148 



CIVIL HISTORY OF VERMONT. 



Part IL 



COURSE OF STUDIES. 



PKESIDENTS AND CORI'ORATIOB. 



Commentaries, Cicero's Select Orations 

 and Virgil. The authors here mentioned 

 are preferred ; but tlie amount of knowl- 

 edge will be regarded rather than particu- 

 lar books from which it has been acquired. 

 Those, who propose to pursue a partial 

 course of study, will be examined in those 

 studies which are necessary to a success- 

 ful prosecution of their proposed course. 



The regular seasons for the admission 

 of students into the university are on the 

 day preceding commencement, and that 

 preceding the first day of the autumnal 

 term. 



The parents or guardians of such as 

 become members of the university, or tlie 

 students themselves, are required to pay 

 the term bills, from year to year, in ad- 

 vance, or give bonds to the treasurer for 

 the payment of the same. 



CorRSE OF Studies. 

 Freshman. Class. 

 Fall Tcrm."^ — Algebra, Herodotus, Liv\-, 

 Greek and Latin Forms. Summer Term. — 

 Geometry, (plane and spherical,) Herodo- 

 tus, Livy, Tacitus, Roman Antiquities. 

 Sophomore Class. 



Fall Term. — Tacitus, Odyssey, Plane 

 and Spherical Trigonometry, Conic Sec- 

 tions. Summer Term — Surveying, Navi- 

 gation, Projections, Differential and In- 

 tegral Calculus, Quintiiian,GreekOrators. 

 Jiinior Class. 



Fall Term. Horace, Thucydides, Sta- 

 tics, Danymics. Summer Term. — Latin 

 Drama, Greek Drama, Hydrostatics, Hy- 

 draulics, Chemistry, Galvanism and Elec- 

 tricity, Magnetism, Electro-Magnetism 

 with experiments. 



Senior Class. 



Fall Term. — Physiology, Psychology, 

 Logic, Crystallography, Higher Mathe- 

 matics, Astronomy. Summer Tcrrn. — As- 

 tronomy, Metaphysics, Moral Philosophy, 

 Principles of Government, Rhetoric, Fine 

 Arts, Evidences of Natural and Revealed 

 Religion. 



Frequent exercises in Elocution, Com- 

 position and Translations are required 

 through the whole course. Instruction 

 is given in French during the last two 

 years. Biblical instruction is given on 

 the Sabbath. During the two last years 

 private classes maybe formed in Hebrew, 

 Germam, Italian, or Spanish Languages. 

 Lectures are given in Natural Philosophy, 

 Natural History, Cliemistrv, &c. 



Commencement is on the first Wed- 

 nesday in August. There are two vaca- 

 tions — one of four weeks from the com 



* Tke Fall Term embraces the montlis of Pep- 

 terabcr, October, November anil December. T/ie 

 Summer Term, the months of March, April, May, 

 5 line and .Iiily. 



mencement; tlie other of eight weeks 

 from the first Wednesday in January. 



The students are examined, at the close 

 of each study, by the faculty ; and also 

 annually by the faculty and a committee, 

 during the three weeks immediately pre- 

 ceding commencement, in all tlie studies 

 pursued under the direction of the faculty. 

 The examinations are intended to be exact 

 and thorough, and in each case the attain- 

 ments of every student are noted and re- 

 corded. 



The text books in ^he department of 

 languages, though more numerous than 

 in most colleges, are not more expensive, 

 as the cheap German editions are used. 

 Entire authors are preferred to collections 

 of extracts. The use of these, it is be- 

 lieved, furnishes an inducement to the 

 student to retain his classics, and to pur- 

 sue the study of them beyond the imme- 

 diate demands of the recitation room. 



CATALOGUE 



OF ALURINI AND HONORARY GRADUATES. 

 [.Vote — In the following catalogues, those who 

 have (lied are designated by a *. The names of min- 

 ister? in the list of graduates arc in italic] 



Elected. Presidents. ^^.^^ 



l.-^00 Rev, Daniel C. Sanders, D. D. 1S14 

 l.Sir, ^Rev. Samuel Austin, D. D. 1821 

 1821 Rev. Daniel Haskel, A. M. 1824 

 182.5 Rev. Willard Preston, A. M. 1826 

 1826 Rev. James Marsh, D. D. 1833 



1833 Rev. John Wheeler, D. D. 



Corporation. 

 1791 Rev. Caleb Blood, 1808 



]7:)l*Rev. Bethuel Chittenden, 1803 



1791 *Rev. Asa Burton, D. D. 1810 



1791 *Hon. Ira Allen, 1796 



1791 *Hon. Jonathan Arnold, 1796 



1791 *Hon. Enoch Woodbridge, A.B. 1805 

 1791 *Hon. Samuel Hitchcock, A. B. 1813 

 1791 "^Hon. Jonathan Hunt, 1807 



1793 ^Joshua Stanton, Esq. 1802 



1799 Rev. D.C. Sanders, D.D.yVe5M8]4 



1800 *Wm.C. Harrington, Esq. 1809 



1801 David Russell, Esq. 1810 

 ]802*Hon. Amos Marsh, A. M. 1811 

 lS02"Hon. Martin Chittenden, A.B. 1813 

 1 8(12 ^Hon. Royal Tyler, A. M. 1813 

 1804 *Rev. Publius V. Booge, A. M. 1810 

 1804 Rev. Leonard Worcester,A.M.lS10 

 1804 Rev. Henry Green, A. M. 1813 

 1807 *Hon. Daniel Farrand, A. B. 1810 

 1807 John Pomeroy, M. D. 1810 

 1810 Hon. Samuel C. Crafts, A.M. 1818 

 1810 Hon. J. D. Farnsworth, M. D. 1818 

 ] 810 *Hon. Ezra Butler, 1816 

 1810*Hon. Pliny Smith, 1816 

 1810 Rev. A. Bronson, A. M. 1816 

 1810 Hon.Wni. A. Griswold, A.M. 1819 

 1810 Hon. James Fisk, A.M. 1812 

 1810 Hon. Titus Hutchinson, A. M. 1826 



