II. By subjects (each minor counted separately); during 1894-1906. MAJOR SUBJECT MINOR '94-5 '95-6 '96-7 '97-8 '98-99 '99-00'00-01'01-02'02-03'03-04'04-05'05-06 I 2 Quaweran 2 22 18 17 1 14 '94-5 '95-6 '96-7 '97-8 '98-9 '99.00'00-01'01-02'02-03'03-04'04-05'05-06 Semitic Languages. I 7 7 7 6 6 6 3 4 Latin 3 4 3 4 4 4 7 5 7 9 3 5 Germanic Languages. 4 4 4 1 2 2 3 4 7 2 3 Romance Languages. 3 5 7 3 4 6 4 5 4 English 12 II 12 It 12 I2 10 9 7 4 4 7 20 20 14 15 13 15 14 13 II 14 II 13 2 3 2 I 16 15 17 15 7 9 -20 9 Political Science 15 24 23 9 7 6 5 4 Math. and Astron. 5 4 4 7 8 6 6 9 6 8 14 15 9 8 9 9 10 18 Chemistry 16 II 14 18 13 15 17 21 20 21 Botany, Arboriculture 6 6 7 7 9 9 TO IO 13 I 2 2 I 3 8 14 9 9 5 IO I 2 3 3 4 6 7 I I I 2 5 6 3 5 3 I 4 4 4 7 3 I 2 13 3 II 5 13 31 Horticulture 7 3 9 I I I I I 4 I I 3 2 2 I Civil Engineering 16 8 4 4 6 4 6 6 8 14 Mechanical Enginering -38 20 13 15 IO 19 17 19 17 I 2 I 31 47 43 20 18 15 IO 2 2 م م م ت ر تره ، بار در ها هم در دو ا ه ة ة= تم پر برا اما بر | | |رة 2 7 5 4 I 3 18 18 18 14 13 20 16 19 15 21 38 30 18 20 29 18 16 IO 15 16 I 4 3 IO 17 36 4 3 2 8 4 I 7 2 I I 8 6 7 II 12 IO 17 19 16 13 17 2 Al w Otorren Ő a I II I 18 1 31 19 12 19 18 2 I 1 I2 12 IO IO II 13 2 I 12 } 15 III. Actual number of students in each subject during 1894–1906. '94-95 '95-96 '96-97 '97-98 98-99 99-00 '00-01 '01-02 '02-03 '03-04 '04-05 '05-06 The Semitic Languages and Literatures. I 1 I 13 14 II 8 13 9 15 14 II 5 8 7 IO 7 The Romance Languages. 4 8 8 9 7 9 IO 9 8 English 15 16 19 12 14 13 14 13 15 4 6 9 Philosophy 24 22 19 18 14 16 9 7 9 5 8 IT 16 II 14 21 22 27 15 20 8S 26 American IO 8 II 23 12 9 15 12 13 14 9 7 9 14 17 Mathematics and Astronomy 23 14 18 20 18 18 23 18 18 14 23 Physics 36 21 17 19 24 18 18 22 35 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 25 20 18 18 17 18 3 4 5 8 9 13 3 IO 8 4 7 10 13 Medicine (Anatomy) I 3 6 4 7 13 14 9 15 19 36 Horticulture 5 IO 12 II 9 II 8 7 4 IO 8 Forestry Veterinary Medicine I 3 5 9 5 6 Architecture 3 3 3 Civil Engineering -- 17 10 5 6 5 7 8 6 7 19 Mechanical Engineering 38 23 16 14 17 23 21 20 20 33 2 w 10 I2 I IN IN 2 II 20 II 21 During the past eighteen years 1,620 graduates of 207 institutions have been admitted to graduate work, distributed as indicated in the following table : 18 2 I I 2 2 2 I Acadia 7 De Pauw Adelphi College Duff Coll. (India) I Adelbert. 2 Earlham 6 Alabama Agr. and Mech. Coll. 2 Ecole Nationale (France) 1 Albion 3 Elmira Alfred 3 Erlangen (Germany) 3 3 Amherst 6 Franklin and Marshall I Anatolia Furman Univ. Arkansas 5 Gallaudet. Baker Univ. I Georgia, Univ. of I Bates General Assembly's Institute Beloit 2 (India) Berea Coll. 2 Ghent, State Univ. of Boston. 4 Halle Hamilton I Brown 13 Hannover, Tech. Hochschule I Bryn Mawr I Harvard 18 Buchtel 6 Harvard Annex Bucknell 4 Harvard (Lawrence Scientific) California 20 Haverford 3 Cambridge Univ. I Hillsdale 4 Campbell. I Hobart 14 Capitol I Illinois College I Carleton Illinois Wesleyan Chaddock Imperial Royal Higher Gym. Cheshire Agr. and Hort. Coll. Indiana. 45 (England) Indianapolis 2 Chicago, Univ, of 6 Iowa Agr. 7 Cincinnati 2 Iowa Coll. 6 Colgate... 4 Iowa State Colorado, Univ. of 4 Iowa Wesleyan Colorado State Agr. Coll. Japan Imperial Univ. Colorado School of Mines.. Johns Hopkins. 9 Columbia 12 Kansas Agr. 5 Columbia School of Law.. Kansas State Univ. Cooch-Behar Coll. (India) I Knox 6 Cornell College Lafayette Cornell University -713 Lake Forest Dalhousie 23 Lawrence I Dartmouth 5 Lehigh Davidson 3 | Leipsic Denison I Lombard Denver London 2 I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I I 2 Luther. 7 McGill 5 Purdue 14 McKendree Queen's Univ.(Kingston, Can) 3 Maine, Univ. of. 7 Randolph-Macon 1 Manitoba 7 Rensselaer Poly. Inst.. Mason (Birmingham, Eng.). Rochester 9 Massachusetts Agr. 8 Rockford Coll. Massachusetts Inst. of Tech. 6 Rose Poly. Inst. 3 Michigan Agr: 10 Rutgers. 5 Michigan, Univ. of. 30 St. Andrews (Scotland) Middlebury Coll. St. Lawrence Univ.. Milton.. St. Petersburg (Russia) Real Minnesota 16 Gymnasium Missouri School of Mines.--- Scio Coll.. Missouri State Sibpur Agr. Coll. (India) Moors Hill College St Stephens Coll. --Mt. Allison 5 Smith 25 Mt. Holyoke.. 4 South Carolina. 3 Mt. Union South Dakota Agr. 3 Napa Southern California Nashville South Western Univ. (Texas) Nebraska 16 St. Olaf Newberry I Stanford 12 New Brunswick, Univ. of. Stevens Inst. 7 Newcomb. Susquehanna Univ. New Hampshire College. Swarthmore.. 3 New Hampshire Agr. Sydney Univ.(New So.Wales) 2 New York, Coll of the City of 5 Syracuse 13 North Carolina.--6 Texas.. 7 North Carolina Agr. Coll. 2 Texas Agr 3 North Dakota, Univ. of.. 1 Tokio Univ. Northwestern Univ.. 5 Toronto 23 Notre Dame Trinity Coll. (Toronto). I Oberlin 9 Tulane Ohio State. 27 Union Ohio Univ... 4 U. S. Naval Academy 4 Ohio Wesleyan Univ. 4 Utah University Ottawa Vanderbilt I 18 Oxford. Vermont 3 Oregon State Univ. Victoria Oklahoma Univ. of Vienna (Austria) I Pacific Univ. (Calif.). Virginia I Pacific Univ. (Oregon). Virginia Agr. and Mech. Coll. Penn Coll. (Iowa) Virginia Poly. Inst. Pennsylvania Colí.for Women Wabash.. 7 Pennsylvania State .. 3 Wake Forest Coll. Pennsylvania, Univ. of. 2 Washington Univ.Pennsylvania, West. Univ. of 2 Wellesley ... 13 Pine Hill Theo. Sem I 3 Presbyterian College of S. C. I Wesleyan I 1 I I 2 1 I The legislation of the Faculty dealing with matters under the supervision of the standing committees will be found in the various sections of this report I shall call attention here only to such general legislation as has not been referred 10 above. The former standing Committee on the Excuse of Laboring Students was abolished on the 6th of October, 1905, and a new committee consisting of the Dean, the Commandant, and the Professor of Physical Culture (with the addition for the cases of women of the Instructor in the Sage College gymnasium) was created to deal with all petitions for such excuses. An important change was made during the year in the regulations concerning final examinations. For many years a definite period known as block-week has been set aside at the end of each term for final examinations, and during this period no other University exercises have been allowed. At the Faculty meeting of November 30, 1905, the Faculty of the Sibley College of Mechanical Engineering requested permission to continue the work of instruction in that college throughout the time now devoted to examinations, that is to say during the block-week. This request was referred to the Committee on University Policy with instructions to report at a special meeting of the University Faculty to be called by the President. The Committee on University Policy considered the matter and reco commended that the request of Sibley College be granted subject to the following qualifications. That students of Sibley College be excused from work there when it conflicts with block-week examinations elsewhere ; (2) that students in other colleges taking instruction in Sibley College be excused from attendance there during block-week unless otherwise directed by their Dean ; (3) that no other college or department be required to furnish instruction to students of Sibley College during the examination period, but any college or department may do so if agreeable to it. I. |