' 60 MATRICULATION CARDS THE CALIFORNIA BULLETIN PAYMENT OF BILLS DEGREE FEE A fee of $5.00 must be paid by each candidate for a degree. This charge covers the cost of the diploma. No student is consider­ ed to have met the requirement for graduation until this fee has been paid. DELINQUENT ACCOUNTS All fees are payable in advance. No student may be enrolled, graduated, receive semester grade reports, or have a transcript of his record issued until all previous charges have been paid. COST OF BOOKS The estimated cost of textbooks is $15 to $20 a semester. Stu­ dents may purchase books, materials, and other supplies through the College Book Store. REPAYMENTS Repayments will not be made to students who are temporarily suspende.d, indefinitely suspended, dismissed, or who voluntarily withdraw from the College; for any part of the advance registration deposit for any cause whatsoever, except where students give notice of intention to withdraw at least three weeks before the College opens or when the student is rejected by the College. A repayment will be made for personal illness, when this is certified to by an attending physician, or for such other reasons as may be approved by the Board of Trustees for the amount of the housing and contingent fees paid by the student for the part of the semester which the student does not spend in the College. The advance registration deposit will be returned to students provided they notify the College of their intention not to attend not less than three weeks before the opening of the 'semester or term, or provided the student is rejected by the College. 6} and room, and All bills, including the contingent fee, board r. Book Store Bursa the of office special fees must be paid at the s, checks, ex­ draft bank All . basis cash a on business is conducted d be drawn shoul and ted, press and post office money orders are accep nia. sylva to the Commonwealth of Penn e registration The Student Activity Fee must be paid on or befor passed by ation regul a to ding accor r, Bursa day, at the office of the ees. Trust of the Student Congress and approved by the Board '. MATRICULATION CARDS Upon having completed registration, students are given matri­ culation cards which entitle them to admission to the classes for which they have registered. These cards must be carried at all times and presented when requested. ' 74 32. (4) COMMERCIAL SPANISH 4 er. A study of the use of Spanish in commercial relations between United States and Spanish America. Forms of correspondence and commercial vocab­ ulary studied. 41, 42. 51, 52. (3) SPANISH-AMERICAN LITERATURE The novel and short story in Spanish-America. ings, and reports. 3 er. Lectures, outside read­ CONTEMPORARY SPANISH DRAMA (3) 3 er. GEOGRAPHY PRINCIPLES OF GEOGRAPHY ( 3) 3 er. A foundation course for further geographic study. The units of earth relations, weather, climate, maps, land forms, inland bodies of water, oceans, soils, and vegetation are treated as bases for interpretation of earth regions. Special devices and methods are also emphasized. Prerequisite to all other courses in Geography. 21. ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY ..35. (3) 3 er. COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL GEOGRAPHY (3) 3 er. An interpretative survey of- the commerce and industry of the United States in relation to other regions of the world. Geographic conditions af­ fecting industry, production, and commerce of the world; developments and relations of commercial areas to location, availability of resources and to markets form the core of this course. 36. Studies in the modern drama with reading pf representative works. 1. 75 GEOGRAPHY THE CALIFORNIA BULLETIN CONSERVATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES (3) 3 er. Major governmental projects, minerals, water resources, plant resources, and soil are studied. Teachers of geography, economics, and history will find the content of this course well suited to their needs as it gives students a broader concept pf natural resources. 37. GEOGRAPHY OF ASIA ( 3) 3 er. The chief emphasis of this course is a regional analysis of the Asiatic continent. However, the economic and political phases of the area will be stressed as well as its interdependence with other portions of the world. 38. GEOGRAPHY OF AUSTRALASIA-AFRICA (3) 3 er. Consideration is given to the part economic conditions, as they exist today, play in the inter-relations of the countries of the world. Special emphasis is given to resources of typical regions as well as those from various countries. International trade relations and means of communication are analyzed and