U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. . ..
OBsERvER, ROBERT HENRY DEAN. _ V i
There has been established at the College by the U. S. Department of ’ i`
 n Agdennure a Station of the Weather Bureau, with iirst-class instrumental
_ equipment, and working in close connection with the College and the {
Experiment Station. Students who are interested in the study of meteorol- »
§t0¤ ogy and kindred sciences will find at this Station of the Bureau a rare  
¥t°¤ chance for special investigation, and they are welcome to such benente , 
{ton , as the Station affords,  
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ADMISSION.
A student is admitted to the State College in one of six ways: Z;.
I. By examination. ‘
II. By certificate from an accredited school. i
Ill. By certificate from the College Academy. V
IV. By transfer of credits from a college or university.
V. As a special student.
VI. By certificate from the Normal School.
1. ADMISSION BY EXAMINATION.
For the Freshman Class students are examined on the following 2
1. IN ENor.rsH.—(a) On Advanced Grammar. Selections for analysis
and parsing are arranged to test the caudidate’s knowledge of the structure
of the language. (6) On Rhetoric and Composition. The candidate is
required to write two essays of not less than two hundred words each, one
011 a subject taken from a prescribed work of some standard author, the
other on a subject chosen by the candidate. The books from which sub~
jects will be taken are: Addison’s Sir Roger cle Cowrgr papers; Burke’s
C0}I£l~]t(IXf07l wif/1 [hc Colonies; Coleridge’s Aaczéwzi ./llariwzer; Eliot’s Silas
' A/az·zm·,· Irving’s Ly'; 0f G0/a’swith,· Lowell’s Vision q'.Sz`r La1z1y’al,· ¤
Macanlay’s essay on Aa'a’z`$0zz and Lrfe 0f _/0b11s0zz,· l\lilton’s Lycidas, I
Camus, L’A//qgra and Il Pwzscroso; Scott’s Ivanhoe and Lady of the Lake;
Shakespeare’s fulizzs Lazrar, ./lfacbcf/z and /I/wr/zaai of I/e1z1'ce,· Tennyson’s
Gtlflff/I and Lyzmllc, Lamelol ami E/aizze, T/ze: Rzssiyzg af Arthur. _ _
The candidate must be laniiliar with the plots, incidents and characters oi cach work,
and he prepared to show his ability to write correct English. No candidate will be adniittcd
whose work is notably deficient in a knowledge of spelling, punctuation, paragraphing, and
5\'I]lZlX.
_ 2. IN Hts/roRY.—(a) On Eggleston’s History of the United States, or
an equivalent. ((2) On General History, in amount equivalent to Anderson’s
·* or Myers' General History. ’
3. IN GEoGRA1>Hv.—(a) On Advanced Descriptive, Mathematical, and *
. Political Geography, as presented in Butler’s Complete, or The Natural
F H Advanced, Geography, (b) On Physical Geography, as presented by Tart
- or Davis.
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