Xbubwash] a review OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO 85 



In the same way the corporation and Council with all existing 

 statutes and appointments of the University College were continued. 



The property and income upon which the University and University 

 College were founded in common were controlled as formerly by the 

 provisions of a separate Act. 



The Universit}' continued to be governed as heretofore by a Senate 

 and there was now added for certain executive functions a University 

 Council. The functions of convocation continued as heretofore, but to 

 its membership were now added the graduates in Arts, Law and Medicine 

 of all federating universities. 



The Chancellor and Vice Chancellor were elected as heretofore and 

 their official duties continued. 



The composition of the Senate was enlarged by several important 

 additions. The Minister of Education and the heads of federating 

 universities and colleges were added to the ex officio members, a repre- 

 sentative of each of the federating universities and colleges was added 

 to the appointed members, and the graduates in Arts of each federating 

 university were empowered to elect one representative for every hundred 

 graduates on the register of the university when this Act came into 

 effect. The graduates in Medicine as one body were entitled to elect four 

 representatives and the graduates in Law two. The members of con- 

 vocation were thus for the first time separated by faculties in the elec- 

 tion of representatives on the Senate. The separate representation in 

 Arts by federating universities was limited to six years. All the func- 

 tions and powers of the Senate were continued as heretofore but no 

 student could, be admitted to university exammations without a certifi- 

 cate that he had complied with all the requirements of his college 

 affecting his admission to such examination. 



The University now became a teaching body ^nth power to cons- 

 titute faculties in Arts, Law, Medicine and Engineering, the faculty of 

 Arts including the following subjects : Mathematics, Physics, Astronomy. 

 Geology, Mineralogy, Chemistry Pure and Applied, Zoology, Botany, 

 Physiology, History, Ethnology and Comparative Philology, Histon- of 

 Philosophy, Logic and Metaphysics, Education, the Spanish and Italian 

 Languages, Political Science (including Economics, Jurisprudence and 

 Constitutional Law), and such other sciences, arts and branches of 

 knowledge as the Senate may from time to time determine unless other- 

 wise prohibited by this Act. Provision was further made to include as 

 options in the Arts curriculum the subjects of religious knowledge but 

 not for teaching them. 



Tlie lectures in the L^niversity faculty were made free of charge 

 (excepting laboratory fees, and fees for lectures in the faculties of Medi- 

 ■cine and Law) to all students enrolled in a federating university or in 



