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Dartmouth College., 1900
 

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Page 72 - The form of examination will usually be the writing of a paragraph or two on each of several topics to be chosen by the candidate from a considerable number — perhaps ten or fifteen — set before him in the examination paper. The treatment of these topics Is designed to test the candidate's power of clear and accurate expression, and will call for only a general knowledge of the substance of the books.
Page 224 - Has studied medicine not less than four full school years of at least nine months each, including four satisfactory courses of at least six months each, in four different calendar years in a medical school registered as maintaining at the time a satisfactory standard.
Page 12 - And we do further, of our special grace, certain knowledge and mere motion, for us, our heirs and successors, grant...
Page 13 - Act. in as full and ample a manner to all intents and purposes as if the same privileges and protections were repeated and re-enacted in this Act.
Page 16 - In case of vacancy, the trustees may appoint a president, and in case of the ceasing of a president, the senior professor or tutor, being one of the trustees, shall exercise the office until an appointment shall be made.
Page 85 - University distinctly announces that it will hold an admission examination " in any city or at any school where the number of candidates and the distance from other places of examination may warrant it.
Page 219 - The Merchant of Venice and Julius Caesar; The Sir Roger De Coverley Papers...
Page 224 - ... he had either graduated from a registered college or satisfactorily completed a full course in a registered academy or high school ; or had a preliminary education considered and accepted by the regents as fully equivalent ; or held a regents medical student certificate, granted before this act took effect; or had passed regents examinations as hereinafter provided.
Page 85 - Xenophon (about thirty pages*), directed to testing the candidate's mastery of the ordinary forms, constructions, and idioms of the language; the test to consist, in part, of writing simple Attic prose, involving the use of such words, constructions, and idioms only as occur in the portion of Xenophon prescribed. The portion of Xenophon prescribed for this examination is the first book of the Anabasis, chapters i-viii. Two years' notice will be given of any change in the selection.
Page 73 - Milton's L' Allegro, II Penseroso, Comus, and Lycidas; Burke's Speech on Conciliation with America; Macaulay's Essays on Milton and Addison. In 1903, 1904, and 1905, it will be based upon : Shakespeare's Macbeth; Milton's Lycidas, Comus, L' Allegro, and II Penseroso; Burke's Speech on Conciliation with America; Macaulay's Essays on Milton and on Addison.

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