Caption: Course Catalog - 1892-1893 This is a reduced-resolution page image for fast online browsing.
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HISTORY. 17 liberally to the University; but a disposition to do so has been much more manifest in recent sessions of that body. Besides $70,000 for a science building, the 37th General Assembly (1891) appropriated for the use of the University for two years the sum of $65,044.23. At the date of this writing the 38th General Assembly has not completed its work in this respect. To date the total appropriations by the state to the University for all purposes whatsoever amount to $584,200. It has been mentioned that 77 students attended the first term in 1868. The total enrollments for the succeeding years to the present are as follows: 128, 180, 274, 381, 400, 405, 368, 370, 388, 387, 399, 414, 382, 352, 382, 330, 332, 362, 343, 377, 417, 469, 519, 583, 714. It will be noted that for the last ten years each year, with a single exception, shows a gain over that preceding. The last year's gain is much the greatest, reaching 21 per cent over the attendance for 1892 and nearly 40 per cent over that for 1891. The following table gives details of attendance since 1881-82: ATTENDANCE OF STUDENTS IN THE SEVERAL DEPARTMENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY, FOR THE YEARS 1881-82 TO 1892-93. Q l' D YEAR. n CD O C Art and Design Ancient Languages.. *Electrical Engineering.. Natural History English and Moder guages Total tMunicipal and Engineering Architecture Unclassified Men Mechanical Engineering. 41 39 45 56 53 65 57 74 78 78 88 82 Civil Engineering Mining Engineering. [ 1 M a a' a S anita La a • 1881-82. 1882-83. 1883-84. 1884-85. 1885-86. 1886-87. 1887-88. 1888-89. 1889-90. 1890-91. 1891-92. 1892-93• 21 28 24 21 25 29 23 16 14 22 II 40 41 51 58 43 45 53 62 1 3 2 1 3 4 4 6 6 5 6 1 14 TR 21 26 29 87 95 87 93 7 46 59 61 73 92 98 It 15 42 40 26 23 27 25 15 20 40 51 14 11 17 20 18 21 34 54 53 53 71 is 52 4 119 7 117 6 94 11 102 8 102 5 84 14 85 9 85 3 IOI 4 95 7 104 10 106 4 15 8 4 8 14 15 17 17 36 40 47 43 34 31 39 19 27 27 44 16 I 276 76 28g 93 261 69 292 269 63 289 54 305 72 346 71 392 77 444 75 494 89 610 104 1° 352 382 330 362 332 343 377 469 519 58; *Not separately classified until 1890-gi. tNot separately classified until 1892. This shows that the marked increase has been in certain of the courses of engineering. The courses in architectural engineering and in
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