UIHistories Project: A History of the University of Illinois by Kalev Leetaru
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Repository: UIHistories Project: Course Catalog - 1899-1900 [PAGE 157]

Caption: Course Catalog - 1899-1900
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REQUIREMENTS FOR GRADUATION COURSE OF INSTRUCTION Required for the Degree of LL.B.

FIRST YEAR

155

1. Contracts (Law i) ; Torts (Law 2) ; Real Property (Law 3 ) ; Common Law Pleading (Law 4) ; Criminal Law (Law 5) ; Personal Property (Law 6). 2. Contracts (Law 1) ; Torts (Law 2) ; Real Property (Law 3) ; Common Law Pleading (Law 4) ; Domestic Relations (Law 7).

SECOND YEAR

1. Evidence (Law 8) ; Sales (Law 9) ; Real Property (Law 10) ; Agency (Law 11) ; Equity (Law 12) ; Damages (Law 13). 2. Evidence (Law 8) ; Real Property (Law 10) ; Equity (Law 12) ; Bailments and Carriers (Law 14) ; Bills and Notes (Law 15).

THIRD YEAR

1. Trusts (Law 16) ; Corporations (Law 17) ; Wills and Administration (Law 18) ; Partnership (Law 19) ; Constitutional Law (Law 22) ; International Law (Law 23) ; Practical Conveyancing (Law 25) ; Moot Court (Law 26). 2. Corporations (Law 17) ; Equity Pleading (Law 20) ; Suretyship and Mortgage (Law 21) ; Constitutional Law (Law 22) ; International Law (Law 23) ; Municipal Corporations (Law 24) ; Practical Conveyancing (Law 25) ; Moot Court (Law 26). REQUIREMENTS FOR GRADUATION

The requirements for graduation with the degree of bachelor of laws are seventy-eight semester hours of work. A "semester hour," as here used, means one hour per week of class room work for one-half of a year. The degree will be conferred upon the completion of the course set forth above. ADMISSION TO THE BAR Under the rules of the Supreme Court of Illinois, candidates for admission to the bar of this state must have had a high school education or its equivalent, must have completed a three years' course of study in a law school or law office, and must then pass an examination to be given by the State Board of Bar Examiners.