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ECONOMICS DRAWING, GENERAL 1. 183 ENGINEERING ELEMENTS OF DRAFTING.—This work is designed as a gen- eral preparation for drafting in all its branches. The problems are arranged so as to be of practical benefit and are designed to throw the student on his own ingenuity in aplying the principles learned. This course includes in all about thirty plates. Lectures and notes. Fall term, at 8, at JO, and at 1.20, full credit. Assistant Professor PHILLIPS and Mr. WEBBER. 2. DESCRIPTIVE GEOMETRY.—This term's work includes problems relating to the point, line, and plane; the generation and classification of lines and surfaces; planes tangent to surfaces of single and of double curvature; intersections, developments, and revolutions. The application of principles and methods in numerous and varied practical problems is a large part of the work. Church's Descriptive Geometry. Winter term, at 8.20, at 10.10, and at 1.15, full credit. Assistant Professor PHILLIPS and Mr. WEBBER. Required: General Engineering Drawing 1. 3. LETTERING.—Plain and ornamental alphabets; free-hand and mechanical lettering; titles and title pages. Lectures and Notes. Spring term, at 8, at 10, and at 1.20, half credit. Assistant Professor PHILLIPS and Mr. WEBBER. Required: General Engineering Drawing 1. 4. SKETCHING.—In perspective and orthographic projections. Architectural sketch plans and details; machines, machine parts, and mechanisms. Lectures and notes. Spring term, at 8, at 10, and at i.2o, half credit. Assistant Professor PHILLIPS and Mr. WEBBER. Required: General Engineering Drawing 1, 2. 5. ADVANCE DESCRIPTIVE GEOMETRY.—Curved lines of the higher orders; higher singe curved, warped and double-curved surfaces. Church's Descriptive Geometry, with references to Warren's General Problems from the Orthographic Projections of Descriptive Geometry. Spring term, at 8, at 10, and at 1.20, three-fifths credit. Assistant Professor PHILLIPS. Required: General Engineering Drawing 1, 2. ECONOMICS 1. Introductory Course: This is a beginners' course, consisting of two parts: a. PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS.—This course is intended to give a general survey of the field of the science. Fall and winter terms, M., W., F., at 11, three-fifths credit. Dr. HAMMOND.
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