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College of Medicine (located in Chicago)-Continued.

Courses-Continued.

(3) Four years. In College of Medicine (Chicago). Entrance requirement: (1) 15 units of secondary work, including 8 prescribed-3 English, 2 mathematics, 2 German, French, Latin, or Greek, 1 American history and civics; and (2) two years (60 semester hours) of college work, including 30 prescribed-8 chemistry, 8 physics, 8 biology, 6 German or French. B. S. degree after first two years and M. D. after fourth year.

College of Dentistry (located in Chicago).

Admission: 15 units work in an approved secondary school.

Degree: D. D. S.-Three-year course.

School of Pharmacy (located in Chicago).

Admission:

For degree of Graduate of Pharmacy, 2 years of work in an approved secondary school.

For degree of Phar. Chem.; graduation from an approved secondary school. Degrees: Graduate in Pharmacy-two-year course. Four years' practical drug experience. The time spent in residence at the school may be counted a part of this requirement.

Phar. Chem.-Two-year course, with special emphasis upon laboratory work.

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Colleges of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Engineering, Agriculture,

Library, and Music School.................

Board, at Urbana..

Room, at Urbana...

Board and room, at Chicago, per week..

Total annual expense..

24

144-180

72-80

5-6 375-450

Faculty, 753.

Students, 5,539, of whom 190 are from foreign countries.

Of special interest to foreign students.—Located in the heart of the great corn country, the university, in the College of Agriculture, offers particularly strong courses dealing with this grain and its culture. A close affiliation maintained with the State experiment station enables the university to support a much larger faculty and permit a higher degree of specialization than would otherwise be possible. Among the noteworthy courses in this college may be mentioned animal husbandry, with opportunity for advanced work in animal nutrition; agronomy, particularly soils and grains; entomology, and landscape gardening.

The College of Engineering is of first rank. The work in civil and electrical engineering is particularly strong, and the university maintains an engineering experiment station devoted entirely to research.

In the newly organized College of Commerce, the university offers courses in business administration, including social and industrial economics, accountancy, banking, and railway administration. The work in railway administration is divided into two general courses; in one, emphasis is upon traffic and accounting; the other, with stress

upon the transportation service, prepares men directly for transportation department

of railways.

Preparation for journalistic work, either on the managerial and advertising, or on the reportorial, literary or editorial side, is provided.

The Library School is among the best in the country. The course includes, numer. ous visits to libraries, book binderies, book stores, and printing establishments in the vicinity, and each student is required to spend at least one month in practical work in an assigned public library.

The Graduate School, which has recently been reorganized, is of high rank. NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY, Evanston and Chicago, Ill. The College of Liberal Arts, the Graduate School, the College of Engineering, the Theological Schools, the School of Music, and the School of Oratory, are located in Evanston, a city of 25,000 inhabitants, 12 miles north of the center of Chicago, and continuous with it. The Schools of Law, Medicine, Pharmacy, Dentistry, and Commerce are in Chicago, a city of 2,344,018 inhabitants. Founded, 1851. College of Liberal Arts (undergraduate).

Admission: 15 units; 5 prescribed-3 English, 24 mathematics.

Degrees: A. B. and B. S.-Four-year courses.

Graduate School.

Admission: Bachelor's degree from recognized college.

Degrees:

A. M.-One year of postgraduate study; thesis.

Ph. D.-Three years of postgraduate study; thesis.

M. S. T.-Three years in a theological school; one year of postgraduate work in theology; thesis.

Medical School.

Admission: Two years of college work.

Degree: M. D.--Four-year course and additional hospital year.

Law School.

Admission: One year of college work. A graduate of a recognized secondary school who is more than 20 years old may be admitted.

Degrees:

LL. B. and J. B.-Three-year course.

LL. M.-One year of study after receiving LL. B.; thesis.

J. D.-(The candidate for this degree must have a bachelor's degree from a recognized college.) One year of postgraduate study after LL. B.

College of Engineering.

Admission: As in College of Liberal Arts.

Degrees:

B. S.-Four-year course.

E. E. and C. E.-Five-year course.

School of Pharmacy.

Admission: Fifteen units.

Degrees:

Graduate in Pharmacy-Two years of six months each.
Pharmaceutical Chemist-Two years of nine months each.

Dental School.

Admission: Graduation from recognized high school.
Degree: D. D. S.-Four-year course.

School of Commerce.

Admission: Two years of collegiate work.

Degree: B. B. A.-Three years' study and thesis.

Garrett Biblical Institute, primarily a Methodist theological seminary, but open to

any properly recommended students.

Graduate School of Theology.

Admission: Bachelor's degree from recognized college.

Degree: B. D.-Three-year course.

Miscellaneous:

School of Music.

School of Oratory.

Preparatory schools—

Evanston Academy (Evanston).

Grand Prairie Seminary (Onarga, Ill.).

Elgin Academy (Elgin, Ill.).

Expenses:
Tuition-

College of Liberal Arts.......

$110

Graduate School (based on courses taken), not to exceed..

40

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100

140

150

45

For course leading to degree Graduate in Pharmacy.
For course leading to degree Pharmaceutical Chemist..
Dental School.......

School of Commerce (based on courses taken), average..
Theological School, free.

Board, $5 to $7 a week.

Room, $5 to $12 a month.

Total annual expense.......

Faculty, 477.

Students, 4,791, of whom 115 are from foreign countries.

389-585

Of special interest to foreign students.-The medical school and pharmacy school occupy three large and well-equipped buildings. In addition numerous hospitals and dispensaries throughout the city provide abundant opportunities for clinical instruction. Wesley Hospital and Mercy Hospital each conducts a training school for nurses with a curriculum under the supervision of the university.

The Dental School is of the first rank. A special postgraduate or practitioner's course, beginning the day after commencement and lasting four weeks, is offered. The location of the School of Commerce, in Chicago, offers unusual opportunities for practical observation and study of modern business and business problems in one of the country's greatest commercial centers.

The College of Engineering introduces an unusual number of nontechnical courses into its curriculum with the intention of giving its graduates a broader and more general training than is commonly done.

A Norwegian-Danish and a Swedish Theological Seminary are maintained to train students for work in this country among people of the respective nationalities.

UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME, Notre Dame, Ind., town of 1,000 inhabitants 2 miles from South Bend, Ind., a city of 63,198 inhabitants, and 80 miles east of Chicago, Ill., city of 2,344,018 inhabitants. Founded, 1842.

College of Arts and Letters.

Admission: 16 units; 13 prescribed-4 English, 2 Latin, 2 French or German, 2 history, 2 mathematics, 1 science. For the department of classics all 16 units are prescribed, there being 7 foreign language units required. These must be 4, Latin and 3 Greek.

Degrees: A. B., Lit. B., Ph. B., Ph. B. in Journalism, Ph. B. in commerce-Fouryear courses.

College of Science.

Admission: 16 units; 13 prescribed-4 English, 2 science, 3 mathematics, 2 foreign language, 2 history.

Degrees: B. S., B. S. in Chem., B. S. in Biol., B. S. in Phar.-Four-year courses. A thesis is required.

Short courses in pharmacy. Two years for those who have completed one year of high-school work, and leading to degree Ph. G. Three years for those who have completed two years of high-school work, and leading to degree Ph. C.

College of Engineering.

Admission: 16 units, as in College of Science.

Degrees: C. E., M. E., E. E., E. M., Chem. E.-Four-year courses. A thesis is required.

College of Architecture.

Admission: 16 units, as in the College of Science.

Degrees:

B. S. in Architecture, B. S. in Architectural Engineering-Four-year courses. M. S. in Architecture, M. S. in Architectural Engineering-One year postgraduate study; thesis. These masters' degrees may also be conferred for work done in absentia.

- College of Law.

Admission: 16 units; 13 prescribed, as in the College of Letters.
Degrees:

LL. B.-Three-year course.

LL. M.-One year after LL. B.; thesis.

LL. D, or D. C. L.--Three years after LL. B; thesis.

For either of these degrees, an A. B. or a B. S. is a prerequisite.

College of Music.

Admission: As in the College of Arts and Letters.

Degree: B. Mus.-Four-year course.

Graduate courses:

Admission: Bachelor's degree from a recognized college.
Degrees:

Master of Music-One year of postgraduate study; thesis.
Ph.D.-Three years of postgraduate study; thesis.

Expenses: Board, room, and tuition, $400.

Faculty, 70.

Students, 1,028, of whom 57 are from foreign countries.

Of special interest to foreign students.-The College of Engineering is equipped with ample laboratories and shops for instruction in civil, mechanical, electrical, mining, and chemical engineering. The proximity to the city of South Bend affords the student opportunity for observation in modern engineering plants.

Although students of all religious denominations are admitted, the university is strictly a Roman Catholic institution.

PURDUE UNIVERSITY, Lafayette, Ind., a city of 20,000 inhabitants. Founded, 1869; a "land-grant" institution; coeducational.

Admission: 15 units; 9 prescribed--3 English, 2 foreign language, 2 mathematics, 1 science, 1 history. For the engineering schools an additional

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unit of solid

.B. S. in Chemical Engineering.
.B. S. in Civil Engineering.
.B. S. in Electrical Engineering.

B. S. in Mechanical Engineering.
B. S. in Pharmacy.

A two-year course in pharmacy leads to the degree Pharmaceutical Chemist. Graduate Department.

Admission: Bachelor's degree from a recognized college.

Degrees: M. S., M. S. in Agriculture, M. E., C. E., E. E., Ch. E.-One year of postgraduate study and thesis.

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Of special interest to foreign students.—The engineering courses, with exceptional laboratory equipment and large faculty, afford excellent opportunity for the study of civil, electrical, mechanical, and chemical engineering.

The School of Pharmacy is organized on the basis of college work; the School of Agriculture emphasizes work in animal husbandry, agronomy, horticulture, and dairy husbandry. In the School of Science extensive courses in chemistry, physics, and biology, including bacteriology and forestry, are offered.

IOWA STATE COLLEGE, Ames, Iowa, a town of 4,000 inhabitants. 1858; a "land-grant" institution.

Founded

Admission: 15 units; 8 prescribed-3 English, 24 mathematics, 1 history, 2 foreign languages. For admission to the division of engineering an additional one-half unit solid geometry is prescribed.

Collegiate courses.

Division of Agriculture:

Four-year courses

Agricultural Education; degree, B. S. in Agricultural Education.

Agricultural Engineering; degree, B. S. in Agricultural Engineering.

Agronomy; degree, B. S. in Agronomy.

Animal Husbandry; degree, B. S. in Animal Husbandry.

Dairying; degree, B. S. in Dairying.

Forestry; degree, B. S. in Forestry.

Horticulture; degree, B. S. in Horticulture.

Five-year courses—

Agricultural Engineering; degree, B. S. in Agricultural Engineering.
Forestry; degree, B. S. in Forestry.

Science and Agriculture; degree, B. S. and B. S. (in specific subjects).
Two-year course-Agriculture; certificate.

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