Academic and Administrative Titles
Capitalize the principal words in a title that appears before
the name of a particular person. Don't capitalize a title elsewhere.
Vice President Teresa Rungsopinkul
but:
Teresa Rungsopinkul, vice president for
(not of) public affairs and development
Assistant Professor Keith Kirby
but:
the assistant professor or Keith Kirby,
assistant professor
An exception is in the heading or closing of a letter:
Academic Degrees and Honors
Don't capitalize general references to academic degrees and
honors. Do capitalize and punctuate the abbreviated degree
after someone's name. See also Academics.
I have bachelor of arts and master of fine arts degrees.
but:
Korinna Goudy, D.M.A.
Addresses on Envelopes
The United States Postal Service requires
that addresses appear on envelopes in all-capital letters and, except for the
hyphenated ZIP code, without punctuation.
Groups of People
The names of racial, linguistic, tribal, religious, and other
groups of people are capitalized. Don't hyphenate them. The
following list is
not exhaustive.
African American or Black
Alaska Native
American Indian or Native American
Asian (from the Far East, Southeast Asia, India, China, or Korea)
Asian American
Caucasian or White
Chicana or Chicano
Hispanic
Latina or Latino
Mexican American
North African
Pacific Islander
people of color
people with disabilities (not the handicapped
or the disabled)
Greeks (capitalized) are both people from Greece and members of fraternities
and sororities. The latter belong to Greek-letter organizations.
Places
Capitalize north, south, east, and west when
they are part of specific geographic regions or official names
of organizations. Don't capitalize general compass directions.
| SPECIFIC
the Far West
the Western hemisphere
the West Eugene Neighborhood Association |
GENERAL
the west entrance
the western United States
west Eugene |
Capitalize
Earth when referring to the planet. Capitalize World War
II and Second World War.
Room
The word room is often unnecessary in addresses.
If you use it before a room number or after a room name, it should be
capitalized.
101 Chapman Hall or Room 101 Chapman Hall
Walnut Room, Erb Memorial Union
Buildings and Spaces
Only a few buildings include the word "building"
in their official names (e.g., Education Building, Music
Building). Don't confuse names of administrative units
with names of buildings.
| ADMINISTRATIVE
UNITS UO Libraries
School of Law |
BUILDING
NAMES
Knight Library
William Knight Law Center |
SPACES
Formal names of spaces are authorized by the UO president.
Dave Rowe Room (in Knight Library)
Leona E. Tyler Conference Room (in Chapman Hall)
Paul Olum Atrium (in Willamette Hall)
Things
Capitalize only the formal names of departments, institutes,
schools, centers, and government agencies. Don't capitalize
words that aren't part of the formal names.
| FORMAL Center
for Asian and Pacific Studies
School of Music
Department of Political Science
Oregon Legislative Assembly |
INFORMAL the
center
the music school or the school
the political science department or
the department
the state legislature |
the Summer Session office
but:
summer session (the June-through-August academic session)
Some administrative units include the full name of a person. In such cases
there are two acceptable formal names.
| FORMAL
Charles H. Lundquist College of Business
Lundquist College of Business
Robert Donald Clark Honors College
Clark Honors College |
INFORMAL the
Lundquist college or the college
the Lundquist college or the college
the honors college
the honors college |
Only a few offices include "University of Oregon"
in their official names. They also have two formal names.
| FORMAL University
of Oregon Alumni Association
the Alumni Association
University of Oregon Foundation
University of Oregon Libraries
UO Libraries |
INFORMAL the
association
the Foundation
the library or the branch libraries
|
Don't capitalize names of academic majors and minors except
for proper nouns.
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