PRESENT CURRICULUM. 



It is scarcely necessary to trace the growth of the curriculum step 

 by step during the past ten years. It will serve all purposes to show 

 its present condition, as found in the current catalogue of the Univer- 

 sity. Applicants for admission to the Freshman class in the A. B. 

 course must have to their credit one term's work in Physical Geogra- 

 phy, one in Physiology and one in Elementary Physics ; for the Philo- 

 sophical course, the same, plus an additional term in Physics and one 

 in Botany ; for the Scientific course, there is added still further one 

 term's work in Chemistry, one in Anatomy and Physiology, and one in 

 Mechanical Drawing. For the college work, we have thought it well 

 to give the Classical and Scientific courses substantially complete, in 

 order to show the amount of scientific work in each, in relation to 

 other studies. Scientific studies appear in bold-baced type, in order 

 to facilitate the work of comparison. No doubt the line between what 

 is classed as Scientific and what is not will seem arbitrary in some 

 cases, but that is hardly to be avoided. 



For the Degree of Bachelor of Arts. 



FRESH31AN CLASS. 



FALL TF.RM. 



"'Latin. — Cicero, De Senectute or De Ainicitia, followed by Livy, Books I- 

 II, or XXI-XXII ; The Latin Subjunctive. 



Greek. — Select Orations of Lysias ; History of Athens under the Thirty 

 Tyrants and Restoration of the Democracy. 



Mathematics — Part III of Olney's University Algebra. 



Rhetoric. — Hart's, with Lectures, one hour a week. 



I 



'■"Separate entries in t lie courses arc in many cnses Ium-c alilircviatcil, Imt in ni) ease 

 iiiiilli'd. 



