the classes he is entitled to attend for the Academical Year or Term then ensuing or current shall be marked and initialled by the Secretary of the University or his authorised substitute, and by the Adviser of Studies. No student shall be entitled to attend a class unless it is so marked and initialled on his class card. 25. No student shall receive a class card for any Academical Year or Term unless he has at the same time or previously paid the Matriculation fee for the Academical Year (£2, 2s.), or the reduced Matriculation fee due for a Whitsunday term taken alone (£1, 1s.), as the case may be, and has received a Matriculation card. 26. No student shall receive a Matriculation card unless he has paid the instalment of the Inclusive fee for the year to which such Matriculation card applies, or has paid the normal fee for at least one individual class. 27. Students who have resolved to attend a class as part of the curriculum covered by the Inclusive fee must be regular in their attendance upon the meetings of the class, and must duly perform the work of the class. If they fail to receive a certificate from the Professor or Lecturer that they have fulfilled these requirements, the course will nevertheless be counted as one of those covered by the Inclusive fee, and a second attendance shall count as another such course. A student who has begun to attend a course shall not be entitled to withdraw from it at any time later than twenty-one days after the opening of the term and if he wishes to withdraw within twenty-one days from the opening of the term, he must obtain the consent of the Professor or Lecturer. 28. Every student shall, on being required to do so, be bound to exhibit to the Professor or Lecturer conducting any class he is attending a class card marked and initialled by the Secretary or his authorised substitute and by the Adviser of Studies, showing that he is entitled to attend such class. INCLUSIVE FEES FOR COMBINED COURSES. In addition to the fees mentioned in the foregoing Regulations, the following fees for combined Courses have been fixed provisionally by the University Court, but may be altered, after consultation with the Courts of the other Scottish Universities. Meanwhile they do not apply to students who follow out their courses of study partly in one Scottish University and partly in another : 1. Inclusive fee for the Degrees of M.A. and M.B., Ch.B. taken together--Two hundred and seven pounds, fifteen shillings (£207, 15s.), payable in five annual instalments of £36, 88. each, and one instalment (in the 6th year) of £25, 15s., admitting to fifty graduating courses. 2. Inclusive fee for the Degrees of M.A., B.Sc., and M.B., Ch.B. taken together-Two hundred and thirty-five pounds, ten shillings (£235, 10s.), payable in six annual instalments of £39, 5s. each, admitting to fifty-five graduating courses. NON-GRADUATING COURSES. The University Court have determined that the following shall be non-graduating Courses, which a student who has paid an Inclusive fee in the Faculty of Arts shall be entitled to attend : : Junior Latin. Junior Greek. Junior German. SYLLABUS OF COURSES. DEPARTMENT OF ANCIENT LANGUAGES. N.B.-Students who do not produce evidence of having passed the Leaving Certificate Examination in Latin or Greek on the Higher Standard, or of some equivalent qualification, may attend the General Classes in these subjects for purposes of graduation on passing an examination to be held at the opening of the Martinmas Term. There will be Junior Classes in Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, for students not qualified to attend the General Classes in these subjects, and a certificate of having duly performed the work of the Junior Class will qualify such students to attend the General Class in a subsequent year. GREEK. ST ANDREWS. Professor Burnet and Mr W. L. Lorimer. In the General Class, Lectures will be given on the History of Greek Literature, and kindred subjects. There will also be Prelections on one or more of the books prescribed for the General Examination. It is intended that this class should be of use to all students who desire some knowledge of Greek civilisation and thought, even if they do not propose to carry the study further or to take the subject for purposes of graduation at all. In the Special Class more stress will be laid on accurate scholarship. It is intended to be partly a preparation for the Honours Class, and partly for students who are taking Greek with Moral Philosophy as a preparation for the study of Divinity. The work of the Honours Class will be arranged so as to cover two Academic years, in the course of which Lectures will be given on some of the books and subjects prescribed for Honours. A detailed programme for the year will be issued at the beginning of the Martinmas term. All the Greek Classes will meet at least three times a-week. Tutorial instruction will be given at hours to be arranged. Dundee. Mr T. R. Mills. There will be a Junior Class for students who are not qualified to enter the General Class at St Andrews. HUMANITY. ST ANDREWS. Professor Lindsay and Dr H. J. Thomson. In the General Humanity Class for the Academic year 19221923, the Lectures will deal with books and subjects prescribed for the General Examination in 1923. In the Special Humanity Class the Lectures will deal with books and subjects prescribed for the Special Examination in 1923. In the Honours Humanity Class these Authors will be read: Terence, Adelphi; Martial, VII.-XII. (Bridge and Lake's Selections); Catullus (Simpson's Selections). Each Class meets three times a-week. The following reference-books are recommended: (GRAMMAR) Gildersleeve and Lodge, Latin Grammar; (HISTORY) How and Leigh, History of Rome; (LITERATURE) Wight Duff, History of Roman Literature; (ANTIQUITIES) Ramsay, Manual of Roman Antiquities; (METRE) Hardie, Res Metrica. DUNDEE. Mr T. R. Mills. General Class. The Lectures will deal with the books and subjects prescribed for the General Examination in 1923. The Class will meet three times a-week. Additional hours will be devoted to Unseen Translation and to tutorial instruction in Latin Composition. Special Class. The Lectures will deal with the books and subjects prescribed for the Special Examination in 1923. The Class will meet three times a-week. Junior Class. The books in this Class will be chosen, with reference to the wants of students, from Livy, Sallust, Cicero, Virgil, and Ovid. Latin Prose Composition and Unseen Translation will be systematically studied. HEBREW. ST ANDREWS. Professor Kay. The following Courses of Lectures in Hebrew and Oriental Languages are delivered in St Mary's College. Programme of Study for Session 1922-1923. 1. Introductory Hebrew. Hours to be arranged. MacFadyen's edition of Davidson's Hebrew Grammar, with exercises. 2. Junior Hebrew. 10 to 11 A.M. daily. Grammar and Exercises. Three days weekly. Occasional Lectures. (This class will qualify for the 3. Senior Hebrew. (This class qualifies for the Special Examination in the Department of Ancient Languages.) 11 to 12 A.M. daily. (a) Israel's reminiscences of pre-national days (Genesis i.-xii.), with investigation of pre-biblical traditions common to the Semitic group. (b) The Earliest Code of Law (Exodus xx.-xxiv.), with Lectures on the Later Codes, and their collection in the Pentateuch. (c) The prophetic Literature, with specimen chapters from several Prophets. (d) Hebrew Poetry. Prosody. Ecclesiastes, and some Psalms. Text, date, authorship, and contents of parts selected for reading. 4. Syriac.-Grammar and Peshito New Testament. 5. Arabic if required. Grammar, and school reading-book. 6. Aramaic.-Grammar and Reading, Daniel, ii.-vii. Whitsunday Term. 1. Introductory.-A Course for beginners in Hebrew. Davidson's Introductory Grammar, as far as sect. 31, including the more important exercises, Hebrew-English and English-Hebrew. 2. Special. The work prescribed for the M.A. Degree. 3. Syriac.-Nestle's Grammar. Matthew xxvi.-xxviii. in Syriac New Testament. 4. Aramaic.-Grammar and Reading. DEPARTMENT OF MODERN LANGUAGES. Students who do not produce evidence of having passed the Leaving Certificate Examination in French or German on the Higher Standard, or of some equivalent qualification, may attend the General Classes in these subjects for purposes of graduation on passing an examination to be held at the opening of the Martinmas Term. ENGLISH. ST ANDREWS. Professor Blyth Webster and Mr Bond. General Class Courses of Study, 1922-1923. 1. Outlines of the History of English Literature to 1700, with study of prescribed books of Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, and Dryden. |