Page:Jesuit Education.djvu/701

Rh New York, Jesuit College, 201—202.

Nightingale, Professor, 307 note, 357.

Nobili, Robert, Jesuit, first European Sanskrit scholar, 151.

Notes taken in class, 463—465.

Non-sectarian school, 580 sqq.

Noviciate, in the Society, 418—422.

Obedience, of teacher, 609—610, 650; of pupil, 650.

Oberammergau, Passion play, and Jesuit drama, 169.

Observatories, of Jesuits, 180, 227, 229—232.

Odenbach, F. L., Jesuit meteorologist, 227.

Officials, in Jesuit colleges, 115—118.

Oliphant, L., 208.

Oratorians, 127, 448 note.

Ovid, 44, 385, 386, 565.

Oxford, 69—71, 212, 411.

Pantel, Jesuit scientist, 233.

Papenbroeck Jesuit historian, 161.

Patience, of teacher, 420, 630, 631—632, 646.

Patriotism, and Jesuit schools, 255—263.

Peck, Professor in Columbia, 223 note 2, 224, 327.

Permanent teachers, 435 sqq.

Perpinian, Jesuit writer, 162.

Perry, Jesuit astronomer, 228.

Pesch Henry, Jesuit writer, 237.

Petavius, Jesuit scholar, 160, 427, 448 note.

Petrarch, 49—50.

Phaedrus, 385, 472—473.

Physics, in Jesuit curriculum, 131, 134, 194.

Pitt, on classics, 358.

Plans of studies, previous to the Ratio Studiorum, 108—409.