PROGRESS OF INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION. 393 



given iu llic report of the Departmeut for the hist year, (1871,) autl 

 we now present a cut of the college building, ^Yhich may be seen on 

 the opposite page. 



The university has a library of its own, numbering 4,G00 volumes, and 

 the students also have access, free of charge, to the library of the State 

 Historical Society, which contains 50,000 volumes, embracing almost 

 every subject concerning which information might be desired. The 

 number of students in the university of the present collegiate year is 

 517, 93 of whom are in the college of arts, and 130 in the female col- 

 lege. 



