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Graduates of the University of California are admitted without examination.

Persons holding degrees from other institutions of learning of repute are also admitted without examination.

Graduates of accredited high schools and private schools of this State, who are eligible for admission to the University upon certificates, and whose certificates cover the requirements for admission to the College of the Law, are admitted without examination.

Applicants for admission to the Middle Class must be at least nineteen years of age; must comply with the conditions required to enter the Junior Class; and must pass an examination in all the studies of the Junior year.

Applicants for. admission to the Senior Class must be at least twenty years of age; must comply with the conditions required to enter the Junior Class; and must pass an examination in all the studies of the Junior and Middle years.

Members of the bar may, in the discretion of the Dean, be admitted as special students.

Applications for admission and certificates of good moral character must be filed with the Registrar of the College of the Law, prior to examination.

No applicant for admission to either the Middle Class or the Senior Class will be examined for admission at any other time than at the regular examinations at the end and at the beginning of the college year.

Further information can be obtained by addressing either the Dean or the Registrar.

COURSES OF INSTRUCTION.

The object of the College of the Law is to give such instruction in the principles of our jurisprudence as will furnish preparation for the practice of the profession of the law in this country. Particular attention is directed from time to time to the codes and the general statutes of this State. The courses of instruction extend over a period of three years, and are as follows:

Contracts.

JUNIOR YEAR.

Assistant Professor OLNEY.

Harriman on Contracts; Huffcut & Woodruff's American Cases on

Contracts.

3 hours, during a portion of the year.

Real Property.

Professor TAYLOR.

Williams on Real Property; Blackstone's Commentaries; Kent's Commentaries, Part VI; Digby's History of the Law of Real Property; and illustrative cases.

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McClain's Cases on Carriers. Assigned Cases on Telegraphs. 2 hours, throughout the year.

MIDDLE YEAR.

Sales of Personal Property.

Assistant Professor OLNEY.

Williston's Cases on Sales.

3 hours, during a portion of the year.

Negotiable Instruments.

Assistant Professor OLNEY.

Bigelow on Bills and Notes; Bigelow's Cases on Bills and Notes.

3 hours, during a portion of the year.

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Municipal Corporations.

Professor TAYLOR.

Smith's Cases on Municipal Corporations.

2 hours., during a portion of the year.

Wills and Administrations.

Professor SLACK.

Chaplin's Principles and Cases on Wills; California's Code of Civil Procedure, title "Proceedings in the Probate Court," and assigned cases.

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Stephen on Common Law Pleading; Lubé's Equity Pleading; Bliss on Code Pleading; California Code of Civil Procedure, and assigned cases.

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A Moot Court is established as a regular mode of instruction. Attendance is made compulsory upon the members of the Senior Class. A member of the Faculty presides over the argument of each cause, and an opinion is written under his direction by some student.

LIBRARY.

There is no library connected with the college, but students are permitted to use the San Francisco Law Library, at the City Hall, on the same terms as members of the bar.

PRIVILEGES ON GRADUATION.

Students who complete the prescribed courses receive the degree of Bachelor of Laws, and are admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of the State, on motion, without examination.

EXPENSES.
FEES.

Tuition is free, but a fee of $10.00 per year is charged to cover incidental expenses.

BOARD AND LODGING.

Good board, with room, at a convenient distance from the lecture rooms, may be procured at the rate of $5.00 a week and upward.

THE MEDICAL DEPARTMENT.

FACULTY.

BENJAMIN IDE WHEELER, President of the University, President.

ARNOLD A. D'ANCONA, Professor of Physiology, Dean.

G. A. SHURTLEFF, Emeritus Professor of Mental Diseases and Medical Jurisprudence.

ROBERT A. MCLEAN, Professor of Clinical and Operative Surgery.

BENJAMIN R. SWAN, Professor of Diseases of Children.

GEORGE H. POWERS, Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology.

WILLIAM WATT KERR, Professor of Clinical Medicine.

DOUGLASS W. MONTGOMERY, Professor of Diseases of the Skin.
WASHINGTON DODGE, Professor of Therapeutics.

JOHN W. WILLIAMSON, Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery.
JOHN W. ROBERTSON, Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases.
HARRY M. SHERMAN, Professor of the Principles and Practice of Surgery.
ALONZO E. TAYLOR, Professor of Pathology.

WILLIAM E. HOPKINS, Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology.
CHARLES A. VON HOFFMAN, Professor of Gynecology.

HERBERT C. MOFFITT, Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine.

GEORGE F. SHIELS, Associate Professor of Principles and Practice of Surgery.

W. B. LEWITT, Associate Professor of Diseases of Children.

Frank T. GREEN, Associate Professor of Materia Medica and Medical

Chemistry.

THOMAS W. HUNTINGTON, Associate Professor of Clinical and Operative Surgery.

BEVERLY MACMONAGLE, Lecturer on Gynecology.

J. HENRY BARBAT, Instructor in Surgery and Surgical Anatomy.
RICHARD M. H. BERNDT, Instructor in Therapeutics.

WILLIAM J. HAWKINS, Instructor in Physiology.

JAMES F. MCCONE, Instructor in Obstetrics.

THOMAS BYERS WOODS LELAND, Instructor in Physiology.

PHILIP MILLS JONES, Instructor in Therapeutics and Librarian.
CHARLES LEWIS MORGAN, Instructor in Materia Medica.

EDWARD VON ADELUNG, JR., Instructor in Nervous Diseases.

HENRY A. L. RYFKOGEL, Director of the Clinical Laboratory and Assistant Curator.

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