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In all matters not expressly delegated to the Senate or to the several Faculties, the Regents govern, either directly or through the President or Secretary.

FUNDS.

The endowments on which the Academic Colleges and the Lick Observatory have been founded and maintained are the following:

1. The Seminary Fund and Public Building Fund, granted to the State by Congress.

2. The property received from the College of California, including the site at Berkeley.

3. The fund derived from the Congressional Land Grant of July 2, 1862.

4. The Tide Land Fund, appropriated by the State.

5. Various appropriations by the State Legislature for specified purposes.

6. The State University Fund, which is a perpetual endowment derived from a State tax of two cents on each $100 of assessed valuation.

7. The Endowment Fund of the Lick Astronomical Department.

8. The United States Experiment Station Fund of $15,000 a year. 9. The Morrill College Aid Fund, yielding in the current year $25,000.

10. The gifts of individuals.

The Mark Hopkins Institute of Art, the Medical Department, the Post-Graduate Medical Department, the Dental Department, the California College of Pharmacy, and the Veterinary Department, are supported by fees from students. The Hastings College of the Law has a separate endowment.

REGISTER

OF THE

ACADEMIC COLLEGES, AT BERKELEY

AND THE

LICK OBSERVATORY AT MOUNT HAMILTON

THE ACADEMIC COUNCIL.

NOTE.-The Academic Council is composed of the professors, lecturers, and instructors in the Academic Colleges. The Council regulates provisionally, or (where the functions to be exercised are executive) supervises, such matters relating to undergraduate students and their work as are not reserved by law to the separate Faculties, but in which they are all concerned.

The names, excepting those of the chairman and secretary, are divided into groups of professors, associate professors, assistant professors, lecturers, and instructors; and are arranged alphabetically in each group.

BENJAMIN IDE WHEELER, President of the University, Chairman.

THOMAS R. BACON, Professor of Modern European History.

CORNELIUS B. BRADLEY, Professor of Rhetoric.

ELMER E. BROWN, Professor of the Theory and Practice of Education. SAMUEL B. CHRISTY, Professor of Mining and Metallurgy.

EDWARD B. CLAPP, Professor of the Greek Language and Literature. ARNOLD A. D'ANCONA, Professor of Hygiene.

GEORGE DAVIDSON, Honorary Professor of Geodesy and Astronomy, and Professor of Geography.

JOHN FRYER, Agassiz Professor of Oriental Languages and Literatures. CHARLES M. GAYLEY, Professor of the English Language and Literature. FREDERICK G. HESSE, Professor of Mechanical Engineering.

EUGENE W. HILGARD, Professor of Agriculture, and Director of Agri

cultural Experiment Stations.

GEORGE H. HOWISON, Mills Professor of Intellectual and Moral Philosophy and Civil Polity.

*WILLIAM CAREY JONES, Professor of Jurisprudence.

MARTIN KELLOGG, Emeritus Professor of Latin.

ANDREW C. LAWSON, Professor of Mineralogy and Geology.
*JOSEPH LECONTE, Professor of Geology and Natural History.

CURTIS H. LINDLEY, Honorary Professor of the Law of Mines and
Water.

ELWOOD MEAD, Professor of the Institutions and Practice of Irrigation. WILLIAM A. MERRILL, Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. †ADOLPH C. MILLER, Professor of Finance.

* Absent on leave, 1900-01.

During the second half-year.

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