UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 3. Completion of at least 90 weeks of study in residence in an accredited law school, of which at least 56 must have been in residence in this College. (In the case of a student admitted with advanced standing prior to September, 1951, at least thirty weeks must have been completed in residence in this College.) 4. Completion of the last 28 credits and the last 30 weeks of study in residence in this College, unless other arrangements are made in advance by written petition approved by the faculty of the College of Law. In cases of superior scholarship and intellectual attainments the Bachelor of Laws degree may be recommended With Honors or With High Honors. Ordinarily, to be eligible for consideration for the degree of Bachelor of Laws With Honors the candidate must have maintained an honor point average of 3.0 on all work attempted, and to be eligible for consideration for the degree of Bachelor of Laws With High Honors the candidate must have maintained an honor point average of 3.5 on all work attempted which work must include Legal Research or Law Review. STANDARDS OF THE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION The Council on Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar of the American Bar Association requests that attention be called to the Standards of the American Bar Asso- ciation adopted in 1921 and by it recommended for enactment by all states. These Standards as amended provide in effect that every candidate for admission to the bar, in addition to taking a public examination, shall give evidence of graduation from a law school which shall require at least three years of acceptable college work as a con- dition of admission, and three years of law study (or longer if not a full-time course), which shall have an adequate library and a sufficient number of teachers giving their entire time to the school to ensure actual personal acquaintance and influence with the whole student body, and which shall not be operated as a commercial enterprise. LIBRARY The Law Library contains over 36,000 volumes, with accessions being made at the rate of approximately three thousand volumes a year. In it are included the published reports of the courts of last resort in every state in the Union and of the Federal Courts, the English Reports, Full Reprint, the English Law Reports, Law Journal Re- ports, Law Times Reports, Dominion Law Reports, the Canadian Reports, Australian Reports, New Zealand Reports, Scottish Reports, and the Philippine Reports, together with a collection of digests, encyclopedias, series of selected cases, English and American treatises and textbooks, and the statutes of a majority of American jurisdictions includ- ing the Federal statutes. LEGAL RESEARCH The program in Legal Research (LW. 601) is a specific attempt to relate the study of law to practice by modeling instruction upon law office methods. The program is conducted as individual projects. Current problems, which are submitted by attorneys throughout the state, are used when available. The student is required to do individual research and to present his findings in the form of a legal memorandum. Emphasis is upon individual work and responsibility. Professional facility in research, analysis, or- ganization, and expression must be fully demonstrated before credit is earned.