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HARRY AUGUSTUS BIGELOW, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.

A.B., Harvard University, 1896; LL.B., ibid., 1899; Instructor in Criminal Law, ibid., 1899-1900; practiced law, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, 1900-3; Assistant Professor of Law, University of Chicago, 1904-6; Associate Professor, ibid., 1906-9; Professor, ibid., 1909—. FRANK BILLINGS, S.M., M.D., Professor of Medicine.

M.D., Chicago Medical College, 1881; S.M., Northwestern University, 1890; Interne, Cook County Hospital, 1881-2; Student in Vienna, 1885-6; Professor of Medicine, Northwestern University Medical School, 1891-8; Attending Physician to the Presbyterian Hospital; President of Chicago Medical Society, 1890; Professor of Medicine, Rush Medical College, 1898-; Dean of Faculty, ibid., 1900-; Professorial Lecturer on Medicine, University of Chicago, 1901-5; President of the American Medical Association, 1902-4; President of the Association of American Physicians, 1905-6; Professor of Medicine, University of Chicago, 1905. President, National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, 1908.

GILBERT AMES BLISS, PH.D., Professor of Mathematics.

S.B., University of Chicago, 1897; S.M., ibid., 1898; Ph.D., ibid., 1900; Fellow, ibid., 18991900; Instructor in Mathematics, University of Minnesota, 1900-2; Student, University of Göttingen, 1902-3; Associate in Mathematics, University of Chicago, 1903-4; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Missouri, 1904-5; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Princeton University, 1905-8; Associate Editor, Annals of Mathematics, 1906-8; Associate Editor, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 1908-; Associate Professor of Mathematics, University of Chicago, 1908-13; Professor of Mathematics, ibid., 1913-.

OSKAR BOLZA, PH.D., Non-Resident Professor of Mathematics.

Abiturientenexamen, Freiburg i. B., 1875; Ph.D., Göttingen, 1886; Reader in Mathematics,
Johns Hopkins University, 1888-9; Associate in Mathematics, Clark University, 1889-92;
Associate Professor of Mathematics, University of Chicago, 1892-3; Professor of Mathe-
matics, ibid., 1894-1910; Non-Resident Professor of Mathematics, ibid., 1910-; Hon.
Professor of Mathematics, University of Freiburg i. B., 1910-.

ROBERT JOHNSON BONNER, PH.D., Professor of Greek.

A.B., University of Toronto, 1890; Fellow in Latin, ibid., 1891-3; Graduate of Ontario
Law School and Member of Ontario Bar, 1894; Classical Master, Collegiate Institute,
Collingwood, Ont., 1895-9; Fellow in Greek, University of Chicago, 1899-1900; Professor
of Latin, John B. Stetson University, 1900-3; Assistant in Greek, University of Chicago,
1903-4; Ph.D., ibid., 1904; Assistant in Greek and Latin, University College, ibid., 1904-5;
Associate in Greek, University of Chicago, 1905-6; Instructor, ibid., 1906-8; Assistant
Professor, ibid., 1908-10; Member Board of Editors, Classical Philology; Associate
Professor, ibid., 1910-13; Professor, ibid., 1913-.

JAMES HENRY BREASTED, PH.D., Professor of Egyptology and Oriental History.

A.B., Northwestern College, 1888; Chicago Theological Seminary, 1889-90; A.M., Yale University, 1891; Non-resident Fellow, University of Chicago, 1892-4; University of Berlin and Royal Museum, 1891-4; A.M. and Ph.D., University of Berlin, 1894; collecting for the University of Chicago in Egypt, 1894-5; Assistant in Egyptology, University of Chicago, 1894-6; Assistant Director of Haskell Oriental Museum, ibid., 1895-1901; Instructor in Egyptology and Semitic Languages, ibid., 1896-8; Assistant Professor, ibid., 1898-1902; Thomas Museum Lecturer, Richmond College, 1898; Honorary D.B., Chicago Theological Seminary, 1898; Collaborator on Egyptian Lexicon of Royal Academies of Germany, at Berlin, 1899-1900; on Mission to the Oriental Museums of Europe, for the Egyptian Lexicon Commission, 1900-1; Director of Haskell Oriental Museum, University of Chicago, 1901-; Associate Professor of Egyptology and Semitic Languages, ibid., 1902-5; Director of the Egyptian Expedition of the University of Chicago, in the Sudan, 1905-7; Professor of Egyptology and Oriental History, ibid., 1905-; Corresponding Member of the Royal Academy of Berlin, 1907; Morse Lecturer, Union Theological Seminary, 1912; Ann Mary Brown Lecturer, Brown University, 1912-13.

CARL DARLING BUCK, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Department of

Sanskrit and Indo-European Comparative Philology.

A.B., Yale University, 1886; Member of American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1887-8, 1888-9; Ph.D., Yale University, 1889; Student in German Universities, chiefly in Leipzig, 1889-92; Assistant Professor of Sanskrit and Indo-European Comparative Philology, University of Chicago, 1892-4; Associate Professor, ibid., 1894-1900; Professor, ibid., 1900-3; Head of the Department of Sanskrit and Indo-European Comparative Philology, ibid., 1903-.

SHERBURNE WESLEY BURNHAM, A.M., Professor of Practical Astronomy, and Astronomer in the Yerkes Observatory. Retired.

Astronomer in Chicago, Private Observatory, 1870-7; A.M., Yale University, 1878; (Observer at the Dearborn Observatory, Chicago, 1877-81, 1882-4; Observer at the Washburn Observatory, Madison, Wis., 1881-2; Expert Commissioner chosen by the Trustees of the

Estate of James Lick to test the seeing on Mt. Hamilton, Cal. (resulting in the location of the Lick Observatory), 1879; Astronomer at the Lick Observatory, 1888-92; Professor of Practical Astronomy and Astronomer in the Yerkes Observatory, University of Chicago, 1893-; Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society, 1894; Associate of the Royal Astronomical Society, 1898; Lalande prize in Astronomy, Paris Academy of Science, 1904.

ERNEST DEWITT BURTON, D.D., Professor and Head of the Department of New Testament and Early Christian Literature.

A.B., Denison University, 1876; D.D., ibid., 1897; ibid., Oberlin College, 1912; Instructor, Academy of Kalamazoo College, 1876-7; Graduate, Rochester Theological Seminary, 1882; Instructor in New Testament Greek, ibid., 1882-3; Associate Professor of New Testament Interpretation, Newton Theological Institution, 1883-6; Professor of New Testament Interpretation, ibid., 1886-92; Professor and Head of the Department of New Testament and Early Christian Literature, University of Chicago, 1892-; Oriental Educational Investigation Commissioner of the University of Chicago, 1908-9; Director of University Libraries, University of Chicago, 1910-.

NATHANIEL BUTLER, A.M., D.D., LL.D., Professor of Education; Director of Co-operation with Secondary Schools.

A.B., Colby University, 1873; Associate Principal, Ferry Hall Female College, Lake Forest, Ill., 1873-6; A.M., Colby University, 1876; D.D., ibid., 1895; LL.D., ibid., 1903; ibid., Georgetown College, 1913; Associate Principal, Highland Hall College for Women, Highland Park, Ill., 1876-9; Master, Yale School for Boys, Chicago, 1879-80; Principal, Highland Hall College for Women, Highland Park, Ill., 1880-4; Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature, the old University of Chicago, 1884-6; Professor of Latin, University of Illinois, 1886-9; Professor of the English Language and Literature, ibid., 1889-92; Acting Director of the University Extension Division, University of Chicago, 1893-4; University Extension Associate Professor of English Literature, and Director of the University Extension Division, ibid., 1894-5; President of Colby College. 18951901; Professor of Education and Director of Co-operation with Secondary Schools, University of Chicago, 1901-; Dean of the College of Education, ibid., 1905-9; Examiner for Colleges, ibid., 1910-11.

THOMAS CHROWDER CHAMBERLIN, PH.D., LL.D., Sc.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Geology.

A.B., Beloit College, 1866; A.M., ibid., 1869; Principal, High School, 1866-8; Graduate Student, University of Michigan, 1868-9; Professor of Natural Science, State Normal School, Whitewater, Wis., 1869-73; Professor of Geology, Beloit College, 1873-82; Assistant State Geologist of Wisconsin, 1873-6; Chief Geologist, ibid., 1876-82; studied glaciers of Switzerland, 1878; Lecturer on Geology, Beloit College, 1882-7; Professor of Geology, Columbian University, 1885-7; U.S. Geologist, 1882-1908; Ph.D., University of Michigan, and University of Wisconsin, 1882; President, University of Wisconsin, 1887-92; Professor and Head of the Department of Geology, University of Chicago, 1892-; LL.D., University of Michigan, 1887, Beloit College, and Columbian University of same date; Geologist to Peary Expedition, 1894; President of the Chicago Academy of Sciences; Editor of The Journal of Geology; LL.D., University of Wisconsin, 1904; Sc.D., University of Illinois, 1905; LL.D., University of Toronto, 1913; Consulting Geologist, Wisconsin Geological Survey; Commissioner, Illinois Geological Survey; Investigator, Fundamental Problems of Geology, Carnegie Institution, 1902-; President, Illinois Academy of Science, 1907; Consulting Geologist, U.S. Geological Survey, 1908-; President, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1908-9; Member of Commission for Oriental Educational Investigation, 1908-9.

CHARLES CHANDLER, A.M., Professor of Latin.

A.B., University of Michigan, 1871; A.M., ibid., 1874; Teacher of Languages, Pontiac, Mich., High School, 1871-4; Tutor in Academy and Instructor in Latin, Denison University, 1874-6; Professor of Latin Language and Literature, Denison University, 1876-91; Professor of Latin, University of Chicago, 1892—.

WALTER WHEELER COOK, A.M., LL.M., Professor of Law.

A.B., Columbia University, 1894; Assistant in Mathematics, ibid., 1894-5; John Tyndall Fellow in Physics, ibid., 1895-7; Student, Jena, Leipzig, Berlin, 1895-7; Assistant in Mathematics, Columbia University, 1897-1900: A.M., ibid., 1899; LL.M., ibid., 1901; Instructor in Jurisprudence and American History, University of Nebraska, 1901-2; Assistant Professor of Law, ibid., 1902-3; Professor of Law, ibid., 1903-4; Professor of Law, University of Missouri, 1904-6; Professor of Law, University of Wisconsin, 1906-10; University of Chicago Law School, Summer, 1906; Professor of Law, ibid., 1910-.

JOHN MERLE COULTER, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Botany.

A.B., Hanover College, 1870; A.M., ibid., 1873; Ph.D., Hanover College and Indiana University, 1882; Botanist of Geologic Survey of the Territories, 1872-4; Professor of Natural Sciences, Hanover College, 1874-9; Professor of Biology, Wabash College, 187991; President and Professor of Botany, Indiana University, 1891-3; Vice-President, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1891; President of Lake Forest

University, 1893-6; Professor and Head of the Department of Botany, University of
Chicago, 1896-; President, American Botanical Society, 1897-8; Editor of the Botanical
Gazette, 1875-; Member of the American Philosophical Society; Member of the National
Academy of Sciences; Associate Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences;
President, Illinois Academy of Sciences, 1910; Corresponding Fellow of the Botanical
Society of Edinburgh; Foreign Member of the Linnaean Society.

STARR WILLARD CUTTING, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Department of
Germanic Languages and Literatures.

A.B., Williams College, 1881; A.M., ibid., 1892; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1892; Principal of Deerfield Academy (Mass.), 1881-6; Student in German and French, Universities of Leipzig and Geneva, 1886-8; Professor of Modern Languages, University of South Dakota, 1888-90; Graduate Student in German and French, Johns Hopkins University, 1890-1; Professor of German and French (locum tenens), Earlham College, Indiana, 1891-2; Assistant Professor of German, University of Chicago, 1892-4; Associate Professor, ibid., 1894-1900; President of Central Division of the Modern Language Association of America, 1901-2; Professor of German Literature, University of Chicago, 1900-6; Head of the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures, ibid., 1906LEONARD EUGENE DICKSON, PH.D., Professor of Mathematics.

S.B., University of Texas, 1893; A.M., ibid., 1894; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1896; Chemist, Geological Survey of Texas, 1892-3; Fellow in Pure Mathematics, University of Texas, 1893-4; Fellow in Mathematics, University of Chicago, 1894-6: Student, Leipzig and Paris, 1896-7; Instructor in Mathematics, University of California, 1897-9; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, ibid., 1899; Associate Professor of Mathematics, University of Texas, 1899-1900; Editor, American Mathematical Monthly, 1902-8; Editor, Transactions American Mathematical Society, 1910-; Research Assistant to the Carnegie Institution, 1904; Member of the National Academy of Sciences; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Chicago, 1900-7; Associate Professor, ibid., 1907-10; Professoribid., 1910-.

WILLIAM EDWARD DODD, PH.D., Professor of American History.

S.B., Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 1895; S.M., ibid., 1897; Instructor in History, ibid., 1895-7; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1900; Professor of History, Randolph-Macon Col lege, 1900-8: University of North Carolina, Summer School, 1904; University of Chicago, Summer, 1908; Professor of American History, ibid., 1908-.

GEORGE BURMAN FOSTER, PH.D., Professor of the Philosophy of Religion. A.M., University of West Virginia, 1884; Graduate, Rochester Theological Seminary, 1887; Universities of Göttingen and Berlin, 1891-2; Ph.D. (honorary), Denison University, 1892; Professor of Philosophy, McMaster University, Toronto, Canada, 1892-5; Associate Professor of Systematic Theology, University of Chicago, 1895-7; Professor of Systematic Theology, ibid., 1897-1905; Professor of the Philosophy of Religion, ibid., 1905-. ERNST FREUND, J.U.D., PH.D., Professor of Jurisprudence and Public Law. Gymnasium, Dresden and Frankfurt, to 1881; Student, University of Berlin and University of Heidelberg, 1881-4; J.U.D., University of Heidelberg, 1884. Student, Columbia University Law School, 1884-5; practiced law, New York City, 1886-94; Locum tenens Professor of Administrative Law and Municipal Corporations, Columbia University, 1892-3; Instructor in Roman Law and Jurisprudence, University of Chicago, 1894-5; Assistant Professor, ibid., 1895-1900; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1897; Associate Professor of Jurisprudence and Public Law, University of Chicago, 1900-2; Professor of Law, ibid., 1902-. EDWIN BRANT FROST, A.M., Sc.D., Professor of Astrophysics; Director of Yerkes Observatory,

A.B., Dartmouth College, 1886; A.M., ibid., 1889; Sc.D. (hon.), ibid., 1911: Instructor
in Physics and Astronomy in the Scientific Department, Dartmouth College, 1887-90;
University of Strassburg, 1890-1; Volunteer and Assistant in Royal Astrophysical Observ-
atory, Potsdam, 1891-2; Assistant Professor of Astronomy and Director of the Observa-
tory, Dartmouth College, 1892-5; Professor of Astronomy, ibid., 1895-8; Non-Resident
Instructor in Astronomy, ibid., 1898-1902; Professor of Astrophysics, University of Chi-
cago, 1898-; Director of the Yerkes Observatory, ibid., 1905-; Editor of the Astrophysical
Journal; Associate, Royal Astronomical Society; Member, National Academy of
Sciences; Member, American Philosophical Society; Sc.D. (hon.), Cambridge Uni-
versity, 1912.

GEORGE ELLERY HALE, S.B., Sc.D., PH.D., LL.D., Non-Resident Professor of
Astrophysics. Pasadena, Cal.

Harvard College Observatory, 1889-90; S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1890;
Director of the Kenwood Astrophysical Observatory, 1890-6; Lecturer in Astrophysics,
Beloit College, 1893-1904; University of Berlin, 1893-4; Sc.D. (hon.), Western Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania, 1897, Yale University, 1905, Victoria University of Man-
chester, 1907, Oxford University, 1909, University of Cambridge, 1911; Ph.D. (hon.),
University of Berlin, 1910; LL.D., Beloit College, 1904; Foreign Member or Correspondent
of the Royal Society, and of the Academies of Paris, Rome, Vienna, Amsterdam, Upsala,
etc.; Associate Professor of Astrophysics, University of Chicago, 1892-7; Director of the

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Yerkes Observatory, ibid., 1895-1905; Professor of Astrophysics, ibid., 1897-; Joint Editor, Astrophysical Journal; Director of the Solar Observatory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Mt. Wilson, Cal., 1905-.

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

A.B., Harvard University, 1870; Fellow in Philosophy, ibid., 1870-1; Tutor in Latin, ibid., 1874-6; Non-Resident Fellow in Classics (resident in Leipzig and Göttingen) ibid., 1876-7 Tutor in Latin, ibid., 1877-80; Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, Cornell University, 1880-92; Professor and Head of the Department of Latin, University of Chicago, 1892-; Member, Board of Editors, Classical Philology: Associate Editor, Classical Quarterly; Associate Editor, Classical Review; formerly Honorary Editor, American Journal of Archaeology; formerly Joint Editor, Cornell University Studies in Classical Philology; Corresponding Member, German Archaeological Institute of Berlin, Athens, and Rome; President, American Philological Association, 1892-3; LL.D., Union College, 1895; LL.D., Princeton University, 1896; LL.D., St. Andrews University, 1907; LL.D., University of Aberdeen, 1907; Director, American School of Classical Studies in Rome, 1895-6; Chairman, Managing Committee of same, 1895-9; Honorary Member, Cambridge (England) Philological Society, 1907; Vice-President, (English) Classical Association, 1907-; Chairman of the Joint Committee of the National Education Association, the Modern Language Association of America, and the American Philological Association on Grammatical Nomenclature, 1911—.

JAMES PARKER HALL, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law; Dean of the Law School. A.B., Cornell University, 1894; LL.B., Harvard University, 1897; practiced law, Buffalo, N. Y., 1897-1900; Lecturer on Constitutional Law and Real Property, Buffalo Law School, 1898-1900; Associate Professor of Law, Leland Stanford Junior University, 1900-2; Professor of Law, University of Chicago, 1902-; Dean of the Law School, ibid., 1904—; University of Wisconsin Law School, Summer, 1911.

ROBERT FRANCIS HARPER, PH.D., LL.D., Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures.†

A.B., Old University of Chicago, 1883; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1886; Instructor in the Semitic Languages, Yale University, 1887-8, and 1889-91; Assyriologist to the Expedition of the Babylonian Exploration Fund (under the auspices of the University of Pennsylvania), 1888-9; British Museum, 1891-2; Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, 1896; Associate Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures, University of Chicago, 1892-1900; Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures, ibid., 1900-; British Museum, 1901-2; Director of the Oriental Exploration Fund for Babylonia, 1903-; General Director of the Oriental Exploration Fund, 1906-; Director of the American School for Oriental Study and Research in Palestine, 1908-9; Editor, American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures; LL.D., Muskingum College, 1912. LUDVIG HEKTOEN, M.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Pathology. A.B., Luther College, Decorah, Ia., 1883; A.M., ibid., 1896; M.D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago, 1887; Interne, Cook County Hospital, Chicago 1888-9; Student in Prague, Berlin, and Sweden, 1890, 1894-5, 1896, 1897; Lecturer on Pathology, Rush Medical College, 1890-2; Physician to the Coroner's Office, Chicago, 1890-4; Professor of Pathology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1892-4; Professor of Morbid Anatomy, Rush Medical College, 1895-8; M.D., ad eundem, ibid., 1896; Professor of Pathology, ibid., 1898; President of Chicago_Pathological Society, 1898-1902; Pathologist to the Cook County Hospital, 1889-1903; Professor and Head of the Department of Pathology and Bacteriology, University of Chicago, 1901-; Director, Memorial Institute for Infectious Diseases, Chicago, 1902-; President, American Association Pathologists and Bacteriologists, 1901; Editor. Journal of Infectious Diseases, Chicago, 1904-; MiddletonGoldsmith Lecturer, New York Pathological Society, 1906: Vice-President, American Association for Advancement of Science, 1909; Lecturer, Harvey Society, New York, 1910; Foreign Member, Norsk Medicinsk Selskab, 1910; M.D. (Hon.), Royal Frederick University, Christiania, 1911; Herter Lecturer, New York University-Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1912; Sc.D., University of Michigan., 1913.

CHARLES RICHMOND HENDERSON, PH.D., D.D., Professor of Sociology and Head of the Department of Practical Sociology.

A.B., Old University of Chicago, 1870; A.M., ibid., 1873; D.B., Baptist Union Theological Seminary, 1873; Pastor, Terre Haute, Ind., 1873-82, and Detroit, Mich., 1882-92; D.D., Baptist Union Theological Seminary, 1883; Assistant Professor of Sociology, and University Recorder, University of Chicago, 1892-4; University Chaplain, ibid., 1892-; Associate Professor of Sociology, ibid., 1894-7; Professor of Sociology, ibid., 1897-; Head of the Department of Practical Sociology, ibid., 1904-; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1901; Barrows Lecturer to India, 1912-13.

CHARLES JUDSON HERRICK, PH.D., Professor of Neurology.

S.B., University of Cincinnati, 1891; Instructor in Natural Science, Granville Academy, 1891-2; Professor of Natural Sciences, Ottawa University, Kan., 1892-3; Instructor in Biology, Denison University, 1893-6; S.M., ibid., 1895; University Scholar in Biology,

† Deceased.

Columbia University, 1896-7; Assistant Professor of Zoology, Denison University, 1897-8; Professor, ibid., 1898-1907; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1900; Associate in Comparative Neurology, Pathological Institute of the New York State Commission in Lunacy, 1897-1901; Managing Editor, Journal of Comparative Neurology, 1894-; Professor of Neurology, University of Chicago, 1907-; Member, International Commission of Brain Research, 1912.

ROBERT HERRICK, A.B., Professor of English.

A.B., Harvard University, 1890; Instructor in Rhetoric, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1890-3; Instructor in Rhetoric, University of Chicago, 1893-5; Assistant Professor, ibid., 1895-1901; Associate Professor, ibid., 1901-5; Professor of English, ibid., 1905—. EDWARD WILCOX HINTON, LL.B., Professor of Law.

Student, University of Missouri, 1885-8; LL.B., University of Missouri, 1890; LL.B., Columbia University, 1891; practiced law, Columbia, Mo., 1891-1912; Professor of Law, University of Missouri, 1904-13; Dean of Law School, ibid., 1912-13; University of Wisconsin Law School, Summer, 1910; University of Chicago Law School, Spring, 1911, and Winter and Spring, 1913; Professor of Law, ibid., 1913—.

EMIL GUSTAV HIRSCH, A.M., LL.D., LITT.D., D.D., Professor of Rabbinical Literature and Philosophy.

A.B., University of Pennsylvania, 1872; A.M., ibid., 1875; Student, University of Berlin, 1872-6; Alumnus of Hochschule für die Wissenschaft des Judentums, 1872-6; student, Leipzig, 1876; Rabbi, 1877; LL.D., Austin College, 1896; Minister of Har Sinai Congregation, Baltimore, Md., 1877; of Adath-Israel Congregation, Louisville, Ky., 1878; of Sinai Congregation, Chicago, 1880-; Editor of the Zeitgeist, Milwaukee, 1880-7; of the Reformer, New York, 1886; of The Reform Advocate, Chicago; Professor of Rabbinical Literature and Philosophy, University of Chicago, 1892-; Lit.D., Western University of Pennsylvania, 1900; D.D., Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, O., 1901; Turnbull Lecturer, Johns Hopkins University, 1902; Editor, Biblical Department Jewish Encyclopedia; D.C.L., The Temple University of Philadelphia, 1908. THOMAS ATKINSON JENKINS, PH.D., Professor of French Philology.

A.B., Swarthmore College, 1887; Ph.B., University of Pennsylvania, 1888; Fellow by Courtesy, Johns Hopkins University, 1893-4; Ph.D., ibid., 1894; Instructor in Romance Languages, Vanderbilt University, 1895-6; Adjunct Professor, ibid., 1896-1900; Professor of French in Swarthmore College, 1900-1; Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures, University of Chicago, 1901-2; Associate Professor of French Philology, ibid., 1902-11; Professor, ibid., 1911-.

FRANKLIN JOHNSON, D.D., LL.D., Professor of Church History and Homiletics.

Retired.

Graduate, Hamilton Theological Seminary, 1861; Pastor, Michigan and New Jersey, 1864-6; German Universities, 1866-9; D.D., University of Jena, 1869; LL.D., Ottawa University, Kansas, 1898; Pastor, Cambridge, Mass., 1874-88; Athens, Greece, 1888-9; President, Ottawa University, Kansas, 1890-2; Assistant Professor of Church History and Homiletics, University of Chicago, 1892-4; Associate Professor, ibid., 1894-5; Professor, ibid., 1895-1908.

EDWIN OAKES JORDAN, PH.D., Professor of Bacteriology; Chairman of Department of Hygiene and Bacteriology.

S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1888; Chief Assistant Biologist to the Massachusetts State Board of Health, 1888-90; Lecturer on Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1889-90; Fellow in Morphology, Clark University, 1890-2; Ph.D., Clark University, 1892; Associate in Anatomy, University of Chicago, 1892-3; Instructor, ibid., 1893-5; Assistant Professor of Bacteriology, ibid., 1895-1900; Student, Pasteur Institute. Paris, 1896; Associate Professor of Bacteriology, ibid., 1900-7; Editor, Journal of Infectious Diseases, Chicago, 1904-; Chief of Serum Division, Memorial Institute for Infectious Diseases, Chicago, 1905-; Professor of Bacteriology, University of Chicago, 1907-; Chairman of Department of Hygiene and Bacteriology, ibid., 1914—. CHARLES HUBBARD JUDD, PH.D., LL.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Education; Director of the School of Education.

A.B., Wesleyan University, 1894;, Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1896; A.M., Yale University, 1907; LL.D., Miami University, 1909: LL.D., Wesleyan University, 1913; Instructor in Philosophy, Wesleyan University, 1896-8; Professor of Experimental Psychology, New York University, 1898-1901; Professor of Psychology and Education, University of Cincinnati, 1901-2; Instructor in Psychology, Yale University, 1902-4; Assistant Professor, ibid., 1904-7; Professor and Director of the Psychological Laboratory, ibid., 1907-9; Editor, Monograph Supplements of Psychological Review, 1905-9; Member, Council of American Psychological Association, 1907-8; President, American Psychological Association, 1909; Member, Council of American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1909; Member, Executive Committee of American Society of Naturalists, 1909-11; President, National Society of College Teachers of Education, 1910; Member, National Council of Education, 1911-; Trustee, National Society for the Study of Education, 1910-12; Professor and Head of the Department of Education, and Director of the School of Education, University of Chicago, 1909-.

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