GENERAL REGULATIONS 55

as free electives toward either of these degrees; provided that the total of
all electives from outside this college which may be credited by such stu-
dents shall not exceed 20 credits; and provided further that they must
secure at least 40 credits, acceptable toward such degrees, in residence in
this college.

10. ADMISSION TO THE LAW SCHOOL; PRE-LEGAL STUDIES

Students are eligible for transfer to the Law School who have (a)
completed three academic years of satisfactory work on full programs of
study (see last paragraph of section 2 above, entitled Credits and Points)
in any of the B.A. courses or in the Ph.B. General Course, and have (b)
satisfied the basic requirements of the first two years in any of those
courses (e. g., English, foreign language, and the history-mathematics—
science requirement in the B.A. General Course), and have (c) success-
fully carried their third year of Letters and Science studies. In this third
year students should complete all unfulfilled general requirements and
should also have the work of their major so well in hand that the thesis
requirement may be satisfied concurrently with the first year work in Law.
For requirements in the courses mentioned above, see pages 58—61.

Any major in Letters and Science, energetically carried with the gen-
eral degree requirements, will furnish adequate preparation for the study
of law. But the Law School Faculty believes that, as a rule, the student in-
tending to study law should major in the field of social studies (economics,
history, philosophy, political science, or sociology), and that, in any event,
when he begins the study of law he should have acquired some understand-
ing of the economic and political life of the United States and of Anglo-
American constitutional history, as weil as some acquaintance with phil-
osophy and social psychology. They recommend especially the following
courses: Economics 1; History 4, 5, 117, 141; Philosophy 11; Political
Science 1 or 101; Sociology 46 or 139. They recommend also, for their
bearing on certain phases of the law: Economics 5, 19, 123, 124, 133, 137,
142; Philosophy 21, 41, 43, 136, 146; Political Science 18, 123, 125, 139, 165,
245; Sociology 161.

Students may, by availing themselves of either this section or section
9, secure both the undergraduate degree and the law degree in six years.
Indeed, students who do not secure their Arts degrees in addition to their
Law degrees will be at a disadvantage.

11. UNIVERSITY TEACHERS’ CERTIFICATE

In accordance with the statutes of Wisconsin, certificates are issued to
all graduates of a regular college course who complete the course in peda-
gogical instruction prescribed by the University. This certificate, when
presented to the State Superintendent of Public Instruction, entitles the
holder to receive a license to teach in any public school in Wisconsin for
one year, renewable for a second year after one year of successful experi-
ence. Graduates who present satisfactory evidence of good moral charac-
ter and of two years of successful teaching in the Wisconsin public schools
after graduation are entitled to receive from the State Superintendent an
unlimited state certificate. See pages 82-83.

12. HONORS IN SCHOLARSHIP

Sophomore honors are awarded on the basis of a minimum of two full
years of work (not less than 60 credits) completed in residence in the Uni-
versity. A student securing during these two years 135 grade-points, plus
1.5 grade-points for each credit above 60 required in his course, will be