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ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS.
  
  
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ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS.

Admission to the Department.—For admission to the Department of
Graduate Studies a baccalaureate degree from a recognized institution of
collegiate rank is required, for men and women alike. In order to become
a candidate for a degree, the student must be advanced to candidacy by the
Committee on Rules and Courses upon formal application, as set forth below.

Advancement to Candidacy for a Degree.—Any graduate student who
wishes to become a candidate for a degree must file with the Dean of the
Department his application on a blank form to be secured from the Registrar.
This application must include a proposed program of work arranged
in accordance with the requirements for the several degrees as stated below,
and must be accompanied, in case the applicant does not hold an academic
degree from this University, by an official transcript of the applicant's academic
record made out by the Registrar of the institution from which the
baccalaureate degree was received, and by a catalogue of that institution,
marked to show the courses of study pursued. The application will be submitted
by the Dean to the Committee on Rules and Courses, who will consider
it in conference with the professors concerned. The Committee will
have the right to require that the applicant add to his program any courses,
undergraduate or graduate, considered necessary to supply his deficiencies,
or to enable him to pursue with profit the courses he has selected. When
the program has been finally approved, the Dean will report to the applicant
his advancement to candidacy for a degree.

It should be distinctly understood that graduate degrees are not conferred
merely upon the basis of the number of courses passed, or of the
length of time spent in resident or non-resident work, but upon the basis
of the quality and scope of the candidate's knowledge, and his power of investigation
in his chosen field of study. Candidates whose training and attainments
are inferior cannot expect to secure a degree in the normal length
of time estimated below for the respective degrees.