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REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION

Applicants for admission must be at least sixteen years of age and must furnish evidence of their ability to prosecute the work of the course successfully.

The preliminary education should be equivalent to that required for entrance to a good high school.

Students who have pursued courses of study in other colleges of pharmacy will be given credit for such portions of their work as are equivalent to the work required by this School.

REQUIREMENTS FOR GRADUATION

The candidate for the degree of graduate in pharmacy must be twenty-one years of age, must have had four years' practical experience in pharmacy, including the period of attendance at School, and must have attended two full courses of instruction, the first of which may have been in some other reputable college or school of pharmacy. He must have attended regularly the laboratory and lecture. courses of this School, must pass the examinations, and must not have been absent more than five times during the term from either laboratory exercises or lectures in any department.

The candidate for the degree of graduate in pharmacy, who presents himself for final examination before he has attained the age or practical experience required, will, if successful, receive a certificate of having finished the course and will be awarded his diploma when the requirements of age and experience are complied with.

Persons competent to fulfill the general requirements of admission to the University may be granted credit upon the University courses for equivalent work satisfactorily completed at the School of Pharmacy.

Further information is given in the special announcement of this school. Address W. B. Day, Actuary, School of Pharmacy, 465-7 State Street, Chicago, Ill.

SUMMER TERM, 1901

The Summer Term of 1901 will open Monday, June 17th, continue nine weeks, and close Friday, August 16th. No examinations or other conditions will be placed upon admission. All who can do the work are welcome to get what they can from it. Those who can meet the requirements may matriculate in the University if they desire, and in that event may have credits to apply upon regular University courses when certified, upon examination or otherwise, by the professors in charge. Examination in and credit for some of the courses may be had at the end of six weeks by any who find it impossible to remain during the whole session. Instruction begins on June 18th and closes on August 14th. The exact amount of credit given for each course is stated in connection with the outline of courses given below.

FEES

A tuition fee of twelve dollars ($12) is required of all students in regular attendance at the session. This entitles one to admission to all special lectures and to as many courses as may be approved by the Director. An extra laboratory fee in some courses is charged for materials used. Any single course may be taken for a fee of six dollars ($6) and the laboratory fee, if there be any in connection with the course taken. For all students who take examinations, credit will be entered upon the University records. For further information on any matter connected with the Summer Term address Edwin G. Dexter, Director, Urbana, Illinois.

COURSES OFFERED

ART AND DESIGN.-Two courses will be offered in Art and Design in charge of Mr. Lake.

BOTANY.-Four courses, one of them an elementary course which will be accepted for admission, will be offered in botany in charge of Professor Burrill and Mr. Holferty.

CHEMISTRY.-Four courses, including an elementary course, will be offered in chemistry in charge of Professor Grindley and Mr. Sammis.

EDUCATION.-Seven courses will be offered in education in charge of Professor Dexter, Assistant Professor Brooks, President Draper, Dean Russell of Teachers' College, Columbia University, and Professor Ryley of London, England.

ENGLISH LITERATURE.-Five courses will be offered in English literature in charge of Professor Dodge, Mr. Horner, and Professor Rolfe of Cambridge.

GERMAN.-Three courses will be offered in German in charge of Dr. Brooks.

HISTORY.-Three courses, one of them an elementary course in American history, will be offered in charge of Professor Greene. LATIN.-Three courses will be offered in Latin in charge of Professor Barton.

MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY.-Ten courses in mathematics and astronomy, including elementary algebra, and plane and solid, geometry, will be offered in charge of Mr. Short, Mr. Ponzer and Mr. Brenke.

PHYSICS.-Three courses, one of them an elementary course, will be offered in physics in charge of Professor Quick and an assistant.

RHETORIC.—Three courses, one of which is an elementary course that will be accepted for entrance to the University only, will be offered in rhetoric in charge of Professor Clark and Mr. Horner.

ZOOLOGY.-Four courses, including an elementary course, will be offered in zoology in charge of Professor Smith, Mr. McClellan and Dr. Folsom.

Special courses of lectures will be offered presented by Dr. William J. Rolfe of Cambridge, Mass., Dean James E. Russell of Columbia University, Professor H. B. Ryley of London, England, Chancellor E. B. Andrews of the University of Nebraska, President Z. X. Snyder of the Colorado State Normal School, Superintendent James H. Van Sickel of Baltimore, Md., and others.

The libraries, laboratories, Astronomical Observatory, and Gymnasium of the University will be open for students at the summer term.

GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF COURSES

Following the description of each course of instruction. will be found the necessary requirements, if any, for admission to that particular course. Careful attention must be given to these requirements and to the sequence of studies thus indicated. For instance, under Architecture 4, for students of the College of Engineering, page 188, there are required "Physics 1 and 3," and "Architecture 2 and 3." Turning now to these subjects, it is found that physics I and 3 are the major course of one year, architecture 2 is wood construction, and architecture 3 is metal construction. All these subjects must be satisfactorily passed before admission may be had to the class in architecture 4.

In case a course not required for graduation is selected by less than five students, the right to withdraw the same for the semester is reserved.

Graduate courses of instruction are described under the various subjects, as a rule after the undergraduate courses. They are numbered upward from 100. Other courses may often be arranged by the professors in charge to meet the special requirements of students. The subjects in which graduate courses are announced for 1901-1902 are as follows:

Agriculture, architecture, botany, chemistry, civil engineering, Danish language, economics, education, electrical engineering, French, geology, Greek, history, mechanical engineering, municipal and sanitary engineering, philosophy, physics, psychology, theoretical and applied mechanics, zoöl

ogy.

Credit is reckoned in semester "hours," or simply

"hours." An "hour" is either one class period a week for one semester, each class period presupposing two hours' preparation by the student, or the equivalent in laboratory, shop, or drawing room.

The semester, the days, and the class period or periods. during which each course is given, and the number of "hours" per semester for which the course counts, are shown after each course, as follows: The semester is indicated by the Roman numerals I., II.; the days, by the initial letters of the days of the week; the class period or periods (of which there are nine each day, numbered consecutively from one to nine), by Arabic figures; and the "hours" or amount of credit, by Arabic figures in parentheses. For example, after the description of Anthropology I (p. 187) occur the abbrevations I.; M., W., F.; 1; (3). These are to be read first semester, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, first period, three "hours."

AGRONOMY

1. DRAINAGE AND IRRIGATION.-Location of drains and irrigation conduits, leveling, digging, laying tile and pipes, filling, and subsequent care; cost of construction and efficiency; sewers for the disposal of waste water from farm buildings and the sewage from kitchen and toilet; farm water pipes, pipe and thread cutting. Class work, laboratory and field practice. I., first half; daily; 6, 7; (21⁄2). Mr. CRANE.

2. FIELD MACHINERY.-The tools and machinery of the field,plows, harrows, and hoes; seeders, drills, corn and potato planters; cultivators, weeders and spraying machines; mowers, rakes, selfbinders, corn harvesters and huskers, potato diggers, wagons, etc. Class work and laboratory practice, including setting up and testing machines, noting construction and elements necessary for successful work. I., first half; daily; 1, 2; or II., second half; daily; 6, 7; (21⁄2). Mr. CRANE.

gas engines,

3. FARM POWER MACHINERY.-Horse-powers, traction engines, windmills, pumps, corn shellers, feed cutters, grinders, and threshing machines,-their construction, efficiency, durability, and care. Class room and laboratory work. I., second half; daily; 1, 2; (22). Mr. CRANE.

4. FARM BUILDINGS, FENCES, AND ROADS.-The arrangement,

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