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Caption: Course Catalog - 1898-1899 This is a reduced-resolution page image for fast online browsing.
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Ii8 COLLEGE OF SCIENCE entomology, physiology, botany, or geology as a scientific career. 3. To lay in biological work and study a liberal foundation for a course in medicine. 4. To prepare for the teaching of the natural or physical sciences in high schools and colleges. Special advantages are offered graduate students for whose work the museums, laboratories, and libraries, and the field and experimental equipment of the University and of the associated State Laboratory of Natural History, furnish an extraordinarily full provision. The University Biological Station, at Havana, is regarded as one of the University laboratories, and work done there by students may receive credit like work in any of the other laboratories. CLASSIFICATION OF SUBJECTS PRESCRIBED Art and Design I, 2; 5 hours.* Chemistry 1, 3a or 3b, 4; 5 or 10 hours. German B or 1, 3, 4, 6; 20 hours. Mathematics 1 to 4; 5 hours. Military Science I, 2; 5 hours. Physical Training— Men, 1, 3; 2.x/2 hours. Women, 7, 9; 3 hours. Rhetoric 2; 2 hours. ELECTIVE List A** (Major Courses) Astronomy 4 to 6; 3 to 10 hours. Biology 2; 5 hours. Botany 1-5, 7, 9, 10; 10-44 hours. Chemistry 2a, 5a, 5b, 5c, 7, 9, 9a or 9b, 12; 10 hours. Geology 1, 2; 10 to 20 hours. Mineralogy 1, 2; 5 or 10 hours. *For Explanation of '"hours" see p. 167. •*No number of hours in any subject will be accepted as major work other than the number specified against that subject in list A. Credit will not be given for both major and minor work in the same subject.
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