$2-=1 24 THE STATE UNIVERSITY.
. 2 )
;_ E to the degree of Bachelor of Arts.
1-Q ` Grcek.—To oifer two units in Greek, applicant must have com- - tl
  · ‘ _ pleted: d
' (a) First Year. O11e unit. White’s Beginne1-’s Greek Book (or
» i ' - [ its equivalent), involving quantity, accentuation, declcnsions, gen- D
A `- ? ders, conjngations, syntax and idioms.
.» · (b) Second Year. One unit. Four books of Xenophon’s Ana-
  basis; six books of the Iliad, and Gleason’s exercises in Greek m
fg; prose composition.
i" _ l Gcrmrm.—In order that a two yea1·s’ course in German should be C
j   accepted for two units it should comprise:
  (a) Athorough drill in and an elementary knowledge of the E
  gender of nouns and declension of nouns and adjectives; the demon- E
·   strative, relative and interrogative pronouns; the normal, inverted ta
and transposed order; the ability to write German script legibly and all
A readily under dictation; to translate with comparative ease elemen- lc
·   V tary German into English, and vice versa; familiarity with the strong GI
` and weak eonjugations of the commonest verbs. hi
  (b) Advanced German Grammar-; composition; the reading of bl
1 ·.4_ about 200 pages of German prose of medium difficulty; the reading th
-?_ of some of the easier German lyrics. pl
` ..¥°` French.—A two years’ course in French, equivalent to the two Gt
`._· years’ course in German just outlined, will be accepted in lieu of in
" " the latter. m
‘ . nz
i   l Science.
_; Physics.—Tl1e one unit required in this subject involves the com· lv.
° ,; pletion of some text-book in High School Physics of a grade not D
  I lower than Gage’s Elements. The time of study should extend ty
_ ;J through one school year. It is recommended that the student shall
  also have done about forty or more experiments of a quantitative
l- ‘ character. _
`_ Uhcmistry.—To be accepted as one unit, Chemistry must have IS
:‘_ been studied forone school year, and should have rende1·ed the student
- " familiar with the following topics in non-metallic chemistry: V
A Properties of the principal acid-forming elements and their com- Pl
_ _· pounds; simple problems on relations by weight; relations between
gas volumes and the weights of chemically related solids; acids, in
Q bases and salts; valence; series of oxy-acids and their salts; oxida-
* tion and reduction; acid anhydrides; hydrated and poly-acids.
~ To be accepted as possessing one half-unit value, each of thc
` A following subjects must have been pursued for at least one half of V;
rj · _ _   _       »._. _ . . _   i __
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