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PRELIMINARY EXAMINATIONS.-Preliminary examinations in any of the requirements for admission may be taken a year or more before entering college, and a candidate will receive credit for any subjects thus passed in advance.

DATE AND PLACE OF EXAMINATIONS.—Examinations for admission are held twice each year, in June and in September.

In June the entrance examinations of the college are those of the College Entrance Examination Board, of which Wesleyan University is a member. An application for the privilege of taking these examinations must be made to the Secretary of the College Entrance Examination Board, Post Office SubStation 84, New York, N. Y., from whom all necessary information regarding the June examinations can be obtained. These examinations will be held June 17-22, 1912, at a large number of widely distributed points, including Middletown.

Applications for examination at points in the United States east of the Mississippi River (also at Minneapolis, St. Louis, and other points on the Mississippi River) must be received by the Board on or before Monday, June 3, 1912; applications for examination elsewhere in the United States or in Canada must be received on or before Monday, May 27, 1912; and applications for examination at points outside of the United States and Canada must be received on or before Monday, May 13, 1912. In order to facilitate the making of arrangements for the proper conduct of the examinations, it is desired that all applications be filed as early as possible.

Each application filed in accordance with the foregoing requirements must be accompanied by the examination fee, which is $5.00 for candidates examined at points in the United States and Canada, and $15.00 for candidates examined at points outside the United States and Canada. This fee should be remitted by postal order, express order, or draft on New York, payable to the College Entrance Examination Board.

Applications received later than the dates named above will be accepted when it is practicable to arrange for the examination of the candidates concerned, but only upon the payment of $5.00 in addition to the regular fee. The blank forms necessary for making this application may be obtained only from the Secretary of the College Entrance Examination Board.

The fees of candidates for examination in June, 1912, whose applications have been accepted by the Secretary, can under no circumstances be returned unless the request for their return is received on or before Monday, June 10, 1912.

A candidate for examination in two or more years will be required to pay the examination fee in each year.

The examinations in September will be conducted by the college, and no fees will be charged. They will be held only in Middletown. The date of the examination in 1912 will be September 18-19.

ADMISSION BY CERTIFICATE.-Certificates covering the foregoing requirements for admission to college are received from certain schools of good standing, which have been approved by the Faculty. A certificate will not be received unless it covers decidedly the major part of the requirements for admission.

No certificate will be received from any school in New England which has not been approved by the New England College Entrance Certificate Board, of which this college is a member. The Secretary of the Board is Prof. N. F. Davis, of Brown University, Providence, R. I., to whom applications from New England schools for the certificate privilege should be addressed. Such applications must reach the Secretary not later than April first, if approval is desired for the next academic year.

Certificates of the College Entrance Examination Board will be received in lieu of examination in the subjects which they

cover.

Diplomas issued by the Regents of the University of the State of New York, and pass cards supplementary to such diplomas, will be received in lieu of examination in the subjects which they cover. Regents' certificates will also be received, provided they cover decidedly the major part of the requirements for admission.

Certificates from preparatory schools and Regents' diplomas are never accepted in lieu of examination for advanced standing.

Students entering by certificate are considered as on trial until the completion of the mid-year examinations. A student admitted to college on certificate, who is dismissed during his

Freshman year on account of inability to keep up with his class, must take examinations in all subjects required for admission, in case he desires to return to college.

Detailed information concerning admission by certificate may be obtained on application to the Secretary of the Faculty.

ADMISSION OF WOMEN.-Women were first admitted to the University in 1872. The Trustees voted, February 26, 1909, that no women should be admitted in any class later than that entering in 1909. Women may be admitted, however, as graduate students. The Trustees have adopted a resolution favoring the establishment of a coördinate college for women as soon as the necessary funds can be secured.

Satisfactory evidence of good moral character will be required in the case of all candidates for admission; and certificates of honorable dismissal will be required from those who have been members of other colleges.

COURSES OF INSTRUCTION.

For regulations concerning selection of studies, see page 94.

Bracketed courses are not given this year, but will, in most cases, be given next year.

The figures and following the number of a course indicate respectively that the course is offered for the first or the second half-year.

The Roman numerals in parentheses following each course indicate the examination group to which it is assigned. For table of groups, see pages 92 and 93.

The place of meeting of each course is indicated by means of the following abbreviations: F. H. Fisk Hall; J. H.-Judd Hall; O. H. Observatory Hall; S. L. Scott Laboratory of Physics; CHEM. LAB., BIOL. LAB. Chemical, Biological Laboratory.

An asterisk prefixed to the number of a course indicates that it can be elected only with the previous approval of the instructor; such approval must be in writing and must be handed in by the student along with his list of electives.

LATIN.

PROFESSOR HARRINGTON; ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS NICOLSON
AND HEWITT.

Of the following courses in Latin, Courses I. and I.A are given every year, the remaining courses usually in alternate years only, the bracketed courses being omitted in 1911-12. Either Course I. in Latin or Course I. in Greek is required of all candidates for the degree of B. A. Course I.A should be elected in Freshman year by all students intending to pursue any further study of the classics. Courses II.-VI. are elective for those who have taken Course I. Courses I., I.A, two of Courses II.-V., and any one of Courses VI., XVI., and XVII. are required of candidates for preliminary honors in classics. Courses VII.-XXI. are intended primarily for those who have taken at least Course I. and two of Courses II.-V. But Courses XVI. and XX. may by special permission of the instructor be elected by those who have taken only Course I.; and students of marked , ability in the reading of Latin, who are taking one of Courses II.-V., may be admitted to certain of the other courses at the same time by special permission of the instructor, to whom application should in each case be made.

I. LIvy,—Selections (first half-year). TERENCE,-Phormio; PLAUTUS,-Menaechmi (second half-year). Exercises in sight translation throughout the year. SECTION 1, Mon., Wed.,

Fri., at 9; SECTION 2, Tu., Th., Sat., at 9; SECTION 3, Tu., Th., Sat., at 11. 31 F. H. PROFESSORS NICOLSON and HEWITT. (II.)

I.A. SUPPLEMENTARY COURSE. Training in rapid reading; practice in Latin composition. Occasional lectures throughout the year by the instructors in Latin, giving a preliminary survey of the various departments of classical study. Wed., at 11. 31 F. H. PROFESSOR NICOLSON. (IV.)

II. CICERO,- Selected letters, to give a more intimate acquaintance with the history of Rome during the last two decades of the republic, and to compare colloquial with formal Latin. Tu., Th., at 12 (first half-year). 31 F. H. PROFESSOR HARRINGTON.

(XI.)

III.2 HORACE,-Odes and Epodes, to illustrate the lyric art of the Augustan age. Tu., Th., at 12 (second half-year). 31

F. H. PROFESSOR HARRINGTON.

(XI.)

[IV. HORACE,-Satires and Epistles, to illustrate the social and literary standards of Rome at the beginning of the empire. Twice a week (first half-year). PROFESSOR HARRINGTON.]

[V.2 PLINY THE YOUNGER,-Selected letters, to illustrate especially the state of Roman society at the close of the first century after Christ. Twice a week (second half-year). PROFESSOR HARRINGTON.]

VI. LATIN PROSE COMPOSITION. In this course the elementary principles of Latin style are studied and considerable amounts of English prose (dealing with subjects both ancient and modern) are translated into Latin. Tu., Th., at 3 (first half-year). 31 F. H. PROFESsor Hewitt. (XII.)

[VII. RAPID READING. The aim in this course is to read large amounts of comparatively easy Latin, with a view to acquiring facility in the use of the language. The selections for the first half-year are from poetry (Vergil, Plautus, Terence);

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