Sec. 23. The Board shall have power to regulate the course of instruction, and prescribe, with the advice of the Faculty, the books to be used in the institution; and also to confer, for similar or equal attainments, similar degrees or testimonials to those conferred by the University of Michigan. Sec. 24. The President, professors, farm manager and tutors, shall constitute the Faculty of the State Agricultural College.. The President of the College shall be the President of the Faculty. The Secretary of the State Board of Agriculture shall be a member and Secretary of the Faculty. Sec. 25. The Faculty shall pass all needful rules and regulations necessary to the government and discipline of the College,. regulating the routine of labor, study, meals, and the duties and exercises, and all such rules and regulations as are necessary to the preservation of morals, decorum and health. Sec. 26. The Faculty shal! have charge of the laboratories, library, and museums of the institution. Sec. 27. The Faculty shall make an annual report by the first Wednesday of December, of each year, to the State Board of Agriculture, signed by the President and Secretary, containing such information and recommendations as the welfare of the institution, in their opinion, demands. Any members of the Faculty may make a minority report if they disagree with the conclusions of the majority, which the Faculty shall communicate to the Board. No communication at any other time, from members of the Faculty, shall be entertained by the Board, unless they have been submitted to a meeting of the Faculty, and sanctioned by a majority. Sec. 28. The President shall be the chief executive officer of the State Agricultural College, and it shall be his duty to see. that the rules and regulations of the State Board of Agriculture, and the rules and regulations of the Faculty be observed and executed. Sec 29. The subordinate officers and employés, not members of the Faculty, shall be under the direction of the President, and in the recess of the Board, removable at his discre tion, and he may supply vacancies that may be thus or otherwise created; his action in these respects shall be submitted to the approval of the State Board of Agriculture at their next meeting. Sec. 30. The President may or may not perform the duties of a professor, as the State Board of Agriculture shall determine. If he performs the duties of a professor, or in case the duties of President are exercised by a president pro tem., a superintendent of the farm may be appointed, who shall have the general superintendence of the business pertaining to the farm, the land, and other property of the institution, and who shall be a member of the Faculty. Sec. 31. The President and Secretary, together with the superintendent of the farm, if there be one, and in case there is not one, then one of the professors to be elected by the Faculty, shall constitute a committee to fix the rate of wages allowed to students, and rate of board. In assessing the Board, it shall be so estimated that no profit shall be saved to the institution, and as near as possible at the actual cost. The rates of wages allowed, and rate of charge for board, shall, if practicable, be submitted to the State Board of Agriculture before they take effect. Sec. 32. For current expenditures at the State Agricultural College, specific sums shall be set aside, in the hands of their treasurer, by the State Board of Agriculture, which shall be subject to the warrants of the President of the College, countersigned by the Secretary. All moneys due to the institution, or received in its behalf, shall be collected and received by the Secretary, and deposited by him with the Treasurer of the State Board of Agriculture. The Secretary shall, with his annual report, render a full and complete account of all moneys received and all warrants drawn on the Treasurer, as Secretary of the College, and shall file and preserve all vouchers, receipts, correspondence, or other papers relating thereto. Sec. 33. When the lands of the institution shall be brought to such a condition of maturity as to promise satisfactory re sults, the State Board of Agriculture shall make such rules and regulations as they may deem necessary, cause such comparisons, tests, trials and experiments, scientific and practical, to be made as may, in their opinion, conduce to the instruction of the student and the progress of agriculture, and shall cause the results to be published in the annual report. Sec. 34. All the swamp lands granted to the State of Michigan by act of Congress, approved September twenty-eighth, one thousand eight hundred and fifty, situate in the townships of Lansing and Meridian, in the county of Ingham, and Dewitt and Bath, in the county of Clinton, of which no sale has been made, or for which no certificates of sale have been issued by the Commissioner of the Land Office, are hereby granted, and vested in the State Board of Agriculture, and placed in the possession of the State Agricultural College, for the exclusive use and benefit of the Institution, subject only to the provisions relating to drainage and reclamation of the act of Congress donating the same to the State. Sec. 35. The State Board of Agriculture shall have authority to sell and dispose of any portions of the swamp lands mentioned in the preceding section of this act, and use the same, or the proceeds thereof, for the purpose of draining, fencing, or in any manner improving such other portions of said lands as it may be deemed advisable to bring under a high state of cultivation, for the promotion of the objects of the State Agricultural College. The terms and conditions of the sale of the portions of the above described lands thus disposed of, shall be prescribed by the State Board of Agriculture, and deeds of the same, executed and acknowledged, in their official capacity, by the President and Secretary of the State Board of Agriculture, shall be good and valid in law. Sec. 36. David Carpenter, of Lenawee county; Justus Gage, of Cass county; Philo Parsons, of Wayne county; Hezekiah G. Wel's, of Kalamazoo county; Silas A. Yerkes, of Kent, County, and Charles Rich, of Lapeer county, are hereby constituted and appointed the first State Board of Agriculture. At their first meeting, which the Governor of the State is hereby authorized and directed to call at as early a day as practicable, they shall determine by lot their several periods of service, two of whom shall serve for two years, two of whom shall serve for four years, and two of whom shall serve for six years respectively, from the third Wednesday of January last past, when they are superceded by appointments, in accordance with the provisions of section one of this act, or until their successors are chosen. Sec. 37. Act number one hundred and thirty, session laws of eighteen hundred and fifty-five, being an act for the establishment of a State Agricultural School, and all other acts or parts of acts in conflict with the provisions of this act, are hereby repealed. Sec. 38. This act shall take immediate effect. Approved March 15, 1861. UNITED STATES LAND GRANT. [Chapter cxxx, United States Laws, 1862.] AN ACT donating Public Lands to the several States and Territories which may provide Colleges for the Benefit of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That there be granted to the several States, for the purposes hereinafter mentioned, an amount of puble land, to be apportioned to each State a quantity equal to thirty thousand acres for each Senator and Representative in Congress to which the States are respectively entitled by the apportionment under the census of eighteen hundred and sixty: Provided, That no mineral lands shall be selected or purchased under the provisions of this act. Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That the land aforesaid, after being surveyed, shall be apportioned to the several States in sections or subdivisions of sections, not less than onequarter of a section; and whenever there are public lands in a State subject to sale at private entry at one dollar and twentyfive cents per acre, the quantity to which said State shall be entitled shall be selected from such lands within the limits of such State, and the Secretary of the Interior is hereby directed to issue to each of the States in which there is not the quantity of public lands subject to sale at private entry at one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, to which said State may be entitled under the provisions of this act, land scrip to the amount in acres for the deficiency of its distributive share: said scrip to be sold by said States and the proceeds thereof applied to the uses and purposes prescribed in this act, and for no other use or purpose whatsoever: Provided, That in |