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Page 19 text:
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18 collection of pamphlets presented by the Rev. Dr. Sprague, and the valuable library of D1'. Addison Alexander, the gift of Messrs. R. L. and A. Stuart. The library has, from the generosity of the last-named gentlemen, a fund of ten thousand dollars, whose annual proceeds are devoted to its maintenance and increase. It is open two hours of every weekday for reading and consul- tationg and books may be drawn from it by students three days in the week. Text-books may be kept out during the entire term. Students also have the privilege of using the library ot' the College. The reading-room is under the management of the Alexander Society, and is well supplied with the leading newspapers and periodicals. Students are admitted on the payment of a small annual fee. Rooivrs, Eire. The eommodious buildings of the Seminary afford ample accommodations for students. The rooms, both in the original edifice and in Brown Hall, are furnished with a bed, bedstead, bureau, washstand, chairs, table, bookcase, and elothespress. Wliatever may be needed or desired beyond this must be sup- plied by the students themselves. Complete arrangements are made on the spacious grounds of the Seminary for gymnastic exercises, according to the most approved methods for sedentary men. EXPENSES. There is no charge for tuition or room-rent. The only fees required of students are S510 for the general expense fund, to pay the cost of warming and lighting the public rooms, the attendance of servants, doc., and 31 for the use of the library. Board is furnished at the refectory for 354 per week, and in private families for S55 or the students may, at their discretion, form themselves into clubs and vary the cost at their pleasure. Fuel costs from S8 to S515 per annum, and washing, 231.60 per month. Total of necessary expenses for the Seminary year from S5175 to 35200. ' These prices are nearly double what they were before the war, and it is hoped they may soon be reduced. Books can be bought at a liberal discount, and many class-books are provided in the library. 5 Gaslight may be had in the Seminary at the option of the student.
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Page 18 text:
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17 OPTIONAL STUDIES. Hebrew is the only Oriental language which is taught in the regular course 5 but such students as desire it, may be instructed in Chaldee, Syriac, Arabic, or in the elements of Sanscrit. Private classes may also be formed for classical reading, Biblical exegesis, or other subjects collateral to the course. On application to the Professors of the College, students can have the privi- lege of attending lectures in that institution. Instruction in the French and German languages can be obtained from com- petent teachers at the student's expense. RELIGIOUS EXERCISES. Daily prayers, which every student is expected to attend, are conducted in the morning by members of the Senior Class, and in the evening by the Pro- fessors. On Sabbath morning the Professors preach in rotation in the Seminary Chapel. In the afternoon a conference is held in the Oratory, at which the Professors conduct the discourse on a subject previously announced, and the students conduct the devotional exercises. Missionary meetings are held every Sabbath evening among the students. The concert of prayer on the first Monday of each month is under the direc- tion of the Professors. Various other meetings for devotion or mutual exhortation are maintained either by thc students as a body, or by each class separately, by the graduates of the several colleges, Sac., dsc. Opportunities for active usefulness and observation of pastoral life, are ailorded in the Churches of Princeton and its vicinity, there being nearly twenty Presbyterian Churches, besides those of other denominations, 'within some ten miles of the Seminary. LIBRARY. The elegant library edifice is the gift of James Lenox, LL.D., of New York. It now contains upwards of twenty-one thousand volumes, chiefly theological, including, in addition to many rare and costly works, the large and unique
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Page 20 text:
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19 REPORTS TO PRESBYTERIES. Annual reports are sent to Presbyteries of the attendance upon the exercises of the Seminary of the Students under their care. - EXAMINATION. The next annual examination will begin on Thursday, April 20th, and be continued until the following Tuesday. The Committee of Examination, ap- pointed by the Board of Directors, for the present session, consists of Rev. Joseph T. Smith, D.D., Rev. Robert Davidson, D.D., Rev. Robert Hamill, D.D., Rev. Samuel Miller, D.D., Rev. John Hall, D.D., Rev. William M. Paxton, D.D., Levi P. Stone, Esq., John K. Findlay, Esq., and George Jun- kin, Esq., with their alternates Rev. Henry A. Boardman, D.D., Rev. J. E. Rockwell, D.D., Rev. John Maclean, D.D., Rev. George W. Musgrave, D D., Rev. William D. Snodgrass, D.D., Rev. John C. Backus, D.D., Hon. George Sharswood, Henry Day, Esq., and James Donaldson, Esq. The examination is public, and the presence of visitors, particularly from Presbyteries having students under their care, will be welcomed. Students who are absent from the examination of their own class, or who fail to pass this test in a satisfactory manner, must submit to an examination with the corresponding class in a subsequent year. THE ACADEMICAL YEAR Opens on the Hrst Thursday of September, and closes on the last Wednesday of April. V The usual certificates will be conferred on the next graduating class on Tues- day, April 25th, in the presence of the Board of Directors, when the students will be dismissed with an address by Rev. Joseph T. Smith, D.D. The annual sermon, at the close of the session, will be preached by Rev. HenryA. Boardman, D.D., or by his alternate, Rev.VVillia1n D. Snodgrass, D.D. The Address before the Religious Contribution Society, will bc delivered on Thursday evening, April 20th, by Professor Julius H. Seelye, of Amherst College.
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