THEUniversity RecordOFTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPOUNDED BY JOHN D. ROCKEFELLERVol. VIII NOVEMBER, 1903 No. 7CONTENTSMain Entrance to the School of Education (frontispiece)The Architecture of the School of Education Building, by James GambleRogers, Architect -- 183-186The School of Education, Midway Frontage (full-page illustration) - - 186Gaston Paris: The Scholar and the Man, by T. Atkinson Jenkins - - 186-194A Fac-simile of the Irade Issued by the Turkish Government (full-page illustration) -------- ig§The Oriental Exploration Fund of the University of Chicago, by Ira MauricePrice - - _.._.. 195-197The Visit of the Mosely Educational Commission from Great Britain - - 197-198The Meeting at the University of the National Academy of Sciences- - 198-199The Laying of the Corner-Stone of the Chicago Manual Training School - 199-200The International Guild, Paris - 200The Seventeenth Conference of Affiliating Academies and High Schools - 200-201A Great Football Mass Meeting in Leon Mandel Hall ----- 201-202Election of Officers for the Reynolds Club ------- 202A Special Meeting of the University Congregation - 202The Faculties ------------ 202-205Recent Publications and Addresses by Members of the Faculties - - - 206-213The University Address List, 1903-1904 --..-.- 214-220The University Telephone Directory -------- 220-221PUBLISHED MONTHLY BYZhe WnivexBity of CbicagoANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION SINGLE COPIESONE DOLLAR ENTERED AT CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER TEN CENTSfl '}\if. ¦:*It ji illtSr¦¦¦¦¦tfiMAIN ENTRANCE TO THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION, MIDWAY FRONTAGEVOLUME VIII NUMBER 7University RecordNOVEMBER, 1903THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION BUILDING.BY JAMES GAMBLE ROGERS, ARCHITECT.Since that ideal of the architect's dream, theperfect building, would be the best disposal ofthe most economical materials suitable for therequirements of the structure, it is of prime importance to ascertain the requirements and toproportion them to their relative values; forunless the premises are correct, it is hardly possible, even with the most logical mind, to arriveat the correct conclusion.The skill of the architect is almost as forciblyshown in determining what are these premises,the requirements of the problem, as in thatgreatest test of his ability, reaching the bestsolution of the problem — the solution that answers best all the requirements according totheir relative importance.It is just as necessary to determine the relative importance as to determine the requirements themselves; for it is obvious that therecould be a plan which solved perfectly most ofthe requirements, and at the same time be afailure if the most important requirement wasnot properly related. One of the great old English landscape gardeners said : " I cannot undertake architectural work, for though I knowI can make a good room, or two good rooms, Ido not know how properly to relate severalrooms — that is architecture/'In making the plans — I say "plans," becausethe best plan is capable of giving the best elevation, and the plan carries with it all the elements of true architecture — in making the plan thefirst duty of the architect is to learn the requirements and their relative importance. Theserequirements may be divided, for the sake ofexplanation, into local requirements, generallyeasy to determine because they are direct anddefinite, though sometimes requiring keen judgment; and inherent requirements, arising fromthe particular kind of building and from theindividual use of such building.In the case of the School of Education building, forming part of the Elementary Quadrangle, the local requirements, aside frqm thelevel piece of ground situated on a magnificentthoroughfare, were given by the Universityauthorities. They were that the building, fortunately, be absolutely fireproof, that the roofbe of red tile, that the exterior be of Bedfordstone, and that the style of architecture harmonize with that of the other buildings on the University campus.Of the inherent requirements, those relatingto the individual uses of the building, such assize, number and location of rooms, were giveiiafter several consultations on the part of thearchitect with the head of this group of buildings and his able assistants. This would leavefor the architect to advise the character of thebuilding, the circulation, natural light, and thematerial questions of heating, lighting and ventilation, and practical school designing and construction.183184 UNIVERSITY RECORDThe character of the building should be ofthe first consideration, for in that charming stateof architectural perfection it should be possibleto ascertain simply by a glance at the buildingwhat are its uses. A home should look like ahome, a city hall should differ from a post-office,an engine house should not possibly be mistaken for a church, a seat of learning should bedistinguished from a factory or a restaurant.Moreover, in expressing its character, a buildingmust express the spirit of the times and theplace in which it is built.It doubtless will be agreed that a schoolshould have dignity, repose, grace and learning,and with all its dignity and repose, should at thesame time be cheerful and attractive and have awell defined retired character. Certainly suchqualities would be in especial harmony with theadvanced method of teaching advocated by thisvery school. The ornament should be studiedand graceful and not in quantities that mightsavor of the thoughtless and capricious.It must be considered that this group of buildings is an institution of importance in itself, isa part of a magnificent institution, and is amemorial. Hence it is consistent that it be justas monumental as possible without departingfrom its own simple character.By " circulation " is meant the means of passage, such as halls, corridors, stairways, etc.The number of attendants in the institutiondemands that the circulation be so well considered that a large number of persons maywithout friction enter or leave the building, orgo from one room to another, and have easyaccess to the stairs, which should be sufficientin number and well distributed.In the construction of a school building toomuch emphasis cannot be placed on the naturallighting, not only of the rooms, but also of thehalls and stairways, both for cheerfulness andfor hygienic reasons. The amount of lightnecessary for a school varies with different authorities, but it is sufficient to say that, thoughthe light sometimes comes from a wrong angle,there is never too much light in a school room.Cheerfulness demands that the halls be lightedmore than is barely sufficient for vision; forwhat could be more depressing than alwayspassing through a gloomy corridor before entering a class room — no matter how cheerful theroom may be — and then nullifying the effect ofa good class room by repassing the gloom onleaving the room ?Such questions as the proportion of classrooms, the heights of blackboards, the lockersfor teachers and pupils, the electric lighting,ventilation, heating and construction, are technical questions that would prove uninterestingin detailed discussion ; but a word in regard tothe ventilation system and the construction ofthe building might be of interest.The heating and ventilating is a combinedsystem, the plenum system, and is the most approved to date of the various systems of forcedventilation. Under this system fresh air isbrought in from the outside by immense fans ineach end of the building and forced into eachroom. It is so arranged that the air in enteringthe building be, if the rigors of the climatedemand, passed through staggered coils of radiators and heated, thus insuring at all timesas even a temperature in the rooms as mechanical apparatus can make it. The foul airpasses off near the floor line by a separate fluefor each room, up through the roof of the building. In the corridors, where there is no concentration of persons for a long period of time,there are placed radiators under the windowsand a smaller proportion of ventilating ductsthan for the same area in the class-rooms.The construction of this building we can sayis as absolutely fireproof as modern art canmake it, and is more nearly fireproof than thatdevelopment of the last century, the fireproofoffice building. Around the windows there isUNIVERSITY RECORD 185almost no woodwork whatever, only a thinmolding in place of the heavy trim usuallyfound in buildings. What can be a better security against fires than the corridors with thefloors of cement, the walls of brick, and eventhe window sills of stone, and at each of thefour corners of these rectangular corridors aniron and slate stairway giving immediate egressfrom the building?One quite noteworthy feature in the planof this building is the concrete floor construction. A cement slab twenty-five by eighty-eightfeet is an immense piece of cement. There arein the School of Education Building twelve suchslabs. As there were many comments at thetime of the construction of this work concerningits security, it may be reassuring to know thatthese slabs were tested in a practical mannerand their stability confirmed.The method of the test was to fill a roomfull of bricks. This is, of course, a much greaterweight than the floors would ever be subjectedto, and is of itself sufficiently reassuring. Butas the floors showed no effects whatever fromthe test, two iron beams were placed in themiddle of the span of the room, and on thesethe whole load of the room full of bricks wasconcentrated. Not only was there no breakagebut there was no appreciable deflection of thefloor.By actual calculation of engineers, this floorwithstood a live load of over six hundredpounds. This means that these floors are probably five times as strong as the floors in ourimmense office buildings, which is sufficientassurance of their safety.Of the requirements enumerated above, onecan see the architect's solution in the School ofEducation Building. To understand the solution better, it is necessary to know that this isone of a group of buildings which will eventually complete a symmetrical interior court, thebeginning of which is already partially shown by the form of the present building. When thisis completed, the grounds and walks laid out,the vines grown on the walls, and the variousclass numerals or memorials carved on theraised circles of stone left for that purpose inthe spaces between the first story windows,there will be a retreat, withdrawn from thenoise and publicity of the streets, but visible inall its dignity from the corridors which willsurround it. On the east, and on the west, sideof this court is a lower building. This not onlytends to relieve the monotony of what wouldotherwise be a lack of composition, but it alsoserves the practical use of allowing the prevailing western breezes to enter this interior courtand prevent its becoming stuffy.This arrangement of an interior court surrounded by corridors, with the future Gymnasium and Assembly Hall on the north side, permits the development of a charming interiorcourt, which by its beauty will be a source ofpleasure and inspiration to all who pass throughthe perfectly lighted corridors; and it givesthat which probably no school of its size in theworld can be favored with — namely, sunlightin every class room at some time of the day.In determining on the method of meeting theprincipal requirement of the building — namely,the "character" — there was a long consideration of which "parti"* to adopt. Withoutquestion, the easiest way to secure that muchdesired character would be to make a series orgroup of separate buildings ; for how charmingwould it be, for instance, if the kindergartenhad a separate building of its own, with its atmosphere of little children ; to have the library insome more prominent central building, etc., etc.After due consideration, this principle wasabandoned because of the lack of ground at thattime to develop such a scheme properly; because of the additional expense of building a* " Parti " is a French term meaning general schemeor method of grouping the various parts of the building.186 UNIVERSITY RECORDseries of separate buildings with the connectingcorridors which would be necessary in our climate; and because in the operation of thisinstitution, it would be an unnecessary hardshipfor anyone going from the third floor of onebuilding to the third floor of another, to be compelled to go down to the main floor, to passthrough a connecting corridor, and then up thestairs to the third floor again.So the " parti " of a monumental building wasdetermined on, with enough of movement in theroof line to prevent too great severity in itsappearance. Therefore, the plan was made tohave one central feature marking the mainentrance — for surely there should be not evena momentary doubt in any mind where theentrance of a building is ¦ — and then to combinethe various divisions in one symmetrical building, which would be simpler and more economical.The large amount of light necessary for classrooms demands a great amount of fenestrationwith a small proportion of wall space — -a wallspace so desirable for appearance, and one whichiti the buildings of centuries ago added sucharchitectural charm. Then the conditions weredifferent. Not only did fewer people read atthat time, but there was such a tax on windowsthat they were made to the smallest limit of thefew necessities of the time, regardless of thesanitary benefits of light.To relieve the tendency that so many windows might have toward the appearance of afactory, it was decided to group the windows ina motive that could be carried around the building, and by the repetition of a pleasing featuregive that dignity and repose which the buildingshould have.If that eminent architect, Gamier, who madean opera house that has given the chief impetusin the construction of all the continental operahouses since that time, can criticise his own production, surely it is fair to say that every building has its faults, and its architect can see them. In this building the more prominent defectsare the objectionable skylights in the roof, theirregularity of certain small rooms, and theunfortuiiate colors on the walls of some of therooms.The unpleasant effect of the numerous skylights breaking the roof surfaces was necessitated by economy ; for the roof space had to beutilized for room purposes and light placed init, when the roof in this style of architectureshould have been left with only a few simpledormers.It is pleasant to think that the irregular littlerooms are only for a temporary use and may begiven their proper proportions when the otherbuildings of this group are erected and the excessive demand on the present parts somewhatrelieved.The unfortunate colors in some of the roomsare the result of temporary conditions, anddemonstrate that an ordinary contract painterhas not the ability to mix the colors and to dothe work that should be done by a decorator.The proportion of the windows, the bandcourses, the relation of the moldings, and thegeneral composition, are questions of architectural inspiration and technique that would demand a development beyond the limits of thepresent article.GASTON PARIS: THE SCHOLAR AND THE MAN.*BY ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR T. ATKINSON JENKINS,Department of Romance Languages and Literatures.It is eminently fitting that the Romance Department in some public way should give evidence of its indebtedness to the great scholarwhose useful life has recently closed and whosedeath — so pervading and powerful was his influence — came to us all as a personal loss. M.Brunetiere has well said: "In every countrywhere there is a chair of Romance languages,in Italy as well as in Germany, in Holland, in1A paper read at a regular meeting of the RomanceGlub of the University of Chicago.UNIVERSITY RECORD 187Denmark, in Sweden, in Russia, in the new universities of the United States, .... at Baltimore, and at Chicago, it is a pupil of GastonParis who occupies that chair, or a pupil of oneof his pupils; and all of these, it may almostbe said, take less pride, in their own works thanin the fact that they have been his pupils." Wegladly accept this statement as essentially true,and as including those of us who have not hadthe privilege of conversing with Gaston Parisdi bocca a bocca. We know that we are in somemeasure honoring ourselves when we give expression to our admiration of the scholar and ofthe man, to our profound respect for the qualities of mind and of heart that made him great.2Gaston-Bruno-Paulin Paris was born at Ave-nay, a town at no great distance from Reims,August 9, 1839. The family was native toChampagne, but the father, Paulin Paris, hadalready established himself at the capital. Bythe time the boy had completed his etudesclassiques at the College Rollin, his father hadbeen for three years occupant of the uniquechair at the College de France devoted to theFrench literature of the Middle Ages — a fieldin which for many years he was the most activepioneer in France. This preoccupation on thepart of the father with the history of French2 Mention is here made of the chief sources ofinformation for this paper. In the Grande Encyclopediethere will be found a succinct sketch by M. Jeanroy,exceedingly moderate in tone, as perhaps befitted anaccount of a scholar then living. It is said that GastonParis preferred this sketch to any other that had beenprinted during his lifetime. His election to the Acade-mie frangaise in 1896 was the immediate occasion fortwo other sketches, more general in character, the firstby M. Antoine Thomas, published originally in theRevue encyclopedique Larousse, and later in the author'sEssais de philologie frangaise; the second, by anotherpupil, Professor H. A. Todd, of Columbia University,in the twelfth volume of the Publications of the ModernLanguage Association of America. To these sketchesmay be added a few of the many notices, of greater orless fullness and value, which have appeared in the publicpress since March 5, 1903, the date of Paris's death. medievalism was a powerful influence in thelife of the son, who always loyally namedPaulin Paris as one of the two teachers to whomhe owed the most.The year 1853 had been a memorable one inthe history of Romance studies: in that year•the chair at the College de France first occupiedby Paulin Paris was founded, and in the sameyear Friedrich Diez had published his Etymological Dictionary of the Romance Languages — a work which Littre and a few othersin France greeted with praise. Three yearslater, at the age of seventeen, Gaston Paris setout for Bonn to study with the author of theGrammar and the Etymological Dictionary.Speaking in later years of his reception at Bonn,Gaston Paris said :J'eprouve une emotion attendrie quand je repense ason extreme bienveillance pour l'ecolier inconnu qui etaitun beau jour arrive de Paris, a la bonte qui eclairait sonvisage quand ses yeux incertains m'avaient enfin reconnudans le demi-jour de son paisible cabinet, aux promenadesqu'il me permettait de faire a ses cotes, repondant (enfrancais malgre l'effort qu'il lui fallait faire) a mesquestions souvent bien peu reflechies, aux encouragements si chaleureux qu'il donna bientot a mes premiersessais.A year at Gottingen and the three followingyears at the ficole des Chartes bring us back tothe influence of the founder of Romance philology ; for his " These de sortie," the Etude surle role de r accent latin, is dedicated to " Monsieur Frederic Diez, Professeur ordinaire aTuniversite de Bonn et Correspondant de l'Aca-demie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres." Fromthe. columns of the lahrbuch Diez replied:"Diese Arbeit macht der neuen Schule Ehre"— weighty words of quiet praise based, as allknew, upon impartial examination and ripejudgment.In America the young author of a successfuldissertation such as this in all probability wouldbe called immediately to some small inland institution, where his best hours would be absorbed188 UNIVERSITY RECORDin elementary instruction — a discipline not, ofcourse, to be underrated, but not the servicefor which long years of preparation have bestfitted him, and where, unless his enthusiasm isreal and vigorous, he is likely to lose the wideroutlook and to become a professional indifferent.In France, in 1862, there was no chair to aspireto, with the single exception of that held byPaulin Paris at the College de France ; the subject of Romance philology was not taught; thedemand must be created.Gaston Paris again set to work, and the nextyear appeared the Introduction a la grammairedes langues romanes {de Diez], traduite deVallemand. The preface contains a fine tributeto the originality and the solidity of Diez'sscholarship, together with a sympathetic sketchof his life. It is true that, recently, M. Brune-tiere has hinted broadly that it was only thewell-known modesty of Gaston Paris which ledhim to give Diez so much credit for inspiringand giving direction and value to his pupil'sprofessional efforts. "For," says M. Brune-tiere, " it is really Gaston Paris whom time willshow to be the true agent in the revival ofRomance studies — I am tempted to say, in thecreation of Romance studies." It is difficult, ofcourse, to hold the balance of judgment in sodelicate a matter as this ; I am inclined to think,however, that M. Brunetiere's legitimate pridein the achievements of his fellow-countrymanhas here led him into a slight exaggeration. Atany rate, it is true that in later life Gaston Parisstill spoke of Diez in terms of the warmestadmiration, not merely for his personal qualities,but expressly for his scientific method. At theDiez centenary, in 1894, he used these words:It was Diez who wrote for us the Grammar of theNeo-Latin Languages, and in spite of our intense andextremely specialized studies which he was the first topursue, his book, so simply arranged, so luminouslyclear, so wide and sure in its knowledge, is still todaythe basis of the labors of his disciples. The third volume especially, treating of syntax, is ample proof thatthis German, who had hardly ever set foot on Romance territory and who spoke with ease none of the Romancetongues, had a marvelous insight into the genius ofthese languages and a power of attention whose strengthwas not impaired and whose penetration was not dulledby the enormous labor imposed upon it.And he adds :It would be no exaggeration to say that Frederick Diezcould hear the grass grow.I cannot refrain from adding some evidencethat in another way, also, Gaston Paris wasmuch indebted to Diez — a debt which he himself was the first to acknowledge. In 1862 hewrote :I desire to call attention to the completely disinterestedattitude which Diez adopts in all matters pertaining toscience. Last year I was examining a point upon whichI was forced to disagree with his Grammar; I wrote himfor his opinion, and received this reply : " My dearfriend, this is my advice: If you discover mistakes inmy work, say so without hesitation, and I shall begrateful to you. We all make mistakes, and old peopleare especially liable to the error of clinging to an ideato which they have become accustomed. Youth is moreactive and freer; it often finds what we seek for invain."The general indifference and even hostilitywith which the new Romance studies were regarded in France thirty years ago would havedisheartened many men; Romance philology,if it was thought of at all, was regarded as akind of pedantic tail-piece to the romantic literary cult for the Middle Ages. There was alsoa repugnance to the application of scientificmethods to the French language. "What!"exclaimed Genin, "would you study French asyou study Sanskrit or the language of Persep-olis?" There was a particular lack of sympathy with any application of scientific methodto French literature, even to that of the remotepast, and these facts Gaston Paris deplores in thepreface quoted above. After praising Diez's unvarying practice — never to yield to the temptation to express ideas or views which, attractivethough they might be, were nevertheless onlyprobabilities, and not certainties — the youngscholar adds :UNIVERSITY MEOOBD 189II serait difficile peut-etre de s'y conformer en France,ou l'attrait des vues d'ensemble, des considerations bril-lantes, des decouvertes nouvelles se joint au souci constant de la forme et du public pour entrainer l'ecrivainhors du cercle etroit de la science, et ou nous sommestentes d'accorder a un paradoxe ingenieux, habilementsoutenu, la preference sur une seche verite exposeesimplement.While at the ficole des Chartes, Gaston Parishad for fellow-student M. Paul Meyer, and forteacher Francis Guessard. The latter, according to M. Thomas, was a kind of epicurean inphilology, not too ambitious professionally afterhe had once been admitted to the Institute. Hisinstruction at times took on the form of anamiable causerie; but it is thoroughly characteristic of the generous and courteous spirit ofGaston Paris that he thus speaks of Guessardin the preface to his dissertation:Les conseils et les observations de M. Guessard ....ont apporte a cet essai des modifications de forme et defond dont la valeur etre appreciee par tous ceux quiconnaissent son erudition profonde et sure, la finesse deson esprit et la nettete de ses vues . . . . je tiens a. luien exprimer ici toute ma reconnaissance.After leaving the ficole des Chartes with thetitle of archiviste paleographe, Gaston Paris'snext plan was to fortify himself with the degreeof docteur es lettres. To this end he presentedto the Paris Faculty of Letters, three years later,the Histoire poetique de Charlemagne (1865).It was in this work that the author, after anattentive study of the existing epics recountingthe life of Charlemagne, not only affirmed theformer existence of a poem devoted to the youthof the emperor, but also gave in detail an analysis of the content of this lost poem. In 1874,nine years later, fragments of this chanson degeste (Mainet) were discovered, and it wasfound that there was nothing of importance tochange in the analysis given in the Histoirepoetique de Charlemagne. There is, perhaps,nothing mysterious in all this; it is simply aninstance, more than usually striking, of whatmay be accomplished when hard work, good method, and complete materials are united withenthusiasm and common sense.The dissertation attracted immediate attention; even the Revue des deux mondes published a favorable review, and the next year theyoung doctor was authorized by Victor Duruy,the liberal minister of public education, to opena " cours libre " on Romance philology (that is,a course at the professor's risk, the state assuming no responsibility as to his compensation).A friend of Gaston Paris tells us that this permission of M. Duruy seemed at the time onefull of dangers, for it was a very great questionas to whether there would be any students.Even if pupils were not wanting, another seriousdifficulty presented itself. Several good-inten-tioned friends advised the young man not toattempt at once to dispense with all examinations and with all direct appeal to the generalpublic. Gaston Paris chose the more difficultpath, and this decision, he recorded in lateryears, cost him some painful hours, besieged ashe was with doubt lest he should have chosen aroad which would deprive him of indispensablesupport. However, there came not only listeners, but also disciples, and two years later(1868), when the ficole des Hautes fitudes wasfounded, he was given the position of repetiteur,and, soon after, that of directeur des conferencesin the section of Romance philology. Says M.Monod, the present president of the historicaland philological section:Aucun des enseignements de notre ecole n'a ete . . . .plus fecond, plus remarquable que celui de Gaston Paris.Once thus established in a worthy manner,the career of Gaston Paris had fairly begun, in1866. His subsequent professional life is littleelse than a series of honors won, of serious andresponsible duties assumed and well performed.In 1868-69 he acted as substitute for hisfather in the chair of the College de France, andin 1872, on the retirement of Paulin Paris, theson was appointed permanently. The fatherlived until 1880; on December 8, 1881, in his190 UNIVERSITY RECORDopening lecture, Gaston Paris paid a remarkable tribute to the services rendered to Romancestudies in France by Paulin Paris. The lectureis worth rereading (it will be found in theeleventh volume of Romania), for it contains asketch of the early development of Romancephilology in France; it is also remarkable forthe sobriety and perfect taste with which a delicate subject is treated. While giving the fullestcredit to his father's enthusiasm, activity, andsincerity, he makes no effort to cover up hisparent's weak points, nor to exaggerate thevalue of his publications. Paulin Paris — it isGaston Paris who is speaking — was essentiallyan homme eclair e of the eighteenth century ; hehad little idea of method, being largely self-instructed ; the expressions bevue, grosse faute,meprise inexcusable cost him little when he wasapologizing for his mistakes ; but with all this,one need not minimize the value of the servicesrendered by his sixteen years at the College deFrance, and by his long list of publications.Gaston Paris, it appears, adopts the same wiseand moderate attitude as that taken by anothergreat scholar, Henry Morley, who has observed :As experience and responsibility gather upon us, andwe learn how hard in every line is even moderate skill,the wise are perhaps content to find what a man can do,without making it a reproach to him what he cannot do.The fruit of the early years at the ficole desHautes fitudes was the publication, in 1872, ofthe critical text of the Vie de Saint-Alexis — awork in the domain of pure philology as clear,penetrating, and solid as the Histoire poetiquede Charlemagne had been in the field of literature. An eminent professor of my acquaintance is fond of referring to the year 1872 as" the year One," carried away perhaps by somesuch enthusiasm as animated the founders ofthe French republic in the days of Brumaireand Thermidor. The French public in generalwas not called upon to judge this work; nodoubt many saw in it a case of criticism gonemad. But if the author was hypercritical, this fault did not weigh for much with the Academiedes Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, for this bodybestowed upon the author the Prix Gobert ; anda few years later, in 1876, Gaston Paris waselected a member of this section of the Institute. Thus it happened that father and son hadthe pleasure of sitting together in this eminentbody for four years.If the year 1872 may not be called " the yearOne of French philology" without some exaggeration, it was surely a noteworthy year inthe life of Gaston Paris. We have seen thathe was made incumbent of the chair of mediaevalFrench language and literature at the Collegede France in that year ; that then also appearedthe Vie de Saint Alexis; further, it was at thistime — or a little before this — that the journalRomania was launched. Permit me to reviewsome of the matters touched upon in the memorable prospectus of this important journal ; theywill serve to illustrate the admirable breadth ofmind, the sincere patriotism, and the deep faithin the value of a disinterested pursuit of truthwhich characterized Gaston Paris and his colleague, M. Paul Meyer. The prospectus explains :But for the war we should have announced ourjournal sooner. But the national disaster ought only tospur us on to greater efforts; our work is not onlyscientific, it is also distinctly national; the general indifference to our national past has been one of thecauses of our national weakness; the remedy that wepropose to apply is to assert anew the profound truth ofthe ancient saying, " Know thyself ! "From the scientific side — and foreigners maybe excused if they regard Romania chiefly onthis side — the undertaking was one of thegreatest importance; for it was nothing lessthan an endeavor to assemble the materialswhich should make it possible to write an important chapter in the intellectual history of themodern world. At the time Romania beganpublication, there were only two journals inthe field: the Jahrbuch fiir romanische undenglische hiteratur, then edited by Lemcke andUNIVERSITY RECORD 191destined to cease publication in 1876, and theRevue des langues romanes. The latter journal,then in its third year, had been in existence longenough to show that its chief activities wouldbe in the field of old and modern Provengal, andthat the dilettante spirit was not rigidly excluded from its columns.In the first volume of Romania Gaston Parissigned twenty-one articles and reviews; M.Paul Meyer, his associate, was the author ofthirteen. Twenty years later, in a brief retrospect, the two editors state that in these firsttwenty volumes they have occupied fully onequarter of the total space. They confess thatthis labor, congenial as it usually was, had absorbed their best hours. Bu we may add thatthe results show that the time had been wellspent. In 1872 Germany was ahead of Franceboth in the attention given to Romance philology in the universities and in the number andimportance of works issued; moreover, thelabors of Raynouard, Paulin Paris, Littre, andother French savants had had little influence onthe French public, and none at all upon theofficial programs of studies in secondary schools.In 1892 Paris had become a center of Romancestudies second to no other; and the time wasnot far ahead when the Conseil superieur destruction publique was to open the secondaryschool to the study of mediaeval French life andliterature. In 1892 the editors might view, withsome alarm perhaps, a rising flood of books,periodicals, brochures, and dissertations, threatening to make the labor of sifting and weighingthem — a work which could not be handed over1o the first comer — one which might exceedhuman powers.In speaking of the first two decades ofRomania we have anticipated a little. In 1885Gaston Paris had been made president of thesection of the ficole des Hautes fitudes whichconcerns itself with philology and history. Thisresponsible position he held for ten years, whenhe succeeded Gaston Boissier (who had been made permanent secretary of the French Academy) in the position of administrator of theCollege de France. One of his colleagues inthis institution said recently:For seven years harmony has reigned among us, wehave enriched our curriculum, and we have learned toappreciate the high motives which actuated our director.The following year was to exhibit GastonParis in a new role — that of the Academician.His election in May, 1896, may have been a surprise to many; to those well acquainted withthe literary charm of even his technical articlesit was rather a matter of wonderment that hehad not been received sooner. In the veryappreciative address of M. Brunetiere at theobsequies, we may catch some interestingglimpses of the philologist engaged with hisfellow-Immortals in the time-honored task ofthe revision of the Academy dictionary. SaysM. Brunetiere:It is true that philology proper is not indispensable inthe preparation of a dictionary which is expressly adictionary of present usage; but Gaston Paris was morethan a grammarian and philologist; he knew the Frenchlanguage as its historian, but he also felt it and loved it.And so he never tried to convert the Academy to hisown somewhat radical ideas on the subject of a reformin the orthography. In the debates on the dictionaryhe showed himself to be a man of today: the MiddleAges were not intruded. He taught us all somethingwhenever he contradicted us. His courtesy was perfect,with a shade of irony. And when a vote had to betaken, and his opinion did not prevail, it was with usmerely a question as to which to admire most — theimmense range of his knowledge or the graceful easewith which he handled it Gaston Paris was athorough gentleman, a man of the world, and, besides,a man of chastened imagination and of delicate taste.Where, I may add, shall we find a piece ofliterary criticism more sure, penetrating, anddelicate than the study of Francois Villon in theseries "Les grands ecrivains francais" — aseries, by the way, planned originally by Gaston Paris together with the present distinguishedambassador of France to the United States?Where shall we look for more just and sympathetic studies than those of Frederic Mistral,192 UNIVERSITY RECORDErnest Renan, Albert Sorel, Alexandre Bida,Charles Thurot, Sully-Prudhomme ? Could thegeneral public ask for more charmingly writtenessays than those which compose the two volumes, Poemes et legendes du moyen age, inwhich the author ranges from the Nibelungen-lied to Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, and fromJohn of Damascus in the seventh century toVictor Hugo's Orientates in the nineteenth?The pearl of this collection, the study of thelegend of Tristan and Iseult, written for theRevue de Paris, is remarkable for its high literary finish ; it is still more remarkable, at leastto my mind, in that one may seek in vain in thisessay for any phrase which oversteps the sobertruth, any statement which will not stand themost searching light that can be brought to bearupon it in the present state of our knowledge.I come now to a more difficult part of my task— an estimate of those qualities which are notusually classed as professional. It would seemthat two traits were dominant in the characterof Gaston Paris — his generous disposition andhis devotion to duty. Of both of these it wouldbe easy to speak at length; both are pleasingtopics. From his never-failing good-will flowed,no doubt, one of the most powerful of his influences. In the first lecture given in the hall inthe Rue Gerson, in 1866, Gaston Paris said:The desire of every professor worthy of the name foreach of his pupils is the desire of Hector for his son:" Then may men say of him : ' Far greater is he thanhis father.' "As a consequence, the devotion of his pupilswas boundless; witness the volume of studiesdedicated to his memory and presented to himon his fiftieth birthday, in 1889, by his Swedishstudents ; witness the Etudes romanes dediees aGaston Paris, written by some forty-five othersof his pupils, thirty-eight French, six Swiss, andone Belgian. Seeking for a fitting anniversaryon which to offer this collection, the Frenchpupils chose — and there were many to choose from — the twenty-fifth anniversary (1890) oftheir master's doctorate in letters.The same large-minded tolerance was showntoward his fellow-professionals, of whatevernationality. Examine the thirty volumes of Romania, and you will not find a word of his criticism that is not courteous in spirit. Searchingand unsparing it generally is, but harsh, never.His friend and colleague, M. fimile Levasseur— a teacher and man of much the same generous mold — explains the fact thus :It was because Gaston Paris never wished to discourage those who were trying to walk in the same roadas he. On the contrary, he lent them a helping hand. Hewas always accessible to others, even to the point ofbeing prodigal with his time, and he easily establishednatural and frank relations with young people as soon asthey showed themselves to be in earnest as students..... Only those who have known him intimately areaware how completely this kindly feeling, coupled withentire devotion to professional duties, ruled his dailyconduct.Gaston Paris had the enthusiasm which belongs to the specialist. His marvelous industry,aided by a memory of exceptional power, enabled him to stand at the head of his profession.But he maintained himself there, it should notbe forgotten, by a scrupulous attention to duties,large and small. M. Paul Meyer tells us :In the numerous committees which consume the majorpart of our time he allowed himself to be loaded withthe heaviest part of the work. If it were necessary toexamine some proposition, to draw up a report, to makean address, he was always ready. He would never haveaccepted a position which he did not believe himselfable to fill conscientiously Among his numerouscommittees, the one upon which his co-operation wasthe most effective and prolonged was that having incharge the direction of the Histoire litteraire de la France.He was made an assistant member of this committeesoon after his election to the Academie des Inscriptions(1876) ; he replaced his father as a full member in 1881.During the twenty-five years that he worked at the common task he accomplished more than his share: hismemoirs on the Romans de la table ronde in the thirtiethvolume, and on Joinville in the thirty-second volume, arein reality books, either of which would be enough tomake a scholar famous.UNIVERSITY RECORD 193About a year ago the small subsidy whichfor more than two centuries had been donatedby the state to the support of the oldest ofFrench learned reviews, the lournal des savants,was withdrawn. In this juncture the Institute,rather than see the venerable journal discontinued, voted to assume the expense of publication. Note that at this moment, when his healthwas beginning to fail in an unmistakable way,Gaston Paris chose to assume the heavy burdenof the directorship — an act which later calledforth this significant comment from M. Brunetiere :Intellectual workers have also their heroism, and thedeath of Gaston Paris is an eloquent proof of the fact.He succumbed under the task which I am confident heknew was beyond his strength, but one which his conscience would not allow him to refuse.Let us now attempt at least a resume of theprofessional labors referred to in the foregoing :nine years of preparation for the responsibleduties of university instruction; twenty-twoyears a leading spirit in the Revue critiqued'histoire et de litterature, of which he wasone of the founders, 1866; thirty years joint-editor of Romania; thirty-five years of teaching at the ficole des Hautes fitudes;3 thirty-one years of teaching at the College de France ;ten years president of the historical and philological section of the ficole des Hautes fitudes ;seven years director of the College de France;twenty-five years a member of the committeehaving in charge the Histoire litteraire de laFrance; twenty-two years member of the council of the ficole des Chartes ; forty years a member of the Societe de l'ficole des Chartes, and3 Through the liberality of the Marchioness Arconati-Visconti and of Mme. Paris, the library and scientificpapers of Gaston Paris are to be confided to the care ofthis institution. To insure the proper care and the growthoi the library, and for the eventual publication of important papers, the Societe Amicale Gaston Parts hasbeen organized, under the temporary presidency of M.Antoine Thomas. All interested in the aims of the society may apply for membership to the treasurer, M.Mario Roques, 3, Boulevard St. Germain, Paris 5. twice — 1883 and 1897 — president of the same;joint founder, and for twenty-eight years chiefsupporter, of the Societe des Anciens TextesFrangais ; twenty-seven years member of theAcademie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres ;four years member of the Academie frangaise.The future bibliographer of Gaston Paris'sbooks, articles, reviews, and prefaces will haveno light task. One of his most pleasing dutieswill be to draw up the list of works — many ofthem volumes which have made enviable professional reputations — dedicated to Gaston Pariswith expressions of warm esteem and respect.No place, alas, is given in such bibliographiesto the labor spent in reviewing and controllingthe works of others before publication. " Howoften," says M. Paul Meyer, " have I seen himlay his own work aside to take up that ofothers ! "Truly, the mere mass of this production isastounding, and we may well be in doubtwhether or not his place can be filled. As tothis, Professor Pio Rajna gracefully wrote afew weeks ago :At the Round Table of King Arthur one chair remained vacant. It was called the Perilous Seat, and woeto him who essayed to occupy it. It was reserved forone most worthy, and such a one was not to be foundamong all that multitude of heroes. At the Round Tableof Romance studies the chair of Gaston Paris will remainvacant.I shall not presume to offer an estimate of theintellectual qualities of all this professionalwork; I shall leave that task to others morecompetent. Of these, fortunately, there aremany who have already paid their tribute ofthanks for so illustrious an example. As forthe fundamental spirit which animated all hiswork, let Gaston Paris speak for himself. OnDecember 8, 1870, in the opening session of acourse at the College de France upon the" Chanson de Roland and the National Life ofFrance," he used these noble words :Je professe absolument et sans reserve cette doctrine,que la science n'a d'autre objet que la verite pour elle-194 UNIVERSITY RECORDmeme, sans aucun souci des consequences bonnes oumauvaises, regrettables ou heureuses, que cette veritepourrait avoir dans la pratique. Celui qui, pour unmotif patriotique, religieux et meme moral, se permetdans les faits qu'il etudie, dans les conclusions qu'il tire,la plus petite dissimulation, l'alteration la plus legere,n'est pas digne d'avoir sa place dans le grand laboratoireou la probite est un titre d'admission plus indispensableque l'habilete.Ainsi comprises, les etudes communes, poursuiviesavec le meme esprit dans tous les pays civilises, formentau-dessus des nationalites restreintes, diverses et tropsouvent hostiles, une grande patrie qu'aucune guerre nesouille, qu'aucun conquerant ne menace, et ou les amestrouvent le refuge et 1'unite que la cite de Dieu leur adonnes en d'autres temps.On similar high ground were his utterancesin the Discours de Reception at the Academy.Called upon by the custom to deliver the eulogyof Pasteur — and the eloquent and fitting tributethus elicited is an additional proof of the catholicity of his interests — he addressed himself inone passage especially to young people, urgingupon them the same quest of truth in whateverfield they might be called to labor :Be assured that the discipline which this quest willimpose upon your minds will leave its mark in your consciences and in your hearts. He who has a horror ofdeceit, and even of pretence, and carries that horrorinto the smallest matters, is by this attitude alone outof danger from most vices and disposed favorably to allthe virtues.Elsewhere he said :The truth must not be perverted, even in the face ofmotives of self-interest which may seem more important;for there are none which are more important*To the service of this high ideal Gaston Parisbrought rare mental powers. The enormousextent and high quality of his published workare sufficient proof of this. A former pupil anda devoted friend, M. Morel-Fatio, credits himwithan intellectual vigor coupled with the keenest criticalsense ; a penetration at once rapid and sure ; the difficultart of collecting facts in order to draw conclusions; the faculty of finding the best and most expressive word;and, crowning trait of all — a graceful charm of manner,an exquisite kindliness which made his acquaintance delightful and brought him many priceless and illustriousfriendships.It is again M. Brunetiere, however, who seemsto me to have perceived most clearly the rarestvirtue of his intellectual work:Many specialists in Romance languages, as in otherfields, are the slaves of their learning; their personalitydoes not control their material. Whatever Gaston Parissaid or wrote, we always felt that he was more thanequal, yes, superior to the subject he was treating. . . . .It is this which gives to his most specialized work aunique character.With all these high tributes in mind, I confess that I cannot find fault with KristofferNyrop when he addresses Gaston Paris in thelofty language which Dante used in speaking ofAristotle :Vidi il maestro di color che sanno,Tutti l'ammiran, tutti onor gli fanno.It is no part of my duty to draw lessons fromthe life which has been outlined, but I believethat there are none who are not alive to someideal of human character, and that everyone —whether or not he be called to a professionalcareer — may draw some measure of inspirationfrom the life of Gaston Paris. No vulgar ambition ever turned him from the aim with whichhe began life ; professionally, he had the « -preme pleasure, as M. Brunetiere well says, of" realizing late in life a great thought embracedwhile young." But shall we not add, remembering that the instructor and the thinker taketheir value from the man, that as a man also hislife was in the truest sense a success, and thatwe are putting the words of Shakespeare to aworthy use when we say of Gaston Paris :His life was gentle, and the elementsSo mix'd in him that Nature might stand upAnd say to all the world, " This was a man."A FACSIMILE OF THE IRADE ISSUED BY THE TURKISH GOVERNMENT TO THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO[The finnan granted permission from the Sultan tn conduct aichieolngioal exca-vations at Bismya in Babylonia)UNIVERSITY RECORD 195THE ORIENTAL EXPLORATION FUND OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OHIOAGO.BY IRA MAProfessor of the SemiticThe oriental world is full of surprises. Everyturn of the spade and every stroke of the pick inits ruins and mounds reveal something of interest and value to students of ancient times. Thelast half-century has produced fruitful resultsin its excavations of the mounds of the East.Ancient peoples, their culture, their religions,and their literatures, have been newly andalmost wholly portrayed in the light of theserevelations.Many expeditions have been organized in thepast for the purpose of exploring and excavating the remains of ancient oriental peoples.Most of these have brought to light rich andvaluable information to illumine some period orperiods of the past. Up to the present time,however, the University of Chicago has takenno active part in any of these enterprises. Stillit has been its purpose from the very beginningto undertake direct and active exploration andexcavation in the chief biblical countries of theOrient. Not until last July was it possible tolay definite plans for work of this kind. Atthat time a friend kindly offered to contributea given sum of money yearly for five years tocarry on active excavations in some one or allof the so-called biblical lands, Egypt, Palestine,Syria, Assyro-Babylonia.As soon as the above donation was proffered,President Harper took active steps to secure afirman to permit excavation at some definitelocation in Babylonia. In the month of September he set out for Constantinople with thespecific purpose of securing the necessary document. He was cordially received by the UnitedStates ministry at Constantinople, and with theco-operation of the ministry, was entirely successful in securing the firman for Bismya in accordance with the laws of the Turkish government. Immediately on his return to Chicago URICE PRICE,Languages and Literatures.the University established the Oriental Exploration Fund, and empowered it to conduct exploration and excavation in the oriental countries, and to seek and receive funds for theprosecution and extension of the work. Theorganization of the Fund is as follows :I. The general management is in the handsof a General Director and two Secretaries.2. The work on the fields is in charge ofspecial Directors.3. The Treasurer of the University of Chicago is Treasurer of the Fund.4. Honorary Vice-Presidents are appointedfrom among those who have shown specialinterest in the fund.5. An Advisory Council from among thosescholars in all lands who have had practicalexperience gives counsel to the management ofthe Fund.6. A General Committee is made up of allpersons who desire to forward the interests ofthe Fund.The management of the Fund has alreadytaken steps to inaugurate work in the fieldfor which the firman has been granted. Mr.Edgar James Banks, who is familiar withTurkish, acquired through several years' residence in the Orient, has been appointedField Director for Assyria and Babylonia. Heleft Constantinople October 23 with some ofhis staff to go overland to Bagdad and Busreh.His plan was to reach the latter point byNovember 30. Thence with his outfit and abody of workmen he would proceed directly toBismya, the point at which the firman grantspermission to carry on excavations.The following facts about Bismya have beengathered from reports of Drs. William HayesWard and John P. Peters, who have visited themound and have published statements concerning its location and its value :196 UNIVERSITY RECORDBismya in central Babylonia is situated on the drybed of the ancient canal, Shatt-en-Nil, about thirty-fivemiles southeast of Nippur, the site at which the University of Pennsylvania has been at work since 1888, andforty miles northwest of Telloh, where the French havebeen at work since 1878, or about two days' journey fromeach. According to Dr. Peters, the ruins consist of agroup of shapeless mounds about three-quarters of amile in circumference and from thirty to forty feet inheight. Dr. Ward says that they are somewhat higherthan Telloh or Yokha. The surrounding walls, the corners of which are toward the cardinal points, may betraced in places. The largest mound of the group is atthe west corner; the next in size, which Dr. Ward believes may have been the ziggurat of the tempel, is in thesouthern part of the inclosure. He observed walls ofuninscribed bricks ; also some fragments of black stonewhich, as it is unusual in central Babylonia, indicates thatimportant buildings once existed there. Dr. Peters, whoworked at the ruin for five hours, found in an ancientdrain pipe several fragments and one complete tabletinscribed in cuneiform, but he saw no glass or glazedpottery, which always indicate that the site has not beenbuilt on since ancient times. Both Drs. Ward and Petersagree that the ruins are the site of an ancient city ofespecial importance, particularly because they are situatedon the Nil canal about half-way between Nippur andTelloh, where one might expect to find a large city. Itsnearness to those cities is no indication that it is lessimportant: it may have flourished at a different time.In southern Babylonia, Ur, Larsa, and Erech, or innorthern Babylon, Sippar, and Cutha are located quite asnear to each other.According to the inscriptions, one of the most important cities of central Babylonia was Isin or Nisin, andalthough, so far as is known, there is no positive proofthat Bismya is the ancient Isin, most Assyriologists are ofthat opinion. As long ago as Dr. Peters wrote his Nippur,he said in Vol. II, p. 125 : " If Bismya be the site of thisimportant place, valuable discoveries await the spade ofthe explorer who shall some day be fortunate enough todig there." His opinion is now shared by others.The city of Isin was a place of importance as earlyas 4000 B. C, and about 2500 B. C, it exercised a hegemony over Babylonia ; both Ur and Nippur paid tributeto Isin, and its kings frequently restored the temples ofthose and other cities. Bur-Sin, king of Isin, whose dateis about 2600 B. C, calls himself the patesi of Ur and therestorer of the temples at Eridu and Erech.Other kings of Isin were Ishme-Dagan, whos-* bricksare found at Ur and Nippur, and Ur-Ninib, who laid apavement in the Nippur temple. Dr. Ward speaks of Bismya as being far from anywater. Dr. Peters says that water is two hours away.As the ruins are on the ancient canal, bitter or hardwater may be obtained by digging, but, if not, a watercarrier with a small caravan of donkeys could at a slightcost make two trips daily for water.The legation has been informed by the Porte that thesite is one of danger. Dr. Peters also found the placedangerous. In fact, there is no part of Babylonia which issafe at all times, and Bismya would be no more unsafethan any other ruin in the vicinity where excavations arenow carried on. The government will furnish a guardsufficient for protection ; and the dangerous Arabs wouldprobably be employed as workmen, and by careful handling the good-will of an Arab can always be obtained ;and, moreover, danger in a work of this sort should notbe regarded as a serious obstacle.Bismya is in the Vilayet of Bagdad and in the Kasaof Divaniyeh — about sixty miles away — the residenceof the Mutessarif, the nearest government official.The Oriental Exploration Fund has alreadyhad a cordial reception on the part of thosewho are interested in exploration and excavation in the Orient. This is gratifying to themanagement, and it will greatly aid the Fund incarrying out its work with energy and enthusiasm. New fields for exploration and excavation are opening on every side, and they will beentered by this Fund as rapidly as the resourceswill allow. The Fund therefore invites cooperation and assistance on the part of all persons who may desire to aid in the enlargementof its work. Checks may be sent to the OrientalExploration Fund, in care of the University ofChicago, and made payable to Mr. Charles L.Hutchinson, the Treasurer of the University.Such a contribution made at the present timewill greatly encourage the management andopen the way to immediate extension of itsactivities.Information concerning the work of the Fundwill be given from month to month in theBiblical World, a monthly magazine publishedby the University. Contributors will be en-1 oiled in the General Committee of the Fund,and the Biblical World will be sent to them freeof charge. It is expected that the detailedUNIVERSITY RECORD 197reports from the field and any other scientificpublications issued by the Fund will likewisebe sent to all members of the Fund.The officers of the Fund are as follows:General Director — William Rainey Harper ;Secretaries — Ira Maurice Price, GeorgeStephen Goodspeed; Treasurer — Charles L.Hutchinson ; Vice-Presidents — to be appointed ;Advisory Council — to be appointed; GeneralCommittee — to be appointed ; Directors —Robert Francis Harper, Assyria and Babylonia ;James Henry Breasted, Egypt; James RichardJewett, Palestine and Syria; Edgar JamesBanks — Field Director for Babylonia.THE VISIT OF THE MOSELY EDUCATIONAL COMMISSION FROM GREAT BRITAIN.The members of the Mosely Educational Commission from Great Britain, who through thegenerosity of Alfred Mosely, Esq., have been inspecting the various phases of public educationin the United States, were the guests of President Harper and the University on Friday, November 6. The aim of Mr. Mosely in making upthe commission was to secure the co-operation,not only of trained students of education andmen intimately connected with its administrationin all branches, but also of leaders in the moreimportant centers of commercial, industrial, andintellectual life. He hopes that such men inthe future may be able, as members of municipal or educational bodies to recommend totheir fellow-citizens noteworthy ideas to be incorporated into a better-organized system ofnational education in Great Britain.The members of this commission with thepublic bodies they represent and the positionsthey fill, are as follows :Arthur Anderton, Esq., J. P., alderman and chairmanof the Technical Instruction Committee of the WestRiding County Council. (Nominated by the CountyCouncils Association.)Henry E. Armstrong, Esq., LL.D., Ph.D., V.P.C.S.,professor of chemistry in the City and Guilds of LondonInstitute. W. E. Ayrton, Esq., F.R.S., professor of physics inthe Central Technical College, past president of theInstitution of Electrical Engineers.Thomas Barclay, Esq., LL.B., Ph.D., late president ofthe Paris Chamber of Commerce.A. W. Black, Esq., J.P., mayor of Nottingham, chairman of the Nottingham Education Committee.R. Blair, Esq., M.A., B.Sc. assistant secretary for technical instruction of the Department of Agriculture andTechnical Education of Ireland. (Nominated by theDepartment of Agriculture and Technical Education, Ireland.)J. Rose Bradford, Esq., M.D., Lond., F.R.C.S., F.R.S.,professor of medicine, University College, London.G. J. Cockburn, Esq., late chairman of Leeds SchoolBoard.Right Rev. the Bishop of Coventry, late chairman ofthe Birmingham School Board.H. Coward, Esq., president of the National Union ofTeachers. (Nominated by the National Union ofTeachers.)Rev. Professor Finlay, S.J., F.R.U.I., member of theIntermediate Education Board and the Technical Education Board, Ireland, professor of political economy, University College, Dublin. (Nominated as official representative of the Board of Agriculture and Technical Education of Ireland.)T. Gregory Foster, Esq., B.A., Ph.D., assistant professor of English in IJniversity College, London, andsecretary to the college.W. C. Fletcher, Esq., M.A., late Fellow of St. John'sCollege, Cambridge, headmaster of the Liverpool Institute, Liverpool.W. H. Gaskell, Esq., M.A., M.D., F.R.S., Fellow ofTrinity Hall, Cambridge, university lecturer in physiology.Rev. H. B. Gray, D.D., Oxford, warden of BradfieldCollege.W. P. Groser, Esq., of the Inner Temple, representingthe Parliamentary Industry Committee, and to inquireinto legal education.C. J. Hamilton, Esq., B.A., Camb., F.S.S., lecturer onpolitical economy, University College, Cardiff (secretaryto the commission).J. R. Heape, Esq., chairman of the Rochdale Technical School.Rev. A. W. Jephson, M.A., member of the LondonSchool Board.W. Jones, Esq., M.P. for Arfon Division of Carnarvon, representing the Parliamentary Industry Committee.Magnus Maclean, Esq., M.A., D.Sc, professor of electrical engineering in the Glasgow and West of Scotland198 UNIVERSITY RECORDTechnical College, Glasgow. (Nominated official representative by (i) the Glasgow and West of ScotlandTechnical College ; (2) the Edinburgh School Board ;(3) the Technical and Secondary Education Committeeof the Ayrshire County Council.)Rev. T. L. Papillon, M.A., vicar of Writtle, Essex,late fellow and tutor of New College, Oxford, formerlyFellow of Merton College.Herbert R. Rathbone, Esq., B.A., barrister-at-law,member of the .education Committee, and deputy-chairman of the Committee on Elementary Education, Liverpool.H. R. Reichel, Esq., LL.D., late Fellow of All Souls,Oxford, principal of University College of North Wales,Bangor, and member of the Welsh Intermediate Education Board. (Nominated as official representative ofUniversity Colleges of Cardiff, Aberystwith, and Bangor.)John Rhys, Esq., LL.D., professor of Celtic in theUniversity of Oxford, member of the British Academy,member of the Oxford Education Committee (sometimeH. M. inspector of schools).W. Ripper, Esq., M.I.C.E., professor of engineeringin University College, Sheffield, member of the SheffieldEducation Committee.Sir Albert Kaye Rollit, LL.D., D.C.L., M.P., vice-president of the London Chamber of Commerce. (Nominated by the Association of Municipal Corporations.)Charles Rowley, Esq., M.A., J.P., member of the Manchester Education Committee and of the ManchesterSchool of Technology, chairman of the ManchesterSchool of Art.A. J. Shepheard, Esq., chairman of the TechnicalEducation Board of the London County Council.Arthur Edmund Spender, Esq., B. A Oxon, barrister-at-law, director of Plymouth Girls' High School, memberof Plymouth Chamber of Commerce Executive, and ofthe Mount-Edgcumbe Industrial Training Ship, representing Plymouth.John Whitburn, Esq., member of Education Commission of Newcastle on Tyne.At the dinner given the commission in theMen's Commons, Hutchinson Hall, PresidentHarper presided and introduced the speakers;and Professor Rollin D. Salisbury, Dean of theOgden Graduate School of Science/ made theaddress of welcome. Music was furnished bythe University Band, and a large body of students by their songs and hearty applause addedmuch to the enthusiasm of the occasion.The following members of the commission were called upon for brief responses: Mr. Alfred Mosely, head of the commission; Mr. H.Coward, president of the National Union ofTeachers ; Professor T. Gregory Foster, Ph.D.,of University College, London; Mr. W. C.Fletcher, M.A., head-master of the Liverpoolinstitute; Rev. T. L. Papillon, M.A., vicar ofWrittle, Essex, and late Fellow and Tutor ofNew College, Oxford; Mr. H. R. Reichel,LL.D., principal of University College of NorthWales ; and Professor John Rhys, LL.D., of theUniversity of Oxford.The same evening a reception was given tothe commission by President and Mrs. Harper.THE MEETING AT THE UNIVERSITY OF THE NATIONALACADEMY OF SCIENCES.The autumn session of the National Academyof Sciences was held at the University onNovember 17 and 18. This was the first meeting of the Academy in the West. It has amembership of ninety. Of the seventeen papersoffered, ten were presented by members of theUniversity Faculty, as follows :^ " Preliminary Report on the Agassiz Data Relative toUnderground Temperatures at the Calumet and HeclaMine," T. C. Chamberlin." The Relation between Solution Tension and Physiological Action of the Elements," A. P. Mathews, introduced by C. O. Whitman.\ " On the Distribution and Classification of the Ple-siosaurs," S. W. Williston, introduced by T. C. Chamberlin." The Evolution of the Wing-Bars in Pigeons," C. O.Whitman." Evolution without Mutation," Charles B. Davenport, introduced by C. O. Whitman.\ " Stereoisomeric Nitrogen Compounds," J. Stieglitz,introduced by A. A. Michelson." Some Peculiarities of Comets' Tails, and TheirProbable Explanation," E. E. Barnard, introduced byk George E. Hale." Stars of the Orion Class," Edwin B. Frost, introduced by George E. Hale.V " On the Nature of the Solar Flocculi," George E.Hale.**' Spectra of Imperfect Gratings," A. A. Michelson.UNIVERSITY RECORD 199On the 19th the academy visited YerkesObservatory, under the guidance of ProfessorGeorge E. Hale and other members of the Observatory staff. A special train was placed atthe service of the academy by the generosity ofPresident Hughitt of the Chicago & Northwestern railway. A reception was given the academy by President and Mrs. Harper on Wednesday evening, November 18, and a banquet bythe Research Club on the following evening.Luncheons were provided by the University atHutchinson Hall and the Quadrangle Club, andby Professor Hale at the Observatory.THE LAYING OF THE CORNER-STONE OF THE CHICAGOMANUAL TRAINING SCHOOL BUILDING.The exercises connected with the laying ofthe corner-stone of the new Chicago ManualTraining School building, on June 17, 1903,may be briefly described as follows :At the close of the graduating exercises of thethree secondary schools — namely, the ChicagoManual Training School, the South Side Academy, and the Morgan Park Academy — a procession was formed, headed by the UniversityBand. This procession moved to Monroeavenue between Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninthstreets, to the spot where the corner-stone of thenew building was ready to be laid.The President of the University conductedthe exercises. Prayer was offered by Rev. Dr.Alonzo K. Parker, the Recorder of the University. Dr. Thomas W. Goodspeed, the Secretaryof the Board of Trustees of the University andof the Trustees of the Chicago Manual TrainingSchool, then read the list of articles to be deposited in the corner-stone :THE LIST OF ARTICLES DEPOSITED IN THE CORNER-STONE OFTHE CHICAGO MANUAL TRAINING SCHOOL BUILDING.1. Photograph of Mr. E. W. Blatchford, President ofthe Board for the first fourteen years.2. Photograph of Mr. Henry Holmes Belfield, the Director of the school from its opening.3. The first and seventh annual catalogues. 4. Inaugural Address of the Director, June 19, 1884.5. Sermon of Dr. Simon J. McPherson to the firstgraduating class, delivered June 20, 1886.6. The Calendar for 1902-3, the twentieth year.7. Illustrations of drawings and shop work of thepupils from 1883 to 1899.8. Pamphlet describing tower clock designed and madefor the University of Chicago by the Chicago ManualTraining School.9. The Bulletin of Information of the University Schoolof Education.10. The prospectus of the University ElementarySchool.11. The University of Chicago Summer Quarter Announcements, 1903.12. The Daily Maroon.13. The Chicago morning papers.14. The University Register, 1902-3.15. The Atlantic Monthly, of which the Convocationorator for the secondary schools is the editor.The President then introduced Mr. E. W.Blatchford, the President of the Board of Trustees of the Chicago Manual Training Schoolfrom the organization of that board in 1882until the transfer of the school to the Universityof Chicago in 1897. Mr. Blatchford read thefollowing address :Mr. President and Trustees of the University of Chicago,Ladies and Gentlemen:The present occasion is one of historic interest. Youhave done me honor in permitting me to take part in thisinitial step in the erection of a building to be devoted tomanual training. This name, however, fails to expressfully the scope of the beneficent work here projected.It is now twenty years since the Commercial Club ofChicago, deeply impressed by the value to our city andto our land of this new phase of education, organizedthe Chicago Manual Training School, the first independentschool of the kind in this, or any other, country.The motto adopted, Mente atque Manu ad Virtutem,implies as its elemental thought, progress — -progress onward and upward : onward, as its practical trainingaffiliates itself with labor — labor, the basis of the mightiest problem which today confronts the American citizen;upward, as its teachings develop character — that tenuous element which reigns dominant in this world, andholds relation to that world which is to come.It is six years since the Commercial Club transferredthe School, with its building, machinery, apparatus, andendowment, to the University. Well have you fulfilled,200 UNIVERSITY RECORDMr. President, the obligations of the trust which youthen assumed! It now becomes the nucleus of the polytechnic department of the University, and part of thebroad plan which your Trustees are projecting. We canjustly anticipate that in its new environment, with enlarged opportunities, it will grow in efficiency and usefulness.In accordance with the duty devolved upon me, I nowproceed to lay this corner-stone. This I do in the nameof the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.Amen.The corner-stone was then lowered into position by Mr. Blatchford, who used in this duty atrowel and mallet which had been made for thisoccasion by pupils of the school. The exerciseswere concluded with the benediction by Dr.Parker.THE INTERNATIONAL GUILD, PARIS, FRANCESThe International Guild was founded tenyears ago by Miss Edith Williams, professor ofEnglish at the ficole Normale Superieure atSevres and at the ficole Normale at Fontenay-aux-Roses. Miss Williams, with an experienceof many years in educational work in Paris, feltkeenly the need of an institution in Paris forEnglish-speaking people who wished to preparethemselves as teachers of French, or whowished to attain a thorough knowledge of theFrench language and a broad culture in Frenchliterature. For such persons the work of theSorbonne is too highly specialized and, of necessity, little, if any, individual attention can begiven to the student. With a view to supplyingthis need Miss Williams gathered a few stu-xOn October n, 1902, the Board of Affiliations ofthe University of Chicago, upon the recommendation ofthe Director of the Board and after hearing a full statement from Miss Elizabeth Wallace, of the Department ofRomance Languages and Literature, unanimously votedto place the International Guild upon the list of institutions co-operating with the University. Owing to amisunderstanding, the report of this institution did notappear in the Annual Register. It has been thoughtfitting, therefore, to insert this announcement in theRecord. dents about her in her apartment and commenced her work. Since that beginning theGuild has grown from a class of six Englishwomen students to an attendance of over twohundred men and women of English, American,German, and Russian nationality.The Guild is governed by a Board of Trustees, and is under the direction of Miss EdithWilliams. It offers a full course of instructionin the French language, literature, and historyby professors of the University of Paris, assisted by a body of instructors. Among the members of the faculty are MM. Paul Meyer,Leopold Sudre, Georges Pellissier, and PaulDesjardins. The classes are graduated to meetthe needs of beginners and advanced studentsrespectively. A special feature is made of pronunciation and phonetics, and a full courseleads up to an examination for a certiUcat.This examination is conducted by an inspecteurgeneral attached to the University and two professors of the Sarbonne. The Guild has beenrecognized by the Registration Council of London as a foreign college at which teachers whowish to be registered may finish their universitycourse.The Guild occupies four floors of the apartment building 6 rue de la Sorbonne. It standsdirectly opposite the Sorbonne, and so has theadvantage of university surroundings. Thereis a library, class-rooms, lecture-rooms, and tearooms at the service of students. Boardingand lodging are not provided by the Guild, butthere is kept a list of recommended familieswhere students may find homes at moderateprices.THE SEVENTEENTH CONFERENCE OF AFFILIATINGACADEMIES AND HIGH SCHOOLS.The seventeenth educational conference of theacademies and high schools affiliating or cooperating with the University of Chicago washeld at the University Friday and Saturday,November 13 and 14, 1903.UNIVERSITY RECORD 201An executive session of Deans and Principalswith the Board of Affiliations was held in theAssembly Hall, Haskell Museum, Friday, November 13, at 2:30 p.m.A committee appointed at the last meetingpresented a report upon the increase of creditsfor admission to the University in English,offered by the secondary schools. Committee:Associate Professor Herrick, chairman; Mr.Nott Flint, of the University of Chicago ; Principal H. N. Hart, of Butte; Dr. E. H. Lewis,of Lewis Institute ; Miss Eleanor Quinn, of thePeoria High School. This report, with its recommendation, goes to the Faculty of the JuniorColleges for further consideration.Reports were also presented on "The Influence of Fraternities in Secondary Schools," byPrincipal Spencer R. Smith of the South Division High School; "The System of StudentAdvisers as an Administrative Device in HighSchools," by Superintendent M. A. Whitney, ofElgin; " The Self-Governing System," by Principal L. J. Block, of the John Marshall HighSchool.Papers were read by Dean John M. Dodson,on " The Preparation Needed for Medical Studies," and by Professor James P. Hall, of theLaw School, on " Preparation for the Study ofLaw."On Saturday morning, November 14, a general conference was held in Leon Mandel Hallfor a discussion of the Report of the Commission of Twenty-one appointed at the lastconference to consider the general problem thenpresented, namely, a proposition —1. To connect the work of the eighth gradeof the elementary school with that of the secondary school.2. To extend the work of the secondaryschool to include the first two years of collegework.3. To reduce the work of the seven years thusgrouped together to six years. 4. To make it possible for the best class ofstudents to do the work in five years.The commission reported through three constituent committees appointed to consider thegeneral question from the standpoint of thecollege, the secondary school, and the elementary school.Reports upon this very important matter wereread and addresses made by Professor NathanielButler ; Superintendent J. S. Brown, of Joliet ;Superintendent F. L. Soldan, of St. Louis;President Rush Rhees, of Rochester University ;and others.Departmental conferences occupied the afternoon of Saturday. A large number of delegatesfrom the affiliating and co-operating schoolswere present, and the attendance, especially atthe Saturday morning meeting in Leon MandelHall, was very large.A GREAT FOOTBALL MASS MEETING IN LEONMANDEL HALL.On Tuesday evening, November 24, therewas held in the Leon Mandel Assembly Hallthe greatest football mass meeting in the historyI of the University. Seventeen hundred peopleI filled the main floor of the auditorium, the1 galleries, and the stage. The galleries andstage were artistically draped with maroon banners, and early in the evening there was suddenly unveiled an electric motto containing thewords " Who Can, We Can, Chicago Can, BeatMichigan."The program, which was preceded by a verysuccessful alumni dinner in Hutchinson Hall,was carried out under the management of theSenior College Council. Associate ProfessorShepardson, of the Department of History, wasthe chairman of the evening, and Mr. Arthur E.Bestor, of the class of 1901, was the cheermas-ter. The music for the occasion was furnishedby the University of Chicago Military Band, theGlee Club, the Women's Glee Club, the Mando-202 UNIVERSITY RECORDlin Club, and the University Choir. In the procession there were, besides the musical organizations, the Senior College Council, the JuniorCollege Council, the Graduate School Council,the Divinity School Council, the Law SchoolCouncil, the Medical School Council, the University of Chicago football squad, the wearersof the "C," the Chicago Alumni Club, the speakers of the evening, and special guests.Speeches were made by Dr. Thomas W.Goodspeed, Secretary of the University; Mr.Homer J. Carr, of the class of '79, presidentof the Chicago Press Club ; Associate ProfessorGeorge E. Vincent, Dean of the Junior Colleges; Associate Professor Oliver J. Thatcher,of the Department of History ; Mr. A. C. Bartlett, the donor of the new Gymnasium; MissLulu Louise Just and Mr. Leo. F. Wormser,representing the students of the University;Captain A. C. Ellsworth, of the fotball team,and former captains; Mr. A. A. Stagg, andPresident Harper. The greatest enthusiasmwas aroused by the speeches, music, and songs,some of which were especially written for theoccasion.ELECTION OF OFFICERS FOR THE REYNOLDS CLUB.On the evening of November 21 the result ofthe balloting for the first officers of the Reynolds Club was announced to a large assemblage of students in the club-rooms. The newofficers, who will continue in office until theregular March election is held, are the following: president, Mr. Howard J. Sloan, of theclass of '04 ; vice-president, Mr. Oliver B. Wy-man, of the same class ; secretary, Mr. Roy D.Keehn, of the class of '02 ; treasurer, Mr. LeonP. Lewis, of the class of '02; librarian, Mr.Fred T. Fischel, of the class of '03.Mr. Sloan, Mr. Wyman, and Mr. Fischelserved on the Clubhouse Commission, whichfor more than a year gave its special attentionto the details of the organization of the club and to the formulation of a plan for a constitution.fit is a striking fact that all of the new officers\oi the club are from the Law School.A SPECIAL MEETING OF THE UNIVERSITY CONGREGATION.A special meeting of the University Congregation was held in Congregation Hall, Haskell Oriental Museum, Thursday, November 5,1903, at 4:00 p.m.This special meeting was called by the Congregation Committee to receive from the administrative officers the financial statements for thepreceding year. Statements in explanation ofthe financial policy and condition of the University were made by the President, the BusinessManager, Mr. Heckman, the Physical Director,Mr. Stagg, the Auditor, Mr. Arnett, the Deanof University College, Mr. MacClintock, theDirector of the Press, Mr. Miller, and by Mr.Payne and Mr. Mallory, Secretaries of the University Extension Division.THE FACULTIES.Professor Julian W. Mack, of the LawSchool, was elected judge of the Circuit Courtof Cook County, June 1, 1903.Dr. Charles J. Chamberlain, of the Department of Botany, has been elected to membershipin the Botanical Society of America.Associate Professor Marion Talbot, Dean ofWomen, has been elected president of the Chicago Association of Collegiate Alumnse.Dr. Gary de Hough's collection of flies,especially Muscidae (10,000 specimens), hasbeen purchased for the Zoological Museum.Associate Professor Robert Herrick, of theDepartment of English, begins in the AtlanticMonthly for January, 1904, a serial entitled"The Common Lot." The scene of the novelis laid in Chicago.UNIVERSITY RECORD 203Professor John M. Coulter, Head of theDepartment of Botany, is still absent in Europe.He will ret am for work in the Winter Quarter.During the last Winter Quarter fortnightlyconferences were held for the discussion of theteaching of mathematics and physics in secondary schools.Professor Benjamin Terry, of the Department of History, received the degree of Doctorof Laws at the last commencement of ColgateUniversity.Mr. Heinrich Hasselbring, a graduate of Cornell University, has been appointed to an Assistantship in Botany, and put in charge of thegreenhouses.Dr. Oscar L. Triggs, of the Department ofEnglish, has been elected secretary of the newMorris Society which was organized in Chicago,May 14, 1903.Professor John U. Nef, Head of the Department of Chemistry, has received a regularmembership in the Royal Society of Science atUpsala, Sweden.In the Department of Chemistry the following assistants have been appointed by the Boardof Trustees : Mr. W. J. Hale, Mr. J. G. Lawrie,and Miss E. E. Barnard.A new text-book on Composition and Rhetoric, by Miss Maude L. Radford, assistant inEnglish (University College), is announced bythe publishers, Hinds & Noble, New York.Assistant Professor Bradley M. Davis, of theDepartment of Botany, spent the summer atWoods Holl, in charge of the Department ofBotany at the Marine Biological Laboratory.Assistant Professor George H. Locke wasinvited to deliver the Founder's Day oration,October 1, at the Jacob Tome Institute, PortDepont, Md. Mr. Locke was present also atthe meeting of the Committee of Eleven of theNational Educational Association in its three-day session in May. Dr. Joseph E. Raycroft, of the Department ofPhysical Culture and Athletics, has been madea member of the National Council of the American Association for the Advancement of Physical Education.Dr. Galusha Anderson, of the DivinitySchool, has retired from the active duties of theDepartment of Homiletics, although retaininghis professorship. He expects to devote himself chiefly to writing.Through the generosity of Mrs. Mary J. Wil-marth, a hundred dollars will be devoted to thepurchase of magazines, reviews, and other periodicals for the reading-room in the ReynoldsClub House — a timely gift that members of theclub will fully appreciate.In the ninth annual report of the ChicagoBureau of Charities Professor Charles R. Henderson, of the Department of Sociology, appearsas a member of the Board of Directors and alsoas chairman of the Executive Committee. Mr.Franklin MacVeagh, of the Board of Trusteesof the University, is president of the sameorganization.Professor Richard Green Moulton, Head ofthe Department of Literature (in English),acted as the University Preacher on October25 and November 1. Rev. Edward Judson,D.D., of New York, who takes up his newduties as professor of Homiletics in the DivinitySchool at the opening of the Winter Quarter,was the University Preacher on November 15and 22.At the Church of the Redeemer, Chicago, onAugust 22, Miss Alice Cleveland Judson, daughter of Dean and Mrs. Harry Pratt Judson, wasmarried to Mr. Gordon Jennings Laing, Assistant Professor in the Department of Latin. Mr.and Mrs. Laing are spending the AutumnQuarter in Colorado; Mr. Laing will resumehis regular work in the University at the beginning of the Winter Quarter.204 UNIVERSITY RECORDDr. Eleanor P. Hammond, of the Departmentof English, who spent the summer in the libra-lies of England, had the good fortune to discover, in a well-known and authentic manuscript, a brief poem by Chaucer hitherto unpublished. The text will appear shortly in ModemLanguage Notes.On Settlement Sunday, November 8, MissMary E. McDowell, Head of the University ofChicago Settlement, gave an address on " SocialSettlement Activities." Dr. Nathaniel Butler,president of the Christian Union, presided at themeeting, and Professor Henry H. Donaldson,president of the University Settlement Board,made a brief report.Miss Lilian Haines Halsey, of New York,was married to Dr. Lewellys F. Barker, Head ofthe Department of Anatomy in the Universityof Chicago, on Thursday, October 29, at theresidence of Mr. Stewart Paton in Baltimore, byRev. Francis F. Haines, of Goshen, N. Y. Thebride is a daughter of the late William F. Halsey, of New Orleans, and a sister of Mrs Stewart Paton, of Baltimore. The best man was Dr.William S. Thayer, of Baltimore. The invitations to the wedding were limited to the members of the two families and a few intimatefriends. Dr. and Mrs. Barker are to spend ayear in Europe before he resumes his work inChicago.In a recent contribution to the press M. Ant.M. Borel, a distinguished French critic, makesthe following complimentary reference to theUniversity of Chicago: "There are four institutions in this metropolis which offer amplecompensation for its defects in edility: theUniversity, the libraries, the Art Institute, andthe woman's clubs. No better evidence couldbe quoted for the speed of your progress ; andto revisit Chicago after twenty years and findsuch evidences of intellectual refinement is farmore interesting than to deplore the growth ofyour skyscrapers." Professor Albion W. Small, Head of the Department of Sociology, spent the summer inEurope as a member of the Commission on theOrganization of the Congress of Arts andSciences to be held next year in St. Louis at theLouisiana Purchase Exposition. The othermembers of the Commission are Professor Simon Newcomb, of Johns Hopkins University,chairman, and Professor Hugo Miinsterberg, ofHarvard University. Invitations were carriedto some of the foremost scholars of Europe toparticipate in the congress. Professor Smallworked chiefly in Great Britain, Austria, andRussia. As a result of the combined labors ofthe commission one hundred and twenty representative scholars in all departments of sciencehave accepted the invitations and will readpapers at the congress in September, 1904.The first volume of a new text-book ongeology, by Professor Thomas C. Chamberlin,Head of the Department of Geology, and Professor Rollin D. Salisbury, Head of the Department of Geography, is announced for publication by Henry Holt & Co., of New York. It istu appear in the "American Science" series,and is devoted to the dynamic side of the subject, the second volume, yet unfinished, beinggiven to a treatment of the historical side. Thetext-book is primarily intended for advancedstudents. It is said that in fulness and originality of treatment the work surpasses othertext-books in the same field. Most of the drawings for the volumes were made by Mr. G.Adolph Johnson, a student in the Junior Collegeof the University.A series of lectures on the Haskell Foundation was given at the University the secondweek in October by Dr. Charles Cuthbert Hall,president of Union Theological Seminary, NewYork. The following themes were includedin the series : " A Report of the Barrows Lectureship in India, Ceylon, and Japan ; " generaltopic, " Christian Belief Interpreted by Chris-UNIVERSITY RECORD 205tian Experience:" (i) "The Nature of Religion;" (2) "The Christian Idea of God andits Relation to Experience;" (3) "The LordJesus Christ the Supreme Manifestation ofGod ; " (4) " The Sin of Man and the Sacrificeof Christ;" (5) "The Ideas of Holiness andImmortality Interpreted by Christian Experience;" (6) "Reasons for Regarding Christianity as the Absolute Religion."On November 17 the University SettlementLeague held its first business meeting for thisyear at the Quadrangle Club, when MissFrances Kellor, of the Department of Sociology, made an address on the problem of"Domestic Service." After reports from thechairmen of the various committees, ProfessorHenry H. Donaldson, president of the Settlement Board, spoke with reference to the plansfor a new building for the University Settlement in the Stock Yards district. There isgreat need of a new building, as the presentSettlement workers are living above a feed store in two flats that are very inadequate for thepurpose. It is hoped that in the coming springthe plans for a new building may be realized.The new building of the Frances ShimerAcademy for instruction in instrumental andvocal music and domestic science was opened atMt. Carroll, 111., on November 2. The building has eleven practice rooms, two rooms forinstruction in piano and voice, a sewing-room,kitchen, and pantry, besides halls of generoussize and , a basement under the whole of thebuilding. The building was designed by Shep-ley, Rutan & CooLdge, and the money for itsconstruction was given by friends of the Academy in Mt. Carroll, Freeport, Chicago, andother cities. Four new pianos have been placedin the building, as well as furniture for thedomestic science department, and a new grandpiano has been added to the equipment of thechapel. Every room in the new building isalready in use. The Frances Shimer Academyfor girls is controlled by the University.206 UNIVERSITY RECORDREGENT PUBLICATIONS AND ADDRESSES BY MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY FACULTIES.1Where Published.Name.Abbott, Frank FrostAnderson, Galusha.Baber, Zonia.Barnes, Charles Reid.Blackwelder, Eliot,Brown, Orville Harry.Clark, Solomon Henry. Title.Reviews:Ball's "Apocolocyntosis of Seneca."Addresses:" Some Phases of Roman Public Life," The CookCounty Association of Teachers of Greek and Latin,May 23.Reviews:Matheson's " The Representative Men of the Bible,"Hovey's " Barnard Sears, A Christian Educator."Fletcher's " Chapters on Preaching."McKim's " The Gospel in the Christian Year and inChristian Experience."Hillis's " Faith and Character."Hebert's "Premieres verites."" Church and Reform."Bouillat's "L'e*glise catholique."Egan's "Onward and Upward."Addresses:"The Place of Drawing in the Teaching of Geography," High School Teachers, Chicago, May 23;"China, Its Past and Probable Future," Kansas City,Mo., May 7.Addresses:" Plant Physiology in Secondary Schools," ArmourInstitute, Chicago, April 12, 1903.Articles: Classical Review, Vol. XVII(1903), pp. 218-20.American Journal of Theology,April, 1903.Ibid.Ibid.Ibid.Ibid.Ibid.Ibid.Ibid.Ibid.(and R. D. Salisbury).Mountains."Articles: ' Glaciation in the Bighorn Journal oj Geology, March, 1903." The Immunity of Fundulus Eggs and Embryos toElectrical Stimulation."Child, Charles Manning. Articles:"Abnormalities in the Cestode Moinezia ExpansaIII."" Studies on Regulation I.in Stenostoma." Fission and Regulation" Studies on Regulation II. Experimental Controlof Form-Regulation in Stenostoma."(and A. N. Young). "Regeneration of the Appendages in Nympha of the Agrionidae."Addresses :" Function of Literary Study in a Scheme of NormalEducation," State Normal School, San Diego, Calif.;Stephen Phillips's " Ulysses," Leland Stanford Jr.University, Calif.; interpretative lecture on "Macbeth," Brigham Young College, Logan, Utah ; interpretative lecture on " Macbeth," Weberstake Academy, Ogden, Utah; "The Tragic Ideal," KindergartenAssociation, Dallas, Tex.; "The Pedagogy of OralExpression," Teachers' Association, Los Angeles,Calif. American Journal of Physiology.Biological Bulletin, Vol. Ill,Nos. 3 and 4, pp. 95-114,143-160, Figs. 42-74, July andAugust, 1900.Archiv fur Entwickelungsme-chanik, Bd. H. 2 and 3, pp.187-237; 355-420- Plates V,VI, VII.Ibid., Bd. XV, H. 4, pp. 603-37,Plates XXIII-XXV.Ibid., pp. 543-602, Plates XX-XXII.1 The last circular requesting data with reference to publications and addresses was sent out June 1, 1903; the next circular will be issuedJanuary 1, 1904. For Decennial Publications see the University Record, November, 1902, and February, 1903.UNIVERSITY RECORD 207Name. Title.Davenport, Herbert Joseph. Books:Translation into Italian of " Outlines of ElementaryEconomics."Articles:"Proposed Modifications in Austrian Theory andTerminology.""The Scope and Method of Grammar."Addresses:Commencement address, Lincoln, Neb., High School,June 5, 1903. Where Published.Milan: Socie*te* Editrice Libraria.Quarterly Journal of Economics,May, 1902.Education, November, December, 1902.Davis, Bradley Moore. Articles:"The Evolution of Sex in Plants.""Oogenesis in Saprolegnia."Reviews:" Postelsia." Popular Science Monthly, February, 1903.Botanical Gazette, March andApril, 1903.Ibid.,Vo\. XXXV (1903), p. 368Dickson, Leonard Eugene. Books:"Introduction to the Theory of Algebraic Equations" (pp. v -f- 104).Articles:" Definitions of a Field by Independent Postulates.""Definitions of a Linear Associative Algebra byIndependent Postulates.''" On the Groups Defined for an Arbitrary Field bythe Multiplication Tables of Certain Finite Groups."" The Abstract Group G Simply Isomorphic with theAlternating Group of Six Letters."" Three Sets of Generational Relations Defining theAbstract Simple Group of Order 504."" Generational Relations Defining the Abstract Groupof Order 660."Donaldson, Henry Herbert. Articles:(and Davis, D. J.). "A description of Charts Showing the Areas of the Cross-Sections of the HumanSpinal Cord at the Level of Each Spinal Nerve."Addresses:"Bernhard von Gudden : The King's Physician,"the Graduating Class at Rush Medical College, April3, 1903. New York : John Wiley & Sons,.1903.Transactions of American Mathematical Society, Vol. IV (1903),pp. 13-20.Ibid., pp. 21-26.Proceedings ofthe London Mathematical Society, Vol. XXXV,pp. 68-80.Bulletin American MathematicalSociety, Vol. IX, pp. 303-6,(March, 1903).Ibid., pp. 194-204.Ibid., pp. 204-6.Journal of Comparative Neurology, Vol. XIII, No. 1 (March,1903).Dubedout, Ernest Jean. Articles:" Romantisme et Protestantisme "Addresses:A series of six lectures on the " Theatre contemporainen France," the University of Chicago, February-March, 1903. Journal of Modern Philology,Vol. I (June, 1903).208 UNIVERSITY RECORDName.Epsteen, Saul.Fiske, Horace Spencer.Gore, Willard Clark.Harper, William Rainey.Hatfield, Henry Rand.Hektoen, Ludwig.Henderson, Archibald.Henderson, CharlesRichmond. Title.Articles:"Determination of the Group of Rationality ofLinear Differential Equations."" Untersuchungen iiber lineare Differentialgleich-ungen und die zugehorigen Gruppen."" On Linear Differential Congruences."Books:"Provincial Types in American Fiction" (6 illus.;pp. 264)."Chicago in Picture and Poetry" (100 illus.: pp. 187).Articles:"Academic and Professional Training of Teachers.""Image and Idea in Logic."Addresses :" Religion and the Higher Life," Fiftieth AnniversaryYoung Men's Christian Association, Louisville, Ky.,April 5 ; same address, Commencement, Baylor University, Waco, Tex., April 20; same address, Commencement, McMaster University, May 6 ; same address, Augustana College, Rock Island, 111., May 28 ;address on "Libraries, Laboratories, and Museums,"at dedication of new building, Commencement, Baylor University; Commencement Address, LombardUniversity, June 4; Commencement Address, Earl-ham College, June 8.Addresses:"Problems of Commercial Education," Cook CountyHigh-School Teachers' Association, May 23, 1903.Addresses:"Bacteriological Examinations of the Blood duringLife," Wisconsin State Medical Society, Milwaukee,June 3, 1903.Articles:"Two Simple Constructions for Finding the Foci ofan Hyperbola, Given the Asymptotes and a Point on,or a Tangent to, the Curve.""A Method for Constructing an Hyperbola, Giventhe Asymptotes and a Focus.""The Derivation of the Brianchon Configurationfrom Two Spatial Point-Triads."" Harmonic Pairs in the Complex Plane : A Geometrical Treatment of Certain Maps Defined by the Equation of Correspondence <a = - (z-\ — J .Articles:"World Currents in Charity Theory and Practice.""Digest of Documents on Prison Discipline, andSocial Position of the Prison Warden."Reviews:Several in American Journal of Sociology. Where Published.American Mathematical Monthly,March, 1903.American Journal of Mathematics, April, 1903.Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, June, 1903.Springfield, O.: The ChautauquaPress, 1903.Chicago: Ralph Fletcher Seymour (for the Industrial ArtLeague), 1903.Elementary School Teacher, Apriland May, 1903."Studies in Logical Theory"(edited by John Dewey), chap.American Mathematical Monthly, November, 1902.Ibid., December, 1902.Ibid., February, 1903.Ibid., April, 1 903.Annals of American Academy ofPolitical and Social Science,May, 1903, and separate publication No. 378.Proceedings of the NationalPrison Association, 1 902.UNIVERSITY RECORD 209Name.Ingres, Maxime. Title. Where Published.Addresses :"The Nineteenth Century," Harvard University,March, 1903; fifteen lectures on "French Literature,"Chicago Woman's Club, winter 1902-3.Jackman, Wilbur Samuel. Articles:"The Correlation of Mathematics.""Shortening the School Course: A Fable of theProgressive Hen."Addresses:Twelve addresses on nature study and related subjects, Teachers' Institute, Fort Dodge, la. Educational Review, March,1903.Journal of Education.Kinsley, Carl. Addresses:"Electrical Oscillations and their Uses," CentralAssociation of Physics Teachers, Chicago, May 2;"Electrical Resonance in Telephone Circuits," theChicago Branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Chicago, May 19.Books:"A Laboratory Manual of Physiological Chemistry."Articles:"Anamniote Embryos of the Chick" (abstract).Addresses:"Anamniote Embryos of the Chick," AmericanMorphological Society, Washington, D.C., December,1902.Livingston, Burton Edward. Books:"The Role of Diffusion and Osmotic Pressure inPlants."Koch, Waldemar.Lillie, Frank Rattray. Chicago: University of ChicagoPress.Science, March, 1903.Chicago: University of ChicagoPress.Locke, George Herbert. Articles:"The Two-Years' College Course.""A New Book on Education.""Progress in Secondary Education in New Yorkcity.""Secondary Education in Queensland.""The Proposed Unification of Educational Administration in the State of New York.""The Progress of Education in the South.""The Extension of the Elective System at Yale.""The Committee of Eleven.""High-School Architecture."Reviews:Lorimer's "Letters of a Self -Made Merchant to his. Son." School Review, April, 1903.Ibid.Ibid., May, 1903.Ibid.Ibid.Ibid., June, 1903.Ibid.Ibid.Ibid.Ibid,, April, 1903.Lyon, Elias Potter. Addresses:" Need of a Better Preparation for the Study of Medicine" address to medical students, University ofMissouri, May 20, 1903.210 UNIVERSITY RECORDName.Mathews, Albert Prescott.Merriam, Charles Edward.Moore, Eliakim Hastings.Moulton, Forest Ray.Moulton, Richard Green.Myers, George William.McCoy, Herbert Newby.Price, Ira Maurice. Title.Articles:" The General Physiology of Nerves."" The Nature of Nerve Irritability and of ChemicalStimulation," Part II.Addresses:Address to the Yale Medical Alumni, New Haven,Conn., April 16, 1903.Books:"A History of American Political Theories."Reviews:Keen's "Tramway Companies and Local Authorities."Shambaugh's " Constitutions of Iowa."Addresses:"On the Foundations of Mathematics," Presidentialaddress before the American Mathematical Societyat its ninth annual meeting, New York, December29, 1902.Articles :" The True Radii of Convergence of the Expressionsfor the Ratios of the Triangles when Developed asPower-Series in the Time-Intervals."Books:"The Moral System of Shakespeare: A PopularIllustration of Fiction as the Experimental Side ofPhilosophy."Addresses :" The Renaissance of University Education," Commencement Address, Boston University, June 3.Books:(and Brooks). "Rational Grammar School Arithmetic," Part II.Articles:"A Working Basis for Correlation of High SchoolMathematics.""Secondary Mathematical Teaching Should bePractical."Reviews:Beman & Smith's "Arithmetic."Articles:"Equilibrium in the System Composed of SodiumCarbonate, Sodium Bicarbonate, Carbon Dioxide,and Water."Articles:"Clay;" "Cormorant;" "Crane;" "Crispus;" "Cucumber;" "Dodo."Reviews:Berger's "Les prefaces jointes aux livres de la Bibledans les manuscrits de la Vulgate."Holborn's "Pentateuch in the Light of Today." Where Published.Reference Handbook of MedicalSciences, Vol. VI (1903).Science, N. S., Vol. XVII, pp.729-33.New York: The Macmillan Co.Journal of Political Economy,March, 1 903.Political Science Quarterly, June,1903.Science, March 13, 1903; Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, May, 1903;School Review, June, 1903.Astronomical Journal, No.^537(entire), and No. 538, May 15,1903.New York: The Macmillan Co.Chicago: Scott, Foresman & Co.Mathematical Supplement SchoolScience, June, 1903.Ibid., June, 1903.School Science, April, 1 903.American Chemical Journal^May, 1903.Jewish Encyclopedia, Vol. IV,New York: Funk & Wag-nails, 1903.American Journal of Theology vApril, 1903.Ibid.UNIVERSITY RECORD 211Name. Title. Where Published.;, Ira Maurice. Reviews:Holzbey's "Die Biicher Ezra und Nehemiah." American Journal of Theology,April, 1903.Erbt's "Jeremia und seine Zeit." Ibid.Jacob's "Das Hohelied." Ibid.Robertson's "Early Religion of Israel." Ibid.Boehmer's " Gottesgedanken in Israels Konigthum." Ibid.Gindraux's "Les esperances messianiques dTsrael."IV. Ibid.Rohling's " En route pour Sion." Ibid.Jordan's "Prophetic Ideas and Ideals." Ibid.Strachan's " Hebrew Ideals from Story of Patriarchs." Ibid.Kent's " Messages of Israel's Lawgivers." Ibid.Stewart's "Memorable Places Among Holy Hills." Ibid.Delitzsch's "Babel und Bibel." Ibid.Delitzsch-McCormick's "Babel and Bible." Ibid.Konig's "Bibel und Babel." Ibid.Barth's "Babel und israelitisches Religionswesen." Ibid.Budde's "Das Alte Testament und die Ausgra- Ibid.bungen."Winckler's "Die Babylonische Kultur, u. s.w." Ibid.Jeremias's "Im Kampfe um Babel und Bibel." Ibid.Radau's " The Creation Story of Genesis " I. Ibid.Raycroft, Joseph Edward.Schutze, Martin.Slonaker, James Rollin.Smith, Alexander.Smith, John M. P. Addresses:"Babylon and the Bible," Isaiah Woman's Club,Chicago, April 1." An Agate Seal Cylinder of 2000 B. C," the American Oriental Society, Baltimore, Md., April 18.Addresses:" The Value of the Strength Test as Compared withOther Items of the Physical Examination and SomeMethods of Making these Tests," Detroit, Mich.,April 8, 1903.Books:"Twelve Songs of Maeterlinck." Metrical translations with an introduction.Addresses:•' Nature Study in the Public Schools," five lectures,Saginaw, Mich., April 24, 25, 1903."Birds and their Nests," High School, Saginaw,Mich., April 23." The English Sparrow," Valparaiso, Ind., May, 23.Reviews:H. C. Jones's " Principles of Inorganic Chemistry.'Addresses:" The Balance Sheet of Science," Purdue University,April, 1903.Reviews:Giesebrecht's "Der Knecht Jahves des Deutero-jesaia."Girdlestone's " The Grammar of Prophecy."Patterson's " Broader Bible Study: The Pentateuch."Adams's " The Minor Prophets."Riedel's "Alttestamentliche Untersuchungen." Chicago: Ralph Fletcher Seymour.Journal of American ChemicalSociety, May, 1903.Biblical World, March, 1903.Ibid., May, 1903.Ibid., June, 1903.Ibid.American Journal of Theology,April, 1903.212 UNIVERSITY RECORDName.Sparks, Edwin Erle. Title.Articles:"The New Superintendent."" Western Movement of the People."Reviews:Hulbert's " Historic Highways."McGrady's " South -Carolina in the Revolution."DeWitt's " Impeachment of Andrew Jackson."Addresses :Teachers' Institute, Independence, la., March 30 ;Sons of American Revolution, Chicago, April 18;Western Engineers' Association, Chicago, May 2;Northern Iowa Teachers' Association, Union City,May 15; Sons of American Revolution, Milwaukee,May 29; Commencement, Council Bluffs, la., June 4. Where Published.Midland School Journal, April,1903.West Virginia School Journal,April, 1903.American Historical Review,April, 1903.Annals American Academy^April, 1903.Dial, June, 1903.Starr, Frederick. Books:"Prehistoric Archaeology of Europe" (syllabus; pp.44.)." Notes upon the Ethnography of Southern Mexico,"II, (pp. 109, 52 cuts).Articles:"TheTastoanes."" Mexican Onyx.""The Sacral Spot in Maya Indians."" Mary Louise Duncan Putnam."" More Notched-Bone Rattles."Signed and unsigned articles in Unity and ChicagoTribune.Reviews:Carl Lunnholtz's "Unknown Mexico."Signed and unsigned reviews in Chicago Tribune,Dial, Unity, and American Antiquarian.Addresses:After-dinner address, " The Dutch," annual banquetof the Holland Society of Chicago, April 16; addressat complimentary luncheon given by heads of departments of the State University of Iowa, May 9 ;lecture at the State University of Iowa on "Antiquityof Man," May 9 ; " Modern Mexico," Iowa City, May10; address to graduating class, John Marshall highschool, Chicago, June 26. Albany: University of State ofNew York, 1902.Reprinted from Proceedings ofDavenport Academy of Sciences, 1902.Journal of American Folklore,April-June, 1902.Tropical Truth, March, 1 903.Science, March 13, 1903.Ibid., April 17.Proceedings of Davenport Academy of Sciences, May 4, 1903.The World Today, March, 1903.Talbot, Marion. Articles:"The Connection of Mrs. Alice Freeman Palmerwith the Association of Collegiate Alumnae," included in a memorial sketch published by the association.Contributions in the "Department of Home Eco- The House Beautiful.nomics."UNIVERSITY RECORD 213Name.Tolman, Albert Harris. Title.Reviews:Lewis's " Text-Book of Applied English Grammar."Addresses:" Why and How the Spelling of English Should beSimplified," the Ella F. Young and George HowlandClubs, April 4, 1 903; "The Teaching of EnglishMasterpieces," English section of the Chicago andCook County High School Association, May 23, 1903. Where Published.The Elementary School Teacher,March, 1903.Webster, Ralph Waldo. Books:"A Laboratory Manual of Physiological Chemistry." Chicago : University of ChicagoPress, 1903.Weller, Stuart. Books:"A Report on the Paleozoic Paleontology of NewJersey" (pp. 462, plates 53).Articles:" The Composition, Origin, and Relationships of theCorniferous Fauna in the Appalachian Province ofNorth America."" Crotalocrinus Cora -(Hall)." Geological Survey of New Jersey.Journal of Geology, Vol. X, pp.423-32.Ibid., pp. 532-34, Plate III.Whitford, Harry Nichols. Reviews:Vernon's " Economics of Forestry."Boulger's "Wood." Botanical Gazette, May, 1903.Ibid.Williston, Samuel Wendell. Articles:"North American Plesiosaurs," Part I. Publication 73, Field ColumbianMuseum, April, 1 903.Young, Jacob William Albert. Addresses:" What is the Laboratory Method?" Central Association of Science and Mathematics Teachers, ArmourInstitute, Chicago, April 12, 1903." The Bibliography of Mathematics," Chicago Bibliographic Society, Chicago, April 30, 1903.214 UNIVERSITY RECORDTHE UNIVERSITY ADDRESS LIST.This list includes the names of the Trustees of the University and of the Divinity School, the Officers of Administrationand of Instruction in the various Schools and Colleges of theUniversity, the members of their families, the Officers of theStudents' Fund Society, and the Donors of Buildings. (T) indicates a private telephone.Corrections of and additions to this list may be sent to thePresident's Secretary.NAME. ADDRESS;Mr. and Mrs. Frank FrostAbbott Not in residenceMr. and Mrs. Harry DelmontAbells Morgan ParkMr. and Mrs. George E. Adams 530 Belden av. (T)Mr. Walter Sidney Adams Williams Bay, Wis.Miss Anne Elizabeth Allen 5623 Madison av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Philip SchuylerAllen 612 W. 60th pi. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Edward ScribnerAmes 5520 Madison av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Galusha Anderson Newton Centre, Mass.Mr. and Mrs. James RowlandAngell 5629 Madison av.Miss Frances Ramsay Angus 62 Oakwood av.Mr. and Mrs. Trevor Arnett 358 E. 57th st.Miss Lorley Ada Ashleman 6018 Jackson Park av.Mr. and Mrs. Wallace WalterAt wood 5453 Monroe av.Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Ayer 1 Bank st. (T)Miss Zonia Baber 5623 Madison av. (T)Mr. James Claud Baird Morgan Park, 111.Mr. and Mrs. Jesse A. Baldwin Oak Park, 111. (T)Miss Susan Helen Ballou 5663 Washington av.Mr. and Mrs. Lewellys FranklinBarker Not in residenceMr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Barnard 6200 Greenwoodav. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Edward EmersonBarnard Williams Bay, Wis.Miss Edith Ethel Barnard 510 W. 62d st.Mr. and Mrs. Charles ReidBarnes 5610 Madison av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Storrs B.Barrett Williams Bay, Wis.Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Bartlett 2720 Prairie av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Enos M. Barton 4920 Greenwood av. (T)Mr. W. O. Beal 5659 Drexel av.Mr. and Mrs. Joseph HenryBeale, Jr. Not in residenceMr. and Mrs. Edward AmbroseBechtel 5607 Washington av.Miss Henrietta KatherineBecker Foster HallMrs. Jerome Beecher 241 Michigan av. NAME. ADDRESS.Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Belfield 5738 Washingtonav. (T)Miss Belfield 5738 Washington av.Mr. and Mrs. Robert RussellBensley 5477 Ellis av.Mr. Arthur Eugene Bestor Snell HallMr. and Mrs. Arthur Dean Bevan 2917 Michigan av. (T)Mr. Frank Billings 35, 22d st. (T)Mr. Hugh F. Binns 5714 Kimbark av.Mr. and Mrs. Francis A. Blackburn 5498 Cornell av.Mr. and Mrs. Frederick MasonBlanchard 6034 Ingleside av.Mrs. Emmons Blaine 5 The RaymondWalton pi. (T)Mr. William Richards Blair 119 M. Divinity HallMiss Caroline Blinn 4638 Ashland av.Mr. Gilbert Ames Bliss 338 E. 57th st. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Oskar Bolza 5810 Woodlawn av.Mr. and Mrs. Percy HolmesBoynton 5603 Washington av.Miss Helen Bradshaw 6106 Washington av.Mrs. Harriet C. Brainerd 2970 Groveland av.Mr. and Mrs. James HenryBreasted Not in residenceMiss Sophonisba PrestonBreckinridge Green HallMr. and Mrs. Frank MelvilleBronson Morgan ParkMr. Roy Hutchison Brownlee 6024 Ellis av.Mr. Robert Walter Bruere 5827 Monroe av.Mr. and Mrs. Carl Darling Buck 5733 Lexington av.Mr. and Mrs. Isaac BronsonBurgess Morgan Park (T)Mr. and Mrs. Sherburne WesleyBurnham Evanston, 111.Mr. and Mrs. Ernest DeWittBurton 5717 Monroe av.Miss Annette Butler 335 E. 62d st.Miss Ellen Butler 5601 Madison av.Mr. Nathaniel Butler 5601 Madison av.Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Le RoyCaldwell Morgan Park (T)Miss Catherine B. Camp 5709 Kimbark av.Mr. and Mrs. Edward Capps Not in residenceMr. Stephen Reid Capps 600 E. 60th st. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Ives Carpenter 5533 Woodlawnav. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cary 2935 Indiana av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Clarence FassettCastle 5468 Ridgewoodct.(T)UNIVERSITY RECORD 215Mr. and Mrs. Charles JosephChamberlainMr. and Mrs. Thomas ChrowderChamberlinMiss Georgia Louise ChamberlinMr. O. E. ChamberlinMr. and Mrs. Charles ChandlerMr. Henry P. ChandlerMr. and Mrs. Wayland JohnsonChaseMiss Henrietta Helen ChaseMr. Frank Barnes CheringtonMr. and Mrs. Charles ManningChildMr. W. C. ChildsMiss Lisi Cecilia CiprianiMr. and Mrs. William ClancyMr. and Mrs. Solomon HenryClarkMiss Edith ColeMiss Emily ColeMiss Clara ComstockMiss Mary Rena CobbMrs. William P. CongerMr. and Mrs. John Merle CoulterMiss Annette CovingtonMr. and Mrs. Henry ChandlerCowlesMr. Wallace CraigMr. and Mrs. L. A. CrandallMr. and Mrs. Charles R. CraneMiss Caroline CrawfordMr. and Mrs. Claude HenryCrossMr. and Mrs. John MaxwellCroweMiss Helen CulverMiss Lillian Sophia CushmanMr. and Mrs. Starr WillardCuttingMr. and Mrs. Charles BenedictDavenportMr. Herbert Joseph DavenportMr. and Mrs. Henri CharlesEdouard DavidMr. William R. DavisMr. Bradley Moore DavisMrs. Charles DavisMiss Viola DerattMr. and Mrs. John Dewey 6149 Greenwood av.Hyde Park Hotel (T)367 E. 58th st.367 E. 58th st.6037 Kimbark av.33 Hitchcock HallMorgan Park (T)5458 Greenwood av.115 M. Divinity Hall6036 Ingleside av.Snell Hall5622 Ellis av.4530 Woodlawnav. (T)5761 Washington av.5053 Washington av.5053 Washington av.5488 Greenwoodav. (T)Kelly Hall262 Michigan av.Not in residence5756 Madison av.343 E. 62d st.31 Snell Hall3983 Drexel boul. (T)2559 Michigan av. (T)403 E. 62d st.6623 Rhodes av.5620 Ingleside av.31 Ashland boul.6036 Jefferson av.5336 Ellis av. (T)5750 Madison av.13 North Hall.5827 Kimbark av.6047 Ellis av.27 North Hall5859 Washington av.6565 Yale av. (T)6016 Jackson Parkav. (T) Mr. and Mrs. Leonard EugeneDicksonMrs. Zella Allen DixsonMiss Emily ElisabethDobbinMr. and Mrs. John M. DodsonMr. and Mrs. Henry HerbertDonaldsonMr. Wilbert Shepard DrewMr. and Mrs. Jean DubedoutMiss Gertrude DudleyMiss Elizabeth Hopkins DunnMr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Eller-manMr. and Mrs. Daniel GiraudElliottM'ss Augusta EngelsMr. Saul EpsteenMr. Charles Hull EwingMr. and Mrs. Oliver CummingsFarringtonMr. and Mrs. E. B. FelsenthalMr. Ora Thristan FellMr. Marshall FieldMr. and Mrs. Earl B. FersonMrs. Alice D. FeulingMr. and Mrs. Horace SpencerFiske 5611 Drexel av.5600 Monroe av.Williams Bay, Wis.568 Washingtonboul. (T)5740 Woodlawn av.5412 Washington av.443 E. 56th st.5488 Greenwoodav. (T)5622 Ellis av.Williams Bay, Wis.Chicago Beach Hotel759 W. 47th st.7 North Hall31 Ashland boul.338 E. 57th st.4108 Grand boul. (T)5800 Jackson av.1905 Prairie av. (T)395 E. 58th st.5607 Washington av.57th st. andMadison av.5457 Lexington av.15 Snell Hall5535 Lexington av.Williams Bay, Wis.6027 Ellis av.550 E. 55th st.Miss Martha FlemingMr. Roy Caston FlickingerMr. and Mrs. Nott William Flint 5761 Madison a v.Mr. and Mrs. George BurmanFosterMr. Philip FoxMr. Tenny FrankMr. and Mrs. Thomas B. FreasMr. and Mrs. Henry V. Freeman 5760 Woodlawn av.Miss Martha E. French 31 Ashland boul.Mr. Ernst Freund 5730 Woodlawn av.Mr. and Mrs. Angus MathewFrew 5809 Washington av.Mr, and Mrs. Edwin Brant Frost Williams Bay, Wis.Miss Grace Fulmer 4467 Oakenwald av.Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gordon Gale 5344 Greenwoodav. (T)Mr. Dana Lewis GatesMr. Errett GatesMr. and Mrs. F. T. GatesMiss Priscilla Grace GilbertMr. Harry O. GilletMr. and Mrs. J. J. Glessner 5803 Madison av.124 South DivinityMontclair, N. J.5765 Washington av.6810 Parnell av.1800 Prairie av. (T)216 UNIVERSITY RECORD5627 Madison av.5537 Lexington av.5630 Kimbark av.5630 Kimbark av.5329 Greenwood av.6036 Ingleside av.Evanston, 111.Evanston, 111.5810 Drexel av. (T)NAME. ADDRESS.Mr. and Mrs. John Paul Goode 489 E. 62d st. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Edward Goodman 263 Oakwood boul.Mr. and Mrs. Edgar JohnsonGoodspeedMr. and Mrs. George StephenGoodspeedMr. and Mrs. Thomas WakefieldGoodspeedMr. Charles Ten Broeke Good-speedMr. W. C. GoreMr. and Mrs. William GorsuchMr. and Mrs. B. A. GreeneMr. and Mrs. Howard G. GreyMiss Ragnhild GulbransenMr. and Mrs. Henrik Gunder-senMr. and Mrs. Frank WakeleyGunsaulusMr. and Mrs. W. F. E. GurleyMr. and Mrs. Frederic JamesGurneyMr. Charles Claude GuthrieMr. Walter Stanley HainesMr. and Mrs. George Ell ery Hale Williams Bay, Wis.Mr. and Mrs. William GardnerHale 5757 Lexington av. (T)Mr. William J. Hale 5724 Washingtonav. (T)Mr. and Mrs. James Parker Hall 5637 Madison av. (T)Mr. Charles H. Hamill 2227 Prairie av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Hamilton 2929 Michigan av. (T)Mr. William Lloyd Hamilton 5939 Calumet av.Miss Eleanor Prescott HammondMr. Rolvix HarlanMiss Althea HarmerMr. Robert Francis HarperMr. and Mrs. William Rainey59th st. andLexington av. (T)Morgan Park2618 Prairie av.6151 Lexington av.> Jackson av.5725 Drexel av.464 W. Adams st.5515 Woodlawn av.68 M. Divinity Hall443 E. 56th st.The UniversityHarperMiss Helena Davida HarperMr. Norman M. HarrisMr. and Mrs. Walter WilsonHartMr. B. C. H. HarveyMr. Leroy Harris HarveyMr. Heinrich HasselbringMr. Shinkishi HataiMr. and Mrs. Henry Rand HatfieldMr. and Mrs. Augustus RaymondHatton 6032 Monroe av.59th st. andLexington av.26 North Hall9036 Superior av.5516 Madison av.6242 Woodlawn av.6019 Madison av.5738 Drexel av. (T)5825 Kimbark av. NAME.Mr. and Mrs. Wallace HeckmanMr. Olof HedeenMiss Mary HefferanMr. and Mrs. Ludwig HektoenMr. and Mrs. Charles RichmondHendersonMr. and Mrs. George LincolnHendricksonMr. and Mrs. Robert HerrickMr. and Mrs. John CharlesHesslerMr. and Mrs. Charles EdmundHewittMr. and Mrs. William HillMr. and Mrs. Emil GustavHirschMrs. Annie HitchcockMr. and Mrs. Glenn MoodyHobbsMr. and Mrs. William H. HoldenMiss Antoinette B. HollisterMr. Willis B. HolmesMr. and Mrs. George ElliottHowardMiss Grace HoweMr. Clifton Durant HoweMiss Mary HowellMr. and Mrs. Ira WoodsHowerthMr. and Mrs. George CarterHowlandMr. Eri Baker HulbertMr. and Mrs. Charles L. HutchinsonMr. and Mrs. James NevinsHydeMr. Joseph Paxson IddingsMr. and Mrs. E. Fletcher IngalsMr. and Mrs. Maxime IngresMr. Foster H. IronsMr. Ernest Edward IronsMr. and Mrs. Wilbur SamuelJackmanMr. and Mrs. John FranklinJamesonMr. and Mrs. Thomas AtkinsonJenkinsMr. Marcus W. JerneganMr. and Mrs. James R. JewettMr. and Mrs. Franklin JohnsonMr. Samuel Carlisle JohnstonMiss Elizabeth B. Jones ADDRESS.4505 Ellis av. (T)Morgan Park5515 Woodlawn av.5803 Washingtonav. (T)5736 Washington av.5515 Woodlawn av.5735 Lexington av. (T)5756 Madison av.450 E. 60th st.5728 Madison av. (T)3612 Grand boul. (T)474] Greenwood av.362 E. 54th st.Evanston, 111.6146 Woodlawn av.45 Hitchcock Hall5811 Madison av.52 Walton pi.6014 Kimbark av.6149 Ellis av.Not in residence5731 Woodlawn av. (T)5537 Lexington av.2709 Prairie av. (T)2409 Michigan av.5730 Woodlawn av.4757 Grand boul. (T)5334 Ellis av. (T)5330 Greenwood av.230 Ashland boul. (T)5724 Kimbark av. (T)5551 Lexington av.488 E. 54th place118 Maroon HeightsNot in residence5531 Washington av.6156 Ingleside av.4638 Ashland av.UNIVERSITY RECORD 217NAME.Mr. and Mrs. Haydn Evan JonesMr. Lauder William JonesMr. and Mrs. Lester BartlettJonesMr. and Mrs. Edwin OakesJordanMr. and Mrs. Noble B. JudahMr. and Mrs. Harry PrattJudsonMr. Edward JudsonMrs. Elizabeth G. KellyMrs. V. H. KendallMr. and Mrs. Paul Oskar KernMr. and Mrs. A. A. KesterMr. and Mrs. Carl KinsleyMr. Camillo von KlenzeMiss Frances KnoxMr. and Mrs. O. A. KnudsonMr. and Mrs. C. C. KohlsaatMr. and Mrs. H. H. KohlsaatMr. and Mrs. Charles EdwardKremerMr. and Mrs. Carl JohannesKrohMr. Preston KyesMiss Alice LachmundMiss Adele LacknerMr. and Mrs. Carl GustavLagergrenMr. and Mrs. Gordon JenningsLaingMiss Ruth Winifred LaneMiss Elizabeth E. LangleyMr. and Mrs. James LaurenceLaughlinMiss Agatha LaughlinMr. James Wright LawrieMr. and Mrs. Kurt LavesMr. and Mrs. Nels S0rensonLawdahlMr. and Mrs. William M.LawrenceMr. and Mrs. Arthur W. LeonardMr. Dean DeWitt LewisMr. and Mrs. Frank RattrayLilliefMr. and Mrs. David J. LingleMr. James Weber LinnMr. and Mrs. W. R. Linn Morgan Park6408 Greenwood av.6213 Lexington av.5720 Woodlawn av.2701 Prairie av. (T)5765 Washingtonav. (T)Hitchcock Hall2716 Prairie av.4467 Oakenwald av.5475 Ellis av.5836 Drexel av.5344 Greenwood av.23 North Hall588 E. 60th st.1047 E. 60th st.239 Ashland boul.120 Lake ShoreDrive (T)482 N. State st. (T)345 E. 61st st.48 Hitchcock HallBeecher Hall3201 Calumet avMorgan Park6023 Monroe ave.5654 Monroe av.360 E. 54th st.5747 Lexingtonav. (T)5747 Lexington av.6820 Lafayette av.4 Plaisance ct.Morgan Park513 Jackson boul. (T)Morgan Park5551 Monroe av.5801 Monroe av. (T)486 E. 54th pi.43 Hitchcock Hall2709 Michigan av. (T) Mr. John Thomas ListerMiss Louisa H. LivermoreMr. Burton Edward LivingstonMr. and Mrs. F. J. LlewellynMiss Rose LlewellynMr. and Mrs. George HerbertLockeMr. and Mrs. Robert MorssLovettMr. and Mrs. Frank O. LowdenMr. and Mrs. Arthur ConstantLunnMr. Carlton J. LyndeMr. and Mrs. Elias Potter LyonMiss Florence May LyonMr. and Mrs. William D. Mac-ClintockMr. and Mrs. Julian W. MackMr. and Mrs. I. W. MaclayMr. Murdoch Haddon MacLeanMrs. Christina M. MacLeanMiss Annie M. MacLeanMr. Harris Franklin MacNeishMr. and Mrs. Franklin Mac-VeaghMr. and Mrs. Hervey FosterMalloryMr. and Mrs. Leon MandelMr. John Matthews ManlyMr. and Mrs. Charles RiborgMannMr. and Mrs. Charles A. MarshMr. George Linnaeus MarshMr. and Mrs. Heinrich MaschkeMiss F. von MassouMr. and Mrs. Albert PrescottMathewsMr. and Mrs. Shailer MathewsMr. Samuel AlexanderMatthewsMr. and Mrs. Ezra B. McCaggMr. and Mrs. Harold F. McCormickMr. and Mrs. Herbert NewbyMcCoyMiss Mary E. McDowellMr. and Mrs. Andrew McLeishMr. and Mrs. George HerbertMead ADDRESS.Morgan Park, 111.Green HallNot in residence5206 Madison av. (T)5206 Madison av.Not in residence5725 Monroe av. (T)1912 Prairie av. (T)283 E. 65th pi.12 North Hall6011 Woodlawn av.Foster Hall5629 Lexington av. (T)5206 South Parkav. (T)Yonkers, N. Y.6026 Monroe av.6026 Monroe av.6023 Monroe av.5639 Drexel av.103 Lake ShoreDrive (T)5444 Ingleside av.3409 Michigan av. (T)5455 Lexington av. (T)5442 Ridge wood ct. (T)5639 Washingtonav. (T)115 Maroon HeightsNot in residence5731 Washingtonav. (T)456 E. 60th st.5736 Woodlawn av.(T)6932 Wentworth av.67 Cass st. (T)88 Bellevue pi. (T)Monroe av. (T)4638 Ashland av. (T)Glencoe, 111.6016 Jackson Parkav. (T)218 UNIVERSITY RECORDNAME. ADDRESS.Mr. and Mrs. Floyd R. Mechem 5828 Woodlawn av.Mr. and Mrs. Charles EdwardMerriam 6040 Woodlawn av.Mr. John Jacob Meyer Not in residenceMr. and Mrs. Ira BentonMeyers 350 W. 61st st. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Albert AbrahamMichelson 5837 Washington av.Mr. and Mrs. Frank JustusMiller 357 E. 58th st.Mr. and Mrs. Newman Miller 5515 Woodlawn av.Mr. and Mrs. Robert AndrewsMillikan 360 E. 54th st.Mrs. Sarah E. Mills 5727 Monroe av.Miss Emily Mills 5727 Monroe av.Miss Sarah E. Mills Morgan ParkMr. and Mrs. Charles FredericMillspaugh 5748 Madison av. (T)Miss Clara Isabel Mitchell 9163 Pleasant av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. John J. Mitchell 5012 Woodlawnav. (T)Mr. and Mrs. John WildmanMoncrief 5717 Monroe av.Mr. William Vaughn Moody Not in residenceMr. and Mrs. Addison WebsterMoore 6045 Woodlawn av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Eliakim HastingsMoore 5617 Washington av.Mr. and Mrs. Forest Ray Moulton Not in residenceMr. and Mrs. Richard GreenMoulton 5053 Washingtonav. (T)Mr. and Mrs. George WilliamMyers 6119 Monroe av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Johnston Myers 2438 Michigan av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. John Ulric Nef 6018 Jackson Park av.Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Lee Neff 5827 Kimbark av.Mr. Charles Hugh Neilson 93 Hammond st.Mr. Bertram G. Nelson 88 M. Divinity HallMr. John W. Nevius Morgan ParkMrs. Alice Peloubet Norton 5832 Washingtonav. (T)Mr. Christian J0rginius Olsen Morgan ParkMr. and Mrs. William BishopOwen 6027 Lexington av. (T)Mr. Frederick William Owens 5473 Lexington av.Miss Bertha Parcot 5478 Ellis av.Mr. Alonzo K. Parker Hitchcock HallMiss Louise S. Parker Hitchcock HallMr. and Mrs. Francis WarnerParker Hotel Del PradoMr. and Mrs. John A. Parkhurst Williams Bay, Wis. Mrs. Laura O. ParsonsMr. and Mrs. F. W. PatrickMiss Bertha PayneMr. Perry J. Payne 167 E. 50th st.Marengo, 111.5744 Monroe av. (T)584 Adams st.Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. Payne 220 E. 60th st. (T)Mr. and Mrs. George R. Peck 17 Delaware pi.Miss Frances Pellett Kelly HallMr. Richard A. F. Penrose, Jr. Not in residenceMiss Cora Belle Perrine 486 E. 54th pi.Mr. William August Petersen Morgan ParkMr. and Mrs. Frank Peterson Minneapolis, Minn.Miss Rose Phillips 5829 Jackson av.Mr. and Mrs. Karl Pietsch 6049 Kimbark av.Mr. Nate C. Plimpton 356 E. 57th st.Miss Elisabeth Port 5761 Madison av.Mr. and Mrs. Ira M. Price Morgan ParkMr. and Mrs. Eduard Prokosch 6456 Ellis av.Dr. Brown Pusey Evanston, 111.Mr. and Mrs. Joseph EdwardRaycroft 6109 Greenwoodav. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Hall Raymond 5648 Kimbark av.Mr. and Mrs. Frank F. Reed Riverside, 111.Miss Mary Reed 5409 Jefferson av. (T)Mr. Herbert M. Reese Williams Bay, Wis.Mr. and Mrs. John A. Reichelt 748 Washington boul.Mr. and Mrs. Daniel GraisberryRevell 5430 Lexington av.Miss Myra Reynolds Foster HallMiss Emily Jane Rice 6955 Perry av. (T)Mr. Howard Taylor Ricketts 5498 Cornell av.Mr. and Mrs. George W. Ritchey Williams Bay, Wis.Miss Luanna Robertson Kelly HallMiss Josephine Chester Robertson 5704 Jackson av.Mr, and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller New York cityMr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr. New York cityMr. Henry Roudil 20 North HallMr. and Mrs. Nathaniel I.Rubinkam 445 E. 56th st.Mr. Henry A. Rust The Quadrangle ClubMr. and Mrs. Martin A. Ryerson 4851 Drexel boul. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Otto R. Ryerson 6531 La Fayette av.Mr. Rollin D. Salisbury 5730 Woodlawn av.Miss Margaret Scaggs 5520 Woodlawn av.Mr. and Mrs. Frederick WilliamSchenk 5661 Drexel av.Miss Anna Talea Scherz 4842 Kenwood av.UNIVERSITY RECORD 219NAME. ADDRESS.Mr* and Mrs. Frank Schlesinger Williams Bay, Wis.Mr. Hans M. Schmidt- Warten-berg Not in residenceMiss Lydia Marie Schmidt 335 W. 61st st.Mr. and Mrs. Martin Schutze Not in residenceMr. Ferdinand Schwill 62 Hitchcock HallMr. Harry Fletcher Scott 6014 Kimbark av.Mr. and Mrs. George A. Sea-verns, Jr. 3831 Michigan av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.Seidenadel 5817 Jackson av.Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Senn 532 Dearborn av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Geo. E. Sham-baugh 5627 Washingtonav. (T)Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Shears 3130 Indiana av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Francis WaylandShepardson 6026 Monroe av. (T)Mrs. A. M. Sheppard 5601 Madison av.Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shorey 5516 Woodlawn av.Mrs. Maria A, Shorey 5520 Woodlawn av. (T)Mr. Earl Silver 5700 Jackson av.Mr. and Mrs. Burton J. Simpson 6546 Lexington av.Mrs. Alice Simpson Morgan ParkMiss Margaret O. Skaggs 5520 Woodlawn a v.Mr. and Mrs. Herbert EllsworthSlaught 338 E. 57th st. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Albion WoodburySmall 5731 Washingtonav. (T)Miss Lina Small 5731 Washington av.Mr. and Mrs. Charles PorterSmall 5729 Madison av. (T)Mr. Alexander Smith Not in residenceMr. and Mrs. Byron L. Smith 2140 Prairie av. (T)Miss Eleanor Smith Hull House (T)Miss Gertrude Smith Hull HouseMr. and Mrs. Frederick A.Smith 87 Rush st. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Gerald BirneySmith 5430 Lexington av.Mr. and Mrs. John M. P. Smith 469 E. 56th st.Mr. and Mrs. Willard A. Smith 3256 Rhodes av. (T)Mr. Joseph Madison Sniffen Morgan ParkMr. and Mrs. Edwin ErieSparks 5631 Madison av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Sprague 2710 Prairie av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Amos Alonzo Stagg 5704 Jackson av.Mr. Frederick Starr 5634)^ Jackson av.Mr. and Mrs. Edward M.Stephenson 5475 Madison av.Mr. and Mrs. Julius Stieglitz 6026 Monroe av.Mr. George N. Stewart 5221 Jefferson av. Miss Katherine Marion Stillwell 5756 Monroe av.Mr. Samuel Wesley Stratton Washington, D. C.Mr. Katashi Takahashi 5488 Ellis av.Miss Marion Talbot Green HallMr. Frank Bigelow Tarbell 5730 Woodlawn av.Mr. and Mrs. Horace K. Tenney 4827 Kenwood av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin S. Terry 6044 Jefferson a v.Mr. Oliver Joseph Thatcher 28 North HallMr. and Mrs. Judson B. Thomas 6915 Yale av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. William I. Thomas 6107 Madison av.Mr. and Mrs. James WestfallThompson 5747 Washingtonav. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Georg Thorne-Thomsen 6022 Jefferson av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Albert HarrisTolman 5750 Woodlawn av.Mr. Frank Leland Tolman 41 Douglas pi. (T)Mr. Clarence Almon Torrey 30 North HallMr. William Lawrence Tower 9 Plaisance ct.Mr. and Mrs. Oscar LovellTriggs 5634 Madison av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Jared G. CarterTroop 6047 Kimbark av.Mr. and Mrs. James HaydenTufts The UniversityMiss Gertrude Van Hoesen 6037 Kimbark av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. VanTuyl 5328 Drexel av.Mr. and Mrs. Thorstein B.Veblen 6104 Ellis av.Mr. Oswald Veblen 5800 Jackson av.Mr. and Mrs. Herman Eduardvon Hoist Freiburg, Baden,GermanyMr. and Mrs. George EdgarVincent 5737 Lexington av. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Clyde WeberVotaw 437 E. 61st st. (T)Mr. and Mrs. George C. Walker 228 Michigan av. (T)Mrs. James M. Walker 1721 Prairie av.Mr. and Mrs. William B.Walker 2027 Prairie av.Miss Elizabeth Wallace Beecher HallMr. and Mrs. R. James Wallace Williams Bay, Wis.Miss Louise Ware Williams Bay, Wis.Mr. Joseph Parker Warren 19 North HallMiss Irene Warren 403 E. 62d st.Mr. John Broadus Watson 78 Hitchcock HallMr. Ralph Waldo Webster Windermere HotelMr. J. Clarence Webster 4 Tower pi. (T)Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Weller 5813 Madison av.Mrs. H. M. Weller 5813 Madison av.220 UNIVERSITY RECORDMr. and Mrs. Harry GideonWellsMr. Frank Howard WestcottMr. Harry Nichols Whitf ordMr. and Mrs. C. O. WhitmanMr. and Mrs. Clarke B.WhittierMr. and Mrs. William R. WickesMr. Frederick Newton WilliamsMr. and Mrs. Samuel WendellWillistonMiss Ruth WillistonMr. Samuel WillistonMr. and Mrs. William CleaverWilkinsonMr. and Mrs. Herbert Lock-wood WillettMr. Frederick Newton WilliamsMr. Hiram Parker WilliamsonMrs. H. M. WilmarthMr. and Mrs. John GordonWilsonMr. and Mrs. Francis AsburyWoodMiss Elsie WygantMiss Elizabeth YeomansMr. and Mrs. Charles T. YerkesMr. Ghen Ichiro YoshiokaMrs. Ella Flagg YoungMr. and Mrs. Jacob WilliamAlbert YoungMr. and Mrs. John H. ZaneMr. and Mrs. Charles ZueblinMr. George B. Zug ADDRESS.5811 Madison av.9 North Hall6242 Woodlawn av.5238 Woodlawn av.5631 Madison av. (T)6231 Kimbark av.4450 Oakenwald av.5723 Monroe av.5723 Monroe av.Belmont, Mass.5630 Woodlawn av.5407 Woodlawn av. (T)4450 Oakenwald av.41 Hitchcock HallAuditorium Annex5842 Rosalie ct. (T)5600 Drexel av.5744 Monroe a v. (T)Kelly Hall3201 Michigan av. (T)5488 East End av. (T)5342 Cornell av. (T)Not in residence5327 Washington av.38 Madison Park (T)Not in residenceTELEPHONE DIRECTORY.George E. AdamsAnne E. AllenPhillip S. Allen -Edward S. AmesEdward E. Ayer -Zonia Baber -Jesse A. BaldwinArthur F. BarnardCharles R. BarnesEnos M. BartonA. C. BartlettBeecher Hall -Henry H. BelfieldArthur D. Bevan -Frank Billings North 1074Hyde Park 5681Wentworth 1582Hyde Park 5299North 383Hyde Park 5681Oak Park 5163Hyde Park 1016Hyde Park 1486Oakland 163South 91Hyde Park 426Hyde Park 5228Douglas 432South 616 Mrs. Emmons BlaineGilbert A. Bliss -Isaac B. BurgessErnest Caldwell -Stephen R. Capps -Frederick S. CarpenterFrank GaryClarence F. CastleThomas C. ChamberlinWayland J. ChaseWilliam ClancyClara Comstock -Lathan A. CrandallCharles R. Crane -Starr W. Cutting -Viola Deratt -John Dewey -John M. Dodson -Gertrude DudleyE. B. Felsenthal -Marshall FieldFoster Hall -Henry G. GaleJ. J. GlessnerJohn P. GoodeGreen Hall -Ragnhild GulbransenWilliam G. Hale -William J. Hale -James P. HallD. G. HamiltonCharles H. HamillWilliam R. Harper -Shinkishi Hatai -Wallace Heckman -Ludvig Hektoen -Robert HerrickWilliam Hill -Emil G. HirschGeorge C. Howland -Charles L. HutchinsonE. Fletcher IngalsMaxime IngresErnest E. Irons -William S. JackmanNoble B. Judah -Harry P. JudsonKelly Hall -H. H. KohlsaatCharles E. KremerJ. Laurence LaughlinWilliam M. Lawrence -Frank R. Lillie North 1166Hyde Park 809Morgan Park 401Morgan Park 272Hyde Park 1527Hyde Park 852Douglas 374Hyde Park 6577Hyde Park 530Morgan Park 431Drexel 2836Hyde Park 6629Douglas 1983South 745Hyde Park 6148Wentworth 564Hyde Park 770West 1207Hyde Park 6629Drexel 2216South 270Hyde Park 426Hyde Park 1558South 621Hyde Park 54Hyde Park 426Hyde Park 600Hyde Park 1080Hyde Park 1533Hyde Park 1981Douglas 699Calumet 901Hyde Park 426Hyde Park 1215Drexel 3309Hyde Park 1632Hyde Park 2143Hyde Park 5233Douglas 1164Hyde Park 1409South 106Oakland 532Hyde Park 5154Polk 2762Hyde Park 5644South 955Hyde Park 1905Hyde Park 426North 1077Black 1652Hyde Park 984Ashland 522Hyde Park 1416UNIVERSITY RECORD 221W. R. Linn -Frank J. LlewellynRobert M. LovettFrank 0. Lowden -William D. MacClintockJulian W. MackFranklin MacVeagh -Leon Mandel -John M. Manly -Charles R. Mann -Charles A. MarshMiss F. von MassouShailer MathewsEzra B. McCaggHarold F. McCormickHerbert N. McCoy -Mary E. McDowellGeorge H. MeadIra B. MeyersClara I. Mitchell -John J. Mitchell -Charles F. Millspaugh -Addison W. MooreRichard G. MoultonGeorge W. MyersJohnston MyersAlice P. Norton -William B. Owen -Bertha PayneWalter A. PayneJoseph E. RaycroftMary ReedEmily J. RiceMartin A. Ryerson -George A. Seaverns, Jr. South 134Hyde Park 1883Hyde Park 970South 111Hyde Park 1063Drexel 3103North 546Douglas 1079Hyde Park 1544Hyde Park 787Hyde Park 963Hyde Park 969Hyde Park 1286Dearborn 181North 707Hyde Park 6471Yards 596Hyde Park 936Wentworth 411Longwood 211Oakland 239Hyde Park 5402Hyde Park 6152Oakland 418Hyde Park 888Calumet 3713Hyde Park 5400Hyde Park 844Hyde Park 5237Hyde Park 10Hyde Park 1686Hyde Park 221Wentworth 864Oakland 260Douglas 3313 Nicholas SennGeorge E. ShambaughG. F. Shears -Francis W. ShepardsonMrs. Maria A. ShoreyHerbert E. Slaught -Albion W. Small -Charles P. Small -Byron L. SmithEleanor SmithFrederick A. SmithWillardA. Smith -Edwin E. Sparks -A. A. SpragueHorace K. TenneyJudson B. Thomas -James W. Thompson -Mrs. Georg Thorne-Thomsen -Frank L. Tolman -Oscar L. TriggsGertrude Van HoesenGeorge E. Vincent -Clyde W.Votaw -George C. Walker -J. Clarence Webster -Ralph W. Webster -Clark B. WhittierHerbert L. Willett -John G. Wilson -Elsie Wygant -Charles T. YerkesGhen Ichiro Yoshioka -Mrs. Ella F. YoungCharles Zueblin - North 204Hyde Park 1864- Douglas 338Hyde Park 6339- Hyde Park 6304Hyde Park 809- Hyde Park 969Hyde Park 624- South 292Monroe 70- Dearborn 3294Harrison 3298- Hyde Park 896South 393Drexel 2664- Jackson 521Hyde Park 842- Hyde Park 6071Douglas 6050- Hyde Park 5677Hyde Park 5601- Hyde Park 1371Hyde Park 1642- Harrison 1460North 1290- Hyde Park 680Hyde Park 1648- Hyde Park 5244Hyde Park 6525- Hyde Park 5237Douglas 121- Hyde Park 5455Hyde Park 816- Oakland 505Decennial publicationsS7>© UNIVERSITY of CHICAGOFIRST SERIESThe First Series consists of ten volumes representing the work of research of the several Departmentsof the University. These articles are also issued in separate form as reprints. Size, quarto.SECOND SERIESThe following octavo volumes of the second series are announced :Vol. I. The Life and Repentaunce of Marie Magdalene. By Lewis Wager. A morality playreprinted from the original edition of 1566-67,edited, with an Introduction, Notes, and Glos-sarial Index, by Frederic Ives Carpenter.Pp. xxxvi + 91, cloth. Net, $1.00; postpaid,#1.08.Vol. n. The Second Bank of the United States.By Ralph C. H. Catterall. Pp. 538, cloth.Net, $3.00; postpaid, $3.20.Vol. m. Light Waves and their Uses. By AlbertA. Michelson; with 108 drawings and threecolored plates. Pp. 164, cloth. Net, $2.00;postpaid, $2.12.Vol. IV. The Poems of Anne Countess of Win-chilsea. From the original edition of 1713 andfrom unpublished manuscripts, edited, with anIntroduction and Notes, by Myra Reynolds.Pp. cxxx+434, cloth. Net, $3.00; postpaid,fe.35-Vol. V. 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