STATE COLLEGE OF KENTUCKY. .35
ed ANALYSIS. Each student will be furnished with his special —»
apparatus, re-agents and table space.
al Sccomi Tc2‘m.—Tl1is, when tl1e student is sufliciently ad-
e- vanced, is devoted to QUANTITATIVE CIIErIIoAL ANALYSIS.
B. Various Chemical Compounds are placed in tl1e hands of the
e- , student for complete or Quantitative Analysis. Each student in
ry Practical Chemistry is required to pay in advance the small
rd fee of live dollars, to cover the expense of the re—agents, etc.,
which he uses; he will also be charged with the cost of the
apparatus he may break or injure.
TEXT—BOOKS REQUIRED.
VY Elements of Natural Philosophy, by Sidney A. NOFCOII, A. »
M., Elementary Manual of Chemistry, abridged from Eliot and
l Storer’s Manual, by VVm. Ripley Nichols. Manual of Quali-
Bd tative Chemical Analysis, by Chas. W. Eliot and F. H. Storer,
_ revised by \Vm. R. Nichols. Quantitative Chemical Analysis,
  Fresenius and others.
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DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL HISTORY. .
.ed
>li— UNMDHTHAH
ne, The aim in this department is to make use of such methods -
ch- as will bring the student as close as is practicable to the sources
to of knowledge. A good beginning has been made in securing
led H the necessary appliances to this end. A working fund is pro-
the ‘ vided to meet immediate necessities for apparatus, illustrative
Q materials and for special treatises. In this way it is believed "
 · that the requirements for thorough instruction 1nay be met and
the facilities for teaching steadily increased.
ari- V Text-books are used in the regular classes as a basis for the
work required; but works of reference and standard treatises
are provided in a special library for the department. The ad-
,1_O_ vanced and special studies are conducted more nearly on the
plan of iield and laboratory investigation. Only those students
AL { taking a special interest in Natural History are expected to I
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