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Show 62 WEBER COLLEGE - OGDEN, UTAH Economics Guy Harold Hurst Owen Morrell Clark Ira Joseph Markham 1. Principles of Economics. A course dealing with the fundamental principles of economics: human wants and their satisfaction, production, consumption, specialization, organization of modern business, and some fundamentals of money, credit, and prices. Three quarter hours. Autumn, Winter, Spring. Clark 2. Principles of Economics. A course giving special emphasis to: value and price, monopoly price, the actual distribution of wealth in our society, and the distribution of income among the factors of production: rent of land, wages of labor, interest on capital, and profits of business. The subject matter of Economics 1 is used as a background for this course. Three quarter hours. Winter, Spring. Clark 3. Principles of Economics. A continuation of Economics 2. Special emphasis is given to present day problems, including: taxation, agriculture, transportation, public utilities, governmental regulation of business, business cycles, unemployment, the New Deal, and various economic systems. Three quarter hours. Spring. Clark 4. Economic History of the United States. A study of the evolution of industrial society in the United States from the period of colonial development down to the present. Population, immigration, natural resources, public lands, transportation and communication, extractive and manufacturing industries, markets, commerce, financial institutions, labor, government finance, and tariff are treated. Five quarter hours. Autumn. Clark 5. Money and Banking. A course covering the theory and history of money, origin and principles of banking, functions of the bank, the clearing house, and Federal Reserve System. Five quarter hours. Spring. Markham 6. Business Finance. A course dealing with the promotion of business undertakings, forms of business organizations, stocks, bonds and notes, sale of securities, working capital, surplus and dividend policies, consolidations, and business failures and reorganizations. Five quarter hours. Autumn. Hurst 7. Economic Geography. Influence of geographic factors on the development of industry and commerce; commercial products and their regions of production; distribution and development of leading industries, continents and countries; relations of man to his geographic environment. Five quarter hours. (May not be given 1941-1942.) Clark WEBER COLLEGE - OGDEN, UTAH 63 Education John Benson 1. Principles of Education. A study of education: meaning, aims, function, and relationship to other agencies and institutions. Recommended for all desiring to teach in secondary schools. Required of all students intending to teach in the elementary grades. Three quarter hours. Autumn, Spring. Benson 2. Organization and Administration. A course dealing with: (1) Utah school law and means and agencies by which the law is administered, and (2) relationship of federal government to state and local units as defined by the State Board of Education. Required of students intending to teach in the elementary grades. Three quarter hours. Spring. Benson Engineering Merlon L. Stevenson Garnett Littlefield James McCormac 1. Mechanical Drawing. A drafting course on the use and care of drawing instruments, simple geometric problems, drawing to scale, orthographic drawings, isometric drawings, perspective drawings, working drawings, and free-hand sketching. Special emphasis is placed on free-hand lettering. Three laboratory periods a week. Three quarter hours. Autumn, Winter. Littlefield la. Advanced Mechanical Drawing. A drafting course devoted to practical drafting as applied to engineering. An attempt is made to assign problems that will fit into the various engineering fields in which the students are interested. Three laboratory periods a week. Prerequisite: Engineering 1 or its equivalent. Three quarter hours. Autumn, Winter. Littlefield 2. Engineering Drawing. A continuation of Engineering 1 and la, with special emphasis placed on auxiliary views, developing surfaces, intersecting surfaces and working drawings. One lecture and two lab oratory periods a week. Three quarter hours. Winter. Littlefield 3. Descriptive Geometry. A study of the principles and problems relating to orthogonal projection of the point, line, plane, cylinder, cone, double-curved surfaces of revolution, and warped surfaces. One lecture and two laboratory periods a week. Prerequisite: Engineering 1. Three quarter hours. Spring. Littlefield 4. Surveying. A course concerned with steel tape measurements, ranging lines, measuring angles, compass surveys, transit surveys, differential leveling, profile and cross section work, curves, grades, topographic and city surveying, including computations and platting. One lecture and one field period a week. Prerequisites: Engineering 1, Mathematics 3. Two quarter hours. Autumn. Littlefield |