.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

91

Freed, Ivan Graham (Chem.) .... ..................Harrisonburg, Va .

Friddell, Guy Raymond (Eng ) .. ................. .....Richmond, Va.

Gano, Robert Daniel (Chem.) .... ................... Richmond, Va.

Garrison , David Oscar (Math ) .................... .....................Norfolk, Va.

Gayle, John Lefebvre (Govt.) .... ................... ...Richmond, Va.

Gentry, William Wayne (Bus ) ................ ............Richmond, Va.

George, Ellis Parsons (Biol.) .................. Richmond, Va

Gettier, Straughan Lowe (Eng.) ................ ....Norfolk, Va.

Gill, Robert O'Kennon (Soc ) ·· ············ ·Ettrick, Va.

Graham, William Brockenbrough (Bus.) ............... .Richmond, Va .

Gray, M. Jolms (Soc ) . .............................. ..........Richmond, Va.

Griffin, John David (Bus .) ....... ....................... ..Poquoson, Va.

Grigg, John Edward (Biol.) ..................... ..........Richmond, Va.

Gross, Jerome (Bus.) ... ........................... Richmond, Va.

Gwathemy, Owen (Chem.) . ................. .........Beulabville, Va.

Haden, Walter Wightman (Chem ) ................. .......Fife, Va

Harris, John Marshall (Chem.) ......................... ....Ventnor, N. J .

Hathaway, Robert Morse ........................ ..Pl easantville, N. Y

Horsley, John Cabell (Bus.) .... .................. ...Schuyler , Va. Howell, Alton Leroy (Eng.) ................ ................Richmond, Va.

Hudson, Harvey Lee , Jr. (Eng ) ................ Richmond, Va. Hughes, Rupert Stanley , Jr. (Chem.) .. .............Richmond, Va Humbert, Richard Elmer (Biol.) . ................... ......Suffolk, Va.

Huneycutt, James Wilson (Phys.) .................... .Richmond, Va .

Irby, Moreland Russell (Phys.) ............... Richmond, Va.

Jackson , William Walter ............ ................... .Richmond, Va . Jacobs, Alexander Samuel (Chem.) ....... ..........Petersburg , Va

Jarvis, Floyd Eldridge, Jr. (Chem.) ... .................... .Richmond, Va.

Jennings , Fred Albert, Jr. (Chem.) ··········- ················Richmond, Va.

Johnson, Samuel Linden (Econ.) ................. Harper ' s Ferry, W. Va

Jones, Cecil Franklin (Bus.) .................. ............Richmond, Va

Jones, Clarence Bailey (Soc ) ..... ................ Pendleton, N. C. Katz, Maxwell David (Psych .) . ................ Montclair, N. J . Kellison, James Bruce (Econ.) ............... .............Richmond, Va Keyser, Hugh Latimer (Chem.) . ....................... ..Richmond, Va . King, Thomas Edwin .... .................. ....Marlinton, W. Va Klein, Edward Milton (Bus.) .... .................. Bridgeport, Conn. Knipe, Sydney Huntley, Jr (Bus.) ........ .....Glen Ridge, N. J. Kraft, Richard Harrington (Psych.) . ............... ......Richmond, Va

Lamm, George Benton (Bus . ) ... .................. .....Dunn , N. C. Langford, William Ernest, Ji:. (Bus.) ................... .Richmond, Va. Leake, Hunter Trevelian , Jr. (Bus.) ...........................Richmond, Va. MacKenzie, William Allister (Psych .) .. ...........Roadstown, N J. McCammon , Samuel Douglas , Jr (Bible) ................. Richmond, Va. McVay, Thomas Harold, Jr. (Chem.) ........ ................Norfolk , Va

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Mallery, William Clifford (Eng.) ........................ ....................Richmond, Va. Manley, Jack Hamilton (Eng.) ........................................................Buchanan, Va. Marable, Dall ace Elmo (Eng.) ................................................Newport News, Va. Martin, Theodore Tucker ( Chem.) ..................................................Towson, Md. Metzger, William Henry, Jr. (Chem.) ..................Richmond, Va. Michaelson, Joseph Bernard (Chem.) ............................................Richmond, Va. Miller, George Kenneth (Hist.) ............... ..............................Richmond, Va. Miller, Jerry Gerson (Bus.) ............................. Fredericksburg, Va. Miller, William Edwin, Jr. (Bus.) .......... ...................Richmond, Va. Mitchell, Stephen Lord (Bus.) ........................... Martinsville, Va. Mooney, Ernest Warner, Jr. (Eng.) ........................................ Petersburg, Va. Nichols, Richard Baxter, Jr. (Math.) ................................. ........Richmond, Va. Owen, Richard Clement, Jr. (Bus.) ....................................................Norfolk, Va. Owens, Spencer (Bible) ......................................... ..................Portsmouth, Va. Pace, Warren Maxwell (Bus.) .... ...................................Bloomfield, N. J. Pearman, Roland Luther ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Perkins, Horace Eugene (Chem.) ........................................ .......Richmond, Va. Phillips, Gordon Franklin (Biol.) ..................................................Pocahontas, Va. Pohlig, Oscar August, Jr. (Bus.) ...................................................Richmond, Va. Pregeant, Victor Eugene (Econ.) ....................................................Richmond, Va. Price, Harvey Benson (Econ.) ............................................................Phoebus, Va. Pusey, Rollo I van, Jr. (Soc.) ............................................................Richmond, Va. Rhodes, Meredith Watkins (Bus.) ..........................................University of Rich. Richardson, Straughan Stafford, Jr. (Bus.) ........................................Lillian, Va. Roach, Arthur Park, Jr. (Eng.) ...................................... ......Rochester, N. Y. Robertson, David Lauder, Jr. (Econ.) ............................................Pelham, N. Y. Rose, Frank Lafayette, Jr. (Hist.) ....................................................Windsor, Va. Sadler, George William, Jr. (Eng.) ................................................Richmond, Va. Sampayo, Hector Manuel.. ..................................................San Juan, Puerto Rico Sandridge, William Alfred (Econ.) ........................................ Richmond, Va. Sasmor, Daniel Joseph (Chem.) ................. .....................................Bronx, N. Y. Satterfield, Dave Edward, III.. ......................................................Richmond, Va. Schools, John Augustine (Bus.) ......................................................Richmond, Va. Sheintoch, Martin (Biol.) .................................... .............Petersburg, Va. Skinner, Wilbur Lester (Govt.) ......................................................Richmond, Va. Smith, James Ray ..................................................... ..................Portsmouth, Va. Snead, Harry Lamont, Jr. (Econ.) ....................................Colonial Heights, Va. Spahn, Philip (Bus.) ...............................................................................Rutland, Vt. Spiers, Lawrence Earl, Jr. (Bus.) ....................................................Richmond, Va. Stafford, Vernon Carleton ....................................... ........................Richmond, Va. Sternberg, Alexander Bernard (Drama) ........................................Richmond, Va. Thistlethwaite, James Richard (Chem.) ........................................Richmond, Va. Thomas, Harding Lester (Biol.) ..................................................Martinsville, Va. Traylor, John Marshall (Chem.) ......................................................Richmond, Va. Turner, Edwin Randolph (Chem.) .................................................Hopewell, Va.

Vogt, Elmo Jenkins (Hist.)

Trevilians, Va. Watts, Stanley Saul (Chem.) ............................................................Richmond, Va. Wermuth, Scott Henry, Jr. (Bus.) '............Richmond, Va. West, Elmer Stone, Jr. (Chem.) ........................................................Mayslick, Ky. Wheeler, Alfred McAllister (Bus.) Fredericksburg, Va. Wheeler, Frank Edge (Bus.) ............................................................Arlington, Va. White, Harold Mitchell (Soc.) ......................................................Windsor, N. C. White, Stanley Wise ......................................................................................Odd, Va. Whitehead, Claude Montreville, Jr. (Bus.) ....................................Richmond, Va. Wholey, Walter Daniel (Soc.) ................................................Fredericksburg, Va. Wilkinson, William Bernard (Phys.) ............................................McKenney, Va. Williams, Richard Kennon ................................................................Richmond, Va. Williams, Richard Preston ................................................................Richmond, Va. Willing, Mark Skinner, Jr. (Phys.)

Mt. Holly, Va. Wilson, Calvin LeRoy (Bus.) ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Winston, Beverly Kone, Jr. (Biol.) Richmond, Va. Zicafoose, Harold Caleb ......................................................................Richmond, Va.

SOPHOMORE CLASS

Adams, James Belt ..................................................................................Halifax, Va. Adams, Ray Franklin ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Adams, William Burdette ....................................................................Centralia, Va. Armstrong, Thomas Weedon, Jr Culpeper, Va. Atkins, Herbert Adolphus, Jr ...........................................................Richmond, Va. Bain, James Wilson ........................................................................Brooklyn, N. Y.

Barney, Philip ......................................................................................Petersburg, Va. Baroody, Alfred Fred ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Baylor, Richard Norton ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Bohannon, John -Franklin Richmond, Va. Bourne, Chester Winfield Layton Quantico, Va. Bowden, Edward Eley ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Brenner, Louis Richmond, Va. Bristow, William Edmund ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Brown, Forrest Whitfield, Jr .............................................................Richmond, Va. Brumble, William David ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Bryan, William James, Jr ...................................................................Richmond, Va. Buford, Charles Walthall, Jr Scarsdale, N. Y. Burnett, Clem Fitch, Jr .......................................................................Richmond, Va.

Butler, Henry Montt ......................................................Santiago, Dominican Rep. Butler, Howard Washington, Jr .......................................................Richmond, Va.

Chandler, William Boswell... .............................................University of Richmond Clarke, Garland Lewis ................................................................Lawrenceville, Va.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Coffman, John Milton ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Conklin, Edward Gordon ....................................................................Rockville, Md. Coor, Ronald Gordon, Jr .....................................................................Richmond, Va.

Coulter, Raymond Bernard, Jr .............................................................Ashland, Va.

Crabtree, George William ..................................................Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Creadick, William Reynolds, J r .................................................Bridgeport, Conn.

Culyer, Robert Piercy ................................................................Port Chester, N. Y. Dabney, Edwin Price ........,.................................................................Richmond, Va.

Drake, Linwood Crumpler, Jr. ........................................Sunbeam, Handsom, Va. Edwards, Richard Lee ......................................................................Petersburg, Va. Ellis, Pierce Sartorius, Jr ...............................................................Tallahassee, Fla. Ellwanger, Albert Thompson, Jr ...........................................................Gladys, Va. Elmore, Fletcher Leigh, Jr .....................................................................Alberta, Va. Elmore, John Milton, Jr .....................................................................Richmond, Va. Eppes, Edward Mitchell, IIL. ............................................................Richmond, Va.

Erickson, Robert Melvin Henry ................................................Jamestown, N. Y. Farmer, Harvey Thompson, Jr .........................................................Richmond, Va. Feeley, Hugh Anthony ........................................................ N ew Philadelphia, Pa. Feinberg, Herbert Edward ..............................................................Brooklyn, N. Y. Fenlon, Patrick Ignatius ..............................................................Washington, D. C. Flannagan, Allen Waddell, Jr .................................................................Louisa, Va.

Flax, Donald ..............................................................................................Exmore, Va. Fleming, John Wilkinson ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Flowers, William Livingstone ......................................................Brooklawn, N. J. Fore, Philip Winfree, Jr .......................................................................Culpeper, Va.

Foster, Junius Edward, Jr .....................................................................Hudgins, Va. Frank, Raymond J arvice ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Friedenberg, Milton David .....................,..........................................Petersburg, Va. Garbett, Julius Stanley ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Garvey, William David ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Gasser, George Bershold, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va. Gatten, Ernest Burdette, Jr ............ ..................................................Richmond, Va. Gindhart, Charles Frederick, Jr .............................................Newport News, Va. Graham, Paul Joseph ........................................................................Brooklyn, N. Y. Hall, Charles Greer ..............................................................................Richmond, Va. Hall, George Francis, Jr ...................................................................Brentwood, Md. Hamner, Earl Henry, Jr .......................................................................Schuyler, Va. Hart, Frank Bacon, Jr .........................................................................Richmond, Va. Hatcher, James Thomas, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va. Higinbotham, Don Fay ..............................................................Bridgeport, W. Va. Holloman, Henry Curtis ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Holt, Douglas Morris ..........................................................................Richmond, Va. Horne, Linwood Tyler ............................................................................Norfolk, Va. Hubbard, James Frederick ..................................................................Bon Air, Va. Hughes, Thomas Parke ......................................................................Richmond, Va.

Jacobs, Alvin David .....................·-----································Petersburg, Va. Janssen, Carl Andrew ......................•···-------························Chester, Va.

Jeffreys, Herndon Philpott ...............·---·····························Chase City, Va. Jett, Henry Lee ........................................................................................Reedville Va.

Johnson, Thomas Ellis, Jr------··································Richmond, Va. Jones, Benjamin Thomas ..........•·······-----····························Richmond, Va. Jones, Bertram Alfred ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Jones, Linwood Garland. .....................................................................Richmond, Va. Jones, Thaddeus Wallace ......................................................................Cheriton, Va. Kantor, Leonard Jack. New York, N. Y. Keppler, Philip ....•·······················--···--··········································Richmond, Va. King, Casper Sidney .................·-----·····························Lynchburg, Va.

Kinsey, Eugene Edward, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va. Laurinaitis, Francis lgnatius ..............................................New Philadelphia, Pa. Lawler, Courtney Franklin ........................................................Clifton Forge, Va. Lawrence, Robert Spencer ................................................................Richmond, Va. Lee, Frank Harrison ............................................................................Richmond, Va. Lloyd, William Harry ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Long, Robert Clifton ............................................................................Richmond, Va. Longaker, Horace George, Jr ...................................................Newport News, Va. Lowery, Richard Wilborn ..................................................................,...Halifax, Va. Lubman, Melvin Vernon ....................................................................Petersburg, Va. Luttrell, Oscar Edwyn, Jr .................................................................Baltimore, Md.

Macllwaine, William Andrew University, Va. McClanahan, Berry Judson ................................................................Richmond, Va. McClaren, Samuel Lee ............................................................................Summit, Va. Madigan, John Quinten ..............................................Queens Village, L. I., N. Y. Mallory, Dudley Walton, Jr Richmond, Va. Mears, William J oseph........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Miller, Louis Franklin ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Miller, William Frederick. Madison, Conn. Moffett, Brooke Miller ....................................................................Washington, Va. Moncure, Richard Cassius Lee Richmond, Va. Moseley, William Vincent, Jr ...............:...........................................Richmond, Va. Nichols, Thomas William New Rochelle, N. Y. Oliver, George Jeffries, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va. Paredes, Oswald Ogden ........................................................................Centralia, Va. Pasternack, Sidney ..............................................................................Hartford, Conn. Phipps, William Henry ............ : Richmond, Va.

Pinger, Harvey ................................................................................Bronxville, N. Y.

Poteat, Wallace Bagby ............................................................................Chester, Pa. Proffitt, John Stephen Richmond, Va. Read, John Lewis, Jr ...........................................................................Camden, N. J. Reynolds, George Edward Richmond, Va.

Rhodenhiser, Oscar William, Jr ...............................................................Osaka, Va.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Roper, William Young, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va. Rose, John Bertrand, Jr .....................................................................Richmond, Va. Rouzie, John Ben, Jr ...........................................................................Richmond, Va. Satterwhite, William Eldridge ................................... ................Richmond, Va. Savage, Ulysses Settle, J r ...................................................................Phoebus, Va. Scheerer, William Francis ..................................................................Pottsville, Pa. Sheaffer, Wilbur Maxton ....................................................................Richmond, Va.

Sizer, Houston Boyd ................••···············-··························•············•···Roanoke, Va. Skorapa, Victor Anthony ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Slate, Carlton Lee .................... ....................................................Petersburg, Va. Smith, William Moses, J r .......................................................................Dillwyn, Va. Snead, Edwin Judson, Jr ...................,......................... Fork Union, Va. Snead, William Roswell ......................................................................Covington, Va. Stansbury, Warren Aubrey

Va.

Steadman, Bruce Able ..................................................................Pinetops, N. C. Stoutamire, Albert Lucian ..................................................................Richmond, Va.

Tapscott, Lawrence Lee ...................... ..............Scottsville, Va. Teass, Richard Ferrell, Jr .................................................................Petersburg, Va.

Trotter, William Augustus, III.. ..................................................Clarksville, Va. Tu, Wei-Yoen ......................................................................................Shanghai, China

Vaughn, John Walter ....................................................................Hammonton, N. J Walke, Roger Taylor ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Walker, Aubrey Max .............................................................. Clifton Forge, Va.

Walthall, William Warren, Jr ..................... ..................... Richmond, Va.

Wampler, H. Melvin ............................................................................Richmond, Va.

Wash, Robert William, Jr ......................................... .............Apple Grove, Va. Waters, Leland Hubert, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va

Weiss, Milton ..................................................... ..............................Richmond, Va. Williams, Edwin Thomas ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Williams, Howard Mack. .............................................................Laurinburg, N. C. Williams, Richard Kennon ................................................................Richmond, Va. Wright, Robert Sturdevant ............................................................Metuchen, N. J.

Wyatt, Jphn Mitchell, IIL ...............................................................Richmond, Va. Wyatt, Robert Franklin, Jr ...................................... .....................Townsend, Va. Zacharias, Charles Merriwether .............................................. .......Richmond, Va. Zuber, John Charles ................................................................... ...Monroe, N. Y.

FRESHMAN CLASS

Ancarrow, Newton Hopper ................................................................Richmond, Va. Anderton, Roland Bush, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va. Armstrong, Andrew Adams, Jr .........................................................Richmond, Va. Ashworth, David William ......... ...............................................Richmond, Va.

Atkinson, James Harold ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Atkinson, John Jr .................................................................................Richmond, Va. Avery, Clarence Philip, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va. Baggett, Durward Earl, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va. Baker, Frank William ....................................................................Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Baker, John Hancock ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Ballard, Leonard Weakley ..............................................................Shelbyville, Ky. Bane, Ned Barbee Pulaski, Va. Barnett, Richard Milan .........................................................................Roanoke, Va.

Barrett, Gerald Walker, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va. Beale, Barkley DeRoy ...........................................................................Nathalie, Va. Bloom, Henry Tucker ........................................................................Camden, N. J. Booker, Clifton Hite ............................................................................Richmond, Va Boothe, Archie McKensie, J r ...............................................................Roanoke, Va. Bradley, Robert Sherman Branford, Conn. Branch, David vVare Richmond, Va. Bricker, Elwood Emanuel... Richmond, Va. Brown, Horace Marshall... .................................................Charles Town, W. Va. Brown, Irby Barnett.. .........................................................................Richmond, Va. Bucceroni, Joseph Louis ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Bullock, Robert Allen, J r .....................................................................Blantons, Va. Burruss, William Russell... Richmond, Va. Bushnell, George Frederick ..............................................................Kingston, N. Y. Carter, Lawson Courtney, Jr ...............................................................Hampton, Va. Cash, Lawrence Moler Ricbmond, Va. Caulkins, Charles Whitney, Jr Leesburg, Va. Ciola, Louis Alexandria .......................................................................... N orfolk, Va. Clarke, Walter Gustavus, Jr. ............................................................Midlothian, Va. Coats, Robert Kennon Richmond, Va. Codd, John Alexander ......................................................................Portsmouth, Va. Conner, William Stewart.. .......................................... .........Hanover, Va. Cosby, William Joseph Richmond, Va. Councill, William J ulius ......................................................................Hampton, Va. Cox, Joseph Powhatan .................................................................Gordonsville, Va. Crump, Thaddeus Talley ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Curtis, Thomas Jefferson ..................................... .........Richmond, Va. Decker, Henry Chesley ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Decker, William MarshalL ....................................................White Plains, N. Y. Delgado, Alfredo, Jr ...............................................................Mexico City, Mexico Derdevanis, Louis John .....................................................................Richmond, Va. Dickiwon, Vivian Earl..... \ Bump;,ss, Va. Doud, Frederick Whitman Carbondale, Pa. Dunnavant, Robert Hamilton....... .................. .......Richmond, Va. Eanes, Walter Francis........................... Richmond, Va. Egan, Robert Joseph Worcester, Mass.

98

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Elliott, Jack Emerson ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Ellis, Charles Durrett ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Emert, John Merle ....................................................................................Dillwyn, Va.

Ende, Norman ......................................................................................Petersburg, Va.

Endicott, George Robert ......................................................................Richmond, Va.

Evans, Francis Andrew ........................................................................Pottsville, Pa.

Fields, William Jack. .............. ...........................................Mouth of Wilson, Va.

Filling, James Hill, Jr .......................................................................Woodville, Va.

Fine, Jack Paul ......................................................................................Richmond, Va.

Finlayson, Alec Wakefield ..................................................................Hopewell, Va.

Fisch, Benjamin ....................................................................Newport News, Va.

Fisher, Richard Harding .......................................... .........................Roanoke, Va. Fitzgerald, William W ade ..................................................................Covington, Va.

Gambill, Charles Joseph, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va.

Garnett, Reuben Berkeley ................................................................Beulahville, Va.

Gates, Alfred Percy, Jr ...................................................................West Point, Va. Gentry, Walter Carroll, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va.

Gill, Herbert Coghill... .............................................................................Ettrick, Va. Gleason, John Craddock. .......................................................................Roanoke, Va.

Goldstein, Reuben ................................................................................Richmond, Va.

Gorman, Richard Francis ..................................................................Lynchburg, Va.

Greenberg, David Jeremiah ................................................................Richmond, Va. Haake, Edward Call. .............................................................................Richmond, Va. Hague, James Richard ........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Hale, Howard Benjamin ..............................................................Edwardsville, Va.

Hall, Cleve Gordon, J r .......................................................................Richmond, Va.

Hall, Cleveland Edward ....................................................................South Hill, Va.

Harding, George Stanley, Jr .............................................................Richmond, Va. Hare, Ray Maxey, Jr. ...................................................................Chevy Chase, Md. Harper, Fleming Bates, Jr ............................................................Portsmouth, Ohio Hauft, Arthur Benton ..................................................................Hempstead, N. Y. Heffernan, James Dannehl... ...................................................Fredericksburg, Va. Heffner, Edgar Franklin ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Holleman, Joseph Howard, J r .................................................................Surry, Va. Houghton, Robert Allen. .....................................................................Berryville, Va. Hubbard, James Edward, ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Hubbard, Seth Roger ................ .......................................................Brooklyn, N. Y. Imburg, J erome ......................................................................................Richmond, Va. Irby, Edward Crawley ........................................................................Kenbridge, Va. Janson, Lars Edward ............................................................................Arlington, Va. Jennings, Thomas Henry ................................................................Appomattox, Va. Jewett, Jeremiah J onathan .............................. ..................................Richmond, Va. Johnson, Edward Allen ......................................................................Arlington, Va. Johnson, James Rainey ............................................................................ N orfolk, Va. Johnson, James Shirley ........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Jones, Claud t, Curtis .......... .......... .............................Ar ca dia, Fla . Jordan, Hildred Dallas, Jr ............. ........... ...................Ri chmoud, Va. Jurgens , Charles Davis ...... .......... .......... ..Bon A ir , Va . Keefer, David Ewing ............. ............. ...................Alex andri a, Va. Kennedy, Robert Carr ......... ........... ........Richm ond, Va. Kent, Robert Lee . ......... ,. ........... ......................Richm ond, Va. Ke ssler, Wilbur Murdock. . .............. ........... ..................Richm ond, V a King, William Charles, Jr ......... .............. .............. ..Ri chmond, V a Kingery , Charles Fisher .............. ....................... ..Rocky Mount, Va. Knight, William Irvin , J r . ........... ........... Ri chmond, Va. Knighton, Guy Wilford ............. ............... ..................Ri chmoncl , V a Knox, Thomas Bayly ....... ........... .............. Northfi eld, N. J. Kramer, William Case .............. ............. ..................St Alban s, N Y Kronenbitter, Robert Page . ............ ............... ...................L eonia, N. J. LaLuna, Generoso Joseph ....: ............ ......... O ssining, N . Y .

Leaming, Hugo Prosper .. ......... ............. .......Richm ond, Va .

Leath, Thomas Hewlett ... ............... .......... Richm oncl, Va. Lee, William Bradford ............... ............... .............. Richmo nd, Va. Leonard, Thomas Benjamin, Jr ............... ............ Ric hmond, Va.

Lester, Thomas Graham, Jr .~.. ........... ........... ..Ri chmond, Va. Lockey , William Hut chison, Jr ....... ............. .......Ri chmond, Va . Loomer , Elvin Cofer ......... ........... ............. Smithfi eld , Va. Luck, William Tyree, J r ..... ........... ............... .......Richm ond, Va. Ludlam, William Francis . ........... ............. .Glen Allen , Va. Lumpkin, Robert J oseph .............. ........... ......Richm on cl, Va. Lusby, Frederick, Stanley . ............. ............. .Arlin gton, Va. MacKinlay , Donald Albert... .... ............. _......White Plai ns, N. Y.

McOure, William West .... ............. ..........................Ri chmond, Va McLeod, Wilmore Randolph .... ............. ........... .Glen Allen , Va.

Mabry, Jesse Hughes, Jr .... ............... ..................... .Newport News, V a. Magee, Benjamin Harrison .......... .................... Ri chmond, Va. Malay, Richard Edward . ........... ........................... ......Ri chmond, Va. Mann, Frank William, Jr ... ........... .............. Richm ond, Va. Mardan , Omar Van W alkup .... .............. ........... .Richmond, Va. Martin, John Loyd ............... .......... ................. White P ost , Va. Martin , Malcolm Bruce .. ........... .............. ............ La nex a , Va. Matthews, Orville Courtney, Jr .... .............. .............. ......Hot Sprin gs, Va. Mattox, Conard Blunt.. . ................. ........... ............ Gr etna , Va. Michelle, Paul Bradenham, J r .......... ............... ........Ri chmond, Va. Miles, Carroll Emory . ........... ................. ........Rocky Mount , Va. Millhiser, Kenneth ...... ............. ............... ......Richmond, Va . Mills, Carroll W elford .......... ............... .......... .Richmond , Va. Minor, Philip Lee Allen ................ ..................................... .Richm ond, Va. Mitler, Milton Donald ........ ........... .............. New York, N. Y. Moore, Howard White ............... ............ ............ .Richm ond, Va.

100

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Moran, Bernard Vincent, Jr .............................................................Petersburg, Va.

Morgan, James Pierpont ......................................................................Altavista, Va.

Moses, Charles Anthony ....................................................................Richmond, Va.

Motley, Charles Gayle ........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Mundy, Harry Robert ............................................................................Roanoke, Va.

Murphy, Allen Thomas, Jr. ................................................................Richmond, Va.

Mylius, Charles Woodford, Jr .................................... Richmond, Va.

Nash, Edwin Bracey .......................................Blackstone, Va.

Niedermayer, Marvin Adolph ............................................................Richmond, Va.

Oglesby, Allan Campbell... .................................................................Richmond, Va.

Oliver, John Princewood, Jr .............................................................Richmond, Va.

Oppenheim, Lewyn ..........Ar lingt on, Va.

Parker, Walter Leroy ..........................................................Richmond, Va.

Pattie, Clagett Harry, Jr Richmond, Va.

Perrin, Harry John .............................................................................Richmond, Va.

Porrata, Charles Francis ........................................................Santurce, Puerto Rico Powell, Maynard Robert, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va.

Pyles, Albert Harvey ....................................................... Chevy Chase, Md.

Quaintance, Rupert Wilson, Jr Lundale, W. Va.

Rackett, Reynolds Holman ............................................. Richmond, Va.

Ralston, Edward Eubank. ...................................................................Richmond, Va.

Reid, James Herbert, Jr. ............................................. Ethel, W. Va.

Reid, Leslie Earle ................................................Richmond, Va.

Reynolds, Alfred Smith ......................................................................Richmond, Va.

Richard, Carroll Jordan ......................................................................Covington, Va.

Ritchie, George Gordon, Jr ......................................................... Richmond, Va.

Roberts, Lucien Wood, Jr ...................................................................Richmond, Va.

Robinson, William Henry .................................................... Richmond, Va.

Rolfe, Norman ......... New York, N. Y.

Russinoff, Albert ..................................................................................Richmond, Va.

Sagendorf, Jack Bertolette Fairfax, Va.

Saleeby, Albert Vernon ........................................................................Hopewell, Va.

Saunders, Thomas Archer ..............................................................South Hill, Va.

Savage, Bernard Manuel ....................................................................Richmond, Va.

Saxby, Edward Stanley ......................................................................Richmond, Va.

Seymour, Morse Gustave ............................................................Salamanca, N. Y.

Shaia, Edward Harry ..........................................................................Richmond, Va.

Shelton, Alonzo Garland, Jr ...............................................................Richmond, Va.

Shepherd, Francis DuVal, Jr .............................................................Richmond, Va.

ShepP.e, Ernest Irving, J r ...................................................................Richmond, Va.

Silianoff, Steve ........................................................................Wilmerding, Pa.

Simpson, Otho Owens .........................................................................Falmouth, Va.

Sims, Wilbur Montgomery ................................................................Richmond, Va.

Sinclair, William Thomas, Jr. ..........................................................Petersburg, Va.

Slaughter, Charles Wilmer ..................................................... Richmond, Va.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND

Smith, Horace Lilburn ........................................................................Richmond, Va. Smith, Hubert Fay ............................................................................Columbia, S. C. Smith, Ray Milton ................................................................................Richmond, Va. Solomon, Joseph Alpheus ....................................................................Arlington, Va. Spence, Emmet Leslie, !11................................................................Richmond, Va. Spigel, Fred Dave ................................................................................Richmond, Va. Starritt, William Baker ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Steigleder, Henry Robert ..........................................................Bowling Green, Va. Storey, Carl Clinton ........................................................................Portsmouth, Va. Swann, Charles Edward ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Sweeney, John Fenton, Jr ...................................................................Richmond, Va. Taliaferro, Hunter Halsey ............................................................Hot Springs, Va. Taylor, Preston James ................................................................................Keller, Va. Taylor, Virgil Deitrick. .....................................................................Mappeville, Va. Thompson, Harry Leigh ....................................................................Richmond, Va. Thornton, Andrew Thomas, J r ...........................................................Roanoke, Va. Thurston, Gordon Willson ................................................................:.Richmond, Va. Trainham, William Emory, Jr .....................................................Front Royal, Va. Tucker, Jesse Miller, J r .....................................................................Richmond, Va. Tutwiler, Kenneth Gray ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Unger, Samuel Hirsh ........................................................................Petersburg, Va. Van Allen, Kenneth Edward ............................................................Scottsville, Va. Van Doren, Matthew Fontaine Maury ............................................Richmond, Va. Velenovsky, Edwin J oseph ..................................................................Eastport, Md. Wagstaff, Chester Lee Roy ..............................................................McKenney, Va. Walker, Harry Charles, Jr ..............................................................Richmond, Va. Wilbourne, Jack Bradbury ....................................................................Roanoke, Va. Wiley, James Hundley, J r .................................................................Richmond, Va. Williams, George Patteson, Jr .........................................................Richmond, Va. Winder, Raymond Clyde....................................................................Richmond, Va. Wooten, Oscar Smith ..........................................................................Camden, S. C. Wright, James Roscoe ............................................................................Rapidan, Va. Yeatts, Otey Coleman ........ ...................................................................Penhook, Va. Yoffey, Lawrence Morton ..................................................................Richmond, Va. Young, David Thomas, Jr ..........................................................Richmond, Va. Young, Herman Wilton ......................................................................Richmond, Va. Zava, Thomas Eugene ............................................................................Victoria, Va.

SPECIAL STUDENT

Belmont, Pasquale ..................................................................................Richmond, Va.

STUDENTS IN AVIATION ONLY

Allen, Richard Newman ................................................................Gordonsville, Va. Crowder, Charles Womack, Jr ...........................................................Richmond, Va.

Dennis, John Stokely ....................••·····----·····························Blackstone,Va.

Ghazarian, Aghavni ..............................................................................Richmond, Va. Grinnan, Daniel, IV ............................................................................Richmond, Va.

Huckstep, Julian Brindleton. ................---·································Ellerson, Va. Hundley, Charles Proctor ..................................................................Dunnsville, Va.

Kent, Joseph Francis, Jr

Va. Marr, William Thomas ..........................................................................Norfolk, Va. Miltz, George Edwin ............................................................................Richmond, Va.

O'Connor, Frederick Merrill.·----·······-·································Richmond, Va. Olsson, Carl Arne ..............................................................................West Point, Va. Palmer, Milton Meade........................................................................Richmond, Va. Smith, Parke Farr ................·------······

Snelling, Wilton Oscar, Jr .................................................................Richmond, Va. Starke, Harold Eugene ..........................................................................Ashland, Va. Straus, Raymond I., J r .......................................................................Richmond, Va. Welton, Chauncey Goode....................................................................Richmond, Va.

Faculty Offices and Office Hours

AHRENS, F. C. ( Q. Adm. Bldg.) M. W. F. 10 :30; T. Th. S. 11 :30.

ALBRIGHT,C. L. (14 Phys. Bldg.) M. 8:30, 9:30.

ALLEY,R. E. (111 Phys. Bldg.) T. Th. S. 11 :30.

AsTROP,R. C. (1()() Biol. Bldg.) T. Th. S. 11 :30.

BAILEY,J. W. (101 Biol. Bldg.) T. Th. S. 10 :30.

BALL, L. F. (Sl Adm. Bldg.) M.-S. 10:30.

CARVER,M. E. (106 Biol. Bldg.) M.-S. 10 :30.

CAYLOR,W. F. (Gym.) M. W. F. 9:30; T. Th. S. 10:30.

CousINs, S. B. (Tower Room, Adm. Bldg.) M.-F. 11 :30; M. T. Th. 12:30; M.-F. 2:30.

GAINES,R. E. (205 Phys. Bldg.) M. W. F. 11 :30.

GAINES,W. J. (8 Chem. Bldg.) M. W. F. 10 :30; T. Th. S. 9 :30.

GRABLE,E. S. (207 Phys. Bldg.) M. W. F. 10:30; T. Th. S. 9 :30.

HACKLEY,W. B. (212 Biol. Bldg.) M. W. F. 10 :30; T. Th. S. 10 :30.

HARLAN,R. (212 Biol. Bldg.) M. W. F. 9 :30.

HENDERSON,F. 0. (S2 Adm. Bldg.) M. W. F. 10 :30; T. Th. S. 9 :30.

HOLTZCLAW,B. C. (Personnel Office) M. W. F. 11 :30; T. Th. S. 10:30.

KEY, F. B. (207 Phys. Bldg.) M. W. F. 10:30; T. Th. S.11 :30.

LAVENDER,T. E. (12 Chem. Bldg.) M. W. F. 11 :30; T. Th. S. 9:30.

LOVING,R. E. (112 Phys. Bldg.) M. W. F. 10:30; T. Th. S. 10:30.

McDANEL, R. C. (P Adm. Bldg.) M.-S. 10 :30.

MATTHEWS,S. T. (P Adm. Bldg.) M.-S. 11 :30.

MILLER,F. B. (12 Chem. Bldg.) M. W. F. 11 :30; T. Th. S. 10:30.

MITCHELL,S. C. (P Adm. Bldg.) M. W. F.10:30; T. Th. S.10:30.

MODLIN,G. M. ( 11 Chem. Bldg.) M. W. F. 9 :30; T. Th. S. 11 :30.

MYERS,H. I. (14 Biol. Bldg.) M. W. F. 9:30, 10:30.

NETTLES,J. E. (Alumni Office) M. W. F. 10 :30.

PEPLE,E. C. ( S2 Adm. Bldg.) M.-S. 9 :30.

PIERCE,J. S. (206 Chem. Bldg.) M. W. F. 11 :30; T. Th. S. 11 :30.

PINCHBECK, R. B. (Dean's Office) M. W. F. 8 :30, 9 :30, 11 :30; T. Th. S. 10 :30, 11 :30.

PRINCE,W. L. (Sum. Sch. Office) M. W.12:30; T. Th. 12:30.

SKINNER, N. W. (Q. Adm. Bldg.) M. W. F. 9:30; T. Th. S. 9:30.

RYLAND,G. (106 Chem. Bldg.) M. W. F. 11 :30; T. Th. S. 12:30.

SMART,R. F. (201 Biol. Bldg.) T. Th. S. 9 :30, 10:30.

SNYDER,W. F. (S2 Adm. Bldg.) M. W. F. 9 :30.

STEVENSON,S. W. (Sl Adm. Bldg.) M. W. F. 11 :30; T. Th. S. 10:30.

THOMAS, H. P. (11 Chem. Bldg.) M. W. F. 10:30; T. Th. S. 11 :30.

WHEELER,C.H. (205 Phys. Bldg.) M. W. F. 11 :30; T. Th. S. 10:30.

WHITTEN, A. I. (105 Chem. Bldg.) M. W. F. 10:30; T. Th. S. 10:30.

WILLIAMS, A. (Playhouse) M. W. F. 9 :30; T. Th. S. 9 :30.

WRAY, C. B. (3 Biol. Bldg.) M. W. F. 11 :30; T. Th. S. 10:30.

OF ROOMS

B-S-Administrativ e Building. Bb-Biolog y Building .

Cb-Chemistry Building MRT-Marionette Repertory Theatre, W. C.

Pb-Physics Building . PHPlayhous e *For additional information concerning the schedule of classes in the Department of Fine Arts, consult a member of that faculty .

WHITIET 6 PIIINTEIIS, IIICHMOND, VA

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