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and such Professors selected from the various Faculties as the Senatus Academicus may determine, provided that the total number of the Committee shall not exceed twelve.

3. It shall be the duty of these Committees to select persons to be recommended to the Senatus Academicus for the Degrees; but the Committees shall not entertain_applications from or on behalf of persons desirous of receiving the Degrees.

4. The Committees shall present reasoned reports, embodying their recommendations to the Senatus.

5. In the case of every person recommended for either Degree, the report shall contain a statement of the grounds on which the recommendation is founded, specifying such particulars as the Senatus may from time to time require.

6. No resolution to confer the Degree of Doctor of Divinity or of Doctor of Laws shall be moved in the Senatus except upon special notice given after a fortnight has elapsed from the date when the report of the Committee shall have been presented.

Ceremonial of Graduation.

All Candidates for Graduation who are proposed by the Faculties as qualified, must before their admission to Degrees be present at the ceremonial of Graduation. The Degrees in the several Faculties are publicly conferred by the Chancellor or the Vice-Chancellor of the University, in name of the Senatus Academicus.

The annual ceremonial of Graduation takes place in the end of March. Candidates presented for Graduation are expected to appear in gowns, and to provide themselves with the hoods of their respective degrees.

No person shall be allowed, after examination, to graduate until he has paid, as a registration fee, the sum of £1 to the General Fund of the University. This payment entitles the graduate to enrolment as a life member of the General Council of the University.

Academic Costume.

1. For Masters of Arts. —A gown of black silk or inferior stuff, still worn by the Professors in several of the Faculties in the University of France, with cincture or belt of black silk, and a cap of black velvet, silk, or other material, after the fashion of that still worn in the University of France.

2. For Doctors of Divinity, Laws, Medicine, and Science.—If

on occasions of high ceremony a distinctive dress is deemed desirable, robes respectively of violet, scarlet, crimson, and amaranth silk, or cloth with facings; cinctures and caps after the fashion used by the Professors in these Faculties in the University of France.

3. The hoods of the Graduates in all the Faculties to be after the pattern of those of the University of Cambridge, as most nearly resembling the form of the hood on the Rector's robe of this University, and of the following materials and colours :— That of the M.A., black silk with red silk lining.

That of the D.D., violet purple silk or cloth with white satin lining, to represent the old ermine lining.

That of the LL.D., scarlet silk or cloth with white satin lining. That of the M.D., crimson silk or cloth with white satin lining. That of the D.Sc., amaranth silk or cloth with white satin lining.

That of the Mus.D., cerulean blue silk or cloth with white satin lining.

4. The Bachelors in the several Faculties to be entitled to wear the gown and cap of M.A., with hoods of the same colour as those of the Doctors of their Faculties, but bordered with white fur.

LISTS OF GRADUATES.

List of those who have received the Degree of Doctor of Laws since 1851, inclusive.

1851.

Thomas Burbidge, A.B., Principal of College at Leamington, Warwick.

Daniel Wilson, Edinburgh.

George Douglas Campbell, Duke of Argyll.

1853.

Thomas Miller, M.A., Rector of Academy, Perth.

Alexander Baron Humboldt, Prussia.

1854.

The Right Hon. Duncan M'Neill, Lord Justice-General.

Sir John M'Neill.

Sir Ralph Anstruther, Bart.

1856.

Major Playfair, Provost of St Andrews.

Thomas Duncan, Professor of Mathematics, St Andrews.

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Henry Carmichael, M.A., Australia.

George L. Craik, M.A., Queen's College, Belfast.

1861.

Richard Low, High School, Dundee.

Rev. Alexander M'Laren, Minister of Kemback.

1862.

Samuel Birch, British Museum.

1863.

Sir William Stirling-Maxwell, Keir, Rector of the University. John Hunter, W.S., Edinburgh.

George Dempster, Skibo.

Lyon Playfair, Edinburgh.

Robert Chambers, Edinburgh.

William Y. Sellar, M.A., Professor of Humanity, Edinburgh.

1865.

William Wright, B.A., Assistant MS. Department, British

Museum.

Thomas Henry Dyer, London.

1866.

1867.

Rev. Robert Graham, Minister of Errol.

John Stuart Mill, M.P., Rector of the University.

David Page, Edinburgh.

Patrick James Stirling, Dunblane.

1868.

Rev. Patrick Bell, Minister of Carmyllie.

Rev. Charles Clouston, Minister of Sandwick.

1869.

William L. F. Fischer, M.A., Professor of Mathematics, St Andrews. John C. Adams, M.A., Lowndean Professor of Astronomy, Cambridge.

Rev. William Martin, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Aberdeen. James Anthony Froude, M.A., Rector of the University.

Alexander Brown, Arbroath.

1870.

James Browning, M.A., St Andrews.
William O. Lonie, M.A., St Andrews.

T. Irvine Boswell Boswell, Balmuto, Fifeshire.

1871.

John Anderson, C.E., Woolwich.

Adam Paterson, Dean of the Faculty of Procurators, Glasgow.
The Very Rev. A. P. Stanley, Dean of Westminster.

1872.

Archibald Geikie, Professor of Geology, Edinburgh.
Rev. Hugh Macmillan, Minister of Free Church, Glasgow.
Rev. Frederick H. Scrivener, M.A., Rector, St Gerrans.

1873.

Rev. George Granville Bradley, Master of University Col., Oxford. John Nichol, B.A., Professor of English Language and Literature, University of Glasgow.

Edward B. Tylor, Linden, England.

John Boyd Baxter, Dundee.

John Gwyn Jeffreys, London.

1874.

Rev. John Percival, Clifton College, Bristol.

Rev. John Struthers, Prestonpans.

William D. Whitney, Yale College, America.

William D. Bruce, Alloa.

1876.

James Croll, Edinburgh.

James Stuart, M.A., M.P.

William Wallace, M.A., Oxford.

1877.

Alexander Anderson, Gymnasium, Old Aberdeen.
James Geikie, Geological Survey of Scotland.
James Murie, M.D., London.

David H. Paton, M.A., High School, Glasgow.
David Pryde, M.A., Ladies' College, Edinburgh.
Benjamin W. Richardson, M.A., M.D., London.

Edward Caird, M.A., Glasgow.

Alexander Laing, Newburgh.

1878.

William C. M'Intosh, M.D., Professor of Natural History, St Andrews.

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John Hutton Balfour, M.A., M.D., Edinburgh.

Thomas Davidson, F.R.S., Brighton.

Richard Holt Hutton, M.A., London.

Augustus S. Wilkins, M.A., Manchester.

1883.

John Caird, D.D., Principal of Glasgow University.

John Cleland, M.D., Professor of Anatomy in Glasgow University. David Fogo, M. A., Madras College, St Andrews.

Edwin Wallace, M.A., Worcester College, Oxford.

Robert Spence Watson, Newcastle-on-Tyne.

1884.

Sandford Fleming, C.E., C.M.G., Chancellor of Queen's University, Kingston.

Olaus Henrici, F.R.S., Professor of Mathematics, University College, London.

James Russell Lowell, LL.D., United States Ambassador, London.

William Gunion Rutherford, M.A., Westminster School, London. Christopher Russell Scott, High School, Kirkcaldy.

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