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CHEMISTRY: : Boylston Hall; 1775 books. Dr. Baxter.

MINERALOGY Aand PetrograPHY: University Museum; 740 books. Professor Wolff.

BOTANY: Gray Herbarium, Botanic Garden; 8969 books. Professor B. L. Robinson.

PHANEROGAMIC BOTANY: University Museum; 710 books. Professor Goodale.

ZOOLOGY AND GEOLOGY (Museum of Comparative Zoology): including the WHITNEY COLLECTION OF GEOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHY (6500 vols.): University Museum; 40,064 books. Mr. Henshaw.

ZOOLOGY (Zoological Laboratories): University Museum; 277 books. Professor Mark.

GEOLOGY AND PALAEONTOLOGY (Geological Laboratory): University Museum; 124 books. Professor Shaler.

PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY: University Museum; 571 books. Professor Davis. ANTHROPOLOGY: Peabody Museum; 3138 books. Professor Putnam. The above libraries contain also many pamphlets, maps, photographs, etc.

MUSEUMS, LABORATORIES, ETC.

Students who take courses involving laboratory work or the study of collections, or who are engaged in special research of an advanced character outside of the regular courses, may carry on such studies, under proper regulations, in the appropriate Museums and Laboratories.

The following is a list of the Museums and Laboratories which are available to suitably qualified students, under these conditions, with the names of their Curators or Directors. Some of them comprehend subdivisions, not here enumerated. Fuller information about the Museums and Laboratories may be found on later pages of the Catalogue.

SEMITIC MUSEUM: Divinity Avenue. Professor Lyon.

SANSKRIT COLLECTION (Sanskrit, Jaina Prākrit, and Pāli manuscripts, rubbings of inscriptions from the Açoka stone and Buddhist Stupa of Bharhut, facsimile coins, photographs, stereopticon slides, etc.): Warren House. Professor Lanman.

CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY COLLECTION (maps, casts of sculptures and of inscriptions, stereopticon slides, photographs, facsimile coins, etc.): in various buildings.

PSYCHOLOGICAL LABORATORY: Dane Hall. Professor Münsterberg.

WILLIAM HAYES FOGG ART MUSEUM: Broadway. Professor Charles H. Moore.

GRAY COLLECTION OF ENGRAVINGS: East room, Fogg Art Museum. Professor Charles H. Moore.

FINE ARTS DRAWING ROOM: 37 Sever Hall. Professor Charles H. Moore. ARCHITECTURAL DRAWING ROOM: Nelson Robinson Jr. Hall. Professor H. L. Warren.

JEFFERSON PHYSICAL LABORATORY: off Kirkland Street.

Trowbridge.

Professor

ENGINEERING LABORATORY: Pierce Hall, Oxford Street. Professor Hollis.

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING LABORATORY: Pierce Hall, Oxford Street. Asst. Professor Adams.

LABORATORY OF MINING AND METALLURGY: Rotch Building, Jarvis Street. Professor H. L. Smyth.

CHEMICAL LABORATORY: Boylston Hall. Professor Sanger.

GEOLOGICAL MUSEUM AND LABORATORIES: University Museum, Oxford Street. Professor Shaler.

MINERALOGICAL MUSEUM AND LABORATORIES: University Museum, Oxford Street. Professor Wolff.

BOTANIC GARDEN: corner of Garden and Linnaean Streets. Professor

Goodale.

GRAY HERBARIUM: Botanic Garden. Professor B. L. Robinson.

BOTANICAL MUSEUM AND LABORATORIES: University Museum, Oxford Street. Professor Goodale.

CRYPTOGAMIC HERBARIUM: University Museum, Oxford Street. Professor Farlow.

MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY AND LABORATORIES OF NATURAL HISTORY: University Museum, between Oxford Street and Divinity Avenue. Mr. Henshaw.

PEABODY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY AND ETHNOLOGY: Divinity Avenue. Professor Putnam.

GERMANIC MUSEUM: Broadway and Cambridge St.

Professor Francke.

Graduate Students taking the courses offered to them at the Medical School are admitted to the laboratories in which those courses are carried on. In special cases, and by arrangements made beforehand in each case, Graduate Students may carry on studies at the Bussey Institution of Agriculture and Horticulture or at the Astronomical Observatory.

PUBLICATIONS.

Some Departments of study issue periodicals or yearly volumes, embodying the work of instructors and students at the University. Other Departments make regular contributions, under an official heading, to the proceedings of certain learned societies or to journals of literature and science, existing outside of the University. The publications of the first class and those of the second which are also issued directly by the Departments are the following; including a few which, although connected with studies cultivated by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, are independent of that Faculty:

HARVARD ORIENTAL SERIES (Indic Philology Department) : Vols. I-IV issued. Vols. V-X in press.

HARVARD STUDIES IN CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY (yearly): Vols. I-XV issued. Vol. XVI in preparation.

STUDIES AND NOTES IN PHILOLOGY AND LITERATURE (Modern Language Departments): yearly. Vols. I-IX issued.

HARVARD HISTORICAL STUDIES: published under the direction of the Department of History and Government, from the income of the Henry Warren Torrey Fund. Vols. I-X issued.

QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS: in its nineteenth year.

ANNALS OF THE OBSERVATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE: fifty volumes issued.

ANNALS OF MATHEMATICS, NEW SERIES, issued quarterly under the management of the Division of Mathematics: in its sixth year.

CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CRYPTOGAMIC LABORATORY: fifty-five numbers issued.

CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE GRAY HERBARIUM: twenty-eight numbers issued.

PUBLICATIONS OF THE MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOÖLOGY:- BULLETIN, forty-three volumes issued; MEMOIRS, twenty-seven volumes issued. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ZOOLOGICAL LABORATORY: one hundred and fifty-seven numbers issued. (Some of the contributions are also contained in the Museum Bulletin.)

PUBLICATIONS OF THE PEABODY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY AND ETHNOLOGY:- ANNUAL REPORTS, thirty-seven numbers issued; PAPERS, ten numbers issued; MEMOIRS, nine numbers issued; special publication, Codex Nuttall.

The HARVARD GRADUATES' MAGAZINE, issued quarterly, and now in its thirteenth year, gives a record of the current life and work of the University, biographical and bibliographical data regarding Graduates, besides articles on other matters of general interest.

CLUBS.

Important work is done by students in Clubs which exist in more or less close connection with the several Departments of study, and meet frequently. These organizations, concerning which detailed information is given in the Departmental Pamphlets or may be obtained from instructors, include the following:

SANSKRIT CONFERENCE: fortnightly in the second half-year.
CLASSICAL CLUB: fortnightly.

MODERN LANGUAGE CONFERENCE: fortnightly.

DEUTSCHER VEREIN fortnightly.

CERCLE FRANCAIS: fortnightly.

PHILOSOPHICAL CONFERENCE: monthly.

HARVARD PEDAGOGICAL CLUB: fortnightly.

HARVARD MEMORIAL SOCIETY.

HARVARD FOLK-LORE SOCIETY.

HARVARD MUSICAL CLUB: fortnightly.

HARVARD PHYSICAL CLUB: twice in three weeks.

HARVARD CHEMICAL CLUB: fortnightly.

BOYLSTON CHEMICAL SOCIETY: fortnightly.

BOTANICAL CLUB: fortnightly.

ZOOLOGICAL CLUB: weekly.

HARVARD NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY: bi-monthly.

HARVARD ENGINEERING SOCIETY: monthly.

TOPIARIAN CLUB: monthly.

To these are to be added the Semitic Conference, the Mathematical Conference, the Physical Colloquium, and the Geological Conference (see Announcement), which have something of the character of clubs.

Besides the above named clubs, existing for purposes of special study and discussion, there are organized in the University many societies having religious, ethical, political, literary, musical, and social objects. The GRADUATE CLUB, maintained by students in the Graduate School, may be especially mentioned. Its circular may be obtained on application. For a record of portions of the work of the seminaries, conferences, and clubs, during the year 1903-04, see pages 453-463.

REGULATIONS CONCERNING THE CHOICE

OF STUDIES.

The Courses of Instruction named in the Announcement (pp. 358-446) are provided by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences for all the students under its charge, whether registered in Harvard College, in the Lawrence Scientific School, or in the Graduate School; and a student in any one of these departments makes his choice of studies according to the regulations of the department to which he belongs. (See below.)

A student in regular standing in any department of the University not under the charge of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences may, under a standing vote of the Corporation, obtain admission to any course offered by that Faculty, provided it be not a laboratory course, or necessarily limited in numbers, by presenting to the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences an application, on an official blank, certified by the Dean of the department in which the student is registered, and by giving satisfactory evidence of qualification for the course to the instructor who conducts it. A student in regular standing in Harvard College, the Lawrence Scientific School, or the Graduate School may obtain admission to a course offered in any other department of the University by presenting an application to the Dean of that department in similar form, and giving to the proper instructor satisfactory evidence of qualification.

No student is admitted to any course offered by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, unless he has fulfilled all the requirements for that course as stated in the Announcement, or otherwise satisfies the instructor that he is prepared to pursue it.

Every student must make his election so as to avoid conflict between the hours appointed for recitations or examinations in the courses which he chooses. No student will be examined in two courses of the same examination group, excepting half-courses not given in the same half-year, and a few courses specially mentioned in the Announcement.

The courses primarily for Undergraduates are open also to Graduate Students, and are sometimes recommended to such students; but they are not ordinarily counted towards the degree of Master of Arts.

The courses for Undergraduates and Graduates are, under certain limitations, which are named in notes attached to the courses in the Announcement, open to any properly qualified student. But no starred (*) course may be taken by any student without the previous consent of the instructor.

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