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applicants for instruction in these branches warrants the formation of a class. Instruction in any special study is dependent upon the number of students being sufficient to warrant the maintenance of a class, the Board of Directors reserving the right to withdraw any study from the course when, in its opinion, the attendance is insufficient to justify its continuance.

All work done in the school will be the property of the Association until the close of the school exhibition at the end of the school year, and must not be removed from the building without permission.

ORDER OF SPECIAL COURSES AND HOURS OF SESSION.

1. Drawing and Painting Classes.

Professor MATHEWS.

Drawing and painting from the life, from the head or costumed model, and from still life.

Daily, 9:00-4:00. Instructor attends Monday and Thursday.

2. Modeling Classes.

Professor TILDEN.

Modeling from the antique, from the head, and from the figure. Daily, 9:00-4:00. Life Class covers a period of four months and a half. Announcements made in September. Instructor attends Tuesday and Friday afternoons.

3. Antique Classes.

Professor STANTON.

Preparatory antique drawing; advanced antique drawing.
Daily: 9:00-4:00. Instructor attends Tuesday and Friday.

4. Sketch Class.

Assistant Professor ALTMANN.

In charcoal, pencil, and pen-and-ink from draped model.

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S., 9:00-4:00. Instructor in attendance. This class continues throughout the year and is independent of the regular school

course.

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Certificates of Proficiency.-The terms of affiliation with the University of California provide as follows:

"The students of said school, upon the recommendation of the Faculty thereof, may receive such degree or certificate of proficiency from the University of California as the Regents of the University may deem appropriate to the course of study pursued."

Students may receive the University certificate on successfully passing the competitions and examinations in the different branches as herein specified: (1) Composition; (2) drawing from life; (3) painting or modeling from life (academic size),; (4) painting, drawing, or modeling of a portrait bust; (5) perspective; (6) anatomy.

Priveleges. The art gallery of the Mark Hopkins Institute, containg a large collection of works of art, including many excellent examples of well known painters, is open to the students of the school during the term.

A well selected art library and reading-room, containing the current magazines and art periodicals, is also at the service of the students of the school.

Association Awards.-The San Francisco Art Association awards eight yearly scholarships to the most deserving pupils of the school. The Byrne Yearly Scholarship is awarded to the most deserving pupil of the Saturday class

Tuition Fees.-The tuition fees in the regular daily classes for all day, per month, are $10; per term, $37.50; per year, $75. For halfday, per month, $7; per term, $26; per year, $52.

For the night classes: Antique class, $3 per month, or $10 per term; portrait class, $4 per month, or $12 per term; life class, $5 per month, or $16 per term.

For the Saturday classes: $4 per month, or $12 per term of four months.

HASTINGS COLLEGE OF THE LAW.

DIRECTORS.

HON. WILLIAM H. BEATTY, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court,

ex-officio President of the Board...

Sacramento.

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BENJAMIN IDE WHEELER, President of the University, President.

EDWARD R. TAYLOR, Professor of Law, Dean.

CHARLES W. SLACK, Professor of Law.

WARREN OLNEY, JR., First Assistant Professor of Law.

LOUIS T. HENGSTLER, Second Assistant Professor of Law.

WILLIAM B. BOSLEY, Special Lecturer.

LEONARD STONE, Registrar.

CALENDAR AND DIRECTORY.

The college year begins on the second Monday in August and ends with the college year at Berkeley.

in December.

There is a recess of three weeks

The exercises are held in the City Hall, San Francisco.

The classes meet daily at 8:15 and 9:15 A.M. and 4:30 P.M.

The address of the Dean is 530 California Street, San Francisco.

The office of the Registrar is Room 620, Parrott Building, San Francisco.

ADMISSION.

Applicants for admission to the Junior class must be at least eighteen years of age; must deposit with the Registrar certificates of good moral character; and unless otherwise qualified to be admitted, must pass satisfactory examinations in the following subjects:*

1. English. The examination in this subject will presuppose thorough acquaintance with the following works, together with the practical knowledge of grammar and elementary rhetoric implied in such acquaintance: (1) The Lady of the Lake; (2) The Alhambra; (3) Sir Roger de Coverley; (4) Classic Myths; (5) Short Poems: Horatius, The Deserted Village, The Cotter's Saturday Night, The Prisoner of Chillon (or selections from Childe Harold), Winter, Winter Morning Walk, Snow-Bound, Tam O'Shanter, The Ancient Mariner, L'Allegro, Il Penseroso; (6) The Merchant of Venice; (7) Julius Caesar; (8) Macaulay's Warren Hastings.

While the regular examination will, for the present, be upon these subjects without option, schools on the accredited list of the University, may, after consultation with the English Department of the University, avail themselves of such substitutes as the following: For (1), The Lay of the Last Minstrel; for (2), Tom Brown at Rugby, or Ivanhoe; for (3), Addison's Select Essays; for (5), some twelve poems of similar scope and character; for (6) or for (7), Macbeth.

2. Arithmetic. No examination in this subject is required, since the study comes regularly in the grammar school, and its essential processes are involved in Algebra.

3. Algebra. Through quadratic equations; namely, the various methods of factoring, the theory of exponents, integral and fractional, positive and negative, the calculus of radicals, ratio, and proportion; quadratic equations, both single and simultaneous, their solution and their theory, including all the recognized methods of solution and equations reducible to the quadratic form and the formation of equations from given roots.

4. Plane Geometry. Including the general properties of regular polygons, their construction, perimeters, and areas, and the different methods for determining the ratio of the circumference to the diameter.

* Subjects are numbered to correspond with those of the general list of preparatory subjects for admission to the Colleges at Berkeley. The amount of work represented by each of the subjects is as given in the General List of Preparatory Subjects in this Register.

*5. Government of the United States. A knowledge of the principles of government, Federal, State, and local. This requirement presupposes an acquaintance with the history of the United States.

6. Elementary Latin. (a) Translation of easy prose into English. The examination will cover the translation, subject matter, and implied grammar of selected passages from Caesar's Gallic War, Books I-IV; but accredited schools may use any equivalent Latin text. (b) Translation of simple English into Latin prose. This requirement presupposes familiarity with the usual forms and ordinary constructions of the language. Continued training in translating detached sentences illustrative of constructions, and of sentences based on Caesar or an equivalent author, together with a thorough grammatical drill on the work read, is a proper preparation for satisfying this requirement.

7. Advanced Latin. (a) Translation of Latin of average difficulty. The examination will include the translation into idiomatic English of average passages from (1) Cicero's orations against Catiline, for Archias, and for Pompey's Military Command; (2) Virgil's Æneid, Books I-VI; (3) some other speech of Cicero to test ability in sight translation. The examination will also include questions on the usual forms and ordinary constructions of the language and on prosody. This requirement may be satisfied in accredited schools by study of prose and poetry of equivalent difficulty. (b) Translation of English narrative into Latin prose. The English passage offered for translation will be a paraphrase from one of Cicero's orations. This requirement calls for systematic training in Latin prose composition, based on prose authors, during the last two years of the high school course.

8. Mediæval and Modern History. (Corresponding to (13) of the general requirements for admission to the Colleges at Berkeley,) Myers's Mediæval and Modern History will indicate the period to be covered and the amount required.

The examinations are held at the times and places announced for holding the entrance examinations to the Academic Colleges of the University, at Berkeley. Applicants for admission will not be examined at any other time, unless for reasons of the most exceptional urgency. Further information concerning the examinations can be obtained from the Recorder of the Faculties of the University of California, Berkeley, California.

* Beginning with the academic year 1901-02, this subject will be Civil Government and American History.

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