LD2111 .7 1825 Conservation Resources Lig-Free® Type I Ph 8.5, Buffered 2111 5 y 1 STATUTES AND LAWS OF THE UNIVERSITY IN CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS- CAMBRIDGE : UNIVERSITY PRESS— BILLIARD AND METCALF. 1825. ^\ THE NEW YORK PUBLICLIBRARY P ASTOR, LENOA AND TILDEN fOVHDATtOm. 1900, kl^^m \ih^ • • A M • • • ' • • « » • • -• TILDEN FOUNDATlO.N<5 1 300. LAWS OF THE UNIVERSITY. CHAR I. OF ADMISSION AND MATRICULATION. 1. No one shall be admitted to the University, un- less he have a good moral character, certified in writing by his preceptor or some other suitable person 2. To be received into the Freshman Class, the candidate must be thoroughly acquainted with the Grammar of the Latin and Greek languages, including Prosody ; be able properly to construe and parse any portion of the follov^ing books, namely, Jacobs' Greek Reader,* the Gospels mmMm^ in the Greek Testament, Virgil, Sallust, and Cicero's Select Orations, and to translate English into Latin correctly. He must be well versed in Ancient and Modern Geography; the fundamental rules of Arithmetic ; vulgar and decimal fractions ; proportion, simple and compound ; single and double fellowship; alligation, medial and alter- nate ; and algebra to the end of simple equations, comprehending also the doctrine of roots and powers, and arithmetical and geometrical progression.f * Instead of Jacobs' Greek Reader, Dalzel's Collectanea Graeca Minora ■will be accepted until 1826. t The other books used in the examination are the following, namely, Adam's Latin Grammar (Gould's edition is preferred) ; the Gloucester Greek Grammar (Buttraann's Greek Grammar, and the Abridgment of it, are also allowed) ; Lacrois's Arithmetic, Cambridge edition ; Euler's Algebra, printed also at Cambridge ; " Elements of Geography, Ancient and Mod- ern, by J, E. Worcester." 4 ADMISSION AND MATRICULATION. [^Chap- I. 3. No one will be admitted after the usual time, un- less he satisfies the Faculty of the University that he has been necessarily prevented from offering himself in season. If any one be admitted after the first Fri- day in October, he will be charged for advanced standing. 4. No person may be admitted to advanced standing after the beginning of the second term of the Senior year. 5. In order to such admission, in addition to the requisites for the Freshman Class, he must appear, on examination, to be well versed in the studies of the class which he proposes to enter.* He must also pay into the Treasury, one hundred dollars for each year's advancement, and ratably for a less time : Pro- vided that the Government may reduce this charge to sixty dollars, in favour of meritorious beneficiaries upon application. Any Scholar, however, who has a regular dismission from another College, may be admitted to the standing, for which, on examination, he is found qualified, without any pecuniary consideration. 6. Every person who maybe accepted on examina- tion, and be permitted to join the University^ shall be on probation, and shall not be admitted as a member of the Society in full standing, until after one term. * Whereas, in consequence of the different order of studies in different Colleges, Candidates from other Colleges for advanced standing in this, while deficient in»some branches, may yet have anticipated others ; so that on the whole they may have learned as large an amount of the studies of this Seminary, as the Class for admission to which they apply ; in such cas- es, the Faculty of the University will receive the anticipated for the deficient studies. Provided, however, that no studies shall be received in compensa- tion but such as form a part of the course at this University; and that the candidate have so much knowledge in each department, as to be able to go on with the class. And the applicant shall be admitted only on condition that he afterwards make up such deficient studies, to the satisfaction of the Faculty upon examination ; and should he neglect so to do, his connexion with the University shall be forfeited. Candidates from such a distance as renders it difficult to obtain a knowl- edge of the exact order of studies at this University, shall be entitled to the privilege of the foregoing rule. Chap» I.] ADMISSION AND MATRICULATION. 5 This time may be prolonged^ however, at the discre- tion of the Faculty, to a period not exceeding a year. If, during the time of his probation, a Student shall fail to manifest such a degree of diligence in study, disposition to good order, and obedience to the laws, as shall be satisfactory to the Faculty ; or if upon any other ground it be deemed by the Faculty not ad- visable, that he should become a member of the Uni- versity, his connexion shall cease. 7. No application for the admission of a person thus separated from the University, shall be received till after the interval of a year, and only upon his pro- ducing satisfactory testimonials of good conduct during the whole time of his separation. If again accepted upon examination, he shall be put on probation as before ; and if during this second probation he shall be again separated from the University, his separa- tion shall be final. 8. The parents or guardians of those Students who have been accepted on examination, or some other per- son for them, must advance ten dollars to the Steward, and give a bond to the President and Fellows, with surety or sureties to the satisfaction of the Steward, in the sum of four hundred dollars, to pay their quarter bills according to the laws and customs of the Uni- versity. 9. Every one who has been accepted shall on the first day of the tern^or as soon after as may be, exhib- it to the President a certificate that the bond has been given, and the payment made, agreeably to the forego- ing law. He shall then sign an engagement in the following form : " I do promise and engage, that I will observe and conform to the laws and regulations made for the government of the Students of Harvard Univer- sity ; " and every person admitted as a Student in the University, shall sign a like engagement. 6 OFFICERS AND GOVERNMENT. [Chap, II. 10. Resident Students ^hall sign the above engage- ment with the President ; and Students of Medicine attending Medical lectures, shall sign it with the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine. 11. The University is open to persons who are not candidates for a degree, and who desire to study in par- ticular departments only : Provided that such persons have a good moral character ; that their previous ac- quisitions be such, as are now demanded of Students before admission, so far as the studies proposed to be pursued shall require ; and that they be subject to all the laws of the University, in regard to diligence and good conduct. CHAP. II. OFFICERS AND GOVERNMENT OF THE UNIVERSITY. 12. The President, the Professors not exempted by the tenure of their offices, and the Tutors^ have the immediate care and government of the Students, and are denominated the Faculty of the University. 13. The Corporation and Overseers constitute the Government of the University. 14. The Faculty have authority to make all orders and regulations necessary for carrying into effect their powers and duties, and to appoint Committees of their body with power to hear, determine, and punish any offence by any punishment below suspension. 15. The Faculty have cognizance of all offences committed by the Students, and it is their duty to en- force the due observance of all the laws and regulations for maintaining discipline, and promoting order, virtue, Chap. II.] OFFICERS AND GOVERNMENT. 7 piety, and good learning in the Society. The several members of the Faculty, as also the other Officers and Instructers, will exert their personal influence and au- thority to maintain discipline, order, and respect for the laws ; and will refer to the Facuhy all offences, the punishment of which may exceed their power ; and on such, as well as on all other occasions, will afford the Faculty and the President their advice, information^ and cooperation. When any Student is brought before the Faculty for violence or insult offered to any of the officers of the University, the persons injured or insulted, unless they be a majority of the officers, shall not have a voice, nor be present at the meeting. 16. The Faculty shall meet at stated times, and whenever convoked by the President, to perform the duties incumbent on them ; to communicate and and compare their opinions and information respecting the conduct and character of the Students and the state of the University ; and to consider and suggest such measures as may tend to its improvement. 17. The Professors and other Officers usually ex- empted from the duty of attending the meetings of the Faculty, shall, when requested by the President or the Boardj be associated with, and act for the time as members of the Board. 18. It being the design of the Government to have the Faculty invested with ample power to administer the instruction and discipline of the University, they are expected and desired to propose at all times to the Government, any laws or measures, which they may find requisite or useful for the effectual exercise of their functions. 19. It shall be the duty of the President to reside constantly at Cambridge, to exercise a general super- intendence over the concerns of the University, and see 8 OFFICERS AND GOVERNMENT. [^Cliap. II. that the course of instruction and discipline be carried into effect; to preside on public academic days; and to address instruction and counsel to the Students as he shall find opportunity. It is the duty of the President to call meetings of the Corporation and of the Faculty, to preside at the same, and to execute their votes and measures ; to ac- quaint himself intimately with the state, interests, and v^ants of the whole Institution ; to study its growth, the increase of its resources, the extension of instruction, and the better adaptation of it to the state of science and of society ; to be present, according to some fixed rules, at some of the exercises and recitations of each instructer, and by these and other means to endeavour to form an acquaintance with the capacity of every Student, to furnish new motives to application, and to ascertain the degree of knowledge acquired on the most important subjects ; to inquire into the execution of the laws, to see that no law falls silently into disuse, and to present for repeal to the Government any law w hich may be thought injurious or unnecessary. He is to exercise and perform all such other powers and duties as the President has been accustomed to exercise and per- form, and which are not by these Statutes assigned to the Faculty, or to some other officer of the University : Provided that the Corporation shall from time to time exempt him, as far as practicable, from such duties as are merely ministerial. The President is authorized to employ a private Secretary, whose com- pensation shall be determined by the Corporation. 20. The Professors, unless specially exempted, are constantly to reside in Cambridge, having chambers in the University or dwelling near it ; and the Tutors, Librarian, and Proctors are to reside in the College edifices. 21. The Professors, Tutors, Librarian, and other Chap* II ] OFFICERS AND GOVERNMENT, 9 Officers, shall perform such services, in their respective offices, as have been, or may be, assigned to them by the Government. 22. The Tutors and Librarian shall be chosen for a term not exceeding three years, and shall have like authority. 23. The Proctors shall be chosen for a term not exceeding two years, and shall exercise in their particular districts, and throughout the University, the same inspection and authority as a Tutor. 24. The Faculty will assign to the Graduates and Undergraduates the chambers and studies in the Col- lege edifices ; they will also appoint persons to be Monitors, and to do such other services as may be required, and fix their stipends, which, when not other- wise provided for, shall be charged to the Students in their quarter bills. 25. Whereas it is inexpedient on divers accounts, that any class, or individual or individuals in a class, should make presents to the Instructers or Officers of the University, it is required that they discourage any attempt to make, and absolutely decline accepting, any such presents. 26. As the Professor of Mathematics and the Libra- rian are intrusted with valuable property, belonging to the University, they shall respectively give a bond in such sum and with such sureties, as shall be directed by the Corporation, with condition to account for or replace all such property, as shall be committed to them in their respective offices. 27. No person shall hold any executive office in the University, who has the pastoral care of a church, or who holds any civil office, except the office of Justice of the Peace ; and whoever shall accept such pastoral care, or any civil office except that of Justice of the Peace, shall be considered as resigning his place in the 2 10 METHODS OF DISCIPLINE. [Chap. III. University, and the same shall be void, and a new elec- tion shall take place. 28. The emoluments of the President and of all the Professors and Instructers, shall be made to depend, when it can be done consistently with the statutes of their respective foundations, in some measure on the number of Students ; and for this purpose, whenever a new appointment is made to any of these offices, or whenever the present incumbents shall assent to the arrangement, these officers shall receive a certain fixed salary, and shall be entitled, in addition thereto, to a certain sum for every Undergraduate. 29. One of the Faculty shall be appointed by the Corporation to the office of Registrar, who shall keep a record of the votes and orders passed by the Faculty, give certified copies of the same, when requisite, and prepare the letters to be sent to parents and guardians. CHAP. III. METHODS OF DISCIPLINE. Encouragements and Rewards. 30. To encourage good conduct in the members of the society, and animate them to literary exertion, the following system of rewards is established. 31 . The President, consulting with the Professors and Tutors, will, in the early part of each year, pre- sent books, provided by the Hopkins Fund, to such Students of the Sophomore Class as shall be most dis- tinguished for their application to their studies. 32. The Corporation wdll give out subjects for the Bowdoin Prize Dissertations in the English language, CA«p. in.] METHODS OF DISCIPLINE. 11 and assign to the author or authors of the two best performances a first premium for each, and to the author or authors of the two next best a second pre- mium for each, if so many dissertations, of sufficient merit, are offered. The first premium is a gold medal of the value of thirty dollars ; the second, a gold medal of the value of twenty dollars. Candidates must sub- scribe fictitious names to their dissertations, and accom- pany them with sealed letters having the fictitious names on the outside and their real names within ; which letters will be burnt unopened, except those of the successful candidates, whose names will be placed on the records of the Corporation and of the Faculty. 33. In conformity to the will of the Founder of these prizes, the successful dissertations must be " read in publick by their respective authors, who shall deliver a fair copy of the same, to be lodged in the Library ; such copies to be written on quarto paper of the same size, that such of them, as shall merit it, may be bound together in handsome volumes and be lodged in the Library." 34. Agreeably to the institution of the " Boylston Prizes for Elocution," on the day after Commence- ment in each year there will be held in University Hall, or in the Meeting house at Cambridge, a pub- lick exhibition and trial of the skill and improvement of the Students at the University in elocution. The speakers are not to rehearse their own composition ; but to select pieces in prose or verse, from English, Greek, or Latin authors, the selections to be approved by the Boylston Professor of Rhetorick and Oratory. The proportion in English, is to be at least two out of three. The competitors must be Graduates of the year, or Undergraduates of one of the two next classes. The Corporation will, each year, select five gentlemen distinguished for their elocution either at the bar, in the pulpit, or in the senate, who, 12 METHODS OF DISCIPLINE. [Chap* III. with the Corporation, or a major part of them, will judge of the merits of the competitorsj and award the prizes. They will assign five prizes; two first prizes, namely, fifteen dollars or a gold medal of that value to each of the two best speakers, and three second prizes, namely, ten dollars or a gold medal of that value to each of the three next best : Provid- ed, that if the judges shall be of opinion that none of the competitors have exhibited sufficient skill and improvement to be entitled to the first prizes, they may withhold them. At this exhibition no prompting of the speakers will be allowed ; and a failure of mem- ory in any one, will exclude him from being consid- ered in the assignment of the prizes. 36. In the selection of Students to receive pecuniary favours, such as the College benefits called exhibi- tions, and the Hollis scholarships, the Corporation will give the preference to those (not otherwise dis- qualified), who are of good behaviour, and who are recommended by the Faculty as excelling in their respective studies. Any open profaneness, or disor- derly or undutiful behaviour, shall be accounted a dis- qualification for such favours. In the appointment of Students by the Faculty to perform services to w hich a compensation is annexed, regard will also be had to literary merit and to moral character. And no one who is a College beneficiary shall remain such any longer than he shall continue exemplary for sobriety, diligence, and orderly conduct. 36, There will be three Exhibitions in each year, namely, one at each of the semiannual visits of the Committee of the Overseers, and one in the other term. The Exercises at these exhibitions, as well as at Commencement, shall be assigned by the Faculty. The refusal of a Student to perform the part assigned him on either of these occasions, will be punished as a high offence. Every performer shall deliver Chap, in.] METHODS of discipline. 13 to the President, one week at least previously to the Exhibition, a fair copy of his performance. At such times as may be fixed by the Professor of Rhet- orick and Oratory, each performer shall rehearse his part. If any one shall make additions to what is con- tained in the copy delivered by him to the President or other presiding officer, or shall speak any thing in publick which he has been directed to omit, he shall suffer punishment according to the aggravation of the offence. 37. The Students will be examined, from time to time, by Committees appointed by the Overseers from their own body, or from the community at large, in the whole of their studies. 38. To carry this design into effect, it shall be the duty of each Instructer, when a class has completed a particular branch of study, or a particular book, as shall be judged expedient by the Faculty, and deter- mined by a rule, to give information of the same to the President, who will assign a day for the exam- ination of the Class in that study or book, giving notice at least seven days before to the chairman of the Committee appointed to examine in that branch of study. And the examining Committee will be requested to mark by numbers their estimate of the performance of each Student, which estimate shall be taken into consideration by the Instructer, and have its influence in forming the next Scale of Merit. The Committee will also state generally their opinion of the degree of thoroughness and exactness with which the book, or branch of study, has been learned. 39. In order to ascertain, as nearly as may be, the relative rank of each Student in his Class, in the months of June and December of each year a Scale of Merit will be made out, by adding together the amounts allowed to each Student by the several In- struciers; and in forming these amounts each Instructer 14 METHODS OF DISCIPLINE. [Chap. III. shall have reference to the estimate of the examining Committee in connection with his own estimate at the recitations and other exercises. 40. In forming the Scale of Merit, one column will be assigned to conduct. The estimate of this shall be formed by the collective judgment of the Faculty, after consulting their records. Punishments. 41. The Governors and Instructers earnestly desire that the Students may be influenced to good conduct and literary exertion by higher motives than the fear of punishment ; but when such motives fail, the Facul- ty will have recourse to friendly caution and warning, fines, solemn admonition, and official notice of delin- quency to Parents or Guardians ; and where the na- ture and circumstances of the case require it, to sus- pension, dismission, rustication, or expulsion. Fines shall not be resorted to as an ordinary punishment; none shall be imposed but by the Faculty ; and in no case shall a fine exceed ten dollars. 42. All instances of the violation of the laws of the University, by disorderly conduct, by absence from stated exercises, or by the negligent performance of prescribed duties, will be recorded, and formally report- ed to the Faculty at set times, and whenever occasion requires. 43. Whenever a Student is found to be delinquent, he shall be liable to be deprived of any such indulgence as may be granted to exemplary Students, with respect to absence, going out of town, and the like ; to have par- ticular portions of study prescribed to him, to be per- formed during the vacation, or at other times ; and to forfeit all claims to the distinctions and rewards pro- vided for the meritorious : and if he persist in such de- linquency, he may be suspended or suffer higher pun- ishment. Chap* III.] METHODS OF DISCIPLINE. 15 44. By suspension for negligence a Student is sepa- rated from his Class as to those branches of study in which he is deficient, and placed under private in- struction, provided for the purpose in the town of Cambridge. 45. Every person so suspended is required to per- form exercises with the person or persons, under whose from 9 A. M. till noon, and Friday ^ from 2 P. M. till 3. During the third term, on Monday "| Tuesday ! from 8 o'clock A. M. till noon, Wednesday | and from 1 till 6 P. M. Thursday J j^ . , ? from 9 o'clock, A. M. till noon, ^ ritlay ^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^ p^ ^ ^jj ^ 2. Resident Graduates, and resident Students with the privileges of Graduates, may borrow and return books on the before mentioned days of the week dur- ing the hour from 2 to 3 o'clock P. M. 3. Undergraduates may borrow and return books during the hour from 1 to 2 o'clock, as follows — Juniors and Seniors, — on Monday and Thursday : Sophomores, — on Tuesday ; Freshmen, — on Wednesday. i X 45 THE COURSE OF INSTRUCTION For Undergraduates in Harvard University. Oct, 1825. The folio-wing are the principal Authors and Studies assigned to the Classes, FRESHMEN. 1. Collectanea Graeca Majora. (Dalzel's.) 2 vols. 8vo. — The 4th Cambridge edition is preferred. 2. Greek Testament. (Griesbach's.) 3. Livy, five books, 12mo. 4. Grotius de Veritate Religionis Christianae. 5. Horace. Cambridge edition. 6. Excerpta Latina. Wells, Boston, 8vo. 7. Geometry (Legendre's). Algebra (Lacroix's).— Cambridge Transl.- 8. Adam's Roman Antiquities. 9. Lowtb's English Grammar. Exercises in Declamation once a Week. SOPHOMORES. 1, 6, and 7, continued and finished. 10. Cicero de Oratore, or an equivalent. 11. Analytick Geometry. — Cambridge Course of Mathematicks. 12. Blair's Lectures on Rhetorick. 2 vols. 8vo. 13. History, Ancient and Modern. (Tytler's.) Exercises in Declamation and Composition once a fortnight through the year. JUNIOR SOPHISTERS. 14. Logick. (Dr. Hedge's.) 15. Paley's Moral Philosophy. 16. Homer's Iliad. (Robinson's edition is recommended.) 17. Juvenal and Persius expurg. or an equivalent part of Tacitus. 18. Hebrew Grammar. (Prof. Willard's.) 19. No. 1 & 2 of Whiting & Watson's Hebrew Bible, or the Psalter. 20. Natural Philosophy. — Cambridge Course. 21. Topography, &c. — Camb. Course of Math. 22. Diff. and Int. Calculus or Fluxions. — Camb. Course of Math.* 23. Chemistry. Public Declamations — Forensick Disputes once a month, Themes once a fortnight. * A substitute is allowed for this branch, and for the parts of Natural Philosophy con- n"fected with it. 7 46 SENIOR SOPHISTERS. 24. Intellectual Philosophy. (Stewart's and Brown's.) 25. Paley's Evidences, and Butler's Analogy. 26. Political Economy. (J. B. Say's.) 27. Philosophy ofrf atural History. (Smellie's. Dr. John Ware's edit.) Declamations, Forensicks, and Themes, as in the Junior year. K.B The pnhlick Declamations, held on Thursday, at the morning study bell, are to be attended by the Seniors and Juniors. N. B. Instead of 18 and 19, those above twenty-one years of age, and others at the written request of their parent or guardian, may attend to Mathematicks, or Greek & Latin, or one of the foreign Modern Languages. A like option is allowed between Greek & Latin, and the Modem Languages, in the afternoon of the second term of the Junior year ; be- tween Mjithematicks and the Modern Languages in the forenoon of the second term of the Junior year ; between Ancient or Mod- ern Languages, and Chemistry, Mineralogy, and Geology, in the afternoon of the second and third terms of the Senior year ; and be- tween Intellectual Philosophy and Natural History, in the afternoon of the first term of the Senior year. The above studies will, as far as possible, be so arranged as to admit of any Student's attending to all. TABLE OF PRIVATE EXERCISES. FRESHMEN. Morning exercise. Forenoon. Afternoon. Mornina;. V Mond. to Sat. ) ^^^^^ ^^^ j- atin. ^ inclusive. ) Monday to Friday. Saturday. Monday to Friday. Forenoon Afternoon Monday to Saturday. Monday to Friday. Saturday. i Monday to ' ( Friday. ■\ Mathematicks. English Granamar. ( Declamation, History, and ( Antiquities. > Greek and Latin. SOPHOMORES. < Greek and Latin. Greek and Latin. Rhetorick. Mathematicks. History, and Declamation, or English Composition. Maihematicks. Greek and Latin. ( 1st & 2d terms &, 10 I weeks of 3d term. 3 last w'ks 3d term. \ 1st term. 2d term. 3d term. 1st k, 2d terms. 3d term. 47 JUNIOR SOPHISTERS. Morning. Forenoon. Afternoon. ( Monday to I Saturday. C Mon. to Frid. ) Monday to ( Thursday. ( Monday to \ Friday. 1st term. 2d and 3d terms. 1st term. Logick and Mor. Philosophy. Mathematicks &. Nat. Fhilos. Chemistry, last five weeks. Mathematics, )^^^j^^^^^j^^_ or Mod. Lang, ^ Hebrew, or substitute. Greek and Latin, or Mod. Lang. 2d term. ^ Nat. Philosophy. 3d term. Every second Friday the Class present Themes, and half the Class read Fo- rensicks. SENIOR SOPHISTERS. 2d term. 1st term. Morning. Forenoon. Mond. to Sat. | Natural Philosophy. 1st term. 2d k. 3d term?. 1st term. 2d term. Isl term. Afternoon. 2d and 3d terms. itel. Phil. Ha Polit. Economy. (Monday to ^Astronomy I Thursday. I Theology and Nat. Philos. r Intel. Phil, or Nat. History.* Ti,T J * T? • 1 ! Ancient or Mod. Lang, as Mond. to Frid. < u 4-^ * f r-i •* j a substitute for Chemistry, (^Mineralogy, and Geology. ^ Every second Friday the Class present Themes, and half the class read Fo- rensicks. The usual time of private exercises, for the morning, is immedi- ately after prayers ; in the forenoon, at X and half after X o'clock, and at XI and half after XI ; in the afternoon, from the end of the summer vacation, till the first day of November, at IV ; from that time till the winter vacation, between IV and half after III ; from the end of the '-^^er vacation, till the middle of March, at IV ; thence, till the enu ' "^ *'^rra, at half after IV ; during the third term at V. ^Anjr variatiui. "^ese times, required by the size or division of the ckisses, or the citure of the exercise, will be an- nounced as there may be occasion by the Professors or Tutors. LECTURES. * TERM L By the Professor of Divinity, Monday to Saturday, last five weeks, at XI,t to Seniors. Hebrew, Monday to Saturday, first six weeks, at •X^I, to Juniors. Astronomy, Monday to Saturday, first six weeks, u tc a at XI, to Seniors. <( Chemistry, Monday to Saturday, last five weeks, at XI, to Juniors. French and Spanish Literature, at the times as- signed to Mod. Lang. (See Table of Private Exercises.) * The option here mentioned, will, for the present year, take place at the morning exercise of the 2d or 3d term. t On Saturday the Lecture may be at an earliar hour, at the discretion of the Lecturer. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 48 029 908 957 5 t TERM II. By the Professor of Greek, Monday to Friday ,,'^ last three weeks, at XI, to Juniors. « French and Spanish Literature, at the times as- signed to Modern Languages. «■« Chemistry, Mineralogy, and Geology, one hour be- fore evening prayers, to Seniors. TERM III. By the Professor of La^ (Royall)y Monday to Thursday, at XI, to • Seniors. * Physiology at XI, after the lectures of the ROyall Prof, are finished, to Seniors. Metaphysics, Monday to Thursday, at XI, to Sen- iors. *' Anatomy and Surgery first five weeks, at IV, P. M., to Seniors. " Natural Philosophy, from Monday to Friday, ex- cept every second Friday, at XI, to Juniors, " (Rumford,) Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, at IX, to Seniors. " Rhetorick and Oratorj^, Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, at IX, to Juniors. *^ French and Spanish Lite rain- at the times as- signed to Modern J ^'^'^ '* Miperalog}*at(' '^ nonday to Friday, af V., P. M., to>S>. o. ' ^ .". '* ^ -Natural History, Monday to Friday, last eight weeks, at IV, P. M., to Seniors. N. B. In the several courses of lectures, the students are to be examined at the end of each lecture, at the beginning of the next,, or after every four or five lectures (an hour being set apart for this purpose), as the Professor shall judge expedient. ♦The forenoon lecture or exercise for the Seniors and Juniors on Saturday^ during the 2d and 8d terms, will iJe determined* hereafter. ^ • * cc cc CORRECTION. In the Appendix, page 42, line 26, after the word '^ prayers^"^^ in- sert ^^ and any one absent from evening prayers on that day., from what- ever cause^ who does not enter his name as above directed — ." Conservation Resources Lig-Free® Type I Ph 8.5, Buffered ■^sr ilrHfiy O*" CONGRESS 029 908 957 ?