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BENJAMIN IDE WHEELER, President of the University, President. WILLIAM M. SEARBY, Professor of Pharmacy and Director of the Pharmaceutical Laboratory, Secretary and Dean.

JOHN CALVERT, Professor of Pharmacy, Emeritus.

WILLIAM T. WENZELL, Professor of Chemistry, Emeritus.

FRANKLIN T. GREEN, Professor of Chemistry, and Director of the Chemical Laboratory.

*HANS H. BEHR, Professor of Botany, Emeritus.

ALBERT SCHNEIDER, Professor of Botany, Materia Medica, and

Pharmacognosy.

HAYDN M. SIMMONS, Lecturer on Toxicology.

HARLEY R. WILEY, Lecturer on Pharmaceutical Jurisprudence.

FREDERICK W. NISH, Instructor in Pharmacy, and Assistant in Pharmaceutical Laboratory.

Location. The College is located in the Buildings of the University south of Golden Gate Park, San Francisco.

Calendar. The year 1903-04 began near the end of August. The year continued a little over eight months, closing April 30, 1904.

Practical and Theoretical Teaching. The additional laboratories now provided rendered it possible to make the instruction in the College thoroughly practical. This, however, is not done at the expense of theoretical teaching, but in addition to it. Accordingly, the lectures given now consist largely of directions for the performance of the *Died March 6, 1904.

work to be actually done under the professors' supervision, with expositions of the principles involved, and of the theories held regarding them.

REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION.

For the Degree of Graduate in Pharmacy:

1. Applicants for admission must be at least eighteen years old, except in the case of graduates of high schools, of accredited schools, of normal schools of this State, or of other institutions of a grade equal to the above. All such applicants are admitted irrespective of their age. (While it is advisable that students shall have had one or two years' practical training in a drug-store before entering college, it is not compulsory.)

2. Applicants will be accepted who bring any of the following credentials:

(a) Certificates of graduation from high schools.

(b) Diplomas of graduation from schools or academies accredited by the University of California. (See earlier pages of this Register.)

(c) Certificates of high standing in other institutions of collegiate grade.

(d) Diplomas from Normal Schools of this State.

(e) First grade teachers' certificates of this State.

(ƒ) Certificate of having completed satisfactorily the second year's course in a high school in this State.

3. Applicants who do not present any of the foregoing credentials will be examined in the following branches:

(a) English.-Grammar and Composition.

(The handwriting

will be estimated and will form part of this examination.)

(b) Geography.

(c) Physical Geography.

(d) Free-hand Drawing.

(e) Arithmetic.-Fundamental rules; fractions, common and decimal; denominate numbers; percentage; proportion; weights and measures-metric, apothecaries', and avoirdupois.

(ƒ) Algebra.—Through quadratics with one unknown quantity. (g) Latin.—Elementary. The applicant will be expected to be able, with the aid of a dictionary, to translate simple Latin sentences into English, and vice versa, and to analyze grammatical forms.

(h) Geometry.—Elementary, including mensuration of solids.

An applicant who fails to pass the entrance examination may be conditioned in not more than two subjects, in which he will be reëxamined after three months. Should he again fail, his fees will be refunded, except that the sum of twenty-five dollars will be retained, which will be placed to his credit if he should return to the College to pay the balance of his fee within two years. Applicants who desire to be matriculated without examination for the course leading to the degree of Graduate in Pharmacy may present their credentials to the Dean at his office, 400 Sutter Street, at any time before the opening of the College, Monday, August 22nd. All others will present themselves for examination at the College on Monday, August 22nd, at 9:00 A.M.

For the Degree of Bachelor of Pharmacy:

Applicants will be matriculated who have received a degree in Letters or Science, or who have been matriculated in the University, or who present a diploma from an accredited high school or other institution whose credentials will be accepted for entrance to the Academic Colleges of the University.

Those who cannot bring such credentials will be required to present themselves for examination at the entrance examination at Berkeley.

COURSES OF INSTRUCTION.

The following courses are prescribed to all candidates for the degree of Graduate in Pharmacy:

1. Elementary Botany.

JUNIOR YEAR.

Professor SCHNEIDER.

Preparatory to advanced botany and to materia medica. Twentysix lectures and demonstrations, and monthly excursions in the field.

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Sixty lectures and sixty sessions, of three hours each, in the Phar

maceutical Laboratory.

8. Vegetable Histology.

Professor SCHNEIDER.

Theory of the microscope, and its use in the study of plant life. Twenty-eight sessions in the Microscopical Laboratory.

10. Chemical Laboratory.

Sixty sessions of three hours each.

11. Chemical Laboratory.

Professor GREEN.

Professor GREEN.

Qualitative and quantitative chemical analysis, both volumetric and gravimetric. Sixty sessions of four hours each.

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Sixty lectures, and thirty sessions, of three hours each, in the

Pharmaceutical Laboratory.

9. Pharmacognosy.

Professor SCHNEIDER.

Studies of the microscopic structure of drugs with the compound

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Fifteen lectures by Dr. Simmons and fifteen laboratory sessions by Professor Green.

13. Bacteriology.

Professor SCHNEIDER.

Twelve lectures and thirty sessions, of four hours each, in the

Bacteriological Laboratory.

14. Economic Pharmaceutical Botany.

Professor SCHNEIDER.

Eighteen lectures.

REVIEWS.

Class reviews are conducted by the instructors or professors on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays during the term.

TEXT-BOOKS AND WORKS OF REFERENCE.

For a list of text-books and works of reference used consult the ANNUAL ANNOUNCEMENT of the California College of Pharmacy, which may be obtained by addressing the Secretary, Professor WILLIAM M. SEARBY, 400 Sutter Street, San Francisco, California.

EXAMINATIONS.

Examinations are held periodically during the year, by the Faculty. In addition to the periodical examinations above referred to, the Junior students are examined at the close of the year in all the branches taught, and if they obtain the requisite credits at this and at the other examinations, are admitted to the Senior class at the next year. Juniors who fail in more than two branches at the final examinations are required to remain another year in the Junior class.

First-course students from other pharmaceutical colleges, who desire to enter the Senior class of this college, must produce sufficient evidence of their fitness; otherwise they will be required to pass the Junior examination, as a condition of admission.

The Senior students are examined at the end of the year for the degree of Graduate in Pharmacy, in chemical synthesis and analysis, toxicology, botany, vegetable histology, materia medica, physiology, the chemical and microscopical characters of drugs, the uses and doses of drugs, theoretical and practical pharmacy, and the translation of recipes from Latin into English and from English into Latin.

The Graduate students are examined at the end of the year for the degree of Bachelor of Pharmacy, in Analytical Chemistry, the Separation of Alkaloids and Active Principles, Histology of Medicinal Substances, and the Microscopical Examination of Drugs and Chemicals. They are also required to present a thesis showing original investigation in some of these lines.

CONDITIONS OF GRADUATION.

FOR THE DEGREE OF GRADUATE IN PHARMACY (Ph.G.)

Every person to whom the diploma as Graduate in Pharmacy shall be granted must fulfill the following conditions:

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