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AMY GERALDINE BOWMAN, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,
1236 Market Street, San Francisco.
HARRY GEORGE CHAPPELL, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,
Central Bank Building, Oakland.
ALAMANDER NOBLE COPSEY, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,
21 Powell Street, San Francisco.
ARCHIBALD NATHANIEL DICK, M.D., Member of the Clinical Staff,
Woodland.

RAY EDSON GILSON, B.S., D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

1111 Washington Street, Oakland.

SAMUEL ALLSTON HACKETT, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff, 1168 Washington Street, Oakland.

WILBUR HANFORD HALSEY, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff, 1055 Washington Street, Oakland.

JAMES WILLIAM LIKENS, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

Callaghan Building, San Francisco.

FRED. HARRIS METCALF, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

Eighth and J Streets, Sacramento.

JAMES PALLARD PARKER, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

Santa Cruz.

FRANK LAFAYETTE PLATT, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff, 85 Flood Building, San Francisco.

CHARLES E. PORTER, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

San Francisco.

CHARLES EDGAR POST, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

135 Geary Street, San Francisco.

WILLIAM EDMUND PRICE, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

1104 Market Street, San Francisco.

MAX SICHEL, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

121 Post Street, San Francisco.

BENJAMIN MITCHELL STICH, Member of the Clinical Staff,

1933 Ellis Street, San Francisco.

ALLEN HOLMAN SUGGETT, B.S., D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

Marysville.

WALTER JUDSON TAYLOR, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

Sacramento.

EMORY LORENZO TOWNSEND, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

Los Angeles.

J. B. TUFTS, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

533 Sutter Street, San Francisco.

ARTHUR HARRY WALLACE, D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff,

636 Sutter Street, San Francisco.

CHARLES LOUIS ZIEGLER, Ph.B., D.D.S., Member of the Clinical Staff, 1170 Market Street, San Francisco.

IN THE CALIFORNIA COLLEGE OF PHARMACY.

ROBERT GRAFTON SHOULTS, Ph.G., Assistant in Pharmaceutical Lab

oratory,

Sonoma.

STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE

ACADEMIC SENATE,

1901-02.

1. Academic Council.

2. Graduate Council.

3. Professional Council.

4. Editorial Committee.-Professors BAKEWELL, GAYLEY, LAWSON, SETCHELL, HILGARD, PAGE, WELLS, Drs. WILCZYNSKI, Moore, FERGUSON.

5. Membership. - Professors HILGARD, HESSE, FLAGG, SOULÉ, MERRIAM.

7. *University Extension.-Professors FRYER, BAKEWELL, DRESSlar, SYLE, JAFFA, Drs. LAPSLEY, NOYES.

*This committee is appointed by the President in accordance with a resolution of the Regents of the University.

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 privilegss 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 The Constitution of the State provides for the perpetuation of the University, with all its departments.

sex.

ORGANIZATION.

The organization of the University comprises the following depart ments of instruction:

I. IN BERKELEY.

1. College of Letters.

5. College of Agriculture. 2. College of Social Sciences. 6. College of Mechanics. 3. College of Natural Sciences. 7. College of Mining.

4. College of Commerce.

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. Medical Department.

4. Post-Graduate Medical Department.

5. Dental Department.

6. California College of Pharmacy.

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

HISTORY.

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 College of California, which had been organized several years before the University, transferred its property and students upon terms which were mutually agreed upon, and closed its work of instruction in 1869. It had been incorporated in 1855, and through its agency a part of the Oakland property of the University, and the Berkeley site now owned and occupied by the latter, were secured.

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 15,000 inhabitants, fifty 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 condensed statement of the climatic conditions of Berkeley based on the records of the last fourteen years:

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