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censes, one credit being granted for each 15 hours (with the 
exception of “B8, Plant Culture”). Through an agreement 
made in January, 1931, with Long Island University, under- 
graduate credit for certain courses will be allowed toward ful- 
filling the requirements for a university degree, provided the 
admission requirements at the University and the laboratory re- 
quirements have been fulfilled. Such courses are starred. By 
arrangement with the institution concerned, these credits may also 
be used as undergraduate credits in other colleges and universities. 
Nature materials used in the courses, and plants raised become the 
property of the student. 
Members of the Garden are entitled to a 50 per cent. discount 
from the regular fee for all “ B” courses; from other persons 
the indicated fee is required. Long Island University students 
desirous of electing any of these or of the “ A” courses should 
notify Dean Tristram W. Metcalfe or Dr. Ralph H. Cheney, who 
will give the candidate a card entitling him to admission to the 
course. The student should present this card at the beginning of 
the first session of the course. No course will be given when less 
than ten persons apply. 
*Bl. General Botany.—A two-year course of thirty class 
meetings each year. Also thirty two-hour laboratory periods, the 
time for the latter to be arranged when the class is organized. The 
first year (A) is spent on the structure and functions of the 
higher plants. Four credits. The second year (B) deals with 
the lower groups, their structure, life histories, and relationships. 
Four credits. In 1934-35 the first half of the course (A) will 
be given. The first half is not a prerequisite for the second, but 
those who have never studied botany before are advised to take 
(A) first. Fee, $10 each year. Thursdays, 4 p.m., beginning 
September 27. Miss Rusk. 
*B10. Flowering Plants: Field and Laboratory Study.— 
Thirty sessions. The object of this course is to become acquainted 
with the species of wild flowering plants (native plants and intro- 
earn how to identify them. [Field and lab- 
joel 
duced weeds), and to 
oratory work are distributed according to the weather, the season, 
and the needs of the class. The field work is done largely in the 
Brooklyn Botanie Garden. The laboratory work consists of ex- 
* Accepted for credit in Long Island University. 
