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HERMAN RALPH MEAD, M.A., Reference Librarian.

*JESSE VERTNER MendenhaLL, Stenographer in the President's Office. GEORGE WASHINGTON MERRITT, M.D., Assistant in Ophthalmology (M).

REBECCA MEYERSTEIN, Stenographer in the Secretary's Office.

GUY STILLMAN MILLBERRY, D.D.S., Assistant in Metallurgy (D).
EDWARD FRANKLIN MILLER, Technical Assistant in Anatomy (M).
JAMES WILLIAM MILLS, Field Assistant in Horticulture.

HERBERT TURBITT MOORE, A.B., D.D.S., Assistant in Clinical
Surgery (D).

JOSEPH HAINES MOORE, Ph.D., Assistant in Astronomy (LO).
WILLIAM GEORGE MOORE, M.D., Assistant in Gynecology (M).

JAMES WHEELER MORIN, B.L., Reader in American History.

EARLE MULLIKEN, Assistant in the Recorder's Office.

HENRY COFFINBERRY MYERS, Ph.D., Honorary Fellow in Agricultural Chemistry.

CARL SIEGFRIED GUENTHER NAGEL, M.D., Ch.D., Assistant in Ophthalmology (M).

J. B. NEFF, Conductor of Farmers' Institutes for Southern California. ALFRED NEWMAN, M.D., Assistant in Surgery (M).

FREDERICK WILLIAM NISH, Ph.G., Pharm. B., Assistant in Pharmaceutical Laboratory (Ph).

HOWARD D. NOBLE, Assistant in Orthodontia Technic (D).

ZELIA NUTTALL, Field Director of the Crocker-Reid Researches in Mexico.

FRANK ELLERY ODELL, B.S., Reader in Education.

JESSIE FIELD OGDEN, Clerk to the Librarian.

MICHAEL ONGERTH, Grad.Theol., Reader in German.

JOHN HARRIS OOLEY, Foreman of the Chico Forestry Station.

KARL WILHELM WOLFGANG OSTWALD, Ph.D., Research Assistant in Physiology.

LARRANCE PAGE, A.B., M.S., Assistant in Physics.

HAROLD KING PALMER, Ph.D., Assistant in Astronomy, on the D. O. Mills Foundation (LO).

CARLETON HUBBELL PARKER, B.S., Secretary for University Extension and Staff Lecturer.

GEBHARD H. PFUND, Assistant in Physical Culture.

WILLIAM HENRY PHIPPS, Clerk in Secretary's Office.

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WILHELM ROBERT RICHARD PINGER, M.A., Assistant in German.
LOUISA ADELLE PLACE, Assistant in Physical Culture.
RICHARD CHEADLE POWELL, B.S., Assistant in Physics.
JAMES WOODMANSEE RHODES, Assistant in Physical Culture.
EFFIE JOSEPHINE RIGDEN, B.S., Agassiz Assistant in Zoology.
HARRY PHILIP ROBARTS, M.D., Assistant in Surgery (M).

ALICE ROBERTSON, Ph.D., Assistant in Zoology.

THORBURN BRAILSFORD ROBERTSON, B.S., Assistant in Physiology. JOHN WESLEY ROPER, Patron Chico Forestry Station.

ANNE WALKER ROSENMÜLLER, Mailing Clerk in the Library.

LUDWIG ROSENSTEIN, Laboratory Assistant in the Fertilizer Control Laboratory.

*JOSEPH ARTHUR ROWELL, B.S., Evening Assistant in the Library. PERCY ELLIOTT ROWELL, B.S., Assistant in Physics.

TRACY GEORGE RUSSELL, A.B., M.D., Assistant in Surgery (M).

LIONEL SAMUEL SCHMITT, B.S., M.D., Assistant in Diseases of the Skin (M).

JACOB SCHWARTZ, M.D., Assistant in Surgery (M).

CRAIGIE SAMUEL SHARP, Stenographer in the President's Office.

TALBERT NELSON SHELDON, B.S., Assistant in Physics.

JOHN WILSON SHIELS, M.D., Assistant in Medicine (M).

HAYDN MOZART SIMMONS, Ph.G., M.D., Lecturer on Toxicology (Ph). ARTHUR BOURNE SMITH, Ph.B., B.L.S., Head of Order Department in the Library.

ALEXANDRA GROGAN SMITH, M.A., Assistant in Latin.

DON EUGENE SMITH, A.B., Lecturer in University Extension and Assistant in History.

ELIZABETH HIGHT SMITH, A.B., M.S., Assistant in Plant Pathology. ELLIOTT SMITH, B.S., Fellow in Astronomy (LO).

GEORGE ARNOLD SMITHSON, M.L., Reader in English.

ALFRED SOLOMON, M.A., Assistant in French.

GEORGE SPENCER, Mechanic in the Department of Mining.

WILLIAM RILEY STAMPER, Mechanician in the Department of Physics. HERMAN REINHARD STEINBACH, B.L., Reader in German.

FRANK CLIFFORD STEVENS, President's Stenographer.

GUY ROBERTSON STEWART, Assistant in the Agricultural Laboratory.

* Resigned August 31, 1905.

†Resigned January 23, 1906.

NORMAN CASWELL STINES, B.S., Assistant in Mining and Metallurgy.
LEONARD STONE, LL.B., Registrar (L).

HERBERT ARTHUR STOUT, B.L., Evening Assistant in the Library.
ALPHEUS B. STREEDAIN, Agassiz Artist in the Department of Zoology.
FREDERICK JOHN TEGGART, A.B., University Extension Lecturer.
*PAUL THELEN, B.S., Assistant in Physics.

JOHN TUOHY, Patron Tulare Agricultural Sub-Station.

HEINZ VON HUNGEN, Helper in Zoology.

JAMES THOMAS WATKINS, M.D., Assistant in Orthopedic Surgery (M). EMMET LEROY WEMPLE, Jr., M.D., Assistant in Genito-Urinary Surgery (M).

ALBERT MERRIL WEST, B.S., Assistant in Plant Pathology.

ALEXANDER DRUMMOND WHITE, Storekeeper and Machinist in the Department of Mechanics.

SIDNEY WARREN WILCOX, B.L., Reader in Economics.

EDWIN PAUL WILLOUGHBY, Helper in Mining Laboratory.

BENJAMIN J. WINGFIELD, Assistant in Viticulture.

CHESTER HOWARD WOOLSEY, B.S., M.D., Assistant in Medicine (M). ALLEN CHEEVER WRIGHT, Assistant in Mechanics and Foreman in Iron Work.

HARRIE LYNWOOD WRIGHT, Clerk in Secretary's Office.

*Resigned September 30, 1905. † Resigned November 21, 1905.

ORGANIZATION AND GOVERNMENT.

The University of California is an integral part of the public educational system of the State. As such it completes the work begun in the public schools. Through aid from the State and the United States, and by private gifts, it furnishes facilities for instruction in literature and in science, and in the professions of art, law, medicine, dentistry, and pharmacy. In the Colleges of Letters, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences, Commerce, Agriculture, Mechanics, Mining, Civil Engineering, and Chemistry, these privileges are offered without charge for tuition, to all residents of California who are qualified for admission. Non-residents of California are charged a tuition fee of ten dollars each half-year. In the Professional Colleges, in San Francisco, except that of Law, moderate tuition fees are charged. The instruction in all the colleges is open to all qualified persons, without distinction of sex. The Constitution of the State provides for the perpetuation of the University, with all its departments.

ORGANIZATION.

The organization of the University comprises the following departments of instruction:

I. IN BERKELEY.

1. College of Letters.
2. College of Social Sciences.
3. College of Natural Sciences.
4. College of Commerce.

5. College of Agriculture.
6. College of Mechanics.
7. College of Mining.

8. College of Civil Engineering.

9. College of Chemistry.

II. AT MOUNT HAMILTON.

Lick Astronomical Department (Lick Observatory).

III. IN SAN FRANCISCO.

1. Mark Hopkins Institute of Art.

2. Hastings College of the Law.

3. College of Medicine.

4. College of Dentistry.

5. California College of Pharmacy.

The distinctive characteristics of the various colleges and departments are given in detail in subsequent pages of this REG

ISTER.

HISTORY.

In 1869 the College of California, which had been incorporated in 1855 and which had carried on collegiate instruction since 1860, closed its work of instruction and transferred its property, on terms which were mutually agreed upon, to the State of California for the use of the University of California.

The University was instituted by a law which received the approval of the Governor, March 23, 1868. Instruction was begun in Oakland in the autumn of 1869. The Commencement exercises of 1873 were held at Berkeley, July 16, when the University was formally transferred to its permanent home. Instruction began at Berkeley in the autumn of 1873. The new Constitution of 1879 made the existing organization of the University perpetual.

The Academic Colleges were the only ones actually included in the original organization, although the Organic Act contemplated the establishment of Colleges of Law and Medicine. The Professional Colleges in San Francisco have been added from time to time. The Lick Observatory was formally transferred to the University in June, 1888; the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art, in 1893.

SITE AND CLIMATE.

The University of California is located at Berkeley, a town of about 30,000 inhabitants, forty minutes' ride by train and ferry from San Francisco. The site of the University comprises about two hundred and seventy acres, rising at first in a gentle and then in a bolder slope from a height of about two hundred feet above the sea level to one of over nine hundred feet. It thus covers a range of more than seven hundred feet in altitude, while back of it the chain of hills continues to rise a thousand feet higher. It has a superb outlook over the bay and city of San Francisco, over the neighboring plains and mountains, the ocean, and the Golden Gate.

The climate at Berkeley is exceptionally well suited for uninterrupted university work throughout the year.

Following is a statement of the climatic conditions of Berkeley, condensed from "A Fifteen year Synopsis of Meteorological Observations made at Berkeley, 1887, July 1, to 1902, June 30.'' (University Chronicle, Vol. V, No. 3).

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