Lawyers' Title Guaranty Fund Grant.-The Lawyers' Title Guaranty Fund, a business trust of Florida lawyers, closely affiliated with The Florida Bar, has estab- lished an annual grant of $1,000 to supplement the salary of a distinguished professor in the field of real property. The first incumbent is Professor James W. Day. PREPARATION FOR THE STUDY OF LAW A lawyer's education may be divided into his pre-legal training, his law school career, and his post legal education. Pre-legal training involving a set undergraduate program has deliberately not been prescribed by the College of Law. The faculty feels that in view of the diverse nature of the lawyer's tasks, the best program is similarly one of broad diversification in which the student gains a knowledge of the formative processes of our civilization, the nature of men and their institutions, and something of the technology of our age; the capacity for understanding, independent and chal- lenging thinking; and, finally, the ability to clearly and forcefully express himself in the English language. Since concepts expressed in words are the primary tools of the legal profession, it cannot be emphasized too strongly that the beginning law student must bring into legal education the fundamental skills necessary for effective oral and written com- munication. ADMISSIONS Students without previous law school study are admitted at the beginning of the first and second semesters, but are not admitted to the summer sessions. PROCEDURE FOR ADMISSION Applicants for admission to the College of Law are required to file a preliminary application with the University Registrar on or before August 1 for the first semester, December 30, for the second semester. It will be impossible to consider applications received after these dates. Upon receipt of the preliminary application, the Registrar will furnish final ap- plication forms. No applicant will be admitted until he has filed a complete transcript of his record from each law school, college or university attended (other than the Uni- versity of Florida), and his Law School Admission Test score has been received from the Educational Testing Service. A written statement must also be filed concerning previous attendance at other law schools and, if the applicant has attended another law school, a certificate from the Dean thereof that he is in good standing at that in- stitution. REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION Beginning Students: All applicants for admission to the College of Law must have received a 4-year baccalaureate degree from a college or university of approved standing. Requests for admission to the College in a semester prior to the fall semester of 1961 will be governed by existing entrance requirements under which an applicant must have achieved a minimum score of 340 on the Law School Admission Test (or a minimum of 375 if the Test is retaken).