^**-^-/«-r£ ANNUAL CALENDAR OF The McGill University College OF BRITISH COLUMBIA tsnded in 1906 by the Royal Institution for the Advancement of Learning of British Columbia, under authority of an Act of the Legislature SESSION 1909-1910 H iWtj-.fcQv t*|-»i£ir.R., JPAIMTVRS ANNUAL CALENDAR OF The McGill University College OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Founded in 1906 by the Royal Institution for the Advancement of Learning of British Columbia, under authority of an Act of the Legislature *£& 23#,J *t> l .jt & SESSION 1909—1910 r- THE ROYAL INSTITUTION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF LEARNING OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GOVERNORS OF THE McGILL UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA ^Hon. F. Carter-Cotton, President. x A. C. Flumerfelt, Esq., Treasurer. / William Peterson, M.A., LL.D., C.M.G., Principal McGill University. "Hon. H. E. Young, B.A., M.D., LL.D., Minister of Education. < Alexander Robinson, Esq., B.A., LL.D., Superintendent of Education. < S. J. Tunstall, Esq., B.A, M.D. *- Campbell Sweeny, Esq. ? David Robertson, Esq. "'Col. F. B. Gregory, LL.B. "R. P. McLennan, Esq. •'W. P. Argue, Esq., B.A., Secretary. ' W. H. Malkin, Esq. - E. B. Paul, Esq., M.A. 'Vt. H. P. Clubb, Esq. -C E. Hope, Esq. —W. D. BRYDONE-JaCK. Esq., JH^. U..{{. C.f* ; ld^X.%, (E&) <" George Jay, Esq. — Gt E. Robinson, Esq.. B.A., Acting Principal m OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION VANCOUVER G. E. Robinson, B.A. (Dal.), Acting Principal and Dean, Professor of Mathematics. J. K. Henry, B.A. (Dal.), Professor of English. L. F. Robertson, M.A. (McGi'l), Professor of Latin. H. Chodat, M.A. ^ McGill), Professor of Modern Languages. H. K. Dutcher, M. Sc. (McGill), A. M. Can. S.C.E., Professor of Civil Engineering. J. G. Davidson, B.A (Tor.), Ph. D. (Cal.), Professor of Physics. I). W. Munn, M.A. (McGill), B. Sc. (McGill), Professor of Mechanical Engineering. A. E. Boak, M.A. (Queen's), Lecturer in Greek. G. R. Kendall, B. Sc. (McGill), Lecturer in Chemistry. L. F. Robertson, M.A., Registrar. - ' _ v.ctor.a em<ifa*H I ^w, S. J. Willis, B.A. (McGill), Dean and Professor of Classics. E. H. Russell, B.A. (Queen's), Professor of Mathematics. Jeanette A. Cann, B.L. (Dal.), Lecturer in English. Alice 0. E. Henry, M.A. (McGill), Lecturer in Modern Languages. Percy Elliott, M.Sc. (McGill), Lecturer in Physics. r • ACADEMIC YEAR 1909—1910 Thursday, /Matriculation and Supplemental Examin- September 23rd \ ations begin. Septemte?30th {^is^ation and Payment of Fees. Octoftst {Lectures begin. DecJmberTith {Last da3' of lectures for term- December 16th {Examinations begin. December8 22nd {Christmas vacation begins. 1910 , v Wednesday, {„ , . ^anua^y f 1^S^ *™ open, March Tith {Good Friday. No lectures. ApriU^h {Last d&y of Jectures. Anril 18th | Sessional Examinations begin. EXAMINATION TIME TABLES. Matriculation Examination. SEPTEMBER, 1909. Thursday, September 23rd. Morning, 9-10.30—English Grammar. 10.30-11—English Dictation. 11-12—English Composition (Prelim.) Afternoon, 2.30-4.30—English Literature and Composition. 4.30-6.30—History. Friday, September 24th. Morning, 9-11—Latin Books. 11-1—Arithmetic. Afternoon, 2.30-4.30—Latin Composition and Sight. Monday, September 27th. Morning, 9-11—French. 11-12.30—Trigonometry. Afternoon, 2.30-4.30—German. 4.30-6—Chemistry and Botany. Tuesday, September 28th. Morning, 9-11—Geometry, Part I. 11-12.30—Physics and Physiography. Afternoon, 2.30-4—Algebra, Part II. 4-5.30—Geometry, Part II Wednesday, September 29th. Morning, 9-11—Algebra, Part I. 11-1—Greek Books. Afternoon, 2.30-4.30—Greek Composition and Sight. r EXAMINATION TIME TABLES. FACULTY OF ARTS. Supplemental Examinations, September, 1909. DATE Hour. Supp. to First Year Sessional Supp. to Second Year Sessional Thursday Sept. 23rd... 9 English Literature English Literature 2.30 English Composition and History. English Coniposit on Friday, Sept. 24th 9 Latin Books. Latin Books 2.30 Latin Composition, Sight Translation and History. Latin Composition, Sight Translation, History and Literature Saturday, Sept. 25th... French. French 2.30 French French Monday, Sept. 27th.... 9 Algebra. Algebra •2.30 Trigonometry, Tuesday, Sept. 28th... 9 Greek Books. German. Greek Books German 2.30 Greek Composition, Sight Translation and History. German. Greek Composition Sight Translation and History. German. Wednesday, Sept.29th 9 Physics Conies and Solid Geometry. 2.30 Geometry Chemistry. EXAMINATION TIME TABLES. FACULTY OF ARTS. Christmas Examination, 1-909, First Year Second Year Third Year. Thursday, Dec. 16th..A.M. Mathematics French P.M. Latin Chemistry German Mathematics Hiyslcs Friday, Dec. 17th a.m. French Latin English p.m. English Latin French Monday, Dec. 20th...a.m. Physics .Mathematics Logic p.m. Greek English Tuesday, Dec. 21st a.m. German Greek English P'M. History EXAMINATION TIME TABLES. FACULTY OF ARTS, Sessional Examinations, 1910. Morning examinations commence at 9; afternoon examinations at 2.30 Day and Date First Year Second Year Third Year. Friday, April 15th p.m. English Composition Monday. April 18th...a.m. Mathematics French " P.M. Mathematics French Tuesday, April 19th..A.M Latin Chemistry German Mathematics Physics P.M. Latin Chemistry German Mathematics Physics Wed'sday, Apl. 20th..A.M. French Latin English " P.M. French History Latin English Thursday, April 21st a.m. . English Latin French " P.M. English Latin French Friday, April 22nd A.M. Physics Mathematics P.M. History Mathematics Tuesday, April 26th..A.M. Greek English " P.M. Greek English Wed'sday, Apl. 27th..A.M. German Greek English P.M. German Greek English The McGill University College- of British Columbia- HISTORICAL SKETCH In 1894, at the instance of friends of higher education in the Province, who desired such relations between local high -schools and universities in other parts of the Empire as would tend to the inception and promotion of university work in ■ British Columbia, legislation was passed which empowered the affiliation of high schools to recognised universities; and this was supplemented in 1896 by an act providing for the incorporation of high schools as colleges in accordance with the charters and constitutions of such universities. Under these enactments Vancouver High School became Vancouver College, and was admitted to affiliation for the First Year in Arts by the Corporation of McGill University, which, had in the meantime secured such extension of its charter powers as made possible the admission of* extra-Provincial colleges to the relation of affiliation. Work was begun under this relation in 1899, and by 1902 the work had grown so, and was of such a character that an extension of affiliation was granted, to cover the first two years in Arts and the University Intermediate Examination. This ■year Victoria College, too, applied for and obtained affiliation covering the First Year in Arts. Later the need of university connection more intimate still and essential than that of affiliation and also of extension of the scope of work came to be felt and urged, and the result of much careful urging and deliberation was the passage in 1906 of local legislation (1) enacting that "the Governors, Principal, and Fellows of McGill College and University may exercise and enjoy in the Province of British Columbia all the powers, rights, privileges, and functions conferred upon them by the charter granted to them by His late Majesty, King George IV., in the second year of his reign, and amended by Her late Majesty, Queen Victoria, in the sixteenth year of her reign.;" and (2) authorising the incorporation of'a body politic under the name of "The Royal Institution for the • Advancement of Learning of British Columbia, whereby the 10 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Royal Institution shall undertake the conduct or administration of any part of the higher education work now carried on by such Boards," and also to "establish at such place in British Columbia as McGill University may designate a College for the higher education of men and women, such College, in respect of courses of study and examinations, to be deemed a College "of McGill University, and the instruction given to its students to be of the same standard as that given in like subjects at McGdl University at Montreal." In pursuance of the objects of its foundation, therefore,' the Royal Institution established at Vancouver the McGill University College of British Columbia (by agreement with the Board of School Trustees) taking over the Arts work previously done by the Vancouver College, with extension of the scope and of the options allowed, adding two years of Applied Science and later the Third Year in Arts. In 1907 the act was amended so as to allow of the establishment of Colleges of the Royal Institution in other cities in the Province, and in the following year the College at Victoria, hitherto directly affiliated to McGill, came under the" control of the Royal Institution as a part of the McGill University College of British Columbia, affording courses in the first two years in Arts. CONSTITUTION OF THE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE Under the Act of the Legislature of the Province of British Columbia, the Royal Institution for the Advancement of Learning of British Columbia is constituted a body corporate, with all the usual rights and privileges of corporate bodies. The members of the Royal Institution are the Governors of the College, and, as such, control the finances, make statutes and by-laws, appoint professors, and perform all other administrative duties. The President of the Royal Institution is ex-officio Chancellor of the College. COURSES' OF STUDY—TBW SESSIONS II The Principal is the Academic head and Chief Administrative Officer. He is appointed by the Board of Governors, of which body he is a member, ex-officio. A Senate has been constituted under the Statutes. In conjunction with the Faculty and the Corporation of McGill University, the senate exercises authority over all matters relating to educational policy. The statutes and regulations have been framed on the most liberal principles, with a view to providing, as far as possible, for all classes of persons, opportunity for the attainment of mental culture. The College is undenominational in character. ■ COURSES OF STUDY The College offers instruction in the first, second and third years of the Arts Course, and in the first and second years of the Course in Applied Science of McGill University. The standard of work is that of McGill University, all the examinations being conducted by the Examining Board of that institution, which includes all the members of the local staff. Candidates passing the examinations at the end of any year in either Arts or Applied Scierice are admitted to the next year of McGill University without further examination. The Courses in Arts are open to men and women on equal footing. THE SESSION The University Year or Session is divided into two terms, the first extending to the Christmas vacation, and the second from the expiry of the Christmas vacation to the end of the SessionaFExaminations in May. The Session of 1909-1910 will begin on Friday, October 1st. Two matriculation examinations will be held in 1909, the first commencing on Monday, June 14th, and the second on Thursday, September 23rd. 12 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Summer Classes. During the months of May and June, a series of Summer Classes will be conducted, intended mainly, in the first instance, to meet the requirements of students in the first two years of their course. The subjects offered in the Faculty of Arts are English, Latin, Greek, Mathematics, Physios, Chemistry, Logic, Psychology, French and German. BOARD AND RESIDENCE. Good board and lodging can be obtained in the vicinity of the College buildings at a cost of from $22.00 per month upwards; or, separately, board at $15.00 to $21.00 per month, - rooms at $7.00 to $12.00 per month. A list of suitable boarding and lodging houses, the sanitary conditions of which are required to be properly certified, is prepared, and may be obtained on application to the Registrar* CLASSIFICATION OF STUDENTS. Except under special circumstances, no student under the age of sixteen is admitted to the first year courses in Arts or Applied Science, or under the age of seventeen to the second year. . Students are classified as Undergraduates, Conditioned Students and Partial Students. „ Undergraduates are matriculated students who are pursuing a full undergraduate course of study leading to a degree. In order to obtain undergraduate standing, a candidate must have passecl the matriculation examination of the University or some other examination accepted in lieu thereof (see page 15) and have registered as a matriculated undergraduate. Conditioned Students are those who, not having completed their matriculation examination, are pursuing a full undergraduate course of study leading to a degree, and are entitled to obtain undergraduate standing on completing their matriculation. • MATRICULATION EXAMINATION 13 Partial Students are those who, not belonging to one of the above classes of students, are pursuing a course of study in .the' University College. Except as provided below, such students may, subject to the approval of the Professor, attend any class without previous examination. Persons who wish to take a partial course in the first year of the Faculty of Arts must, if under the age of eighteen years, first present to the Principal certificates of having taken a satisfactory course of school instruction. In order to obtain admission to the classes in French, intending students must have passed the University matriculation examination, or an equivalent examination, in that subject. Partial students who subsequently obtain undergraduate standing *by passing the matriculation examination may, as undergraduates, be exempted, at the discretion of the Faculty, from any particular course or courses qf lectures which they may have attended as partial students and in which they have passed the sessional examinations. MATRICULATION I. REGULATIONS 1. Matriculation Examinations, which are those of McGill University, are held only in June and September. All inquiries^ relating to the examinations should be addressed to the Registrar. 2. Every candidate for examination is required to fill up an application form and return the saihe with the necessary fee one month before the examination. Blank forms may be obtained from the Registrar. 3. In order to obtain an examination at a local centre, any Headmaster or other person must, before May 1st, submit to the Registrar of McGill University, the name of some suitable person, preferably a university graduate, who is willing to act as deputy examiner, i.e., receive the questions, hold the examinations and forward the an=\vers to Montreal. The 14 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA University will be responsible for no other local expenses than the payment of the deputy examiners. t4. The matriculation examination may be taken in two part3, the Preliminary Division comprising (1) English Composition and Dictation, (2) English Grammar, (3) History and Geography, and (4) Arithmetic, and a candidate who passes on any three of the four papers set in this Division, at one time, *will be allowed to count to his credit the subjects covered thereby, and the remaining paper may be taken separately or when he presents himself for examination in the Final Division. "Those who fail in two or more papers will be required to take this part of the examination over again. t5. Candidates for examination in the Final Division who fail in not more than two subjects at one time *may complete the requirements by passing in the subject or subjects in which they failed, at any matriculation examination held within the same or the following year. to. The examination may also be taken as a whole (without reference to Divisions), in which case those who have obtained pass standing in at least half of the required subjects for entrance to any Faculty at one time, *may complete the matriculation examination by passing in the remaining subject or subjects at any examination held within the same or the following year. •Subjects passed at the June and September examinations of the same year will be sonsidered as "having been passed "at one time," Candidates, therefore, who have failed at the June examinations and present themselves in the following September will not be required to take the subject in which they passed in June. tin 1910 the division of subjects into Pre'jminary and Final will be done away with the regulations 4, 5 and 6 will be replaced by the simple statement, that a candidate may take the examination in parts, credit being given for any five subjects passed at one time. There will De one paper of two hours on English Composition and Spelling will be tested by the papers in Composition and Literature. A new regulation has also been adopted and will ne in force in 1910, to the effect that a candidate will be exempted from the formal examinations in English Grammar, History -and Arithmetic on presentation of a certificate.from the Principal p£ an approved school, or other satisfactory examinations in these! subjects fully up to the requirements prescribed for matriculation. m MATRICULATION EXAMINATION 15 7. When ism or more- books or subjects are prescribed for one„examination it is necessary to pass in each. 8. A candidate in order to pass must obtain at least 40 per cent, of the total number of marks allowed for each subject. 9. Certificates of having passed the following examinations will, if submitted to the Registrar, be accepted pro tanto in lieu of the matriculation examination, i.e., in so far as the subjects and standard are, to the satisfaction of the Board of Matriculation Examiners, the same as, or equivalent to, those . required for the matriculation examination of this University. Candidates offering certificates which are not a full equivalent will be required to pass tne matriculation examination in such of the required subjects as are not covered thereby:— Province of Qyebec. The University School Preliminary Examination and the Departmental Examination of Grade I Academy. The University School Leaving Examination. * The Examination for the Model School Diploma, under certain conditions. Province of Ontario. The Junior and Senior Teachers' Certificate Examinations. Junior and Senior Matriculation Examinations. Province of New Brunswick. The Examinations for Superior and Grammar School Licenses. Province of Nova Scotia. The Leaving Examinations, Grades XI and XIL Province of Prince Edward Island. The Examination for First and Second Class Teachers' Licenses. The First and Second Year Examinations of Prince of Wales College. •m. 16 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Province of British Columbia. The Junior, Intermediate and Senior Grade Examinations.. Alberta and Saskatchewan. The Departmental Examinations for Stanuards VII and VIII. Newfoundland. The Intermediate and Associate Grade Examinations. Great Britain. The School and Matriculation Examinations of the Univer-" sities of Oxford, Cambridge and London, and the Leaving Examinations of the Scotch Education Department. Applications for exemption from the matriculation examination, based upon certificates of having passed examinations other than those above mentioned, will be considered as occasion may require by the Board of Matriculation Examiners. Every such application must be accompanied by certificates and full particulars, and Should be addressed to the Registrar of McGill University. II. FEES. (See Page 25.) III. SUBJECTS OF EXAMINATION. FOR ARTS. For candidates intending to take the B.A. Course:— (See Regulation 4, Page 14.) English Composition and Dictation. English Grammar. History and Geography. Arithmetic. FINAL DIVISION. 1. English Literature. 2. Latin or Creek. if SUBJECTS OF EXAMINATIONS ' 17 3. One of the following:—Greek or Latin (the one not already chosen), French, German. 4. Algebra, Part I. 5. Geometry, Part I. 6. One of the following:—Physiography, Botany, Chemis try, Physics, a Language not already chosen. For candidates intending to take the B.Sc. Course in Arts: PRELIMINARY DIVISION. As above. FINAL DIVISION. 1. English Literature. 2. French. 3. German. 4. Algebra, Part I. 5. Geometry, Part I. 6. One of the following:—Physiography, Botany, Chemistry, Physics, Latin, Greek. FOR APPLIED SCIENCE. PRELIMINARY DIVISION. (See Regulation 4, Page 14.) English Composition and Dictation. English Grammar. History and Geography. Arithmetic. FINAL DIVISION. For all courses leading to the Degree of B.Sc, in Applied Science:— 1. English Literature. 2. One of the following:—French, German, Latin, Greek. 3. Algebra, Parts I and II. 4. Geometry, Parts I and II. 5. Trigonometry. fi. One of the following:—Physiography, Botany, Chemis* try, Physics, a Language not already chosen. r 18 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA For matriculation in the Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, see the University Calendar. IV. REQUIREMENTS IN EACH SUBJECT. PRELIMINARY DIVISION. English Composition and Dictation. For Composition.—Candidates will write a short essay on a subject to be given at the time of the examination. English Grammar. Main facts in connection with the history of the language; Etymology and Syntax. A good knowledge of Parsing and Analysis is essential. West's English Grammar for Beginners is recommended as a text-book. History and Geography. Candidates will be required to show a somewhat intimate acquaintance with the history of England from 1485 to the present time. While any text-book written for the upper forms of schools may be used in preparation for the examination, Gardiner's Outline of English History (Longmans)-is recommended. The Geography required will be that relating to the History prescribed. Arithmetic. All the ordinary rules, including Square Root, and a knowledge of the Metric System. FINAL DIVISION. English Composition and Literature. Composition.—As in Sykes's Elementary Composition, with an essay on some subject connected with the works prescribed in Literature. Frequent practice in composition is essential. Literature.—1909 and 1910—Any two of the following: Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice; Nineteenth Century Prose pp. 1-126, with notes (ed Cunliffe, Copp, Clark Co.;) Poems of the Romantic Revival (Copp, Clark Co.), pages 1 to 82 with notes; Tennyson's Select Poems (Ed. Alexander, Copp, Clark Co.) ■ MATRICULATION EXAMINATION 19 In 1911 Julius Caesar will be substituted for The Merchant of Venice. The other requirements will remain as above. An alternative paper will be set on the work specified in English for the Junior Matriculation examination of the Province of Ontario. Greek. Texts.—Xenophon, Anabasis, Book 1, Chaps. I to VIII, or Farnell's "Tales from Herodotus" (Macmillan's Elementary Classics), Chaps. VIII to XVI. Grammar.—Knowledge of grammar will be tested by translation and composition, and by grammatical questions based on the specified texts. Translation at Sight from Greek into English. Composition.—Translation into Greek of detached English sentences and easy narrative based on the prescribed texts. - Two papers will be set:—(1) Translation at sight and composition; (2) Translation from and grammatical and other questions based on the prescribed texts. No candidate will be J/t*^-*itmU allowed to pass who fails on paper (1). !^i' Alternative questions will be set on the work prescribed in Greek for the Junior Matriculation examination of the Province of Ontario, if this differs from that specified above. At the September examination other texts equivalent to those specified may be accepted, if application be made to the Registrar at least one month before the date of the examination. Latin. For 1909 and 1910.— Texts.—Caesar, De Bello Gallico, Book IV, Chap. 20 to the end, and Book V ;Ovid, Stories from the Metamorphoses (as in Gleason's "A Term of Ovid," American Book Company), lines 1 to 670. Grammar.—Knowledge of grammar will be tested by translation and composition, and by grammatical questions based on the specified texts. m 20 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRLITSH COLUMBIA Translation at Sight from Latin into English. Composition.—Translation into Latin of detached English sentences and easy narrative based On the prescribed texts. Two papers will be set:—(1) Translation at sight and composition; (2) Translation from and grammatical and other questions based on the prescribed texts. No candidate will be allowed to pass who fails on paper (1). Note.—The Roman method of pronouncing Latin is recom-. mended. An alternative paper will be set on the Latin texts prescribed for the Junior Matriculation examination of the Province of Ontario, if these differ from those specified above. At the September examination other texts in Latin equivalent to those specified may be accepted, if application be made to the Registrar at least a month before the day of the examination. French. Grammar.—A thorough knowledge of French accidence and of those points of syntax which are of more frequent occurrence ' in an ordinary easy style. " Translation at Sight into English of a French passage of moderate difficulty. Translation at Sight into French of detached English sentences and an easy English passage. Material for such translation is selected with a view to testing the candidate's general knowledge of French Grammar. Candidates are required to pass in English-French translation as well as in the paper as a whole. Books recommended:—Bertenshaw's French Grammar (Longmans), and Cameron's Elements of French Prose Composition (Holt & Co.) German. Grammar.—A thorough knowledge of German accidence and of the syntax of the topics treated in Lessons 46, 47, 57, 58, 59 and 60 of the Joynes-Meissner Grammar, and as pre- f0 MATRICULATION EXAMINATION 21 sented in the Joynes-Meissner, Van der Smissen, or any other German Grammar of equally good standing. Translation at Sight into English of a German passage of moderate difficulty. Translation into German of detached English sentences and of an easy English passage. Material for such translation is selected with a view to exemplifying the points of grammar included within the above limits. Texts.— (Translation and grammatical study) :— For 1910 and 1911.—Volkmann, Kleine Geschichten (Heath & Co.; Stille Wasser, ed. Bernhardt (Heath & Co.) It is recommended that candidates should read the prescribed texts in the above order, beginning in Volkmann's Kleine Geschichten with Himmelsschlussel and Siebenmeilenstiefel. The Ontario Junior Matriculation requirements in German will be accepted in place of the texts specified above. At the September examination other texts equivalent to those specified may be accepted, if application be made to the Registrar at least one month before the date of the examination. Algebra. Part I. Elementary rules, involution, evolution, fractions, indices, surds, simple and quadratic equations of one or more unknown quantities; as in Hall & Knight's Elementary Algebra to the end of surds (omitting portions marked with an asterisk), or as in similar text-books. Algebra. Part 11. The three progressions, ratio, proportion, variation, permutations and combinations, binomial theorem, logarithms, theory of quadratic equations, as in the remainder of Hall & Knight's Elementary Algebra (omitting Chaps. XL. to XLIII inclusive), or as in similar text-books. Geometry. Part I. Euclid's Elements, Books I, II, III, with easy deductions; or an equivalent.- 22 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA An alternative paper will be set on the Ontario Junior Matriculation requirements in this subject. Geometry. Part II. Euclid's Elements, Books IV and VI, with definitions of Book V, and easy deductions; or an equivalent.' Trigonometry. Measurement of angles, trigonometrical ratios or functions of one angle, of two angles and of a multiple angle; as in Lock's Elementary Trigonometry, Chaps. I to Xll. Hall &. Knight's Trigonometry, Chaps I to XII, inclusive, omitting Chap. V.; or as in similar text-books. Physiography. The elements of the science, as in Davis's Elementary Physical Geography, or any other text-book covering the same ground. Botany. Text-book to be selected. Chemistry. Elementary inorganic chemistry, comprising the preparation and properties of the chief non-metallic elements and their more important compounds, the laws of chemical action, combining weight, etc. The ground is simply and effectively covered by Remsen's "Elements of Chemistry," pp. 1 to 165, and 218 to 243 (Macmillan's Edition). Physics. Properties of matter; elementary mechanics of solids and fluids, including the laws of motion, simple machines, work, energy; fluid pressure and specific gravity; thermometry, the effects and modes of transmission of heat. Text-books recommended—Gage's Introduction to Physical Science, 1902 edition (Ginn & Company), Chaps, I to iV, inclusive; or Sinclair's Elementary Physics, Grades I, II and III, (Copp, Clark Co.) MATRICULATION EXAMINATION 23 V. DATES OF EXAMINATIONS. The examinations in 1909 will commence on Monday, June 14th, and on Thursday, September 23rd. Special arrangements may be made for the examination of candidates who are prevented by severe illness or domestic affliction from presenting themselves on the dates fixed. ADMISSION TO EQUIVALENT STANDING A student of any university other than McGill, wishing to be admitted to the College with equivalent standing, is required to send with his application:— 1st.—A calendar pf the university in which he has studied, giving a full statement of the courses of study. 2nd.—A complete statement of the course he has followed. 3rd.—A certificate of the standing gained, and of conduct. CERTIFICATES AND PRIZES. 1. Certificates of High General Standing will be granted to those undergraduates of the first two years who have obtained three-fourths of the maximum marks in the aggregate of the studies proper to their year, are placed in the First Class in not less than half the subjects, and have not more than one Third Class. 2. Prizes or Certificates will be given to those undergraduates who have distinguished themselves in the studies of a particular class, and have attended all the other classes proper to their year. REGISTRATION AND ATTENDANCE 1. Candidates entering on a course of study in any Faculty, whether as undergraduates, conditioned students or partial students, are required to attend at the office of the Registrar on the day preceding the opening day of the Session, for the purpose of filling out in duplicate the usual form of registration, and of signing the following declaration in the Matricula or Register:— 24 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA I hereby declare that I will faithfully observe the Statutes, Rules and Ordinances of the McGill University College of British Columbia. 2. Students are required to attend at least seven-eighths of the total number of lectures in any one course. Those whose absences exceed one-eighth of the total number of lectures in a course shall not be permitted to come up for the examination in that course. Each absence from lectures during the first three days of the session, or of the second term thereof, shall count as two. Excuses on the ground of illness or domestic affliction shall be dealt with by the Principal. 3. Punctual attendance on all classes is required of each student. Absence from lectures can only be excused by necessity or duty, of which proof must be given to the Faculty. The number of times of absence, which shall cause the loss of ia session, shall in eaeh case be determined by the Faculty. The following special regulation regarding attendance has been adopted:— Lectures shall commence at five minutes after the hour, on the conclusion of the roll-call, and students failing to answer to their names shall be marked "absent" unless they report themselves at the close of the lecture, in which case they shall be marked "late," and given such credit for attendance as the Faculty may deem advisable. Lectures shall end at five minutes before the hour. 4. .A record shall be kept by each Professor or Lecturer, in which the presence or absence of students shall be carefully noted. This record shall be submitted to the Faculty when required. 5. Credit for attendance on any lecture or class may be refused on the grounds of lateness, inattention, neglect of study, or disorderly conduct in the class-room or laboratory. In the case last mentioned, the student may, at the discretion of the Professor, be required to leave the room. Persistence in m MATRICULATION EXAMINATION 25 any of the above offences against discipline shall, after admonition by the Professor, be reported to the Principal. FEES. GENERAL REGULATIONS. 1. Fees shall be paid to the Registrar on or before October 15th. After October 15th an additional fee of $2.00 will be exacted of all students in default. Matriculation Fees. For the first examination $5.00 For a subsequent examination in one or two subjects.. 2.00 For a subsequent examination in three or more subjects . .• 3.00 For examination of certificates, in respect of which candidates are exempted from the whole of the matriculation examination 1.00 Candidates writing on matriculation papers with the view of qualiyfing as partial students, shall pay a fee of $1.00 per subject. Matriculation fees must be sent to the University Registrar at the time of application for the examination. Certificates will, on application, be issued to successful candidates without additional fee. Duplicate certificates will not be granted unless satisfactory proof be given of the loss or destruction of the original. The fee for a duplicate certificate is $1.00. Fees for Undergraduates. FEES IN ARTS. • Students pursuing the full undergraduate course pay a sessional fee of ten dollars. Partial students pay fees as follows:— Chemistry, per term $5.00 Physics, per term 5.00 Otter subjects, per term 3.00 %• 26 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA FEES IN APPLIED SGIENCE. Sessional fee for full undergraduate course $50.00 Field work in surveying 25.00 Laboratory courses, per term 5.00 Draughting, per term.... .* 5.00 Lecture courses per term .- 3.00 The sessional fees are payable in two instalments; half in October, half in January. A deposit of $5.00 as caution money is required from each student. This deposit is returned at the end of the session, after deductions have been made to cover breakages, etc. At the request of the students themselves, and by the authority of the Royal Institution, two dollars additional will be exacted from all undergraduate and conditioned students for, the support of the Student Activities Association. COURSE FOR B. A. 27 Information for Students in Arts. ORDINARY COURSE FOR THE DEGREE OF B.A. FIRST YEAR Greek, 1, or Latin, 1. English and History, 1. Mathematics, 1—(Algebra, Geometry and Trigonometry) Latin, 1, or Greek, 1, or French, 1, 2, or German, 1. J'hysics, 1. . German may be taken instead of Trigonometry by students who intend to read for Modern Language Honors. This option will, however, be granted only on the recommendation of the Modern Language Department. French cannot be taken as a qualifying option in the first year, except by students who have passed the Matriculation examination in this subject. SECOND YEAR English Composition. Latin, 2, or Greek, 2. And three of the following:— Greek, 2, or Latin, 2. English, 2. French, 3, 4. German, 2. Mathematics, 2. Chemistry, 1. Philosophy, la, lb, lc. Students intending to take the double course in Arts (B.A.) and Applied Science, must take Mathematics and Chemistry. 28 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA THIRD YEAR y^, English. And two of the following:— Mathematics. X Physics.^' Latin. <* French. Mathematics or Physics must be one of the subjects chosen by students who have not taken Chemistry in the Second Year. EXAMINATIONS IN ARTS 1. There are two examinations in each year, viz., at Christmas and at the end of the Session. Successful students are arranged in three classes at the sessional examinations. Those who obtain 75 per cent, and over are placed in the First Class; those who have between 60 and 75 per cent, in the Second Class, and those with from 40 to 60 per cent, in the Third Class. Christmas examinations will be held in all the subjects •of the Firet and Second Years, and are obligatory on all undergraduates, and also on all partial students of the First Year, unless they have been specially exempted. Partial students of the First Year, who fail in the Christmas examination, will be Tequested to withdraw from the class. Twenty-five per cent, of the marks given for the sessional work in each subject will be assigned for the results of the Christmas examinations. Students prevented by illness from attending the Christmas examinations will, on presenting a medical certificate, be given sessional standing on the results of the April examinations. Christmas examinations in the Third and Fourth Years may be held at the option of the professors. When held, the same value will be assigned to them as in the case of the First and Second Years. 2. The following are the regulations for advancement to the Second, Third and Fourth Years of the undergraduate course, and are subject to the condition that a student shall w EXAMINATIONS IN ARTS ' 29 not be allowed to continue a subject of the preceding year in which he has not made good his standing, except in the case of compulsory subjects in the Second Year. Advancement to the Second Year—A student who has failed to complete one of the ordinary courses of the First Year may enter the Second Year without special permission of the Faculty. A student who has failed to complete two of the ordinary courses of the First Year shall be permitted to enter the Second Year, but only on the condition that an average of 50 •per cent, has been obtained in the other subjects of the First Year course. Advancement to the Third Year—A student may be allowed to proceed to the Third Year with one subject uncompleted if that subject belongs to the Second Year. Repeating Year—By special permission of the Faculty, a student who is required to repeat his year may on application in writing:— (a) Be exempted from attending lectures and passing -examinations in the subjects in which he has already passed. (b) Be permitted to take, in addition to the subjects in which he has failed, one of the subjects of the following year of his course. 3. Examinations supplemental to the sessional examinations will be held in September, simultaneously with the matriculation examinations. The time for each supplemental examination will be fixed by the Faculty; the examination will not be granted at any other time, except by special permission of the Faculty, and on payment of a fee of $5.00. 4. A list of those to whom the Facultv has granted supplemental examinations in the following September will be published after the sessional examination. 30 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA COURSES OF LECTURES. GREEK. All students taking Greek are expected to provide themselves with a grammar, a Greek-English dictionary, and an Atlas of ancient geography. The following are recommended:— Allen's Elementary Greek Grammar; Liddell and Scotfs Greek Lexicon (Abridged; or Intermediate); Kiepert's Atlas Antiquus, or Putzger's Historical Atlas. First Year. 1. Lectures, four hours a week. For 1909-1910 -.—Authors Plato, Apologia (Adam Pitt Press); Homer, Odyssey Books VI and VII (Merry, Clarendon Press); Euripides, Bacchae (Gwyther, Bell's Illustrated Classics). Composition North & Hill ard's Greek Prose Composition (Rivingtons). Translation at Sight Peacock & Bell, Passages for Greek Translation (Macmillan, Elementary Classics). Greek HiStory 560 to 479 B. C. Book recommended Cox's Greeks and Persians (Longmans Epoch Series), or" Bury's History of Greece (Macmillan), chs. V to VII. Second Year. 2. Lectures, four hours a week. L For 1909-1910:—Authors Summer Reading. — Plato, Crito (Adam, Pitt Press). Lectures.—Thucydides, Book VII, (in part) (Marchant, Macmillan); Euripides, Iphigeneia in Tauris (England, Macmillan & Company); Homer, Iliad XXIV (G. M. Edwards, Pitt Press). Composition—North & Hill ard's Greek Prose Composition. (Rivingtons). .'. Translation at Sight, Greek Unseens in Prose and Verse, Intermediate Section (Blackie & Son). Greek History 479 to 403 B. C. Books recommended, Bury, History of Greece (Macmillan), chs. VIII to XI; Abbott, Pericles and the Golden Age of Athens (Putnam). LATIN 31 LATIN. All stndents taking Latin are expected to provide themselves with a grammar, a Latin-English dictionary, and an Atlas of Ancient Geography. The following are recommended:—'; Allen & Greenough's New Latin Grammar; Lewis's School Die-, tionary, or White-'s Junior Students' Latin-English Dictionary; Kiepert's Atlas Antiquus, or Putzger's Historical Atlas. First Year. 1. Lectures, four hours a week. For 1909-1910: — Authors Sallust, Catiline (Summers, Pitt Press); Cicero, de Amicitia (Masse, Bell's Illustrated Classics); Tibullus, Selections (Dobson, Arnold's Latin Texts). Composition Mitchell, Introduction to Latin Prose Composition (Macmillan, Toronto). Translation at Sight Hardy's Latin Reader (Macmillan). Roman History Ontlines, to 133 B. C. Book recom- mended, Botsford, History of Rome (Macmillan), chs. I to VI. Second-Year. 2. Lectures, four hours a week. For 1909-1910:—Authors. — Summer Reading. — Virgil Bucolica (Sidgwick, Pitt Press), omitting II and III. Lectures —Livy, Book XXI (Trayes, Bell's Illustrated Classics); Horace, Selected Odes (Wickham, Clarendon Press); Virgil, Aeneid VI (Sidgwick, Pitt Press). • Composition—North & Hillard's Latin Prose Composition (Rivingtons). Translation at Sight Hardy's Latin Reader (Macmillan) ,_ Roman History Outlines, from 133 B.C. to 337 A.D. Book recommended, Botsford, History of Rome (Macmillan), chs. VII to XII. Third and Fourth Years. 3. Lectures, four hours a week. For 1909-1910:—Summer Reading.—Bury's History of the Roman Empire to the death of Marcus Aurelius. «r 32 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Authors Lectures.—Cicero, Tusculan Disputations, Books I and II (Allyn & Bacon); Horace, Epistles, Book I 8-end, and Book II, (Wilkins, Macmillan & Co.); Plautus, Captivi (Morris, Ginn & Co.) A course of twelve lectures on the Roman Literature of the Empire. A course of twelve lectures on the Private Life of tihe Romans. „ Composition Selected Passages. Translation at Sight Rivingtons' Class Books of Latin Unseens (ed. Smith), Book XII. ENGLISH. First Year, 1.—Halleek's History of English Literature (American Book-Co.), pp. 1-261, with the following readings:— Chaucer, Prologue te the Canterbury Tales; Spenser, Faerie Queene, Book 1; Milton, Comus; European History (Adams, Macmillan), pp. 53-451.' Regular practice and instruction in composition are strongly recommended. Second Year, 2.—English Literature.—Halleek's History of English Literature, pp. 305-480, and Nineteenth Century Lit-, erature (Cunliffe and Cameron, Copp, Clark Co.). Composition.—Fortnightly essays will be required and will be taken into account in determining the standing of students at the end of the session. One hour per week. This course is obligatory on all second years students. Third Year—BA Prose Writers Before Dry den.—The main object of the course will be to discuss the chief literary influences visible in the Pre-Restoration writers of English prose and to examine characteristics of style. The subject will be treated chronologically. As the course is largely interpretative and critical, facts of biography will be used only when they illustrate points of moment. . Students will read the following works for examination: More, Utopia (Arbor's reprint, or Temple Edition); Sidney, Apologie for Poetry (Ed. Cook, Ginn & Co. or Shuckburgh, Cambridge University Press); Lodge, Rosalynd (Newnes, <0 ENGLISH—FRENCH 33. Caxton Series); Bacon, New Atlantis; Earle, Microcosmo- graphie (Temple Ed.); Milton, Areopagitica (Ed. Hales, Clarendon Press). 3.5. English Literature.—Shakespere.—This course will begin with a review of the early history of the English drama, and of the conditions which led to its development in the time of Elizabeth. The advances made by the earlier Elizabethan dramatists will be noted, and Shakespere's methods illustrated by a comparative study of A Midsummer Night's Dream, Romeo and Juliet, Henry V, As You Like It, Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth, and The Tempest; the relation of these plays to their sources will also be considered. Students are recommended to read as many of Shakespere's plays as they can, and to give special attention to those mentioned above. Books of reference will be named from time to time. Two hours a week. 3.C. English Composition.—An advanced course on English Composition, including style, methods and principles of literary criticism, treated from the historical point of view, and an introduction to the comparative study of literature in accordance with the most recent results of contemporary thought and research. In connection with this course students will be examined in a course of prescribed readings. Essays at stated periods are required of all. *"One hour a week. FRENCH. First Year 1. Vreeland & Koren, French Syntax and Composition (Holt); Saudeau, Mile, de la Seigliere (Holt); Chateaubriand, Les Aventures du dernier Abencerage (Holt). 2. Daudet, Tartarin (A. B. Co.) ; Dumas, Napoleon (Macmillan), including passages for translation into French; Pail- leron, Le monde ou l'on s'ennuie (Jenkins) ; Milhau,("Choix de Poesies (Renouf); Super, Historie de France (Holi). Equivalent work will be prescribed for the oral work and the oral examination given in McGill University. Four hours weekly, two for each course. * 34 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Second Year Summer Readings for students entering on their Second Year:—Corneille, Cinna (Holt): Daudet, Le Petit Chose (Heath). The examinations on Summer Readings will be held in the first week of the session. Sessional Lectures. 3. Vreeland and Kpren, French Syntax and Composition (Holt), Parts II and III and Idioms of Part I; Corneille, Le Cid (Holt); Bazin, Les Oberle (Holt); Elementary Historical French Grammar. 4. Mansion, Esquisse de la Litterature Francaise (Mc- Dougall & Co., London); Moliere, Femmes Savantes (Heath); A. France, Le Livre de mon Ami (Holt); Milhau, Choix de Poesies (Renouf). Equivalent work will be prescribed for the oral work and the oral examination given in McGill University. Four hours weekly, two for each course. Third Year. The courses will consist mainly in the study of French Literature and Advanced Prose Composition. Summer Readings for students entering on the Third Year:—Racine, Phedre (Heath); Hugo, Quatrc-vingt-treize (Ginn). , The examinations on Summer Readings will be held in the first week of the session. Sessional Lectures:— 5. For 1909-10:—Literature in the XVIIIth and XlXth Centuries. Lesage Gil Bias (Heath and Co.) ; Marivaux, Le Jeu del'Amour et du "Hasard: Buffon, Discours sur le Style": Montesquieu, Grandeur et Decadence des Komains; iSedaine, Le ^hj^fophe WPft 1p, ,«nvm>; J. J.Rbusseau, Selections; Voltaire, ^aire. Victor Hugo, Ruy Bias; Musset, Selections (Ginn and Co.) : Balzac, Eugenie, Grandet; Rostand,Princess' Lointaine; FRENCH—GERMAN 35 Hugo, Legende des Siecles; Gautier, Poesies (Selections). Doumic, Histoire de la Litterature Francaise. Prose Composition:—Spiers, Graduated Course of Translation into French Prose (Simpkin, Marshall and Co., London). 6. For 1910-11:—Literature up to the end of the XVIIth Century. Corneille, Polyeucte; Racine, Les Plaideurs, Iphigenie; Moliere, Le Misanthrope; Boileau, Choix d'Epitres et de Satires; La Bruyere, Selections; Madame de la Fayette, La Princesse de Cleve; Canat, Histoire de la Litterature Francaise (Delaplane). Prose Composition:—Spiers, Graduated Course of Translation in French Prose (Siihpkin, Marshall and Co., London). NJB.—In order to be admitted to the Third Year French a student must understand French well enough to take lectures delivered in French. Four hours weekly. GERMAN. First Year. 1. The Joynes-Meissner German Grammar (Heath and Co.); Horning, German Composition; Two German Tales (Holt) : Freytag, Die Journalisten (Gmn); Schiller, Maria Stuart (Holt and Qo.); German and French Poems (Holt and Co.). Four hours weekly. The examination will, in addition to the above, include equivalents for the oral examinations, given in McGill University. Year Second. Summer Readings for students entering on their Second Year:—Schiller, Die Piccolomini (Holt); Riehl, Die vierzehn NothClfer (A. B. Co.). The examinations on Summer Readings will be held in the first week of the session. 2. Sessional Lectures.—The Jovnes-Meissner German Grammar: Horning, German Composition; Schiller, Wilhelm fit 3} UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Tell (Holt); Goethe, Hermann and Dorothea (Heath); Frey- tig, Karl der Grosse (Holt); Keller, Bilder aus der Deutschen Literatur (American Book Co.), edition 1905. Four hours weekly. The examination will, in addition to the above, include equivalents for the oral examination, given in McGill University. PHILOSOPHY. Second Year. 1A. Psychology. Text-book:—James, Psychology, Briefer Course, pp. 1-279, omitting Chs. 7, 14, 15. This course will include a general account of sensation, with special illustration by reference to the sensations which are of pre-eminent importance for the purposes of practical life (sight, hearing, contact, movement). This will be followed by a general outline sketch of the functions of the central nervous system and particularly of the higher brain-centres, as the physiological correlates of mental activity. The nature of habit and its importance for mental life will next be studied, and will be followed by an examination of the leading features of the concrete stream of actual mental life and the principal constituents of the self. The course will conclude with a study of attention and association. Occasional essays will be prescribed. Three Jiours weekly, throughout the first term of the session. IB. Formal Logic.—In the second term a course in Formal Logic and Fallacies. Text-book: S. H. Mellone, Intro-, ductory Text-Book of Logic (second edition). Chaps I-III, IV (1-2-3-4), V-VII (omitting Chaps. V, part 4), X. The course will embrace an outline of the general formal principles of valid reasoning, with frequent illustrations of their application to actual discussion. This will be followed by more detailed examination of the types of fallacious reasoning most commonly perpetrated in literature and daily life. Fortnightly exercises will be set and will form an important feature of the course. Three hours weekly. 1C. A course of six lectures upon the nature of philosophy and its relation to the sciences, and its place as a university studv. MATHEMATICS—PHYSICS 37 MATHEMATICS. First Year. 1. Plane and Solid Geometry.—The equivalent of Books IV, VI and XI of Euclid, with supplementary matter from Hall and Stevens' Euclid. Algebra—Hall and Knight's Elementary Algebra (omitting Chaps. XL-XLII inclusive), or the same subject matter in similar text-books. Trigonometry.—Hall and Knight's Elementary Trigonometry to page 210 and Chap. XIX. Nature and use of logarithms. (Bottomley's four figure tables). Four hours per week. Second Year. 2. Geometry.—(a) Solid Geometry, continuation of the First Year: (b) Geometrical Conic Sections, Wilson's Solid Geometry and Geometrical Conies. Algebra.—Permutations and Combinations; Binomial Theorem; Exponential and Logarithmic Series; Undetermined Coefficients; Partial Fractions; Summation of typical series; Probabilities; Determinants; Graphic Methods. Text Book.—Hall and Knight's Higher Algebra. Three hours per week. Spherical Trigonometry.—A short course compulsory for students proceeding to the Faculty of Applied Science. Students taking the^ Advanced Course in Mathematics are recommended to take this course. Third or Fourth Year. 3. Elementary Analytical Geometry; elementary parts of the Differential and Integral Calculus; simple Differential Equations. Four hours per week. PHYSICS. First Year. 1. Physics.—This course has two objects: (1) to give the minimum acquaintance with Physical Science requisite for a 38 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA liberal education to those whose studies will be mainly literary; (2) to be introductory to the courses in Chemistry and other branches of Natural Science, and to the more detailed courses in Physics in the Third and Fourth Years. Only the most impqrtant principles in each branch of the subject wdl be treated, as far as possible, with reference to their historical development and mutual relations; and they will receive concrete illustration in the study of the principal instruments in daily use in the laboratory. Two illustrated lectures will be given per week. During the session each student will be required to attend in the laboratory, and make measurements involving the use of the following instruments:—Balance, Pendulum, Barometer, Thermometer, Sonometer, Telescope or Microscope, Tangent Galvanometer, Wheatstone's Bridge. Outline of Syllabus. The scope and method of Science, primary phenomena ("states and properties of matter"), motion, velocity, acceleration, laws of motion, momentum, energy, work; the parallelogram law for velocities and forces, equilibrium and the simple machines; uniform circular motion, vibration, the pendulum; fluid pressure, the barometer, specific gravity; summary of Mechanics, indicating the principle of the conservation of energy. The missing energy traced in:— (1) Sound:—Nature of wave motion, intensity, pitch and quality of musical notes; the stretched string and organ pipe; resonance. (2) Heat;—Temperature and the thermometer; the calorimeter, fusion and vaporisation; laws of Boyle and Gay-Lussac; the mechanical equivalent; application of conduction, convection and radiation to common problems of climate, ventilation, etc. (3). .Light:—Reflection, refraction, the spherical mirror, prjsm, lens, microscope, telescope, spectroscope, polariscope; principle of interference and sketch of the undulatory theory. (4) Electricity and Magnetism:—The electrophorus, the modern induction machine, the condenser; the idea of potential; atmospheric electricity'; magnetic field and lines of force; the compass and terrestrial magnetism; effects of current; the * PHYSICS—CHEMISTRY 39- voltameter and storage cell; the galvanometer; heating effects; simple batteries; Ohm's Law; practical units and measurement of current, resistance, electromotive force; mutual mechanical effects of conductors and magnetic fields; principle of the electric motor; the electro-magnet; induction of currents, and principle of the dynamo; applications to telegraph, telephone, lighting, and supply of power. Conclusion.—Restatement of principle of Conservation of Energy in complete form; dissipation of Energy. Two hours a week. Text-book:—Mann and Twiss. 2. Experimental Physics.—(First Course.)—Laws of energy, sound, light and heat. Text-books—Wat-on, (Longmans). Lectures fully illustrated. Two hours a week; with Laboratory Course, three hours a week. Laboratory Manual.—Tory and Pitcher. Heat:—Construction and calibration of thermometers; melting and boiling points; air thermometers; expansion of solids, liquids and gases; calorimetry; specific and latent heats; laws of vapour pressure; radiation; the mechanical equivalent of heat. Sound.—Velocity of sound; determination of rates of vibration of tuning forks; resonance; laws of vibration of strings. Light.—Photometry; laws of reflection and refraction; indices of refraction; focal lengths and magnifying powers of mirrors, lenses, telescopes and microscopes: the sextant, spectroscope, spectrometer, diffraction grating, optical bench and polar- iscopes. CHEMISTRY. Second Year. 1. General Chemistry.—A course of lectures on Elementary Chemical Theory, and on the principal elements and their compounds. The lectures are fully illustrated by means of experiments. <* 40 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Text-book:—Holleman's Text-book of Inorganic Chemistry (Translation by Cooper). For Reference:—Bloxam's Chemistry. Three hours a week. Elementary Practical Chemistry.—This course is compulsory for all undergraduates taking the above course of lectures. The work includes experiments illustrative of the laws of chemical combination, the preparation of pure chemical compounds, and elementary Qualitative Analysis. Four hours a week. * COURSES IN APPLIED SCIENCE 41 Information for Students in Applied Science The instruction in this Department covers the work of the First and Second Years of the Faculty of Applied Science of McGill University. Being largely in Mathematics and pure Science, it is intended as a foundation for the specialization carried on in the third and fourth years in the various branches of Engineering. In two additional years at McGill, students may proceed to the Degree of B.Sc. in any of the following Departments:— I.—A rchitecture. II.—Chemistry. III.—Chemical Engineering. IV.—Civil Engineering and Surveying. V.—Electrical Engineering. VI.—Mechanical Engineering. VII.—Metallurgical Engineering. VIII.—Metallurgy. IX.—Mining Engineering. X.—Railways. The regular work of each session in Applied Science will end about the first of May, at the close of the sessional examinations. The summer work will commence as soon as practicable thereafter, and will be continued for six weeks (see Reg. 2, below). EXAMINATIONS. 1. Sessional examinations are held in all subjects. In addition there are Christmas examination in certain subjects, 'and class examinations are held from time to time, at the option of the Professor. 2. Credit will be given in the sessional standing for class examinations held during the session, and also for the Christmas examinations. 3. Students who have- failed in one or more subjects of the curriculum shall be required to make good their standing by passing:— * 42 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (1) The supplemental examinations, or (2) The sessional examinations, or (3) The examinations of the summer courses when such examinations are equivalent to the 'sessional examinations. 4. Students who, at the commencement of lectures in any session have failed to make good their standing in three or more subjects, or in any two major subjects,* shall, if they remain in attendance as undergraduates, be required to repeat all the work in those subjects. 5. Partial students are entitled to examinations in the subjects which they have taken as Partial Students, but not to supplementals, nor to examinations in other subjects. GENERAL OUTLINE OF COURSES. The curriculum, as laid down in the following pages, may be changed from time to time as deemed advisable by the Faculty. The work prescribed for the first two years is the same in all courses, except in Practical Chemistry and in that leading to the Degree of Bachelor of Architecture. The subjects of instruction in these years for all courses, except those above-named, and the number of hours per week devoted to each, are as follows: FIRST YEAR. SUBJECT Lectures per Week Laboratory, etc. periods* per Week . First Term Second Term First Term Second Term 5 5^ 2 1 2 8 2 °i° i' 1 2 2 Dynamics 2 1 8. 2 ... 1 1 1 2 § Major subject. * A labora ;ory perk d is three hours. COURSES IN APPLIED SCIENCE 43 All students of the First Year who at the close of the first term have failed in any four of the following five subjects, which . form part of the work of the finst term, viz., Dynamics, Geometry, Algebra, Physics, Descriptive Geometry, will be required to withdraw from the University. SECOND YEAR. SUBJECT Analytical Geomeiry . §Calculus §Chemistry Graphical Statics §Mapping s Materials of Const §Mech. Drawing ^Mechanics §Mech. of Machines §Physics Shopwork Surveying Lectures per Week First Term Second Term Laboratory periods* per Week etc. First Term 1J 1 T Second Term- 14 1 I Surveying Field Work, 4 weeks, beginning Sept. 6th, 1909. SUMMER WORK. 1. All undergraduates entering the Second Year (excepting those taking the Practical Chemistry Course), and students in the Civil Engineering, Mining Engineering and Transportation (Railways) Courses entering the Third Year, are required to be in attendance at the Surveying School on the 6th September, when the field work in Surveying and Geodesy will commence. 2. Undergraduates in the Mechanical, Electrical and •Metallurgical Engineering Courses are required to attend a •Summer session of about six weeks between the Second and Third Years. The work to be done in the first two of these courses is as follows:—Mechanical Drawing (Machine Design and Machine Drawing), 10 hours per week; Physics and Physical * 44 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Laboratory Work, 11 hours per week; Shopwork (Smith shop and Foundry) 11 hours per week. Undergraduates in Metallurgical Engineering will take courses in qualitative and quantitative chemical analysis. COURSES OF LECTURES. I. CHEMISTRY AND ASSAYING. Second Year:—Students in all the courses of Applied Science, are required to take up the study of Chemistry in the second year, having previously acquired a knowledge of some branches of Physics in the first year of their course. They attend a course of lectures, supplemented by tutorial classes, on the laws of chemical combination, chemical formulae and equations, the preparation and properties of the more important elements and their compounds, etc. They must also devote at least one morning or afternoon a week, throughout the sessiqn, io practical work in the laboratory, where they learn the construction and use of ordinary apparatus, and perform a series of experiments designed to cultivate the powers of observation and deduction. Many of the experiments involve accurate weighing, and for this purpose the elementary laboratory is well supplied , with balances. During the second term considerable attention is also devoted to the subject of Qualitative Analysis. Text-book:—Holleman's Inorganic Chemistry. Students in the Chemistry Course must do, in addition, a large number of preparations of the ordinary Inorganic Com-, pounds during the first term, and a complete course of Qualitative Analysis during the second. They must also attend a tutorial class explanatory of the laboratory work. Text-book:—A. A. Noyes' Qualitative Chemical Analysis. 2. DESCRIPTIVE GEOMETRY. This course deals with the methods of representing objects on one plane so that their true dimensions mav be accurately scaled. It discusses the methods employed in the graphical solution of the various problems, arising in engineering design, r ENGLISH COMPOSITION—DRAWING 45 and deals generally with the principles underlying all constructive drawing. The methods taught are illustrated by applications to practical problems. It is the aim of the work to develop, the imagination in respect to the power of mentally picturing unseen objects, and, incidentally, precision in the use of the drawing instruments is attained. First Year:—Geometrical drawing; problems on straight line and plane; projections of plane and solid figures; curved surfaces and tangent planes; intersections of surfaces; axometric projections; shades and shadows. 3. ENGLISH COMPOSITION. In view of the importance of accuracy of expression in the case of those engaged in scientific or professional work, a course on English Composition is prescribed for all undergraduates of the First Year. Students who give evidence of having already reached the required standard of proficiency, - by passing a special exemption examination, may be excused 'from attendance on this-course. This special examination will be held a# 11 o'clock on Friday, October 1st. Satisfactory results in class and essay work must be obtained before entry into the Second year. , Students who have passed the composition of the First Year Arts will be exempt from this subject. 4. FREEHAND DRAWING. LETTERING. ETC. In the Freehand Course, the object is to train the hand and eye so that students may readily make sketches from parts of machinery, etc., either as note-book sketches, diagrams, perspective drawings in light and shade, or as preparatory dimensioned sketches 'from which to make scale drawings. In the Lettering Course, plain block alphabets, round writing, and titles, will be chiefly dealt with. In this course, also tinting, tracing, blue printing and simple map drawing will be included. m 46 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA 5. GRAPHICAL STATICS. Composition of forces; general methods involving the use of funicular and force polygons; determination of reactions, centres of gravity, bending moments and moments of resistance; stresses in cranes, braced towers, roof trusses and bridge trusses. Required of all Engineering students. Three hours per week, second term of Second Year. 6. MATERIALS OF CONSTRUCTION. Manufacture and properties of cast iron, wrought iron, crucible, bessemer and open hearth steel; principal alloys; considerations governing selection of materials; manufacture and properties of Portland and natural cements; limes; concrete; stone and brick masonry; principal kinds of timber used for engineering purposes; preservation of timber. Discussion of standard specifications. Required of all Engineering students in the Second Year. One hour per week. 7. MATHEMATICS AND MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS. 1. Geometry.—Exercises on Euclid, including loci, transversals, etc., elements of Solid Geometry and of Geometrical Gonic Sections. First year (first term). Text-book:—Wilson's fSolid Geometry and Conic Sections (Macmillan). Algebra.—Miscellaneous theorems and exercises, exponential and other series, properties and solution of higher equations, complex numbers and vector algebra, graphical algebra with an introduction to Analytic Geometry. First Year (first - and second terms). Text-books:—Wentworth's College Algebra (Ginn & Co.). Tanner and Allen's Analytic Geometry (American Book Co.). Trigonometry.—Plane and Spherical. First Year (second term). Text-book:—Murray's Plane and Spherical Trigonometry with Tables (Longmans). Analytic Geometry.—The point, straight line, circle, parabola, ellipse and hyperbola, elements of geometry of three dimensions. First Year (latter part(of second term), and MATHEMATICS—MECHANICS OF MACHINES 47 Second Year (first term). The Second Year work begins with the circle. Text-book:—Tanner and Allen's Analytic Geometry (American dSook Co.) Calculus.—Differentiation of functions of one or more variables, successive differentiation, tangents, etc., multiple points, asymptotes, curvature, maxima and minima, integration with applications to areas, volumes, moments of inertia, etc. Second Year (first and second terms). Text-book:—Murray's Differential and Integral Calculus (Longmans). Mechanics.—An elementary course in dynamics, statics, and hydrostatics. First Year (first and second terms). Textbook:—Lonev's Mechanics and Hvdrostatics for Beginners (Cambridge University Press). Mechanics.—The course treats of the general principles of statics, the laws of motion and dynamics of a particle. Cases of motion under varying force are treated, and a knowledge of differential and integral calculus is essential. Students taking the course must attend the Second Year mathematics course in the calculus. They must also have taken First Year dynamics (see mathematics courses, or be otherwise qualified. Three lectures per week, second term of Second Year. Text-book—Jean's Theoretical Mechanics. 8. MECHANICS OF MACHINES. Mechanics of Machines.—Second Year.—Three hours per week. Required of all Engineering students. Kinematics of Machines.—Constrained motion;, kinematic pairing; velocity and acceleration in mechanisms; centrodes; analysis and classification of simple mechanisms, including the quadric crank chain, the slider crank chain and various wheel trains; design of involute wheel-teeth. Dynamics of Machines.—Work and power; the power and turning effort of prime movers; inertia and kinetic energy of revolving and reciprocating parts of machines. Text-book:—Durle/s Kinematics of Machines (Wiley). 9. MECHANICAL DRAWING AND DESIGNING. First Year.—Three hours per week. Required of all Engineering students. Elementary principles of mechanical draw- 48 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA ing and draftsmanship; preparation of working drawings of sinjple machine details; preparation of tracings. Second Year.—Required of all Engineering students. More difficult exercises in mechanical drawing"; dimensioned sketches of machine parts; and the making of assembly drawings. 10. PHYSICS. The instruction includes a fully illustrated course of experimental lectures on the general principles of Physics (embracing, in the first year, The Laws of Energy—Heat, Light, and Sound; in the second year, Electricity and Magnetism), accompanied by courses of practical work in the laboratory, in which the students will perform for themselves experiments, chiefly quantitative, illustrating the subjects treated in the lectures. Opportunity will be given to acquire experience with all the principal instruments used in exact physical and practical measurements. Laboratory Course. First Year.—Three hours per week spent in practical measurements in the Laboratory in conjunction with the lecture courses and in accordance with the following outline:— Heat.—Construction and calibration of thermometers; boiling points; air thermometer; expansion of solids, liquids and gases; calorimetry; latent heats. Sound.—Velocity of sound; determination of rates of vibration of tuning forks; resonance; laws of vibration of strings. Light.—Photometry; laws of reflection and refraction; focal lengths -and magnifying powers of mirrors, lenses, telescopes and microscopes; the sextant; spectroscope, spectrometer, optical bench. Text-books:—Watson (Longmans); Tory and Pitcher, Laboratory Manual. Second Year.—Magnetism and Electricity. Measurements of pole strength and moment of a magnet; the magnetic field; methods of deflection, and oscillation; comparison PHYSICS—SURVEYING 49 of moments and determination of the elements of the earth's magnetism; variometers. Current Electricity.—A complete course of measurementa of current strength, resistance, and electromotive force; calibration of galvanometers. Text-books:—Watson (Longmans); Tory and Pitcher, Laboratory Manual. An additional course of six weeks, involving four laboratory periods per week with lectures, will be given in May and June. 11. SURVEYING. This course is designed to give the student a theoretical and practical training in the methods of plane and geodetic surveying, in the field work of engineering operations, and in practical astronomy. The lecture course is divided as follows: Second Year.—Chain and angular surveying; the construction, adjustment, use and limitations of the transit, level, micrometer, compass and minor field instruments; topography; levelling; contour surveying; railway circular curves; planimeter and pantograph; general land systems of the Dominion and Provinces. Field Work.—The students are required to carry out the following work: In the Second Year:—(1) A farm survey using chain and compass; (2) a compass and micrometer survey; (3) a detail survey using chain and offset; (4) levelling; (5) transit work. All students are required to keep complete field notes, and to prepare maps, sections and estimates. Field work is required of all students of the second year (except those taking the Practical Chemistry Course). The work will begin in 1909 on 6th September, and wUl continue for a month. 12. SHOPWORK. The «ourse in shop work is intended to afford some preparation for that study of workshop practice on a commercial scale which every engineer has to carry out for himself. With this 50 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA end in view, the student works in the various shops of the department, and, completes in each a series of practical exercises. He thus obtains some knowledge of the nature and properties of the various materials he employs; he becomes familiar with the use and care of the more important hand and machine tools; and he acquires some manual skill. ■ The instruction thus obtained must, Jiewever, be continued . and supplemented. For thisjuirpose students are expected to spend the greater j>ojrtion of each long vacation in gaining practical experience in some engineering workshops outside the University. Students are required to read and make notes of selected portions of certain text-books, and articles in technical journals, illustrative of the work done in each shop. In connection with his shopwork each student is required to keep a record of his work. These records or notes are made on standard forms. These are handed in to the Shop Instructor at the close of each period of work, and, together with diligence and the results of a brief written examination, form the basis on which credit for shopwork is assigned. The work of the various shops is carried out under the direction of the Professor of Mechanical Engineering. The following are the subjects of instruction:— Carpentry and Joiner Work.—Sharpening and care of wood-working tools; sawing, planing and paring to size; preparation of flat surfaces, parallel- strips, and rectangular blocks; construction of the principal joints employed in carpentry and joiner work, such as end and middle lap joints, end and middle mortise and tenon joints, mitres, and dado and sash joints; dovetailing; scarfing; joints used in roof• and girder work; wood-turning; use of wood-turning tools. Smith-work.—The forge and its tools; use and care of smith's tools; management of fire: use of anvil and swage- block; drawing taper, souar^ and parallel work; bending, up- spftrMor. hardening, and tempering tools for forge and machine work: tempering drills, dies, taps, and springs. SHOPWORK 51 Machine-shop Work.— Exercises in chipping; preparation of flat surfaces; filing to straight edge and surface plate; scraping, screwing and tapping; use of scribing block and .surface gauge; marking off work for lathes and other machines; turning and boring cylindrical work to gauge; surfacing; screw- cutting and preparation of screw-cutting tools; use of turret lathe; taper turning; machining flat and curved surfaces on the planing and shaping machines; plain and circular milling with vertical and horizontal spindles; gear-cutting; cutter- grinding; drilling and boring; use of jigs; grinding flat and cylindrical surfaces; cutting tools for hand and machine; their cutting angles and speeds; dressing and grinding tools. For the Third and Fourth Year courses in the several Departments, students are referred to the Calendar of McGill University. 52 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Sessional Examinations— 1908-1909. ARTS. Passed the Third Year Examinations. CLASS III.—Phipps, Skaling, Manning (s). Passed the Second Year Examinations. CLASS I.—Paterson. CLASS II.—Des Brisay, Taylor, Lindsay. CLASS III.—Thomas, Boak, Smith (s), Sparling, Willett, Macleod, J. V., Boyd, Macleod, H. (s), Sel- man (s), Dixon, Boyes (s), Knowling (s), and Mackeen (s), equal. Passed the First Year Examinations. CLASS I.—Murray. CLASS II.—Muddell, Cowan, Mills. CLASS III.—Stewart, Davidson, Harris (s) and MacCree (s) equal, Lane (s), Greggs, Busby (s), Muttit (s), Hamilton, Beckman (s), Allan (s). Standing in the Several Subjects. Third Year. English Literature. CLASS III.—Phipps, Skaling, Manning. English Composition. CLASS III.—Phipps, Skaling. Latin. CLASS III.—Phipps, Manning, Skaling. Physic?. CLASS III.—Skaling, Plipps, Manning. SESSIONAL EXAMINATIONS 53 ■Second Year. English Composition. CLASS I.—Taylpr. CLASS II.—Des Brisay, Paterson, Willett, Smith, Letvin- off; Boak and Lindsay equal. CLASS III.—Sparling, Selman, Boyd, Macleod, J. V. and Thomas equal; Macleod, H. E., Meadows, Knowling, Boyes and Dixon and Mackenzie equal; Mackeen. English Literature. CLASS 1.—Paterson, Smith, Des Brisay. CLASS II.—Sparling, Letvinoff and Lindsay and Willett equal; Boak, Macleod, J. V., Meadows, Taylor, Macleod, H. E., and Thomas equal; Boyd. CLASS III.—Boyes, Mackeen, Dixon and Knowling, equal; Selman, MacKenzie. Greek. CLASS I.—Paterson. CLASS II.—Smith. CLASS III.—Thomas, Howell, Dixon, Letvinoff. Latin. CLASS I.—Paterson. CLASS II.—Lindsay, Taylor, Thomas. CLASS III.—Howell, Des Brisay and Sparling, equal; Macleod, H. E. Meadows, Smith, Dixon, Boak, Boyd and Bunt and Macleod, J. V., and Willett, equal; Selman, Mackeen, Letvinoff, Knowling. Mathematics. {TjASS III.—Paterson, Dixon, Boyes, Lindsay, Macleod, J. V, Selman and Willett. equal; Boyd, Knowling. Passed in Algebra only, Smith; passed in Geometry only, Meadows. .■ <,-■ ■ 54 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA j ' v\'" " *''' French. CLASS IL—Des Brisay. CLASS III.—Lindsay, Willett, Boak, Taylor, Macleod, J. V., Sparling, Boyd and Bunt, equal. Chemistry. CLASS IL—Boak, Thomas. CLASS III.—Taylor, Sparling, Boyes, Macleod, H. E.;^ Mackeen. jPt'rsi Tear. English Literature, Composition and History. CLASS L—Murray. •CLASS IL—Mills, Muddell, Reid, Cowan and Harris equal; Beckman and MacCree equal; Greggs, Busby and Davidson and Holland and Mut- tit, equal; Allan. CLASS III.—Hamilton, Turnbull, Stewart. Passed in Literature and History—Wilson. Passed in Literature and Composition—Cattell, Jones, Mac- farlane, Orme, Underhill. Passed in Literature—England. Passed in History—Kirkpatrick. Passed in Composition—Barrett, Paddon. Patrick, Ross, Greek. CLASS IL—Murray, Mills, Muddell. CLASS III.—Muttit, Beckman. Latin. CLASS 1.—Murray. CLASS IL—Muddell, Lane, Cowan, Mills, Muttit. CLASS III.—MacCree, Evans and Reid equal; Davidson and Turnbull equal; Stewart, Beckman and and Busby equal; Hamilton, Dougan and Harris equal: Holland, Cattell. Greggs, Allan. "]■"'■-■'"'-:■ -*' >'<■ ■ ^ SESSIONAL EXAMINATIONS. 65 Mathematics. CLASS I.—Muddell and Reid equal. CLASS II.—Lane, MacCree, Cowan, Ross, Dougan and Kirkpatrick, equal; Murray, Stewart. CLASS III.—Davidson, Jones, Busby, Greggs, Wilson, Hamilton, Rogers, Mills, Cattell. Passed in Algebra and Geometry—Beckman, Evans, Holland. Passed in Algebra and*T>igonometry—Orme. Passed in Geometry and Trigonometry—Raynes. Passed in Algebra—Barker, Paddon. Passed in Geometry—Allan, Barrett, England, Harris, Patrick, Sawers. Passed in Trigonometry—Atkins, Muttitt, Turnbull. French. CLASS III.—Harris, Cowan and Davidson equal; Allan and Lane equal; Evans, Hamilton, Cattell, and England and Greggs, equal. German. CLASS III.—Stewart, Harris. Physics. CLASS I.—Cowan, Lane, MacCree and Muddell equal; Stewart. CLASS II.—Greggs, Murray, Holland, Busby and Dougan equal; Atkins and Kirkpatrick equal. CLASS III.—Hamilton, Evans, Davidson, Harris, Allan, Mills, Ross, Barrett, Beckman and Muttit and Turnbull, equal; Jones, and Wilson and Orme and Barker equal. APPLIED SCIENCE. II. Year. Passed the Examinations of the Second Year.—Earle, Galloway, Underhill (s), Brydone-Jack (s). UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Chemistry. CLASS I.—Galloway. Chemical Laboratory. CLASS IL—Brydone-Jack. CLASS III.—Underhill, McKinnon. Graphical Statics. CLASS I.—Earle. CLASS IL—Underhill. CLASS III.—Galloway, Brydone-Jack. Mapping. CLASS IL—Brydone-Jack, Underhill, Galloway. CLASS III.—McKinnon. Materials of Construction. CLASS I.—Earle, Galloway. CLASS II.—Brydone-Jack. CLASS III.—Underhill, McKinnon. Mathematics. I—Analytic Geometry. CLASS I.—Earle, Galloway. CLASS III.—Underhill. II—Calculus. CLASS IL—Earle. CLASS III.—Galloway. III.—Mechanics. CLASS I.—Earle. CLASS IL—Galloway, Underhill. CLASS III.—Brydone-Jack. Mechanical Drawing. CLASS I.—Earle. CLASS IL—Underhill, McLeod. CLASS III.—Brydone-Jack, Galloway, McKinnon. SESSIONAL EXAMINATIONS 57 Mechanics of Machines. CLASS I.—Earle. CLASS IL—Galloway. CLASS III.—Underhill. Physics. CLASS III.—Galloway, Underhill, Brydone-Jack. Physical Laboratory. CLASS III.—Brydone-Jack and Galloway and McKinnon and Underhill, equal. Shopwork; Machine Shop. CLASS IL—Earle, Galloway. CLASS III.—Brydone-Jack, Underhill, McKinnon, Smith Shop. CLASS IL—Earle and Eldridge, equal. CLASS III.—Galloway and McKinnon, equal; Brydone- Jack. Surveying. CLASS IL—Earle. CLASS III.—Underhill, Galloway, Brydone-Jack. Surveying, Field Work. CLASS II.—Galloway, Brydone-Jack. CLASS III.—McKinnon, Underhill. I. Year, Passed the Sessional Examinations (in order of merit):— McNiven, Wade, Macrae, Chaffey, Bagshaw, McGregor, Mc- Lellan (s), Fleming (s), Underhill (s), Farrell (s), Leckie (s), McLennan (s), Ellis (s). (s.) Supplemental Examination. Descriptive Geometry. CLASS I.—Earle and McNiven, equal. CLASS II.—Price, McGregor, Macrae, Bagshaw. Chaffey, Wade, McLellan. 58 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA CLASS III.—McLennan, Underbill, Fleming, Elliott and Macleod and Scott, equal. English. CLASS I.—McNiven. CLASS II.—Wade, McGregor, Macrae and Underhdl, equal; Leckie. CLASS III.—Bagshaw and Chaffey, equal; Ellis, Army- tage, Draper, Farrell. Geometrical Drawing. CLASS I.—McNiven, Bagshaw, Chaffey. CLASS IL—Macrae, Wade. CLASS III.—McGregor, "McLennan, Underhill, McLellan, Fleming and Smith, equal. Supplemental: Passed-'-Priee, Draper, Leckie, Ellis, Elliott, Armytage, Faa-TelL Lettering and Freehand Drawing. CLASS I.—McNiven, Chaffey. CLASS II.—Leckie, Fleming and Wade, equal; Price,, Bagshaw, Draper. CLASS III.—Underhill, McLellan, Farrell, McLennan, Macrae and Smith, equal; Elliott and McGregor equal; Armytage and Ellis, equal. Mathematics—(a) Algebra. CLASS III.—Fleming, McGregor, McNiven, Bagshaw, Chaffey and Macrae, equal; Wade, Ellis, Farrell and Leckie, equal. (b) Dynamics. CLASS III.—McNiven, Wade, McLellan and Macrae, equal; Fleming and McGregor, equal; Bagshaw and Chaffey, equal. (c) Solid -Geometry and Conic ■Sections. CLASS IL—McNiven, Macrae. SESSIONAL EXAMINATION 59 CLASS III.—Wade, Chaffey, Bagshaw, McGregor, Fleming, McLennan, Leckie and McLellanj equal; Farrell, Elliott and Ellis and Price and Underhill, equal. (d) Trigonometry. CLASS II.—Chaffey, Bagshaw, McNiven, Macrae. CLASS III.—Fleming, Farrell, Leckie, McGregor, McLellan and McLennan and Wade, equal; Armytage. Mechanical Drawing. CLASS IL—Underhill, McLellan, Farrell, McNiven and Wade, equal; Bagshaw, Draper, Macrae and Smith, equal. CLASS III.—Chaffey, Fleming, Leckie, McGregor. Physics. CLASS II.—McLellan, McNiven, Wade, Macrae. CLASS III.—Bagshaw, McGregor, Fleming, Chaffey, Farrell, Smith, McLennan, Ellis. Physics Laboratory. CLASS I.—Bagshaw and Wade, equal; McGregor and Macrae, equal; McNiven, Fleming. CLASS IL—Chaffey, Ellis, McLellan, Underhill. CLASS III.—Draper, Farrell, Smith, Armytage, Elliott, Leckie, McLennan and Price, equal. Shopwork; (a)—Carpenter Shop. CLASS L—Wade, McNiven. CLASS IL—Chaffey, Fleming and Smith and Underhdl, equal: Farrell and Macrae, equal; McGregor and Mcl^ennan, equal. CLASS III.—Ellis, Draper and Elliott, equal; McLellan, Armytage and Leckie, equal. * 60 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (6) Smithshop. CLASS I.—Wade. CLASS II.—Bagshaw, Farrell and Smith and Underhill, equal; Fleming and McNiven, equal. CLASS III.—Draper, and McGregor and Macrae, equal; Ellis and McLellan, equal; Elliott, Armytage and McLennan, equal. REGISTER OF STUDENTS Register of Students. M ARTS. THIRD YEAR. Undergraduates. Manning, Virll Z., Vancouver Nl I Skaling, Arthur C, Vancouver r>* Phipps, Roy G., Vancouver /^ | 'Thomas^ E. Olive, South Cedar Partials. ) Davis, William A., Vancouver MacConnell, Rbt. A., Vancouver Raynes, Walter L., Vancouver SECOND YEAR. Undergraduates. *Boak, Eric W., Vancouver (^ Boyd, James B., Vancouver Boyes, David A., Vancouver Bunt, William P., Vancouver DesBrlsay, Isabel J., Vancouver Dixo.n. Margaret, Vancouver Howell, Lucy M., N. Vancouver Knowling, Albert J., Vancouver/1 \ "Letvinoff, Lena, Vancouver Lindsay, Gordon, Vancouver Mactteen, Mabel H. Vancouver MncBionria»«Ca*ln-F., Vancouver Macleod, Hazel E., Vancouver Macleod,. John V., Chilliwack Meadows. Stanley D., Vancouver. Paterson, Edith L., Vancouver ) gejmjyi, Gordon S., Vancouver Smith, Margaret A., Central Park SpartingfBlteM^M., Vancouver Taylor, .,Gjac&—A., Vancouver Thomas, Owen J., Vancoucer Willett, Jean T., Vancouver FIRST YEAR. Undergraduates. Allan, Mabel I., Vancouver ^h—ataaaggji!" Mn VnTuniivar Barrett, Harry A., Vancouver Beckman, Elta M., Vancouver BusbyT~Edward M., Vancouver "flt'Hll. Mircw*. Vancouver ^^ifea^clMaEgnrotiuii^lnntHMiHarif Cowan, Beulah M., Vancouver BoyideanvTJFcaalo^ A., Vancouver Dougan, Wilson, Vancouver England, Violet, Vancouver Evans, George G., Vancouver Greggs, Gladys E., Vancouver flSSSBtean mc 0 Vancouver Harris,. Clara E„ Moresby Isd. Holland, Richard R., Vancouver _C Van- Kirkpatrick. E. A. B., Vancou-. ver. H Lane, James E., New West. McCree, Walter T., Vancouver ^"Virhnr M - IT., Vancouver Mjlls^ Annes V., Nanaimo Muddell, Edward C, Vancouver atwrofesJBEmMfaBiatS., Vancouver Muttit, Leonard A., New West. Rogers, Clyde H. A., Vancouver Wtoag, AnnUi ..T-., Vancouver Sawers, Basil L., Vancouver ntrmmrti iflliirintine E., Vancouver Turnbull, John R., Vancouver WMwlBtH-WlifPill) Vuhiiliumi Wilson, Ray H., Port Essington M •Conditioned Undergraduate 62 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF BRHI3H COLUMBIA J Conditioned. M Mclnnes, Thos. R. L., Van'ver Paddon, Amy W., Vancouver Orme, Noreen M., Vancouver 7 Paitials. Adams, James, Vancouver Atkins, Basil E., Vancouver Barker, Culver M., Vancouver Barr, Thomas, Vancouver Davis, William A., Vancouver Leslie, James, Vancouver MqColl, Irene M., Port Haney MacConnell, Rbt. A., Vancouver McCracken, , Wm. H., Vancou'r McLean, Archibald, Vancouver Macnaughten, Rid'. F., N. Van. Pali'iulkr ■ai'ate." II1., Vancouver Raynes, Walter, Vancouver Reid, Hugh S., Vancouver ^heppard, Albert, Vancouver Suzuki, Juzo, Vancouver Wallace, Bryce, Vancouver APPLIED SCIENCES. SECOND YEAR. N\ Brydone-Jack, H. D., Vancou'r (v\ Earle, Harry, Central Park fi/\ Galloway, John D., Greenwood McKinnon, Duncan A., Van'r Macleod, Samuel A, Vancouver Underhill, Frederic C, Vanc'r m FIRST YEAR. 'Armytage, Maurice G., N. Van Bagshaw, Frank, Victoria ChafFeyT Charles R., C'tl Park Draper, Richard, Vancouver Elliott, Hector M., Vancouver tEllis, Wm., Vancouver Farrell, Gordon, Vancouver Flemjng, Wm. R., Vancouver Leckie, John A., Vancouver McGregor. Donald M., Victoria McLellan Rbt. B., Vancouver McLennan, Rbt. P., Vancouver *McEeod, Samuel A., Vancouver McNiven, John J., New West. Macrae, Lawrence P., Victoria tftfice, Harold, Vancouver Smith, Philip P., Central Park fTTncferhill, James T., Vanc'r - tWade, M. LeightofT| Kamloops ♦Partial Student. tConditioned Student. INDEX. Admission to Equivalent Standing 23 Attendance 23 B. A. Course 27 B. Sc. Course ... ., 41 Board and Residence 12 Certificates and Prizes ... 23 Chemistry 39, 44 Classification of Students 12 Constitution of College 10 Courses of Study .., 11 Courses of Lectures 30 Descriptive Geometry - 44 English 32, 45 Examinations in Arts 28 Examination Time Tables 5, 6, 7, 23 Examinations, Sessional 52 Examinations in Applied Science 41 Faculty of Arts ... 27 Fees ... ... 25. Freehand Drawing 45 French -. 33 Graphical Statics 46 German 35 Greek 30 Historical Sketch $ Latin 31 Lettering 45 Materials of Construction 46 Mathematics and Mathematical Physics 37, 46 Matriculation 13 Mechanics of Machines 47 Mechanical Drawing and Designing 47 Physics 37 48 Registration and Attendance* 23 Requirements in Subjects 18 Register of Students 61 Shopwork 49 Summer Classes 12 Summer Work in Applied Science ' 43 Surveying 49
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Annual Calendar of the McGill University College of British Columbia [1909]
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Title | Annual Calendar of the McGill University College of British Columbia |
Publisher | [place of publication unknown] : [publisher not identified] |
Date Issued | [1909] |
Subject |
University of British Columbia |
Geographic Location |
Vancouver (B.C.) |
Genre |
Periodicals |
Type |
Text |
FileFormat | application/pdf |
Language | English |
Notes | Titles in chronological order: Annual Calendar of the McGill University College of British Columbia (1909 - 1914) ; Calendar of the University of British Columbia (1915 - 1919) ; Calendar University of British Columbia (1920 - 1922) ; The University of British Columbia Calendar (1923 - 1964) ; UBC Calendar (1963 - 1968) ; The University of British Columbia 69/70 Fifty-Fifth Session ; The University of British Columbia 70/71 Fifty-Sixth Session ; The University of British Columbia Fifty-Seventh Session Calendar 1971/72 ; The University of British Columbia Fifty-Eighth Session Calendar 1972/73 ; The University of British Columbia Fifty-Ninth Session Calendar 1973-4 ; The University of British Columbia Vancouver, Canada Sixtieth Session Calendar 1974/5 ; The University of British Columbia Vancouver/Canada Sixty-First Session Calendar 1975-76 ; 1976-1977 The University of British Columbia Sixty-Second Session Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 1977/78 Sixty-Third Session Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 64th Session 1978/1979 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 65th Session 1979/1980 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 66th Session 1980-1981 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 66th Session 1981-82 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 68th Session 1982-83 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 69th Session 1983-84 Calendar ; UBC 1984/85 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 71st Session 1985-86 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 72nd Session 1986-87 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 73rd Session 1987-88 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 74th Session 1988-89 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 75th Session 1989-90 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 76th Session 1990-91 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 77th Session 1991-92 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 78th Session 1992-93 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 79th Session 1993-94 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 1994/95 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 1995/96 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 1997/98 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 1998/99 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 1999/2000 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia 2000/2001 Calendar ; 2001/2002 Calendar ; The University of British Columbia Calendar 2003/04 ; The University of British Columbia Calendar 2004/2005 ; The University of British Columbia Calendar 2005/2006 ; The University of British Columbia Calendar 2006/07 ; The University of British Columbia Calendar 2007/08 ; The University of British Columbia Calendar 2008/09. |
Identifier | LE3 .M263 LE3_M263_1909-1910 |
Collection |
University Publications |
Source | Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives |
Date Available | 2016-05-31 |
Provider | Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library |
Rights | Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The University of British Columbia Enrolment Services: direct inquiries to www.students.ubc.ca/calendar |
CatalogueRecord | http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1210013 |
DOI | 10.14288/1.0303475 |
AggregatedSourceRepository | CONTENTdm |
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