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6. If any student shall prove inattentive to the admonition and reproof of any Dean, professor, or officer, it shall be the duty of such Dean, professor, or officer, to report the offender to the Vice-President.

7. If the Vice-President shall deem it necessary or desirable, he shall summon the offender to appear before the Council at its next subsequent meeting, when he shall be solemnly admonished by the President or acting chairman of the Council.

8. If any student shall have been summoned before the Council a second time during the same term, he shall forfeit the term, and be excluded from the College during the remainder thereof.

9. If the offence for which any student shall be summoned before the Council be of a grave character, it shall be competent to the Council to suspend him during either one or two sessions, according to their discretion.

10. It shall be the duty of the steward and porters of the College to report to the Vice-President any instances of disorder or breach of discipline which they may ob

serve.

RULE REGARDING STUDENTS DROPPING SESSIONAL AT

TENDANCE.

That any student desirous of suspending his studies for a season, provided he shall give notice of such intention within one fortnight after the commencement of the session, shall be permitted to retain his name upon the College books for a year, on payment of one pound sterling, provided he do not attend lectures; and any College or class fees he may have paid shall be carried to his credit for the succeeding year.

OF THE ENTRANCE AND MATRICULATION
OF STUDENTS.

THE Queen's College being an incorporated College of
the Queen's University in Ireland, and having founded
and created in it, by Charter, the several University
Faculties of Arts, Medicine, and Law, and the practical
schools of Engineering and Agriculture, in each of
which departments the proper degrees are conferred
upon students of the College by the Senate of the
Queen's University, all students candidates for degrees
are required, at entrance into the College, to pass a ma-
triculation examination, which is prescribed by the
Council, and arranged for the several Faculties and
Schools to which students may wish to enter.

The attention of the parents and guardians of students is requested to the very great importance of young men, at entrance, being thoroughly well prepared in the matriculation course, as, when only imperfectly grounded, even if admitted into the College, such students are not merely incompetent to obtain distinction or prizes, but, being unable to follow the higher courses of study in the College classes with proper advantage, incur the risk of being found unfit for promotion at the sessional examinations, or even for the University degree at the end of their course.

FACULTY OF ARTS.

All candidates for the degrees of Bachelor or Master of Arts must, at entrance into the College, pass an examination in the following subjects:

The English Language:

Grammar and Composition.

The Greek Language; any two of the following books:

Homer-The first four books of the Iliad.

Xenophon-The first three books of the Anabasis.
Lucian-Walker's Selections.

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The Latin Language; any two of the following books:

Virgil-The first six books of the Æneid.

Horace The first book of the Odes, and first book of the Sa-
tires.

Sallust The Conspiracy of Catiline, and Jugurthine War.
Cæsar The fifth and sixth books of the Gallic War.
Retranslations from English into Latin of portions of Cæsar.

Arithmetic and Algebra:

The first four rules of Arithmetic.

Vulgar and Decimal Fractions.-Extraction of the Square
Root.

Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication, and Division of Alge-
braical Quantities.
Proportion.-Simple Equations.

Geometry:

The first and second books of Euclid.

History and Geography:

Roman History, to the Accession of Augustus.
Grecian History, to the Death of Alexander the Great.
Outlines of Ancient and Modern Geography.

FACULTY OF MEDICINE.

Candidates for the degree of Doctor of Medicine must, n entrance as matriculated students, pass an examiation in the following course of study:

The Greek Language; any one of the following books, at the option of the student:

Homer-The first four books of the Iliad.

Xenophon-The first three books of the Anabasis.
Lucian-Walker's Selections.

The Latin Language; any one of the following books, at the option of the student:

Virgil-The first six books of the Æneid.

Horace-The first book of the Odes, and first book of the Sa

tires.

Sallust-The Conspiracy of Catiline, and Jugurthine War.
Casar-The fifth and sixth books of the Gallic War.

72 ENTRANCE AND MATRICULATION OF STUDENTS.

Arithmetic:

The first four rules of Arithmetic.-Proportion.

Vulgar and Decimal Fractions.-Extraction of the Square
Root.

Geometry:

The first book of Euclid.

Geography:

Outlines of Modern Geography.

This examination may be passed at the commencement of the first, second, or third years of medical study; but the matriculated student only can become a candidate for scholarships and prizes.

FACULTY OF LAW.

Candidates for the degree of Bachelor or Doctor of Laws, or for the diploma of Elementary Law, are required at entrance, to pass a matriculation examination, in the same course of study as prescribed for the Faculty of Arts.

SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING.

Candidates for the diploma of Engineering Assistant, or of Civil Engineer, are required, at entrance, to pass a matriculation examination in the following course of study:

The English Language:

Grammar and Composition.

Arithmetic and Algebra:

The first four rules of Arithmetic.
Vulgar and Decimal Fractions.
Extraction of the Square Root.

Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication, and Division of Alge

braical Quantities.

Proportion.

Simple Equations.

Geometry:

The first and second books of Euclid.

History and Geography:

Roman History, to the accession of Augustus.
Grecian History, to the death of Alexander the Great.
Outlines of Ancient and Modern Geography.

SCHOOL OF AGRICULture.

Candidates for the diploma of the school of Agriculure will be required, at entrance, to pass an examinaion in

The English Language:

Grammar and Composition.

Modern Geography.

The first four rules of Arithmetic.-Proportion.

Vulgar and Decimal Fractions.

Extraction of the Square Root.

NON-MATRICULATED STUDENTS.

Students of special subjects, not candidates for Uniersity degrees, may attend the classes of the several rofessors of those subjects, without matriculation, on ayment of the College and class-fees detailed page 43 seq., and shall be considered as only subject to the iscipline enjoined by Chapter XIII. of the Statutes, age 35.

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