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SUMMER SCHOOL COURSES

List of Those to be Given During Session.--School Will Open July 9.

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

The thirty-eighth session of the Summer Courses of Instruction in Arts and Sciences of Harvard University will begin on Wednesday, July 1, and end on Wednesday, August 12, 1908.

Class-room exercises will be held ordinarily in the forenoon of five days of the week for six weeks.

In several important respects the Summer School this year will mark a distinct advance over that of former years, inasmuch as 92 courses of study are offered, as against 76 last year, and 85 in 1903, which has been the maximum heretofore. Of the 92 courses offered this year, 65 have been accepted by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences for the bachelor's degrees from students in the University, as against 47 so accepted in 1907; and 20 of the courses have been approved as leading toward a "master's" degree, as compared with nine such courses last year.

The tuition fee varies from $20 to $30, the larger fees being charged in the laboratory courses. A registration fee of $2 is required of each student. Eighty dollars for six weeks may be regarded the average expenditure of a student with a single course of study. Historical excursions, evening lectures and social gatherings are abundant. Reduced railway fares will be arranged whenever possible.

Further detailed information may be obtained from the chairman, Professor J. L. Love, 4 Lawrence Hall, Cambridge, Mass.

The following ninety-two courses are offered:

(The * is prefixed to Courses accepted for a degree in Harvard University).

Anthropology.--*Introductory Course. Dr. A. M. Tozzer.

Astronomy. -- *Introductory Course. Professor W. C. Brenke.

Botany.--*Introductory Course; *Advanced Course. Professor M. A. Chrysler and Mr. R. B. Thomson.

Chemistry.--*Elementary Theoretical and Descriptive; *Organic; *Physical; *Qualitative Analysis; *Quantitative Analysis; *Research. Professors G. P. Baxter and H. A. Torrey, and Messrs. Frevert and A. C. Boylston.

Classics.--Greek for Beginners; *Life of the Ancient Greeks; Latin for Teachers; *the Roman Poets. Professors C. B. Gulick and E. K. Rand, and Dr. A. S. Pease.

Education.--*History of Modern Education; *Principles of Education; *School Administration; *Methods of Teaching History; *Methods of Teaching Mathematics. Professor E. O. Sisson, Superintendent F. E. Spaulding, Dr. J. Sullivan, and Mr. G. W. Evans.

Engineering.--*Plane and Topographical Surveying; *Railroad Engineering; *Geodetic Surveying; *Elementary Statics; *Resistance of Materials; *Elementary Kinematics and Kinetics; *Shopwork. Professors I. N. Hollis and H. J. Hughes, and Messrs. E. R. Markham and H. P. Forte.

English -- Elementary Composition; Advanced Composition; Second Ad- vanced Composition; College Admission Requirements in English; *Anglo-Saxon; Outlines of English Literature; Eighteenth Century English Literature; Nineteenth Century Literature; English Poets of the Romantic Period. Professor Hancock, Mr. C. T. Copeland, Dr. P. A. Hutchison, and Messrs. C. R. Nutter, H. M. Rideout, J. W. Rankin, and H. R. Shipherd.

Fine Arts.--*History of European Architecture to A.D. 1000; *History of European Architecture to close of the Renaissance; *Architectural Design; *Pure Design as Applied in the Arts; *Drawing and Painting in Representation; *the History of Ancient Art. Professors H. L. Warren and W. L. Mowll, Drs. D. W. Ross and O. S. Tonks, and Messrs. M. Mower and E. O. Parker.

Geography and Geology.--*Physiographic Field Work in Northern Italy or Southern Switzerland; *Physiographic Studies in Central France; *Field Work in Historical and Structural Geology in Montana; *Geological and Petrographical Studies in Montana or New England; *Geological Field Work in Brazil. Professors W. M. Davis, J. E. Wolff, J. B. Woodworth, and D. W. Johnson, and Dr. G. R. Mansfield.

German.--*Intermediate Course in Grammar and Composition with Methods of Teaching; German Conversation; *German Dramatists of the Nineteenth Century. Drs. H. J. Weber and A. W. Boesche.

History and Government.--*Ancient Greek History; *Ancient Roman History; *European History from A.D. 800 to 1648; *American History from A.D. 1763 to 1829; *Civil Government; *Municipal Government. Professors W. MacDonald, W. S. Ferguson, and W. M. Munro.

Mathematics. -- *Advanced Algebra; *Plane Trigonometry; *Solid Geometry; *Plane Analytic Geometry; Differential and Integral Calculus. Professors J. L. Love, W. F. Osgood, and W. C. Brenke, and Messrs. A. B. Frizell and G. W. Evans.

Music.--*Harmony and Counterpoint; *Musical Analysis and Appreciation of Music. Professor J. P. Marshall.

Philosophy and Psychology.--*History of Philosophy; *Introduction to Philosophy; *Introduction to Ethics for Teachers; *Metaphysics; *Descriptive and Experimental Psychology; *Applied Psychology. Professors Josiah Royce and R. B. Perry, and Drs. R. M. Yerkes and C. S. Berry.

Physical Education.--Four Years' Series of Courses in Theory--including Anatomy, Physiology, Histology, Anthropometry, Physical Diagnosis, etc.; Four Years' Series of Courses in Practice--including Swedish Free Movements, Free Exercises, Gymnastic Games, Indian Clubs, Field Athletics, Dancing Steps, Aesthetic Dancing, Corrective Gymnastics, etc. Dr. D. A. Sargent, Director.

Physics. -- Elementary Experimental Physics for Teachers; *Advanced Experimental Physics. Professor McElfresh, and Messrs. P. W. Bridgman and H. C. Hayes.

Public Speaking and Reading.--Development of the Voice; Oral Reading and Discussion; Platform Speaking; Oral Reading of English Classics. Professor F. L. Winter and Mr. B. G. Willard.

Romance Languages.--**Intermediate French for Teachers; French Conversation; *French Literature of the Nineteenth Century; *Elementary Spanish; *Advanced Spanish Composition and Translation. Professors Fortier and Wright, and Messrs. G. L. Lincoln and A. Brun

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