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instruments: An eight-inch reflector; a six-inch refractor; a fiveinch refractor; two six-inch portrait lenses with a three-inch guiding telescope, all equatorially mounted with driving clocks; a threeinch Davidson combination transit-and-zenith telescope; a two-inch altazimuth instrument; a spectroscope; a Repsold measuring engine for measuring astronomical photographs; a Gærtner microscope for measuring spectrograms; an electro-chronograph; a Harkness spherometer; a level-trier; sextants; chronometers; a Howard clock; all the necessary electric connections for recording time and determining longitude by the telegraphic method; and a set of meteorological instruments.

The Chemical Laboratories are large and commodious, well lighted and well ventilated, and offer excellent facilities for the study of chemistry. Special rooms are devoted to volumetric analysis, gas analysis, spectrum analysis, and electrolysis. Ample facilities are provided for chemical analysis and for investigations in foods, drinking waters, mineral waters, poisons, etc. A chemical museum, with a large collection of chemical products and apparatus, is open daily for inspection and study.

The Mineralogical and Petrographical Laboratories are provided with a large collection of minerals and rocks and are well equipped with the necessary apparatus for research work in crystallography and petrography.

The Museum of Geology and Mineralogy comprises an extensive suite of minerals and ores illustrating the chief phenomena of crystals, and of economic deposits. There are, besides, many crystallographic models, and relief maps geologically colored. There is a similarly extensive suite of petrological specimens affording an almost complete illustration of the subject of petrology; and many specimens illustrative of the more interesting features of structural geology.

The Rudolph Spreckels Physiological Laboratory. There are laboratory facilities for about fifty students in the east wing of the building. The central part and west wing of the building are reserved for research. The department library contains complete sets of all the important physiological journals, and the more important monographs on physiological and related subjects.

The Laboratories of Agricultural Chemistry, Fertilizer Control, Viticulture, Agricultural Technology, and Cereal Investigations are located in the Agricultural Experiment Station Building, that of

Plant Pathology in the Botany Building, and that of Bacteriology in an adjoining structure.

The Entomological Laboratories are located in a building.

separate

HARMON GYMNASIUM.

The Gymnasium, presented to the University by the late A. K. P. Harmon, is well equipped, and provides all male students with opportunities for physical culture. Besides the main hall and including athletic quarters, there are one hundred and sixty-seven shower-baths, and two thousand steel lockers for the use of the students.

The exercises in the gymnasium are conducted systematically under the supervision of the Professor of Physical Culture.

HEARST HALL.

Hearst Hall was presented to the University by Mrs. Phoebe A. Hearst for a Women's Gymnasium. It contains the very best of modern equipment, with special facilities to overcome deformities or correct physical defects. In a separate building, and connected with the gymnasium, are eighty-nine shower-baths, supplied with hot and cold water, one hundred and seventy-eight dressing rooms, and nine hundred lockers for the exclusive use of women students. The lower hall is used as a general gathering place for the women of the University.

Connected with the gymnasium is a large enclosed court 150 feet long and 80 feet wide, with a seating capacity of one thousand, also the gift of Mrs. Hearst. It is used as an outdoor gymnasium, as well as for basket-ball and other games suitable for women.

FACULTY OF THE SUMMER SESSION.

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

CHARLES HENRY RIEBER, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Logic; Dean of the Summer Session.

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

JOHN ADAMS, M.A., B.Sc., F.C.P., Professor of Education, University of London.

Graduate of the University of Glasgow (First Class Honors in Mental and Moral Science); Headmaster Jean Street School, Port-Glasgow; Rector Grammar School, Campbeltown, Lecturer at and afterwards Principal of Aberdeen F. C. Training School; Lecturer in Education, University of Glasgow; President of the Educational Institute of Scotland, 1896-97; visited Canada on Educational Commission 1902; Principal of London Day Training College; Professor of Education, University of London.

JAMES TURNEY ALLEN, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Greek.

A.B., Pomona College, 1895; M.A., University of California, 1896; Ph.D., Yale University, 1898; student in Germany, Italy, and Greece, 1905-06; Assistant in Greek, University of California, 1896-97; Fellow in Greek, Yale University, 189798; Instructor in Greek, University of California, 1898-1903; Assistant Professor of Greek, 1903-.

JOHN HOVEY ALLEN, B.S., Assistant in Physics.

B.S., University of California, 1906; Assistant in Physics, 1906-.

ADOLPH EDMUND ANDERSON, Reader in English.

EUGENE FRANCIS ALOYSIUS CAREY, B.S., Assistant in Physics.
B.S., University of California, 1905; Assistant in Physics,
1905-.

ALBERT SCOTT CROSSFIELD, Assistant in Chemistry.
LUDWIG JOSEPH DEMETER, M.A., Assistant Professor of 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, 1902-07; Assistant Professor of German, 1907-.

ROBERT DUPOUEY, B.ès L., Assistant Professor of French.

Bachelier ès Lettres, University of Toulouse, 1894; Licencié ès Lettres, University of Paris, 1899; Agrégé ès Lettres, University of France, 1903; Fellow of the French Government at Harvard University, 1903; Lecturer of the Alliance Française in the United States, 1904; Instructor in French, University of California, 1904-06; Assistant Professor of French, 1906-.

HIRAM WHEELER EDWARDS, Assistant in Physics.

NATHANIEL LYON GARDNER, Ph.D., Teacher of Botany, Polytechnic High School, Los Angeles.

B.S., University of Washington, 1900; M.S., University of California, 1903; Ph.D., 1906; Assistant in Botany, University of California, 1900-06; Teacher of Botany, Polytechnic High School, Los Angeles, 1906-.

WESLEY NEWCOMB HOHFELD, A.B., LL.B., Assistant Professor of Law, Leland Stanford Junior University.

A.B., University of California, 1901; LL.B., Harvard University, 1904; Instructor in Law, Hastings College of the Law, University of California, 1905; Instructor, and Assistant Professor of Law, Leland Stanford Junior University, 1905-.

BAYARD HALE JONES, A.B., Reader in English.

A.B., University of California, 1906.

MARY LETITIA JONES, B.L., B.L.S., Director of School of Library Methods.

B.L., University of Nebraska; B.L.S., New York State Library School, 1892; Librarian University of Nebraska, 1892-97; Librarian Los Angeles Public Library, 1900-1905. ARTHUR SCOTT KING, Ph.D., Instructor in Physics.

B.S., University of California, 1899; M.S., 1901; Ph.D., 1903; Assistant in Physics, 1901-03; Whiting Fellow, 190304, University of Bonn; Research Assistant of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1904-05, Universities of Bonn and Berlin; Instructor in Physics, University of California, 1905-. *CHARLES ATWOOD KOFOID, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Histology and Embryology.

*

A.B., Oberlin College, 1890; M.A., Harvard University, 1892; Ph.D., 1894; Teaching Fellow in Biology, Oberlin College, 1890-91; Morgan Fellow, Harvard University, 1893-94; Instructor in Vertebrate Morphology, University of Michigan, 1894-95; Superintendent of Biological Station, University of Illinois, 1895-1901; Assistant Professor of Zoology, 1897-1901; Assistant Professor of Histology and Embryology, University of California, 1901-04; Associate Professor, 1904-. At the San Diego Marine Biological Station, La Jolla.

BERTHA KUMLI, Library Organizer for the California State Library. Librarian, Santa Rosa Public Library.

BENJAMIN PUtnam Kurtz, Ph.D., Instructor in English.

A.B., University of California, 1901; Ph.D., 1906.

DERRICK NORMAN LEHMER, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathematics.

A.B., University of Nebraska, 1893; M.A., 1896; graduate student Johns Hopkins University, 1894-95; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1900; Fellow in Mathematics, University of Nebraska, 1895-97; Headmaster Worthington Military Academy, 1897-98; Fellow in Mathematics, University of Chicago, 1898-1900; Instructor in Mathematics, University of California, 1900-04; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 1904-; Research Assistant, Carnegie Institution, 1904-05; 1906-. EXUM PERCIVAL LEWIS, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physics.

B.S., Columbian University, 1888; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1895; Instructor in Physics, University of California, 1895-96; Assistant Professor, 1896-1903; Associate Professor, 1903-; Whiting Fellow of the University of California, University of Berlin, 1898-1900; member Physical Society of America.

SIMON LITMAN, Dr. Jur. Pub. & Rer. Cam., Instructor in Commercial Practice.

A.B., Odessa Commercial College, 1892; Graduate Ecole des Sciences Politiques, Paris, 1899; Student, University of Munich, 1899-1900; Dr. Jur. Pub. & Rer. Cam., University of Zürich, 1901; Lecturer, Ecole Russe des Hautes Etudes Sociales, Paris, 1902; Instructor in Commercial Practice, University of California, 1903-.

CARL HOWARD MCCHARLES, Assistant in Chemistry.

WILLIAM JOHNSTON MCCOY, Special Lecturer in Music.

Student of piano with Creswick and Reinecke; of Theory and Composition with Reinecke, Hauptmann and Sellenick; of Orchestration with Sellenick; composer of orchestral and choral works, and of the music-drama, The Hamadryads. WILLIAM MACDONALD, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of History, Brown University.

A.B., Harvard University, 1892; Ph.D. (Hon.) Union College, 1895; LL.D., University of New Brunswick, 1900; Professor of History and Political Science, Bowdoin College, 1893-1901; Professor of History, Brown University, 1901-; Member of American Historical Association, American Antiquarian Society, Rhode Island, Maine, and Kansas State Historical Societies.

THOMAS A. MCGLYNN, Head of the Art and Manual Training Departments of the Columbia Park Boys' Club of San Francisco.

Graduate of the California School of Design.

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