DECEMBER 27, 1918] 
accessible to pupils who have had no other oppor- 
tunities of previous education than those which the 
free public schools afford.’’ 
3. Admission, Inasmuch as the entrance exami- 
nations to Harvard College now admit freely boys 
from good high schools, the requirements for ad- 
mission to the engineering school shall be the same 
as for admission to Harvard College. Admission 
to advanced standing and special study shall be ad- 
ministered by the engineering faculty. 
4. Fees. The fees of students in the school shall 
be the same as for students in Harvard College, ex- 
cept that supplementary fees for additional or for 
laboratory courses may be charged. 
5. Class rooms and laboratories. The work of 
the school shall be carried on in the class rooms and 
laboratories of the university, but arrangements 
may be made from time to time for the use of the 
facilities of other institutions for any part of the 
work (in its advanced technical courses) when the 
needs, financial resources and best interests of the 
school so require. 
Arrangements for the use of facilities of other 
institutions, or the interchange of instruction, shall 
be made for a period of only one year at a time. 
When there shall be income from the funds of 
the McKay endowment available, in the judgment 
of the president and fellows, for the construction 
of new buildings for the engineering school, con- 
taining offices, laboratories, workrooms and class- 
rooms, such buildings are to be constructed on Har- 
vard University grounds and bear the name of 
Gordon MeKay. 
6. Faculty. The faculty of the school shall con- 
sist of the president of the university and of those 
professors, associate professors, assistant pro- 
fessors and instructors appointed for more than 
one year, the greater part of whose work of in- 
struction is done in the school, and of a limited 
number of other teachers of subjects offered in the 
school to be appointed in the usual way. The term 
of appointment of a teacher from any other insti- 
tution who gives instruction in the school shall be 
for one year only; his title shall be lecturer, in- 
structor or assistant. 
The faculty shall, under the direction of the cor- 
poration, have control of all instruction given in 
the school wherever the instruction may be given. 
7. Degrees. A student satisfactorily fulfilling 
the requirements of a prescribed four-year pro- 
gram in any of the engineering fields shall be 
awarded the degree of bachelor of science in that 
field. 
The degree of master of science, or an equiva- 
SCIENCE 
637 
lent degree, shall be awarded upon the successful 
completion of at least one additional year of study. 
For the doctor’s degree the requirements shall be 
similar to those in the graduate school of arts and 
sciences. 
8. Credit for instruction elsewhere. As in the 
ease of every faculty the faculty of the engineer- 
ing school may, in its discretion from time to time, 
allow credit towards the degree under its control 
for instruction received at another institution or by 
other instructors. 
9. Courses in the school, or the services of its 
staff, may be made available to qualified students 
of other institutions. 
10. This plan shall be submitted to the Supreme 
Judicial Court of Massachusetts, or a justice 
thereof, for approval. 
The faculty of the school of engineering is 
as follows: 
A. Lawrence Lowell, president; George F. Swain, 
Gordon McKay professor of civil engineering; 
George S. Raymer, assistant professor of mining; 
Arthur E. Kennelly, professor of electrical engi- 
neering; Henry L. Smyth, professor of mining and 
metallurgy, and director of the mining and metal- 
lurgical laboratories; Harry E. Clifford, Gordon 
McKay professor of electrical engineering; Lewis 
J. Johnson, professor of civil engineering; Albert 
Sauver, professor of metallurgy and metallography; 
George C. Whipple, Gordon McKay professor of 
sanitary engineering; Comfort A. Adams, Abbott 
and James Lawrence professor of electrical engi- 
neering; Frank A. Kennedy, associate professor of 
engineering drawing; Lionel S. Marks, professor 
of mechanical engineering; George W. Pierce, pro- 
fessor of physics and director of the Cruft Memor- 
ial Laboratory; Hector J. Hughes, professor of 
civil engineering and director of the engineering 
camp; Edward V. Huntington, associate professor 
of mathematics; Gregory P. Baxter, professor of 
chemistry; Lawrence J. Henderson, assistant pro- 
fessor of biological chemistry; Louis C. Graton, 
professor of economie geology; Arthur E. Norton, 
assistant professor of mechanical engineering; 
Harvey N. Davis, assistant professor of physics; 
Grinnell Jones, assistant professor of chemistry; 
Emory L. Chaffee, assistant professor of physics. 
THE MEDALLISTS OF THE ROYAL 
SOCIETY 
Ar the anniversary meeting of the Royal 
Society on November 30, medals were pre- 
