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THE YALE REVIEW

A QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE.

THE YALE REVIEW is owned by The Yale Publishing Company. It is edited by Professors GEORGE P. FISHER, GEORGE B. ADAMS, HENRY W. FARNAM, ARTHUR T. HADLEY, and JOHN C. SCHWAB,

Committed to no party and to no school, but only to the advancement of sound learning, it aims to present the results of the most scientific and scholarly investigations in history and political science.

It is published by Messrs. GINN & COMPANY, 7-13 Tremont Place, Boston, Mass., to whom all business communications should be addressed and all subscriptions paid.

All communications relating to articles, book reviews, exchanges, and editorial work in general should be addressed to

PROF. JOHN C. SCHWAB,

New Haven,

Conn.

Copyright, 1893, by

The Yale Publishing Company, New Haven, Conn.

ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES NEWLY FORMULATED.

BY JOHN B. CLARK, A.M.,

Professor of History and Natural Science in Smith College; Lecturer
on Political Economy in Amherst College.

xiii+235 pages.

Price by mail, postpaid, $1.10.

IN general this work is a restatement of economic principles in harmony with the modern spirit, discarding the Ricardian method, free from doctrinaireism and pessimism, and recognizing the operation of higher motives of action than pure self-interest.

The book is intended for general readers, and, while not in the form of a text-book, may be used with advantage by classes whose teachers instruct partly by lectures and topical readings.

The clearness and originality of the thought, and the freshness of the style, serve to render the work singularly stimulating and suggestive, as well as instructive.

From the Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik: Dr. Johannes Conrad, Professor of Political Science at the University of Halle, Editor:

"... The author possesses an especial capacity for abstraction and for the analysis of economic phenomena, which enables him to reduce these to their simplest expression without thereby becoming abstruse and obscure.

"... the interesting little volume to which we are indebted for much stimulus, and which cannot pass by the intellectual work of our time without leaving its impression. The clear comprehension of the phenomena of our time, the sharply critical estimate of the different struggles and movements, the steady holding of the attention upon the common life of men, and the interests of a common civilization, the ideal conception of society notwithstanding the rejection of everything visionary, the absence of all that is scholastic and of all verbal pedantry, will favorably affect the reader."

GINN & COMPANY, Publishers,

BOSTON, NEW YORK, AND CHICAGO.

NEW HAVEN, CONN.

DEPARTMENTS OF INSTRUCTION.

The courses of study offered in the University are comprehended in four Departments, under the control of the Corporation, each Department being also under the administration of a distinct Faculty of instruction. The Departments are as follows:

THE DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY AND THE ARTS; including

THE ACADEMICAL DEPARTMENT,

THE SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC School,

THE SCHOOL Of the Fine Arts, with a special organization, and
THE COURSES FOR GRADUATE INSTRUCTION, under the combined

Faculty of the Department.

THE DEPARTMENT OF THEOLOGY;
THE DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE;

THE DEPARTMENT OF LAW.

GRADUATE INSTRUCTION.

Graduates of this and other Colleges and Universities, and (in exceptional cases, by special permission) other persons of liberal education who are at least eighteen years old are received as students for longer or shorter periods, with or without reference to the attainment of a degree.

The degree of Doctor of Philosophy, with the courses of the Graduate Department leading thereto, are open to candidates without distinction of sex.

An executive Committee has a general oversight of the students in this Department. The Committee this year is composed of Professors W. D. WHITNEY, H. A. NEWTON, G. J. BRUSH, A. M. WHEELER, G. T. LADD, and A. T. HADLEY. They receive the names of applicants for instruction, and judge and approve the courses of study proposed. Information may be obtained from Prof. A. T. Hadley, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., as to conditions, terms, etc. Students may also make special arrangements with any instructor according to their mutual convenience. All graduate students not regularly enrolled in any other Department of the University, are required to register their names at the Treasurer's office at the beginning of each year of study.

The courses are arranged under the following heads: Psychology, Ethics and Philosophy; History, Political and Social Science; Oriental Languages and Biblical Literature; Classical Philology; Modern Languages and Literatures; Natural and Physical Science; Pure and Applied Mathematics; The Fine Arts; Music.

Instruction is given partly by lectures, partly by recitations and by oral and written discussions, partly by directing courses of reading, and partly by work in the laboratories and with instruments. There are also various voluntary associations, in which instructors and students meet together periodically for the reading of papers, oral discussions, etc.; such are, the Classical Philology Club, the Mathematical Club, the Political Science Club, the Philosophical Club, and the Modern Language Club.

The fee for instruction is generally one hundred dollars; but it may be more, or less, according to the courses pursued and the amount of instruction received. The academic year begins Sept. 28th, 1893.

For catalogues and prospectus apply to F. B. DEXTER, Secretary of Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

YALE UNIVERSITY.

Courses of Graduate Instruction in History and Political Science.

Professor E. J. PHELPS:

Law.

Professor G. P. FISHER:

General Church History.

Professor W. H. BREWER:

Physical Geography in its relation to Political History.

Professor ROBINSON:

Jurisprudence.

Professor A. M. WHEELER :

European History since 1789.

Professor W. G. SUMNER:

Historical Development of the Modern Industrial Organization; Anthropology; Social Science.

Professor C. H. SMITH:

American History (Colonial); American History (National).

Professor G. B. ADAMS:

Medieval History; English History to 1485; The Age of the Renaissance; Investigation Course in European History.

Professor H. W. FARNAM :

Public Finance; History of Labor Organizations; Poor Relief.

Professor A. T. HADLEY:

Economics (General Course); Economics (Special Course); Economic Problems of corporations; Political Science.

Professor A. T. HADLEY and Professor J. C. SCHWAB:

Economic Policy.

Professor J. C. SCHWAB:

Economics; Investigation Course in Economics; United States Public Finance.

Five Fellowships yielding $400 each, and twenty Scholarships yielding $100 each, have been created by the Corporation out of the income of University funds. These fellowships and scholarships are open to graduates of all colleges; but in the case of the fellowships, preference is given to those who have already spent at least one year in graduate study.

Students have the free use of the Library of the University (including the Linonian and Brothers Library), and are admitted to the College Reading Room on payment of an annual fee of two dollars. The University Library contains over 150,000 volumes, and many thousands of unbound pamphlets. Of current periodical publications, including publications of learned societies, the Library receives an unusually large number, the foreign serials alone being not less than five hundred. The Linonian and Brothers Library contains 31,000 volumes. The whole number of volumes in the several libraries of the University is over 200,000.

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