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The following Candidates for Graduation in Medicine have passed the Preliminary Examination required by the New Regulations.

William M. G. Anderson.

Christina S. Auchterlonie.

Margaret S. Dickson.

Maurice Kantrovitch.

Isabella Logie.

Agnes E. Melville.
Henrietta Rusack.
Benjamin P. Watson.

United College

OF

ST SALVATOR AND ST LEONARD.

THIS College, as at present constituted, dates from 1747, when the Colleges of St Salvator (founded 1450) and St Leonard (founded 1512) were united by Act of Parliament. It embraces the Faculties of Arts, Science, and Medicine.

Principal.

JAMES DONALDSON, M. A., LL.D.

John Burnet, M. A.,

Professors.

Alexander Roberts, M. A., D.D.,.
David George Ritchie, M.A.,

William Knight, LL.D.,
Arthur Stanley Butler, M.A.,
P. R. Scott Lang, M.A., B.Sc.,
William C. M'Intosh, M.D.,
LL.D., F.R.S.,

J. Bell Pettigrew, M.D., LL.D.,
F.R.S.,

Thomas Purdie, B.Sc., Ph.D.,
LL.D., F.R.S.,

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Professor of Greek.
Professor of Humanity.

Professor of Logic and Meta-
physics.

Professor of Moral Philosophy.
Professor of Natural Philosophy.
Professor of Mathematics.

Professor of Natural History.

Professor of Medicine and Anatomy.
Professor of Chemistry.

John M. D. Meiklejohn, M.A., Professor of Education.

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Lecturers.

Robert A. Robertson, M. A., B.Sc., Lecturer in Botany.
F. F. Roget, B.-ès-L.,
Lecturer in French.

LAWS AND REGULATIONS.

1. Students shall wear their gowns not only in attending the College Classes but on all Academic occasions.

2. Students shall give regular and punctual attendance on their Classes, and shall observe due order and discipline.

3. Students are expressly prohibited from injuring or defacing the Class-rooms or College buildings, by writing on the walls, or otherwise; from treading on the grass-plots, or playing at foot

ball within the College walls; and from throwing snowballs within the College walls, or in the streets.

4. Making of noise such as shouting, singing, whistling, &c., within the College walls, especially within the lobbies leading to the Class-rooms, is strictly prohibited.

5. Profane swearing, intemperance, drinking in inns or taverns, and riotous or disorderly behaviour, are strictly prohibited.

6. Within the walls of the College, riding on horseback, walking in any unauthorised procession, and appearing in masks, or in other than ordinary dress or academic costume, are strictly prohibited.

7. Violations of College laws and discipline, as well as all immorality, and conduct unworthy of a student and gentleman, will be visited by censure, or such other penalty as shall be deemed suitable to the offence; and in the case of aggravated misconduct, by rustication, which involves the loss of one or more Sessions, or by expulsion from the College, which prevents admission to any University in Scotland.

8. Bursars, in cases of flagrant misconduct, or continued neglect of their studies, will be deprived of their Bursaries.

9. All Class Fees shall be paid to the Secretary of the College at the commencement of the Session; and each Student is required to lodge his address in St Andrews with the College Janitor.

PROFESSORSHIPS.

GREEK.

This Professorship (as a Professorship of " Philosophy ") is coeval with the foundation of the Colleges, but Greek was not taught as a separate subject till the beginning of the eighteenth century. The Professor is appointed by the University Court.

There are three Greek Classes, which are taught by the Professor or his Assistant at separate hours.

The First or Junior Greek Class is intended for Students who have not yet passed the Preliminary Examination in Greek on the Higher Standard. The work of the Class consists of reading in the easier Attic authors, and Euripides or Homer. Special attention is given to the study of Attic Syntax and to Prose Composition. This Class does not qualify for graduation, and is taught mainly by the Assistant. There is a Tutorial Class for Beginners in the Winter Session, and a Junior Class in the Suminer Session for those preparing for the Preliminary Examination.

The Ordinary Greek Class may be attended with a view to graduation by any Student who has passed the Higher Standard Preliminary in Greek, even if he has not passed the whole Preliminary Examination. (See Regulations for Graduation in Arts, Section XI.) Prelections will be given on some of the books set for the Ordinary Degree of M.A., and weekly exercises in Greek Prose Composition will be prescribed. Weekly Lectures will be given on Greek Grammar and on Greek History, with constant reference to the texts of Herodotus and Thucydides. This Class is a full course, qualifying for graduation in Arts.

In the Summer Session there will be an Ordinary Class, in which Prelections will be given on books prescribed for the M.A. Degree, and not already treated in the Winter Session. This Class will be a half-course, qualifying for graduation in Arts.

In the Honours Class Lectures will be given on some of the books prescribed for the Degree of M.A., with Honours in Classics. Lessons in Greek Composition will be given to each member of this Class individually, at separate times. Lectures will be given in alternate years on the Constitutional History of Athens, with the 'Aonvaiwv Toλireía, and on Greek Literature with Aristotle's Poetics.

In connection with this Class, the Campbell Medal, for proficiency in Greek studies, will be awarded annually. The subject of the Examination for this medal will be some portion of the Honours work, more minutely and critically treated. Papers will also be set on Composition and the Principles of Philological Criticism.

In addition to the Classes mentioned above, it is proposed to institute a Seminarium for instruction in the methods of original research. Students who have already attended the Honours Class are invited to communicate with the Professor, who will be glad to suggest subjects for investigation, and to give the necessary advice as to books and method. There will be no fee for the Seminarium; but only those Students who have given evidence of sufficient capacity will be admitted to it.

The following are the subjects proposed for study during Session 1896-97 :

Junior Class.-Selections from the easier Attic Authors and from Homer or Euripides; Greek Grammar and Composition. Ordinary Class.-Plato, Apology; Aristophanes, Acharnians; Sophocles, Antigone; Lectures on Greek History and Literature; Greek Prose Composition.

Honours Class.-Demosthenes, De Corona; Herodotus I., V., VI.; Lectures on Greek History and Literature; Greek Composition.

Subjects prescribed for Summer Study.

Junior Class.-(1) For Summer Reading: Plato, Apology (Adam's edition); Euripides, Baccha (Tyrrell's edition); Homer, Iliad I. (Monro's edition). (2) For Greek Prose: F. Harrison's Cromwell (Macmillan's English Statesmen series), pp. 57-60, "It is no part of this work who are religious and godly.'

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Ordinary Class.—(1) For Summer Reading: Sophocles, Philoctetes; Herodotus, V.-VII. (2) For Greek Prose: Green's Short History of the English People, ch. vii., section 3, p. 17, “We have had grander . . . hardest to bring home to her."

HUMANITY.

This Professorship was founded in 1620, by Sir John Scot of Scotstarvit. The Professor is appointed by the University Court.

There are three Humanity Classes. The First Class is generally attended by Students in their first year of a four years' course; the Second by Students in their second year; and the Third, which is the Honours Class, is open to Students in either their third or fourth year.

In the First or Junior Humanity Class, which meets five days a-week at 1 o'clock, and also on Tuesdays at 9 o'clock, the subjects of study are-Virgil, Livy, Horace, and Cicero. During the first hour on Tuesdays, progressive exercises in Grammar are done in the Class. The hour on Thursdays is devoted to Roman History and Antiquities.

Besides the work of the Class, other work for private study is prescribed, and the Students are examined on that work at stated periods.

The Second or Ordinary Humanity Class meets five days a-week at 10 o'clock A.M. The authors studied are Cicero, Horace, Tacitus, Terence, Persius, and Juvenal. Work for private study, from these or other approved authors, is also prescribed in this Class.

Subjects for Summer study are proposed at the close of each Session to the members of both the Junior and Ordinary Humanity Classes. These subjects consist of additional portions of the authors already named, with the further study of Roman Literature, Geography, and Antiquities. Examinations are held at the beginning of each ensuing Session.

The Third or Honours Humanity Class meets at 11 o'clock on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. The subjects of study are -some of the more difficult writings of Cicero, Plautus, Lucretius, and Tacitus. Home exercises in Higher Latin Composition are

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