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FACULTY OF THE SUMMER SESSION

BENJAMIN IDE WHEELER, Ph.D., LL.D., President of the University.

ERNEST CARROLL MOORE, LL.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Education; Dean of the Summer Session.

JAMES SUTTON, Ph.B., Recorder of the Faculties.

JAMES MARK BALDWIN, PhD., Sc.D., LL.D., Professor of Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University.

A.B., Princeton University, 1884; M.A., 1887; Ph.D., 1889; Sc.D., Oxford University, 1900; LL.D., Glasgow University, 1901; studied at Leipzig, Berlin, and Tübingen; Professor of Philosophy, Lake Forest University, 1887-89; Professor of Philosophy, Toronto University, 1889-93; Professor of Psychology, Princeton University, 1893-1904; Professor of Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University, 1904-; Vice-President International Congress of Psychology, London, 1892; Judge of Award, World's Columbian Exposition, 1893; Honorary President International Congress of Criminal Anthropology, Geneva, 1896; President American Psychological Association, 1897-98; Member of the American Philosophical Society; awarded gold medal Royal Academy of Denmark, 1897; member Institut International de Sociologie.

ELLEN MARGARET BARTLETT, Teacher of Domestic Science, San Francisco Public Schools.

Graduate of the Normal Course in Domestic Science, San Francisco Public Schools, 1901; Teacher Domestic Science, San Francisco Public Schools, 1904-.

SAMUEL THORBURN BLACK, President of the State Normal School, San Diego.

County Superintendent Ventura County, 1891-95; California State Superintendent of Public Instruction, 1895-98; President State Normal School, San Diego, 1898-.

FREDERIC THOMAS BLANCHARD, B.L., Reader in English.

B.L., University of California, 1904; Reader in English, University of California, 1904-.

LUDWIG BOLTZMANN, Ph.D., Professor of Physics, University of Vienna.

Ph.D., University of Vienna; Assistant, University of Vienna, 1867; Professor of Theoretical Physics, University of Graz, 1869; Professor of Mathematics, University of Vienna, 1873; Professor of Experimental Physics, University of Graz, 1876; Professor of Theoretical Physics, University of Munich, 1890; Professor of Theoretical Physics, University of Vienna, 1895; University of Leipzig, 1900; University of Vienna, 1902-.

CORNELIUS BEACH BRADLEY, M.A., Professor of Rhetoric.

A.B., Oberlin College, 1868; M.A., 1886; Theological course at Oberlin, 1868-70, and at Yale 1870-71; Tutor, Oberlin College Preparatory Department, 1868-70; Vice-Principal, Oakland High School, 1875-82; Instructor in English, University of California, 1882-86; Assistant Professor of the English Language and Literature, 1886-89; Associate Professor, 1889-94; Professor of Rhetoric, 1894-. Member of Committee of Ten on English in Secondary Schools, 1893, of the National Educational Council.

CARLOS BRANSBY, M.A., Litt.D., Instructor in Spanish.

M.A., Lafayette College, 1883; Litt.D., 1903; Graduate of New Jersey State Normal School, 1871; Union Theological Seminary, 1877; Lecturer, October, 1877, to May, 1878; Teacher of Spanish, Los Angeles Business College, the McPherron Academy, and the Los Angeles Ladies' College, 1887-89; Teacher of Spanish, English Grammar and Rhetoric in Occidental College, 1890-92; Teacher of Spanish, Los Angeles High School, 1893-1901; Instructor in Spanish, University of California, 1901-.

FRANK FOREST BUNKER, Ph.B., Supervisor of Training, State Normal School, San Francisco.

Graduate of the Los Angeles State Normal School, 1893; Ph.B., University of California, 1901; Supervisor of Training, State Normal School, San Francisco, 1901-.

FREDERIC BURK, Ph.D., President of the State Normal School, San Francisco.

B.L., University of California, 1883; M.A., Stanford University, 1892; Fellow in Psychology, Clark University, 189698; Ph.D., Clark University, 1898; City Superintendent of Santa Barbara Schools, 1898-99; President San Francisco State Normal School, 1899-.

ROBERT BUTLER, Assistant in Physics.

WARREN THOMPSON CLARKE, B.S., Assistant Superintendent of University Extension in Agriculture.

B.S., University of California, 1903; Field Assitant in Entomology, University of California, 1903-04; Assistant Superintendent of University Extension in Agriculture,

1994-.

ANNA BOTSFORd Comstock, B.S., Lecturer in Nature Study, Cornell University.

Graduate of the Chamberlain Institute, 1873; B.S., Cornell University, 1878; awarded bronze medal for wood engraving, Pan American Exposition, 1901; Assistant Professor, Cornell extension work in Nature Study, 1899; Lecturer, Stanford University extension work, 1899-1900; Member Society American Wood Engravers.

RUSSELL TRACY CRAWFORD, Ph.D., Instructor in Practical Astronomy.

B.S., University of California, 1897; Ph.D., 1901; Student Assistant in Astronomy, University of California, 189697; Assistant in Astronomy, 1897-98; Fellow in Astronomy, Lick Observatory, 1898-1901; Instructor in Practical Astronomy, University of California, 1903-.

MORRIS ELMER DAILEY, M.A., President of the State Normal School, San José.

M.A., Indiana University, 1897; City Superintendent of Schools, Fresno, 1897-99; Teacher of History, State Normal School, San José, 1899-1900; President of State Normal School, San José, 1900-; Advisory Editor Western Journal of Education.

LUDWIG JOSEPH DEMETER, M.A., Instructor in German.

Student at the Polytecknikum, Munich, 1893-95; M.A., Harvard University, 1901; Instructor in Modern Languages, Tufts College, 1898-1900; Austin Teaching Fellow, Harvard University, 1900-01; Instructor in German, Harvard University, 1901-02; Instructor in German, University of California, 1902-.

JAMES MAIN DIXON, M.A., F.R.S.E., Lecturer in English.

M.A., St. Andrews University, 1879; Professor and Secretary of Imperial College of Engineering, Tokyo, Japan, 1879-86; Professor of English, Imperial University, Tokyo, Japan, 1886-92; Professor of English Literature and Logic, Washington University, 1892-1901; President of Columbia College, 1903-04; Secretary of the Asiatic Society of Japan.

1891.

FREDERIC GERBER DORETY, B.L., LL.B., Lecturer in Law.

B.L., University of California, 1900; LL.B., Harvard University, 1903; Lecturer in Law, University of California, 1903-.

ROBERT DUPOUEY, B. ès L., Agrégé ès Lettres de l'Université de Paris, Instructor in French.

Bachelier ès Lettres, University of Toulouse, 1894; Member of the Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, 1897; Licencié ès Lettres de l'Université de Paris, 1899; Agrégé ès Lettres de l'Université de France, 1903; Fellow of the French Government at Harvard University, 1903; Lecturer of the Alliance Française in America, 1904; Instructor in French, University of California, 1904-.

ARTHUR STARR EAKLE, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mineralogy.

B.S., Cornell University, 1892; Ph.D., University of Munich, 1896; Assistant in Mineralogy and Geology, Cornell University, 1891-92; Instructor in Mineralogy and Geology, 1892-94; Assistant in Mineralogy, Harvard University, 189799; Instructor in Mineralogy and Petrography, 1899-1900; Assistant in Mineralogy, 1900-01; Instructor in Mineralogy, 1901-03; Assistant Professor of Mineralogy, University of California, 1903-; Fellow Geological Society of America.

HAROLD RAYMOND EBRIGHT, Assistant in Civil Engineering. FREDERIC ERNEST FARRINGTON, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Education.

A.B., Harvard University, 1894; Fellow in Education, Teachers' College, Columbia University, 1901-02; M.A., Columbia University, 1902; Student at Jena, Germany, and at the Sorbonne, Paris, 1902-03; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1904; Instructor in Mathematics, Collegiate School, New York, 1897-1901; Director of Neighborhood Work, Speyer School; Assistant Professor of Education, University of California, 1904-.

ELBERT ALLAN GIBBS, Assistant in Civil Engineering.

WILLIAM GARDNER HALE, A.B., LL.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Latin, University of Chicago.

A.B., Harvard University, 1870; LL.D., Union College, 1895; LL.D., Princeton University, 1896; Fellow in Philosophy, Harvard University, 1874-76; Fellow of Harvard University in Classics, and Student at Leipzig and Göttingen, 1876-77; Tutor in Latin, Harvard University, 1877-80; Professor of Latin, Cornell University, 1880-92; Professor and Head of the Department of Latin, University of Chicago, 1892-; Chairman of the American School of Classical Studies, Rome, 1894-99; Associate Editor of the Classical Review, since 1895.

ELMER EDGAR HALL, Ph.D., Instructor in Physics.

B.S., University of Sauthern California, 1893; M.S., Uni versity of California, 1896; Ph.D., Cornell University, 1902; Whiting Fellow of University of California, Cornell University, 1901-02; Assistant in Physics, University of California, 1899-1901; Instructor in Physics, 1902-.

CLARENCE MELVIN HARING, D.V.M., Instructor in Veterinary Science and Bacteriology.

D.V.M., Cornell University, 1904; Instructor in Bacteriology and Veterinary Science, University of California, 1904-.

RULIFF STEPHEN HOLWAY, A.B., M.S., Assistant Professor of Physical Geography.

A.B., Stanford University, 1903; M.S., University of California, 1904; Principal of the San José High School, 1888; Teacher in the San José State Normal School, 18881902; Instructor in Education, University of California, 1903-04; Assistant Professor of Physical Geography, 1904-; Member of the National Geographic Society.

ARCHIE LEMONT HYDE, Assistant in Chemistry.

LILLIAN SERAPHINE HYDE, A.B., University Extension Lecturer in Agriculture.

A.B., Stanford University, 1903; Teacher of Cookery and Sewing, Stimpson Lafayette Industrial School, Los Angeles, 1903; Special Extension Lecturer and Demonstrator, Department of University Extension in Agriculture, University of California, 1904-05.

MYER EDWARD JAFFA, M.S., Assistant Professor of Agriculture; in charge of Laboratory of Agricultural Chemistry.

Ph.B., University of California, 1877; M.S., 1896; Assistant Chemist, Tenth United States Census, 1879-80; Assistant in Agricultural Department, University of California, 188081; Assistant Chemist, Northern Transcontinental Survey, 1881-83; First Assistant and Chemist, Department of Viticulture, 1883-89; First Assistant Chemist, in charge of Agricultural Laboratory, 1889-93; Instructor in Agriculture, 1893-96; Assistant Professor of Agriculture, 1896-, University of California; Special Agent and Food Expert, United States Department of Agriculture, 1900.

CHARLES BELFORD JONES, Reader in History.

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