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APR  28   1919 

DOCTORS  OF  PHILOSOPHY 


OF 


YALE  UNIVERSITY 


1861-1915 


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Published  by  the  University 

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1916 


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DOCTORS  OF  PHILOSOPHY 

OF 

YALE   UNIVERSITY 

WITH    THE   TITLES    OF   THEIR   DISSERTATIONS 


1861-I915 


Prepared  by  the  Graduate  School 

Published  by  the  University 

NEW  HAVEN 

April  1916 


EXOHANGS 


Certainly  Yale  and  Sheffield  are  entitled  to  the  credit  of  introduc- 
ing among  American  institutions  the  degree  of  Doctor  of  Philoso- 
phy, demanding  for  it  a  high  standard  of  attainments,  and  never 
bestowing  the  honor  {not  in  a  single  case  so  far  as  I  can  remember) 
by  any  irregular  promotion. — The  Sheffield  School  of  Yale  Univer- 
sity, by  President  Gilman  of  Johns  Hopkins  University. 

Historically,  the  account  should  begin  with  Yale  College,  where  in 
1846  graduate  courses  in  "Philosophy  and  the  Arts"  were  estab- 
lished and  the  attempt  was  made  to  superadd  on  the  old  frame-i 
work  of  the  college  the  four  faculties  of  law,  medicine,  theology, 

and  philosophy The  honor  of  having  established  the  first 

creditable  course  of  study  for  the  degree  of  Doctor  of  Philosophy 
is  due  to  Yale. — Second  Annual  Report  of  the  President  and  Treas- 
urer of  the  Carnegie  Foundation  for  the  Advancement  of  Teaching, 
1907,  p.  86. 


%5^ 


CONTENTS 

PAGE 

Preface  5-7 

Table  of  Doctorates  by  Years    6 

Table  of  Doctorates  by  Periods   7 

Table  of  Doctorates  by  Departments   7 

Classical   Philology  and   Archaeology,   Indo-Iranian   Philol- 
ogy, Comparative  Philology,  and  Linguistics  9-26 

Semitic  Languages,  Literature,  and  History 27-35 

Romance  Languages  and  Literatures   3^39 

Germanic  Languages  and  Literatures  4^-44 

English  Language  and  Literature  45-^4 

Mathematics    65-76 

Physics 77-85 

Chemistry   86-115 

Botany  116-118 

Zoology  and  Comparative  Anatomy  1 19-122 

Physiology,  Physiological  Chemistry,  Bacteriology,  Hygiene, 

and  Public  Health  123-135 

The  Geological  Sciences    136-148 

The  Social  Sciences   149-158 

History  I59-I70 

Philosophy  and  Education    171-185 

Department  Undetermined    186, 187 

Index    189-210 


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Digitized  by  the  Internet  Archive 

in  2007  with  funding  from 

IVIicrosoft  Corporation 


http://www.archive.org/details/doctorsofphilosoOOyalerich 


PREFACE 

The  list  presented  in  this  pamphlet  was  prepared  by  the 
Graduate  School  of  Yale  University,  in  cooperation  with 
the  University  Secretary's  Office,  and  is  a  complete  list  of 
all  who  have  received  the  degree  of  Doctor  of  Philosophy 
from  Yale  University.  The  names  are  classified  and 
arranged  chronologically  under  the  departments  in  which 
the  principal  work  was  done,  in  accordance  with  the  present 
division  of  departments  in  the  Graduate  School.  In  the 
earlier  years  the  departments  were  grouped  and  less  clearly 
defined,  and  therefore  it  has  been  necessary  to  list  a  few 
names  at  the  end  with  the  department  undetermined. 
Owing  to  the  incompleteness  of  the  earlier  records,  in  a 
few  instances  the  titles-  of  the  dissertations  cannot  be  stated. 
The  list  states  the  degrees  of  each  person;  the  title  of  the 
dissertation,  and,  in  case  it  has  been  printed,  the  title  as 
printed,  if  varying  from  the  original,  with  full  bibliographi- 
cal data;  and  the  present  or  latest  position  or  the  occupa- 
tion and  address  of  each  person  according  to  the  most 
recent  information  obtainable,  and,  in  case  of  those  not 
living,  the  former  principal  positions  as  far  as  known. 

The  Graduate  School  was  first  formally  organized  in 
1847.  The  degree  of  Doctor  of  Philosophy  was  first 
offered  in  i860,  and  was  first  conferred  in  1861,  and  first 
conferred  upon  women  in  1894.  From  1861  to  and  includ- 
ing 191 5  the  degree  has  been  conferred  upon  749  men  and 
99  women,  a  total  of  848.    Of  this  number  789  are  living. 

The  earliest  degrees  were  conferred  in  the  departments 
of  Classics  (1861),  Physics  (1861),  Mathematics  (1862), 
Chemistry  (1866),  Geology  (1867),  and  Zoology  (1867). 
Later  the  chronological  order  of  the  first  degrees  conferred 
in  the  departments  was  as  follows :   Philosophy  and  Educa- 


— 6— 

ticn  (1874),  Engliih  (1875),  Social  Sciences  (1877),  Phy- 
siological Chemistry  (1880),  History  (1882),  Semitics 
(1888),  Romance  Languages  (1894),  German  (1896),  and 
Botany  (1899).  The  following  tables  show  that  the 
numerical  growth  was  slow  up  to  1889,  in  which  year  13 
degrees  were  conferred.  In  no  one  year  of  this  early  period 
(before  1889)  were  there  more  than  7  recipients,  with  an 
average  of  about  3  for  each  year.  23  degrees  were  con- 
ferred in  1 891,  and  44  were  conferred  in  1909,  the  maxi- 
mum number  for  any  one  year  to  date.  From  an  average 
of  3  per  year,  the  number  rose  to  an  average  of  16  during 
the  period  from  1890  to  1894,  to  27  for  the  next  five  years, 
and  to  33  from  1900  to  1915. 

Table  of  Doctorates  by  Years 

1861 3                   1891 23 

1862 I                    1892 15 

1863 3                   1893 13 

1866 4                   1894 21 

1867 I                   1895 19 

1869 4                   1896 31 

1870 I                   1897 22 

1871 3                    1898 34 

1872 3                    1899 30 

1873 8                    1900 26 

1874 4                    1901 39 

1875 4                     1902 29 

1876 8                    1903 36 

1877 6                    1904 39 

1878 7                    1905 36 

1879 3                    1906 29 

1880 5                    1907 22 

1882 2                    1908 32 

1883 I                    1909 44 

1884 2                    1910 27 

1885 6                    1911 31 

1886 3                    1912 31 

1887 4                    1913 39 

1888 4                    1914 32 

1889 13                    1915 36 

1890 9 


— 7— 


Table  of  Doctorates  by  Periods 

Men 

1861  to  1869  16 

Decade  1870  to  1879  47 

Decade  1880  to  1889  40 

Half-decade  1890  to  1894  74 

Half-decade  1895  to  1899  112 

Decade  1900  to  1909  290 

1910  to  1915  175 

754 


/^omen 

Total 

0 

16 

0 

47 

0 

40 

7 

81 

24 

136 

42 

332 

21 

196 

94 


848 


Classical  Philology,  etc 

Physics  

Mathematics   

Chemistry   

Geological  Sciences   

Zoology  and  Comparative  Anatomy 

Philosophy  and  Education  

English  

Social  Sciences   

Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 

History  

Semitic  Languages  

Romance  Languages  

Germanic  Languages  

Botany   

Department  undetermined 


tes  by  Departments 

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43 

0 

43 

2 

29 

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1862 

52 

10 

62 

5 

35 

3 

1866 

99 

3 

102 

8 

93 

4 

1867 

49 

2 

51 

I 

43 

4 

1867 

14 

I 

15 

0 

14 

5 

1874 

83 

7 

90 

4 

34 

6 

1875 

72 

34 

106 

5 

69 

7 

1877 

50 

3 

53 

2 

24 

8 

1880 

48 

6 

54 

I 

49 

9 

1882 

48 

12 

60 

3 

29 

10 

1888 

48 

I 

49 

7 

18 

II 

1894 

14 

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17 

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12 

1896 

20 

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13 

1899 

8 

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10 

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0 

II 

6 

749      99      848      59    497 


Hanns  Oertel,  Dean. 

Charles  Schuchert,  Acting  Dean. 

Clara  Beatrice  Underwood,  Secretary. 


DOCTORS  OF  PHILOSOPHY 

OF 

YALE  UNIVERSITY 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  CLASSICAL  PHILOL- 
OGY AND  ARCHAEOLOGY,  INDO-IRANIAN. 
PHILOLOGY,  COMPARATIVE  PHILOL- 
OGY, AND  LINGUISTICS 


1861 

James  Morris  Whiton,  B.A.  Yale  University  1853. 

Dissertation:    Ars  longa,  brevis  vita. 

Staff  Editor  of  The  Outlook,  New  York  City. 


1863 

William  Henry  Hale,  B.A.  Yale  University  i860,  LL.B.  Albany 

Law  School  1861. 
Dissertation:    Comparison  of  the  evolution  of  the  Prakrit  dialects 

from  Sanskrit  and  Italian  from  Latin. 
Lawyer,  and   Superintendent  of  Public   Baths,  40   First  Place, 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

Lewis  Richard  Packard,  B.A.  Yale  University  1856. 

Dissertatim:    (Title  not  known.) 

Hillhouse    Professor    of   the    Greek    Language   and    Literature, 

Yale  University. 
Died  1884. 

1869 

Robert  Porter  Keep,  B.A.  Yale  University  1865. 
Dissertation:    Quintilian:    his  life,  times,  and  work. 
Principal,  Norwich  Free  Academy,  Norwich,  Conn. 
Died  1904. 


— 10 — 

i872 

Isbon  Thaddeus  Beckwith,  B.A.  Yale  University  1868. 

Dissertation:    The  Greek  sophists. 

Professor  of  Greek,  Trinity  College    (1872-1898),   Professor  of 

New     Testament     Literature     and     Interpretation,     General 

Theological  Seminary  (1898-1906). 
Highland  Court,  50  Windsor  Ave.,  Hartford,  Conn. 

Morton  William  Easton,  B.A.  Yale  University  1863,  M.D.  Colum- 
bia University  1867. 
Dissertation:    On  language  as  a  factor  in  the  evolution  of  the 

human  species. 
Professor    of    English    and    Comparative    Philology,    Emeritus, 

University  of  Pennsylvania,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

1873 
Charles  Rockwell  Lanman,-  B.A.  Yale  University  1871. 
Dissertation:    The  nasal  verbs  in  Sanskrit,  Greek,  and  Latin. 
Wales    Professor    of    Sanskrit,    and    Editor    of    the    Harvard 
Oriental  Series,  Harvard  University,  Cambridge,  Mass. 

Dwight  Whitney  Learned,  B.A.  Yale  University  1870. 
Dissertation:    Compounds  in  Sanskrit. 

Professor  of  Church  History  and  Biblical  Theology,  Doshisha 
University,  Kyoto,  Japan. 

Jules  Luquiens,  B.D.  University  of  Lausanne  1866. 
Dissertation:     The   ablaut   in    the    Indo-European    conjugational 

system. 
Street  Professor  of  the   Romance   Languages  and  Literatures, 

Yale  University. 
Died  1899. 

James  Irving  Manatt,  B.A.  Grinnell  College  1869. 

Dissertation:     The    earlier    and    later    edition    of    Aristophanes' 

Clouds. 
Professor  of  Greek  Literature  and   History,  and   Head  of  the 

Department,  Brown  University,  Providence,  R.  I. 
Died  1915. 

Bernadotte  Perrin,  B.A.  Yale  University  1869. 

Dissertation:    The  Elektra  of  Sophocles  and  the  Choephoroi  of 

^schylus  compared. 
Lampson  Professor  of  Greek  Literature  and  History,  Emeritus, 

Yale  University.  , 


II- 


i874 

August  Hjalmar  Edgren,  Ph.B.  Cornell  University  1871. 

Dissertation:  On  the  vowel-gradation  of  verbs  in  the  Romance 
languages. 

Professor  of  Romance  Languages,  Sanskrit,  and  Comparative 
Philology,  and  Dean  of  the  Graduate  School,  University  of 
Nebraska;    member  of  Nobel  Institute  of  Swedish  Academy. 

Died  1903. 

1875 

William  Rainey  Harper,  B.A.  Muskingum  College  1870,  B.D. 
Baptist  Union  Theological  Seminary  1881. 

Dissertation:  Subject,  Some  problems  connected  with  compara- 
tive Indo-European  philology.     (Exact  title  not  known.) 

President,  and  Professor  and  Head  of  the  Department  of  the 
Semitic  Languages  and  Literatures,  University  of  Chicago, 
Chicago,  111. 

Died  1906. 

1876 

Willabe  Haskell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1863. 
Dissertation:     Comparative    syntax    of    the    Indo-European    lan- 
guages. 
Curator  of  the  College  Reading  Room,  Yale  University. 
Died  1913. 

John  Punnett  Peters,  B.A.  Yale  University  1873. 

Dissertation:    Comparative  and  superlative  in  the  Indo-European 

languages. 
Rector  of  St.  Michael's  Church,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Henry  Parks  Wright,  B.A.  Yale  University  1868. 
Dissertation:    The  letters  of  Pliny  the  Younger. 
Dunham  Professor  of  the  Latin  Language  and  Literature,  and 
Dean  of  the  College  Faculty,  Emeritus,  Yale  University. 

1878 

David  Walter  Brown,  B.A.  Yale  University  1876. 

Dissertation:    Constitutional  history  of  the  early  Roman  republic. 

Lawyer,  5  Beekman  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

George  Ensign  Bushnell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1876,  M.D.  1880. 
Dissertation:    The  conditional  sentences  of  ^schylus. 
Colonel  of  Medical  Corps,  U.  S.  Army,  Commanding  U.  S.  Army 
General  Hospital,  Fort  Bayard,  N.  M. 


12 

Joseph  Alvin  Graves,  B.A.  Yale  University  1872. 

Dissertation:    M.  Tullii  Ciceronis  pro  A.  Cluentio  Habito  oratio 

ad  judices. 
Principal  of  the  South  School  District,  Hartford,  Conn. 
Died  1899. 

David  Andrew  Kennedy,  B.A.  Yale  University  1874. 
Dissertation:    The  lyrical  parts  of  the  Seven  against  Thebes. 
Classical    Master    and    Co-Principal,    Dearborn-Morgan    School 

(1879-1910). 
245  Dwight  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

Rufus  Byam  Richardson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1869. 

Dissertation:    Marcus  Aurelius. 

Lawrence  Professor  of  Greek,  Dartmouth  College   (1882-1893); 

Director   of  American   School   of   Classical   Studies,   Athens, 

Greece  (1893-1903). 
Died  1914. 

1879 
Frank  Bigelow  Tarbell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1873. 
Dissertation:     Notes    on    the    First    Philippic    of    Demosthenes. 

(Published  as  follows:    The  Philippics  of  Demosthenes,  Ginn 

and  Company,  New  York,  1880.) 
Professor    of    Classical    Archaeology,    University    of    Chicago, 

Chicago,  111. 

1880 
Alexander  Martin  Wilcox,  B.A.  Yale  University  1877. 
Dissertatioti :    Aristotle's  criticism  of  Plato's  Republic. 
Professor  of  the  Greek  Language  and  Literature,  University  of 

Kansas,  Lawrence,  Kan. 

1882 

Edmund  Morris  Hyde,  B.A.  Trinity  College  1873. 

Dissertation:  The  Delphic  Oracle. 

Professor  of  Latin,  Rollins  College,  Winter  Park,  Fla. 

1884 
Thomas  Dwight  Goodcll,  B.A.  Yale  University  1877. 
Dissertation:     The    genitive    case    in    Sophokles.      (Published    in 

Transactions  '  of     the     American     Philological     Association, 

15:5-35-     Cambridge,  1884.) 
Lampson  Professor  of  the  Greek  Language  and  Literature,  Yale 

College. 


—13— 

i885 

Samuel  Ball  Platner,  B.A.  Yale  University  1883. 

Dissertation:  A  comparison  of  three  recensions  of  the  Ramayana. 
(Published  in  part  in  Proceedings  of  the  American  Philolog- 
ical Association,  i885:xlvii-i.     Cambridge,  1886.) 

Professor  of  Latin,  Western  Reserve  University,  Cleveland,  O. 


1886 

John  Miller  Burnam,  B.A.  Yale  University  1884. 

Dissertation:    Romance  forms  in  Latin. 

Professor  of  Latin,  University  of  Cincinnati,  Cincinnati,  O. 

Edward  Bull  Clapp,  B.A.  Illinois  College  1875. 

Dissertation:    Conditional  sentences  in  Aischylos.     (Published  in 

Transactions     of     the     American     Philological     Association, 

18:43-58.     Boston,  1887.) 
Professor  of  the  Greek  Language  and  Literature,  University  of 

California,  Berkeley,  Cal. 

Arthur   Pinckney    Hall,    B.A.    Drury    College    1878,    B.D.    Yale 

University  1884. 
Dissertation:    Some  verb  uses  in  Pliny's  Letters. 
Professor  of  Latin,  and  Dean,  Drury  College,  Springfield,  Mo. 


1887 

William  Everett  Waters,  B.A.  Yale  University  1878. 
Dissertation:     Studies    on    the    forms    of    words    in    Petronius, 

together    with     an     introduction     on     his     identity.      (Partly 

embodied    in    Petronius,    Cena    Trimalchionis,    Benjamin    H. 

Sanborn  and  Company,  Boston,  1902.) 
Professor  of  the   Greek  Language  and  Literature,   New  York 

University,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


1888 

Clarence  Fassett  Castle,  B.A.  Denison  University  1880. 
Dissertation:   The  use  of  the  aorist  participle  in  Homer. 
Associate  Professor  of  Greek  on  the  Edward  Olson  Foundation, 
University  of  Chicago,  Chicago,  111. 


—14— 

William  Henry  Parks,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886. 

Dissertaticni:    Variations   from  Attic  usage  in   St.   Paul's  earlier 

epistles    (Romans,   I-II    Corinthians,   Galatians,   I-II   Thessa- 

lonians). 

Died  1910. 

..■**"      .) 

James  Johnson  Robinson,  B.A.  Princeton  University  1884. 
Dissertation:    The  Annals  of  Quintus  Ennius.     A  paper  treating 

particularly  of  the  verse. 
Master  in  Latin,  Hotchkiss  School,  Lakeville,  Conn. 

1889 

Carl  Darling  Buck,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886. 

Dissertatiofi:  The  choregia  in  Athens  and  at  Ikaria.  (Published 
in  American  Journal  of  Archaeology,  5:18-33.  Boston,  1889; 
and  in  Papers  of  the  American  School  of  Classical  Studies 
at  Athens,  5:77-92.    Boston,  1892.) 

Professor,  and  Head  of  the  Department,  of  Sanskrit  and  Indo- 
European  Comparative  Philology,  University  of  Chicago, 
Chicago,  111. 

iSgo 

Frank  Gardner  Moore,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886. 

Dissertation:     De   societatis   quam  vocant  initiis,   sive   Quomodo 

scriptores    antiqui,    praesertim    Plato,    Aristoteles,    Lucretius, 

societatis  origines  habuerint. 
Professor    of    Classical    Philology,    Columbia    University,    New 

York,  N.  Y. 

Hanns  Oertel. 

Dissertation:     De   cottldiani   sermonis  in   Q.   Horatii   Flacci  ser- 

monibus  vestigiis. 
Professor    of    Linguistics    and    Comparative    Philology,    Yale 

College,  and  Dean  of  the  Graduate  School,  Yale  University. 

George  Scott,  B.A.  Alfred  University  1877. 
Dissertation:    The  preposition  in  Horace. 

Flickinger  Professor  of  the  Latin  Language  and  Literature, 
Otterbein  College,  Westerville,  O. 

Herbert  Gushing  Tolman,  B.A.  Yale  University  1888. 
Dissertation:    De  gerundio  latino  atque  modo  infinitivo  sanscrito. 
Professor    of    Greek    Language    and    Literature,    and    Dean    of 

College  of  Arts  and  Science,  Vanderbilt  University,  Nashville, 

Tenn. 


—15— 

iSgi 

Frank  Frost  Abbott,  B.A.  Yale  University  1882. 
Dissertation:    Colloquial  Latin  in  the  letters  to  Cicero. 
Kennedy  Professor  of  Latin  Language  and  Literature,  Princeton 
University,  Princeton,  N.  J. 

Edward  Capps,  B.A.  Illinois  College  1887. 

Dissertation:  The  stage  in  the  Greek  theatre.  (Published  as 
follows:  The  Greek  stage  according  to  the  extant  dramas, 
Transactions  of  the  American  Philological  Association, 
22:5-80.    Boston,  1891.) 

Professor  of  Classics,  Princeton  University,  Princeton,  N.  J. 

i8ga 

Washington  Irving  Hunt,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886. 
Dissertation:   The  influence  of  Homer  on  the  poetry  of  Matthew 

Arnold. 
Tutor  in  Greek,  Yale  University. 
Died  1893. 

Frank  Justus  Miller,  B.A.  Denison  University  1879. 
Dissertation:    The  Latinity  of  the  younger  Pliny. 
Professor  of  Latin,  and  Dean  in  the  Junior  Colleges,  University 
of  Chicago,  Chicago,  111. 

1894 

John  Beadle,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886. 

Dissertation:    Auxiliary  verbs  in  Latin. 

Classical  Teacher  in  Brown  Tutoring  School,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

James  W.  D.  Ingersoll,  B.A.  Yale  University  1892. 
Dissertation:    The  use  of  quod  in  Cicero. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Latin,  Yale  College. 

Guy  VanGorder  Thompson,  B.A.  University  of  Colorado  1888. 
Dissertation:    The  Draconian  constitution. 
Tutor  and  Instructor  in  Latin,  Yale  University. 
Died  1897. 

1895 

William    Tenney    Bartley,    B.A.    Yale    University    1891,    B.D. 

Andover  Theological  Seminary  1899. 
Dissertation:    The  story  of  Agamemnon. 
Pastor,  Congregational  Church,  Middlefield,  Mass. 


— 16— 

Curtis  Clark  Bushnell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1891. 

Dissertation:    Three  translations  of  ^schylus. 

Professor  of  Classics,  Syracuse  University,  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

M.  Victor  Staley,  B.A.  University  of  Wisconsin  1893,  M.A.  1894, 

LL.B.  University  of  Oregon  1904. 
Dissertation:    Index  verborum  to  the  Shadvinga  Brahmana  of  the 

Samaveda. 
Supervising-Principal  of  the  Corona  City  Schools,  Corona,  Cal. 

Susan  Dinsmore  Tew,  B.A.  Smith  College  1892. 
Dissertation:    Notes  on  the  vocabulary  of  ^schylus. 
Professor     of     Greek,     Sophie     Newcomb     Memorial     College 
(Tulane  University),  New  Orleans,  La. 


1896 

Charles  Samuel  Ingham,  B.A.  Yale  University  1891. 
Dissertation:    The  conjunction  quod  in  St.  Augustine's  De  civitate 

Dei. 
Head  Master,  Dummer  Academy,  South  Byfield,  Mass. 

Clifton  Price,  B.A.  Cornell  University  1889. 
Dissertation:    Commands  and  prohibitions  in  Horace. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Latin,  University  of  California,  Berkeley, 
Cal. 

George  Clarence  Thompson,  M.A.  Wake  Forest  College  1888. 
Dissertation:    The  Periclean  tradition. 
Principal,  Alameda  High  School,  Alameda,  Cal. 

Arthur  Leslie  Wheeler,  B.A.  Yale  University  1893. 

Dissertation:  The  use  of  the  imperfect  indicative  in  Plautus  and 
Terence.  (Published  in  revised  form  as  follows:  The  uses  of 
the  imperfect  indicative  in  Plautus  and  Terence,  Transactions 
of  the  American  Philological  Association,  30:14-23.  Boston, 
1899;  The  imperfect  indicative  in  early  Latin,  American 
Journal  of  Philology,  24:163-191.  Baltimore,  1903;  The  syntax 
of  the  imperfect  indicative  in  early  Latin,  Classical  Philology, 
1:357-390.     Chicago,  1906.) 

Professor  of  Latin,  Bryn  Mawr  College,  Bryn  Mawr,  Pa. 


—17— 

i897 

Carleton  Lewis  Brownson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1887. 

Dissertation:  Plato's  studies  and  criticisms  of  the  poets.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  as  follows:  Plato's  studies  in  Greek  literature, 
Proceedings  of  the  American  Philological  Association, 
27:38-40.  Boston,  1896;  Reasons  for  Plato's  hostility  to  the 
poets,  Transactions  of  the  American  Philological  Association, 
28:5-41.     Boston,  1897.) 

Professor  of  Greek,  and  Dean  of  the  Faculty,  College  of  the 
City  of  New  York,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Herbert  Chester  Nutting,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 
Dissertation:   The  uses  of  the  independent  subjunctive  in  Cicero's 

Orations. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Latin,  University  of  California,  Berkeley, 

Cal. 

Charles   Hamline   Zimmerman,    B.A.    Northwestern   University 

i80i. 
Dissertation:    The  independent  subjunctive  in  Tacitus. 
Instructor    in    Latin,    New    Haven    High    School,    New    Haven, 

Conn. 

1898 

James  Turney  Allen,  B.A.  Pomona  College  1895,  M.A.  Univer- 
sity of  California  1896. 

Dissertation:  A  study  of  the  optative  mode  in  conditional  and 
conditional-relative  clauses  in  Greek.  (Published  in  revised 
form  as  follows:  On  the  so-called  iterative  optative  in  Greek, 
Transactions  of  the  American  Philological  Association, 
33:101-126.    Boston,  1902.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Greek,  University  of  California,  Berke- 
ley, Cal. 

Frederick  Marcy  DeForest,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 
Dissertation:     The    Greek    names    of    Roman    priests,    military 

officers,  legislative  bodies,  and  magistrates. 
Rector,  Grace  Church,  Chicopee,  Mass. 

Theodore  Woolsey  Heermance,  B.A.  Yale  University  1893. 
Dissertation:    Material  in  the  Attic  orators  for  a  history  of  the 

tradition  of  the  Persian  wars. 
Director  of  the  American  School  of  Classical  Studies,  Athens, 

Greece. 
Died  1905. 


— 18— 

George  Dwight  Kellogg,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 

Dissertation:  The  use  of  the  subjunctive  in  independent  sen- 
tences in  Cicero's  correspondence.  (Published  in  part  in 
Proceedings  of  the  American  Philological  Association  as  fol- 
lows: Complementary  and  supplementary  defining  parataxis, 
29:47-52.  Boston,  1898;  Critical  notes  on  Cicero's  letters, 
32:4-5.     Boston,  1900.) 

Professor  of  the  Latin  Language  and  Literature,  Union  College, 
Schenectady,  N.  Y. 

John  Dorsey  Wolcott,  B.A.  University  of  Wisconsin  1895,  M.A. 
Cornell  University  1897. 

Dissertation:  New  words  in  Thucydides.  (Published  in  Trans- 
actions of  the  American  Philological  Association,  29:104-157. 
Boston,  1898.) 

Librarian,  U.  S.  Bureau  of  Education,  Washington,  D.  C. 


1899 

Carl  Axel  Harstrom,  B.A.  Hobart  College  1886,  M.A.  1889. 

Dissertation:  A  contribution  to  the  comparative  study  of  the 
imagery  in  Catullus  and  Horace.  (Published  in  part  as  fol- 
lows: The  use  of  sense-epithets  in  poetry.  Proceedings  of 
the  American  Philological  Association,  1900:17-20.  Boston, 
1901.) 

Principal,  Harstrom  School,  Norwalk,  Conn. 


1900 
Louise  Preston  Dodge. 

Dissertation:    Posse  and  its  synonyms  in  Cicero's  Letters. 
Professor  of  Latin,  Winona  College,  Winona  Lake,  Ind. 

Edward  Thomas  Owen,  B.A.  Yale  University  1872. 

Dissertation:  A  revision  of  the  pronouns.  (Published  as  follows: 
A  revision  of  the  pronouns,  with  special  examination  of 
relatives  and  relative  clauses,  Transactions  of  the  Wisconsin 
Academy  of  Sciences,  Arts,  and  Letters,  13:1-140.  Madison, 
1900.) 

Professor  of  French  and  Linguistics,  Emeritus,  University  of 
Wisconsin,  Madison,  Wis. 


—19— 

igo2 

Amy  Louise  Barbour,  B.A.  Smith  College  1891, 

Dissertation:  Tryphiodorus,  a  late  epic  poet:  his  relation  to  other 

epics  in  form  and  vocabulary. 
Associate    Professor    of    Greek,    Smith    College,    Northampton, 

Mass. 

Abraham  Royer  Brubacher,  B.A.  Yale  University  1897. 

Dissertation:    Parataxis  in  Herodotus. 

President,  New  York  State  College  for  Teachers,  Albany,  N.  Y. 


1903 

Elisabeth  Frances  Abbe,  B.A.  Wellesley  College  1888,  M.A.  1896. 
Dissertation:    Entrances  in  Greek  tragedy. 

Head  of  Ancient  Language  Department,  Melrose  High  School, 
Melrose,  Mass. 

Lester  Dorman  Brown,  B.A.  University  of  Wooster  1894. 
Dissertation:    A  study  of  the  case  construction  of  words  of  time. 

(Printed  by  The  Tuttle,  Morehouse  &  Taylor  Company,  New 

Haven,  1904.) 
Master  in  Greek,  The  Hotchkiss  School,  Lakeville,  Conn. 

Frank  Scott  Bunnell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894,  M.A.  University 

of  Minnesota  1897. 
Dissertation:    Notes  on  the  vocabulary  of  Apollonius  Rhodius  as 

compared  with  that  of  Homer. 
Instructor    in     Greek    and     Latin,     Norwich     Free     Academy, 

Norwich,  Conn. 

Charles  Upson  Clark,  B.A.  Yale  University  1897. 

Dissertation:     The    text    tradition     of    Ammianus     Marcellinus. 

(Printed  by  Ryder's  Printing  House,  New  Haven,  1904.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Palaeography  and  Late  Latin,  Graduate 

School,  Yale  University. 

Andrew  Sledd,  M.A.  Randolph-Macon  College  1894,  M.A.  Har- 
vard University  1896. 
Dissertation:    Sentence  connection  in  the  Letters  of  Pliny. 
Professor    of    New    Testament    Greek,    Methodist    Theological 
School,  Atlanta,  Ga. 


20 

Henry  Burt  Wright,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898. 

Dissertation:  A  historical  and  critical  study  of  the  literary 
evidence  for  the  campaign  of  Plataea.  (Published  as  follows: 
The  campaign  of  Plataea  (September  479  B.  C),  The  Tuttle, 
Morehouse  &  Taylor  Company,  New  Haven,  1904.) 

Stephen  Merrell  Clement  Professor  of  Christian  Methods, 
School  of  Religion,  Yale  University. 


1904 

Gertrude  Harper  Beggs,  B.A.  University  of  Denver  1893. 
Dissertation:    The  adnominal  genitive  in  Lysias. 
Social    Director,    Martha    Cook    Residence    Hall,    University   of 
Michigan,  Ann  Arbor,  Mich. 

Charles  Heald  Weller,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 

Dissertation:  The  pre-Periclean  propylon  of  the  Acropolis  at 
Athens.  (Published  in  American  Journal  of  Archaeology,  2d 
series,  8:35-70.     Norwood,  Mass.,  1904.) 

Professor  and  Head  of  the  Department  of  Greek  and  Archae- 
ology, State  University  of  Iowa,  Iowa  City,  la. 

Mary  Crowell  Welles,  B.A.  Smith  College  1883. 

Dissertation:  The  appropriation  and  latent  criticism  of  Herod- 
otus in  Thucydides. 

General  Secretary  of  the  Consumers'  League  of  Connecticut, 
Hartford,  Conn. 

Monroe  Nichols  Wetmore,  B.A.  Yale  University  1888,  M.A.  1900. 
Dissertation:     The    plan    and    scope    of   a    Vergil    lexicon,    with 

specimen  articles.     (Printed  by  Ryder's  Printing  House,  New 

Haven,  1904.) 
Professor  of  Latin,  Williams  College,  Williamstown,  Mass. 


1905 

Samuel  Eliot  Bassett,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898. 

Dissertation:  The  bucolic  diaeresis  in  Homer.  (Published  as 
follows:  Notes  on  the  bucolic  diaeresis.  Transactions  of  the 
American  Philological  Association,  36:111-124.     Boston,  1905.) 

Professor  of  the  Greek  Language  and  Literature,  University 
of  Vermont,  Burlington,  Vt. 


— 21 — 

Elizabeth  Hatch  Palmer,  B.A.  Wellesley  College  1887. 
Dissertation:    The  adnominal  genitive  in  Thucydides. 
Associate    Professor   of   Latin,   Vassar    College,    Poughkeepsie, 
N.  Y. 

1906 

Maud  Thompson,  B.A.  Wellesley  College  1901,  M.A.  1902. 
Dissertation:    The  property  rights  of  women  in  ancient  Greece. 
Teacher    and    Lecturer    on    Sociology    and    Economics,    East 
Orange,  N.  J. 

Wilmot   Haines   Thompson,    B.A.   Yale   University    1898,    M.A. 

1902. 
Dissertation:     The    use    of    prepositions    in    the    Greek    dialect 

inscriptions. 
Professor  of  Latin,  Acadia  University,  Wolfville,  N.  S. 

Ralph  Hermon  Tukey,  B.A.  Bates  College  1898,  B.A.  Harvard 

University  1900,  M.A.  1901. 
Dissertation:    The  syntax  of  Isaeus.     Part  I,  The  syntax  of  the 

cases. 
Professor  of  Greek,  William  Jewell  College,  Liberty,  Mo. 

1907 

Harry   Brown  VanDeventcr,   B.A.   Yale   University   1903,   M.A. 

1904. 
Dissertation:    Subordinate  verb  clauses  in  Gains. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Latin,  University  of  Pennsylvania,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 

1908 

May  Alice  Allen,  B.A.  Smith  College  1901. 

Dissertation:     The    technical    vocabulary    of    the    Rhythmic    of 

Aristoxenos. 
Instructor  in  Latin  and  Greek,  Barstow  School,   Kansas   City, 

Mo. 

Henry  Bronson  Dewing,  B.A.  University  of  California  1903,  M.A. 
1905. 

Dissertation:  The  accentual  cursus  in  Byzantine  Greek  prose, 
with  especial  reference  to  Procopius  of  Csesarea.  (Published 
in  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts  and 
Sciences,  14:415-466.     New  Haven,  1910.) 

Dean,  Robert  College,  Constantinople,  Turkey. 


2.2 

Austin  Morris  Harmon,  B.A.  Williams  College  1902,  M.A.  Yale 
University  1903. 

Dissertation:  The  clausula  in  Ammianus  Marcellinus.  (Pub- 
lished in  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts 
and  Sciences,  16:117-245.     New  Haven,  1910.) 

Assistant  Professor,  Preceptor  in  Classics,  Princeton  University, 
Princeton,  N.  J. 

Louis  Eleazer  Lord,  B.A.  Oberlin  College  1897,  M.A.  1897,  M.A. 
Harvard  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  Literary  criticism  of  Euripides  in  the  earlier 
scholia  and  the  relation  of  this  criticism  to  Aristotle's  Poetics 
and  to  Aristophanes,  with  a  note  on  the  Thanatos  scene  in 
the  Alcestis.  (Printed  by  Dieterichsche  Univ.-Buchdruckerei, 
W.  F.  Kaestner,  Gottingen,  1908.) 

Assistant  Dean,  College  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  and  Professor 
of  the  Latin  Language  and  Literature,  Oberlin  College, 
Oberlin,  O. 

Walter  Petersen,  B.A.  Grand  Island  College  1900,  M.A.  Uni- 
versity of  Nebraska  1902. 

Dissertation:  Studies  in  Greek  diminutives.  Part  I,  Neuter  sub- 
stantives in  -10,  except  diminutives  and  hypocoristica.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  Greek  diminutives  in  -lov,  a  study  in 
semantics,  R.  Wagner  Sohn,  Weimar,  1910.) 

Professor  of  Greek  and  Psychology,  Bethany  College,  Linds- 
borg,  Kan. 

1909 

Josiah  Bethea  Game,  M.A.   South  Carolina   College   1895,   M.S. 
Erskine    College    1898,    M.A.    Yale    University    1906,    Ph.D. 
Illinois  Wesleyan  University  1900. 
Dissertation:    An  introduction  to  the  Philippics  of  Cicero  and  to 

the  study  of  his  invective. 
Professor    of    Ancient    Languages,    Florida    State    College    for 
Women,  Tallahassee,  Fla. 

1910 

Erma  Eloise  Cole,  B.A.  Upper  Iowa  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  The  Samos  of  Herodotus.  (Printed  in  revised  and 
condensed  form,  by  The  Tuttle,  Morehouse  &  Taylor  Com- 
pany, New  Haven,  1912.) 

325  South  14th  St.,  Salem,  Oregon. 


—23— 

Clarence  Whittlesey  Mendell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A. 

1905. 
Dissertation:     Sentence    connection    in   Tacitus.      (Published   by 

the  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven,  191 1.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Latin,  Yale  College. 

Clyde  Pharr,  B.A.  Yale  University  1906. 

Dissertation:  Hellanicus  and  the  Ionian  logography.  (In  press, 
R.  Wagner  Sohn,  Weimar,  1915.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Greek  and  Latin,  Ohio  Wesleyan  Uni- 
versity, Delaware,  O. 

1911 

Irene  Nye,  B.A.  Washburn  College  1895. 

Dissertation:  Sentence  connection  as  illustrated  in  certain  por- 
tions of  Livy's  history.  (Published  as  follows:  Sentence 
connection;  illustrated  chiefly  from  Livy,  R.  Wagner  Sohn, 
Weimar,  1912.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Greek  and  Latin,  Connecticut  College 
for  Women,  New  London,  Conn. 

Arthur  Harold  Weston,  B.A.  Yale  University  1908. 

Dissertation:  A  study  in  satirical  literature  in  post-Juvenalian 
Latin.  (Published  as  follows:  Latin  satirical  writing  sub- 
sequent to  Juvenal,  Press  of  the  New  Era  Printing  Company, 
Lancaster,  Pa.,  1915.) 

Instructor  in  Greek  and  Latin,  Yale  College. 

1912 

Lacey  Davis  Caskey,  B.A.  Yale  University  1901. 

Dissertation:      The     building-inscriptions     of     the     Erechtheum. 

(Published  in  part  as  follows:    Die  Baurechnung  des  Erech- 

theion  fur  das  Jahr  409/8  v.  Chr.,  Mitteilungen  des  Kaiserlich 

Deutschen     Archaologischen     Instituts,     Z^'-Z^J-ZAZ-       Athen, 

1911.) 
Curator  of  Classical  Antiquities,  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  Boston, 

Mass. 

1913 
Edmund  Dresser  Cressman,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas  1910. 
Dissertation:     The    semantics    of    -mentum,    -hulum,    and    -culum. 

(Published  as  Humanistic  Studies,  Vol.  i.  No.  4,  University 

of  Kansas,  Lawrence,  Kan.,  1915.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Latin,  University  of  Kansas,  Lawrence, 

Kan. 


—24— 

Harry  Mortimer  Hubbell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1902. 
Dissertation:    The  influence   of   Isocrates   on   Cicero,   Dionysius, 

and   Aristides.     (Published    by   Yale    University    Press,    New 

Haven,  1913.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Greek  and  Latin,  Yale  College. 

Edv^^ard  Wilber  Nichols,  B.A.  Dalhousie  University  1906. 

Dissertation:  The  semantic  variability  and  semantic  equivalents 
of  -osus  and  -lentus.  (Published  as  follows:  The  semantic 
variability  and  semantic  equivalents  of  -oso  and  -lento,  Press 
of   the   New    Era    Printing    Company,    Lancaster,    Pa.,    1914.) 

Instructor  in  Greek  and  Latin,  Yale  College. 


1914 

George  Harry  Cohen,  B.A.  Trinity  College  191 1. 

Dissertation:    Derivative  verbs  in  -to  and  verbal  modification  in 

Latin. 
Student,  Law  School,  Yale  University. 

Sidney  Norton  Deane,  B.A.  Yale  University  1902. 
Dissertation:    The  frieze  of  the  temple  at  Bassai. 
Associate    Professor    of    Greek,    Smith    College,    Northampton, 
Mass. 

Walter  Hobart  Palmer,  B.A.  Yale  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  The  use  of  anaphora  in  the  amplification  of  a 
general  truth;  illustrated  chiefly  from  Silver  Latin.  (Pub- 
lished by  Press  of  the  New  Era  Printing  Company,  Lan- 
caster, Pa.,   1915.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Greek  and  Latin,  Washington  University, 
St.  Louis,  Mo. 

Albert  William  Van  Buren,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  Studies  in  Roman  archaeology:  i.  The  Ara  Pacis 
Augustae;  2,  The  Temples  of  Castor  and  of  Concord  in  the 
Roman  forum;  3,  A  medallion  of  Antoninus  Pius;  4,  A 
transcription  of  the  Palimpsest  of  Cicero's  De  Re  Publica. 
(Published  as  follows:  (i)  The  Journal  of  Roman  Studies, 
3:134-141.  London,  1913;  (2)  The  Classical  Review,  20:77-84, 
184.      London,    1906;     (3)    The    Journal    of    Roman    Studies, 


—25— 

i:i87-i95-     London,   1911;    (4)   Supplementary  Papers  of  the 
American  School  in  Rome,  84-262.     Macmillan  Company,  New 
York,  1908.) 
Librarian,   and  Associate   Professor  of  Archaeology,   American 
Academy  in  Rome,  Italy. 


ALPHABETICAL  LIST 

(*  indicates  that  graduate  is  deceased.) 


Abbe,  1903 
Abbott,  1891 
Allen,  J.  T.,  1898 
Allen,  M.  A.,  1908 
Barbour,  1902 
Bartley,  1895 
Bassett,  1905 
Beadle,  1894. 
Beckwith,  1872 
Beggs,  1904 
Brown,  D.  W.,  1878 
Brown,  L.  D.,  1903 
Brownson,  1897 
Brubacher,  1902 
Buck,  1889 
Bunnell,  1903 
Burnam,  1886 
Bushnell,  C.  C,  1895 
Bushnell,  G.  E.,  1878 
Capps,  1891 
Caskey,  1912 
Castle,  1888 
Clapp,  1886 
Clark,  1903 
Cohen,  1914 
Cole,  1910 
Cressman,  1913 
Deane,  1914 
DeForest,  1898 
Dewing,  1908 
Dodge,  1900 
Easton,  1872 
*Edgren,  1874 


Game,  1909 

Goodell,  1884 
♦Graves,  1878 

Hale,  1863 

Hall,  1886 

Harmon,  1908 
*Harper,  1875 

Harstrom,  1899 
*Haskell,  1876 
*Heermance,  1898 

Hubbell,  1913 
*Hunt,  1892 

Hyde,  1882 

Ingersoll,  1894 

Ingham,  1896 
*Keep,  1869 

Kellogg,  1898 

Kennedy,  1878 

Lanman,  1873 

Learned,  1873 

Lord,  1908 
*Luquiens,  1873 
*Manatt,  1873 

Mendell,  1910 

Miller,  1892 

Moore,  1890 

Nichols,  1913 

Nutting,  1897 

Nye,  191 1 

Oertel,  1890 

Owen,  1900 
♦Packard,  1863 

Palmer,  E.  H.,  1905 


-26— 


Palmer,  W.  H.,  1914 
♦Parks,  1888 

Perrin,  1873 

Peters,  1876 

Petersen,  1908 

Pharr,  1910 

Platner,  1885 

Price,  1896 
♦Richardson,  1878 

Robinson,  1888 

Scott,  1890 

Sledd,  1903 

Staley,  1895 

Tarbell,  1879 

Tew,  1895 

Thompson,  G.  C,  1896 
♦Thompson,  G.  V.,  1894 

Thompson,  M.,  1906 


Thompson,  W.  H.,  1906 
Tolman,  1890 
Tukey,  1906 
Van  Buren,  1915 
VanDeventer,  1907 
Waters,  1887 
Weller,  1904 
Welles,  1904 
Weston,  191 1 
Wetmore,  1904 
Wheeler,  1896 
Whiton,  1861 
Wilcox,  1880 
Wolcott,  1898 
Wright,  H.  B.,  1903 
Wright,  H.  P.,  1876 
Zimmerman,  1897 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  SEMITIC 
LANGUAGES,  LITERATURE,  AND  HISTORY 

[Until  1912-13  this  was  the  Department  of  Semitic 
Languages  and  Biblical  Literature] 


1888 

Mark   Wilson    Chunn,    B.A.    Western    Maryland    College    1882, 

B.D.  Yale  University  1886. 
Dissertation:    The  Hebrew  infinitive  absolute. 
Attorney-at-law,  Luverne,  Minn. 

1889 

Frank  Knight  Sanders,  B.A.  Ripon  College  1882,  M.A.  1888. 
Dissertation:  The  noun  formation  of  the  Asshurbanipal  texts. 
Director,  Board  of  Missionary  Preparation,  New  York  City. 

George  Stibitz,  B.A.  Ursinus  College  1881,  M.A.  1887. 
Dissertation:    The  circumstantial  clause  in  Hebrew. 
Professor     of     Old     Testament     Languages,     Literature,     and 
Theology,  Central  Theological  Seminary,  Dayton,  O. 

Alfred    Mundy    Wilson,    B.A.    Denison    University    1881,    B.D. 

Baptist  Union  Theological  Seminary  1884. 
Dissertation:   The  particle  HJ^  in  the  Hebrew  language. 

1890 

Gaylord   Hawkins   Patterson,   B.A.   Ohio   Wesleyan   University 
1888,  M.A.   Harvard  University   1893,   B.D.  Boston  Univer- 
sity 1898. 
Dissertation:    The  Septuagint  text  of  Hosea  compared  with  the 
Massoretic    text.      (Published    in    Hebraica,    7:190-221.      The 
Student  Printing  Company,  Hartford,  Conn.,  1891.) 
Professor  of  Social  Science,  Dickinson  College,  Carlisle,  Pa. 

Eben  Charles  Sage,   B.A.   Shurtleff  College   1878,  B.D.   Baptist 

Union  Theological  Seminary  1882. 
Dissertation:    The  syntax  of  the  post-exilic  prophets. 
Assistant  Secretary,  General  Education  Board,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


—28— 

iSgi 

Lester  Bradner,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University  1889. 

Dissertation:   The  order  of  the  sentence  in  the  Assyrian  historical 

inscriptions. 
Director  of  Department  of  Parochial  Education,  General  Board 

of  Religious  Education  of  the  Protestant  Episcopal   Church, 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

Clark  Eugene  Crandall,   B.A.   Milton   College   1879,   M.A.   1886, 

B.D.  University  of  Chicago  1885. 
Dissertation:   The  variations  in  the  text,  grammar,  and  vocabulary 

of  the   duplicate   passages   in   the   books   of   Chronicles   and 

Samuel  and  Kings. 
Treasurer,  Milton  College,  Milton,  Wis. 

Olaus  Dahl,   B.A.   Luther   College   1885,   B.D.   Yale   University 

1889. 
Dissertation:    The  new  ideas  of  the  Exile. 
Died  1897. 

George  William  Davis,  Owen's  College  (England)  1880. 
Dissertation:    Some  peculiarities  in  the  syntax  of  Deutero-Isaiah. 
Professor  of  Social  and  Political  Science,  Macalester  College, 
St.  Paul,  Minn. 

Carl  Elofson,  B.A.  Augustana  College  1888. 

Dissertation:    The  attributive  adjective  in  the  Assyrian  historical 

inscriptions. 
Died  1899. 

George  Stephen  Goodspeed,  B.A.  Brown  University  1880,  M.A. 

1883. 
Dissertation:    The  Aramaic  section  of  the  book  of  Daniel. 
Died  1905. 

William  Griffiths,  B.D.  Yale  University  1889. 
Dissertation:  A  history  of  Hebrew  prophecy. 
Clergyman,  Congleton,  Cheshire,  England. 

Charles  Horswell,  B.A.  Northwestern  University  1884. 
Dissertation:   An  inductive  study  of  the  terms  used  for  divination 

and  prophecy  in  the  Old  Testament. 
Pastor,  Kenilworth  Union  Church,  Kenilworth,  III. 


\ 


—29— 

Charles  Foster  Kent,  B.A.  Yale  University  1889. 

Dissertation:    Annexion  in  Assyrian. 

Woolsey  Professor  of  Biblical  Literature,  Yale  College. 

Daniel  Shepardson,  Jr.,  B.A.  Denison  University  1888. 
Dissertation:    The  Arabic  negative  sentence  as  illustrated  by  the 

Kor'an. 
Died  1905. 

Wilbert  Webster  White,  B.A.  University  of  Wooster  1881,  M.A. 

1884. 
Dissertation:    The  historical  situation  in  Isaiah  I-XXXIX. 
President,  Bible  Teachers  Training  School,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Kichiro  Yuasa,  B.D.  Oberlin  College  1888. 

Dissertation:    Classification  of  the  separate  proverbs  in  the  book 

of  Proverbs. 
Librarian,  Demizuagaru,  Muromachidori,  Kyoto,  Japan. 

1892 

John    Havemeyer    Daniels,    B.A.    Yale    University    1889,    M.D. 

Niagara  University  1895. 
Dissertation:    A  consideration  of  the  Old  Testament  conception 

of  Satan. 
Physician,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

1893 
Edward  Bagby  Pollard,  B.A.  Richmond  College  1884,  M.A.  1886, 

B.D.  1891,  Ph.D.  University  of  Berlin  1896. 
Dissertation:    Semitic  sacrificial  customs  as  throwing  light  upon 

the  origin  of  sacrifice. 
Professor  of  Homiletics,  Crozer  Theological  Seminary,  Chester, 
Pa. 

Artemas  Ward  Reynolds,  B.A.  Colgate  University  1885. 
Dissertation:    Hebrew  cosmogony. 
Clergyman,  Elmira,  N.  Y. 

1894 

Harlan  Creelman,  B.D.  Yale  University  1889,  M.A.  1908. 

Dissertation:  The  problem  of  well-being  and  suffering  in  the  Old 
Testament.  (Published  in  part  in  The  Biblical  World, 
7:255-263,  325-338.     Chicago,  1896.) 

Professor  of  Hebrew  Language  and  Literature,  Auburn  Theo- 
logical Seminary,  Auburn,  N.  Y. 


—30— 

Clinton  Lockhart,  B.A.  Kentucky  University  1886,  M.A.  1888. 
Dissertation:    A  critical  and  expository  commentary  on  the  book 

of  Nahum. 
Professor    of    Biblical    Literature,    Texas    Christian   University, 

Fort  Worth,  Texas. 

1896 

Henry  Thatcher  Fowler,  B.A.  Yale  University  1890. 
Dissertation    The  book  of  Joel.     (Published  in  part,  in  modified 

form,  as  follows:    The  chronological  position  of  Joel  among 

the     Prophets,    Journal     of     Biblical     Literature,     16:146-154. 

Norwood,  Mass.,  1897.) 
Professor  of  Biblical  Literature  and  History,  Brown  University, 

Providence,  R.  L 

1897 
Harry  Westbrook  Dunning,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 
Dissertation:    The  text  of  the  First  Book  of  Kings. 
President,    H.    W.    Dunning    and    Company,    Foreign    Tours, 
Boston,  Mass. 

Fred  Elmer  Marble,  B.A.  University  of  Rochester  1887. 
Dissertation:    The  priesthood  in  Israel. 
Clergyman,  Cambridge,  Mass. 

1898 

Armenag    Harutune    Haigazian,    B.A.    Central   Turkey    College 

1889,  B.D.  Hartford  Theological  Seminary  1896. 
Dissertatio7i:    The  text  of  Zephaniah. 
President,  Apostolic  College,  Konia,  Asia  Minor. 

1899 

Charles  Stedman  Macfarland,  B.D.  Yale  University  1897. 
Dissertation:    Jesus  and  the  prophets:    an  historical,  exegetical, 

and  interpretative  discussion  of  the  use  of  prophecy  by  Jesus 

and  his  attitude  towards  it.     (Published  by  G.  P.   Putnam's 

Sons,  New  York,  1905.) 
General  Secretary,  Federal   Council  of  the   Churches  of  Christ 

in  America,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Meyer  Wolodarsky,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1894. 

Dissertation:    Divorce  in  Judaism. 

Lawyer,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Died  1914.  \ 


—31— 

I  goo 

Arthur  Bumstead,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 

Dissertation:   Paul's  conversion  in  the  light  of  historical  criticism. 

Finance,  Winnipeg,  Manitoba,  Canada. 

Died  1915. 

1901 

William  Weber,  B.D.  Yale  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  Eschatology  of  the  Wisdom  of  Solomon.  (Pub- 
lished in  Zeitschrift  fiir  wissenschaftliche  Theologie,  47:145- 
169.  1904;  48:409-444.  1905;  51:314-332;  53:322-345.  1911; 
54:205-239.    Frankfurt-am-Main,  1912.) 

^Farmer,  Fern  Hollow,  Gambrills,  Md. 

1903 
Sara  Anna  Emerson,  B.A.  Boston  University  1877. 
Dissertation:    The   historic   nucleus   of   the   stories   of  Abraham 

contained  in  the  book  of  Genesis. 
Teacher    and    Lecturer    upon    Biblical    Literature,    Watertown, 

Mass. 

Louis  Halsey  Holden,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895,  M.A.  Columbia 

University  1897. 
Dissertation:    John  XXI  in  its  relation  to  the  tradition  of  Johan- 

nine  authorship. 
Pastor,  Christ  Church,  Utica,  N.  Y. 

Sidney  Adams  Weston,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900,  M.A.  1901. 

Dissertation:  The  Kitab  Masalik  en-Nazar  of  Sa'id  ibn  Hasan 
of  Alexandria,  edited  for  the  first  time  and  translated,  v^^ith 
introduction  and  notes.  (Published  in  Journal  of  the 
American  Oriental  Society,  24:312-383.    New  Haven,  1903.) 

Managing  Editor,  Congregational  Sunday-School  and  Publish- 
ing Society,  Boston,  Mass. 

1906 

Shirley  Jackson  Case,  B.A.  Acadia  University  1893,  M.A.  1896, 
B.D.  Yale  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  Sources  of  information  for  a  study  of  Pre-Pauline 
Christology.  (Published  in  part  as  follows:  Paul's  historical 
relation  to  the  first  disciples,  American  Journal  of  Theology, 
11:269-286.  Chicago,  1907;  KTPIOS  as  a  title  for  Christ, 
Journal  of  Biblical  Literature,  26:151-161.     New  York,  1907.) 

Professor  of  New  Testament  Interpretation,  University  of 
Chicago,  Chicago,  111. 


—32— 

Frederick  Lent,  B.A.  Brown  University  1900,  M.A.   1901,   B.D. 

Newton  Theological  Seminary  1900. 
Dissertation:     The    life    of    Simeon    the    Stylite.      (Published    in 

Journal  of  the  American  Oriental  Society,  35:103-198.     New 

Haven,  1915.) 
Pastor,  First  Baptist  Church,  New  Haven,  Conn. 


1907 

George  DeWitt  Castor,  B.A.  Drury  College  1898,  M.A.  1903, 
B.D.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A.  1905. 

Dissertation:  Matthew's  sayings  of  Jesus:  an  attempt  to  recon- 
struct the  non-Marcan  common  source  of  Matthew  and  Luke. 
(Published  in  part  in  Journal  of  Biblical  Literature,  31:82-91. 
Boston,  1912.) 

Professor  of  New  Testament  Literature,  Pacific  Theological 
Seminary,  Berkeley,  Cal. 

Died  1912. 

Albert  Alonzo  Madsen,  B.A.  Moravian  College  1900,  B.D.  1902, 
B.D.  Yale  University  1903,  M.A.  1904. 

Dissertation:  A  critical  study  of  I  Chronicles  21-29:  a  specimen 
of  a  critical  commentary  on  the  Books  of  Chronicles.  (Pub- 
lished as  part  of  the  volume  Chronicles,  in  the  International 
Critical  Commentary,  Charles  Scribner's  Sons,  New  York, 
1910.) 

Pastor,  Trinity  Congregational  Church,  Gloucester,  Mass. 


1908 

Herbert  Stanley  Brown,  B.A.  Yale  University  1881,  B.D.  1886, 

M.A.  1906. 
Dissertation:     A    study    of    the    Syro-Hexaplaric    text    of    First 

Esdras  and  Nehemiah. 
Pastor,  Congregational  Church,  Darien,  Conn. 

Harry  Clinton  York,  B.A.  Yale  University  1905,  M.A.  1906,  B.D. 

1908. 
Dissertation:    The  Latin  versions  of  First  Esdras.     (Published  in 

American  Journal  of  Semitic  Languages,  26:253-302.     Chicago, 

1910.) 
Associate   Professor  of  Biblical   Literature   on  the   Helen  Day 

Gould  Foundation,  Mt.  Holyoke  College,  South  Hadley,  Mass.v 


—33— 

igog 

Kannosuke  Kawanaka,  B.D.  Pacific  Theological  Seminary  1906, 

M.A.  Columbia  University  1907. 
Dissertation:    The  gods  of  the  Arameans. 

Professor  of  Old  Testament  Literature.  Doshisha  University, 
Kyoto,  Japan. 

William  Hamilton  Wood,  B.A.  University  of  Toronto  1901,  B.D. 

Yale  University  1905. 
Dissertation:     Jar    burial    customs    and    the    question    of    infant 

sacrifice     in     Palestine.       (Published     in     abridged     form    in 

Biblical    World,    New    series,    36:166-175,    227-234.      Chicago, 

1910.) 
Professor,  and  Head  of  Department,  of  Biblical  Literature  and 

Religious  Education,  Hamline  University,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 

igii 

Ora  Delmar  Foster,  B.A.  Manchester  College  1906,  B.D.  Oberlin 
College  1908,  M.A.  1909. 

Dissertation:  The  literary  relations  of  the  First  Epistle  of  Peter, 
with  their  bearing  on  date  and  place  of  authorship.  (Pub- 
lished in  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts 
and  Sciences,  17:363-538.     New  Haven,  1913.) 

Professor  of  Biblical  Literature,  Y.  M.  C.  A.  College,  Chicago, 
111. 

Otto   Lichti,   B.S.   New   York   University    1907,    S.T.M.   Pacific 
Theological   Seminary   1909,   M.A.   University  of   California 
1909. 
Dissertation:      Sendschreiben     des     heiligen     Patriarchen,     Mar 
Johannan    Barschuschan,    an    den    Katholikus    der    Armenier. 
(Published    in    Journal    of    the    American    Oriental    Society, 
32:268-342.     New  Haven,  1912.) 
Head  of  German  Department,  High  School,  Reedley,  Cal. 

igi2 

Clarence  Elwood  Keiser,  B.A.  Muhlenberg  College  1905,  M.A. 
University  of  Pennsylvania  1910. 

Dissertation:  Cuneiform  labels  and  tags  from  the  third  millenium 
B.  C.  (Published  as  follows:  Cuneiform  bullae  of  the  third 
millennium,  B.  C,  Babylonian  Records  in  the  Library  of  J. 
Pierpont  Morgan,  pt.  3.     Privately  printed.  New  York,  1914.) 

300  Lawrence  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 


—34— 

Charles   Eugene   Underwood,    B.A.    Butler    College    1903,    M.A. 

1904,  M.A.  Yale  University  1910. 
Dissertation:      The     so-called     supernumerary     member    in     the 

Hebrew  verse. 
Professor  of  Old  Testament   Language  and  Literature,   Butler 

College,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 

Clarence  Russell  Williams,  B.A.  University  of  Pennsylvania  1892, 
M.A.  Princeton  University  1895,  B.D.  University  of  Chicago 
1901. 

Dissertation:    The  appendices  to  the  Gospel  according  to  Mark: 

a  study  in  textual  transmission.     (Published  in  Transactions 

of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  18:347-447. 

Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven,  1915.) 

Lecturer  on  Biblical  Literature,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


1913 

George  Dahl,  B.A.  Yale  University  1908,  M.A.  1909. 

Dissertation:  The  materials  for  the  history  of  Dor  down  to  the 
Jewish  War.  (Published  as  follows:  The  materials  for  the 
history  of  Dor,  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy 
of  Arts  and  Sciences,  20:1-131.     New  Haven,  1915.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Old  Testament  Literature,  and  Director 
of  Religious  Work,  School  of  Religion,  Yale  University. 


1915 

Robert   Ritchie   Harwell,   B.A.    Hampden-Sidney   College    1897, 

M.A.  1898,  B.D.  Yale  University  1903. 
Dissertation:   The  principal  versions  of  Baruch.     (Printed  by  The 
Tuttle,   Morehouse   &  Taylor   Company,   New   Haven,    1915.) 
Professor  of  Greek,  Austin  College,  Sherman,  Texas. 

ALPHABETICAL  LIST 
(*  indicates  that  graduate  is  deceased.) 

Bradner,  1891  Crandall,  1891 

Brown,  1908  Creelman,  1894 

*Bumstead,  1900  Dahl,  G.,  1913 

Case,  1906  *Dahl,  O.,  1891 
*Castor,  1907  Daniels,  1892 

Chunn,  1888  Davis,  1891 


\j 


-35- 


Dunning,  1897 
*Elofson,  1891 
Emerson,  1903 
Foster,  191 1 
Fowler,  1896 
*Goodspeed,  1891 
Griffiths,  1891 
Haigazian,  1898 
Harwell,  1915 
Holden,  1903 
Horswell,  1891 
Kawanaka,  1909 
Keiser,  1912 
Kent,  1891 
Lent,  1906 
Lichti,  191 1 
Lockhart,  1894 
McFarland,  1899 
Madsen,  1907 


Marble,  1897 

Patterson,  1890 

Pollard,  1893 

Reynolds,  1893 

Sage,  1890 

Sanders,  1889 
*Shepardson,  1891 

Stibitz,  1889 

Underwood,  1912 

Weber,  1901 

Weston,  1903 

White,  1891 

Williams,  1912 

Wilson,  1889 
*Wolodarsky,  1899 

Wood,  1909 

York,  1908 

Yuasa,  1891 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT   OF  ROMANCE 
LANGUAGES  AND  LITERATURES 


1894 

Cornelia   Hephzibah   Bulkley   Rogers,   B.A.   Wellesley   College 

1884. 
Dissertation:     Sinalefa,  sineresis  e  hiato  en  los  romances  del  Cid. 
Instructor  in  French  and  Italian,  Vassar  College,  Poughkeepsie, 

N.  Y.,  until  1903. 
Died  1907. 

i8g8 

John  Joseph  Dunn,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 

Dissertation:  Vocabulary  to  the  Orlando  Furioso  of  Ariosto, 
cantos  1-3. 

Professor  of  Celtic  Languages  and  Literatures,  Catholic  Univer- 
sity, Washington,  D.  C. 

1900 

Robert  Longley  Taylor,  B.A.  Hamilton  College  1S82. 

Dissertation:  Alliteration  in  Italian.  (Printed  by  The  Tuttle, 
Morehouse  &  Taylor  Company,  New  Haven,  1900.) 

Professor  of  Romance  Languages,  Williams  College,  Williams- 
town,  Mass. 

1901 
Marian  Parker  Whitney. 

DissertatiofJi:  The  Young  King  and  largesse.    A  study  in  medieval 

manners. 
Professor  of  German,  Vassar  College,  Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y. 


1902 

Charles  Philip  Wagner,  B.A.  Yale  University  1899. 
Dissertation:     The  sources  of  El  Cavallero  Cifar.     (Published  in 

slightly  different  form,  in  Revue  Hispanique,  10:  5-104.     Paris, 

1903.) 
Associate    Professor    of    Romance    Languages,    University    of 

Michigan,  Ann  Arbor,  Mich. 


1 

'i 


—37— 

1904 

Stanley  Leman  Galpin,  B.A.  Western  Reserve  University  1901, 
M.A.  Yale  University  1902. 

Dissertation:  Cortois  and  vilain  as  conceived  by  the  French  and 
Provengal  poets  of  the  twelfth,  thirteenth,  and  fourteenth  cen- 
turies. (Printed  as  follows:  Cortois  and  vilain:  a  study  of 
the  distinctions  made  between  them  by  the  French  and  Pro- 
vencal poets  of  the  twelfth,  thirteenth,  and  fourteenth 
centuries,  Ryder's  Printing  House,  New  Haven,  1905.) 

Professor  of  Romance  Languages,  Trinity  College,  Hartford, 
Conn. 

Milton  Stahl  Garver,  B.A.  Western  Reserve  University  1901, 
M.A.  Yale  University  1902. 

Dissertation:  Sources  of  the  allusions  to  animals  in  the  Italian 
lyric  of  the  thirteenth  century.  (Published  as  follows: 
Sources  of  the  beast  similes  in  the  Italian  lyric  of  the  thir- 
teenth century,  Romanische  Forschungen,  2i:276-32of. 
Erlangen,  1908.) 

Instructor  in  French,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  University. 

1905 
David  Hobart  Carnahan,  B.A.  University  of  Illinois  1896,  M.A. 

1898,  M.A.  Yale  University  1904. 
Dissertation:     The   prologue   in   the    Old    French   and   Provengal 
mystery.     (Printed  by  The  Tuttle,  Morehouse  &  Taylor  Com- 
pany, New  Haven,  1905.) 
Associate    Professor    of    Romance    Languages,    University    of 
Illinois,  Urbana,   111. 

Frederick  Bliss  Luquiens,  B.A.  Yale  University  1897. 
Dissertation:     The    Roman    de    la    Rose    and    medieval    Castilian 

literature.      (Published   in    Romanische    Forschungen,   20:284- 

320  K.     Erlangen,  1907.) 
Professor  of  Spanish,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  University. 

1907 

Oscar  Emil  Staaf,  B.A.  Bethany  College   (Kansas)    1900,   M.A. 

Yale  University  1902. 
Dissertation:     Classical  mythology  in  Calderon. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Romance  Languages,  Adelbert  College, 
Western  Reserve  University,  Cleveland,  O. 


-38- 

igog 

John  Pierrepont  Rice,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900,  M.A.  1901. 
Dissertation:     A   critical    edition    of   the    Bestiary   and    Lapidary 

from  the  Acerba  of  Cecco  d'Ascoli. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Romance  Languages,  Williams  College, 

Williamstown,  Mass. 

1911 

Raymond  Thompson  Hill,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A.  1905. 

Dissertation:  La  Mule  sanz  Frain:  an  Arthurian  romance  by 
Paiens  de  Maisieres,  edited  with  introduction,  notes,  and 
glossary.     (Printed  by  J.  H.  Furst  Company,  Baltimore,  191 1.) 

Instructor  in  French,  Yale  College. 


1913 

Elise  Neuenschwander,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas  1898. 
Dissertation:     Influence  of  Villon  on  Voltaire. 
Associate    Professor    of    Romance    Languages,    University    of 
Kansas,  Lawrence,  Kan. 

1914 

Ames  Haven  Corley,  B.A.  Ohio  Wesleyan  University  1901,  M.A. 

Harvard  University  191 1. 
Dissertation:     A    study    in    the    word-play    in    Cervantes'    Don 

Quixote. 
Instructor  in  Spanish,  Yale  College. 


1915 

Frederick  Anderson,  B.A.  Leland  Stanford,  Jr.,  University  191 1. 

M.A.  Harvard  University  1912. 
Dissertation:     The  literary  experience  of  the  Agricola. 
Instructor  in  Italian  and  Spanish,  Yale  College. 

John  Bellows  DeForest,  B.A.  Yale  University  1905,  M.A.  1912. 

Dissertation:  Old  French  borrowed  words  in  Old  Spanish  of  the 
twelfth  and  thirteenth  centuries  with  special  reference  to  the 
Cid,  Berceo's  poems,  the  Alexandre,  and  Ferman  Gonzalez. 

Instructor  in  French,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  U'niversity. 


—39— 

Joseph  Seronde,  B.A.  Yale  University  1905,  M.A.  1910. 

Dissertation:  A  study  of  the  relations  of  some  leading  French 
poets  of  the  fourteenth  and  fifteenth  centuries  to  the  Marques 
de  Santillana. 

Assistant  Professor  of  Romance  Languages,  University  of  Penn- 
sylvania, Philadelphia,  Pa. 

ALPHABETICAL  LIST 

(*  indicates  that  the  graduate  is  deceased.) 

Anderson,  1915  Neuenschv^ander,  1913 

Carnahan,  1905  Rice,  1909 

Corley,  1914  *Rogers,  1894 

DeForest,  1915  Seronde,  1915 

Dunn,  1898  Staaf,  1907 

Galpin,  1904  Taylor,  1900 

Garver,  1904  Wagner,  1902 

Hill,  191 1  Whitney,  1901 
Luquiens,  190S 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  GERMANIC 
LANGUAGES  AND  LITERATURES 


1896 

Warren  Austin  Adams,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886. 
Dissertation:    Studies  in  Goethe's  Dichtung  und  Wahrheit. 
Professor  of  German,  Dartmouth  College,  Hanover,  N.  H. 

Gustav  Gruener,  B.A.  Yale  University  1884. 

Dissertation:  The  Nibelungenlied  and  Sage  in  modern  poetry, 
(Published  in  Publications  of  the  Modern  Language  Associa- 
tion of  America,  11:220-257.    Baltimore,  1896.) 

Professor  of  German,  Yale  College. 

Alfred  John  Pearson,  B.A.  Bethany  College  (Kansas)  1893. 
Dissertation:    The  Gothic  school  in  Swedish  literature. 
Professor    of    the    German    Language    and    Literature,    Drake 
University,  Des  Moines,  la. 


1898 

Gustav  Albert  Andreen,  B.A.  Augustana  College  1881,  B.A.  Yale 
University  1894. 

Dissertation:  The  origin,  development  and  character  of  the  idyl 
in  German  literature.  (Published  as  follows:  Studies  in  the 
idyl  in  German  literature,  Augustana  Library  Publications, 
No.  3,  Lutheran  Augustana  Book  Concern,  Rock  Island,  111., 
1902.) 

President  of  Augustana  College  and  Theological  Seminary, 
Rock  Island,  111. 

1900 

Ellen  Cordelia  Abbott,  B.A.  Vassar  College  1892. 

Dissertation:     The    influence    of   Shakespere   upon    the    dramatic 

works  of  Heinrich  von  Kleist. 
Teacher,  29  East  29th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


—41— 

igoi 

Alberta  Linton  Corbin,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas  1893. 
Dissertation:    Contributions  to  the  study  of  the  political  lyric  in 

Germany. 
Associate  Professor  of  German,  University  of  Kansas,  Lawrence, 

Kan. 

1904 

Hollon  Augustine  Farr,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896,  M.A.  1902. 
Dissertation:    Five  Berlin  puppet  plays  from  about  1835. 
Chairman  of  the  Academical  Freshman  Faculty,  and  Assistant 
Professor  of  German,  Yale  College. 

Carl  Wilhelm  Johnson,  B.A.  Bethany  College  (Kansas)  1900, 
M.A.  Yale  University  1902. 

Dissertation:  A  comparative  study  of  the  rhythmic  nature  and 
development  of  the  Alexandrine  verse  in  German  poetry 
during  the  early  part  of  the  eighteenth  century. 

Assistant  Professor  of  German,  Williams  College,  Williams- 
town,  Mass. 

Edward  Thorstenberg,  B.A.  Bethany  College  (Kansas)  1899, 
M.A.  Yale  University  1902. 

Dissertation:  Lessing's  appreciation  of  color  as  an  element  of 
effect  in  poetry:   a  contribution  to  the  study  of  Laokoon. 

Professor  of  Scandinavian  Languages  and  Literatures,  Univer- 
sity of  Oregon,  Eugene,  Ore. 

1905 
George  Merrick  Baker,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900. 
Dissertation:    The  German  drama  in  England  from  1785  to  1805. 
Associate   Professor   of  Modern   Languages,   University  of  the 
South,  Sewanee,  Tenn. 

Joseph  Fogelberg,  B.A.  Bethany  College  (Kansas)  1899. 
Dissertation:    Christian  Dietrich  Grabbe:    his  life  and  work. 
Died  1909. 

Lars  Johan  Evald  Hallander,  Upsala  University  (Sweden)  1893, 

M.A.  Yale  University  1904. 
Dissertation:    Das  starke  Verb  bei  Lohenstein:    ein  Beitrag  zum 

Studium  des  fruhneuhochdeutschen  Verbes. 
Assistant  Editor,  Nordstjernan,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


—42— 

1906 

Jay  Glover  Eldridge,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896,  M.A.  1899. 
Dissertation:    Studies  in  the  infinitive  after  modal  auxiliaries  in 

the  Middle  High  German  epic. 
Professor  of  the  German  Language  and  Literature,  and  Dean 

of    the    University    Faculty,    University    of    Idaho,    Moscow, 

Idaho. 

1907 

Albert  Edward  Gubelmann,  B.A.  University  of  Rochester  1897, 
M.A.  1900,  M.A.  Yale  University  1902. 

Dissertation:  Color  and  light  in  Hebbel's  lyric  poetry,  (Pub- 
lished as  part  of  his  book,  Studies  in  the  lyric  poems  of 
Friedrich  Hebbel,  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven,  1912.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  German,  Yale  College. 

Axel  Ebenezer  Vestling,  B.A.  Bethany  College   (Kansas)   1900, 

B.A.  Yale  University  1903,  M.A.  1905. 
Dissertation:   A  study  of  the  relative  pronoun  as  used  by  Heinrich 

Heine  in  his  prose  works. 
Professor  of  German,  Carleton  College,  Northfield,  Minn. 

Arthur  Gustavus  Ward,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898,  M.A.  1904. 
Dissertation:    Friedrich  Hebbel's  aesthetic  notions. 
Professor   of  French,   New   York   State   College   for  Teachers, 
Albany,  N.  Y. 

1909 

Paul  Curts,  B.A.  Yale  University  1905,  M.A.  1907. 

Dissertation:  Luther's  variations  in  sentence  arrangement  from 
the  modern  literary  usage,  with  primary  reference  to  the 
position  of  the  verb.  (Printed  by  R.  Wagner  Sohn,  Weimar, 
1910.) 

Associate  Professor  of  German,  Wesleyan  University,  Middle- 
town,  Conn. 

George  Blakeman  Lovell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1901,  M.A.  1903. 

Dissertation:  Word-order  in  the  works  of  Grimmelshausen  (1625- 
1676)  as  indicated  by  the  position  of  the  verb.  (Published 
in  part  as  follows:  Peculiarities  of  verb-position  in  Grimmels- 
hausen, Journal  of  English  and  Germanic  Philology,  11:205- 
208.    Urbana,  1912.) 

Rector-elect,  Hopkins  Grammar  School,  New  Haven,  Conn. 


—43— 

Frederick  Williams  Pierce,  Ph.B.  Baker  University  1906. 
Dissertation:    A  study  of  Schiller's  use  of  the  relative  pronouns 

in  his  prose  works. 
Assistant    Professor    of    German,    Pennsylvania    State    College, 

State  College,  Pa. 

igio 

Harry   Thomas   Ceilings,   B.A.    Colgate   University    1903,    M.A. 

1906. 
Dissertation:     Contributions   to   the   study   of   the   language   and 

style  of  Gustav  Freytag's  Die  Ahnen,     (Abstract  published  in 

Journal     of     English     and     Germanic     Philology,     13:186-201. 

Urbana,  1914.) 
Professor    of    German    and     Head    of    German     Department, 

Pennsylvania  State  College,  State  College,  Pa. 


igii 

Susan  Almira  Bacon,  B.A.  Mount  Holyoke  College  1905. 
Dissertation:    The  source  of  Wolfram's   Willehalm.     (Published 

as  Heft  4,  Sprache  und  Dichtung,  J.  C.  B.   Mohr,.Tubingen, 

1910.) 
Associate  Professor  of  French,  Mount  Holyoke  College,  South 

Hadley,  Mass.  (until  1915). 
244  Edwards  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 


1913 
Howard  Wadsworth  Church,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904,   M.A. 

1907. 
Dissertation:    Friedrich  Riickert  als  Lyriker  der  Befreiungskriege. 
(Published  in  expanded  form,  by  G.  E.  Stechert  and  Company, 
New  York,  1916  [in  press].) 
Instructor  in  German,  Yale  College. 


1914 

Edith  St.  Clair  Palmer,  B.A.  Mt.  Holyoke  College   1910,   M.A. 

Smith  College  1912. 
Dissertation:    Studien  zu  Theodor  Fontanes  Balladen. 
Instructor  in  German,  Wheaton  College,  Norton,  Mass. 


-44- 


Carl  Frederick  Schreiber,  B.A.  University  of  Michigan  1907, 
M.A.  New  York  University  1910. 

Dissertation:  Harro  Harring:  Ein  Beitrag  zur  Deutschen 
Demagogenliteratur. 

Instructor  in  German,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 

ALPHABETICAL  LIST 

(*  indicates  that  the  graduate  is  deceased.) 


Abbott,  1900 
Adams,  1896 
Andreen,  1898 
Bacon,  191 1 
Baker,  1905 
Church,  1913 
Collings,  1910 
Corbin,  1901 
Curts,  1909 
Eldridge,  1906 
Farr,  1904 
♦Fogelberg,  1905 


Gruener,  1896 
Gubelmann,  1907 
Hallander,  1905 
Johnson,  1904 
Lovell,  1909 
Palmer,  1914 
Pearson,  1896 
Pierce,  1909 
Schreiber,  1914 
Thorstenberg,  1904 
Vestling,  1907 
Ward,  1907 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  ENGLISH  LANGUAGE 
AND  LITERATURE 


1875 

Lucius  Adclno  Sherman,  B.A.  Yale  University  1871. 
Dissertation:     A    grammatical    analysis    of    The    Owl    and    the 

Nightingale. 
Dean  of  Graduate  College,  Professor  of  the  English  Language 

and  Literature,  and  Head  of  the  Department,  University  of 

Nebraska,  Lincoln,  Neb. 

1878 

Julian  Willis  Abemethy,  B.A.  Middlebury  College  1876. 
Dissertation:   The  decline  of  the  English  drama  in  the  eighteenth 

century. 
Literary  work,  Burlington,  Vt. 

x88o 

James  Raymond  Brackett,  B.A.  Bates  College  1875. 
Dissertation:    The  authorship  of  The  Flower  and  the  Leaf. 
Professor  of  Comparative  and  English  Literature,  and  Dean  of 
the  Graduate  School,  University  of  Colorado,  Boulder,  Colo. 

1889 

Wilbur  Lucius  Cross,  B.A.  Yale  University  1885. 

Dissertation:  Eighteenth-century  sentimentalism  in  France  and 
England. 

Professor  of  English,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 

1891 

William  Lyon  Phelps,  B.A.  Yale  University  1887,  M.A.  Har- 
vard University  1891. 

Dissertation:  The  beginnings  of  the  English  romantic  move- 
ment, 1725-1765.  (Published  as  follows:  The  beginnings  of 
the  English  romantic  movement:  A  study  in  eighteenth 
century  literature,  Ginn  and  Company,  Boston,  1893.) 

Lampson  Professor  of  English  Literature,  Yale  College. 


-46- 

1892 

Charles  Davidson,  B.A.  Grinnell  (Iowa)  College  1875,  M.A.  1878. 
Dissertation:    Studies  in  the  English  mystery  plays.     (Published 

in    Transactions    of   the    Connecticut   Academy   of    Arts    and 

Sciences,  9:  125-297.     New  Haven,  1892;    and  as  a  reprint  with 

new  pagination.) 
Professor  of  Education,  University  of  Maine,  until  191 1;    now 

retired. 
Claremont,  Cal. 

1893 
Arthur  Willis  Colton,  B.A.  Yale  University  1890. 
Dissertation:    The  English  prologue  and  epilogue. 
Librarian,  University  Club,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


1894 
Elizabeth  Dcering  Hanscom,  B.A.  Boston  University  1887,  M.A. 

1893. 
Dissertation:  Studies  in  the  Vision  of  Piers  Plowman.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  as  follows:  The  argument  of  the  Vision  of 
Piers  Plowman,  Publications  of  the  Modern  Language 
Association  of  America,  9:  403-450.  Baltimore,  1894.) 
Professor  of  English  Language  and  Literature,  Smith  College, 
Northampton,  Mass. 

Charles  Augustus  Schumacher,  B.A.  Yale  University  1892. 
Dissertation:    Sources  of  Longfellow's  poetry. 
Teacher  of  Psychology  and  Methods  of  Literature,  State  Normal 
School,  Oneonta,  N.  Y. 

Mary  Augusta  Scott,  B.A.  Vassar  College  1876,  M.A.  1882. 

Dissertation:  The  Elizabethan  drama,  especially  in  its  relations  to 
the  Italians  of  the  Renaissance.  (A  part  developed  and  now 
in  press,  as  follows:  Elizabethan  translations  from  the  Italian, 
one  of  the  Semi-Centennial  Publications  of  Vassar  College, 
Houghton,  Mifflin,  and  Company,  Boston,  1915.) 

Professor  of  English  Language  and  Literature,  Smith  College, 
Northampton,  Mass. 

Laura  Johnson  Wylie,  B.A.  Vassar  College  1877. 

Dissertation:      Studies    in    the    evolution    of    English    criticism, 

(Published  by  Ginn  and  Company,  Boston,  1894.) 
Professor,   and    Head   of   the    Department,    of    English,   Vassar 

College,  Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y. 

\'. 


—47— 

Charles  Henry  Adams  Wager,  B.A.  Colgate  University  1892. 

Dissertatimi:  The  Seege  of  Troye,  in  Middle  English,  with 
introduction.  (Published  as  follows:  The  Seege  of  Troye, 
edited  from  MS.  Had.  525,  with  introduction,  notes,  and 
glossaries.  The  Macmillan  Company,  New  York,  1899.) 

Professor  of  English,  Oberlin  College,  Oberlin,  Ohio. 


1896 

Henry  Walter  Bunn,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 
Dissertation:    Some  love  poetry. 

Captain,  Coast  Artillery  Corps,  United  States  Army,  Fort 
Flagler,  Wash. 

Frank  Herbert  Chase,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 

Dissertation:     The   syntax   of  temporal   clauses   in    Old    English 

prose. 
Custodian  of  Special  Libraries,  Public  Library,  Boston,  Mass. 

Edward  Grier  Fullerton,  B.A.  University  of  Pennsylvania  1883. 
Dissertation:   Robert  South. 
Died  1911. 

Martha  Anstice  Harris,  M.A.  Lincoln  College  1894. 

Dissertation:  A  vocabulary  of  the  Old  English  Gospels.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  A  glossary  of  the  West  Saxon  Gospels, 
Latin-West  Saxon  and  West  Saxon-Latin,  Yale  Studies  in 
English,  No.  6,  Lamson,  Wolffe,  and  Company,  Boston,  1899.) 

Professor  of  English  Language  and  Literature,  and  Dean  of 
the  College,  Elmira  College,  Elmira,  N.  Y. 

Robert  Hastings  Nichols,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 
Dissertation:     Studies    in    English    lyrical    poetry    from    1625    to 

1660,  with  suggestions  for  an  anthology. 
Professor   of   Church   History,   Auburn   Theological   Seminary, 

Auburn,  N.  Y. 

Edward  Bliss  Reed,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 

Dissertation:    Studies  in   English  lyrical  poetry  of  the   Caroline 

and      Commonwealth     periods,     with     suggestions     for     an 

anthology. 
Assistant  Professor  of  English,  Yale  College. 


-48- 

Alice  Elizabeth  Sawtelle  (Mrs.  Herbert  Randall),  B.A.  Colby 

University  1888. 
Dissertation:     The    sources    of    Spenser's    classical    mythology. 

(Published  by  Silver,  Burdett,  and  Company,  Boston,  1896.) 
Died  1909. 

1897 

Frederick  Wilkinson  Kilboume,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1894. 

Dissertation:  Alterations  and  adaptations  of  Shakespeare's  plays 
after  1660.  (Published  as  follows:  Alterations  and  adapta- 
tions of  Shakespeare,  The  Poet  Lore  Company,  Boston,  1906.) 

Treasurer  of  the  Curtis  Home,  Meriden,  Conn. 

Herbert  Augustine  Smith,  B.A.  Yale  University  1889. 
Dissertation:    Classicism  and  criticism  in  English  literature  from 

Dryden  to  Pope. 
Editor,  Forest  Service,  United  States  Department  of  Agriculture, 

Washington,  D.  C. 

i8g8 

Edward  Chauncey  Baldwin,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 

Dissertation:  Character-writings  of  the  seventeenth  century,  with 
a  critical  edition  of  Butler's  Characters.  (Published  in  part, 
in  revised  form,  as  follows:  In  Modern  Language  Notes:  Ben 
Jonson's  indebtedness  to  the  Greek  character-sketch,  16:  385- 
396.  Baltimore,  1901;  In  Publications  of  the  Modern  Lan- 
guage Association:  The  relation  of  the  English  "character" 
to  its  Greek  prototype,  18:  412-423.  Baltimore,  1903;  The 
relation  of  the  seventh  century  character  to  the  periodical 
essay,  19:  75-114;  La  Bruyere's  influence  upon  Addison,  19: 
479-495-  Baltimore,  1904;  A  suggestion  for  a  new  edition  of 
Butler's  Hudibras,  26:  528-548.  Baltimore,  191 1;  The  "char- 
acter"  in  Restoration  comedy,  30:  64-78.     Baltimore,  1915.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  English,  University  of  Illinois,  Urbana, 
111. 

Anna  Hunt  Billings,  B.L.  Smith  College  1891. 

Dissertation:  A  guide  to  the  Middle  English  metrical  romances 
which  are  based  upon  English  and  German  legends,  and  upon 
the  legends  of  Charlemagne.  (Published  as  follows:  A 
guide  to  the  Middle  English  metrical  romances  dealing  with 
English  and  Germanic  legends,  and  with  the  cycles  of 
Charlemagne  and  of  Arthur,  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  9, 
Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1901.) 

New  York,  N.  Y. 


—49— 

James  Wallace  Broatch,  B.A.  Yale  University  1891. 

Dissertatian:  The  Troylus  and  Criseyde  of  Chaucer.  (Published 
in  part  as  follows:  The  indebtedness  of  Chaucer's  Troilus  to 
Benoit's  Roman,  Journal  of  Germanic  Philology,  2:  14-29. 
New  Haven,  1900.) 

Died  1908. 

Charlton  Miner  Lewis,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886,  LL.B.  Colum- 
bia University  1889. 

Dissertation:  The  foreign  sources  of  modern  English  versifica- 
tion, with  especial  reference  to  the  so-called  iambic  lines  of 
8  and  10  syllables.  (Printed  by  Ehrhardt  Karras,  Halle,  1898, 
and  made  No.  i  of  Yale  Studies  in  English,  without  bearing 
that  title.) 

Emily  Sanford  Professor  of  English  Literature,  Yale  College. 

Laura  Emma  Lockwood,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas  1891,  M.A. 

1894. 
Dissertation:    A  lexicon  to  the  English  poetical  works  of  John 

Milton,  A-F.     (Published,  with  additions,  as  follows:    Lexicon 

to  the  English  poetical  works  of  John  Milton,  The  Macmillan 

Company,  New  York,  1907.) 
Associate  Professor  of   English   Language,   Wellesley   College, 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

Bertha    Ellen    Lovewell    (Mrs.    George    L.    Dickinson),    B.L. 

Washburn  College  1889. 
Dissertation:    The  life  of  Saint  Cecilia,  from  MS.  Ashmole  43  and 

MS.  Cotton  Tiberius  E.  VII,  with  introduction,  variants,  and 
.     glossary.      (Published    as    Yale    Studies    in    English,    No.    3, 

Lamson,  Wolfife,  and  Company,  Boston,  1898.) 
525  Huntington  Terrace,  Pasadena,  Cal. 

Margaret  Pollock  Sherwood,  B.A.  Vassar  College  1886. 
Dissertation:    Dryden's  dramatic  theory  and  practice.     (Published 

as    Yale    Studies    in    English,    No.    4,    Lamson,    WolfTe,    and 

Company,  Boston,  1898.) 
Professor  of  English  Literature,  Wellesley  College,  Wellesley, 

Mass. 

Caroline  Louisa  White,  B.A.  Mount  Holyoke  College  1894. 

Dissertation:  yElfric:  a  new  study  of  his  life  and  writings.  (Pub- 
lished as  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  2,  Lamson,  Wolffe,  and 
Company,  Boston,  1898.) 

Died  1905. 


— 50— 

Elisabeth  Woodbridge  (Mrs.  Charles  G.  Morris),  B.A.  Vassar 

College  1892. 
Dissertation:    Studies  in  Jonson's  comedy.     (Published  as  Yale 

Studies   in   English,    No.   5,    Lamson,   Wolffe,   and   Company, 

Boston,  1898.) 
67  Mansfield  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

1899 

John  Milton  Berdan,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  The  poems  of  John  Cleveland,  v^ith  a  biography 
and  historical  introductions.  (Published  as  follows:  The 
poems  of  John  Cleveland,  annotated  and  correctly  printed 
for  the  first  time,  with  biographical  and  historical  introduc- 
tions, The  Grafton  Press,  New  York,  1903;  2d  ed.,  Y^le 
University  Press,  New  Haven,  191 1.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Rhetoric,  Yale  College. 

Ella  Isabel  Harris,  B.A.  Waynesburg  College  1889,  M.A.  1892. 

Dissertatimi:  Two  tragedies  of  Seneca  rendered  into  English 
verse,  with  an  introduction.  (Published,  without  the  intro- 
duction, by  Lamson,  Wolfife,  and  Company,  Boston,  1898; 
republished  by  Houghton,  Mifflin,  and  Company,  Boston, 
1899.  Included  in  The  tragedies  of  Seneca  rendered  into 
English  verse,  Henry  Frowde,  London,  1904.) 

Teacher  of  English,  State  Normal  School,  Ellensburg,  Wash. 

Charles  Grosvenor  Osgood,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 

Dissertation:  The  sources  of  Milton's  classical  mythology. 
(Published  as  follows:  The  classical  mythology  of  Milton's 
English  poems,  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  8,  Henry  Holt 
and  Company,  New  York,  1900.) 

Professor  of  English,  Princeton  University,  Princeton,  N.  J. 

Frederick  Morgan  Padelford,  B.A.  Colby  University  1896. 
Dissertation:    Old  English  musical  terms.     (Published  as  Bonner 
Beitrage  zur  Anglistik,   Heft  4,  P.  Hanstein's  Verlag,  Bonn, 

1899.) 
Professor,  and  Head  of  the  Department,  of  English,  University 
of  Washington,  Seattle,  Wash. 

Emerson  Gifford  Taylor,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 
Dissertation:    The  influence  of  French   comedy  on  the   English 

comedy  of  the  late  seventeenth  century  (1660-1740). 
Author,  58  Garden  St.,  Hartford,  Conn. 


—51— 

igoo 

Irene  Tanner  Myers,  M.A.  Bethany  College  1889. 

Dissertation:    A  study  in  epic  development.     (Published  as  Yale 

Studies  in  English,  No.  11,  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New 

York,  1901.) 
Professor    of    History,    and    Dean    of    Women,    Transylvania 

College,  Lexington,  Ky. 

George  Henry  Nettleton,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 
Dissertation:    The  evolution  of  the  Shakespearean  clown. 
Assistant  Professor  of  English,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 
University. 

Charles  Huntington  Whitman,  B.A.  Colby  University  1897. 
Dissertation:    The  birds  of  Old  English  literature.     (Published  in 
Journal  of  Germanic  Philology,  2:149-198.     New  Haven,  1900.) 
Professor  of  English,  Rutgers  College,  New  Brunswick,  N.  J. 


1901 

Martha  Hale  Shackford,  B.A.  Wellesley  College  1896. 
Dissertation:    The  pastoral  idyll  in  English  poetry.     (Chapter  i 

published    as    follows:     A    definition    of    the    pastoral    idyll. 

Publications  of  the  Modern  Language  Association  of  America, 

19^  583-592.     Baltimore,  1904-) 
Associate   Professor  of  English   Literature,  Wellesley  College, 

Wellesley,  Mass. 

Margaret  Sweeney,  B.A.  Radcliffe  College  1899. 

Dissertation:  Patience,  a  Middle  English  poem  in  the  West  Mid- 
land dialect  of  the  fourteenth  century,  edited  with  introduction, 
notes,  and  glossary. 

Professor  of  Rhetoric,  and  Dean  of  Women,  University  of 
Minnesota,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 

Alice  Lincoln  Wright,  B.A.  Wellesley  College  1897. 
Dissertation:     A   study   of   Ben   Jonson's    Catiline,   with   special 

reference  to  its  sources. 
Teacher,  Dwight  School,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

igo2 

Margaret  Rooker  Bradshaw,  M.A.  Vanderbilt  University   1893. 
Dissertation:    The  metre  of  the  Christ. 

Associate  Professor  of  English  Language  and  Literature,  Smith 
College,  Northampton,  Mass. 


—52— 

Emily  Howard  Foley  (Mrs.  Allyn  K.  Foster),  B.A.  Wellesley 
College  1893. 

Dissertation:  The  language  of  the  Northumbrian  Gloss  to  the 
Gospel  of  Saint  Matthew.  (Pt.  i,  Phonology,  published  as 
Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  14,  Henry  Holt  and  Company, 
New  York,  1903.) 

8  Polhemus  PL,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

Henry  Lee  Hargrove,  B.A.  University  of  Nashville  1891,  M.A. 
1892. 

Dissertatian:  King  Alfred's  Old  English  version  of  St.  Augus- 
tine's Soliloquies,  edited  with  introduction,  notes,  and  glossary. 
(Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  13,  Henry  Holt 
and  Company,  New  York,  1902.) 

Professor  of  English  Literature,  Government  Preparatory 
School,  Kaifeng,  Honan,  China. 

Charles  Montgomery  Hathaway,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University  1899, 

M.A.  1901. 
Dissertation:     The   Alchemist,   by   Ben   Jonson,   critically   edited 

with  introduction,   notes,  and   glossary.     (Published  as   Yale 

Studies  in  English,  No.  17,  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New 

York,  1903,  omitting   'critically'    in  the  title.) 
American  Consul,  Hull,  England. 

Robert  Kilburn  Root,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898. 

Dissertation:    Classical  mythology  in  Shakespeare.     (Published  as 

Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  19,  Henry  Holt  and  Company, 

New  York,  1903.) 
Assistant  Professor,  John  L.  Cadwalader  Preceptor  in  English, 

Princeton  University,  Princeton,  N.  J. 

Hubert  Gibson  Shearin,  B.A.  Centre  College  1897,  M.A.  1899. 
Dissertation:    The  expression  of  purpose  in  Old  English  prose. 

(Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.   18,   Henry  Holt 

and  Company,  New  York,  1903.) 
Professor,  and  Head  of  the  Department,  of  English,  Occidental 

College,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 

Susan  Smith  Sheridan,  B.A.  University  of  Omaha  1897. 

Dissertatian:  Glossary  of  the  Anglo-Saxon  Ritual  of  the  Cathe- 
dral Church  of  Durham. 

Teacher,  and  Head  of  the  Department,  of  English,  Hillhouse 
High  School,  New  Haven^  Conn. 


—53— 

Chauncey  Brewster  Tinker,  B.A.  Yale  University  1899,  M.A. 
1901. 

Dissertation:  A  historical  and  critical  account  of  the  translations 
of  Beowulf,  with  a  new  rendering  of  the  poem.  (First  part 
and  a  translation  published  as  follows:  The  translations  of 
Beowulf:  a  critical  bibliography,  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No. 
16,  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1903;  Beowulf 
translated  out  of  the  Old  English,  Newson  and  Company, 
New  York,  1902,  rev.  ed.,  1910.) 

Professor  of  English  Literature,  Yale  College. 


1903 

Carroll  Storrs  Alden,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898,  M.A.  1901. 

Dissertation:  Jonson's  Bartholomew  Fair,  edited  with  introduc- 
tion, notes,  and  glossary.  (Published  as  Yale  Studies  in 
English,  No.  25,  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1904-) 

Instructor  in  English,  United  States  Naval  Academy,  Annapolis, 
Md. 

Henry    Davenport    Blackwell,    B.A.    Randolph-Macon    College 

1890. 
Dissertation:    A  guide  to  the  Middle  English  metrical  romances: 

the  cycle  of  antiquity,  and  the  romances  of  adventure. 
Professor    of    English    Literature,    Randolph-Macon    Woman's 

College,  Lynchburg,  Va. 

Clarence  Carroll  Clark,  B.A.  Johns  Hopkins  University  1896. 
Dissertation:    Matthew  Arnold  and  his  masters. 
Clergyman,  Chapel  of  the  Comforter,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Watson  Nicholson,  B.A.  Leland  Stanford,  Jr.  University   1892, 

M.A.  Harvard  University  1895. 
Dissertation:    The  struggle  for  a  free  stage  in   London.     (Pub- 
lished by  Houghton,  Mifflin,  and  Company,  Boston,  1906.) 
Care  Thomas  Cook  and  Son,  London,  England. 

William  Oliver  Stevens,  B.A.  Colby  College  1899. 

Dissertation:  The  cross  in  the  life  and  literature  of  the  Anglo- 
Saxons.  (Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  23,  Henry 
Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1904.) 

Professor  of  English,  United  States  Naval  Academy,  Annapolis, 
Md. 


—54— 

Elbert  Nevius  Sebring  Thompson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900. 
Dissertation:     The    controversy    between    the    Puritans    and    the 

stage.     (Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  20,  Henry 

Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1903.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  English,  State  University  of  Iowa,  Iowa 

City,  Iowa. 

1904 
John  Chester  Adams,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 
Dissertation:    The  predecessors  of  the  seventeenth  century  court 

masque  in  England. 
Faculty    Adviser    in    Undergraduate    Literary    Activities,    and 

Assistant  Professor  of  English,  Yale  College. 

Arthur  Henry  Bartlett,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898. 

Dissertation:    Jonson's  Every  Man  out  of  his  Humor,  edited  with 

introduction,  notes,  and  glossary. 
Died  1906. 

Herbert  Samuel  Mallory,  Ph.B.  Western  Reserve  University 
1899. 

Dissertation:  Poetaster,  or.  The  Arraignment,  by  Ben  Jonson, 
edited  with  introduction,  notes,  and  glossary.  (Published  as 
Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  27,  Henry  Holt  and  Company, 
New  York,  1905,  omitting  'or,  The  Arraignment'  in  the 
title.) 

Instructor  in  Rhetoric,  University  of  Michigan,  Ann  Arbor, 
Mich. 

De  Winter,  B.L.  University  of  California  1892,  M.A.  Harvard 
University  1894. 

Dissertatimi:  The  Staple  of  News,  by  Ben  Jonson,  edited  with 
introduction,  notes,  and  glossary.  (Published  as  Yale  Studies 
in  English,  No.  28,  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York, 
190S.) 

Teacher  of  English,  High  School,  Berkeley,  Cal. 

1905 
Arthur  Adams,  B.A.  Rutgers  College  1902,  M.A.  Yale  University 

1903,  B.D.  Berkeley  Divinity  School  1910. 
Dissertation:    The  syntax  of  the  temporal  clause  in  Old  English 
prose.     (Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  32,  Henry 
Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1907.) 
Professor  of  English,  and  Librarian,  Trinity  College,  Hartford, 
Conn. 


—55— 

Allen  Rogers  Benham,  B.A.  University  of  Minnesota  1900,  M.A. 
1901. 

Dissertation:  The  expression  of  result  in  Old  English  prose. 
(Published,  with  some  omissions,  as  follows:  The  clause  of 
result  in  Old  English  prose,  Anglia,  13:197-255.     Halle,  1908.) 

Associate  Professor  of  English  Literature,  University  of  Wash- 
ington, Seattle,  Wash. 

Henry  Seidel  Canby,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1899. 

Dissertation:  The  novella  and  related  varieties  of  the  short 
narrative  in  English  before  Chaucer;  with  an  introduction 
on  the  nature  and  history  of  the  reflective  story.  (Published 
in  part,  with  modifications,  in  The  short  story  in  English, 
Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1909,  and  in  The 
English  fabliau,  Publications  of  the  Modern  Language  Asso- 
ciation of  America,  21:  200-214.     Baltimore,  1906.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  English,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 
University. 

Aurelia  Isabel  Henry  (Mrs.  George  F.  Reinhardt),  B.L.  Univer- 
sity of  California  1898. 

Dissertation:  Epicoene,  or,  The  Silent  Woman,  by  Ben  Jonson, 
edited  with  introduction,  notes,  and  glossary.  (Published  as 
Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  31,  Henry  Holt  and  Company, 
New  York,  1906.) 

2510  Ridge  Road,  Berkeley,  Cal. 

Lucius  Hudson  Holt,  B.A.  Yale  University  1902,  M.A.  1904. 
Dissertatio-n:    Volpone,  or.  The  Fox,  by  Ben  Jonson,  edited  with 

introduction,  notes,  and  glossary. 
Lieutenant-Colonel,    United    States    Army,    and    Professor    of 

English  and  History,  United  States  Military  Academy,  West 

Point,  N.  Y. 

William  Savage  Johnson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900. 
Dissertation:    The  Devil  is  an  Ass,  by  Ben  Jonson,  edited  with 

introduction,     notes,     and     glossary.       (Published     as     Yale 

Studies  in  English,  No.  29,   Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New 

York,  1905.) 
Associate     Professor     of     English     Literature,     University     of 

Kansas,  Lawrence,  Kansas. 

Margaret  Dutton  Kellum,  B.A.  Bryn  Mawr  College  1892. 

Dissertation:  The  language  of  the  Northumbrian  Gloss  to  the 
Gospel  of  St.  Luke.  (Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English, 
No.  30,  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1906.) 

Law  Librarian,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


-56- 

Mary  Elizabeth  MacLean,  Ph.B.  University  of  California  1889. 
Dissertation:    The  Jeremy  Collier  controversy. 
Grey  Court,  Ithaca,  N.  Y. 


1906 

Robert  Thomas  Kerlin,  M.A.  Central  College  1890. 
Dissertation:    Theocritus  in  English  literature.     (Printed  by  The 

J.  P.  Bell  Company,  Lynchburg,  Va.,  1910.) 
Professor   of    English,    Virginia    Military    Institute,    Lexington, 

Va. 

Herbert  Spencer  Murch,  B.A.  University  of  Oregon  1898,  M.A. 

Yale  University  1903. 
Dissertation:    The  Knight  of  the  Burning  Pestle,  by  Beaumont 

and   Fletcher,   edited  with  introduction,   notes,  and  glossary. 

(Published  as  Yale  Studies  in   English,   No.  Z2>,   Henry  Holt 

and  Company,  New  York,  1908.) 
Assistant  Professor,  Preceptor  in  English,  Princeton  University, 

Princeton,  N.  J. 


1907 

Marian  Dickinson  Campbell  (Mrs.  Alfred  H.  Terry),  B.A.  Rad- 
cliffe  College  1899. 

Dissertatiojt:  A  variorum  text  of  the  satires  of  John  Donne, 
together  with  some  account  of  the  manuscript,  and  explana- 
tory notes  and  illustrations  from  the  literature  of  the  period. 

Fairfield,  Conn. 

Loring    Holmes    Dodd,    B.A.    Dartmouth    College    1900,    M.A. 

Columbia  University  1901. 
Dissertation:    A  glossary  of  Wulfstan's  Homilies.     (Published  as 

Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  35,  Henry  Holt  and  Company, 

New  York,  1908.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  English,  Clark  College,  Worcester,  Mass. 

Herbert  Franklin  Hamilton,  B.A.  Amherst  College   1897,  M.A. 

Yale  University  1899. 
Dissertation:  The  Pindaric  ode  in  English  verse. 
Associate    Professor    of    English,    Amherst    College,    Amherst, 
Mass. 


—57— 

George  Bremner  Tennant,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900,  M.A.  1903. 

Dissertation:  The  New  Inn,  or,  The  Light  Heart,  by  Ben  Jonson, 
edited  with  introduction,  notes,  and  glossary.  (Published  as 
Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  34,  Henry  Holt  and  Company, 
New  York,  1908.) 

Teacher  of  English,  Stuyvesant  High  School,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


igo8 

Frederick  Browne  Harrison,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1899. 
Dissertation:    Milton's  reputation  in  the  eighteenth  century. 
Master,  The  Tome  School,  Port  Deposit,  Md. 

Samuel  Burdett  Hemingway,  B.A.  Yale  University   1904,   M.A. 

1905. 

Dissertation:  English  nativity  plays,  edited  with  introduction, 
notes,  and  glossary.  (Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English, 
No.  38,  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1909.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  English,  Yale  College. 

Frederick  Erastus  Pierce,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A.  1905. 

Dissertation:  The  collaboration  of  Webster  and  Dekker.  (Pub- 
lished as  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  37,  Henry  Holt  and 
Company,  New  York,  1909.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  English,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 
University. 

1909 

Mable  Electa  Buland  (Mrs.  George  N.  Campbell),  B.A.  Univer- 
sity of  Washington  1904,  M.A.  1908. 

Dissertation:  The  representation  of  time  in  the  Elizabethan 
drama.  (Published  as  follows:  The  presentation  of  time  in 
the  Elizabethan  drama,  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  44,  Henry 
Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1912.) 

Kalama,  Wash. 

Willard  Higley  Durham,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  Legends  of  St.  Guthlac:  St.  Guthlac  the  Hermit; 
The  Death  of  St.  Guthlac:  Two  Anglo-Saxon  poems,  edited 
with  introduction,  notes,  and  glossary. 

Instructor  in  English,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 


-58- 

igio 

William  Talbot  Allison,  B.A.  University  of  Toronto  1899,  M.A. 
1900. 

Dissertation:  Milton's  Tenure  of  Kings  and  Magistrates,  edited 
with  introduction  and  notes.  (Published  as  Yale  Studies  in 
English,  No.  40,  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  191 1.) 

Professor  of  English,  Wesley  College,  University  of  Manitoba, 
Winnipeg,  Manitoba. 

Josephine  May  Bumham,  Ph.B.  University  of  Chicago  1901. 

Dissertation:  Concessive  constructions  in  Old  English  prose. 
(Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  39,  Henry  Holt 
and  Company,  New  York,  191 1.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Rhetoric  and  Composition,  Wellesley 
College,  Wellesley,  Mass.;  also  Assistant  Professor  of  Eng- 
lish, University  of  Kansas,  Lawrence,  Kan.  (for  1915-16). 

Elizabeth  Whittlesey  Cleaveland,  Ph.B.  University  of  Chicago 
1902. 

Dissertation:  A  comparative  study  of  Tindale's  translation  of 
Genesis.  (Published  as  follows:  A  study  of  Tindale's  Genesis 
compared  with  the  Genesis  of  Coverdale  and  of  the  Authorized 
Version,  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  43,  Henry  Holt  and 
Company,  New  York,  191 1.) 

Teacher  of  English,  Hillhouse  High  School,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

Elizabeth   Merrill   (Mrs.   Albert   S.   Cook),   B.A.   University  of 

Cincinnati  1900,  M.A.  1905. 
Dissertation:    The  dialogue  in  English  literature.     (Published  as 

Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  42,  Henry  Holt  and  Company, 

New  York,  191 1.) 
219  Bishop  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn, 

Mary  Winslow  Smyth,  B.L.  Smith  College  1895,  M.A.  1905. 
Dissertation:     Biblical    quotations    in    Middle    English    literature 

before  1350.     (Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  41, 

Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  191 1.) 
54  Trumbull  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

igii 

Evert  Mordecai  Clark,  B.A.  Yale  University  1905,  M.A.  1906. 
Dissertation:   The  Ready  and  Easy  Way  to  establish  a  Free  Com- 


—59— 

monwealth,  by  John  Milton,  edited  with  introduction,  notes, 
and   glossary.      (Published   as   Yale   Studies   in    English,   No. 
51,  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven,  1915.) 
Instructor  in  English,  University  of  Texas,  Austin,  Tex. 

Alexander  Corbin  Judson,  B.A.  Pomona  College  1907,  M.A.  Yale 

University  1908. 
Dissertation:    Cynthia's   Revels,  or,  The  Fountain  of  Self-Love, 

by  Ben  Jonson,  edited  with  introduction,  notes,  and  glossary. 

(Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  45,   Henry  Holt 

and  Company,  New  York,  1912.) 
Instructor  in  English,  University  of  Texas,  Austin,  Tex. 


1912 

Clarence  Edward  Andrews,  B.A.  Yale  University  1906,  M.A. 
1908. 

Dissertation:  Richard  Brome,  his  life,  a  discussion  of  his  work, 
and  the  Antipodes,  reprinted  from  the  quarto  of  1640,  with 
an  introduction,  notes,  and  glossary.  (Published  in  part  as 
Yale  Studies  in  English,  No.  46,  Henry  Holt  and  Company, 
New  York,  1913.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  English,  Ohio  State  University,  Colum- 
bus, O. 

William  Pitt  McCune,  B.A.  Yale  University  1906,  M.A.  1907. 
Dissertation:     The    poems    of   William    Cartwright,    edited    with 

biographical  and  critical  introduction,  notes,  and  glossary. 
Student,  General  Theological  Seminary,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Joseph  John  Reilly,  B.A.  Holy  Cross  College  1904,  M.A.  1906, 
M.A.  Columbia  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  James  Russell  Lowell  as  a  critic.  (Published  as 
follows:  Lowell  as  a  critic,  G.  P.  Putnam's  Sons,  New  York 
and  London,   1915.) 

Chief  Examiner  for  the  Massachusetts  Civil  Service  Commis- 
sion, Boston,  Mass. 


1913 

Alice  Maud  Barbour,  B.S.  Wellesley  College  1893,  M.A.  George 
Washington  University  1910. 


— 6o— 

Dissertation:  Sir  Thomas  North,  an  Elizabethan  translator:  A 
study  of  his  translation  of  Plutarch's  Parallel  Lives  from  the 
French  version  of  Jacques  Amyot. 

Instructor  of  Collegiate  English,  and  Supervisor  of  Publications, 
Mary  Baldwin  Seminary,  Staunton,  Va. 

Gerard  Edward  Jensen,  B.A.  Yale  University  1907,  M.A.  1909. 

Dissertation:  The  Covent-Garden  Journal,  by  Sir  Alexander 
Drawcansir,  Knt.  Censor  of  Great  Britain  (Henry  Fielding), 
edited  with  introduction  and  notes.  (Published  as  follows: 
The  Covent-Garden  Journal,  by  Henry  Fielding,  edited  with 
introduction  and  notes,  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven, 
1916.) 

Instructor  in  English,  University  of  Pennsylvania,  Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

Lawrence  Mason,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A.  191 1. 

Dissertation:  The  English  poems  of  Henry  King,  D.D.,  sometime 
Bishop  of  Chichester,  edited  with  biographical,  critical,  and 
bibliographical  introduction,  notes,  and  appendices.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  The  life  and  works  of  Henry  King,  D.D., 
Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts  and  Sci- 
ences, 18:  227-289.  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven,  1913; 
The  English  poems  of  Henry  King,  D.D.,  1592-1669,  sometime 
Bishop  of  Chichester,  now  first  collected  from  various  sources, 
and  edited.     Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven,  1914.) 

Instructor  in  English,  Yale  College. 

Harvey  Whitefield  Peck,  B.A.  Oberlin  College  1905,  M.A.  Yale 

University  1907. 
Dissertation:    The   Magnetic   Lady,   or,   Humors   Reconciled,  by 

Ben   Jonson,    edited   with    introduction,    notes,   and   glossary. 

(Published  as  Yale  Studies  in   English,   No.  47,   Henry  Holt 

and  Company,  New  York,  1914.) 
Instructor  in  English,  University  of  Texas,  Austin,  Texas. 

Emma  Curtiss  Tucker,  B.A.  Mt.  Holyoke  College  1896. 

Dissertation:  The  later  version  of  the  Wycliffite  Epistle  to  the 
Romans,  compared  with  the  Latin  original:  a  study  of 
Wycliffite  English.  (Published  as  Yale  Studies  in  English, 
No.  49,  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,   1914.) 

Instructor  in  English,  Goucher  College,  Baltimore,  Md. 


— 6i- 


1914 

Eleanor   N.  Adams,   B.A.   University  of   Cincinnati   1902,   M.A. 

1904. 
Dissertation:    Old  English  scholarship  in  England  from  1566  to 

1800.      (In   press,   as   Yale   Studies   in    English,    No.   55,   Yale 

University  Press,  New^  Haven,  1916.) 
Professor  of  English,  Oxford  College  for  Women,  Oxford,  O. 

Henry  Holland  Carter,   B.A.   Oberlin   College   1907,   M.A.  Yale 

University  1908. 
Dissertation:    Every  Man  in  his  Humour,  by  Ben  Jonson,  edited 

with   introduction,   notes,   and   glossary.      (In   press,   as   Yale 

Studies  in  English,  No.  52,  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven, 

1916.) 
Assistant   Professor   of   English,   Carleton    College,   Northfield, 

Minn. 

Will   Taliaferro   Hale,   B.A.   Vanderbilt   University    1902,    M.A. 
1902,  B.D.  Yale  University  1905,  M.A.  Columbia  University 
1912. 
Dissertation:    Of  reformation  touching  church-discipline  in  Eng- 
land and  the  causes  that  hitherto  have  hindred  it,  by  John 
Milton,    edited   with   introduction,    notes,   and    glossary.      (In 
press,   as   Yale   Studies   in    English,   No.   54,   Yale   University 
Press,  New  Haven,  1916.) 
Instructor  in  English,  Indiana  University,  Bloomington,  Ind. 

Lynn  Harold  Harris,  B.A.  Dickinson  College  1906,  M.A.  Yale 
University  1910. 

Dissertation:  Catiline,  his  Conspiracy,  by  Ben  Jonson,  edited 
with  introduction,  notes,  and  glossary.  (In  press  as  Yale 
Studies  in  English,  No.  53,  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven, 
1916.) 

Instructor  in  English,  University  of  Illinois,  Urbana,  111. 

James   Theodore   Hillhouse,    B.A.    Yale   University    191 1,    M.A. 

1912. 
Dissertation:    The  Tragedy  of  Tragedies,  a  Dramatic  Burlesque, 

by  Henry  Fielding,  edited  with  introduction  and  notes. 
Instructor   in    English,    University   of    Minnesota,    Minneapolis, 

Minn. 


—62— 

Florence  May  Snell,  Ph.B.  Oberlin  College  1893,  M.A.  1898. 

Dissertation:  A  Tale  of  a  Tub,  by  Ben  Jonson,  edited  with  intro- 
duction, notes,  and  glossary.  (Published  by  Longmans,  Green, 
and  Company,  London,  England,  1915.) 

Head  of  English  Department,  Huguenot  College,  Wellington, 
South  Africa. 

Mary  Emma  Wadlington,  B.A.  University  of  Mississippi  1902. 

Dissertation:  Mrs.  Frances  Sheridan,  her  life  and  works;  includ- 
ing a  study  of  her  influence  on  Richard  Brinsley  Sheridan's 
plays,  and  an  edition  of  her  comedy,  The  Discovery. 

Head  of  Department  of  English,  High  School,  Clifton,  Ariz. 

Rose  Abel  Wright,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas  1901. 
Dissertation:    The  political  plays  of  the  Restoration  period. 
811  North  M  St.,  Aberdeen,  Wash. 

1915 
Harold  Lawton  Bruce,  B.L.  University  of  California  1908,  M.L. 

1911. 
Dissertation:    Voltaire  on  the  English  stage. 

Instructor  in  English,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 

John  Jay  Parry,  B.A.  Yale  University  1912,  M.A.  1914. 
Dissertation:     The    poems    and    Amyntas    of   Thomas    Randolph 
(1605-1635),  edited  with  an  introduction,  notes,  and  glossary. 
Instructor  in  English,  University  of  California,  Berkeley,  Cal. 

William   Eben    Schultz,    B.A.    Christian    University    1906,    M.A. 

1907,  M.A.  Yale  University  1909. 
Dissertatimi:    The  Beggar's  Opera,  by  John  Gay,  edited  with  a 

historical  and  critical  introduction,  and  notes. 
Instructor  in  English,  University  of  Illinois,  Urbana,  111. 

John  Edwin  Wells,  B.L.  Swarthmore  College  1896,  M.L.  1899, 
M.A.  Columbia  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  A  manual  of  the  writings  in  Middle  English,  1050- 
1400,  exclusive  of  ballads  and  cycles  of  drama.  (In  press, 
as  follows:  A  manual  of  the  writings  in  Middle  English, 
1050-1400,  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven,  1916.) 

Professor  of  English  Literature,  on  the  Rufus  H.  Sage  Founda- 
tion, Beloit  College,  Beloit,  Wis. 


-63- 


Stanley  Thomas  Williams,  B.A.  Yale  University  191 1,  M.A.  1914. 
Dissertatian:    Richard  Cumberland,  his  life  and  dramatic  works, 

with  an  appended  discussion  of  his  non-dramatic  work. 
Instructor  in  English,  Yale  College. 


ALPHABETICAL  LIST 
(*  indicates  that  the  graduate  is  deceased.) 


Abernethy,  1878 
Adams,  A.,  1905 
Adams,  E.  N.,  1914 
Adams,  J.  C,  1904 
Alden,  1903 
Allison,  1910 
Andrews,  1912 
Baldwin,  1898 
Barbour,  1913 

*Bartlett,  1904 
Benham,  1905 
Berdan,  1899 
Billings,  1898 
Blackwell,  1903 
Brackett,  1880 
Bradshaw,  1902 

*Broatch,  1898 
Bruce,  1915 
Buland,  1909 
Bunn,  1896 
Burnham,  1910 
Campbell,  1907 
Canby,  1905 
Carter,  1914 
Chase,  1896 
Clark,  C.  C,  1903 
Clark,  E.  M.,  191 1 
Cleaveland,  1910 
Colton,  1893 
Cross,  1889 
Davidson,  1892 
Dodd,  1907 
Durham,  1909 
Foley,  1902 


*Fullerton,  1896 
Hale,  1914 
Hamilton,  1907 
Hanscom,  1894 
Hargrove,  1902 
Harris,  E.  L,  1899 
Harris,  L.  H.,  1914 
Harris,  M.  A.,  1896 
Harrison,  1908 
Hathaway,  1902 
Hemingway,  1908 
Henry,  1905 
Hillhouse,  1914 
Holt,  1905 
Jensen,  1913 
Johnson,  1905 
Judson,  191 I 
Kellum,  1905 
Kerlin,  1906 
Kilbourne,  1897 
Lewis,  1898 
Lockwood,  1898 
Lovewell,  1898 
McCune,  1912 
MacLean,  1905 
Mallory,  1904 
Mason,  1913 
Merrill,  1910 
Murch,  1906 
Myers,  1900 
Nettleton,  1900 
Nichols,  1896 
Nicholson,  1903 
Osgood,  1899 


—64- 


Padelford,  1899 
Parry,  191 5 
Peck,  1913 
Phelps,  1891 
Pierce,  1908 
Reed,  1896 
Reilly,  1912 
Root,  1902 
*Sawtelle,  1896 
Schumaker,  1894 
Scott,  1894 
Schultz,  1915 
Shackford,  1901 
Shearin,  1902 
Sheridan,  1902 
Sherman,  1875 
Sherwood,  1898 
Smith,  1897 
Smyth,  1910 


Snell,  1914 
Stevens,  1903 
Sweeney,  1901 
Taylor,  1899 
Tennant,  1907 
Thompson,  1903 
Tinker,  1902 
Tucker,  1913 
Wadlington,  1914 
Wager,  1895 
Wells,  1915 
*White  1898 
Whitman,  1900 
Williams,  1915 
Winter,  1904 
Woodbridge,  1898 
Wright,  A.  L.,  1901 
Wright,  R.  A.,  1914 
Wylie,  1894 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  MATHEMATICS 


1862 

John  Hunter  Worrall,  B.A.  Yale  University  1856. 
Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 

Principal,  Mathematical  and  Classical  Institute,  Westchester,  Pa. 
Died  1892. 


1866 

Charles  Greene  Rockwood,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University  1864. 
Dissertation:    The  daily  motion  of  a  brick  tower  caused  by  solar 

heat.     (Published  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  3d  series, 

2:177-183.     New  Haven,  1871.) 
Professor    of    Mathematics,    Princeton    University,    Princeton, 

N.J. 
Died  1913. 

1873 

Augustus  Jay  DuBois,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1869,  C.E.  1870. 

Dissertation:  Strains  in  framed  structures.  (Incorporated  in  his 
book.  The  elements  of  graphical  statics  and  their  application 
to  framed  structures,  John  Wiley  and  Son,  New  York,  1875.) 

Professor  of  Civil  Engineering,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 
University. 

Died  1915. 

1876 

Mansfield  Merriman,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1871,  C.E.  1872. 

Dissertation:  Elements  of  the  method  of  least  squares.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  Elements  of  the  method  of  least  squares, 
Macmillan  and  Company,  London,  1877;  A  text-book  on  the 
method  of  least  squares,  John  Wiley  and  Sons,  New  York, 
1884;  Metodo  de  los  cuadrados  minimos,  M.  Biedma,  Buenos 
Ayres,  1889.) 

Professor  of  Civil  Engineering,  Lehigh  University   (1878-1907.) 

1071  Madison  Ave.,  New  York  City. 


—66— 

Joseph  John  Skinner,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1869,  C.E.  1874. 

Dissertation:  Approximate  computations.  (Published  as  follows: 
Principles  of  approximate  computations,  Henry  Holt  and 
Company,  New  York,  1876.) 

Instructor  and  Assistant  Professor  of  Mathematics,  Massachu- 
setts Institute  of  Technology  (1885-1904). 

Kenwood,  Madison  County,  N.  Y. 


1877 

Andrew   Wheeler    Phillips,    Ph.B.    Yale    University    1872,    M.A. 

Trinity  College  1875. 
Dissertation:    On  three-bar  motion. 
Professor  of  Mathematics   and   Dean   of  the   Graduate  School, 

Yale  University,  until  191 1. 
Died  1915. 

Thomas  Alexander  Smith,  B.A.  Muskingum  College  1872. 
Dissertation:    Computation  of  the  orbit  of  Electra. 
Hale  Professor  of  Mathematics  and  Physics,   Emeritus,  Beloit 
College,  Beloit,  Wis. 

1880 

Thomas  Marcus  Blakslee,  Ph.B.  Colgate  University  1874. 
Dissertation:    The  orbit  of  Swift's  comet  of  July  1878. 
Professor  of  Mathematics,  Emeritus,  Des  Moines  College,  Des 
Moines,  la. 

1885 
Jefferson  Engel  Kershner,  B.A.  Franklin  and  Marshall  College 

1877. 
Dissertation:     The    determination    of    longitude    between    New 

Haven  and  Harvard  College  Observatory,  Cambridge. 
Professor    of    Mathematics,    Physics,    and    Applied    Electricity, 

Franklin  and  Marshall  College,  Lancaster,  Pa. 

Charles  Newton  Little,  B.A.  University  of  Nebraska  1879,  M.A. 

1884. 
Dissertation:    On  knots,  with  a  census  for  order  ten.     (Published 

in   Transactions   of   the    Connecticut   Academy    of   Arts    and 

Sciences,  7:27-43.     New  Haven,  1885.) 
Professor   of    Civil    Engineering   and    Dean   of  the    College   of 

Engineering,  University  of  Idaho,  Moscow,  Idaho. 


-67- 

Eliakim   Hastings    Moore,    B.A.    Yale    University    1883,    Ph.D. 

University  of  Gottingen  1899. 
Dissertation:    Extensions  of  certain  theorems  of  Clififord  and  of 

Cayley    in    the    geometry    of    n    dimensions.      (Published    in 

Transactions     of    the     Connecticut    Academy    of    Arts    and 

Sciences  7:9-26.     New  Haven,  1885.) 
Professor,  and  Head  of  Department,  of  Mathematics,  University 

of  Chicago,  Chicago,  111. 

1889 

Asaph  Hall,  B.A.  Harvard  University  1882. 

Dissertation:  The  mass  of  Saturn  and  the  orbit  of  Titan.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  Determination  of  the  orbit  of  Titan  and 
the  mass  of  Saturn,  Transactions  of  the  Astronomical 
Observatory  of  Yale  University,  1:107-147.  New  Haven, 
1 887- 1 904.) 

Professor  of  Mathematics,  United  States  Navy,  Washington, 
D.  C. 


1891 

Frederick  Lincoln  Chase,  B.A.  University  of  Colorado  1886. 

Dissertation:  Triangulation  of  the  Victoria  companion  stars. 
(In  part  incorporated  in,  A  determination  of  the  solar  parallax 
from  heliometer  observations  of  the  minor  planets  Iris,  Vic- 
toria and  Sappho,  Vol.  I,  Annals  of  the  Cape  Observatory, 
6:1-244.     London,  1897.) 

Astronomer  in  the  Observatory,  Yale  University  (1891-1913). 

Boulder,  Col. 

Percey  Franklyn  Smith,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1888. 
Dissertation:    Pliicker's  complexes  of  lines. 

James  E.  English  Professor  of  Mathematics,  Sheffield  Scientific 
School,  Yale  University. 

1894 

Margaretta  Palmer,  B.A.  Vassar  College  1887. 

Dissertation:  Determination  of  the  orbit  of  the  comet  1847  VI. 
(Published  in  Transactions  of  the  Astronomical  Observatory 
of  Yale  University,  1:183-207.     New  Haven,  1893.) 

Assistant  in  the  Observatory,  Yale  University. 


—68— 

i895 

Charlotte  Cynthia  Barnum,  B.A.  Vassar  College  1881. 
Dissertation:    Functions  having  lines  or  surfaces  of  discontinuity. 
344  Humphrey  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

Jesse  Breland  Johnson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1893. 

Dissertation:    Bicircular  quartics. 

Professor  of  Mathematics,  Baylor  University,  Waco,  Texas. 

1896 

Elizabeth  Street  Dickerman,  B.A.  Smith  College  1894. 
Dissertation:    Curves  of  the  first  and  second  degree  \n  x  y  z  where 

X  y  2  are  conies  having  two  points  common. 
140  Cottage  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

Shunkichi  Kimura,  B.S.  Imperial  University  of  Japan  1887. 
Dissertation:    Studies  on  general  spherical  functions. 
Wireless  Engineer  in  the  Naval  Electrical  Laboratory,  Tokyo, 
Japan. 

1897 

William  Anthony  Granville,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1893. 
Dissertation:   The  origin  and  development  of  the  addition-theorem 

in  elliptic  functions. 
President  of  Pennsylvania  College,  Gettysburg,  Pa. 


1898 

George  Tucker  Sellew,  B.A.  University  of  Rochester  1889,  M.A. 

1892. 
Dissertation:    On  the  complex  number. 
Professor  of  Mathematics,  Knox  College,  Galesburg,  111. 

George  Pratt  Starkweather,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1891,  M.E. 

1894. 
Dissertation:     The    thermodynamic    relations    for    water    steam. 

(Published    as    follows:     The    thermodynamic    relations    for 

steam,    American    Journal    of    Science,    4th    series,    7:129-142. 

New  Haven,  1899.) 
Assistant   Professor  of  Applied   Mechanics,   Sheffield   Scientific 

School,  Yale  University. 
Died  1901. 


\; 


-69- 

Wendell  Melville  Strong,  B.A.  Yale  University  1893,  M.A. 
Cornell  University  1894,  LL.B.  New  York  University  1903. 

Dissertation:  On  the  necessity  of  continuity  in  Euclid's  geometry. 
(Published  as  follows:  Is  continuity  of  space  necessary  to 
Euclid's  geometry?  Bulletin  of  the  American  Mathematical 
Society,  New  series,  4:338-443-     New  York,  1898.) 

Associate  Actuary,  Mutual  Life  Insurance  Company  of  New 
York,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Jacob  Westlund,  Karolinska  Laroverket,  Orebro,  Sweden  1885. 

Dissertation:  Some  new  equations  of  transformation.  (Published 
as  follows:  On  a  class  of  equations  of  transformation, 
American    Journal    of    Mathematics,    21:339-353-      Baltimore, 

1899-) 
Professor  of  Mathematics,  Purdue  University,  Lafayette,  Ind. 

1899 

Leona  May  Pcircc,  B.A.  Smith  College  1886,  M.A.  1893. 
Dissertation:    On  chain-differentiants  of  a  ternary  quantic. 
247  Union  St.,  Springfield,  Mass. 

1900 

Herbert  Edwin  Hawkes,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 
Dissertation:     Examination    and    extension    of    Peirce's    Linear 

Associative  Algebra.     (Published  in  part  as  follows:    Estimate 

of  Peirce's  Linear  Associative  Algebra,  American  Journal  of 

Mathematics,  24:87-95.     Baltimore,  1902.) 
Professor    of   Mathematics,    Columbia   University,    New    York, 

N.  Y. 

1901 

Arthur  Sullivan  Gale,  B.A.  Yale  University  1899. 

Dissertation:  On  a  particular  class  of  algebraic  minimum  curves 
and  surfaces.  (Published  as  follows:  On  the  rank,  order, 
and  class  of  algebraic  minimum  curves,  Transactions  of 
American  Mathematical  Society,  3:451-466.     New  York,  1902.) 

Fayerweather  Professor  of  Mathematics,  and  Head  of  Depart- 
ment, University  of  Rochester,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 

Laurence  Ilsley  Hewes,  B.S.  Dartmouth  College  1898. 

Dissertation:  Some  properties  of  path-curves  of  continuous 
projective  groups. 

Senior  Highway  Engineer,  Office  of  Public  Roads,  U.  S.  Depart- 
ment of  Agriculture,  Washington,  D.  C. 


—70- 

Joshua  Larson,  B.A.  Augustana  College   1889,   M.A.  Yale  Uni- 
versity 1899. 
Dissertation:    A  computation  of  the  orbit  of  S  3062.     (Published 

in   part  as   follows:    Orbit  of  S   3062,   Astronomical   Journal, 

22:11-12.     Boston,  1901.) 
Professor  of  Latin  and   Mathematics,  and  Vice   President  and 

Treasurer,  Minnesota  College,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 

Edwin  Hoyt  Lockwood,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1888. 
Dissertation:    Atmospheric  stability  as  affected  by  water  vapor. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Mechanical  Engineering,  Sheffield  Scien- 
tific School,  Yale  University. 

Edwin  Bidwell  Wilson,  B.A.  Harvard  University  1899. 

Dissertation:  The  decomposition  of  the  general  collineation  in 
space  into  three  skew  reflections.  (Published  in  part  in 
Transactions  of  the  American  Mathematical  Society,  1:193-196. 
New  York,  1900.) 

Professor  of  Mathematics,  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Tech- 
nology, Boston,  Mass. 

Ruth  Goulding  Wood,  B.L.  Smith  College  1898. 

Dissertation:  Non-Euclidean  displacements  and  symmetry  trans- 
formations. (Published  as  follows:  Correlations  of  space 
which  transform  a  non-degenerate  quadric  surface  into  itself, 
Annals  of  Mathematics,  series  2,  2:161-171.     Cambridge,  1901.) 

Professor  of  Mathematics,  Smith  College,  Northampton,  Mass. 

1903 

Helen  Abbot  Merrill,  B.A.  Wellesley  College  1886. 

Dissertation:  On  solutions  of  differential  equations  which  pos- 
sess an  oscillation  theorem.  (Published  in  part  in  Transac- 
tions of  the  American  Mathematical  Society,  4:423-433.  New 
York,   1903.) 

Professor  of  Mathematics,  Wellesley  College,  Wellesley,  Mass. 

Carl  Eben  Stromquist,  B.S.  Bethany  College  (Kansas)   1889. 

Dissertation:  On  a  special  case  of  the  generalized  integral  of 
length,  together  with  certain  contributions  to  the  general 
theory.  (Published  in  revised  form  as  follows:  On  geom- 
etries in  which  circles  are  the  shortest  lines.  Transactions 
of  the  American  Mathematical  Society,  7:175-183.  New  York, 
1906.) 

Professor  of  Mathematics,  University  of  Wyoming,  Laramie, 
Wyo. 


—71— 

1904 

Edward  Lewis  Dodd,  B.A.  Western  Reserve  University  1897. 
Dissertation:    Multiple  sequences.     (Published  in  part  as  follows: 

On    iterated    limits    of    multiple    sequences,    Mathematische 

Annalen,  61:95-108.     Leipzig,  I905-) 
Adjunct    Professor    of    Actuarial    Mathematics,    University    of 

Texas,  Austin,  Texas. 

Burke  Smith,  B.S.  University  of  Washington  1899. 

Dissertation:  On  surfaces  which  may  be  deformed  with  preser- 
vation of  a  conjugate  system  of  curves.  (Published  in  part 
in  Bulletin  of  the  American  Mathematical  Society,  New 
series,  as  follows:  On  the  deformation  of  surfaces  of  trans- 
lation, 11:187-191.  New  Haven,  1905;  Certain  surfaces  admit- 
ting of  continuous  deformation  with  preservation  of  conjugate 
lines,  12:164-171;  Determination  of  associated  surfaces,  12:342- 
346.  New  Haven,  1906;  and  also.  Conditions  for  the  deforma- 
tion of  surfaces  referred  to  a  conjugate  system  of  lines, 
Proceedings  of  the  Indiana  Academy  of  Science,  1904:241-243. 
Indianapolis,  1905.) 

Electrical  Engineer,  Central  Group  of  Bell  Telephone  Com- 
panies, Chicago,  111. 

Clara  Eliza  Smith,  B.A.  Mount  Holyoke  College  1902. 

Dissertation:  Representation  of  an  arbitrary  function  by  means 
of  Bessel's  functions.  (Published  in  part  as  follows:  A 
theorem  of  Abel  and  its  application  to  the  development  of  a 
function  in  terms  of  Bessel's  functions.  Transactions  of  the 
American  Mathematical  Society,  8:92-106.     New  York,  1907.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Mathematics,  Wellesley  College,  Welles- 
ley,  Mass. 

1905 
Raymond  Benedict  McClenon,  B.A.  Yankton  College  1902. 
Dissertation:    On  simple  integrals  with  variable  limits. 
Associate    Professor    of    Mathematics,    Grinnell    College,    Grin- 
nell,  la. 

James  Caddall  Morehead,  B.A.  Roanoke  College  1898,  M.A. 
1899,  M.S.  Princeton  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  Numbers  of  the  forms  2.^q  =  i  and  Fermat's 
numbers.  (Published  in  revised  form,  as  follows:  Extension 
of  the  sieve  of  Eratosthenes  to  arithmetical  progressions  and 


—72— 

applications,    Annals    of    Mathematics,    2d    series,    10:88-104. 
Cambridge,  1908.) 
Instructor  in  Mathematics,  School  of  Applied  Design,  Carnegie 
Institute  of  Technology,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

1906 

Roland  George  Dwight  Richardson,  B.A.  Acadia  College  1898, 
B.A.  Yale  University  1903,  M.A.  1904. 

Dissertation:  Improper  multiple  integrals.  (Published  in  Trans- 
actions of  the  American  Mathematical  Society,  as  follows: 
Multiple  improper  integrals,  7:449-458.  New  York,  1906;  the 
remainder  incorporated  in  the  article.  The  integration  of  a 
sequence  of  functions  and  its  application  to  iterated  integrals, 
9:339-356.     New  York,  1908.) 

Professor  of  Mathematics,  and  Head  of  Department,  Brown 
University,  Providence,  R.  I. 

Gustaf  Eric  Wahlin,  B.A.  Bethany  College  (Kansas)  1903. 
Dissertation :    The  relation  between  the  binary  quadratic  forms 

and  the  quadratic  numerical  bodies. 
Associate  in  Mathematics,  University  of  Illinois,  Urbana,  111. 


1907 

Henry  H.  Conover,  B.S.  Rutgers  College  1900,  M.S.  Yale  Uni- 
versity 1902. 
Dissertation:    On  certain  problems  in  the  calculus  of  variations. 
711  St.  Paul  St.,  Baltimore,  Md. 

1908 

Earl  Gordon  Bill,  B.A.  Acadia  College  1902,  B.A.  Yale  Univer- 
sity 1906,  M.A.  1906. 

Dissertation:  An  apriori  existence  theorem  for  three  dimensions 
in  the  calculus  of  variations.  (Published  as  follows:  First 
part  as,  The  construction  of  a  space  field  of  extremals.  Bul- 
letin of  the  American  Mathematical  Society,  15:374-378.  New 
York  1909;  second  part  as.  An  existence  theorem  for  a 
problem  of  the  calculus  of  variations  in  space,  Transactions 
of  the  American  Mathematical  Society,  13:50-58.  New  York, 
1912.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Mathematics,  Dartmouth  College, 
Hanover,  N.  H. 


—73— 

Francis  Jerome  Holder,  B.S.  National  Normal  University  1896, 

M.A.  Yale  University  1905. 
Dissertation:    Multiple  series. 

Professor,  and  Head  of  Department,  of  Mathematics,  University 
of  Pittsburgh,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

Ernest  Barnes  Lytle,  B.S.  University  of  Illinois  1901,  M.A.  1904. 

Dissertation:  Multiple  integrals  over  iterable  fields.  (Published 
in  part  as  follows:  Proper  multiple  integrals  over  iterable 
fields,  Transactions  of  the  American  Mathematical  Society, 
11:25-36.     New  York,  1910.) 

Associate   in   Mathematics,   University   of   Illinois,   Urbana,   111. 

Euphemia    Richardson    Worthington,    B.A.    Wellesley    College 

1904. 
Dissertation:    Some  theorems  on  surfaces. 
Instructor  in  Mathematics,  Wellesley  College,  Wellesley,  Mass. 

1909 

Horace  Thomas  Burgess,  B.A.  Yale  University  1906,  M.A.  1907. 
Dissertation:     Point-circle    correlations.      (Published    in    part    as 

follows:    The  circular  numbers  for  a  plane  curve,  Annals  of 

Mathematics,  13:123-128.    Princeton,  1912.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Mathematics,   University  of  Wisconsin, 

Madison,  Wis. 

George  Frederick  Gundelfinger,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1906. 

Dissertatio^i:  On  the  geometry  of  line  elements  in  the  plane  with 
reference  to  osculating  vertical  parabolas  and  circles.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  On  the  geometry  of  line  elements  in  the 
plane  with  reference  to  osculating  circles,  American  Journal 
of  Mathematics,  33:i53-i74-     Baltimore,  1911.) 

Literary  work,  Sewickley,  Pa. 

Mary  Shore  Walker  (Mrs.  Albert  W.  Hull),  B.A.  University  of 

Missouri  1903,  M.A.  1904. 
Dissertation:    A  generalized  definition  of  an  improper  multiple 

integral. 
49  Bedford  Road,  Schenectady,  N.  Y. 

1910 

John  Kenyon  Lamond,  B.S.  Rhode  Island  College  of  Agricul- 
ture and  Mechanic  Arts  1907,  M.A.  1907,  M.A.  Yale  Uni- 
versity 1908. 


—74— 

Dissertation:  Improper  multiple  integrals  depending  on  a  para- 
meter. (Published  in  part  as  follows:  Improper  multiple 
integrals  over  iterable  fields,  Transactions  of  the  American 
Mathematical  Society,  13:434-444.    New  York,  1912.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Mathematics,  Wesleyan  University,  Mid- 

dletown.  Conn. 

'I 

Emest   Wilson    Sheldon,    B.A.    McGill    University    1904,    M.A. 

1905,  B.A.  Yale  University  1907. 
Dissertation:     Critical   revision   of   de   Haan's  Tables   of  definite 

integrals.     (Published  in  American  Journal   of  Mathematics, 

34:89-114.     Baltimore,  1912.) 
Professor    of    Mathematics,    University   of   Alberta,    Edmonton 

South,  Alta.,  Canada. 


igiz 

Harry  Leslie  Agard,  B.A.  Wesleyan  University  1904,  M.A.  Yale 

University  1908. 
Dissertation:    The  extension  of  some  theorems  in  the  theory  of 

sets  of  points  to  n-dimensional  space. 
Assistant    Professor   of    Mathematics,    Williams    College,    Wil- 

liamstown,  Mass. 

Ida  Barney,  B.A.  Smith  College  1908. 
•Dissertation:   Line  and  surface  integrals.     (Published  in  American 

Journal  of  Mathematics,  36:137-150.     Baltimore,  1914.) 
Instructor  in  Mathematics,  Smith  College,  Northampton,  Mass. 

Burton  Howard  Camp,  B.A.  Wesleyan  University  1901,  B.A. 
Harvard  University  1903,  M.A.  1907. 

Dissertation:  The  convergence  of  singular  integrals.  (Published 
in  part  as  follows:  Singular  multiple  integrals  with  applica- 
tions to  series.  Transactions  of  the  American  Mathematical 
Society,  14:42-64.    New  York,  1913.) 

Professor  of  Mathematics,  Wesleyan  University,  Middletown, 
Conn. 

John   Lewis  Jones,   Ph.B.    Lafayette    College    1905,    M.A.   Yale 

University  1909. 
Dissertation:    Number-concept. 

Instructor  in  Mathematics,  University  of  Pittsburgh,  Pittsburgh, 
Pa. 


—75— 

Wallace  Alvin  Wilson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  Theory  of  point-aggregates  applied  to  Lebesque 
integrals.  (Incorporated  in  Lectures  on  the  theory  of  func- 
tions of  real  variables,  by  James  Pierpont,  Ginn  and  Company, 
Boston,  1912.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Mathematics,  Yale  College. 

1912 

Archibald    Lament   Daniels,   Jr.,   B.A.    University   of   Vermont 

1907. 
Dissertation:     On    the    librations    of    bodies    whose    periods    are 

one-third  that  of  the  disturbing  body. 
Instructor    in    Mathematics,    Princeton    University,    Princeton, 

N.J. 

Harley  Richard  Willard,  B.A.  Dartmouth  College  1899,  M.A. 
1902,  M.A.  Yale  University  1910. 

Dissertation:  On  a  family  of  oscillating  orbits  of  short  period 
(v^ith  a  chart).  (Published  in  Monthly  Notices,  Royal 
Astronomical  Society,  73:471-484.     London,  1913.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Mathematics,  University  of  Maine, 
Orono,  Me. 

1913 
Theodore  Henry  Brown,  B.A.  Yale  University  1910,  M.A.  191 1. 
Dissertation:   The  effect  of  radiation  on  a  small  particle  revolving 

about    Jupiter.      (Published    in    Annals    of    Mathematics,    2d 

series,  16:22-31.     Princeton,  1914.) 
Instructor  in  Mathematics,  Brow^n  University,  Providence,  R.  I. 

Wilbur  Haverfield  Cramblet,  B.A.  Bethany  College  (W.  Va.) 
1910,  M.A.  1910,  M.A.  Yale  University  1911. 

Dissertation:  On  intermediate  functions,  being  an  extension  of 
semi-continuous  or  upper  and  lov/er  functions  to  a  classifica- 
tion of  discontinuous  functions. 

Professor  of  Mathematics,  Phillips  University,  Enid,  Okla. 

1915 
Henry  Benjamin  Hedrick,  B.A.  George  Washington  University 

1886,  M.A.  Yale  University  1912. 
Dissertation:    Some  principles  and  processes  in  the  construction 

of  mathematical  tables. 
Chief  Computer  on  the  Lunar  Tables,  Yale  University. 


-76- 


Paul  Reece  Rider,  B.A.  William  Jewell  College  1909,  M.A.  1910, 

M.A.  Yale  University  1914. 
Dissertation:    An  extension  of  Bliss's  form  of  the  problem  of  the 

calculus  of  variations,  wath  applications  to  the  generalization 

of  angle. 
Instructor    in    Mathematics,    Sheffield    Scientific    School,    Yale 

University. 

ALPHABETICAL  LIST 
(*  indicates  that  the  graduate  is  deceased.) 


Agard,  191 1 
Barney,  191 1 
Barnum,  1895 
Bill,  1908 
Blakslee,  1880 
Brown,  1913 
Burgess.  1909 
Camp,  191 1 
Chase,  1891 
Conover,  1907 
Cramblet,  1913 
Daniels,  1912 
Dickerman,  1896 
Dodd,  1904 
♦DuBois,  1873 
Gale,  1901 
Granville,  1897 
Gundelfinger,  1909 
Hall,  1889 
Hawkes,  1900 
Hedrick,  1915 
Hewes,  1901 
Holder,  1908 
Johnson,   1895 
Jones,  191 1 
Kershner,  1885 
Kimura,  1896 
Lamond,  1910 
Larson,  1901 
Little,  1885 
Lockwood,  1901 


Lytle,  1908 
McClenon,  1905 
Merrill,  1903 
Merriman,  1876 
Moore,  1885 
Morehead,  1905 
Palmer,  1894 
Peirce,  1899 

♦Phillips,  1877 
Richardson,  1906 
Rider,  1915 

♦Rockwood,  1866 
Sellew,  1898 
Sheldon,  1910 
Skinner,  1876 
Smith,  B.,  1904 
Smith,  C.  E.,  1904 
Smith,  P.  F.,  1891 
Smith,  T.  A.,  1877 

♦Starkweather,  1898 
Stromquist,  1903 
Strong,  1898 
Wahlin,  1906 
Walker,  1909 
Westlund,  1898 
Willard,  1912 
Wilson,  E.  B.,  1901 
Wilson,  W.  A.,  1911 
Wood,  1901 

*Worrall,  1862 
Worthington,  1908 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  PHYSICS 


1861 

Arthur  Williams  Wright,  B.A.  Yale  University  1859. 

Dissertation:  Having  given  the  velocity  and  direction  of  motion 
of  a  meteor  on  entering  the  atmosphere  of  the  earth,  to 
determine  its  orbit  about  the  sun,  taking  into  account  the 
attractions  of  both  these  bodies. 

Professor  of  Experimental  Physics,  Emeritus,  Yale  College. 

Died  1916. 

1863 

Josiah  Willard  Gibbs,  B.A.  Yale  University  1858,  Ph.D.  Erlangen 

1893. 
Dissertatioft:     On    the    form    of    the    teeth    of    wheels    in    spur 

gearing. 
Professor  of  Mathematical  Physics,  Yale  College. 
Died  1903. 

1866 

Francis  Englesby  Loomis,  B.A.  Yale  University  1864,  M.A. 
University  of  Gottingen  1869,  Ph.D.  1869. 

Dissertation:  Periodic  stars.  (Incorporated  in  Inaugural  disser- 
tation for  the  degree  of  Doctor  of  Philosophy  in  the  Univer- 
sity of  Gottingen,  printed  at  the  University  Press,  by  W.  Fr. 
Kaestner,  Gottingen,  1869.) 

Care  of  Baring  Brothers  and  Company,  London,  England. 


1873 

Charles  Sheldon  Hastings,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1870. 
Dissertation:    Comparison  of  the  spectra  of  the  limb  and  of  the 

center   of  the   sun,   made   at   the    Sheffield   Scientific   School. 

(Published  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  3d  series,  5:369- 

371.     New  Haven,  1873.) 
Professor  of  Physics,  Emeritus,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 

University. 


-78- 

i874 
Joseph  Taplin  Lovewell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1857. 
Dissertation:    Graphical  methods  in  physics,  with  special  applica- 
tions   to    wave    lengths    and    numbers    in    spectrum    analysis. 
Secretary,  Kansas  Academy  of  Science,  Topeka,  Kans. 

1876 

Edward  Alexander  Bouchct,  B.A.  Yale  University  1874. 
Dissertation:    On  measuring  refractive  indices,  etc. 
Principal,  Lincoln  High  School,  Gallipolis,  O. 

1883 

Arthur  Elmore  Bostwick,  B.A.  Yale  University  1881. 
Dissertation:    The  influence  of  light  on  the  electrical  resistance 

of  metals.      (Published   in   American  Journal   of   Science,  .3d 

series,  28:133-145.     New  Haven,  1884.) 
Librarian,  St.  Louis  Public  Library,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 

1887 

Julius  Howard  Pratt,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University  1882. 

Dissertation:  The  theory  and  uses  of  the  capillary  electrometer 
of  Lippmann.  (Published  in  part  as  follows:  Experiments 
with  the  capillary  electrometer  of  Lippmann,  American 
Journal  of  Science,  3d  series,  35:143-151.     New  Haven,  1888.) 

Dean  of  Academic  Department,  German-English  Academy, 
Milwaukee,  Wis. 

1892 

John  Whitmore,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886. 

Dissertation:    A  method  of  increasing  the  range  of  the  capillary 

electrometer.      (Published    in    American   Journal    of    Science, 

3d  series,  44:64-70.     New  Haven,  1892.) 
Exeter,  N.  H. 

1893 

Frederick  Elijah  Beach,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1883. 

Dissertation:  The  use  of  cupric  nitrate  in  the  voltameter,  and  the 
electro-chemical  equivalent  of  copper.  (Published  in  Amer- 
ican Journal  of  Science,  3d  series,  46:81-88.  New  Haven, 
1893.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Physics,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 
University. 


f 


—79— 
1894 

Arthur  Louis  Day,  B.A.  Yale  University  1892. 

Dissertation:  The  seconds  pendulum:  determination  for  New 
Haven. 

Director,  Geophysical  Laboratory,  Carnegie  Institution,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. 

1895 

Arthur  Chambers  Alexander,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1889. 
Dissertation:    The   specific  rotation  of  some  vegetable  proteids. 
Civil  Engineer,  Honolulu,  Haw^aii. 

1896 

Leslie  Dayton  Bissell,  B.A.  Yale  University   1887. 

Dissertation:     An    absolute    determination   of   the   length   of   the 

seconds  pendulum  for  New  Haven. 
Head  Master,  Coit  School  for  Boys,  Munich,  Germany. 

1897 

Joseph  Bowden,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University  1891. 

Dissertation:     Chapters  in  the   electro-magnetic  theory  of  light. 

Professor  of  Mathematics,  Adelphi  College,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

Henry  Andrews  Bumstead,  B.A.  Johns  Hopkins  University  1891. 
Dissertation:    A  comparison  of  electrodynamic  theories. 
Professor    of    Physics,    and    Director    of    the    Sloane    Physics 
Laboratory,  Yale  College. 

Horace  Mann  Snyder,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 
Dissertation:     The   residual   charge   in    stratified   and   non-homo- 
geneous dielectrics. 
Principal,  Public  School  No.  122,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

1899 

Lee  DeForest,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  Reflection  of  electric  waves  of  very  high  frequen- 
cies at  the  ends  of  parallel  wires.  (Published  as  follows: 
Reflection  of  Hertzian  waves  at  the  ends  of  parallel  wires, 
American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  8:58-71.  New  Haven, 
1899.) 

Vice-President  and  General  Manager,  DeForest  Radio  Tele- 
graph and  Telephone  Company,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


— 8o— 

Arthur  Woolsey  Ewcll,  B.A.  Yale  University  1897. 

Dissertation:  Rotary  polarization  of  light  in  media  subjected  to 
torsion.  (Published  in  part  as  follows:  American  Journal  of 
Science,  4th  series,  8:89-100.  New  Haven,  1899;  Rotations 
polarisation  des  Lichtes  in  Medien  welche  der  Torsion  unter- 
worfen  werden,  Physikalische  Zeitschrift,  1:201-202.  Leipzig, 
1900.) 

Professor  of  Physics,  Worcester  Polytechnic  Institute,  Worces- 
ter, Mass. 

1900 

Joseph  Hall  Hart,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898. 

Dissertation:    The  action  of  light  on  magnetism.     (Published  in 

American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  10:66-73.    New  Haven, 

1900.) 

William  Kent  Shepard,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1897. 

Dissertation:  A  new  solution  for  the  copper  voltameter.  (Pub- 
lished in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  12:49-56. 
New  Haven,  1901.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Strength  of  Materials,  Sheffield  Scientific 
School,  Yale  University. 

1901 

Edgar  Selah  Downs,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898. 

Dissertation:    The  induced  alternating  current  discharge  studied 

with  reference  to  its  spectrum,  and  especially  the  ultra-violet 

spectrum.     (Published   in   American   Journal   of   Science,   4th 

series,  12:66-73.     New  Haven,  1901.) 
President  of  the  E.  S.  Downs  Company,  Contracting  Electrical 

Engineers,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Chauncey  Brewster  Rice,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1894. 
Dissertation:    An  experimental  study  of  the  Wehnelt  interrupter. 
Associated  with  Atwood  Machine  Company,  Stonington,  Conn. 

1902 

Julius  Olsen,  B.S.  Bethany  College  (Kansas)  1898. 

Dissertation:    An  experimental  investigation  into  the  existence  of 

free  ions  in  aqueous  solution  of  electrolytes.     (Published  in 

part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th   series,   14:237-248. 

New  Haven,  1902.) 
Professor  of  Physical  Science,  Acting  Dean,  and  Secretary  of 

the  Faculty,  Simmons  College,  Abilene,  Texas. 


— 8i— 

Lynde  Phelps  Wheeler,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1894. 

Dissertation:  On  the  reflection  of  light  from  mercury  in  water. 
(Published,  with  additions,  as  follows:  An  experimental  inves- 
tigation on  the  reflection  of  light  at  certain  metal-liquid 
surfaces,  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  32:85-100. 
New  Haven,  191 1.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Physics,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 
University. 

1903 

Allan  Douglas  Risteen,  B.S.  Worcester  Polytechnic  Institute 
1885. 

Dissertation:  The  numerical  evaluation  of  the  absolute  thermo- 
dynamic scale  of  temperature. 

Safety  Engineer,  The  Travelers  Insurance  Company,  Hartford, 
Conn. 

1904 

Howard  Logan  Bronson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900. 
Dissertation:     On   the   transverse   vibrations    of   helical    springs. 

(Published    in     American    Journal     of     Science,    4th     series, 

18:59-72.     New  Haven,  1904.) 
George    Munro    Professor    of    Physics,    Dalhousie    University, 

Halifax,  N.  S. 

Oliver  Clarence  Lester,  B.A.  Central  College  1897,  M.A.  1898, 
M.A.  Yale  University  1902. 

Dissertatio^i:  On  the  oxygen  absorption  bands  of  the  solar- 
spectrum.  (Published  in  the  Astrophysical  Journal,  20:81-104. 
Chicago,  1904;  and  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series, 
18:147-156.    New  Haven,  1904.) 

Professor,  and  Head  of  the  Department,  of  Physics,  University 
of  Colorado,  Boulder,  Col. 

1906 

Haroutune  Mugurdich  Dadourian,  B.S.  St.  Paul's  Institute 
(Tarsus)  1899,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1903,  M.A.  1905. 

Dissertation:  On  the  radioactivity  of  underground  air  and  on 
some  radioactive  properties  of  thorium.  (Published  as  fol- 
lows: The  radio-activity  of  thorium,  American  Journal  of 
Science,  4th  series,  21:427-432.     New  Haven,  1906.) 

Instructor  in  Physics,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 


—82— 

Ellis  Earle  Lawton,  B.S.  University  of  Rochester  1902,  M.A. 
Yale  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  Wave-lengths  and  structural  relation  of  certain 
bands  in  the  spectrum  of  nitrogen.  (Published  in  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  24:101-108.     New  Haven,  1907.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Electrical  Engineering,  College  of 
Applied  Science,  Syracuse  University,  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 


1908 

Perry  Blaine  Perkins,  B.A.  University  of  New^  Brunsv^^ick  1902, 
B.A.  Harvard  University  1903,  M.A.  Yale  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  A  determination  of  the  molecular  weight  of  radium 
emanation  by  comparing  its  rate  of  diffusion  with  that  of 
mercury  vapor.  (Published  as  follows:  A  determination  of 
the  molecular  weight  of  radium  emanation  by  the  comparison 
of  its  rate  of  difTusion  with  that  of  mercury  vapor,  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  25:461-473.     New  Haven,  1908.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Applied  Physics,  Brown  University, 
Providence,  R.  I. 

1909 

Charlton  Dows  Cooksey,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  Corpuscular  secondary  Rontgen  rays.  (Published 
as  follows:  On  the  corpuscular  rays  produced  in  diflferent 
metals  by  Rontgen  rays,  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th 
series,  24:285-304.     New  Haven,  1907.) 

Instructor  in  Physics,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 

Albert  Wallace  Hull,  B.A.  Yale  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  Ionization  produced  by  ultra-violet  light  of  very 
short  wave-lengths.  (Published  as  follows:  The  initial 
velocities  of  the  electrons  produced  by  ultra-violet  light, 
American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  28:251-259.  New 
Haven,  1909.) 

Research  Physicist,  General  Electric  Company,  Schenectady, 
N.  Y. 

Thomas  Smith  Taylor,  B.A.  Yale  University  1906. 
Dissertation:    The  retardation  of  alpha  rays  by  metal  foils  and 
gases,  and  its  variation  with  the  range  of  the  alpha  particles. 


-83- 

(Published  in  American  Journal  of  Science  as  follows:  On 
the  retardation  of  "alpha  rays"  by  metal  foils,  and  its  varia- 
tion with  the  speed  of  the  alpha  particles,  4th  series, 
26:169-179.  New  Haven,  1908;  On  the  retardation  of  alpha 
rays  by  metals  and  gases,  28:357-372.  New  Haven,  1909; 
also.  Philosophical  Magazine  and  Journal  of  Science,  6th 
series,  18:604-619.  London,  1909.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Physics,  Yale  College. 

1910 

Frank  Elbert  Wheelock,  B.A.  Acadia  College  1905. 
Dissertation:    On  the  nature  of  the  ionization  produced  by  a-rays. 

(Published     in    American    Journal     of     Science,    4th     series, 

30:233-255.     New  Haven,  1910.) 
Professor  of  Physics,  and  Dean  of  McClelan  School  of  Applied 

Science,  Mount  Allison  University,  Sackville,  N.  B. 

1911 

James  Cox  Sanderson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1907. 

Dissertation:  The  probable  influence  of  the  soil  on  local  atmos- 
pheric radioactivity.  (Published  in  American  Journal  of 
Science,  4th  series,  32:169-184.     New  Haven,  191 1.) 

Instructor  in  Science,  Blake  School,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 

igi2 

William  Raymond  Barss,  B.S.  Acadia  College  1907,  B.A.  Yale 
University  1909. 

Dissertation:  Ionization  by  collision  in  gases  and  vapors.  (Pub- 
lished in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  34:229-241. 
New  Haven,  1912.) 

Instructor  in  Physics,  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology, 
Boston,  Mass. 

Alexander  Graham  McGougan,  B.A.  McGill  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  The  emission  of  electrons  by  metals  under  the 
influence  of  alpha  rays.  (Published  in  American  Journal  of 
Science,  4th  series,  34:309-328.  New  Haven,  1912;  also  in 
Philosophical  Magazine  and  Journal  of  Science,  6th  series, 
24:462-483.     London,  1912.) 

Instructor  in  Physics,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 


Samuel  James  Plimpton,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  On  the  recombination  of  ions  produced  by  Rontgen 
rays.  (Published  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series, 
35:39-53-  New  Haven,  1913;  Philosophical  Magazine  and 
Journal  of  Science,  6th  series,  25:65-81.     London,  1913.) 

Instructor  in  Physics,  Worcester  Polytechnic  Institute,  Worces- 
ter, Mass. 

1913 

Leigh  Page,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  The  photoelectric  effect.  (Published  in  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  36:501-508.     New  Haven,  1913.) 

Instructor  in  Physics,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 

Jay  Walter  Woodrow,  B.A.  Drake  University  1907,  B.A.  Oxford 

University  1910. 
Dissertation:     Experiments   on   columnar  ionization.     (Published 

in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  36:214-230.     New 

Haven,  1913;    Philosophical  Magazine  and  Journal  of  Science, 

6th  series,  26:511-528.     London,  1913.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Physics,  University  of  Colorado,  Boulder, 

Col. 

1914 

Arsene  Nishan  Lucian,  B.A.  St.  Paul's  College  (Tarsus)  1906, 
Ph.B.  Yale  University  191 1. 

Dissertation:  The  distribution  of  the  active  deposit  of  actinium 
in  electric  fields.  (Published  as  follows:  The  distribution  of 
the  active  deposit  of  actinium  in  an  electric  field,  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  38:539-555.  New  Haven,  1914; 
Philosophical  Magazine  and  Journal  of  Science,  6th  series, 
28:761-778.    London,  1914.) 

Instructor  in  Physics,  University  of  Pittsburgh,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 


1915 

John  Milton  Miller,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A.  1907. 
Dissertation:    The  effective  resistance  and  inductance  of  iron  and 

bimetallic  wires. 
Assistant     Physicist,     Bureau     of     Standards,     Department     of 

Commerce,  Washington,  D.  C. 


-85- 

Robert  Alexander  Patterson,   B.A.  Yale  University   191 1,  M.A. 

1912. 

Dissertation:    The  structure  of  the  third  cyanogen  band. 
Instructor  in  Physics,  Yale  College. 


ALPHABETICAL  LIST 
(*  indicates  that  the  graduate  is  deceased.) 


Alexander,  1895 
Barss,  1912 
Beach,  1893 
Bissell,  1896 
Bostwick,  1883 
Bouchet,  1876 
Bowden,  1897 
Bronson,  1904 
Bumstead,  1897 
Cooksey,  1909 
Dadourian,  1906 
Day,  1894 
DeForest,  1899 
Downs,  1901 
Ewell,  1899 
*Gibbs,  1863 
Hart,  1900 
Hastings,  1873 
Hull,  1909 
Lawton,  1906 
Lester,  1904 
Loomis,  1866 


Lovewell,  1874 
Lucian,  1914 
McGougan,  1912 
Miller,  1915 
Olsen,  1902 
Page,  1913 
Patterson,  1915 
Perkins,  1908 
Plimpton,  1912 
Pratt,  1887 
Rice,  1901 
Risteen,  1903 
Sanderson,  191 1 
Shepard,  1900 
Snyder,  1897 
Taylor,  1909 
Wheeler,  1902 
Wheelock,  1910 
Whitmore,  1892 
Woodrow,  1913 
*Wright,  1861 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  CHEMISTRY 


1866 

Peter   Collier,    B.A.   Yale   University    1861,   M.D.   University   o 

Vermont  1870. 
Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 
Professor  of  Chemistry,  Mineralogy,  and  Metallurgy,  Universit> 

of  Vermont,  Burlington,  Vt. 
Died  1896. 

1869 

Wilbur  Olin  Atwatcr,  B.A.  Wesleyan  University  1865. 

Dissertatimi:  The  proximate  composition  of  several  varieties  of 
Indian  corn.  (Published  as  follows:  On  the  proximate 
composition  of  several  varieties  of  American  maize,  American 
Journal  of  Science,  2d  series,  48:352-360.     New  Haven,  1869. j 

Director,  Office  of  Experiment  Station,  U.  S.  Department  of 
Agriculture,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Died  1907. 

1870 

Nelson  Powell  Hulst,  B.A.  Yale  University  1867,  Ph.B.  1869. 
Dissertation    Investigation  of  chemical  changes  produced  in  the 

conversion  of  pig  iron  into  malleable  cast  iron. 
Connected  with  iron-mining  operations  (1876-1906). 
300  Knapp  St.,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

1871 

Oscar  Dana  Allen,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1861. 

Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 

Professor  of  Metallurgy   (1871-1887)   and  Analytical   Chemistry 

(1874-1887),  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  University. 
Died  1913. 

Bernard  James  Harrington,  B.A.  McGill  University  1869. 

Dissertation:    The  Siemens-Martin  steel  process. 

Professor   of   Metallurgy,    Chemistry,    and    Mineralogy,    McGill 

University,  Montreal,  Canada. 
Died  1907. 


v- 


-87- 

i874 

Charles  Benjamin  Dudley,  B.A.  Yale  University  187 1. 
Dissertation:    Salts  of  lithium  and  lithium  glass. 
Chemist  to  the  Pennsylvania  Railroad  Company,  Altoona,  Pa. 
Died  1909. 

1877 

William  Barton  Payne,  B.A.  University  of  Tennessee  1873. 

Dissertation:    Basic  acetates  of  lead. 

Pastor,  Congregational  Church,  Cortland,  Neb. 

1879 

Henry  Prentiss  Armsby,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1874. 

Dissertation:  The  determination  of  albuminoids  in  feeding  stuffs. 
(Published  in  Annual  Report  of  the  Connecticut  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station,  1879:104-121.     New  Haven,  1880.) 

Director  of  the  Institute  of  Animal  Nutrition,  Pennsylvania 
State  College,  State  College,  Pa. 

Edward  Hopkins  Jenkins,  B.A.  Yale  University  1872. 

Dissertation:  Methods  for  the  determination  of  nitrogen.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  in  Annual  Report  of  the  Connecticut  Agricul- 
tural Experiment  Station,  as  follows:  On  the  determination 
of  nitrogen  in  the  analysis  of  agricultural  products,  1878:111- 
117.  New  Haven,  1879;  reprint  in  American  Chemical  Journal, 
177-83.  Baltimore,  1879;  On  the  determination  of  nitrogen, 
1879:124-133.    New  Haven,  1880.) 

Director,  Connecticut  Agricultural  Experiment  Station,  New 
Haven,  Conn. 

1885 

Thomas  Burr  Osborne,  B.A.  Yale  University  1881. 

Dissertation:  The  quantitative  determination  of  niobium.  (Pub- 
lished in  American  Journal  of  Science,  3d  series,  30:329-337. 
New  Haven,  1885.) 

Chemist,  Connecticut  Agricultural  Experiment  Station,  New 
Haven,  Conn. 

189 1 

Frederic  William  Mar,  B.A.  Yale  University  1888. 
Dissertation:     Niobium,   its  history,   compounds,   and  determina- 
tion.    (Unpublished.     Other    papers    also    submitted    are    the 


—88— 

following:  On  the  so-called  perofskite  from  Magnet  Cove 
Arkansas,  American  Journal  of  Science,  3d  series,  40:403-405 
1890;  On  certain  points  in  the  estimation  of  barium  as  the 
sulphate,  American  Journal  of  Science,  3d  series,  41:288-295 
New  Haven,  1891.) 
Principal,  Public  School  No.  108,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


1892 

Philip  Embury  Browning,  B.A.  Yale  University  1889. 

Dissertation:  On  the  application  of  amyl  alcohol  to  the  separa- 
tion of  the  alkaline  earths.  (Published  in  part  in  American 
Journal  of  Science,  3d  series,  as  follows:  A  method  for  the 
quantitative  separation  of  strontium  from  calcium  by  the 
action  of  amyl  alcohol  on  the  nitrates,  43:50-56;  A  method 
for  the  quantitative  separation  of  barium  from  calcium  by 
the  action  of  amyl  alcohol  on  the  nitrates,  43:314-317;  On 
the  qualitative  separation  and  detection  of  strontium  and 
calcium  by  the  action  of  amyl  alcohol  on  the  nitrates,  43: 
386-388;  A  method  for  the  quantitative  separation  of  barium 
from  strontium  by  the  action  of  amyl  alcohol  on  the  bromides, 
44:459-462;  A  note  on  the  method  for  the  quantitative  separa- 
tion of  strontium  from  calcium  by  the  action  of  amyl  alcohol 
on  the  nitrates,  44:462-463.     New  Haven,  1892.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry,  Yale  College. 


1893 

Hippolyte  Gruener,  B.A.  Yale  University  1891. 

Dissertation:  The  reducing  action  of  hydriodic  acid  as  applied  in 
inorganic  analysis,  with  special  reference  to  the  determination 
of  nitric  acid.  (Published  in  part  in  American  Journal  of 
Science,  3d  series,  as  follows:  A  method  for  the  determina- 
tion of  antimony  and  its  condition  of  oxidation,  42:213-220. 
New  Haven,  1891;  A  method  for  the  iodometric  determina- 
tion of  nitrates,  44:117-123.  New  Haven,  1892;  On  the  iodo- 
metric determination  of  the  nitrates,  46:42-50;  The  stability 
of  standard  solutions  of  tartar  emetic,  46:206-208.  New 
Haven,  1893.) 

Professor  of  Chemistry,  College  for  Women,  Western  Reserve 
University,  Cleveland,  O. 


lenry  Lord  Wheeler,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1890. 

)issertation:  The  double  halides  of  tellurium  with  potassium, 
rubidium,  and  caesium.  (Published  in  American  Journal  of 
Science,  3d  series,  45:267-279.     New  Haven,  1893.) 

Assistant,  Instructor,  Assistant  Professor,  and  Professor  of 
Organic  Chemistry,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity (1895-1911). 

)ied  1914. 

1894 

harlotte  Fitch  Roberts,  B.A.  Wellesley  College  1880. 

Hssertation:  The  development  and  present  aspect  of  stereo- 
chemistry. (Published  by  D.  C.  Heath  and  Company,  Boston, 
1896.) 

rofessor  of  Chemistry,  Wellesley  College,  Wellesley,  Mass. 


1895 

)avid  Albert  Kreider,  B.A.  Lebanon  Valley  College  1892. 

Hssertation:  Perchloric  acid.  (Published  in  part  in  American 
Journal  of  Science,  3d  series,  as  follows:  The  detection  of 
alkaline  perchlorates  associated  with  chlorides,  chlorates,  and 
nitrates,  48:38-40.  New  Haven,  1894;  The  preparation  of 
perchloric  acid  and  its  application  to  the  determination 
of  potassium,  49:443-448;  The  quantitative  determination  of 
perchlorates,  50:287-297.  New  Haven,  1895.  Translations  in 
Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganisclie  Chemie,  7:13-16.  1894;  9:342-348. 
1895;    10:277-288.    Hamburg,  1895.) 

assistant  Professor  of  Physics,  Yale  College. 


1896 

Iharlotte  Fairbanks,  B.A.  Smith  College  1894,  M.D.  Woman's 
Medical  College  of  Pennsylvania  1902. 

Hssertation:  The  determination  of  phosphoric  acid  by  methods 
involving  the  use  of  molybdic  acid.  (Published  in  part  in 
American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The 
iodometric  estimation  of  molybdic  acid,  2:156-162;  An 
iodometric  method  for  the  determination  of  phosphorus  in 
iron,  2:181-185.  New  Haven,  1896.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift 
fiir    Anorganische    Chemie,     13:101-109,     1 17-120.      Hamburg, 

1897-) 
hysician,  St.  Johnsbury,  Vt. 


—90— 

William  Thomas  Hildrup  Howe,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1893. 

Dissertatioft:  The  existence  of  two  orthophthalic  acids.  (Pub- 
lished in  American  Chemical  Journal,  18:390-401.  Baltimore 
1896.) 

Boynton  Wells  McFarland,   Ph.B.   Yale  University    1889,   C.E 

1891. 
Dissertation:    The  mercury  salts   of  the  anilides.     (Published  in 

American  Chemical  Journal,  18:540-547.     Baltimore,  1896.) 
Instructor  in    Chemistry,   and    Head   of   the    Department,    New 

Haven  High  School,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

Alton  William  Peirce,  B.A.  Yale  University  1893. 

Dissertation:  Selenium  in  analysis.  (Published  in  part  in  Amer- 
ican Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The  iodometric 
determination  of  selenious  and  selenic  acids,  1:31-34;  A 
method  for  the  separation  of  selenium  from  tellurium  based 
upon  the  difiference  in  volatility  of  the  bromides,  1:181-185; 
The  gravimetric  determination  of  selenium,  1:416-418;  On 
the  existence  of  selenium  monoxide,  2:163-167.  New  Haven, 
1896.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie, 
11:249-253.  1896;  12:118-123,409-412.  1896;  13:121-126.  Ham- 
burg, 1897.) 

Special  Agent,  Northwestern  Mutual  Life  Insurance  Company, 
Worcester,  Mass. 

Joseph  Hyde  Pratt,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1893. 
[See  Department  of  Geology.] 

Percy  Talbot  Walden,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1892. 

Dissertation:  The  double  chlorides  and  bromides  of  caesium, 
rubidium,  potassium,  and  ammonium  with  ferric  iron.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  On  the  double  chlorides  and  bromides  of 
caesium,  rubidium,  potassium,  and  ammonium  with  ferric 
iron,  with  a  description  of  two  ferro-ferric  double  bromides, 
American  Journal  of*^  Science,  3d  series,  48:283-290.  New 
Haven,  1894.  Translation  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische 
Chemie,  7:331-338.     Hamburg,  1894.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry,  Sheffield  Scientific  School, 
Yale  University. 

1897 

Bertram  Borden  Boltwood,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1892.  1 

Dissertation:    Studies  on  chlorides. 

Professor  of  Radio-Chemistry,  Graduate  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 


—91— 

[saac  King  Phelps,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 

Dissertation:  The  determination  of  carbon,  hydrogen,  and  oxy- 
gen, in  the  wet  way.  (Published  in  part  in  American 
Journal  of  Science  as  follows:  The  precipitation  and  gravi- 
metric determination  of  carbon  dioxide,  3d  series,  50:101-103. 
New  Haven,  189S;  An  iodometric  method  for  the  determina- 
tion of  carbon  dioxide,  4th  series,  2:70-74.  New  Haven,  1896; 
The  combustion  of  organic  substances  in  the  wet  way,  4th 
series,  4:372-382.  New  Haven,  1897.  Translations  in  Zeit- 
schrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  9:356-359-  1895;  12:431-435- 
1896;    16:85-98.    Hamburg,  1898.) 

iChemist  in  charge  of  Organic  Investigations  Laboratory,  Bureau 
of  Chemistry,  Department  of  Agriculture,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Claude  Frederic  Walker,  B.S.  Massachusetts  Agricultural  Col- 
lege 1894,  B.S.  Boston  University  1894. 

Dissertation:  Iodic  acid  in  volumetric  analysis.  (Published  in 
part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows: 
The  application  of  iodic  acid  to  the  analysis  of  iodides, 
3:293-300;  The  titration  of  sodium  thiosulphate  with  iodic 
acid,  4:235-242.  New  Haven,  1897.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift 
fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  14:423-431.  1897;  16:99-108.  Ham- 
burg, 1898.) 

First  Assistant  Teacher  in  Physical  Science,  and  Chairman  of 
Department  of  Physics,  Boys'  High  School,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

1898 

Martha  Austin  (Mrs.  Isaac  K.  Phelps),  B.S.  Smith  College  1892. 

lissertation:  The  estimation  of  manganese  in  analysis.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as 
follows:  The  estimation  of  manganese  as  the  sulphate  and 
as  the  oxide,  5:209-214;  On  the  condition  of  oxidation  of 
manganese  precipitated  by  the  chlorate  process,  5:260-268; 
On  the  estimation  of  manganese  separated  as  the  carbonate, 
5:382-384;  On  the  determination  of  manganese  as  the  pyro- 
phosphate, 6:233-243.  New  Haven,  1898.  Translations  in  Zeit- 
schrift fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  17:264-271,  253-263,  272-275. 
1898;    18:339-351.     Hamburg,  1898.) 

1410  M  St.,  N.  W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Bayard  Barnes,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1895. 

Dissertation:  Investigations  in  organic  chemistry.  (Published 
as  follows:  On  halogen  addition-products  of  the  anilides, 
American  Chemical  Journal,  19:672-682.     Baltimore,  1897.) 

77  Edgehill  Road,  New  Haven,  Conn. 


—92— 

Harry  Ward  Foote,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1895. 

Dissertatimi:  Investigations  in  chemistry  and  mineralog] 
(Incorporated  in  papers  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4t 
series,  as  follows:  On  the  occurrence  of  pollucite,  manganc 
columbite  and  microlite  at  Rumford,  Me.,  1:457-461.  Ne^ 
Haven,  1896;  On  roeblingite,  a  new  silicate  from  Frankli 
Furnace,  N.  J.,  containing  sulphur  dioxide  and  lead,  3:413-415 
On  wellsite,  a  new  mineral,  3:443-448;  On  certain  doubl 
halogen  salts  of  caesium  and  rubidium,  3:461-465;  On  th 
double  fluorides  of  zirconium  with  lithium,  sodium  and  thai 
Hum,  3:466-471;  On  bixbyite,  a  new  mineral,  and  notes  0; 
the  associated  topaz,  4:105-108.  New  Haven,  1897;  On  th 
clinohedrite,  a  new  mineral  from  Franklin,  N.  J.,  5:289-29^ 
New  Haven,  1898.) 

Professor  of  Physical  Chemistry,  Sheffield  Scientific  Schoo, 
Yale  University. 

1899 

Franke  Stuart  Havens,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  Analytical  separations  by  hydrochloric  acid.  (Pub 
lished  in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  a 
follows:  A  method  for  the  separation  of  aluminum  fron 
iron,  2:416-420.  New  Haven,  1896;  The  separation  of  alumi 
num  and  beryllium  by  the  action  of  hydrochloric  acid,  4:111 
114.  New  Haven,  1897.  Further  separations  of  aluminum  b; 
hydrochloric  acid,  6:45-48;  On  the  separation  of  nickel  an( 
cobalt  by  hydrochloric  acid,  6:396-398.  New  Haven,  1898;  Th 
volatilization  of  the  iron  chlorides  in  analysis,  and  th( 
separation  of  the  oxides  of  iron  and  aluminum,  7:370-374 
Separation  of  iron  from  chromium,  zirconium,  and  beryllium 
by  the  action  of  gaseous  hydrochloric  acid  on  the  oxides 
8:217-218.  New  Haven,  1899.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fii: 
Anorganische  Chemie,  13:435-440.  1897;  16:15-18.  1898 
18:147-151,  378-381.     1898;    21:21-27,  389-391.     Hamburg,  1899.; 

Assistant  to  President  and  Vice-President,  Harrison  Brothen 
and  Company,  Inc.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Louis  Cleveland  Jones,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  The  estimation  of  boric  acid.  (Published  in  pari 
in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The 
action  of  carbon  dioxide  on  soluble  borates,  5:442-446.  Ne\\ 
Haven,  1898;    The  estimation  of  boric  acid,  7:34-40;    A  volu- 


—93— 

metric  method  for  the  estimation  of  boric  acid,  7:i47-i53; 
An  iodometric  method  for  the  estimation  of  boric  acid,  8:127- 
132.  New  Haven,  1899.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir 
Anorganische  Chemie,  18:66-71.  1898;  20:212-220.  1899; 
21:169-176.  Hamburg,  1899.) 
Chief  Chemist,  Solvay  Process  Company,  and  Semet  Solvay 
Company,  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

William  Conger  Morgan,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  The  stereochemistry  of  nitrogen.  (Published  in 
part  in  American  Chemical  Journal  as  follows:  The  ethers 
of  isonitrosoguiacol  in  their  relation  to  the  space  isomerism 
of  nitrogen,  20:761-776.  Baltimore,  1898;  The  ethers  of 
toluquinoneoxime  and  their  bearing  on  the  space  isomerism 
of  nitrogen,  22:402-407;  Notes  on  the  space  isomerism  of  the 
toluquinoneoxime  ethers,  22:484-488.     Baltimore,  1899.) 

Professor  of  Chemistry,  Reed  College,  Portland,  Ore. 

Charles  Hyde  Warren,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1896. 
[See  Department  of  Geology.] 


1900 

William  Valentine,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1897. 

Dissertation:  Researches  on  substitution:  The  action  of  bromine 
on  metachlor-,  metabrom-,  and  metaiodanilines.  The  exami- 
nation of  thiobenzoic  acid  in  regard  to  its  action  on 
compounds  containing  amido,  imido,  and  hydroxyl  groups. 
(Published  in  part  as  follows:  The  action  of  bromine  on 
metachlor-,  metabrom-,  and  metaiodanilines,  American  Chemi- 
cal Journal,  22:266-280.     Baltimore,  1899.) 

Manager  of  Sales,  Naugatuck  Chemical  Company,  Naugatuck, 
Conn. 

1901 

Treat  Baldwin  Johnson,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1898. 

Dissertation:  Researches  on  amidines  and  imidoesters.  (Incor- 
porated in  the  following  papers  in  the  American  Chemical 
Journal:  On  the  rearrangement  of  imidoesters,  21:185-193. 
Baltimore,  1899;  On  the  rearrangement  of  imidoesters, 
23:135-150.  Baltimore,  1900;  On  acetyl  and  benzoylimidodi- 
thiocarbonic     esters,     26:185-206.       Baltimore,     1901;      Ueber 


-94-  ' 

Phenyl-p-Tolylformamidin   und   die   Umlagerung  von    Imido- 
athern,     Berichte     der     Deutchen     Chemischen     Gesellschaft, 
32:35-41.     Berlin,  1899.) 
Professor    of    Organic    Chemistry,    Sheffield    Scientific    School, 
Yale  University. 

John  Treadwell  Norton,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898. 

Dissertation:  The  use  of  sodium  thiosulphate  in  analysis.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as 
follows:  The  influence  of  hydrochloric  acid  in  titrations  by 
sodium  thiosulphate,  with  special  reference  to  the  estimation 
of  selenious  acid,  7:287-293;  The  estimation  of  iron  in  the 
ferric  state  by  reduction  with  sodium  thiosulphate  and  titra- 
tion with  iodine,  8:25-30.  New  Haven,  1899;  The  titration 
of  mercury  by  sodium  thiosulphate,  10:48-54.  New  Haven, 
1900;  The  action  of  sodium  thiosulphate  on  solutions  of 
metallic  salts  at  high  temperatures  and  pressures,  12:115-122. 
New  Haven,  1901.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische 
Chemie,  20:221-229.  1899;  21:177-184.  1899;  24:411-419.  1900; 
28:223-232.     Hamburg,  1901.) 

Analytical  Chemist,  Booth,  Garrett  &  Blair,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Charles  Adams  Peters,  B.S.  Boston  University  1897. 

Dissertation:  Oxalic  acid  and  the  oxalates  in  analysis.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as 
follows:  The  titration  of  oxalic  acid  by  potassium  perman- 
ganate in  presence  of  hydrochloric  acid,  7:461-467;  Thej 
determination  of  tellurous  acid  in  presence  of  haloid  salts,! 
8:122-126.  New  Haven,  1899;  The  separation  and  determina-; 
tion  of  mercury  as  mercurous  oxalate,  9:401-406;  The  volu-; 
metric  estimation  of  copper  as  the  oxalate,  with  separation 
from  cadmium,  arsenic,  tin  and  zinc,  10:359-367.  New  Haven, 
1900;  The  estimation  of  calcium,  strontium,  and  barium,  as 
the  oxalates,  12:216-224.  New  Haven,  1901.  Translations  in 
Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  21:185-193,  405-410. 
1899;  24:402-410.  1900;  26:111-122.  1901;  29:145-155.  Ham- 
burg, 1902.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Inorganic  and  Soil  Chemistry,  Massa- 
chusetts Agricultural  College,  Amherst,  Mass. 

1902  1 

Ailing  Prudden  Beardsley,  B.A.  Wesleyan  University  1898.       ^ 

Dissertation:    On  the  action  of  phenylhydrazine  on  acylthiocar-' 

bonic    and    acylimidothiocarbonic    esters:     pyro-a,    j8'-diazole 


—95— 

derivatives;  On  the  action  of  phenylhydrazine  on  ben- 
zoylpseudothioureas:  i,  5-diphenyl-3-amino-pyro-a,  /3'diazole 
derivatives.  (Published  in  condensed  form  in  American 
Chemical  Journal,  27:257-270.  Baltimore,  1902;  29:73-82. 
Baltimore,  1903.) 
Chemical  Engineer,  Cott-A-Lap  Company,  Bound  Brook,  N.  J. 

I  Frank  Eugene  Hale,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900. 

\ Dissertation:    Starch  and  the  dextrins  in  relation  to  iodometry. 

i      (Published  in  part  as  follov^s:    The  initiative  action  of  iodine 

I  and  of  other  oxidizers  in  the  hydrolysis  of  starch  and  dex- 
trins, American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  13:379-399-  New 
Haven,  1902;  On  the  relation  of  hydriodic  acid  and  of  its 
salts  to  the  starch  and  dextrin  iodides,  American  Chemical 
Journal,  28:438-450.  Baltimore,  1902;  On  standard  tartar 
emetic  and  its  structural  formula,  Journal  of  the  American 
Chemical  Society,  24:828-847.  Easton,  Pa.,  1902;  Upon  the 
structure  of  the  starch  molecule.  School  of  Mines  Quarterly, 
24:145-170.  Easton,  Pa.,  1902;  Translation  of  the  first  paper 
in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  31:100-126.  Hamburg, 
1902.) 

Director  of  Laboratories,  Department  of  Water  Supply,  Gas, 
and  Electricity,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

'Ralph  Gibbs  Van  Name,  B.A.  Yale  University  1899. 

Dissertation:  Analytical  applications  of  the  sulphocyanides. 
(Published  in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series, 
as  follows:  The  sulphocyanides  of  copper  and  silver  in  gravi- 
metric analysis,  10:451-457.  New  Haven,  1900;  The  influence 
of  hydrochloric  acid  on  the  precipitation  of  cuprous  sulpho- 
cyanide,  13:20-26;  The  estimation  of  copper  as  cuprous 
sulphocyanide  in  the  presence  of  bismuth,  antimony,  tin  and 
arsenic,  13:138-144.  New  Haven,  1902.  Translations  in  Zeit- 
schrift fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  26:230-238.  1901;  30:122-129. 
1902;    31:92-99.     Hamburg,  1902.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry,  Yale  College. 

1903 

John  Charles  Blake,  B.S.  University  of  Colorado  1901. 

Dissertation:  On  colloidal  silver  and  gold.  (Published  in  part 
in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The 
colors  of  allotropic  silver,  16:282-288;  On  colloidal  gold: 
adsorption    phenomena    and    allotropy,    16:381-387;     Note    on 


-96- 

the  composition  of  Bredig's  silver  hydrosols,  16:431-432; 
Behavior  of  red  colloidal  gold  solutions  toward  the  electric 
current  and  toward  electrolytes,  16:433-441.  New  Haven,  1903. 
Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  37:243- 
251.  1903;  39:69-71,  72-83.  Hamburg,  1904.) 
Professor  of  Chemistry,  Hahnemann  Medical  College,  Chicago, 
111. 

William  Ebenezer  Ford,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1899. 
[See  Department  of  Geology.] 

Henry  Franklin  Merriam,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  Researches  in  organic  and  inorganic  chemistry. 
(Published  in  part  as  follows:  On  some  condensation  pro- 
ducts of  the  pseudothioureas:  synthesis  of  uracil,  thymine 
and  similar  compounds,  American  Chemical  Journal,  29:478- 
492.    Baltimore,  1903.) 

Chemical  Engineer,  General  Chemical  Company,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

Oscar  Stoddard  Pulman,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  The  quantitative  determination  of  uranium,  with 
applications  to  the  estimation  of  phosphoric  acid;  to  which 
is  appended,  A  method  for  the  determination  of  molybdic 
acid,  with  application  to  the  estimation  of  phosphoric  acid. 
(Published  in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series, 
as  follows:  The  estimation  of  molybdic  acid  reduced  by 
hydriodic  acid,  12:449-452.  New  Haven,  1901;  The  determina- 
tion of  uranium  and  uranyl  phosphate  by  the  zinc  reductor, 
16:229-239.  New  Haven,  1903.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir 
Anorganische  Chemie,  29:353-358.  1902;  37:113-124.  Ham- 
burg, 1903.) 

Assistant  Superintendent,  National  Carbon  Company,  Cleve- 
land, O. 

1904 

Robert  William  Curtis,  B.S.  Trinity  College  1896. 

Dissertation:  The  action  of  the  halogen  acids  upon  vanadic  acid. 
(Published  in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series, 
17:41-48.  New  Haven,  1904.  Translation  in  Zeitschrift  fiir 
Anorganische  Chemie,  38:246-255.     Hamburg,  1904.) 

Instructor  in  Chemistry,  College  of  the  City  of  New  York,  New 
York,  N.  Y. 


—97— 

Ralph  Davis  Gilbert,  B.A.  Boston  University  1900,  B.S.  Massa- 
chusetts Agricultural  College  1900. 

Dissertation:  The  estimation  of  vanadium.  (Published  in  part 
in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The 
precipitation  of  ammonium  vanadate  by  ammonium  chloride, 
14:205-210.  New  Haven,  1902;  The  use  of  the  zinc  reductor 
in  the  estimation  of  vanadic  acid,  15:389-391-  New  Haven, 
1903.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie, 
32:174-180.     1902;   35:420-423.     Hamburg,  1903.) 

iChemist,  American  Agricultural  Chemical  Company,  Boston, 
Mass. 

George  Samuel  Jamieson,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1901. 

Dissertation:  Researches  in  organic  chemistry.  (Published  in 
Journal  of  the  American  Chemical  Society  as  follows: 
Researches  on  thiocyanates  and  isothiocyanates,  24:743-754. 
Easton,  Pa.,  1902;  On  some  aldehyde  condensation  products 
of  arylpseudothiohydantoins,  25:366-371;  On  a  class  of  pseudo- 
thioureas  described  as  normal  ureas,  25:719-722.  Easton,  Pa., 
1903;  also.  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  2-oxy-4,  6-diamino 
pyrimidine,  American  Chemical  Journal,  32:342-357-  Balti- 
more, 1904.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Analytical  Chemistry,  Sheffield  Scientific 
School,  Yale  University. 

Herbert  Edvrin  Medway,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  The  use  of  a  rotating  cathode  in  the  electrolytic 
determination  of  the  metals.  (Published  in  part  in  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The  use  of  a 
rotating  cathode  in  the  electrolytic  determination  of  the 
metals,  15:320-323.  New  Haven,  1903;  Further  work  with  the 
rotating  cathode,  18:56-58;  The  material  and  shape  of  the 
rotating  cathode,  18:180-182.  New  Haven,  1904.  Translations 
in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  35:414-419.  1903; 
42:110-113,  114-117.    Hamburg,  1904-) 

Moscow,  Pa. 

.\ndrew  Lincoln  Winton,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1884. 

Dissertation:  Studies  in  methods  of  proximate  organic  analysis. 
(Published  as  follows:  Report  of  the  Connecticut  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station:  Notes  on  the  determination  of  starch, 
128-142.  New  Haven,  1887  (also.  Journal  of  Analytical  Chem- 
istry, 2:149-164.     New  Haven,   1888);    Forage  plants  of  the  salt 


-9^ 

marshes  of  Connecticut,  233-245;  Apparatus  for  drying  in 
hydrogen,  187-189;  Aliquotimeter,  189-191.  New  Haven,  1889; 
The  chemical  composition  of  authentic  samples  of  spices  and 
spice  adulterants,  184-217.  New  Haven,  1898;  Die  Anatomie 
des  Maiskolbens  mit  besonderer  Riicksicht  auf  den  Nachweis 
von  Kolbenmehl  als  Verfalschungsmittel  der  Weizen-  und 
Roggenkleie,  186-195  (also,  Oesterreichische  Chemiker-Zei- 
tung,  3  N.F.,  345-349.  1900);  A  convenient  micro-polariscope 
for  food  examination,  195-198.  New  Haven,  1900  (also,  Journa! 
of  Applied  Microscopy,  2:550-551.  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  1899); 
The  anatomy  of  the  fruit  of  Cocos  nucifera,  208-225.  New 
Haven,  1901  (also,  American  Journal  of  Science,  12:265-280 
New  Haven,  1901);  The  eflfects  of  roasting  on  the  chemica! 
composition  of  cocoa  beans,  265-287;  Beitrage  zur  Anatomie 
des  Beerenobates,  288-325  (also,  Zeitschrift  fiir  Untersuchung 
der  Nahrungs-  und  Genussmittel,  5:785-814.  Berlin,  1902) 
Anatomie  der  Kultur-Varietaten  der  Hirse,  326-338  (also 
Zeitschrift  fiir  Untersuchung  der  Nahrungs-  und  Genussmittel 
6:337-345.  Berlin,  1903);  Uber  amerikanische  Weisen- 
Ausreuter,  339-358.  New  Haven,  1902  (also,  Zeitschrift  fiii 
Untersuchung  der  Nahrungs-  und  Genussmittel,  6:433-447 
Berlin,  1903);  Anatomie  der  Friichte  des  Taumellolches  unc 
der  Roggentrespe,  165-174  (also,  Zeitschrift  fiir  Untersuchung 
der  Nahrungs-  und  Genussmittel,  7:321-328.  Berlin,  1904) 
Anatomie  des  Hanfsamens,  175-180.  New  Haven,  1903  (also 
Zeitschrift  fiir  Untersuchung  der  Nahrungs-  und  Genuss- 
mittel, 7:385-388.  Berlin,  1904);  U.  S.  Dept.  of  Agriculture 
Division  of  Chemistry:  On  the  use  of  sodium  chloride  in 
the  Lindo-Gladding  method  of  determining  potash,  Bulletin 
31:148-150.  1891;  Report  on  dairy  products,  Bulletin  38:92- 
108.  1893;  Report  on  potash.  Bulletin  47:14-23.  1896 
Bulletin  49:27-41.  1897;  Bulletin  51:29-42.  1898;  On  the 
Gunning-Kjeldahl  method  and  a  modification  applicable  .in 
the  presence  of  nitrates,  Connecticut  Agricultural  Experiment 
Station,  Bulletin  112:1-4.  New  Haven,  1892;  A  compilation  oi 
analyses  of  American  feeding  stuffs,  U.  S.  Dept.  of  Agricul- 
ture, Office  of  Experiment  Stations,  Bulletin  11:1-155.  Wash- 
ington, 1892;  Journal  of  American  Chemical  Society:  Oi 
some  conditions  affecting  the  accuracy  of  the  determinatior 
of  potash  as  potassium  platini-chloride,  17:453-466.  Easton 
Pa.,  1895;  On  the  Lindo-Gladding  method  of  determining 
potash,  20:597-609.     Easton,  Pa.,  1898  (also.  Chemical  News 


\; 


—99— 

No.   201 1,   2012.     London,    1898);    The   detection   of   coal-tar 
dyes   in   fruit  products,   22:582-588.      Easton,    Pa.,    1900;    The 
analysis  of  vanilla  extract,  24:1128-1135.     Easton,  Pa.,  1902.) 
Scientific  Investigation,  Wilton,  Conn. 


1905 

Howard  Stanley  Bristol,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1902. 

Dissertation:  Researches  in  organic  and  inorganic  chemistry. 
(Incorporated  in  papers  in  American  Chemical  Journal,  as 
follows:  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  the  structure  of  some 
substitution-products,  33:437-448;  Researches  upon  pyrimi- 
dines: the  action  of  potassium  thiocyanate  upon  some  imide 
chlorides,  33:448-460.     Baltimore,  1905.) 

Newport,  R.  I. 

James  Brown,  B.A.  Yale  University  1902. 

Dissertation:  The  interaction  of  hydrochloric  acid  and  potassium 
permanganate  in  the  presence  of  various  inorganic  salts. 
(Published  in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series, 
as  follows:  The  interaction  of  hydrochloric  acid  and  potas- 
sium permanganate  in  the  presence  of  ferric  chloride,  19:31- 
38.  New  Haven,  1905;  Further  work  on  the  interaction  of 
hydrochloric  acid  and  potassium  permanganate  in  the  presence 
of  various  inorganic  salts,  21:41-57.  New  Haven,  1906.  Trans- 
lations in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  44:145-153; 
47:314-330.     Hamburg,  1905.) 

Professor  of  Chemistiy,  Butler  College,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 

Charles  Paxson  Flora,  B.A.  Yale  University  1902. 

Dissertation:  The  estimation  of  cadmium.  (Published  in  part 
in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The 
use  of  the  rotating  cathode  for  the  estimation  of  cadmium 
taken  as  the  sulphate,  20:268-276;  The  use  of  the  rotating 
cathode  for  the  estimation  of  cadmium  taken  as  the  chloride, 
20:392-396;  Additional  notes  upon  the  estimation  of  cadmium 
by  means  of  the  rotating  cathode,  and  summary,  20:454-455; 
The  estimation  of  cadmium  as  the  oxide,  20:456-458.  New 
Haven,  1905.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische 
Chemie,  47:1-12,  13-19,  20-22.     Hamburg,  1905.) 

Chemical  Engineer  with  Hood  Rubber  Company,  Watertown, 
Mass. 


— 100 — 

Ralph  Nelson  Maxson,  B.S.  Rhode  Island  State  College  1902. 

Dissertation:  The  estimation  of  small  amounts  of  gold.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as 
follows:  The  iodometric  determination  of  gold  in  dilute 
solution,  16:155-160.  New  Haven,  1903;  The  limit  of  error  in 
the  volumetric  determination  of  small  amounts  of  gold,  17:466- 
470.  New  Haven,  1904;  The  colorimetric  determination  of 
small  amounts  of  gold,  21 :27o-274.  New  Haven,  1906.  Trans- 
lations in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  37:81-87.  1903; 
40:254-259.     1904;   49:172-177.     Hamburg,  1906.) 

Professor  of  Inorganic  Chemistry,  State  University  of  Kentucky, 
Lexington,  Ky. 

Joannes  Gabriel  Statiropoulos,  B.A.  Anatolia  College  1899, 
M.S.  Yale  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  Researches  in  organic  chemistry.  (Published  inj 
part  as  follows:  On  some  urazole  and  imidothiobiazoline! 
derivatives,  American  Chemical  Journal,  34:117-132.  Balti- 
more, 1905.) 

Coal  Tar  Chemist  in  charge  of  Laboratory,  Coal  Tar  Products 
Company,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

igo6 

Raymond  Harman  Ashley,  B.S.  Rutgers  College  1903,  M.A. 
Yale  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  The  oxidation  of  sulphur  dioxide  in  analysis. 
(Published  in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series, 
as  follows:  The  oxidation  of  sulphites  by  iodine  in  alkaline 
solution,  19:237-239;  The  estimation  of  sulphites  by  iodine, 
20:13-16.  New  Haven,  1905;  The  analysis  of  dithionic  acid 
and  the  dithionates,  22:259-262.  New  Haven,  1906.  Transla- 
tions in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  45:69-72.  1905; 
46:211-214.     1905;    51:116-120.     Hamburg,  1906.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry,  University  of  Maine,  Orono, 
Me. 

Albert  Hileman,  B.A.  Yale  University  1903. 

Dissertation:  The  determination  of  fluorine  eliminated  as  silicon 
fluoride.  (Published  in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science, 
4th  series,  as  follows:  The  elimination  and  alkalimetric 
estimation  of  silicon  fluoride  in  the  analysis  of  fluorides, 
22:329-338;    The  estimation  of  fluorine  iodometrically,  22:383- 


— lOI — 

384.      New    Haven,     1906.      Translations    in    Zeitschrift    fiir 
Anorganische    Chemie,    51:158-170.      1906;     52:342-344.      Ham- 
burg, 1907.) 
Died  1908. 

Carl  Oscar  Johns,  B.A.  Bethany  College  1899,  M.A.  1902,  Ph.B. 
Yale  University  1904. 

Dissertatimi:  Researches  in  organic  chemistry.  (Published  in 
part  as  follows:  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  the  action  of 
aqueous  and  alcoholic  ammonia  and  aniline  on  some  halogen 
and  mercapto  pyrimidines,  American  Chemical  Journal,  34: 
175-191;  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  2,  5-diamino-6-oxypyri- 
midine,  American  Chemical  Journal,  34:554-568.  Baltimore, 
1905;  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  some  5-iodopyrimidin 
derivatives:  S-iodocytosin,  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry, 
1:305-318.     New  York,  1905.) 

Organic  Chemist,  Bureau  of  Chemistry,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Elmer  Verner  McCollum,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas  1903,  M.A. 
1904. 

Dissertation:  Researches  in  organic  chemistry.  (Incorporated 
in  the  following  papers:  Researches  on  pyrimidins:  on 
methods  of  synthesizing  isobarbituric  acid  and  5-oxycytosin, 
Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry,  1:437-449.  New  York,  1906; 
Researches  on  pyrimidines:  the  action  of  potassium  thio- 
cyanate  upon  imide  chlorides,  American  Chemical  Journal, 
36:136-148;  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  on  the  formation  of 
purines  from  ureapyrimidines,  American  Chemical  Journal, 
36:149-159.  Baltimore,  1906.) 
I  Professor  of  Agricultural  Chemistry,  University  of  Wisconsin, 
Madison,  Wis. 

George  Albert  Menge,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1903. 

Dissertation:  Researches  in  organic  and  physical  chemistry. 
(Incorporated  in  the  following  papers:  On  the  action  of 
phenylhydrazine  on  benzoylpseudoureas:  i,  5-diphenyl-3- 
aminopyrro-a,  /3'-diazole  derivatives,  American  Chemical  Jour- 
nal, 32:358-372.  Baltimore,  1904;  The  relative  solubility  of 
some  difficultly  soluble  calcium  and  barium  salts,  American 
Chemical  Journal,  35:432-445.  Baltimore,  1906;  Researches  on 
pyrimidins:  5-ethylcytosin,  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry, 
2:105-115.    New  York,  1906.) 

Dairy  Chemist,  Dairy  Division,  Department  of  Agriculture, 
Washington,  D.  C. 


— 102 — 

Seth  Enoch  Moody,  B.S.  Dartmouth  College  1898,  M.S.  Yale 
University  1904. 

Dissertation:  The  hydrolysis  of  certain  dissolved  salts  in  pres- 
ence of  iodides  and  iodates.  (Published  in  part  in  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The  iodometric 
determination  of  aluminum  in  aluminum  chloride  and  alumi- 
num sulphate,  20:181-184.  New  Haven,  1905;  The  hydrolysis 
of  salts  of  iron,  chromium,  tin,  cobalt,  nickel,  and  zinc  in 
the  presence  of  iodides  and  iodates,  22:176-184;  The  hydrol- 
ysis of  salts  of  ammonium  in  the  presence  of  iodides  and 
iodates,  22:379-382;  The  iodometric  determination  of  basic 
alumina  and  of  free  acid  in  aluminium  sulphate  and  alums, 
22:483-487.  New  Haven,  1906.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fur 
Anorganische  Chemie,  46:423-427.  1905;  51:121-131.  1906; 
52:281-285,  286-291.    Hamburg,  1907.) 

Assistant  City  Chemist,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 

1907 

David  Lindsey  Randall,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A.  1905. 

Dissertation:  The  use  of  potassium  permanganate  in  the  estima- 
tion of  iron,  mercury,  and  molybdenum.  (Published  in  part 
in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The 
behavior  of  ferric  chloride  in  the  zinc  reductor,  21:128-130. 
New  Haven,  1906;  The  titration  of  mercurous  salts  with 
potassium  permanganate,  23:137-140;  The  behavior  of  molyb- 
dic  acid  in  the  zinc  reductor,  24:313-316.  New  Haven,  1907. 
Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  48:389- 
392.    1906;   53:78-82.     Hamburg,  1907.) 

Professor  of  Chemistry,  and  Secretary  of  the  Faculty,  Baker 
University,  Baldwin,  Kansas. 

1908 

Walter  Minor  Bradley,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1899. 
Dissertation:     The    analysis    and    chemical    composition    of    the 

mineral    warwickite.      (Published    in    American    Journal    of 

Science,  27:179-184.     New  Haven,  1909.) 
Assistant     in     Mineralogy,     Sheffield     Scientific     School,     Yale 

University. 

Samuel  Hopkins  Clapp,  B.A.  Yale  University  1901. 
Dissertation:    Researches  on  pyrimidine  derivatives.     (Incorpor- 
ated   in    the    following    papers:     Researches    on    pyrimidins: 


\1 


—103— 

syntheses  of  some  nitrogen-alkyl  derivatives  of  cytosin, 
thymin,  and  uracil,  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry,  5:49-70- 
Baltimore,  1908;  Researches  on  halogen  amino  acids:  3. 
5-dibromphenylalanine,  American  Chemical  Journal,  40:337- 
348.  Baltimore,  1908.) 
291  High  St.,  Pawtucket,  R.  I. 

William  Allen  Drushel,  B.S.  National  Normal  University  1896, 
B.A.  1897,  B.A.  Yale  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  The  quantitative  estimation  of  potassium.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as 
follows:  On  the  volumetric  estimation  of  potassium  as  the 
cobalti-nitrate,  24:433-438.  New  Haven,  1907;  The  application 
of  the  cobalti-nitrite  method  to  the  estimation  of  potassium 
in  soils,  26:329-332;  The  volumetric  estimation  of  potassium 
in  animal  fluids,  26:555-562.  New  Haven,  1908.  Translations 
in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  56:223-229.  1908;  59: 
97-101.    1908;   61:137-146.    Hamburg,  1909.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry,  Yale  College. 

Frederick  William  Heyl,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  Researches  on  pyrimidines.  (Incorporated  in 
papers  in  American  Chemical  Journal,  as  follows:  Researches 
on  pyrimidines:  on  5-nitrocytosine  and  its  reduction  to 
2-oxy-4,  5-diaminopyrimidine,  36:160-177.  Baltimore,  1906; 
Researches  on  some  condensation  products  of  a  substituted 
pseudothiourea:  synthesis  of  i-methyluracil,  37:628-637; 
Researches  on  pyrimidines:  the  action  of  methyliodide  on 
2-anilino-6-oxypyrimidine,  and  the  synthesis  of  2-anilinopy- 
rimidine,  38:237-249.     Baltimore,  1907-) 

Chief  Chemist,  Upjohn  Company,  Kalamazoo,  Mich. 

Howard  Douglas  Newton,  B.S.  Boston  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  On  some  new  relations  to  titanium  in  analysis:  the 
volumetric  estimation  of  titanium,  of  iron  in  presence  of 
titanium,  and  of  iron  and  vanadium  after  reduction  with 
titanous  sulphate.  (Published  in  part  in  American  Journal 
of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  A  method  for  the  estima- 
tion of  iron  in  presence  of  titanium,  23:365-367.  New  Haven, 
1907;  A  method  for  the  voltimetric  estimation  of  titanium, 
25-T30-I32;  The  estimation  of  iron  by  potassium  permangan- 
ate after  reduction  with  titanous  sulphate,  25:343-345.  New 
Haven,    1908.     Translations    in    Zeitschrift   fiir   Anorganische 


— 104 — 

Chemie,  54:213-216.    1907;   57:278-280.   1908;    58:378-380.    Ham- 
burg-, 1908.) 
Professor     of     Chemistry,     Connecticut     Agricultural     College, 
Storrs,  Conn. 

1909 

Graham  Edgar,  B.S.  Kentucky  State  College  1907. 

Dissertation:  The  quantitative  estimation  of  vanadium.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as 
follows:  The  reduction  of  vanadic  acid  by  zinc  and  magne- 
sium, 25:233-238;  The  determination  of  vanadic  and  molybdic 
acids  in  the  presence  of  one  another,  25:332-334;  The  estima- 
tion of  iron  and  vanadium  in  the  presence  of  one  another, 
26:79-82;  The  iodometric  estimation  of  chromic  and  vanadic 
acids  in  the  presence  of  one  another,  26:333-336.  New  Haven, 
1908;  The  iodometric  estimation  of  vanadic  acid,  chromic 
acid  and  iron  in  the  presence  of  one  another,  27:174-178;  The 
estimation  of  vanadic  and  arsenic  acids  and  of  vanadic  and 
antimonic  acids,  in  the  presence  of  one  another,  27:299-301. 
New  Haven,  1909.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorgan- 
ische  Chemie,  58:39-45,  375-377.  1908;  59:74-78.  1908;  61:280- 
285.     1909;    62:77-80,  344-347.     Hamburg,  1909.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Chemistry,  University  of  Virginia, 
Charlottesville,  Va. 

William  Ruthven  Flint,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898,  M.A.  1906. 

Dissertation:  The  complexity  of  tellurium.  (Published  in  part  in 
American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The 
quantitative  precipitation  of  tellurium  dioxide  and  its  applica- 
tion to  the  separation  of  tellurium  from  selenium,  28:112-118; 
The  complexity  of  tellurium,  28:347-352.  New  Haven,  1909; 
Researches  upon  the  complexity  of  tellurium,  30:209-219. 
New  Haven,  1910.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorgan- 
ische  Chemie,  64:104-111,  112-118.  1909;  68:251-262.  Hamburg, 
1910.) 

Consulting  Chemist,  Pasadena,  Cal. 

Fred  Harvey  Heath,  B.S.  New  Hampshire  College  of  Agricul- 
ture and  Mechanic  Arts  1905. 

Dissertation:  The  iodometric  determination  of  associated  copper, 
arsenic,  and  antimony.  (Published  in  part  in  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The  iodometric 
determination   of  copper,  24:65-74.     New   Haven,    1907;    The 


—105— 

iodometric  determination  of  arsenic  and  antimony  associated 
with  copper,  25:513-519.  New  Haven,  1908.  Translations  in 
Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  55:119-129.  1907; 
59:87-93.  Hamburg,  1908.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry,  University  of  North  Dakota, 
University,  N.  Dak. 

Leonard  Merritt  Liddle,  B.S.  Cornell  College  1906. 

Dissertation:  Studies  in  pyrimidines  and  researches  on  halogen 
amino  acids.  (Incorporated  in  papers  in  American  Chemical 
Journal,  as  follows:  Researches  on  halogen  amino  acids: 
iodine  derivatives  of  paratoluidine;  3,  5-diiod-4-aminobenzoic 
acid,  42:441-461;  Researches  on  halogen  amino  acids;  iodine 
derivatives  of  orthotoluidine.  The  3-iodaminobenzoic  acids, 
42:498-505.    Baltimore,  1909-) 

Professor  of  Organic  Chemistry,  and  Armour  Research  Fellow 
in  Mellon  Institute,  University  of  Pittsburgh,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

David  Ford  McFarland,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas  1900,  M.A. 
1901,  M.S.  Yale  University  1903. 

Dissertation:  Investigation  of  the  action  of  alkyl  halides  on  some 
mercapto  pyrimidines;  and  a  study  of  some  molecular  rear- 
rangements in  the  amidine  and  the  thiocyanacetanilide  series. 
(Incorporated  in  papers  in  American  Chemical  Journal  as 
follows:  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  the  preparation  of 
I,  4-dimethyluracil  and  of  the  monobenzyl  derivatives  of 
4-methyluracil,  42:101-115;  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  the 
action  of  methyliodide  and  of  benzylchloride  upon  2-oxy-4- 
methyl-6-methylmercaptopyrimidine,  42:431-440.  Baltimore, 
1909;  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  the  thio  derivatives  of 
thymine  and  the  preparation  of  thymine,  43:19-36.  Baltimore, 
1910.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Applied  Chemistry,  University  of 
Illinois,  Urbana,  111. 

Edwin  Ward  Tillotson,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University  1906. 

Dissertatian :  On  the  synthesis  of  malonic  ester;  with  special 
reference  to  the  influence  of  catalytic  agents  in  the  several 
reactions.  (Published  in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science, 
4th  series,  as  follows:  On  the  esterification  of  malonic  acid, 
26:243-252;  On  the  conversion  of  cyanacetic  ester  to  malonic 
ester,  26:257-263;  Researches  on  the  influence  of  catalytic 
agents  in  ester  formation:  On  the  esterification  of  cyanacetic 
acid,  26:264-266;    On  the  preparation  of  malonic  acid  or  its 


— io6 — 

ester  from,  monochloracetic  acid,  26:267-274;    On  the  prepara- 
tion  of  cyanacetic  acid   and  its   ester  from  monochloracetic 
acid,  26:275-280.     New  Haven,  1908.) 
Professor    of    Applied    Chemistry,    and    Assistant    Director    of 
Mellon  Institute,  University  of  Pittsburgh,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

Hiram  Lee  Ward,  B.A.  Yale  University  1906. 

Dissertation:  A  study  of  metallic  oxalates,  with  special  reference 
to  the  separation  of  copper  as  the  oxalate.  (Published  in  part 
in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The 
precipitation  of  copper  oxalate  in  analysis,  27:448-458.  New 
Haven,  1909;  The  estimation  of  lead,  nickel,  and  zinc  by 
precipitation  as  oxalates  and  titration  with  potassium  per- 
manganate, 33'-334-33^',  The  oxalate-permanganate  process 
for  the  determination  of  copper  associated  with  cadmium, 
arsenic,  iron,  or  lead,  33:423-432.  New  Haven,  1912.  Trans- 
lation of  the  first  paper  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische 
Chemie,  62:348-359.     Hamburg,  1909.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Chemistry,  Wesleyan  University,  Mid- 
dletown.  Conn. 

1910 

David  Breese  Jones,  B.A.  Ripon  College  1904. 

Dissertation:  The  conversion  of  halides  of  the  general  formula, 
— X.CH2,CH  hal.CHs, — into  allyl  and  propenyl  compounds. 
(Published  in  part  as  follows:  The  transformation  of  allyl- 
phthalimide  into  propenylphthalimide,  American  Chemical 
Journal,  45:343-356.    Baltimore,  191 1.) 

Organic  Chemist,  Bureau  of  Chemistry,  Department  of  Agri- 
culture, Washington,  D.  C. 

Ralph  Walker  Langley,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1902,  M.S.  1904. 

Dissertation:  Studies  of  the  oxides  of  tantalum  and  columbium. 
(Incorporated  in  papers  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th 
series,  as  follows:  On  an  indirect  method  for  determining 
columbium  and  tantalum,  30:393-400;  Note  on  a  recent  method 
for  separating  tantalum  and  columbium,  30:401-402.  New 
Haven,  1910.) 

Chemist,  Acme  Wire  Corporation,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

Howard  Earle  Palmer,  B.A.  Yale  University  1907. 

Dissertation:  The  use  of  potassium  ferrocyanide  and  potassium 
ferricyanide  in  analysis:  (Published  in  part  in  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:    A  method  for  the 


— 107— 

qualitative  separation  and  detection  of  ferrocyanides,  ferri- 
cyanides  and  sulphocyanides,  23:448-450.  New  Haven,  1907; 
On  the  estimation  of  cerium  in  the  presence  of  the  other  rare 
earths  by  the  action  of  potassium  ferricyanide,  26:83-84.  New 
Haven,  1908;  The  volumetric  and  gravimetric  estimation  of 
thallium  in  alkaline  solution  by  means  of  potassium  ferri- 
cyanide, 27:379-380.  New  Haven,  1909;  The  application  of 
potassium  ferricyanide  in  alkaline  solution  to  the  estimation 
of  arsenic,  antimony,  and  tin,  29:399-403;  The  application  of 
potassium  ferricyanide  in  alkaline  solution  to  the  estimation 
of  vanadium  and  chromium,  30:141-145.  New  Haven,  1910. 
Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  54'3i5- 
318.  1907;  59:71-73.  1908;  62:218-220.  1909;  67:317-321. 
Hamburg,  1910.) 
Chemist,  Bureau'  of  Chemistry,  Department  of  Agriculture, 
Washington,  D.  C. 

1911 

Rowland  Sherwood  Bosworth,  B.A.  Yale  University  1908,  M.A. 
1909. 

Dissertation:  The  rates  of  solution  of  certain  metals  in  dissolved 
iodine,  and  their  relation  to  the  diffusion-theory.  (Published 
in  part  as  follows:  On  the  rates  of  solution  of  certain  metals 
in  dissolved  iodine,  and  their  relation  to  the  diffusion  theory, 
American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  32:207-224.  New 
Haven,  191 1.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische 
Chemie,  74:1-20.     Hamburg,  1912.) 

Physicist  for  General  Memorial  Hospital,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Carlton  Howard  Maryott,  B.A.  Brown  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  On  the  nature  of  the  reaction  between  chlorine  and 
benzene  in  the  electrolytic  cell.  (Published  in  part  in  Amer- 
ican Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The  use  of 
metallic  potassium  in  determining  halogens  in  benzol  deriva- 
tives, 30:378-380.  New  Haven,  1910;  On  the  mechanism  of  the 
chlorination  of  benzene  in  the  electrolytic  cell,  35:153-170. 
New  Haven,  1913.) 

Professor  of  Chemistry,  Medical  Department,  University  of 
Georgia,  Augusta,  Ga. 

Claude  Clair  Perkins,  B.A.  University  of  Minnesota  1907,  M.A. 

Yale  University  1909. 
Dissertation:     Molecular   silver,    and   its   use   in   the   gravimetric 
determination    of   iodine.      (Published    in    part    in    American 


— io8— 

Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The  gravimetric 
determination  of  free  iodine  by  the  action  of  metallic  silver, 
28:33-39.  New  Haven,  1909;  The  gravimetric  determination 
of  free  bromine  and  chlorine,  combined  iodine,  and  oxidizing 
reagents  by  means  of  metallic  silver,  29:338-340;  The  use  of 
silver  in  the  determination  of  molybdenum,  vanadium,  sele- 
nium and  tellurium,  29:540-542.  New  Haven,  1910.  Transla- 
tions in  Zeitschrift  fur  Anorganische  Chemie,  63:318-324. 
1909;  66:432-435.  1910;  67:361-364.  Hamburg,  1910.) 
Died  1911. 

Edwin  Jay  Roberts,  B.S.  New  Hampshire  College  of  Agriculture 
and  the  Mechanic  Arts  1906. 

Dissertation:  The  separation  of  cerium  earths.  (Published  in 
part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows: 
On  the  substitution  of  bromine  and  of  iodine  for  chlorine 
in  the  separation  of  cerium  from  the  other  cerium  earths, 
29:45-46.  New  Haven,  1910;  On  the  separation  of  cerium  by 
potassium  permanganate,  31:350-352.  New  Haven,  191 1. 
Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  64:302- 
304.    1909;   71:305-308.    Hamburg,  1911.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Analytical  Chemistry,  Polytechnic 
Institute  of  Brooklyn,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

Samuel  Ray  Scholes,  B.A.  Ripon  College  1905. 

Dissertation:  A  study  of  vapor-pressures.  (Published  in  part  as 
follows:  The  vapor  pressure  of  hydrates,  determined  from 
their  equilibria  with  aqueous  alcohol,  Journal  of  the  American 
Chemical  Society,  33:1309-1326.     Easton,  Pa.,  191 1.) 

Professor  of  Applied  Chemistry,  and  Assistant  Director  of 
Mellon  Institute,  University  of  Pittsburgh,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

igi2 

Philip  Lee  Blumenthal,  B.S.  State  University  of  Kentucky  1909, 
M.A.  Yale  University  191 1. 

Dissertation:  The  separation  and  estimation  of  chlorine  and 
bromine  in  halogen  salts  by  the  diflferential  action  of  oxidiz- 
ers. (Published  in  part  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th 
series,  as  follows:  The  iodic  acid  process  for  the  determina- 
tion of  bromine  in  halogen  salts,  34:469-474.  New  Haven, 
1912;  The  use  of  selenic  acid  in  the  determination  of  bromine 
associated  with  chlorine  in  haloid  salts,  35:54-62;  The  prepara- 
tion of  selenic  acid  and  sodium  selenate  for  use  as  reagents 
in  the  determination  of  bromine  in  haloid  salts,  35:93-96.    New 


\'; 


— 109 — 

Haven,    1913.     Translations   in    Zeitschrift   fiir   Anorganische 
Chemie,  80:36-42,  161-170.     Hamburg,  1913-) 
Research  Chemist  in  Soils,  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment 
Station,  Lexington,  Ky. 

Charles  Andrew  Brautlecht,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1906. 

Dissertation:  Synthesis  of  thiotyrosine.  (Published  in  part  as 
follows:  Hydantoins:  the  synthesis  of  thiotyrosine,  Journal 
of  Biological  Chemistry,  12:175-196.     Baltimore,  1912.) 

Professor  of  Chemistry,  Florida  State  College  for  Women, 
Tallahassee,  Fla. 

Gerald  Burnham,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1909. 
Dissertatian:  Sulphur  combinations  in  proteins-thiopolypeptides. 
(Published  in  revised  form  in  Journal  of  Biological  Chemis- 
try, as  follows:  Sulphur  linkages  in  proteins,  9:439-448; 
Thioamides:  the  formation  of  thiopolypeptide  derivatives  by 
the  action  of  hydrogen  sulphide  on  aminoacetonitrile,  9:449- 
462.  Baltimore,  191 1.) 
-  Chemist  with  E.  Burnham,  Chicago,  111. 

Charles  Raymond  Downs,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  Water-gas  tar:  its  composition  and  commercial 
possibilities.  (Published  as  follows:  Study  of  the  composi- 
tion of  water  gas  tar,  Journal  of  Industrial  and  Engineering 
Chemistry,  6:366-370.     Easton,  Pa.,  1914.) 

Chemist,  with  Barrett  Manufacturing  Company,  New  York, 
N.  Y. 

Herbert  Hartley  Guest,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1908. 

Dissertation:  Thiohydantoins  and  their  biochemical  interest. 
(Published  in  revised  form  in  American  Chemical  Journal, 
as  follows:  Hydantoins:  the  action  of  potassium  thiocyanate 
on  pyrrolidonecarboxylic  acid,  2-thiohydantoin-4-propionic 
acid,  47:242-251;  Hydantoins:  the  action  of  potassium 
thiocyanate  on  asparagine,  48:103-111.    Baltimore,  1912.) 

Chemist,  J.  B.  Williams  Company,  Glastonbury,  Conn. 

Frank  Loyal  Haigh,  B.A.  Ripon  College  1908. 

Dissertation:  On  certain  physical  properties  of  the  alkali  nitrates, 
chlorides,  and  sulphates.  (Published  as  follows:  Certain 
physical  properties  of  the  alkali  nitrates  and  chlorides.  Jour- 
nal of  American  Chemical  Society,  34:1137-1159.  Easton,  Pa., 
1912.) 

Ripon,  Wis. 


— no — 

Charles  Hoffman,  B.S.  University  of  Kansas  1909. 

Dissertation:  A  new  method  for  synthesizing  alpha-amino  acids; 
halogen  derivatives  of  tyrosine.  (Published  in  part  as  fol- 
lows: On  hydantoins:  synthesis  of  3,  5-dichlortyrosine, 
Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry,  10:147-157.  Baltimore,  1911; 
On  hydantoins:  the  action  of  bromine  on  tyrosinehydantoin, 
American  Chemical  Journal,  47:20-27.     Baltimore,  1912.) 

Chief  Chemist,  Ward  Baking  Company,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


1913 

Joseph  Alfred  Ambler,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1910. 

Dissertation:  A  new  method  of  synthesizing  N-alkyl  deriva- 
tives of  a-amino  acids.  (Published  in  revised  form  as  follows: 
The  alkylation  and  hydrolysis  of  aliphatic  sulfonamides.  A 
new  synthesis  of  sarcosine,  Journal  of  the  American  Chemical 
Society,  36:372-385.     Easton,  Pa.,  1914-) 

Professor  of  Chemistry,  Acadia  University,  Wolfville,  N.  S. 

Robert  Bengis,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1910. 

Dissertation:  The  synthesis  of  amino  acids  related  to  adrenaline. 
(Published  in  modified  form  as  follows:  Hydantoins:  Syn- 
theses of  3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylalanine  and  3,  4-dimeth- 
oxyphenylalanine,  Journal  of  the  American  Chemical  Society, 
35:1606-1617.     Easton,  Pa.,  1913.) 

Biochemist,  Bureau  of  Chemistry,  Department  of  Agriculture, 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Arthur  Joseph  Hill,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1910. 

Dissertation:  The  catalytic  action  of  esters  in  the  Claisen  con- 
densation. (Published  in  modified  form  in  Journal  of  the 
American  Chemical  Society,  35:1023-1034.  Easton,  Pa.,  1913; 
Original  Communications,  Eighth  International  Congress  of 
Applied  Chemistry,  6:147-156.  Washington  and  New  York, 
1912.) 

Instructor  in  Industrial  Chemistry,  Sheffield  Scientific  School, 
Yale  University. 

David  Upton  Hill,  B.A.  University  of  New  Brunswick  1908,  M.A. 
Yale  University  191 1. 

Dissertation:  Experimental  studies  on  the  diffusion  theory  of 
reaction  velocity.  (Published  in  part  as  follows:  On  the 
influence  of  alcohol  and  of  cane  sugar  upon  the  rate  of 
solution   of  cadmium   in   dissolved   iodine,   American  Journal 


— Ill — 

of  Science,  4th  series,  36:543-554-     New  Haven,  1913.     Trans- 
lation   in    Zeitschrift    fiir    Anorganische    Chemie,    85:279-291. 
Hamburg,  1914-) 
Instructor  in  Chemistry,  Yale  College. 

Simon  Boghos  Kuzirian,  B.A.  Euphrates  College  1902,  M.A. 
Yale  University  191 1. 

Dissertation:  The  elimination  of  certain  volatile  products  in 
chemical  analysis.  (Published  in  American  Journal  of 
Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The  use  of  sodium  paratung- 
state  in  the  determination  of  carbon  dioxide  in  carbonates  and 
nitrogen  pentoxide  in  nitrates  by  loss  on  ignition,  31 :497-500. 
New  Haven,  191 1;  The  action  of  sodium  paratungstate  in 
fusion  on  salts  of  the  halogen  acids  and  oxy-halogen  acids, 
36:301-304;  The  use  of  sodium  paratungstate  and  the  blowpipe 
flame  in  the  determination  of  acid  radicals,  36:305-312;  Deter- 
mination of  water  of  crystallization  in  sulphates,  36:401-405; 
The  dehydration  and  recovery  of  silica  in  analysis,  36:598- 
604;  A  modification  of  the  usual  method  of  correcting  silica 
for  included  salts,  37:61-64.  New  Haven,  1913.  Translations 
in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  84:319-332.  1913; 
85:108-126,  127-132.    Hamburg,  1914-) 

Assistant  Chemi-st,  Iowa  State  Agricultural  College,  Ames,  Iowa. 

George  Augustus  Linhart,  B.S.  University  of  Pennsylvania  1909, 
M.A.  Yale  University  191 1. 

Dissertation:  On  the  kinetics  of  the  decomposition  of  certain 
organic  and  inorganic  salts.  (Published  in  the  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  On  the  hydrolysis 
of  metallic  alkyl  sulphates.  I.  Ethyl  barium  sulphate,  32:51-60. 
New  Haven,  191 1;  II.  Methyl  and  propyl  barium  sulphates, 
34:289-292;  III.  Ethyl  calcium  sulphate  and  ethyl  strontium 
sulphate,  34:539-542.  New  Haven,  1912;  IV.  Sodium,  stron- 
tium, and  barium  esters  in  alkaline  solutions,  35:283-289;  On 
the  rate  of  reduction  of  mercuric  chloride  by  phosphorous 
acid,  35:353-368.  New  Haven,  1913.  Translation  in  Zeit- 
schrift fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  82:1-16.     Hamburg,  1913.) 

Teaching  Fellow  in  German  and  Chemistry,  University  of 
Washington,  Seattle,  Wash. 

Ben  Harry  Nicolet,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas  1910. 

Dissertation:  Some  derivatives  of  aminomalonic  acid,  and  their 
biochemical  interest.  (Published  in  revised  form  in  Journal 
of  the  American  Chemical  Society,  as  follows:    I.  The  forma- 


— 112 — 

tion  of  pyrimidines   from  diethyl  aminomalonate  and  amino 
malonicnitrile,   36:345-355;     II.   Synthesis   of  hydantoin-4-car- 
boxamide,  36:355-364.     Easton,  Pa.,  1913-) 
Research   Chemist,   Mellon  Institute,  University  of  Pittsburgh, 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

Norman  Arthur  Shepard,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1910. 

Dissertation:  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  uramils  and  thio- 
uramils.  (Published  in  modified  form  as  follow^s:  Researches 
on  pyrimidines:  A  new  method  of  synthesizing  uramils  and 
thiouramils,  Journal  of  the  American  Chemical  Society, 
35:994-1007.     Easton,  Pa.,  1913-) 

Instructor  in  Chemistry,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 
University. 

1914 

Lewis  Hill  Chernoff,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  191 1. 

Dissertation:  Pyrimidine  nucleosides.  (Published  in  revised 
form  as  follows:  Researches  on  pyrimidines:  Synthesis  of 
the  pyrimidine  nucleoside,  4-hydroxymethyluracil,  Journal  of 
the  American  Chemical  Society,  36:1742-1747.    Easton,  Pa.,  1914.) 

Organic  Chemist,  Bureau  of  Chemistry,  Department  of  Agri- 
culture, Washington,  D.  C. 

Ernest  Woodward  Dean,  B.A.  Clark  College  1908,  M.A.  Yale 
University  1912. 

Dissertation:  The  effect  of  constitution  upon  the  velocities  of 
hydrolysis  of  esters  of  substituted  monobasic  aliphatic  acids. 
(Published  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as 
follows:  On  the  hydrolysis  of  esters  of  substituted  aliphatic 
acids.  Ethyl  esters  of  glycolic  acid  and  of  methyloxy,  ethyloxy 
and  propyloxy  acetic  acids,  34:293-296.  New  Haven,  1912; 
Ethyl  esters  of  lactic  acid,  glyceric  acid,  a-ethyloxy  and 
/3-ethyloxy  propionic  acids,  35:486-490;  Saponification  by 
sodium  hydroxide  of  hydroxy  and  alkyloxy  acetates  and 
propionates,  35:605-610.     New  Haven,  1913.) 

Junior  Organic  Chemist,  Bureau  of  Mines,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

William   Mynn   Thornton,   Jr.,    B.A.    Hampden-Sidney    College 
1904,  M.A.  University  of  Virginia  1907,  M.A.  Yale  University 
1912. 
Dissertation:     New    processes    for    the    analytical    separation    of 
titanium  from  iron,  aluminum,  and  phosphoric  acid.      (Pub- 
lished in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows: 
The  estimation  of  titanium  in  the  presence  of  iron,  34:214-217. 


v; 


—US- 
New  Haven,  1912;  The  use  of  the  ammonium  salt  of  nitro- 
sophenylhydroxylamine  ("Cupferron")  in  the  quantitative 
separation  of  titanium  from  iron,  37:173-178;  The  separation 
of  titanium  from  iron,  aluminum,  and  phosphoric  acid  with 
the  aid  of  the  ammonium  salt  of  nitrosophenylhydroxylamine 
("Cupferron"),  37:407-414.  New  Haven,  1914.  Translations 
in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Anorganische  Chemie,  79:190-196.  1913; 
86:407-412.  Hamburg,  1914.) 
Chemist,  E.  I.  duPont  de  Nemours  Powder  Company,  Chester, 
Pa. 

1915 

Joseph  Sumner  Bates,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1912. 
Dissertation:     The    synthesis    of    dipeptide-hydantoins,    together 

with  a  short  study  of  Michigan  hardwood  tar. 
Chemist,  Cott-A-Lap  Company,  Bound  Brook,  N.  J. 

Edward  Frederick  Kohmann,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas   1912. 

Dissertation:  The  constitution  of  mono-  and  dinitrotyrosine,  and 
the  xanthoproteic  and  Millon's  reactions.  (Published  in 
Journal  of  American  Chemical  Society,  as  follows:  Studies  on 
nitrated  proteins:  the  determination  of  the  structure  of 
nitrotyrosine,  37:1863-1884;  the  synthesis  of  3,  5-dinitrotyro- 
sine,  37:2164-2170.     Easton,  Pa.,  1915.) 

Associate  in  Chemistry  in  Department  of  Dairy  Husbandry, 
University  of  Illinois,  Urbana,  111. 

Harley  Dyer  Minnig,  B.A.  Yale  University  1912. 

Dissertation:  A  method  for  the  separation  of  aluminium  from 
iron  and  beryllium  with  a  review  of  existing  methods  for  the 
analytical  determination  of  aluminium.  Published  in  part  in 
American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  The 
separation  and  estimation  of  aluminium  associated  with  iron, 
by  the  action  of  acetyl  chloride  in  acetoin,  39:197-200.  New 
Haven,  1915;  The  separation  and  estimation  of  ajuminium 
and  beryllium  by  the  use  of  acetyl  chloride  in  acetoin.  [In 
press.]) 

Chemist,  The  Solvay  Process  Company,  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

John  Henry  Reedy,  B.A.  Southwestern  University  1900,  M.A. 
1900,  M.S.  University  of  Chicago  1914. 

Dissertation:  Anodic  potentials  of  silver.  (Published  in  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  as  follows:  Anodic  potentials 
of  silver:  I.  The  determination  of  the  reaction  potentials  of 
silver  and  their  significance,   40:281-298;    II.   Their  role  in  the 


—114— 

electrolytic    estimation    of    the    halogens,    40:400-412.      New 
Haven,  1915.) 
Professor  of  Chemistry,  Southern  Methodist  University,  Dallas, 
Texas. 

Blair  Saxton,  B.A.  Wabash  College  1912. 

Dissertation:    The  nature  of  certain  precipitated  inorganic  colloids. 

(Published  in  part  in  Journal  of  American  Chemical  Society, 

as    follows:     The    effect    of    freezing    on    certain    inorganic 

hydrogels,  38:588-609.     Easton,  Pa.,  1916.) 
Instructor     in     Chemistry,     Sheffield     Scientific     School,     Yale 

University. 

Walter  Moody  Scott,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1912. 

Dissertation:  The  hydroxyl  derivatives  of  phenylalanine,  and 
their  biochemical  interest.  (Published  in  Journal  of  Ameri- 
can Chemical  Society,  as  follows:  A  new  synthesis  of  ©-tyro- 
sine, 37:1846-1856;  Researches  on  hydantoins:  Synthesis  of 
the  hydantoin  of  2-hydroxy-5-aminophenylalanine,  37:1856- 
1863.    Easton,  Pa.,  1915.) 

Chemist,  Cheney  Brothers,  Silk  Manufacturers,  South  Man- 
chester, Conn. 

Richard  Wrenshall,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1911. 

Dissertation:  Synthesis  of  a-amino-5-phenylvalerianic  acid.  (Pub- 
lished in  Journal  of  American  Chemical  Society,  as  follows: 
Researches  on  hydantoins:  the  condensation  of  cinnamic 
aldehyde  with  hydantoins,  37:2133-2144.     Easton,  Pa.,  1915.) 

Manager,  Sterling  Varnish  Company,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

ALPHABETICAL  LIST 
(*  indicates  that  graduate  is  deceased.) 

*Allen,  1871  Blumenthal,  1912 

Ambler,  1913  Boltwood,  1897 

Armsby,  1879  Bosworth,  191 1 

Ashley,  1906  Bradley,  1908 

*Atwater,  1869  Brautlecht,  1912 

Austin,  1898  Bristol,  1905 

Barnes,  1898  Brown,  1905 

Bates,  1915  Browning,  1892 

Beardsley,  1902  Burnham,  1912 

Bengis,  1913  Chernoff,  1914 

Blake,  1903  Clapp,  1908 


—115- 


*Collier,  1866 

Curtis,  1904 

Dean,  1914 

Downs,  1912 

Drushel,  1908 
♦Dudley,  1874 

Edgar,  1909 

Fairbanks,  1896 

Flint,  1909 

Flora,  1905 

Foote,  1898 

Ford,  1903 

Gilbert,  1904 

Gruener,  1893 

Guest,  1912 

Haigh,  1912 

Hale,  1902 
♦Harrington,  1871 

Havens,  1899 

Heath,  1909 

Heyl,  1908 
*Hileman,  1906 

Hill,  A.  J.,  1913 

Hill,  D.  U.,  1913 

Hoffman,  1912 

Howe,  1896 

Hulst,  1870 

Jamieson,  1904 

Jenkins,  1879 

Johns,  1906 

Johnson,  1901 

Jones,  D.  B.,  1910 

Jones,  L.  C,  1899 

Kohmann,  1915 

Kreider,  1895 

Kuzirian,  1913 

Langley,  1910 

Liddle,  1909 

Linhart,  1913 

McCollum,  1906 

McFarland,  B.  W.,  1896 

McFarland,  D.  R,  1909 


Mar,  1891 
Maryott,  191 1 
Maxson,  1905 
Medway,  1904 
Menge,  1906 
Merriam,  1903 
Minnig,  1915 
Moody,  1906 
Morgan,  1899 
Newton,  1908 
Nicolet,  1913 
Norton,  1901 
Osborne,  1885 
Palmer,  1910 
Payne,  1877 
Peirce,  1896 
♦Perkins,  191 1 
Peters,  1901 
Phelps,  1897 
Pratt,  1896 
Pulman,  1903 
Randall,  1907 
Reedy,  1915 
Roberts,  C.  F.,  1894 
Roberts,  E.  J.,  191 1 
Saxton,  1915 
Scholes,  1911 
Scott,  1915 
Shepard,  1913 
Statiropoulos,  1905 
Thornton,  1914 
Tillotson,  1909 
Valentine,  1900 
Van  Name,  1902 
Walden,  1896 
Walker,  1897 
Ward,  1909 
Warren,  1899 
♦Wheeler,  1893 
Winton,  1904 
Wrenshall,  1915 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  BOTANY 


1899 

Alexander  William  Evans,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1890. 

Dissertation:  The  Hawaiian  hepaticae  of  the  tribe  Jubuloideae, 
(Published  in  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of 
Arts  and  Sciences,  10:387-462.     New  Haven,  1900.) 

Eaton  Professor  of  Botany,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 
University. 

1901 

Charles  Montague  Cooke,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University  1897. 

Dissertation:  The  Hawaiian  hepaticae  of  the  tribe  Trigonantheae. 
(Published  in  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of 
Arts  and  Sciences,  12:1-44.     New  Haven,  1904.) 

Curator  of  Pulmonata,  Bernice  Pauahi  Bishop  Museum  of 
Polynesian  Ethnology  and  Natural  History,  Honolulu,  Hawaii. 


1903 

Wilton  Everett  Britton,  B.S.  New  Hampshire  College  of 
Agriculture  1893. 

Dissertation:  Vegetation  of  the  North  Haven  sand  plains.  (Pub- 
lished in  Bulletin  of  the  Torrey  Botanical  Club,  30:571-620. 
Lancaster,  Pa.,  1903.) 

Entomologist,  Connecticut  Agricultural  Experiment  Station, 
New  Haven,  Conn,,  and  State  Entomologist. 


1906 

Kate    Grace    Barber    (Mrs.   Andrew    L.   Winton),    B.S.    Rhode 
Island   State   College  of  Agriculture   and   Mechanical   Arts 
1903. 
Dissertation:    Comparative  histology  of  fruits  and  seeds  of  certain 
species    of   cucurbitacese.      (Published   in    Botanical    Gazette, 
47:263-310.     Chicago,  1909.) 
Scientific  Investigation,  Wilton,  Conn. 


—117— 

1907 

Arthur  Harmount  Graves,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900. 
Dissertation:    The  morphology  of  Ruppia  maritima.     (Published 

in   Transactions    of   the    Connecticut   Academy   of   Arts    and 

Sciences,  14:59-170.    New  Haven,  1908.) 
Scientific  Investigation,  New  Haven,  Conn. 


1909 

George  Elwood  Nichols,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904. 
Dissertation:    A  morphological  study  of  Juniperus  communis  var. 

depressa.     (Published  in   Beihefte  zum   Botanischen  Central- 

blatt,  25^:201-241.     Dresden,  1910.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Botany,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 

University. 

1910 

Edwin  Cyrus  Miller,  B.A.  Yale  University  1907. 

Dissertation:  A  physiological  study  of  the  germination  of 
Helianthus  annuus.  (Published  in  Annals  of  Botany,  24:693- 
726.    London,  1910.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Botany,  Kansas  State  Agricultural  Col- 
lege, and  Assistant  Plant  Physiologist,  Kansas  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station,  Manhattan,  Kan. 


1911 

Neil  Everett  Stevens,  B.A.  Bates  College  1908,  M.A.  Yale  Uni- 
versity 1909. 

Dissertation:  Observations  on  heterostylous  plants.  (Published 
in  Botanical  Gazette,  53:277-308.     Chicago,  1912,) 

Pathologist,  Bureau  of  Plant  Industry,  United  States  Depart- 
ment of  Agriculture,  Washington,  D.  C. 


1912 

Marion  Graham  Elkins,  B.S.  Rhode  Island  College  of  Agricul- 
ture and  Mechanical  Arts  1906. 

Dissertation:  The  maturation  phases  in  Smilax  herbacea.  (Pub- 
lished in  Botanical  Gazette,  57:32-52.     Chicago,  1914-) 

Amesbury,  Mass. 


— ii8— 

1915 
Henry  Daggett  Hooker,  Jr.,   B.A.  Yale  University   1912,   M.A. 

1913. 

Dissertation:    Thermotropism  and  hydrotropism.     (Published  as 

follows:    Thermotropism  in  roots,  The  Plant  World,  17:135- 

153.      Baltimore,    Md.;     Hydrotropism    of    roots    in    Lupinus 

albus.  Annals  of  Botany,  29:265-283.     London,  1915.) 

Instructor  in  Botany,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  University. 

ALPHABETICAL  LIST 

Barber,  1906  Graves,  1907 

Britton,  1903  Hooker,  1915 

Cooke,  1901  Miller,  1910 

Elkins,  1912  Nichols,  1909 

Evans,  1899  Stevens,  191 1 


\1 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  ZOOLOGY  AND 
COMPARATIVE  ANATOMY 


1867 

William  North  Rice,  B.A.  Wesleyan  University  1865. 
Dissertation:     The    Darwinian   theory   of   the   origin   of   species. 
(Published  in  The  New  Englander,  26:603-635.     New  Haven, 

G.    I.    Seney    Professor    of    Geology,     Wesleyan     University, 
Middletown,  Conn. 
I  1869 

George  Henry  Perkins,  B.A.  Yale  University  1867. 

Dissertation:  The  molluscan  fauna  of  New  Haven.  (Published 
as  follows:  Molluscan  fauna  of  New  Haven.  A  critical 
review  of  all  the  marine,  fresh  water  and  land  Mollusca  of 
the  region,  with  descriptions  of  many  of  the  living  animals 
and  of  two  new  species,  Proceedings  of  the  Society  of 
Natural  History,  13:109-164.     Boston,  1869.) 

Howard  Professor  of  Natural  History,  Dean  of  the  College  of 
Arts  and  Sciences,  and  Curator  of  the  Museum,  University 
of  Vermont,  Burlington,  Vt.;    State  Geologist. 

1871 

Henry  Shaler  Williams,  Ph.B.  Y^le  University  1868. 
Dissertation:    Comparison  of  the  muscles  of  the  chelonian  and 

human  shoulder-girdles.     (Published  in  part  in  Transactions 

of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  2:301-308. 

New  Haven,  1873.) 
Professor   of    Geology,    Emeritus,    Cornell    University,    Ithaca, 

N.  Y. 

1890 

Edwin  Linton,  B.A.  Washington  and  Jefferson  College  1879. 
Dissertation:    The  anatomy  of  Thysanocephalum  crispum  Linton, 

a  parasite  of  the  tiger  shark.     (Published  in   Report  of  the 

United    States    Commission    of    Fish    and    Fisheries,    pt.    16, 

543-556.     Washington,  1892.) 
LeMoyne   Professor  of  Agriculture  and   Correlative   Branches, 

Washington  and  Jefferson  College,  Washington,  Pa. 


— 120 — 

i895 

Wesley  Roswell  Coe,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1892. 

Dissertation:  On  the  anatomy  of  a  species  of  nemertean  (Cere- 
bratulus  lacteus  Verrill),  with  remarks  on  certain  other 
species.  (Published  as  follows:  On  the  anatomy  of  a  species 
of  nemertean,  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of 
Arts  and  Sciences,  9:479-514.     New  Haven,  1895.) 

Professor  of  Biology,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  and  Curator 
of  the  Zoological  Collection,  Yale  University. 


1898 

Willard  Gibbs  Van  Name,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 

Dissertation:  On  the  embryology  of  a  marine  planarian.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  The  maturation,  fertilization,  and  early 
development  of  the  planarians,  Transactions  of  the  Connect- 
icut Academy  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  10:263-300.     New  Haven, 

1899.) 
Curator  of  Zoology,  New  York  State  Museum,  Albany,  N.  Y. 


igoi 
Katharine  Jeannette  Bush. 

Dissertation:  Descriptions  of  three  new  genera  and  sixteen  new 
species  belonging  to  the  tribes  Sabellides  and  Serpulides. 
(Published  as  follows:  Tubicolous  Annelids  of  tribes  Sabel- 
lides and  Serpulides  from  the  Pacific  Ocean,  Harriman  Alaska 
Expedition,  with  cooperation  of  Washington  Academy  of 
Sciences,  12:167-346.     New  York,  1904.) 

175  Bishop  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 


1905 

Beverly  Waugh  Kunkel,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1901. 

Dissertation:  Studies  on  the  anatomy  of  the  Californian  limbless 
lizard,  Anniella  pulchra,  with  a  general  consideration  of  the 
pineal  apparatus  of  the  vertebrates.  (Published  as  follows: 
Studies  on  the  California  limbless  lizard,  Anniella,  Transac- 
tions of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts  and  Sciences, 
12:349-403.     New  Haven,  1906.) 

Professor  of  Biology,  Lafayette  College,  Easton,  Pa. 


\. 


121 

1907 

William  Barri  Kirkham,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A.  1906. 

Dissertation:  The  early  development  of  the  mammalian  egg. 
(Published  as  follows:  Maturation  of  the  egg  of  the  white 
mouse,  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts  and 
Sciences,  13:65-87.    New  Haven,  1907.) 

Instructor  in  Biology,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 

1910 

William  Harding  Longley,   B.A.  Acadia  University   1901,   B.A. 

Yale  University  1907,  M.A.  1908. 
Dissertation:    The  maturation  of  the  egg  and  ovulation  in  the 

domestic  cat.     (Published  in  American  Journal  of  Anatomy, 

12:139-168.     Philadelphia,  1911.) 
Professor  of  Botany,  Goucher  College,  Baltimore,  Md. 

igi2 

Davenport  Hooker,  B.A.  Yale  University  1908,  M.A.  1909. 

Dissertation:  The  development  and  function  of  voluntary  and 
cardiac  muscles  in  embryos  without  nerves.  (Published  in 
Journal  of  Experimental  Zoology,  11:159-186.  Philadelphia, 
1911.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Anatomy,  Medical  School,  Yale  Uni- 
versity. 

1913 

Theophilus  Shickel  Painter,  B.A.  Roanoke  College  1908,  M.A. 
Yale  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  Spermatogenesis  in  spiders.  (Published  in  Zoo- 
logischen  Jahrbiichern,  38:509-571.     Jena,  1914.) 

Instructor  in  Biology,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 

1914 

George  Alfred  Baitsell,  B.S.  Central  University  of  Iowa  1908, 
M.A.  Yale  University  1909. 

Dissertatiofi :  Experiments  on  the  reproduction  of  the  Hypo- 
trichous  Infusoria.  (Published  in  the  Journal  of  Experimental 
Zoology,    as    follows:     Conjugation    between-  closely    related 


122 

individuals   of  Stylonychia  pustulata,    13:47-77.     Philadelphia, 
1912;    A  study  of  the  so-called  life  cycle  in  Oxytricha  fallax 
and  Pleurotricha  lanceolata,   16:211-235.     Philadelphia,   1914.) 
Instructor  in  Biology,  Yale  College. 


1915 

Stanley  Crittenden  Ball,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  191 1. 

Dissertation:  The  natural  history  and  embryology  of  the  Rhab- 
docoele,  Paravortex  gemellipara. 

Assistant  Curator  of  Zoology,  Peabody  Museum,  Yale  Uni- 
versity. 

Harold  Saxton  Burr,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  191 1. 

Dissertation:    The  effect  of  the  removal  of  the  nasal  pits  on  the 

behavior,  and  on  the  development  of  the  head,  of  Amblystoma. 

(Published  in  the  Journal  of  Experimental  Zoology,  as  follows: 

The  effects  of  the  removal  of  the  nasal  pits  in  Amblystoma 

embryos,  20:27-57.     Philadelphia,  1916.) 
Instructor  in  Anatomy,  Medical  School,  Yale  University. 

ALPHABETICAL  LIST 

Baitsell,  1914  Linton,  1890 

Ball,  1915  Longley,  1910 

Burr,  1915  Painter,  1913 

Bush,  1901  Perkins,  1869 

Coe,  1895  Rice,  1867 

Hooker,  1912  Van  Name,  1898 

Kirkham,  1907  Williams,  1871 
Kunkel,  1905 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  PHYSIOLOGY,  PHYS- 
IOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY,  BACTERIOLOGY, 
HYGIENE  AND  PUBLIC  HEALTH 


1880 

i Russell  Henry  Chittenden,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1875. 

Dissertation:  (a)  Glycogen  and  glycocoll  in  the  muscular  tissue 
of  Pecten  irradians.  (b)  The  oxidation  product  of  glycogen 
with  bromine,  silver  oxide,  and  water.  (Published  in  Ameri- 
can Journal  of  Science,  3d  series,  as  follows:  (a),  10:26-32. 
New  Haven,  1875;    (b),  11:395-401.     New  Haven,  1876.) 

Professor  of  Physiological  Chemistry,  and  Director  of  the 
Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  University. 

1887 
George  Wyckoff  Cummins,  Ph.B.   Yale  University   1884,   M.D. 

Columbia  University  1890. 
Dissertation:     Influence  of  some  organic  and  inorganic  substances 
on  gas  metabolism.     (Published  in  Transactions  of  the  Con- 
necticut   Academy    of    Arts    and    Sciences,    7:406-442.     New 
Haven,  1887.) 
Physician,  Belvidere,  N.  J. 

1891 

Ernest  Ellsworth  Smith,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1888,  M.D.  New 

York  University  1898. 
Dissertation:     Mucin    and   the    albuminoid    basis    of   stomachical 

mucus. 
Physician  and  Chemist,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

189a 

George  Loveless  Amerman,  B.A.  Yale  University  1890. 

Dissertation:  The  influence  of  dialysis  on  the  action  of  pepsin- 
hydrochloric-acid,  studied  quantitatively.  (Published  as  fol- 
lows: A  comparison  of  artificial  and  natural  gastric  digestion, 
together  with  a  study  of  the  diffusibility  of  proteoses  and 
peptone.  Journal  of  Physiology,  14:483-508.  Cambridge,  Eng- 
land, 1893.) 

Librarian,  Marcellus  Free  Library,  Marcellus,  N.  Y. 


124 — 

Frank  Sherman  Meara,  B.A.  Yale  University  1890,  M.D.  Colum- 
bia University  1895. 

Dissertation:  A  study  of  the  products  resulting  from  the  action 
of  water  at  i30°C-i6o°C.  on  albumin.  (Published  as  fol- 
lows: A  study  of  the  primary  products  resulting  from  the 
action  of  superheated  water  on  coagulated  egg-albumin,  Jour- 
nal   of   Physiology,    15:501-534.     Cambridge,    England,    1894.) 

Professor  of  Therapeutics,  Cornell  University  Medical  College, 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

1893 

Lafayette  Benedict  Mendel,  B.A.  Yale  University  1891. 

Dissertation:  On  the  proteolysis  of  crystallized  globulin.  (Pub- 
lished in  Journal  of  Physiology,   17:48-80.     London,   1894.) 

Professor  of  Physiological  Chemistry,  Sheffield  Scientific 
School,  Yale  University. 

1894 

James  Hall  Mason  Knox,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University  1892,  M.A. 
Lafayette    College    1896,    M.D.    Johns    Hopkins    University 
1898. 
Dissertation:     The  proteolysis   of  casein,  with   special   reference 
to    the    cleavage    of   phosphorus;     together   with    a    study    of 
paranuclein. 
Associate    in    Clinical    Pediatrics,    Johns    Hopkins    University, 
Baltimore,  Md. 

1897 

William  John  Gies,  B.S.  Pennsylvania  College  1893,  M.S.  1896, 
Ph.B.  Yale  University  1894. 

Dissertation:  The  influence  of  borax  and  boric  acid  on  the 
nutrition  of  the  animal  body.  (Published  in  the  American 
Journal  of  Physiology,  1:1-39.     Boston,  1898.)  j 

Professor  of  Biological   Chemistry,   Columbia  University,   New  "• 
York,  N.  Y. 

1898 

Alice  Hopkins  Albro  (Mrs.  Charles  A.  Barker),  B.A.  Bryn  Mawr 
College  1890. 

Dissertation:     The    origin    and    chemical    relationship    of    some 
products    of    proteolytic    cleavage.     (Published    in    American  j 
Journal  of  Physiology,  i :  307-335-     Boston,  1898.) 

Died  1904. 


-125— 

Yandell  Henderson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 

Dissertation:  Chemico-physiological  studies  on  the  derivatives 
of  the  proteids.  (Published  as  follows:  A  chemico-physio- 
logical study  of  certain  derivatives  of  the  proteids,  American 
Journal  of  Physiology,  2:  142-181.     Boston,  1899.) 

Professor  of  Physiology,  Medical  School,  Yale  University. 

1899 

Holmes  Condict  Jackson,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  Some  observations  on  the  carbohydrates  of  the 
liver. 

Professor  of  Physiology  and  Director  of  the  Physiological 
Laboratories,  University  and  Bellevue  Hospital  Medical  Col- 
lege, New  York,  N.  Y. 

William  Huntington  Parker,  B.S.  Worcester  Polytechnic  Insti- 
tute 1893. 

Dissertation:  i.  A  study  of  the  alloxuric  bases,  with  especial 
reference  to  their  origin  in  the  intestine;  2.  On  the  maximum 
production  of  hippuric  acid  in  rabbits.  (Published  in  Ameri- 
can Journal  of  Physiology  as  follows:  i.  The  occurrence  and 
origin  of  the  xanthine  bases  in  the  faeces,  4:83-89.  Boston, 
1901;  2.  On  the  maximum  production  of  hippuric  acid  in 
rabbits,  3:472-484.     Boston,  1900.) 

Special  Examiner  of  Drugs,  Medicines,  and  Chemicals,  and 
Assistant  Appraiser,  Port  of  Boston,  Mass. 

1900 

Ernest  William  Brown,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1897,  M.D. 
George  Washington  University  1906. 

Dissertation:  Contribution  to  the  chemistry  of  the  formation  of 
uric  acid  in  man.  (Published  as  follows:  The  rate  of  elimi- 
nation of  uric  acid  in  man.  Journal  of  the  American  Medical 
Association,  49:896-901.     Chicago,  1907.) 

Surgeon,  United  States  Navy,  Washington,  D.  C. 

1901 

Edward  Christian  Schneider,   B.S.  Tabor   College    1897. 
Dissertation:     The   excretion    of   kynurenic   acid.     (Published    in 

American  Journal   of  Physiology,   5:427-456.     Boston,    1901.) 
Head  Professor  of  Biology,  Colorado  College,  Colorado  Springs, 

Col. 


— 126 

igoa 

Arthur  Lyman  Dean,  B.A.  Harvard  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  Studies  on  inulin  and  the  enzyme  inulase.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  Experimental  studies  on  inulase,  Botanical 
Gazette,  35:24-35.  Chicago,  1903;  On  inulin,  American 
Chemical  Journal,  32:69-84.     Baltimore,  1904.) 

President,   College  of  Hawaii,   Honolulu,   Hawaii. 

George  Arthur  Hanford,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898. 

Dissertation:  Studies  on  the  physiological  action  of  caesium 
compounds.  (Published  as  follows:  A  study  of  the  physio- 
logical action  and  toxicology  of  caesium  chloride,  American 
Journal  of  Physiology,  9:214-237.     Boston,   1903.) 

Secretary  and  Treasurer,  G.  C.  Hanford  Manufacturing  Com- 
pany, Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

Leo  Frederick  Rettger,  B.A.  Indiana  University  1896,  M.A.  1897. 

Dissertation:  Experimental  studies  on  the  inter-relation  of  the 
spleen  and  pancreas.  (Published  as  follows:  Experimental 
observations  on  pancreatic  digestion  and  the  spleen,  American 
Journal   of  Physiology,  7:387-404.     Boston,   1902.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Bacteriology  and  Hygiene,  Sheffield 
Scientific  School,  Yale  University. 

Lyman  Brumbaugh  Stookey,  B.A.  Yale  University  1900. 
Dissertation:     Studies    on    glycogen    formation.     (Published    as 

follows:    On  the  formation  of  glycogen  from  glyco-proteids 

and  other  proteids,  American  Journal  of  Physiology,  9:  138- 

146.     Boston,    1903.) 
Professor    of    Physiology,    Medical    Department,    University   of 

Southern  California,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 


1903 

Frank  Pell  Underhill,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1900. 

Dissertation:     Further  experiments  on  the  physiological  action  of 

the  proteoses.     (Published  as  follows:    New  experiments  on 

the  physiological  action  of  the  proteoses,  American  Journal 

of  Physiology,  9:345-373-     Boston,   1903.) 
Professor    of    Pathological     Chemistry,    Medical    School,    and 

Assistant    Professor    of    Physiological     Chemistry,    Sheffield 

Scientific  School,  Yale  University. 


—  127— 

George  Benjamin  White,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1900. 

Dissertation:  Purin  metabolism  and  allantoin  formation:  an 
experimental  study.  (Published  as  follows:  On  the  inter- 
mediary metabolism  of  the  purin-bodies:  the  production  of 
allantoin  in  the  animal  body,  Americal  Journal  of  Physiology, 
12:85-94.     Boston,  1905.) 

Assistant  Director  of  Bacteriological  Laboratories,  Department 
of  Health  of  the  City  of  New  York,  Otisville,  N.  Y. 


1904 

Silas  Palmer  Beebe,  B.S.   Harvard  University  1900,  M.S.  Yale 

University  1902,  M.D.  Cornell  University  1909. 
Dissertation:     The  effect  of  alcohol  and  alcoholic  fluids  upon  the 

excretion  of  uric  acid  in  man.     (Published  in  American  Journal 

of  Physiology,   12:  13-37.     Boston,  1905.) 
Physician,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Elbert  William  Rockwood,  B.S.  Amherst  College  1884,  M.A. 
1901,  M.D.  State  University  of  Iowa  1895. 

Dissertation:  Studies  in  nutrition.  (Published  in  American  Jour- 
nal of  Physiology,  as  follows:  The  utilization  of  vegetable 
proteids  by  the  animal  organism,  11:355-369.  Boston,  1904; 
The  elimination  of  endogenous  uric  acid,  12:38-54;  On  the 
absorption  and  utilization  of  proteids  without  intervention  of 
the  alimentary  digestive  processes,  12:336-352.     Boston,  1905.) 

Professor  of  Chemistry  and  Toxicology,  and  Head  of  Depart- 
ment of  Chemistry,  State  University  of  Iowa,  Iowa  City,  la. 

Robert  Eccles  Swain,  B.A.  Leland  Stanford,  Jr.,  University  1899. 

Dissertation:  The  formation  of  kynurenic  acid  by  the  animal 
body.  (Published  in  part  as  follows:  Some  notable  con- 
stituents of  the  urine  of  the  coyote,  American  Journal  of 
Physiology,  13:30-34-    Boston,  1905.) 

Professor  of  Physiological  Chemistry,  Leland  Stanford,  Jr., 
University,  Stanford  University,  Cal. 


1905 

Harold  Cornelius  Bradley,  B.A.  L^niversity  of  California  1900. 

Dissertation:  The  physiology  of  the  gastropod  Sycotypus  canali- 
culatus.  (Published  as  follows:  Experimental  studies  on  the 
physiology  of  the  molluscs,  American  Journal  of  Physiology, 


—  128— 

13:17-29,     14:313-327.     Boston,     1905;      17:167-176.     Boston, 
1906.) 
Associate    Professor    of    Physiological    Chemistry,    University 
of  Wisconsin,  Madison,  Wis. 

1906 

Robert  Banks  Gibson,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1902. 

Dissertation:  On  proteose  fever:  an  experimental  study.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  Proteoses  and  fever,  Philippine  Journal  of 
Science,  No.  6,  Sec.  B,  Tropical  Medicine,  8:475-491.  Manila, 
1913.) 

Professor  of  Physiology,  College  of  Medicine  and  Surgery, 
University  of  Philippines,  Manila,  P.  I. 

1907 

Philip  Henry  Mitchell,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  Purin  metabolism  in  the  embyro.  (Published  in 
American  Journal  of  Physiology,  as  follov^s:  Chemical  studies 
on  growth. — I.  The  inverting  enzymes  of  the  alimentary  tract, 
especially  in  the  embryo,  20:81-96;  Chemical  studies  on 
growth. — II.  The  enzymes  involved  in  purine  metabolism  in 
the  embyro,  20:97-116.     Boston,  1907.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Physiology,  Brown  University,  Provi- 
dence, R.  I. 

Tadasu  Saiki,  M.D.  Okayama  Medical  College  1898,  M.S.  Yale 
University  1908. 

Dissertation:  The  chemistry  of  non-striated  muscle.  (Published 
as  follows:  A  chemical  study  of  non-striated  mammalian 
muscle.  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry,  4:483-495.  New 
York,  1908.) 

Research   Physiological   Chemist,   Kitayamasaki,   lyo,  Japan. 

1908 

Stanley  Rossiter  Benedict,  B.A.  University  of  Cincinnati  1906. 

Dissertation:  Experimental  studies  on  the  metabolism  of  mag- 
nesium and  calcium.  (Published  as  follows:  The  paths  of 
excretion  for  inorganic  compounds.  The  excretion  of  mag- 
nesium, American  Journal  of  Physiology,  25:  1-22;  The  paths 
of  excretion  for  inorganic  compounds.     The  excretion  of  cal- 


— 129 — 

:     cium,    American    Journal    of    Physiology,    25:23-33.     Boston, 

1909.) 
Professor  of  Chemistry,  Medical  College  of  Cornell  University, 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

1909 

Arthur  Wayland  Dox,  B.S.  University  of  Pennsylvania  1904, 
M.A.  Columbia  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  The  intracellular  enzymes  of  Penicillium  and 
Aspergillus,  vv^ith  especial  reference  to  those  of  Penicillium 
camemberti.  (Published  as  follows:  The  intracellular  enzymes 
of  lower  fungi,  especially  those  of  Penicillium  camemberti. 
Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry,  6:461-467.  Baltimore,  1909; 
also,  Bureau  of  Animal  Industry,  Bulletin  120,  Washington, 
1910.) 

Chief  in  Chemistry,  Iowa  Agricultural  Experiment  Station, 
Ames,  la. 

George  Edward  Gage,  B.A.  Clark  University  1906,  M.A.  Yale 
University  1907. 

Dissertation:  Studies  on  the  biology  and  chemistry  of  nitroso 
bacteria.  (Published  as  follows:  Biological  and  chemical 
studies  on  nitroso  bacteria,  Centralblatt  fiir  Bakteriologie, 
2.  Abteilung,  27:7-48.     Jena,  1910.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Animal  Pathology,  Massachusetts  Agri- 
cultural College,  Amherst,  Mass. 

Warren  Witherell  Hilditch,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  Studies  on  the  influence  of  alcohol  upon  metabo- 
lism. (Published  as  follows:  The  influence  of  alcohol  upon 
nitrogenous  metabolism  in  men  and  animals,  American  Journal 
of  Physiology,  27:  1-23.     Boston,  1910.) 

Pathologist,  and  Director  of  Graves  Laboratory,  Orange  Memo- 
rial Hospital,  Orange,  N.  J. 

Israel  Simon  Kleiner,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1906. 

Dissertation:  Studies  in  intermediary  metabolism — the  physio- 
logical action  of  some  pyrimidines..  (Published  as  follows: 
The  physiological  action  of  some  pyrimidine  compounds  of 
the  barbituric  acid  series,  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry, 
11:443-470.     Baltimore,  1912.) 

Associate  in  Physiology  and  Pharmacology,  Rockefeller  Insti- 
tute for  Medical  Research,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


—ISO- 
John  Franklin  Lyman,  B.S.  Massachusetts  Agricultural  College 

1905. 
Dissertation:     Experimental    studies   on   the   metabolism   of   tht 

purines  in  the  mammalian  organism.     (Published  as  follows; 

The  metabolism  of  some  purine  compounds  in  the  rabbit,  dog 

pig,    and   man.   Journal   of   Biological    Chemistry,   8:  1 15-143 

Baltimore,  1910.) 
Professor   of   Agricultural    Chemistry,    Ohio    State    University 

Columbus,  O. 

Victor  Caryl  Myers,  B.A.  Wesleyan  University  1905,  M.A.  1907 
Dissertation:     The  chemistry  and  physiology  of  the  pyrimidines 

thymine,    cytosine,   and   uracil.     (Published   as    follows:     The 

metabolism  of  some  pyrimidine  derivatives,  American  Journa' 

of  Physiology,  26:77-105.     Boston,  1910.) 
Professor  of  Pathological  Chemistry,  New  York  Post-Graduate 

Hospital  and  Medical  School,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Mary  Davies  Swartz  (Mrs.  Anton  R.  Rose),  B.L.  Denisoi: 
University  1901,  B.S.  Columbia  University  1906. 

Dissertation:  Nutrition  investigations  on  the  carbohydrates  ol 
lichens,  algae,  and  related  substances.  (Published  in  Trans- 
actions of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts  and  Sciences 
16:247-382.     New  Haven,  1911.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Household  Arts,  Teachers  College 
Columbia  University,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

1910 

Edward  Monroe  Bailey,  Jr.,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1900,  M.S 
1905. 

Dissertation:  Biochemical  and  bacteriological  studies  on  the 
banana.  (Published  as  follows:  Studies  on  the  banana.  Journal 
of  Biological  Chemistry,  1:355-361.  New  York,  1905;  Bio- 
chemical and  bacteriological  studies  on  the  banana.  Journal  o) 
the  American  Chemical  Society,  34:  1706-1730.     Easton,  1912.) 

Assistant  Chemist,  Connecticut  Agricultural  Experiment  Station 
New  Haven,  Conn. 

Alice  Frances  Blood,  B.S.  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Tech- 
nology 1903. 

Dissertation:     The  proteolytic  enzymes  in  certain  plants.     (Pub- 
lished in  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry  as  follows:    Some/ 
peculiarities  of  the  proteolytic  activity  of  papain,  8:  177-213; 


—131— 

The    erepsin    of    the    cabbage    (Brassica    olera^ea),    8:215-225. 
Baltimore,  1910.) 
Associate  Professor  of  Household  Economics,  Simmons  College, 
Boston,  Mass. 

zgii 

Morris  Seide  Fine,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1908. 

Dissertation:  Experimental  studies  on  the  utilization  of  veg- 
etable proteins  in  man  and  animals.  (Published  in  Journal 
of  Biological  Chemistry,  as  follows:  Studies  in  nutrition. 
I.  The  utilization  of  the  proteins  of  wheat,  10:303-325; 
Studies  in  nutrition.  II.  The  utilization  of  the  proteins  of 
barley,  10:339-343;  Studies  in  nutrition.  III.  The  utilization 
of  the  proteins  of  corn,  10:345-352;  Studies  in  nutrition.  IV. 
The  utilization  of  the  proteins  of  the  legumes,  10:433-458; 
Studies  in  nutrition.  V.  The  utilization  of  the  proteins  of 
cotton  seed,  11:  1-3;  Studies  in  nutrition.  VI.  The  utilization 
of  the  proteins  of  extractive-free  meat  powder;  and  the  origin 
of  fecal  nitrogen,  11:5-26.     Baltimore,  191 1.) 

Adjiinct  Professor  of  Pathological  Chemistry,  New  York  Post- 
Graduate  Hospital  and  Medical  School,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

William  Cuming  Rose,  B.S.  Davidson  College  1907. 

Dissertation:  Studies  in  intermediary  metabolism;  mucic  acid 
and  carbohydrate  metabolism;  the  physiology  of  creatine  and 
creatinine  elimination,  their  relation  to  carbohydrate  metabo- 
lism. (Published  in  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry  as  fol- 
lows: Mucic  acid  and  intermediary  carbohydrate  metabolism, 
10:  123-138;  Experimental  studies  on  creatine  and  creatinine. 
I.  The  role  of  the  carbohydrates  in  creatine-creatinine  metab- 
olism, 10:213-253;  Experimental  studies  on  creatine  and 
creatinine.  II.  Inanition  and  the  creatine  content  of  muscle, 
10:255-264;  Experimental  studies  on  creatine  and  creatinine. 
III.  Excretion  of  creatine  in  infancy  and  childhood,  10:265- 
270.     Baltimore,   191 1.) 

Professor  of  Biological  Chemistry,  Medical  Department,  Univer- 
sity of  Texas,  Galveston,  Texas. 

Louise  Stanley,  B.S.  University  of  Nashville  1903,  B.Ed.  Univer- 
sity of  Chicago  1906,  M.A.  Columbia  University  1907. 
Dissertation:     The  occurrence  of  purine  enzymes  in  the  tissues 

of  invertebrates  and  lower  vertebrates. 
Associate  Professor  of  Home  Economics,  University  of  Missouri, 

Columbia,  Mo. 


—132- 


igi2 


Amy  Louise  Daniels,  B.S.  Columbia  University  1906. 

Dissertation:  Fat-transport  and  metabolism,  studied  with  the  aid 
of  fat-soluble  dyes.  (Published  as  follows:  The  behavior  of 
fat-soluble  dyes  and  stained  fat  in  the  animal  organism, 
Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry,  13:71-95.     Baltimore,  1912.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Home  Economics,  University  of  Wis- 
consin, Madison,  Wis. 

Robert  Curtis  Lewis,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  The  rate  of  elimination  of  nitrogen  as  influenced 
by  diet-factors.  (Published  in  Journal  of  Biological  Chem- 
istry, 16:  19-77.     Baltimore,  1913.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Physiology  and  Physiological  Chemistry, 
School  of  Medicine,  University  of  Colorado,  Boulder,  Col. 


1913 

Howard  Bishop  Lewis,  B.A.  Yale  University  1908. 

Dissertation:  The  behavior  of  some  hydantoin  and  thiohydantoin 
derivatives  in  the  organism,  together  with  a  study  of  certain 
related  sulphur  compounds.  (Published  in  Journal  of  Bio- 
logical Chemistry  as  follows:  The  behavior  of  some  hydan- 
toin derivatives  in  metabolism.  Part  I,  13:347-356.  Baltimore, 
1912;  Part  II,  14:245-256.  Baltimore,  1913;  The  reaction  of 
some  purine,  pyrimidine,  and  hydantoin  derivatives  with  the 
uric  acid  and  phenol  reagents  of  Folin  and  Denis,  16:369-373. 
Baltimore,  1913-14.) 

Associate  in  Physiological  Chemistry,  University  of  Illinois, 
Urbana,  111. 

Willis  Clarke  Noble,  Jr.,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1906,  M.E.  1910. 

Dissertation:  Some  investigations  into  the  distribution  and 
habitat  of  the  tetanus  bacillus.  (Published  as  follows:  An 
experimental  study  of  the  distribution  and  habitat  of  the 
tetanus  bacillus.  Journal  of  Infectious  Diseases,  16:  132-141. 
Chicago,  1915.) 

Lecturer  in  Bacteriology,  and  Assistant  Director  of  Bacteriolog- 
ical Laboratory,  University  and  Bellevue  Hospital  Medical 
College,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


— i3a— 

Ruth  Wheeler,  B.A.  Vassar  College  1899. 

Dissertation:  Nutrition  experiments  with  mice.  (Published  as 
follows:  Feeding  experiments  with  mice,  Journal  of  Experi- 
mental Zoology,   15:209-223.     Baltimore,   1913.) 

Associate  in  Household  Science,  University  of  Illinois,  Urbana, 
111. 

1914 

Norman  Robert  Blatherwick,  B.S.  Grinnell  College  1909,  M.S. 
University  of  Illinois  1912. 

Dissertation:  The  specific  role  of  foods  in  relation  to  the  com- 
position of  the  urine.  (Published  in  Archives  of  Internal 
Medicine,  14:409-450.     Chicago,  1914.) 

Physiological  Chemist,  Bureau  of  Animal  Industry,  Department 
of  Agriculture,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Samuel  Goldschmidt,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  191 1. 

Dissertation:  The  metabolism  of  an  isomer  of  xanthine  and 
some  isomers  of  the  methylxanthines.  (Published  in  Journal 
of  Biological  Chemistry,  19:83-104.     Baltimore,  1914.) 

Instructor  in  Pathology,  Johns  Hopkins  Medical  School,  Balti- 
more, Md. 

Albert  Garland  Hogan,  B.A.  University  of  Missouri  1907,  B.S. 
1909,  M.A.  1912. 

Dissertation:  Studies  on  the  parental  utilization  and  metabolism 
of  sugars.  (Published  in  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry,  as 
follows:  (a)  The  parental  utilization  of  disaccharide  sugars, 
18:485-496.  Baltimore,  1914;  (b)  The  influence  of  hydrazine 
on  the  utilization  of  dextrose,  20:203-210;  (c)  The  influence 
of  hydrazine  on  the  glyoxalace  activity  of  the  liver,  20:211-215. 
Baltimore,  1915.) 

Assistant  in  Animal  Nutrition,  Kansas  Agricultural  College, 
Manhattan,  Kan. 

Joel  Andrew  Sperry,  2d,  B.A.  Yale  University  1908,  M.S.  1912. 

Dissertation:  A  biochemical  study  of  the  behavior  of  bacteria 
towards  pure  unchanged  animal  and  vegetable  proteins. 
(Published  as  follows:  The  behavior  of  bacteria  towards  puri- 
fied animal  and  vegetable  proteins.  Journal  of  Biological 
Chemistry,   20:445-459.     Baltimore,    1915-) 

Instructor  in  Bacteriology,  University  of  Illinois,  Urbana,  111. 


—134— 

David  Wright  Wilson,  B.S.  Grinnell  College  1910,  M.S.  Univer- 
sity of  Illinois  1912. 

Dissertatmi:  The  chemistry  of  the  nitrogenous  extractives  of 
muscle  tissue.  (Published  in  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry 
as  follows:  The  comparative  chemistry  of  muscle:  the  par- 
tition of  non-protein  water-soluble  nitrogen,  17:385-400;  The 
comparative  chemistry  of  muscle:  betaine  from  the  scallop, 
periwinkle  and  lamprey:  creatine  from  the  lamprey,  18:  17-20. 
Baltimore,  1914.) 

Assistant  in  Physiological  Chemistry,  Johns  Hopkins  Medical 
School,  Baltimore,  Md. 


1915 
Emil  Jacob  Baumann,  B.S.   College  of  the   City  of  New  York 

1912. 
Dissertation:  The  question  of  fat-absorption  from  the  stomach. 
(Published  as  follows:  The  question  of  fat  absorption  from 
the  mammalian  stomach,  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry, 
22:165-190.  Baltimore,  1915.) 
Assistant  in  Physiological  Chemistry,  Sheffield  Scientific  School, 
Yale  University. 

Isaac  Faust  Harris,  B.S.  University  of  North  Carolina  1900,  M.S. 

1903. 
Dissertation:    Chemical  and  physiological   studies   of  the  castor 

bean  and  soy  bean. 
Chemist,  Bronxville,  N.  Y. 

Byron  Murray  Hcndrix,  B.S.  Ohio  State  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  Studies  in  the  physiological  action  of  some  protein 
derivatives.  (Published  as  follows:  Studies  on  the  physio- 
logical action  of  some  protein  derivatives.  I.  Are  zeoses  and 
gliadoses  physiologically  active?  11.  The  relation  of  racemiza- 
tion  to  the  physiological  action  of  proteins  and  proteoses; 
III.  The  physiological  action  of  Vaughan's  "Crude  Soluble 
Poison,"  Journal  of  Biological  Chemistry,  22:443-470.  Balti-  i 
more,  1915-)  1 

Instructor  in  Physiological  Chemistry,  Medical  School,  Univer- 
sity of  Pennsylvania,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Raymond  Louis  Stehle,  B.A.  Ohio  State  University  1912,  M.A. 
1913. 


—135— 

Dissertation:  The  role  of  the  digestive  glands  in  the  excretion  of 
endogenous  uric  acid.  (Published  in  Journal  of  Biological 
Chemistry,  22:215-232.     Baltimore,  iQiS-) 

Instructor  in  Physiological  Chemistry,  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania, Philadelphia,  Pa. 


ALPHABETICAL  LIST 
(*  indicates  that  the  graduate  is  deceased.) 


*Albro,  1898 
Amerman,  1892 
Bailey,  1910 
Baumann,  1915 
Beebe,  1904 
Benedict,  1908 
Blatherwick,  1914 
Blood,  1910 
Bradley,  1905 
Brown,  1900 
Chittenden,  1880 
Cummins,  1887 
Daniels,  1912 
Dean,  1902 
Dox,  1909 
Fine,  191 1 
Gage,  1909 
Gibson,  1906 
Gies,  1897 
Goldschmidt,  1914 
Hanford,  1902 
Harris,  1915 
Henderson,  1898 
Hendrix,  1915 
Hilditch,  1909 
Hogan,  1914 
Jackson,  1899 


Kleiner,  1909 
Knox,  1894 
Lewis,  H.  B.,  1913 
Lewis,  R.  C,  1912 
Lyman,  1909 
Meara,  1892 
Mendel,  1893 
Mitchell,  1907 
Myers,  1909 
Noble,  1913 
Parker,  1899 
Rettger,  1902 
Rockwood,  1904 
Rose,  1911 
Saiki,  1907 
Schneider,  1901 
Smith,  1891 
Sperry,  1014 
Stanley,  1911 
Stehle,  1915 
Stookey,  1902 
Swain,  1904 
Swartz,  1909 
Underbill,  1903 
Wheeler,  1913 
White,  1903 
Wilson,  1914 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  THE 
GEOLOGICAL  SCIENCES 


1867 

William  North  Rice,  B.A.  Wesleyan  University  1865. 

[See  Department  of  Zoology  and  Comparative  Anatomy.] 


1869 

George  Henry  Perkins,  B.A.  Yale  University  1867. 

[See  Department  of  Zoology  and  Comparative  Anatomy.] 

1871 

Bernard  James  Harrington,  B.A.  McGill  University  1869. 
[See  Department  of  Chemistry.] 

Henry  Shaler  Williams,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1868. 

[See  Department  of  Zoology  and  Comparative  Anatomy.] 

1876 

Edward  Salisbury  Dana,  B.A.  Yale  University  1870,  M.A.  1874. 

Dissertation:  Trap  rocks  of  the  Connecticut  Valley.  (Published 
in  part  in  Proceedings  of  the  American  Association  for  the 
Advancement  of  Science,  1874,  pt.  2:45-47.     Salem,  1875.) 

Professor  of  Physics,  Yale  College,  and  Curator  of  the  Min- 
eralogical  Collection,  Peabody  Museum,  Yale  University. 

1880 

George  Bird  Grinnell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1870. 
Dissertation:    The  osteology  of  Geococcyx  calif ornianus. 
Writer,  238  East  15th  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

1885 

Samuel   Wendell  Williston,   B.S.    Kansas   Agricultural    College 
1872,  M.D.  Yale  University  1880. 


—137— 

Dissertation:      Synopsis     of     the     North     American     Syrphidae. 

(Published  as   Bulletin  31,  United  States   National   Museum, 

Washington,  1886.) 
Professor  of  Paleontology,  University  of  Chicago,  Chicago,  111. 


1887 

Erwin  Hinckley  Barbour,  B.A.  Yale  University  1882. 

Dissertation:    The  osteology  of  the  Heloderma. 

Head    Professor    of    Geology   and    Curator    of   the    University 

Museum,    University     of    Nebraska,     Lincoln,     Neb.;      State 

Geologist. 

i88g 

Charles  Emerson  Beecher,  B.S.  University  of  Michigan  1878. 

Dissertation:  Brachiospongidae:  a  memoir  on  a  group  of  Silurian 
sponges.  (Published  as  Memoirs  of  the  Peabody  Museum  of 
Yale  University,  Vol.  2,  pt.  i,  New  Haven,  1889.) 

Died  1904. 

Edmund  Otis  Hovey,  B.A.  Yale  University  1884. 

Dissertation:  Observations  on  some  of  the  trap  ridges  of  the 
East  Haven-Branford  region.  (Published  in  part  in  Amer- 
ican Journal  of  Science,  3d  series,  38:361-383.  New  Haven, 
1889.) 

Curator  of  Geology  and  Invertebrate  Paleontology,  American 
Museum  of  Natural  History,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

1891 

Oliver   Cummings  Farrington,   B.S.   Maine   State   College   1881, 

M.S.  1888. 
Dissertation:    Crystallized  azurite  from  Arizona.     (Published  in 

American    Journal    of    Science,    3d    series,    41:300-307.      New 

Haven,  1891.) 
Curator  of  Geology,  Field  Museum  of  Natural  History,  Chicago, 

111. 

1894 

George  Herbert  Girty,  B.A.  Yale  University  1892. 

Dissertation:  A  partial  revision  of  the  fauna  of  the  Lower 
Helderberg  group.  (Published  as  follows:  A  revision  of  the 
sponges  and  coelenterates  of  the  Lower  Helderberg  group  of 


-138- 

New  York,  New  York  State  Museum,  48th  Annual  Report, 
1894,  2:259-321.     Albany,  1895;    Fourteenth  Annual  Report  of 
the  New  York   State  Geological   Survey,   1894:259-321.     Albany, 
1895.) 
Geologist,  United  States  Geological  Survey,  Washington,  D.  C. 

1895 

Edwin  Horace  Forbes,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1874. 

Dissertation:  On  the  epidote  from  Huntington,  Massachusetts. 
(Published  as  follows:  On  the  epidote  from  Huntington, 
Mass.,  and  the  optical  properties  of  epidote,  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  1:26-30.     New  Haven,  1896.) 

Superintendent  of  Schools,  Torrington,  Conn. 

1896 

Joseph  Hyde  Pratt,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1893. 

Dissertation:  Northupite;  pirssonite,  a  new  mineral;  gaylus- 
site;  and  hanksite,  from  Borax  Lake,  San  Bernardino  County, 
California.  (Published  in  American  Journal  of  Science  as 
follows:  On  the  double  halides  of  caesium,  rubidium,  sodium 
and  lithium  with  thallium,  3d  series,  49:397-404.  New  Haven, 
1895;  On  northupite;  pirssonite,  a  new  mineral;  gaylussite 
and  hanksite,  from  Borax  Lake,  San  Bernardino  County, 
California,  4th  series,  2:123-135.     New  Haven,  1896.) 

State  Geologist  of  North  Carolina,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

1898 

George  Francis  Eaton,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 

Dissertation:  The  prehistoric  fauna  of  Block  Island,  as  indicated 
by  its  ancient  shell  heaps.  (Published  in  American  Journal 
of  Science,  4th  series,  6:137-159.     New  Haven,  1898.) 

Instructor  in  Comparative  Osteology,  Curator  of  the  Osteolog- 
ical  Collection,  and  Associate  Curator  in  Vertebrate  Paleon- 
tology, Yale  University. 

1899 

Herbert  Ernest  Gregory,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  Geology  of  the  Aroostook  volcanic  area  of  Maine. 
(Published  as  follows:  Contributions  to  the  geology  of 
Maine.     Part  2,  Geology  of  the  Aroostook  volcanic  area,  includ- 


—139— 

ing  an   account   of  the   clastic  rocks   of  Aroostook   County, 
United  States  Geological  Survey,  Bulletin  165:93-188.     Wash- 
ington, 1900.) 
Silliman  Professor  of  Geology,  Yale  College. 

Edward  Martin  Kindle,  B.A.  Indiana  University  1893,  M.S. 
Cornell  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  The  Devonian  and  Lower  Carboniferous  faunas  of 
southern  Indiana  and  central  Kentucky.  (Published  in  Bul- 
letins of  American   Paleontology,  as  Vol.  3,   No.   12,   Ithaca, 

1899.X 
Paleontologist  in  charge  of  Invertebrate  Paleontology,  Geolog- 
ical Survey  of  Canada,  Ottawa,  Canada. 

Charles  Hyde  Warren,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  Investigations  in  mineralogy  and  crystallography, 
including  a  description  of  four  new  minerals  from  Franklin, 
N.  J.  (Published  in  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series, 
as  follows:  Some  new  minerals  from  the  zinc  mines  at 
Franklin,  N.  J.,  and  note  concerning  the  chemical  composition 
of  ganomalite,  8:339-353.  New  Haven,  1899;  Mineralogical 
notes,  11:369-373.     New  Haven,  1901.) 

Professor  of  Mineralogy,  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology, 
Boston,  Mass. 

1900 

Joseph  Barrel!,  B.S.  Lehigh  University  1892,  M.S.  1897. 

Dissertation:''  The  geology  of  the  Elkhorn  District,  Montana. 
(Published  as  follows:  Physical  effects  of  contact  meta- 
morphism,  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  13:279-296. 
New  Haven,  1902;  Microscopical  petrography  of  the  Elkhorn 
mining  district,  Jefferson  County,  Montana,  22d  Annual 
Report  of  the  United  States  Geological  Survey,  Pt.  2:511-549. 
Washington,  1901.) 

Professor  of  Structural  Geology,  Yale  College. 

Herdman  Fitzgerald  Cleland,  B.A.  Oberlin  College  1894. 

Dissertation:  A  study  of  fossil  faunas  in  the  Hamilton  stage  of 
New  York.  (Published  as  follows:  A  study  of  the  fauna  of 
the  Hamilton  formation  of  the  Cayuga  Lake  section  in  cen- 
tral New  York,  United  States  Geological  Survey,  Bulletin 
206,  Washington,  1903.) 

Professor  of  Geology,  Williams  College,  Williamstown,  Mass. 


— 140 — 

George  Reber  Wieland,  B.S.  Pennsylvania  State  College  1893. 

Dissertation:  Osteology  of  some  fossil  turtles.  A  study  of 
American  fossil  cycads:  i,  Geological  distribution;  2,  Struc- 
ture of  the  leaf.  (Included  in  his  American  fossil  cycads, 
Carnegie  Institution,  Publication  No.  34,  Washington,  1906.) 

Research  Associate,  Carnegie  Institution,  Washington;  Lecturer 
in  Paleobotany,  Graduate  School,  Yale  University. 


igoi 

Stuart  Weller,  B.S.  Cornell  University  1894. 

Dissertation:  Studies  of  the  Paleozoic  faunas  of  the  interior 
continental  basin  of  North  America.  (A  collection  of  published 
papers  as  follows:  A  bibliographic  index  of  North  Ameri- 
can Carboniferous  invertebrates,  Bulletin  of  the  United  States 
Geological  Survey,  No.  153,  Washington,  1898;  Report  on 
the  fossils  from  the  Wichita  Mountains,  Bulletin  of  the  Geo- 
logical Society  of  America,  11:142-144.  Rochester,  1899;  The 
Paleontology  of  the  Niagaran  limestone  in  the  Chicago  area. 
The  Crinoidea,  Chicago  Academy  of  Sciences,  Bulletin  No.  4, 
Pt.  I  of  the  Natural  History  Survey,  Chicago,  1900;  with 
eighteen  others  published  from  1895  to  1898,  but  not 
specifically  mentioned  here.) 

Professor  of  Paleontologic  Geology,  University  of  Chicago, 
Chicago,  111. 

1903 

Edgar  Roscoe  Cumings,  B.A.  Union  University  1897. 
Dissertation:    The  morphogenesis  of  Platystrophia:    a   study  of 

the    evolution    of    a    Paleozoic    brachiopod.      (Published    in 

American    Journal    of    Science,    4th    series,    15:1-48,    121-136. 

New  Haven,  1903.) 
Professor,  and   Head  of  the  Department,  of   Geology,  Indiana 

University,  Bloomington,  Ind. 

William  Ebenezer  Ford,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1899. 

Dissertation:  Investigations  in  mineralogy.  (A  collection  of 
papers  published  in  the  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th 
series,  as  follows:  Siliceous  calcites  from  the  Bad  Lands, 
Washington  County,  South  Dakota,  9:352-354;  On  some 
interesting  developments  of  calcite  crystals,  10:237-244.  New 
Haven,    1900;    On  calaverite,    12:225-246.     New   Haven,    1901; 


—141— 

On  the  chemical  composition  of  dumortierite,  14:426-430. 
New  Haven,  1902;  Rickardite,  a  new  mineral,  15:69-70;  On 
the  chemical  composition  of  axinite,  15:195-201.  New  Haven, 
1903.  Translations  in  Zeitschrift  fiir  Krystallographie,  33:513- 
522.  1900;  35:430-451.  1901;  37:417-421,  609-610.  1903; 
38:82-88.  Leipzig,  1903.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Mineralogy,  Sheffield  Scientific  School, 
Yale  University. 

Henry  Hollister  Robinson,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1895,  C.E. 
1897. 

Dissertation:  Geology  of  San  Francisco  Mountain  and  vicinity, 
Arizona.  (Incorporated  in  the  publication.  The  San  Fran- 
ciscan volcanic  field.  United  States  Geological  Survey,  Profes- 
sional Paper  76,  Washington,  1913.) 

Clintonville,  Conn. 

Elias  Howard  Sellards,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas  1899. 

Dissertation:  A  study  of  some  Paleozoic  plants  and  insects. 
(Published  as  follows:  A  study  of  the  structure  of  Paleozoic 
cockroaches,  with  descriptions  of  new  forms  from  the  coal 
measures,  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  18:113-134, 
213-227.  New  Haven,  1904;  Fossil  plants  of  the  Upper  Pale- 
ozoic of  Kansas,  The  University  Geological  Survey  of  Kansas, 
9:386-480.    Topeka,  1908.) 

State  Geologist  of  Florida,  Tallahassee,  Fla. 


1904 

Mignon  Talbot,  B.A.  Ohio  State  University  1892. 

Dissertation:  Contributions  to  a  revision  of  the  Helderbergian 
fauna  of  New  York.  (Published  as  follows:  Revision  of  the 
New  York  Helderbergian  crinoids,  American  Journal  of 
Science,  4th  series,  20:17-34.     New  Haven,  1905.) 

Professor  of  Geology,  Mount  Holyoke  College,  South  Hadley, 
Mass. 

George  Albert  Young,  B.S.  McGill  University  1898. 

Dissertation:  Geology  and  petrology  of  Mount  Yamaska,  Prov- 
ince of  Quebec.  (Published  in  Geological  Survey  of  Canada, 
Annual  Report,  New  series,  Vol.  16,  1904,  Ottawa,  1906;  and 
separately  as  Publication  No.  888,  Ottawa,  1906.) 

Geologist,  Geological  Survey  of  Canada,  Ottawa,  Canada. 


—  142— 

1905 

Percy  Edward  Raymond,  B.A.  Cornell  University  1902. 

Disserfatian:  A  Tropidoleptus  faunule  at  Canandaigua  Lake, 
N.  Y.:  the  Chazy  formation  and  its  fauna.  (Published  as 
follows:  The  Tropidoleptus  fauna  at  Canandaigua  Lake,  New 
York,  with  the  ontogeny  of  twenty  species,  Annals  of  the 
Carnegie  Museum,  3:79-177.     Pittsburgh,  1904.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Paleontology,  Harvard  College,  and 
Curator  of  Invertebrate  Paleontology,  Museum  of  Compara- 
tive Zoology,  Harvard  University,  Cambridge,  Mass. 

Frederick  Clark  Stanley,  B.A.  Williams  College  1893. 
Dissertation:    A  critical  study  of  the  composition  of  hornblende. 

(Published    as    follows:     On    the    chemical    composition    of 

amphibole,  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  23:23-51. 

New  Haven,  1907.) 
Teacher    of   Chemistry,    Bridgeport    High    School,    Bridgeport, 

Conn. 

1906 

Gerald  Francis  Loughlin,  B.S.  Massachusetts  Institute  of 
Technology  1903. 

Dissertation:  Contribution  to  the  geology  of  eastern  Connecticut. 
(Published  as  follows:  The  gabbros  and  associated  rocks  at 
Preston,  Connecticut,  United  States  Geological  Survey, 
Bulletin  492,  Washington,  1912.) 

Associate  Geologist,  United  States  Geological  Survey,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. 

Clifton  James  Sarle,  B.S.  University  of  Rochester  1902,  M.S. 
1903. 

Dissertation:  The  Medina  formation  and  fauna  of  New  York. 
(Published  in  part  as  follows:  Arthrophycus  and  Daedalus  of 
burrow  origin,  Proceedings  of  the  Rochester  Academy  of 
Science,  4:203-210;  Preliminary  note  on  the  nature  of 
Taonurus,  4:211-214.     Rochester,  1906.) 

Professor  of  Geology,  and  Instructor  in  Biology,  St.  Lawrence 
University,  Canton,  N.  Y. 

igo8 

Ruth  Sawyer  Harvey,  B.A.  University  of  Cincinnati  1905. 
Dissertation:    Drainage  and  glaciation  in  the  central  Housatonic 

basin. 
Teacher  of  Physical  Geography,  Philadelphia  High  School  for 

Girls,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


\. 


—143— 

Francis  Baker  Laney,  B.S.  Drury  College  1902,  M.A.  University 
of  Wisconsin   1905. 

Dissertation:  The  Gold  Hill  mining  district  of  North  Carolina. 
(Published  as  North  Carolina  Geological  and  Economic 
Survey,  Bulletin  21,  Raleigh,  1910.) 

Geologist,  United  States  Geological  Survey,  and  Microscopist 
and  Mineralogist,  United  States  Bureau  of  Mines,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C. 

Freeman  Ward,  B.A.  Yale  University  1903. 
Dissertation:    Geology  of  the  New  Haven-Branford  region. 
Professor  of  Geology,  University  of  South  Dakota,  Vermilion, 
S.  D.;   and  State  Geologist. 


1909 

Isaiah  Bowman,  B.S.  Harvard  University  1905. 

Dissertation:  The  geography  of  the  central  Andes.  (Published 
as  follows:  The  physiography  of  the  central  Andes,  American 
Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  28:197-217,  373-402.  New  Haven, 
1909.) 

Director,  American  Geographical  Society,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Ellsworth  Huntington,  B.A.  Beloit  College  1897,  M.A.  Harvard 

University  1902. 
Dissertation:     Changes    in    climate    of    recent    geological    time. 

(Published  as  follows:    The  pulse  of  Asia,  Houghton,  Mifflin 

and  Company,  Boston,  1907.) 
222  Highland  St.,  Milton,  Mass. 

Levi  Fatzinger  Noble,  B.A.  Yale  University  190S,  M.A.  1907. 

Dissertation:  The  geology  of  the  Shinumo  area,  Grand  Canyon, 
Arizona.  (Published  as  follows:  Contributions  to  the  geology 
of  the  Grand  Canyon,  Arizona.  The  geology  of  the  Shinumo 
area,  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  29:369-386.  New 
Haven,  1910;  also,  The  Shinumo  quadrangle.  Grand  Canyon 
district,  Arizona,  United  States  Geological  Survey,  Bulletin 
549,  Washington,  1914. 

Assistant  Geologist,  United  States  Geological  Survey,  Washing- 
ton, D.  C. 

Joseph  Ezekiel  Pogue,  B.A.  University  of  North  Carolina  1906, 

M.S.  1907. 
Dissertation:   The  Cid  mining  district  of  Davidson  County,  North 
Carolina:    a  region  of  ancient  volcanic  rocks.     (Published  as 


—144— 

follows:  Cid  mining  district  of  Davidson  County,  North 
Carolina,  North  Carolina  Geological  and  Economic  Survey, 
Bulletin  22,  Raleigh,  1910.) 
Associate  Professor  of  Geology,  Northwestern  University, 
Evanston,  111.;  Associate  Geologist,  United  States  Geological 
Survey,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Thomas  Edmund  Savage,  B.A.  Iowa  Wesleyan  University  1895, 
B.S.  State  University  of  Iowa  1897,  M.S.  1898. 

Dissertation:  The  stratigraphy  of  the  Lower  Paleozoic  forma- 
tions in  southwestern  Illinois.  (Published  as  follows:  Lower 
Paleozoic  stratigraphy  of  southwestern  Illinois,  Illinois  State 
Geological  Survey,  Bulletin  8:103-116.  Urbana,  1907;  On  the 
Lower  Paleozoic  stratigraphy  of  southwestern  Illinois,  Amer- 
ican Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  25:431-443.  New  Haven, 
1908.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Stratigraphic  Geology,  University  of 
Illinois,  Urbana,  111. 

1910 

DeLormc  Donaldson  Cairnes,  B.S.  Queen's  University  1905, 
M.E.  1906. 

Dissertation:  The  Wheaton  River  district,  Yukon  Territory, 
Canada.  (Published  as  follows:  Wheaton  district,  Yukon 
Territory,  Memoir  31,  Canada,  Department  of  Mines,  Geolog- 
ical Survey,  Ottawa,  1912.) 

Geologist,  Geological  Survey  of  Canada,  Ottawa,  Canada.  i 

Chester  Albert  Reeds,  B.S.  University  of  Oklahoma  1905,  M.S. 
Yale  University  1907. 

Dissertation:  The  stratigraphy  of  the  Hunton  formation,  with 
introductory  chapters  on  the  physiography  and  structure  of 
the  Arbuckle  Mountains,  Oklahoma.  (Published  in  part  as 
follows:  The  physiography  and  structure  of  the  Arbuckle 
Mountains,  Oklahoma  Geological  Survey,  Bulletin  3:15-26, 
43-53-  Norman,  Okla.,  1910;  The  Hunton  formation  of 
Oklahoma,  American  Journal  of  Science,  4th  series,  32:256- 
268.     New  Haven,  191 1.) 

Assistant  Curator  of  Geology  and  Invertebrate  Paleontology, 
American  Museum  of  Natural  History,  and  Instructor  in 
Extension  Teaching,  Columbia  University,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


.  —145— 

Charles  Wales  Drysdale,  B.S.  McGill  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  The  geology  of  the  Franklin  mining  district, 
British  Columbia.  (Published  as  follows:  Geology  of  Frank- 
lin Mining  Camp,  Memoir  56,  Canada,  Department  of  Mines, 
Geological  Survey,  Ottawa,  I9i5-) 

Assistant  Geologist,  Geological  Survey  of  Canada,  Ottawa, 
Canada. 

John  Johnston  O'Neill,  B.S.  McGill  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  Geology  and  petrography  of  the  Beloeil  and  Rouge- 
mont  Mountains,  Quebec.  (Published  as  follows:  St.  Hilaire 
(Beloeil)  and  Rougemont  Mountains,  Quebec,  Memoir  43, 
Canada,  Department  of  Mines,  Geological  Survey,  Ottawa, 
1914.) 

Geologist,  Geological  Survey  of  Canada,  Ottawa,  Canada. 

William  Henry  Twenhofel,  B.A.  Yale  University  1908. 

Dissertation:  Geology,  stratigraphy,  and  physiography  of  Anti- 
costi  Island.  (Published  as  follows:  Geologic  bearing  of  the 
peat-beds  of  Anticosti  Island,  American  Journal  of  Science, 
4th  series,  30:65-71.  New  Haven,  1910;  Ordovicic-Siluric  sec- 
tion of  the  Mingan  and  Anticosti  Islands,  Bulletin  of  the 
Geological  Survey  of  America,  21:677-716.     Rochester,   1910.) 

Associate  Professor  of  Geology  and  Paleontology,  University 
of  Kansas,  Lawrence,  Kan.;  and  State  Geologist,  Kansas 
University  Geological  Survey. 

Merton  Yarwood  Williams,  B.S.  Queen's  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  Geology  of  the  Arisaig-Antigonish  district.  Nova 
Scotia.  (Published  as  follows:  Arisaig-Antigonish  district. 
Nova  Scotia,  Memoir  60,  Canada,  Department  of  Mines, 
Geological  Survey,  Ottawa,  1915-) 

Geologist,  Geological  Survey  of  Canada,  Ottawa,  Canada. 

Morley  Evans  Wilson,  B.A.  University  of  Toronto  1907. 

Dissertation:  Preliminary  memoir  on  the  Abitibi  district,  Pontiac 
County,  Quebec.  (Published  as  follows:  Kewagama  Lake 
Map-Area,  Quebec,  Memoir  39,  Canada,  Department  of 
Mines,  Geological  Survey,  Ottawa,  1913.) 

Geologist,  Geological  Survey  of  Canada,  Ottawa,  Canada. 


— 146 — 

I9I3 

Alan  Mara  Bateman,  B.S.  Queen's  University  1910. 

Dissertation:  Geology  and  ore  deposits  of  Bridge  River  district, 
British  Columbia.  (Published  in  part  as  follows:  Lillooet 
Map-Area,  British  Columbia,  Canada,  Department  of  Mines, 
Summary  Report  of  the  Geological  Survey  for  1912,  188-210, 
Ottawa,  1914.) 

Instructor  in  Geology,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 

Ralph  Dixon  Crawford,  B.A.  University  of  Colorado  1905,  M.A. 
1907. 

Dissertation:  Geology  and  ore  deposits  of  the  Monarch  and 
Tomichi  districts,  Colorado.  (Published  as  Colorado  Geo- 
logical Survey,  Bulletin  4,  Denver,  1913.) 

Professor  of  Mineralogy  and  Petrology,  University  of  Colorado, 
Boulder,  Col. 

Bruce  Rose,  B.S.  Queen's  University  1909. 

Dissertation:    Geology  of  Savona  district,  British  Columbia. 

Geologist,  Geological  Survey  of  Canada,  Ottawa,  Canada. 

1914 

Wilson  Barton  Emery,  B.A.  Yale  University  191 1. 
Dissertation:    Geology  of  Carrizo  Mountain,  Arizona. 
Assistant   Geologist,   United   States   Geological   Survey,   Wash- 
ington, D.  C. 

Leopold  Reinecke,  B.A.  University  of  the  Cape  of  Good  Hope 
1902,  M.A.  Cornell  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  The  geology  and  ore  deposits  of  the  Beaverdell 
Map-Area,  British  Columbia.  (Published  as  follows:  First 
part,  Physiography  of  the  Beaverdell  Map-Area  and  the 
southern  part  of  the  interior  plateaus  of  British  Columbia, 
Canada,  Department  of  Mines,  Geological  Survey,  Museum 
Bulletin  No.  11,  Ottawa,  1915;  Second  part.  Ore  deposits  of 
the  Beaverdell  Map-Area,  Memoir  79,  Canada,  Department  of 
Mines,  Geological  Survey,  Ottawa,  1915.) 

Geologist,  Geological  Survey  of  Canada,  Ottawa,  Canada. 

Edward  Leffingwell  Troxell,  B.A.  Northwestern  University  1908, 
M.A.  1911. 


147- 


Dissertatton :     The    vertebrate    fossils    of    Rock    Creek,    Texas. 

(Published   in   the  American  Journal   of  Science,   4th   series, 

39:613-638.     New  Haven,  1915.) 
Ann  Arbor,  Mich. 

1915 

Frederick  James  Alcock,  B.A.  University  of  Toronto  1912. 
Dissertation:    The  geology  of  the  Lake  Athabaska  region. 
Temporary    Junior    Geologist,    Geological    Survey    of    Canada, 
Ottawa,  Canada. 

William  Josiah  Wright,  B.S.  Acadia  College  1907,  B.A.  Yale 
University  1908,  M.A.  1912. 

Dissertation:  Geology  of  the  New  Ross  Map-Area,  with  an  intro- 
ductory chapter  on  the  gold-bearing  series  and  the  granites 
of  southern  Nova  Scotia. 

Temporary  Junior  Geologist,  Geological  Survey  of  Canada. 
Ottawa,  Canada. 


ALPHABETICAL  LIST 

(*  indicates  that  graduate  is  deceased.) 


Alcock,  1915 
Barbour,  1887 
Barren,  1900 
Bateman,  1913 
*Beecher,  1889 
Bowman,  1909 
Cairnes,  1910 
Cleland,  1900 
Crawford,  1913 
Cumings,   1903 
Dana,  1876 
Drysdale,  1912 
Eaton,  1898 
Emery,  1914 
Farrington,  1891 
Forbes,  1895 
Ford,  1903 
Girty,  1894 
Gregory,  1899 


Grinnell,  1880 
*Harrington,  1871 
Harvey,  1908 
Hovey,  1889 
Huntington,  1909 
Kindle,  1899 
Laney,  1908 
Loughlin,  1906 
Noble,  1909 
O'Neill,  1912 
Perkins,   1869 
Pogue,  1909 
Pratt,  1896 
Raymond,  1905 
Reeds,  1910 
Reinecke,  1914 
Rice,  1867 
Robinson,  1903 
Rose,  1913 


—148— 

Sarle,  1906  Weller,  1901 

Savage,  1909  Wieland,  1900 

Sellards,  1903  Williams,  H.  S.,  1871 

Stanley,  1905  Williams,  M.  Y.,  1912 

Talbot,  1904  Williston,  1885 

Troxell,  1914  Wilson,  1912 

Twenhofel,  1912  Wright,  1915 

Ward,  1908  Young,  1904 
Warren,  1899 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  THE 
SOCIAL  SCIENCES 


1877 

George  Willard  Wood,  B.A.  Bates  College  1875. 

Dissertation:    The  Morrill  tariff. 

Editor-in-chief,  Lewiston  Daily  Sun,  Lewiston,  Me. 

1890 

Frederick  Wightman  Moore,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886. 

Dissertation:  Reconstruction  in  socialism.  A  contribution  to 
the  political  history  of  Louisiana  from  May  i,  1862,  to  March 
29,  1867,  and  to  the  history  of  reconstruction  in  the  southern 
states  collected  from  contemporaneous  sources. 

Professor  of  History,  and  Dean  of  Academic  Department, 
Vanderbilt  University,  Nashville,  Tenn. 

Died  1911. 

1891 

Irving  Fisher,  B.A.  Yale  University  1888. 

Dissertation:  Mathematics  in  economics.  (Published  as  follows: 
Mathematical  investigations  in  the  theory  of  value  and  prices, 
Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts  and 
Sciences,  9:1-124.    New  Haven,  1892.) 

Professor  of  Political  Economy,  Yale  College. 

1892 

Morihiro  Ichihara,  Kyoto  Theological  Seminary  (Japan)  1879. 

Dissertation:   The  silk  trade  of  Japan. 

Governor  of  Chosen  Bank,  Asahimachi,  Keijo,  Chosen,  Korea. 

Amos  Parker  Wilder,  B.A.  Yale  University  1884. 

Dissertation:  The  municipal  problem.  (Published  as  follows: 
The  municipal  problem.  A  discussion  (i)  of  the  conditions 
which  make  difficult  the  government  of  American  cities;  (2) 
of    defects    in    charters    which    provoke    evils;     and    (3)    of 


—ISO— 

remedies    for    these    evils    already    under    trial    or    proposed, 
Printed   by    order    of    Chamber   of    Commerce,    New    Haven, 
1891.) 
Treasurer  and  Executive-Secretary,  Yale-in-China,  New  Haven, 
Conn. 

1894 

Jean  du  Buy,  J.U.D.  University  of  Heidelberg,  1889. 
Dissertation:    Two  aspects  of  the   German   constitution.      (Pub- 
lished by  The  Yale  Publishing  Company,  New  Haven,  1894.) 
Retired  Teacher,  Eugene,  Ore. 


1895 

Winthrop  Edwards  Dwight,  B.A.  Yale  University  1893,  LL.B. 

1896. 
Dissertation:    Railroad  legislation  since  1885  in  England  and  the 

United  States. 
Lawyer,  62  Cedar  St.,  New  York  City. 

Mary  Graham,  Ph.B.  Wesleyan  University  1889. 
Dissertation:    The  relations  between  education  and  poverty. 
Care  of  Secretary  of  Yale  University. 

Frank  LeRond  McVey,  B.A.   Ohio  Wesleyan  University   1893. 
Dissertation:    The  Populist  movement.     (Published  as  Economic 

Studies,  American   Economic  Association,   i:   No.  3,   135-203. 

New  York,  1896.) 
President,  University  of  North  Dakota,  Grand  Forks,  N.  D. 


1896 

William  Bacon  Bailey,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 
Dissertation:    Railroad  earnings  in  the  United  States,  1881-1895. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Christian  Sociology,  School  of  Religion, 
Yale  University. 

Kate  Holladay  Claghorn,  B.A.  Bryn  Mawr  College  1892. 
Dissertation:    Law,  nature,  and  convention:    A  study  in  political 

theory. 
Head  of  Department  of  Social  Research,  New  York  School  of 

Philanthropy,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


—151— 

Samuel  Peterson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895,  LL.B.  1898,  D.C.L. 

1899. 

%lDissertation :    Institutional  slavery  in  America:    an  investigation 
of  the  causes  of  its  establishment  and  of  the  peculiar  features 
which  it  possessed. 
Attorney-at-law,  Houston,  Texas. 

William  Ransom  Tuttle,  B.A.  and  B.S.  Olivet  College  1894,  M.A. 
Columbia  University  1897. 

Dissertation:  Some  studies  in  the  theories  of  criminal  anthro- 
pology. 

Teacher  of  American  History,  Nicholas  Senn  High  School, 
and  instructor  in  European  History  in  Senn  Junior  College, 
Chicago,  111. 

i8g8 

George  Kingsley  Olmsted,  Ph.B.   Colorado  College   1894,  M.D. 

Denver  and  Gross  College  of  Medicine  1903. 
Dissertation:    The  economic  history  of  sugar  in  the  nineteenth 

century,  with  a  general  historical  introduction  and  appendices 

containing  a  digest  of  sugar  legislation. 
Physician,  Denver,  Col. 

Sarah    Scovill    Whittelsey     (Mrs.     Percy    T.    Walden),     B.A. 

Radcliffe  College  1894. 

Dissertation:  In  how  far  has  Massachusetts  labor  legislation 
been  in  accordance  with  teachings  of  economic  theory? 
(Published  as  follows:  Massachusetts  labor  legislation:  an 
historical  and  critical  study,  Annals  of  the  American  Academy 
of  Political  and  Social  Science,  Supplement,  1:1-157.  Phila- 
delphia, 1901.) 

210  St.  Ronan  Street,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

1899 

Albert  Galloway  Keller,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 
Dissertation:     A   sociological    study    of   the    Iliad    and    Odyssey. 

(Published  as  follows:    Homeric  society:    a  sociological  study 

of  the  Iliad  and  Odyssey,  Longmans,  Green,  and  Company, 

New  York,  1902.) 
Professor  of  the  Science  of  Society,  Yale  College,  and  Instructor 

in  Anthropology,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  University. 


152- 


igoo 


John  Marshall  Gaines,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 

Dissertation:    Exchange  media:    their  rapidity  of  circulation  and 

other  allied  quantities. 
Bronxville,  N.  Y. 

Edward  Kramer  Nicholson,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 
Dissertation:    Assessment  in  the  United  States. 
Lawyer,  Bridgeport,  Conn. 

Philip  Patterson  Wells,  B.A.  Yale  University  1889. 
Dissertation:    Constitutional  changes  and  political  opinion  in  the 

Eastern  States,  1776-1889. 
Lawyer,  Metropolitan  Bank  Building,  Washington,  D.  C. 


John  Pease  Norton,  B.A.  Yale  University  1899.  ' 

Dissertation:  Contributions  to  the  theory  of  money  and  credit, 
with  some  statistical  investigation  of  the  weekly  statements 
of  the  New  York  Associated  Banks  covering  twenty-two 
years.  (Published  for  the  Department  of  Social  Science, 
Yale  University,  as  follows:  Statistical  studies  in  the  New 
York  money-market,  preceded  by  a  brief  analysis  under  the 
theory  of  money  and  credit,  with  statistical  tables,  diagrams 
and  folding  chart.  The  Macmillan  Company,  New  York,  1902.) 
Economic  Research  Work,  460  Ocean  Ave.,  West  Haven,  Conn. 

Alexander  Pratt,  Jr.,  B.A.  Trinity  College  1898. 
Dissertation:    Doctrine  of  social  resistance. 
Independent  Scientific  Work,   1221   Stratford  Ave.,   Bridgeport, 
Conn. 

Peter  Roberts,  B.D.  Yale  University  1886. 

Dissertation:  The  anthracite  coal  industry.  (Published  as  fol- 
lows: The  anthracite  coal  industry:  A  study  of  the  economic 
conditions  and  relations  of  the  cooperative  forces  in  the 
development  of  the  anthracite  coal  industry  of  Pennsylvania, 
with  introduction  by  W.  G.  Sumner,  The  Macmillan  Company, 
New  York,  1901.) 

Secretary,  of  Industrial  Department,  International  Committee, 
Y.  M.  C.  A.,  Mt.  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


1 


—153— 

Clifford    Thornc,    B.A.    Boston    University    1896,    LL.B.    State 

University  of  lovi^a  1899,  M.A.  1899. 
Dissertation:  Principle  versus  precedent. 
Chairman,    Iowa    State    Board    of    Railroad    Comissioners,    Des 

Moines,  la.,  and  President,  National  Association  of  Railway 

Commissioners. 

igo2 
jMaurice  Henry  Robinson,  B.L.  Dartmouth  College  1890,  M.A. 

1897. 

Dissertation:  The  consolidation  of  industry  in  the  United  States. 
[Professor  of  Industry  and  Transportation,  University  of 
Illinois,  Urbana,  111. 

1903 

James  Elbert  Cutler,  B.A.  University  of  Colorado  1900. 

Dissertation:  Lynch-law.  An  investigation  into  the  history  of 
lynching  in  the  United  States.  (Published  by  Longmans, 
Green,  and  Company,  New  York,  1905.) 

Professor  of  Sociology,  Western  Reserve  University,  Cleve- 
land, O. 

1904 

Peter  Tracy  Dondlinger,  B.A.  National  Normal  University  1899, 
LL.B.  Yale  University  1910. 

Dissertation:  The  wheat  industry.  (Published  as  follows:  The 
book  of  wheat:  an  economic  history  and  practical  manual  of 
the  wheat  industry,  Orange,  Judd  Company,  New  York,  1908.) 

Attorney  and  Counsellor-at-law,  Stamford,  Conn, 

Fred  Rogers  Fairchild,  B.A.  Doane  College  1898. 

Dissertation:  The  factory  legislation  of  the  State  of  New  York. 
(Published  in  Publications  of  American  Economic  Associa- 
tion, 3d  series.  No.  4,  6:1-218.     New  York,  1905.) 

Professor  of  Political  Economy,  Yale  College. 

Edson  Newton  Tuckey,  B.A.  Hamlin  College   1893,  M.A.  Uni- 
versity of  Minnesota  1901. 
Dissertation:    Electric  railway  monopolies  of  America. 
Willard  Courts,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Masajiro  Yokoyama,   Doshisha   University   (Japan)    1896,   M.A. 

Yale  University  1901. 
Dissertation:    The  development  of  the  land  tax  in  Japan. 
Manager,  Bank  of  Japan,  Tokyo,  Japan. 


—154— 

1905 
George  Grant  MacCurdy,  B.A.  Harvard  University  1893,  M.A. 

1894. 
Dissertatiofi:    The  eolithic  problem;    evidences  of  a  rude  industry 
antedating    the    palaeolithic.      (Published    in    The    American 
Anthropologist,  New  Series,  7:425-479.     New  York,  1905.) 
Assistant    Professor    of    Archaeology,     Graduate    School,    and 
Curator  of  the  Anthropological  Collection,  Yale  University. 


1906 

Avard  Longlcy  Bishop,  B.A.  Acadia  University  1901,  B.A.  Yale 
University  1903,  M.A.  1904. 

Dissertation:  The  State  works  of  Pennsylvania.  (Published  in 
part  as  follows:  Corrupt  practices  connected  with  the  build- 
ing and  operation  of  the  State  works  of  Pennsylvania,  Yale 
Review,  15:391-411.  New  Haven,  1907;  The  State  works  of 
Pennsylvania,  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of 
Arts  and  Sciences,  13:149-297.     New  Haven,  1907.) 

Professor  of  Geography  and  Commerce,  Sheffield  Scientific 
School,  Yale  University. 

Chin-Tao  Chen,  M.S.  University  of  California  1902. 
Dissertation:    Societary  circulation. 
Director  of  Education,  Canton,  China. 

Alba   M.   Edwards,   B.A.   University   of   Oklahoma    1903,    M.A. 

Yale  University  1905. 
Dissertation:    The  labor  legislation  of  Connecticut.     (Published 

in  Publications  of  American  Economic  Association,  3d  series. 

No.  3,  8:1-322.     New  York,  1907.) 
Special  Agent,  Bureau  of  the  Census,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Lester  William  Zartman,  B.A.  University  of  Illinois  1903. 
Dissertation:      The    investments    of    life    insurance     companies. 
(Published  by  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1906.) 
Instructor  in  Insurance  and  Political   Economy,  Yale   College. 
Died  1909. 

1908 

John   Bauer,   B.A.    Doane   College    1904,    B.A.   Yale   University 

1906. 
Dissertation:    Economic  and  social  conditions  of  the  Italians  in 
the  United  States. 


—155— 

Assistant  Professor  of  Economics,  Cornell  University,  Ithaca, 
N.  Y. 

Theodore  Harding  Boggs,  B.A.  Acadia  University  1902,  B.A. 
Yale  University  1905,  M.A.  1906. 

Dissertation:  The  influence  exerted  by  the  United  Empire  Loyal- 
ists on  the  life  and  politics  of  Nova  Scotia  and  New 
Brunswick. 

Assistant  Professor  of  Economics,  Dartmouth  College,  Hanover, 
N.  H. 

John  Ker  Towles,  B.S.  Tulane  University  1902,  M.S.  1904. 
Dissertation:    Factory  legislation   of  Rhode   Island.     (Published 

in  Publications  of  American  Economic  Association,  3d  series, 

No.  3,  9:1-119.    Princeton,  1908.) 
Professor  of  Commerce,  University  of  Cincinnati,  Cincinnati,  O. 


1909 

Harry  Gunnison  Brown,  B.A.  Williams  College  1904. 

Dissertation:  Some  phases  of  railroad  combination.  (Published 
in  part  as  follows:  The  basis  of  rate-making  as  affected  by 
competition  versus  combination  of  railroads,  Yale  Review,  16: 
79-86.  New  Haven,  1907-8;  Competitive  and  monopolistic 
price-making,  Quarterly  Journal  of  Economics,  22:628-639. 
Boston,  1907-8.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Economics,  University  of  Missouri, 
Columbia,  Mo. 

Henry  Pratt  Fairchild,  B.A.  Doane  College  1900. 

Dissertation:  Greek  immigration  to  the  United  States.  (Pub- 
lished by  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven,  191 1;  also  in 
part  as  follows:  The  causes  of  immigration  from  Greece, 
Yale  Review,  18:176-196.     New  Haven,  1909-1910.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  the  Science  of  Society,  Yale  College,  and 
Instructor  in  Anthropology,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale 
University. 

Arthur  Sargent  Field,  B.A.  Dartmouth  College  1902,  M.A.  1903. 
Dissertation:    The   child  labor  and  factory  law  of  New  Jersey. 

(Published  as  follows:   The  child  labor  policy  of  New  Jersey, 

Publications    of   American    Economic   Association,    3d   series, 

No.  3,  11:1-229.    Cambridge,  1910.) 
Economist,  with   Bureau   of  Railway   Economics,  Washington, 

D.  C. 


-156- 

William  Gilbert  Lathrop,  B.A.  Brown  University  1889,  B.D.  Yale 
University  1892,  M.A.  1905. 

Dissertation:  The  brass  industry  of  Connecticut.  (Published 
privately  as  follows:  The  brass  industry  in  Connecticut:  A 
study  of  the  origin  and  the  development  of  the  brass  indus- 
try in  the  Naugatuck  Valley.  Printed  by  The  Price,  Lee,  and 
Adkins  Company,  New  Haven,  1909.) 

Pastor,  Congregational  Church,  Shelton,  Conn. 

1910 

Ernest  Frank   McGregor,   B.A.   University   of   Minnesota   1901, 

B.D.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A.  1906. 
Dissertaticrn:    Marriage  and  the  family  among  the  early  Hebrews^ 
Pastor,  First  Congregational  Church,  Norwalk,  Conn. 

Julius  Hall  Parmelee,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A.  1906. 

Dissertation:  American  federal  statistics.  (Published  in  part  as 
follows:  The  statistical  work  of  the  Federal  Government,  Yale 
Review,  19:  pt.  i,  289-303.  New  Haven,  1910;  pt.  2,  374-391; 
New  Haven,  191 1.) 

Statistician,  Bureau  of  Railway  Economics,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Senjiro  Takagi,  B.A.  Yale  University  1907,  M.A.  1908. 
Dissertation:    Some  phases  of  the  relation  between  interest  and 

wages. 
Teacher  of  English,  Keiogijuku  University,  Tokyo,  Japan. 

1911 

William   Smith   Culbertson,   B.A.    Emporia    College    1907,   B.A; 

Yale  University  1908. 
Dissertation:    An  essay  on  Alexander  Hamilton.     (Published  as 

follows:     Alexander    Hamilton:     an    essay,    Yale    University 

Press,  New  Haven,  191 1.) 
Lawyer,  firm  of  McLanahan,  Burton  &  Culbertson,  Washington, 

D.  C. 

Walter  Edv/ard   Lagerquist,   B.A.   Simpson   College   1903,   B.A. 

Yale  University  1905,  M.A.  1906, 
Dissertation:     Causes   and   effects   of  immigration   from   1815   to 

i860. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Economics  and  Commerce,  Northwestern 

University,  Evanston,  111. 


—157— 

Henry  Freeman  Walradt,  B.A.  Yale  University  1907,  M.A.  1908. 

Dissertation:  The  financial  history  of  Connecticut  from  1789  to 
1861.  (Published  in  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Acad- 
emy of  Arts  and  Sciences,  17:1-139.  Yale  University  Press, 
New  Haven,  1912.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  Economics  and  Sociology,  Ohio  State 
University,  Columbus,  O. 


1912 

Fred  Elmore  Lumley,  B.A.  Hiram  College  1905,  M.A.  McMaster 
University  1907,  B.D.  Yale  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  The  beginnings  of  Hebrew  industry:  a  sociological 
inquiry  into  the  character  and  development  of  the  self- 
maintenance  organization  among  early  Hebrews. 

Professor  of  Social  Sciences,  College  of  Missions,  Indianapolis, 
Ind. 

1913 

Ray  Bert  Westerfield,  B.A.  Ohio  Northern  University  1907,  M.A. 
1910,  M.A.  Yale  University  191 1. 

Dissertation:  Middlemen  in  English  business,  1660-1760.  (Pub- 
lished in  Transactions  of  the  Connecticut  Academy  of  Arts 
and  Sciences,  19:111-445.  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven, 
1915.) 

Instructor  in  Political  Economy,  Yale  College. 


1914 

Charles  Wesley  Coulter,  B.A.  University  of  Toronto  1908,  B.D. 
1910,  M.A.  Yale  University  1910. 

Dissertation:  The  beginnings  of  religion  among  the  early 
Hebrews:    a  sociological  inquiry. 

Instructor  in  Sociology,  Western  Reserve  University,  Cleve- 
land, O. 

John   Lee   Maddox,   B.A.   Denison   University   1904,   B.D.   Yale 

University  1908,  M.A.  1909. 
Dissertation:    The  medicine  man:    a  sociological  inquiry  into  the 

character  and  evolution  of  Shamanism. 
Ch?\plain,  United  States  Army,  17th  Infantry,  Eagle  Pass,  Texas. 


—158— 

Percy  Wells  Bidwell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1910,  M.A.  1912. 
Dissertation:    Rural  economy  in  New  England  at  the  beginning 

of  the  nineteenth  century. 
Instructor    in     Economics,     Sheffield     Scientific     School,     Yale 

University. 

Loomis  Havemeyer,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1910,  M.A.  1912. 
Dissertation:    The  drama  of  savage  peoples. 

Instructor  in  Geography  and  Anthropology,  Sheffield  Scientific 
School,  Yale  University. 

ALPHABETICAL  LIST 


(*  indicates  that  graduate  is  deceased.) 

Bailey,  1896 

MacCurdy,  1905 

Bauer,  1908 

McGregor,  1910 

Bidwell,  1915 

McVey,  1895 

Bishop,  1906 

Maddox,  1914 

Boggs,  1908 

*Moore,  1890 

Brown,  1909 

Nicholson,  1900 

Chen,  1906 

Norton,  1901 

Claghorn,  1896 

Olmsted,  1898 

Coulter,  1914 

Parmelee,  1910 

Culbertson,  191 1 

Peterson,  1897 

Cutler,  1903 

Pratt,  1901 

Dondlinger,   1904 

Roberts,  1901 

Du  Buy,   1894 

Robinson,  1902 

Dwight,  1895 

Takagi,  1910 

Edwards,  1906 

Thorne,  1901 

Fairchild,  F.  R.,  1904 

Towles,  1908 

Fairchild,  H.  P.,  1909 

Tuckey,  1904 

Field,  1909 

Tuttle,  1897 

Fisher,  1891 

Walradt,  191 1 

Gaines,  1900 

Wells,  1900 

Graham,  1895 

Westerfield,  1913 

Havemeyer,  1915 

Whittelsey,  1898 

Ichihara,  1892 

Wilder,  1892 

Keller,  1899 

Wood,  1877 

Lagerquist,  191 1 

Yokoyama,  1904 

Lathrop,  1909 

*Zartman,  1906 

Lumley,  1912 

IN   THE   DEPARTMENT  OF   HISTORY 


1882 

Clarence   Winthrop   Bowen,   B.A.   Yale   University    1873,    M.A. 

1876. 
Dissertation:     On  the  boundaries  of  Connecticut.     (Published  as 

follows:   The  boundary  disputes  of  Connecticut,  J,  R.  Osgood 

and  Company,  Boston,  1882.) 
5  East  63d  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


1892 

Edward  Gaylord  Bourne,  B.A.  Yale  University  1883. 

Dissertation:  The  demarcation  line  of  Pope  Alexander  VI.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  The  history  and  determination  of  the  line 
of  demarcation  established  by  Pope  Alexander  VI,  between 
the  Spanish  and  Portuguese  fields  of  discovery  and  coloniza- 
tion, Annual  Report  of  the  American  Historical  Association, 
1891:101-130.    Washington,  1892.) 

Professor  of  History,  Yale  College. 

Died  1908. 

Francis  Wayland   Shepardson,   B.A.    Denison   University   1882, 

M.A.  1886,  B.A.  Brown  University  1883. 
Dissertation:     A  study  of  some  of  the  Scotch-Irish  settlements 

in  the  American  colonies. 
Associate     Professor     of     History,     University     of     Chicago, 

Chicago,  111. 

1894 

Sara    Bulkley    Rogers,    B.A.    Columbia    University    1889,    M.A. 

Cornell  University  1891. 
Dissertation:     The   rise   of   civil    government   and   federation   in 

early  New  England. 
Died  1907. 


— i6o — 

1895 

Maria  Louise  Greene,  B.A.  Vassar  College  1891,  M.Pd.  New 
York  University  1909. 

Dissertation:  Church  and  state  in  Connecticut,  to  1818.  (Pub- 
lished as  follows:  The  development  of  religious  liberty  in 
Connecticut,  Houghton,  Mifflin,  and  Company,  Boston,  1905.) 

25  Clift  St.,  Mystic,  Conn. 


1896 

James  Lee  Mitchell,  B.A.  Harvard  University  1884. 
Dissertation:     The  growth   of  the   spirit  of  toleration   from   the 

reformation  to  the  French  revolution. 
Pastor,  Second  Congregational  Church,  Attleboro,  Mass. 

Sarah  Margaret  Sherrick,  Ph.B.  Otterbein  University  1889. 
Dissertation:     The  despotism  of  Richard  II. 

Professor  of  English  Literature,  Otterbein  University,  Wester- 
ville,  O. 


1897 

Walter  Irenaeus  Lowe,  B.A.  Yale  University  1890. 

Dissertation:  A  history  of  the  events  which  led  to  the  assump- 
tion of  the  title  of  King  of  France  by  Edward  III  of  England. 
(Published,  in  abridged  form,  as  follows:  The  considerations 
which  induced  Edward  III  to  assume  the  title,  King  of 
France,  Annual  Report  of  the  American  Historical  Associa- 
tion,   1900;     1 :  535-583.     Washington,    1901.) 

Professor  of  History  and  Political  Science,  Wells  College, 
Aurora,  N.  Y. 

Frank  Strong,  B.A.  Yale  University  1884,  M.A.  1893. 

Dissertation:  Cromwell's  colonial  and  foreign  policy,  with  spe- 
cial reference  to  the  West  Indies  expedition  of  1654-55. 
(Incorporated  in  the  following  papers:  A  forgotten  danger  to 
the  New  England  colonies,  Annual  Report  of  the  American 
Historical  Association,  1898:77-94.  Washington,  1899;  The 
causes  of  Cromwell's  West  Indian  expedition,  American 
Historical  Review,  4:228-245.     New  York,  1899.) 

Chancellor,  University  of  Kansas,  Lawrence,  Kan. 


— i6i— 

George    Stedman    Sumner,    B.A.    Pomona    College    1894,    B.A. 

Yale  University  1895. 
Dissertation:     The  Cromwellian  transportation  of  the  Irish. 
Professor  of  Economics  and  Sociology,  Pomona  College,  Clare- 

mont,  Cal. 

1898 

Albert  Beebe  White,  B.A.  Yale  University  1893. 

Dissertation:     The  first  eight  years  of  Henry  Ill's  reign,   1216- 

1224. 
Professor    of   History,    University    of    Minnesota,    Minneapolis, 

Minn. 

1899 

Edward  Day  Collins,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  The  Royal  African  Company:  a  study  of  the  Eng- 
lish trade  to  western  Africa  under  chartered  companies  from 
1585  to  1750.  (Published  as  follows:  Studies  in  the  colonial 
policy  of  England,  1672-1680:  the  plantations,  the  Royal 
African  Company,  and  the  slave  trade,  Annual  Report  of  the 
American  Historical  Association,  1900,  1:139-192.  Wash- 
ington, 1901.) 

Professor,  and  Head  of  the  Department,  of  Pedagogy,  Middle- 
bury  College,  Middlebury,  Vt. 

Clive  Day,  B.A.  Yale  University  1892. 

Dissertation:     Industrial    organization    and    regulations    in    the 

American  colonies. 
Professor  of  Economic  History,  Yale  College. 

Arthur  Power  Lord,  B.A.  Yale  University  1893. 

Dissertation:  Rise  of  Cardinal  Richelieu  during  the  regency  of 
Marie  de  Medicis.  (Published  as  follows:  The  regency  of 
Marie  de  Medicis:  a  study  of  French  history  from  1610  to 
1616,  Henry  Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1903.) 

62  Cedar  St.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Walter  Franklin  Prince,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896,  B.D.  Drew 

Theological  Seminary  1897. 
Dissertation:     Studies  in  the  history  of  crime  and  punishment  in 
the  colonial  period.     (Published  in  part  in  Annual  Report  of 


1 62 — 

the  American  Historical  Association,  as  follows:    An  exami-' 
nation  of  Peters's  "Blue  laws",  1898:95-138.    Washington,  1899; 
The  first  criminal  code  of  Virginia,   1899:   1:309-363.     Wash- 
ington, 1900.) 
San  Bernardino,  Cal.  ( 

igoo 

Karl  Frederick  Geiser,  Ph.B.  Upper  Iowa  University  1893.  ^ 
Dissertation:  Indented  servants  in  the  colony  and  common- 
wealth of  Pennsylvania.  (Published  as  follows:  Redemp- 
tioners  and  indentured  servants  in  the  colony  and  common- 
wealth of  Pennsylvania,  Supplement  to  the  Yale  Review,  Vol. 
10,  No.  2,  The  Tuttle,  Morehouse  &  Taylor  Company,  New 
Haven,  1901.) 
Professor  of  Political  Science,  Oberlin  College,  Oberlin,  O.       . 

Agnes  Hunt,  B.A.  Smith  College  1897. 

Dissertation:  The  provincial  committees  of  safety  of  the  Ameri- 
can revolution.  (Published  from  income  of  Francis  G.  Butler 
publication  fund,  Western  Reserve  University,  Press  of  Winn 
and  Judson,  Cleveland,  1904.) 

Associate  Professor  of  History,  Smith  College,  Northampton, 
Mass. 

Paul  Skeels  Peirce,  Ph.B.  Cornell  University  1897. 

Dissertation:  The  Freedmen's  bureau.  (Published  as  follows:. 
The  Freedmen's  bureau:  a  chapter  in  the  history  of  recon- 
struction. Studies  in  Sociology,  Economics,  Politics,  and  His- 
tory, Vol.  3,  No.  I,  State  University  of  Iowa,  The  University 
Press,  Iowa  City,  1904.) 

Professor  of  Political  Economy  and  Sociology,  State  University 
of  Iowa,  Iowa  City,  la. 

Asa  Currier  Tilton,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896.  1 

Dissertation:     The  king  and  the  boroughs  in  century  XIII.     A 

study  in  English  municipal  history. 
Chief  Assistant,  Division  of  Bibliography,  Library  of  Congress, 

Washington,  D.  C. 

1901 

Ernest  Hickok  Baldwin,  B.A.  Yale  University  1891,  M.A.  1897. 

Dissertation:     Joseph    Galloway — A    biography.        (Published   as 

follows:    Joseph    Galloway,   the    loyalist   politician,    Pennsyl- 


— 163— 

vania  Magazine  of  History  and  Biography,  26:  161-191,  289- 
321,  417-442.     Philadelphia,  1902.     Reprint  as  separate  volume, 
Philadelphia,  1902.) 
Principal,  The  Baldwin  School,  Saranac  Lake,  N.  Y. 

Silas  Wright  Geis,  B.L.  University  of  California  1898. 
■Dissertation:     The  colonial  agent  in  England. 

Mary  Cornwall  Hewitt  (Mrs.  Sydney  K.  Mitchell),  B.A.  Smith 

College  1897. 
Dissertation:     The   political   philosophy   of  the   American   revo- 
lution. 
273  Norton  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

Jessie  May  Law,  B.A.  University  of  Nebraska  1894. 

Dissertation:     Cromwell's  major  generals. 

Head  of  History  Department,  Central  High  School,  Springfield, 

Mass. 

Eugene  Irving  McCormac,  B.S.  Upper  Iowa  University  1896. 

Dissertation:  White  servitude  in  Maryland.  (Published  as  fol- 
lows: White  servitude  in  Maryland,  1639-1820,  Johns  Hop- 
kins University  Studies  in  Historical  and  Political  Science, 
Series  22,  No.  3-4.     Johns  Hopkins  Press,  Baltimore,  1904-) 

Assistant  Professor  of  American  History,  University  of  Cali- 
fornia, Berkeley,  Cal. 


1902 

Kan-Ichi  Asakawa,   B.L.   Waseda   College    (Japan)    1895,   B.L. 

Dartmouth  College  1899. 
Dissertation:     The  reform  of  645 — an  introduction  to  the  study 

of  the  origin  of  feudalism  in  Japan.     (Published  as  follows: 

The  early  institutional  life  of  Japan:  a  study  in  the  reform 

of  645  A.  D.,  Tokyo,  Shueisha,  1903.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  Japanese   Civilization,   Graduate   School, 

and  Curator  of  the  Japanese  and   Chinese   Collections,   Yale 

University. 

Robert  Kimball  Richardson,   B.A.  Yale  University   1898,   M.A. 

Columbia  University  1899. 
Dissertation:     The  pontificate  of  Anthony  Bek,  Bishop  of  Dur- 
ham, 1283-1311.     (Published  in  revised  form,  as  follows:   The 


— 164 — 

bishopric    of    Durham    under    Anthony    Bek,    1283    to    131 1, 
Archaeologia    Aeliana,    3d     series,    9:1-141.     Newcastle-upon- 
Tyne,  1913-) 
Professor  of  History,  Beloit  College,  Beloit,  Wis. 

Chalfant  Robinson,  B.L.  University  of  Cincinnati  1893. 

Dissertation:  The  reciprocity  treaty  with  Canada  in  1854. 
(Incorporated  in,  A  history  of  two  reciprocity  treaties:  the 
treaty  with  Canada  in  1854;  the  treaty  with  the  Hawaiian 
Islands  in  1876;  with  a  chapter  on  the  treaty-making  power 
of  the  House  of  Representatives,  The  Tuttle,  Morehouse  & 
Taylor  Company,  New  Haven,  1904.  Reprinted,  under  the 
title.  History  of  the  reciprocity  treaty  of  1854  with  Canada, 
by  the  United  States  Government,  as  Senate  Document  17, 
1st  Session,  626.  Congress.     Washington,  1911.) 

Visiting  Professor  of  Mediaeval  History,  Princeton  Univer- 
sity, Princeton,  N.  J. 

1903 

Harvey  Hugo  Guy,  B.D.  Drake  University  1893,  B.A.  1895,  M.A. 

1899,  M.A.  Yale  University  1902. 
Dissertation:     A  study  in  the  history  of  the  rise  of  the  English 

episcopacy. 
Professor  of  the   History  and   Philosophy  of  Religion,   Pacific 

Theological  Seminary,  Berkeley,  Cal. 

William  Spence  Robertson,  B.L.  University  of  Wisconsin  1899, 
Dissertation:  Francisco  de  Miranda  and  the  revolutionizing  oi 
Spanish  America.  (Published,  as  one  of  the  Herbert  Baxtei 
Adams  prize  essays,  in  Annual  Report  of  the  American  His- 
torical Association,  1907,  1:189-539.  Washington,  1908.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  History,  University  of  Illinois,  Urbana, 
111. 

1904 

Lucy  Elizabeth  Textor,  Ph.B.  University  of  Michigan  1894,  M.A 
Leland  Stanford,  Jr.,  University  1895. 

Dissertation:  A  colony  of  emigres  in  Canada,  1798-1816.  (Pub- 
lished as  University  of  Toronto  Studies,  History  and  Eco< 
nomics,  Vol.  3,  No.  i.  The  University  Library,  Toronto,  1905.)" 

Associate  Professor  of  History,  Vassar  College,  Poughkeepsie, 
N.  Y. 


-i65- 

Brownlee   Robertson  Ward,   B.A.   Yale   University   1888,   Ph.B. 

Yale  University  1889,  M.D.  Columbia  University  1892. 
Dissertatian:     Mirabeau. 
390  Prospect  St.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 


1905 

Annie  Heloise  Abel,  B.A.  Kansas  University  1898. 

Dissertation:  The  history  of  events  that  resulted  in  Indian  con- 
solidation west  of  the  Mississippi  River.  (Published  as  fol- 
lows: The  history  of  events  resulting  in  Indian  consolidation 
west  of  the  Mississippi,  Annual  Report  of  the  American 
Historical   Association,    1906,    i :  233-450.     Washington,    1908.) 

Associate  Professor  of  History,  Smith  College,  Northampton, 
Mass. 

Hubert  Hilary  Suffren  Aimes,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1897. 

Dissertation:  The  Cuban  slave  trade:  a  study  in  the  history  of 
Cuba.  (Published  as  follows:  A  history  of  slavery  in  Cuba, 
151 1   to   1868,   G.   P.   Putnam's   Sons,   New  York,    1907.) 

Associate  Professor  of  History  and  Economics,  University  of 
the  South,  Sewanee, -Tenn. 

Curtis  Howe  Walker,  B.A.  Yale  University  1899. 
Dissertation:     A  list  of  sheriffs  for  England,  1066-1154. 
Assistant  Professor  of  History,  University  of  Chicago,  Chicago, 
111. 

1906 

Conrad   Albin   Peterson,    B.A.   Augustana    College    1901,    M.A. 

Yale  University  1903. 
Dissertation:     Studies    in    Swedish    history    prior    to    1319,    with 

special  reference  to  the  position  of  the  peasantry. 
Professor   of   History  and   Social   Science,   Gustavus   Adolphus 

College,  St.  Peter,  Minn. 

Herman  Justus  Thorstenberg,  B.A.  Bethany  College  1902,  B.A. 

Yale  University  1903,  M.A.  1904. 
Dissertation:     Chapters  in  the  history  of  the  Danish  West  India 

Islands. 
Assistant    Professor   of   History,    Carleton    College,    Northfield, 

Minn. 


— 166— 

1907 

Luther  Anderson,   B.A.   Bethany   College   (Kansas)    1899,   B.A. 

Yale  University  1903,  M.A.  1904.  j 

Dissertation:     A  history  of  the  Salzburgers  in  Georgia.  ^ 

Head  of  the  Department  of  History  and  Economics,  Springfield 
High  School  of  Commerce,  Springfield,  Mass. 

Gilbert  Giddings  Benjamin,  Ph.B.  Syracuse  University  1899, 
M.A.  Yale  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  The  Germans  in  Texas.  (Published  as  follows: 
The  Germans  in  Texas:  a  study  in  immigration.  Publications 
of  the  University  of  Pennsylvania,  Americana  Germanica, 
New  Series,  D.  Appleton  and  Company,  New  York,  1909.) 

Professor  of  European  History,  State  University  of  Iowa,  Iowa 
City,  la. 

Sydney  Knox  Mitchell,  B.A.  Yale  University  1898.  | 

Dissertation:     Taxation  under  John   and   Henry   III.     (Incorpo- 
rated in  Studies  in  Taxation  under  John  and  Henry  III,  Yale 
Historical  Publications,  Series  I,  Studies,  vol.  2,  Yale  Univer- 
sity Press,  New  Haven,  1914.) 
Assistant  Professor  of  History,  Yale  College. 

William  Drown  Rorer,  B.A.  Yale  University  1891. 

Dissertation:     Spanish  Isthmian  projects  and  the  American  canal. 

Vice-President,  Berkeley  Preparatory  School,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

1908 

David  William  Brandelle,  B.A.  Augustana  College  1899,  M.A. 

University  of  Minnesota  1902. 
Dissertation:     The  history  of  the  King's  Council  in  Sweden  from 

1306  to  1390. 
Knowlton  Professor  of  History  and  Economics,  Bates  College, 

Lewiston,  Me. 
Died  1911. 

Wallace  Notestein,  B.A.  College  of  Wooster  1900,  M.A.  Yale 
University  1903. 

Dissertation:  A  history  of  English  witchcraft  from  1558  to  1718. 
(Published  as  follows:  A  history  of  witchcraft  in  England 
from  1558  to  1718,  one  of  the  Herbert  Baxter  Adams  prize 
essays,  American  Historical  Association,  Washington,   191 1.) 

Associate  Professor  of  History,  University  of  Minnesota,  Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

I 


— 167 — 

Ethel  Zivley  Rather  (Mrs.  Ernest  J.  Villavaso),  B.A.  University 

of  Texas  1902,  M.A.  1903. 
Dissertation:     Recognition    of    the    republic    of    Texas    by    the 

United   States.     (Published   in   The    Quarterly   of   the   Texas 

State     Historical     Association,     13:155-256.       Austin,     1910; 

reprinted  as   Bulletin   of  the   University   of  Texas,   No.    165, 

Humanistic   series,   No.   11,   Austin,   191 1.) 
3105  Duval  St.,  Austin,  Texas. 


1909 

Kenneth  Scott  Latourette,  B.S.  McMinnville  College  1904,  B.A. 

Yale  University  1906,  M.A.  1907. 
Dissertation:     The  history  of  early  relations  between  the  United 

States  and  China,  1784-1844. 
Assistant  Professor  of  History,  Reed  College,  Portland,  Ore. 

Henry  Barrett  Learned,  B.A.  Harvard  University  1890,  M.A. 
1897,  M.A.  University  of  Chicago  1894. 

Dissertation:  The  President's  cabinet:  studies  in  the  history  of 
an  American  institution.  (In  part  incorporated  in  his  pub- 
lished volume,  The  President's  cabinet:  Studies  in  the  origin, 
formation,  and  structure  of  an  American  institution,  Yale 
University  Press,  New  Haven,  1912.) 

2123  Bancroft  Place,  N.W.,  Washington,  D.  C. 

George  Edward  Woodbine,  B.A.  Yale  University  1903. 

Dissertation:  Three  thirteenth  century  law  tracts:  Fet  asaver. 
Judicium  essoniorum,  Modus  componendi  brevia.  (Published, 
with  additions,  as  follows:  Four  thirteenth  century  law  tracts, 
Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven,  Henry  Frowde,  London, 
Oxford  University  Press,  1910.) 

Yale  P.  O.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 


1910 

Henry  Wells  Lawrence,  Jr.,  B.A.  Yale  University   1906,   M.A. 

1907. 
Dissertation:     The  political   activity  of  the    Parlement   of   Paris 

and  its  Procureur  General,  1715-1720. 
Instructor  in  History,  and  Associate  Director  of  the  Summer 

Session,  Dartmouth  College,  Hanover,  N.  H. 


— 168— 

Vergil  Vivian  Phelps,  Ph.B.  University  of  Chicago  1901,  Ph.M. 
1903,  B.D.  1907. 

Dissertation:  The  pastor  and  teacher,  with  special  reference  to 
the  pastor  and  teacher  in  the  New  England  churches.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  as  follows:  The  pastor  and  teacher  in  New 
England,  Harvard  Theological  Review,  388-399.  Cambridge, 
1911.) 

Executive  Secretary,  University  of  Illinois,  Urbana,  111. 

Helen  Louise  Young,  B.A.  Cornell  University  1900. 
Dissertation:    A  study  of  the  constitutional  convention  of  New 

York  State  in  1821. 
Assistant  Professor  of  History,  Hunter  College  of  City  of  New 

York,  New  York,  N.  Y. 


191Z 

Bessie  Dean  Cooper,  Ph.B.  Cornell  University  1897. 
Dissertation:     France    under    Richelieu,    seen    from    the    English 

embassy. 
Instructor  in   History,   Hunter   College  of  City  of  New  York, 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

Frank  Joseph  Klingberg,  B.A.  University  of  Kansas  1907,  M.A. 

1908,  M.A.  Yale  University  1909. 
Dissertation:     The    parliamentary    history    of    the    abolition    of 

slavery  and  the  slave  trade  in  the  British  colonies. 
Professor  of  Modern  European  History,  University  of  Southern 

California,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 

Charles  Seymour,  B.A.  Cambridge  University  (England)  1904, 
M.A.  1909,  B.A.  Yale  University  1908. 

Dissertation:  The  development  of  democracy  in  England  since 
1832,  as  shown  in  the  reform  of  the  representative  system. 
(Incorporated  in  his  book,  Electoral  reform  in  England  and 
Wales;  The  development  and  operation  of  the  parliamentary 
franchise,  1832-1855,  Yale  Historical  Publications,  Series  I, 
Studies,  vol.  3,  Yale  University  Press,  New  Haven,  1915.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  History,  Yale  College. 


igi2 

James   Fulton   Ferguson,    B.A.    Monmouth    College    1903,    B.A. 
Yale  University  1906,  M.A.  1907. 


— 169 — 

Dissertation:     The  Edict  of  Diocletian,  edited  with  an  introduc- 
tion, and  with  a  commentary  on  chapters  1-5. 
Associate  Professor  of  History  and  Latin,  Bryn  Mawr  College, 
Bryn  Mawr,  Pa. 

Stewart  Lea  Mims,  B.A.  Yale  University  1904. 

Dissertation:  Colbert's  West  Indian  policy.  (Published  as  Yale 
Historical  Publications,  Series  I,  Studies,  vol.  i,  Yale  Uni- 
versity Press,  New  Haven,  1912.) 

Assistant  Professor  of  History,  Yale  College. 


1913 

Ralph  Volney  Harlow,  B.A.  Yale  University  1909,  M.A.  191 1. 
Dissertation:     The   development  of  the  standing-committee  sys- 
tem in  the  colonial  and  state  legislatures,   1750-1790. 
Instructor  in  History,  Simmons  College,  Boston,  Mass. 

Charles   Chilton   Pearson,   B.A.    Richmond    College    1899,    M.A. 

1904. 
Dissertation:     Readjuster  movement  in  Virginia. 
Farnham,  Va. 

William  Alexander  Robinson,  B.A.  Bowdoin  College  1907,  M.A. 

University  of  Wisconsin  1910. 
Dissertation:     New  England  republicanism,  1797-1815. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Political  Science,  Washington  University, 
St.  Louis,  Mo. 


1914 

Frank  Wesley  Pitman,  Ph.B.  Yale  University  1904,  M.A.  1906. 

Dissertation:  The  development  of  the  British  West  Indies, 
1 700- 1 760. 

Instructor  in  History,  Sheffield  Scientific  School,  Yale  Univer- 
sity. 

Philip  Barrows  Whitehead,  B.A.  Beloit  College  1906,  M.A.  Yale 

University  1908,  B.D.  1910. 
Dissertation:    The  conversion  of  pagan  buildings  in  the  city  of 

Rome  into  Christian  churches. 
Janesville,  Wis. 


— 170 — 

Mary  Gertrude  Young,  B.A.  Cornell  University  1898,  M.A.  Uni- 
versity of  Wisconsin  1908. 
Dissertation:     Management  of  the  Whig  party  under  Sir  Robert 

Walpole,  1 715-1742. 
Professor  of  History,  Oxford  College  for  Women,  Oxford,  O. 


ALPHABETICAL  LIST 
(*  indicates  that  the  graduate  is  deceased.) 


Abel,  1905 

Aimes,  1905 

Anderson,  1907 

Asakawa,  1902 

Baldwin,  1901 

Benjamin,  1907 
♦Bourne,  1892 

Bowen,  1882 
♦Brandelle,  1908 

Collins,  1899 

Cooper,  191 1 

Day,  1899 

Ferguson,  1912 

Geis,  1901 

Geiser,  1900 

Green,  1895 

Guy,  1903 

Harlow,  1913 

Hewitt,  1901 

Hunt,  1900 

Klingberg,  1911 

Latourette,  1909 

Law,  1901 

Lawrence,  1910 

Learned,  1909 

Lord,  1899 

Lowe,  1897 

McCormac,  1901 

Mims,  1912 

Mitchell,  J.  L.,  1896 


Mitchell,  S.  K.,  1907 
Notestein,  1908 
Pearson,  1913 
Peirce,  1900 
Peterson,  1906 
Phelps,  1910 
Pitman,  1914 
Prince,  1899 
Rather,  1908 
Richardson,  1902 
Robertson,  1903 
Robinson,  C,  1902 
Robinson,  W.  A.,  1913 
♦Rogers,  1894 
Rorer,  1907 
Seymour,  191 1 
Shepardson,   1892 
Sherrick,  1896 
Strong,  1897 
Sumner,  1897 
Textor,  1904 
Thorstenberg,  1906 
Tilton,  1900 
Walker,  1905 
Ward,  1904 
White,  1898 
Whitehead,  1914 
Woodbine,  1909 
Young,  H.  L.,  1910 
Young,  M.  G.,  1914 


W 


IN  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  PHILOSOPHY 
AND  EDUCATION 


1874 

Moses  Stuart  Phelps,  B.A.  Yale  University  1869. 

Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 

Professor    of    Mental    and    Moral    Philosophy,    Smith    College, 

Northampton,  Mass. 
Died  1883. 

1884 

Thorstein  B.  Veblen,  B.A.  Carleton  College  1880. 

Dissertation:    The  ethical  grounds   of  a  doctrine  of  retribution. 

Lecturer  in  Economics,  University  of  Missouri,  Columbia,  Mo. 

1889 

Fritz  Jacobson,  B.A.  Augustana  College  1885. 

Dissertation:   A  sketch  of  the  development  of  speculative  thought 

in  Sweden. 
Clergyman,  490  Pacific  Street,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

William  Otterbein  Krohn,  B.A.  Leander  Clark  (Western)   Col- 
lege 1887,  M.D.  Northwestern  University  1905. 
Dissertation:    The  ethics  of  modern  pessimism. 
Physician,  Heyworth  Building,  Chicago,  111. 

William  Ward  McLane,  B.A.  Blackburn  University  1871,  M.A. 

1874. 
Dissertation:    The  evolution  of  religion.     (Published  as  follows: 

Evolution    in    religion.    Congregational    Sunday    School    and 

Publishing  Society,  Boston,  1892.) 
Clergyman,  North  Leominster,  Mass. 

Rikizo  Nakashima,  B.A.  Western  Reserve  University  1884,  B.D. 
Yale  University  1887. 

Dissertation:  Kant's  doctrine  of  the  "Thing-in-itself."  (Printed 
by  Price,  Lee,  and  Adkins  Company,  New  Haven,  1889.) 

Professor  of  Psychology,  Logic,  and  Ethics,  Imperial  Univer- 
sity, Tokyo,  Japan. 


—  172— 

Frank  Chamberlin  Porter,  B.A.  Beloit  College  1880,  B.D.  Yale 

University  1886. 
Dissertation:      The    doctrine    of    resurrection    in    pre-Christian 

Judaism. 
Winkley   Professor  of  Biblical   Theology,   School   of   Religion, 

Yale  University. 

1890 

Elias  Hershey  Sneath,  B.A.  Lebanon  Valley  College  1881,  B.D. 
Yale  University  1884. 

Dissertation:  A  critical  examination  of  Scottish  realism.  (Pub- 
lished in  part  in  his  book,  The  philosophy  of  Reid,  Henry 
Holt  and  Company,  New  York,  1892.) 

Professor  of  the  Philosophy  of  Religion  and  Religious  Educa- 
tion, School  of  Religion,  Yale  University. 


1891 

Herbert  Austin  Aikins,  B.A.  University  of  Toronto  1887. 

Dissertation:  Hume's  theory  of  causation.  (Published,  in  sub- 
stance, in  his  book,  The  philosophy  of  Hume,  Henry  Holt 
and  Company,  New  York,  1893.) 

Professor  of  Philosophy,  College  for  Women,  Western  Reserve 
University,  Cleveland,  O. 

James  Ten  Broeke,  B.A.  Middlebury  College  1884. 

Dissertation:    A  comparison  of  the  views  of  Hartmann  and  Lotze 

concerning  the  self-consciousness  of  the  absolute. 
Professor     of     Philosophy,     McMaster     University,     Toronto, 

Canada. 

1892 

Gerald  Hamilton  Beard,  B.A.  Yale  University  1887,  B.D.  1890. 
Dissertation:    The  doctrine  of  the  incarnation  in  the  light  of  the 

modern  philosophical  conception  of  God  and  the  human  soul. 
Clergyman,    Park    Street    Congregational    Church,    Bridgeport, 

Conn. 

Lars  Herman  Beck,  B.A.  Augustana  College  1885. 
Dissertation:    A   comparison   of  the   doctrines   of  reality  in   the 

philosophies  of  Lotze  and  Bostrom. 
Pastor,  Swedish  Lutheran  Church,  Kane,  Pa. 


^ 


—173— 

Kumato  Morita,  Doshisha  University  (Japan)  1879. 
Dissertation:    Lotze's  conception  of  the  soul  compared  with  that 

of  Buddhism. 
Professor  at  Doshisha  University,  Japan. 
Died  1899. 

1893 

Charles  Bemis  Bliss,  B.A.  Yale  University  1890,  B.D.  Hartford 

Theological  Seminary  1903. 
Dissertation:      Investigations     in     reaction-time     and     attention. 

(Published  in  Studies  from  the  Yale  Psychological  Laboratory, 

1:1-55.     New  Haven,  1893.) 
Pastor,  Congregational  Church,  Mclndoe  Falls,  Vt. 

Carl  August  Blomgren,  B.A.  Augustana  College  1885. 
Dissertation:    The  doctrine  of  substance,  as  held  by  Descartes, 

Spinoza,  and  Leibniz. 
Professor  of  Hebrew  and  Old  Testament  Exegesis,  Augustana 

College,  Rock  Island,  111. 

Edward  Franklin  Buchner,  B.A.  Leander  Clark  College  1889. 

Dissertatiofi:  A  study  of  Kant's  psychology  with  reference  to 
the  critical  philosophy.  (Published  by  The  New  Era  Print, 
Lancaster,  Pa.,  1897;  also  as  Monograph  Supplement  No.  4 
to  the  Psychological  Review,  The  Macmillan  Company,  New 
York,  1897.) 

Professor  of  Education  and  Director  of  the  College  Courses 
for  Teachers  and  the  Summer  Courses,  Johns  Hopkins  Uni- 
versity, Baltimore,  Md. 

Jeremiah  K.  Light,  B.A.  Franklin  and  Marshall  College  1889. 
Dissertation:     Kant's   influence   on   German  pedagogy.     (Printed 

by  Report  Publishing  Company,  Lebanon,  Pa.,  1893.) 
Principal,  Public  School  No.  23,  Jersey  City,  N.  J. 

Erwin  William  Runkle,  B.A.  Leander  Clark  College  1890. 
Dissertation:    The  phenomenalism  of  Berkeley. 
Professor     of     Psychology     and     Ethics,     Pennsylvania     State 
College,  State  College,  Pa. 

Edwin  Alonzo  Warfield,  B.A.  Western  Maryland  College  1882, 

B.D.  Yale  University  1890. 
Dissertation:     The    idea    of    God    in    the    seventeenth    century 

philosophy  on  the  Continent. 
Professor,    and    Head    of    Department,    of    English,    Western 

Maryland  College,  Westminster,  Md. 


—174— 

i894 

Joshua  Allen  Gilbert,  B.A.  Otterbein  University  1889. 

Dissertation:  Researches  on  the  mental  and  physical  develop- 
ment of  school  children.  (Published  in  Studies  from  the  Yale 
Psychological  Laboratory,  2:40-100.     New  Haven,  1894.) 

Physician,  and  Assistant  Professor  of  Clinical  Medicine,  State 
University  of  Oregon,  Eugene,  Ore. 

Victor   Harald   Hegstrom,   B.A.   Augustana   College   1890,   B.D. 

Augustana  Theological  Seminary  1905. 
Dissertation:     Schopenhauer   and   ancient    Hindu   philosophy:     a 

comparative  study  in  pessimism. 
Clergyman,  5400  Kimbark  Ave.,  Chicago,  111. 

William  James  Mutch,  B.A.  University  of  Wisconsin  1882,  B.L. 

1882,  B.D.  Yale  University  1885. 
Dissertation:    The  mental  states  of  the  Hebrew  prophets. 
Professor  of  Philosophy  and  Education,  Ripon  College,  Ripon, 
Wis. 

George  Samuel  Richards,  B.D.  Yale  University  1891. 
Dissertation:    Kant's   theory  of  ethics   examined  with  reference 

to  his  theory  of  knowledge  and  to  the  fundamental  principles 

in  the  moral  teaching  of  Jesus  Christ. 
Pastor,  First  Congregational  Church,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

1895 
William  Ivy  Cranford,  B.A.  Trinity  College  (N.  C.)   1891. 
Dissertation:    Historical  theories  of  perception. 
Professor    of    Philosophy    and    Psychology,    Trinity    College, 
Durham,  N.  C. 

John  Monroe  Moore,  B.A.  National  Normal  University  1887. 
Dissertation:    Studies  of  fatigue.     (Published  in  Studies  from  the 

Yale  Psychological  Laboratory,  3:68-95.     New  Haven,  1895.) 
Secretary    of    Home    Missions,    Methodist    Episcopal    Church, 

Nashville,  Tenn. 

William   Sacheus   Morgan,   Pontypool    College    (South   Wales) 

1889,  B.D.  Yale  University  1892. 
Dissertation:     Causation:     a    treatise    of    the    general    problem, 

together  with  a  detailed  exposition   and  criticism  of   Kant's 

Theory. 
Professor  of   Philosophy  and   Psychology  of   Religion,   Pacific 

Unitarian  School  for  the  Ministry,  Berkeley,  Cal. 


—175— 

Carl  Emil  Seashore,  B.A.  Gustavus  Adolphus  College  1891. 

Dissertation:  Measurements  of  illusions  and  hallucinations  in 
normal  life.  (Published  in  Studies  from  the  Yale  Psycho- 
logical Laboratory,  3:1-67.    New  Haven,  1895.) 

Professor  of  Psychology,  Head  of  Department  of  Philosophy 
and  Psychology,  and  Dean  of  the  Graduate  College,  University 
of  Iowa,  Iowa  City,  la. 

1896 

Anna  Alice  Cutler,  B.A.  Smith  College  1885,  M.A.  1889. 

Dissertation:  The  influence  of  aesthetical  considerations  upon 
Kant's  theory  of  knowledge.  (Published  in  part  as  follows: 
The  aesthetical  factors  in  Kant's  theory  of  knowledge, 
Kantstudien,  2:419-439.     Hamburg,  1898.) 

Professor  of  Philosophy,   Smith   College,   Northampton,   Mass. 

Henry  Davies,  B.D.  Yale  University  1888. 
Dissertation:  Origen's  theory  of  knowledge. 
Rector,  Christ  Church,  Easton,  Md. 

Theodate  Louise  Smith,  B.A.  Smith  College  1882,  M.A.  1884. 

Dissertation:  The  motor  element  in  memory.  (Published  as 
follows:  On  muscular  memory,  American  Journal  of 
Psychology,  7:453-490.     Worcester,  1896.) 

Lecturer,  and  Librarian  of  Children's  Institute,  Clark  Univer- 
sity, Worcester,  Mass. 

Died  1914. 

1897 

Gervase  Green,  B.A.  Yale  University  1894. 
Dissertation:    The  concepts  of  evolution  and  mechanism. 
Lawyer,  128  Broadway,  New  York,  N.  Y.  .       * 

Blanche  Zehring,  B.S.  Ohio  Wesleyan  University  1890. 
Dissertation:    The   dependence  of  the  concept  of  duty  on  faith 

in   God. 
309  East  Linden  Ave.,  Miamisburg,  O. 

1898 

Arthur  Ernest  Davies,  B.D.  Yale  University  1891. 

Dissertation:    A   critical  examination   of   Hume's  psychology  of 

knowledge. 
Professor  of  Philosophy,  Ohio  State  University,  Columbus,  O. 


— 176 — 

Warren  Estelle  Lloyd,  M.L.  University  of  California  1895. 

Dissertation:  The  concept  of  self.  (A  portion  published  as  fol- 
lows: Notes  on  a  case  of  spontaneous  somnambulism,  Journal- 
of  Abnormal  Psychology,  2:239-259.     Boston,  1907-1908.) 

Lecturer  on  Philosophy  of  Law,  and  Spanish  and  Mexican  Law, 
University  of  Southern  California,  Los  Angeles,  Cal.  ' 

Thomas  Calhoun  Stearns,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886,  M.A.  New 
York  University  1892.  i 

Dissertation:  An  epistemological  study  of  pre-sophistic  philos-1 
ophy.  I 

President,  New  England  Cereal  Company,  South  Norwalk,^ 
Conn. 

1899 

William  Milton  Hess,  B.A.  Yale  University  1896,  B.D.  1900. 
Dissertation:    A  critical  examination  of  the  free-will  controversy 

of  the  seventeenth  and  eighteenth  centuries. 
Pastor,  Trinity  Congregational  Church,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

William  Smythe  Johnson,  B.A.  Ouachita  Baptist  College  1892, 

M.A.  1895. 
Dissertation:     Researches   in   practice   and   habit.     (Published  in 

Studies    from    the    Yale    Psychological    Laboratory,    6:5i-i03.' 

New  Haven,  1898.) 
President,   Connell  State   School  of  Agriculture,  Helena,  Okla. 

Edward  Gridley  Kendall,  B.A.  Yale  University  1895. 
Dissertation:     The    place    of    experience    in    cognition:     a    thesis 

defended  against  the  claims  of  Kant. 
56  W.  Main  St.,  Lock  Haven,  Pa. 

Matataro  Matsumoto,  Imperial  University  of  Japan  1893. 
Dissertation:      Researches    on    acoustic    space.       (Published    m 

Studies  from  the  Yale  Psychological  Laboratory,  5:1-75.     New 

Haven,  1897.) 
Professor    of    Psychology    and    Director    of   the    Psychological 

Laboratory,  Tokyo  Imperial  University,  Tokyo,  Japan. 

John  Dorrance  Warnock,  B.A.  Yale  University  1893. 
Dissertation:    Some  characteristics  of  English  thinking,  as  shown 

in  the  development  of  science  and  philosophy. 
Head  of  Department  of  Latin,  Hill  School,  Pottstown,  Pa. 


—177— 

I  goo 

Alexander  Cameron,  B.A.  Carleton  College  1896. 
Dissertation:    Tactual  perception. 
Farmer,  Alexandria,  Minn. 

Clara  Maria  Hitchcock,  Ph.B.  University  of  Chicago  1897. 

Dissertation:  Expectation:  its  nature  and  influence  upon  knowl- 
edge. (Published  as  follows:  The  psychology  of  expecta- 
tion, The  Psychological  Review,  Monograph  Supplements, 
No.  20,  The  Macmillan  Company,  New  York,  1903. 

Professor  of  Philosophy  and  Education,  Lake  Erie  College, 
Painesville,  O. 

Cloyd  North  McAllister,  B.A.  Yale  University  1892. 

Dissertation:  Researches  on  writing.  (Published  as  follows: 
Researches  on  movements  used  in  writing,  Studies  from  the 
Yale  Psychological  Laboratory,  8:21-63.     New  Haven,  1900.) 

Dean  of  Normal  School,  and  Professor  of  Education,  Berea 
College,  Berea,  Ky. 

igoi 

William  Adams  Brown,  B.A.  Yale  University  1886,  M.A.   1887, 

D.D.  1907. 
Dissertation:    The  essence  of  Christianity:    a  study  in  the  history 

of   definition.     (Published   by    Charles    Scribner's    Sons,    New 

York,  1902.) 
Roosevelt  Professor  of  Systematic  Theology,  Union  Theological 

Seminary,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

William  Churchill,  B.A.  Yale  University  1897. 

Dissertation:    The  tendency  toward  idealism  in  recent  scientific 

conceptions  of  matter. 
Sales  Manager,  Corning  Glass  Works,  Corning,  N.  Y. 

Walter  Wells  Davis,  B.A.  Leland  Stanford,  Jr.,  University  1897. 
Dissertation:      Researches     in     cross-education.      (Published     in 

Studies    from    the    Yale    Psychological    Laboratory,    6:6-50. 

1898;   8:64-108.     New  Haven,  1900.) 
Principal  of  Schools,  Columbus,  Wash. 

Robert   Ernest   Hume,   B.A.   Yale   University    1898,   M.A.    1900, 

B.D.  Union  Theological  Seminary  1904. 
Dissertation:    (Philosophy)   i.  The  pantheism  of  the  Upanishads. 
(Sanskrit)  2.  A  translation  of  the  principal  Upanishads.     (In 


-178- 

press  as  follows:  A  translation  of  the  thirteen  principal 
Upanishads,  with  an  introductory  outline  of  the  philosophy 
of  the  Upanishads,  Oxford  University  Press,  London, 
England,  1916.) 
Professor  of  Philosophy  and  History  of  Religion,  and  Missions, 
Union  Theological  Seminary,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Winfield  Scott  Manship,  B.A.  Wesleyan  University  1886,  B.D. 

Yale  University  1889. 
Dissertation:    Kant  and  Schleiermacher  on  knowledge  and  faith. 
Pastor,  Methodist  Episcopal  Church,  East  Berlin,  Conn. 

Ishiro    Miyake,    Doshisha    University,    Collegiate    Department 

(Japan)   1890,  Doshisha  Divinity  School  1894. 
Dissertation:     Researches    in    rhythmic    action.      (Published    in 

Studies    from    the    Yale    Psychological    Laboratory,    10:1-48. 

New  Haven,  1902.) 
Professor    of    Psychology,    The    Sixth    Government    College, 

Okayama,  Japan. 

George    Redington    Montgomery,    B.A.    Yale    University    1892, 

LL.B.  1894,  B.D.  1900. 
Dissertation:    The  distinctions  between  theology  and  philosophy. 
Lecturer  in  Philosophy,  Graduate  School,  New  York  University, 

and  Assistant  Minister,  Madison  Square  Presbyterian  Church, 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

William  James  Taylor,  B.A.  University  of  Nebraska  1891,  M.A. 

1897. 
Dissertation:    Aristotle's  psychology  of  cognition. 
Head  of  Department  of  Psychology,  History  and  Principles  of 

Education,  Brooklyn  Training  School  for  Teachers,  Brooklyn, 

N.  Y. 

John   Edward  Wallace  Wallin,   B.A.   Augustana   College    1897, 

M.A.  Yale  University  1899. 
Dissertation:    Researches  on  the  rhythm  of  speech.     (Published 
in  Studies  from  the  Yale  Psychological  Laboratory,  9:1-142. 
New  Haven,  1901.) 
Director,  Psycho-Educational  Clinic  for  the  Board  of  Education, 
St.  Louis,  Mo. 

igo2 

Halbert  Hains  Britan,  B.A.  Hanover  College  1898. 
Dissertation:    Ethics  and  aesthetics:  their  relation  in  pre-Kantian 

philosophy. 
Professor  of  Philosophy,  Bates  College,  Lewiston,  Me. 


v 


—179— 

George  Barton   Cutten,   B.A.  Acadia   College   1896,   M.A.    1897, 

B.A.  Yale  University  1897,  B.D.  1903. 
Dissertation:     The    psychology    of    alcoholism.      (Published    in 

expanded  form  by  Charles  Scribner's  Sons,  New  York,  1907; 

and  by  The  W.  Scott  Publishing  Company,  London,  1907.) 
President,  Acadia  University,  Wolfville,  Nova  Scotia. 

Joseph  Frazer  Hood,  B.A.  Southwestern  Presbyterian  University 

1896,  M.A.  Yale  University  1900. 
Dissertation:    Maine  de  Biran:    a  study  of  his  psychology. 
Head    of    Department    of    Education,    West    Tennessee    State 
Normal  School,  Memphis,  Tenn. 

Isaac  Woodbridge  Riley,  B.A.  Yale  University  1892,  B.D.  1896, 
M.A.  1898. 

Dissertation:  A  psychological  history  of  Joseph  Smith,  Jr.,  the 
founder  of  Mormonism.  (Published  as  follows:  The  founder 
of  Mormonism,  a  psychological  study  of  Joseph  Smith,  Jr., 
Dodd,  Mead  and  Company,  New  York,  1902;  William 
Heinemann,  London,  1903.) 

Taylor  Professor  of  Philosophy,  Vassar  College,  Poughkeepsie, 
N.  Y. 

Elmer  Ellsworth  Shumaker,  B.A.  Harvard  University  1889,  B.D. 
General  Theological  Seminary  1891. 

Dissertation:  The  function  of  knowledge.  (Incorporated  in  his 
book,  God  and  man:  philosophy  of  the  higher  life,  G.  P. 
Putnam's  Sons,  New  York,  1909.) 

Secretary  Church  Peace  Squadron  of  American  Branch,  World 
Alliance  of  Churches  for  Promotion  of  International  Friend- 
ship, Cambridge,  Mass. 


1903 

George   Ferdinand   Abel,    B.A.    Gettysburg   College    1897,    B.D. 

Yale  University  1900. 
Dissertation:   The  meaning  and  limits  of  mechanism. 
Pastor,  Congregational  Church,  Seymour,  Conn. 

Thomas  Nelson  Baker,  B.A.  Boston  University  1893,  B.D.  Yale 

University  1896. 
Dissertation:    The  ethical  significance  of  the  connection  between 

mind  and  body. 
Pastor,  Second  Congregational  Church,  Pittsfield,  Mass. 


— i8o— • 

i 

Mary  Kcndrick  Benedict,  B.A.  Vassar  College  1897. 
Dissertation:     Thought    and    being:     a    study    in    Mr.    Bradley's 

metaphysics.  ^ 

President,  Sweet  Briar  College,  Sweet  Briar,  Va.  ] 

Tozaburo  Kudo,  M.A.  DePauw  University  1896,  M.A.  Yale  Uni- 
versity 1901. 
Dissertation:     The    ethics    of    Confucius.      (Published    by    the  ^ 
Methodist  Publishing  House,  Tokyo,  Japan,  1904.)  | 

Died  1910. 

Edward  Everett  Rail,  B.A.  University  of  Iowa  1900. 
Dissertation:    A   study   of   mysticism,  with   special   reference   to 

its  character  as  a  theory  of  religious  knowledge. 
Professor   of   Education,    University   of   Tennessee,    Knoxville, 

Tenn. 

1904 

Arthur  Henry  Rolph  Fairchild,  B.A.  University  of  Toronto  1900, 

M.A.  Yale  University  1903. 
Dissertation:     The    psychology    of    the    creative    imagination    in 

poetry,  with   special   reference   to   Shakespeare,   Wordsworth, 

and  Milton. 
Professor  of  English,  University  of  Missouri,  Columbia,  Mo. 

Jiroku  Kawabe,  Doshisha  University,  Theological   Department 

(Japan)  1895,  M.A.  Yale  University  1900. 
Dissertation:    The  development  of  Confucianism  in  Japan  under 

the  influence  of  the  philosophy  of  Shushi. 
Professor  of  Philosophy,  Keiogijuku  University,  Tokyo,  Japan. 

Mary  Isabel  Park,  B.A.  Mount  Holyoke  College  1893. 
Dissertation:     A    study    of    the    philosophical    basis    of    Leibniz' 

optimism. 
Dean  of  Women,  Heidelberg  University,  Tiffin,  O. 


Ernest    Martin    Quittmeyer,    B.A.    Wesleyan    University    1899, 

M.A.  Yale  University  1901,  LL.B.  1903. 
Dissertation:    Ethics  of  American  laws  of  inheritance  and  bequest. 
Principal,  Drum  Hill  High  School,  Peekskill,  N.  Y. 

John  William  Withers,  B.A.  National  Normal  University  1891, 
M.A.  Yale  University  1902. 


— i8i— 

IHssertation:  Euclid's  parallel  postulate:  its  nature,  validity,  and 
place  in  geometrical  systems.  (Published  by  The  Open 
Court  Publishing  Company,  Chicago,  1905.) 

Principal,  Harris  Teachers'  College,  and  Assistant  Superinten- 
dent of  Public  Instruction,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 


1905 

Charles  Edward  Cory,  Ph.B.  Drake  University  1901,  M.A.  1902, 
M.A.  Yale  University  1903. 

Dissertation:  An  examination  of  the  doctrines  of  Hegel,  espe- 
cially their  bearing  upon  the  spiritual  interests  of  man. 

Associate  Professor  of  Philosophy,  Washington  University,  St. 
Louis,  Mo. 

Albert  S.  Hurst,  B.A.  University  of  Toronto   1899,   M.A.  Yale 

University  1904. 
Dissertation:    The  ontological  value  of  the  moral  ideal. 
Professor  of  History  and  Philosophy  of  Education,  Teachers' 
College,  Syracuse  University,  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

Bertram  Augustus  Lenfest,  B.S.  Massachusetts  Institute  of 
Technology  1890. 

Dissertation:  The  accuracy  of  linear  movements:  an  investiga- 
tion of  certain  psychological  problems  by  the  methods  of 
experimental  psychology.  (Published  in  part  as  follows:  The 
accuracy  of  linear  movement,  Harvard  Psychological  Studies, 
2:485-526.     Boston,  1906.) 

Teacher,  Brooklyn  Manual  Training  High  School,  Brooklyn, 
N.  Y. 

Herbert  Martin,  B.A.  Kentucky  University  1899,  M.A.  1900. 
Dissertation:    Cognition  and  the  absolute,  or,  the  possibility  of 

know^ing  God. 
Professor  of  Philosophy,  Drake  University,  Des  Moines,  la. 

Charles  Edvi^ard  Sargent,  B.A.  Bates  College  1883,  M.A.  1887. 
Dissertation:     A    reexamination    of    the    doctrine    of    Gall    and 

Spurzheim  in  the  light  of  recent  science,  with  a  consideration 

of  its  philosophical  implicates. 
Instructor    in    Mathematics,    New    Haven    High    School,    New 

Haven,  Conn. 


— 182— 

Luther   Allan   Wcigle,    B.A.   Pennsylvania   College    1900,    M.A. 

1903. 
Dissertation:    A  historical  and  critical  study  of  Kant's  Antinomy 

of  Pure  Reason. 
Professor  of  Philosophy,  Carleton  College,  Northfield,  Minn. 

igo6 

Edward  Herbert  Cameron,   B.A.  Acadia  University  1900,   B.A. 

Yale  University  1903,  M.A.  Yale  University  1904. 
Dissertation:     Voluntary    production    of    tones    under    varying 

conditions     of     attention.       (Published     as     follows:      Tonal 

reactions,  Yale  Psychological  Studies,  New  series,   1:227-300. 

Lancaster,  Pa.,  1907.) 
Assistant     Professor     of     Education,     Graduate     School,     Yale 

University. 

1907 

Marion  LeRoy  Burton,  B.A.  Carleton  College  1900,  B.D.  Yale 
University  1906. 

Dissertatiofi :  The  philosophical  basis  of  Augustine's  doctrine  of 
sin.  (Published  as  follows:  The  problem  of  evil:  a  criticism 
of  the  Augustinian  point  of  view.  The  Open  Court  Publishing 
Company,  Chicago,  1909.) 

President,  Smith  College,  Northampton,  Mass. 

1908 

Charles     Alexander     Cockayne,     B.A.     Heidelberg     University 

1901,  M.A.  Yale  University  1906. 
Dissertation:   The  relation  of  Spinoza  to  Hobbes. 
208  Riverside  Ave.,  Tiffin,  O. 

Frank  Nugent  Freeman,  B.A.  Wesleyan  University  1904,  M.A. 
Yale  University  1906. 

Dissertation:  The  habit  of  handwriting  and  its  development:  an 
experimental  study.  (Published  in  Yale  Psychological  Studies, 
New  series,  as  follows:  Preliminary  experiments  on  writing 
reactions,  1:301-333.  Lancaster,  Pa.,  1907;  An  experimental 
analysis    of   the    writing   movement,    2:1-46.      Lancaster,    Pa., 

1914.) 
Assistant    Professor    of    Educational    Psychology,    School    of 
Education,  University  of  Chicago,  Chicago,  111. 


-i83- 

1909 

Donald  John  Cowling,  B.A.  Yale  University  1903. 
Dissertation:    Augustine's  theory  of  knowledge. 
President,  Carleton  College,  Northfield,  Minn. 

Robert  Day  Williams,  B.S.  Pomona   College   1903,   M.A.   Yale 

University  1907. 
Dissertation:     A    study   of   reaction-movements       (Published    in 

Yale  Psychological  Studies,  New  series,  2:55-155.     Lancaster, 

Pa.,  1914-) 
Principal,  Mills  School,  Mid-Pacific  Institute,  Honolulu,   H.  I. 

igii 

Herbert  Norton  Loomis,  B.A.  Harvard  University   1901,   M.A. 

Columbia  University  1909. 
Dissertation:     Some    aspects    of    the    rural-school    problem    in 

southern  New  England. 
Director,  Smith's  Agricultural  School  and  Northampton  School 

of  Industries,  Northampton,  Mass. 

Arthur  James  Todd,  B.L.  University  of  California  1904. 

Dissertation:  The  family  in  primitive  education.  (Incorporated 
in  the  following:  The  primitive  family  as  an  educational 
agencj'',  G.  P.  Putnam's  Sons,  New  York,  1913.) 

Professor  of  Sociology,  University  of  Minnesota,  Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

1913 
Charles  Andrew  Armstrong  Bennett,   B.A.   Oxford  University 

1908. 
Dissertation:    The  cognitive  value  of  the  mystic  experience. 
Assistant  Professor  of  Philosophy,  Yale  College. 

Samuel  L.  Eby,  B.A.  Ohio  Northern  University,  1909,  M.A.  Yale 

University  191 1. 
Dissertation:     German    educational    practice    in    the    eighteenth 

century. 
High    School    Inspector,    Department    of    Public    Instruction, 

Columbus,  O. 

John  Trumbull  Metcalf,  B.A.  Yale  University  1910,  M.A.  Yale 

University  191 1. 
Dissertation:    An  experimental  study  of  conscious  attitudes. 
Instructor  in  Psychology,  Princeton  University,  Princeton,  N.  J. 


— 184— 

Herbert    Parsons    Patterson,    B.A.    Wesleyan    University    1908, 

M.A.  191 1,  M.A.  Yale  University  191 1. 
Dissertation:   An  extension  of  the  "Pure  Experience"  philosophy 

of  William  James. 
Professor    of    Education    and    Philosophy,    Dakota    Wesleyan 

University,  Mitchell,  S.  D. 

Solomon  Luther  Reed,  B.A.  Susquehanna  University  1908,  M.A. 

1910,  M.A.  Yale  University  191 1. 
Dissertation:    The  value  of  introspection. 

Professor   of   Education   and    Psychology,    Gustavus   Adolphus 
College,  St.  Peter,  Minn. 

1915 
Albert  Edwin  Avey,  B.A.  Yale  University  1908,  M.A.  1909. 
Dissertation:    An  analysis  of  the  process  of  conceptual  cognition 

(Published  by  Reuter  and  Kieneman,  Cincinnati,  1916.) 
Associate  in  Philosophy,  Bryn  Mawr  College,  Bryn  Mawr,  Pa 

Muriel    Bacheler    (Mrs.    Edgar    B.    Dawkins),    B.A.    Wellesley 

College  1912. 
Dissertation:     Mysticism,   an   epistemological   problem.      (Printec 

by  The  Tuttle,  Morehouse  &  Taylor  Company,  New  Havenj 

1916.) 
259  Alden  Ave.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 

Orville  Anderson  Petty,  B.A.  Muskingum  College  1898,  B.D, 
Pittsburgh  Theological  Seminary  1901,  M.A.  Colorado 
College  1905. 

Dissertation:    The  interpretation  of  the  Meno  of  Plato. 

Pastor,  Plymouth   Congregational   Church,   New   Haven,   Conn. 

John  Jeffrey  Smith,  B.A.  Bethany  College  (W.  Va.)  1908,  M.A. 

1909,  B.D.  Yale  University  1912,  M.A.  1912. 
Dissertation:     Direct  and  indirect  methods   of  teaching  morals: 

a  historical  and  psychological  study. 
Minister,  Cadiz  Christian  Church,  Cadiz,  O. 

ALPHABETICAL  LIST 
(*  indicates  that  the  graduate  is  deceased.) 

Abel,  1903  Bacheler,  1915 

Aikins,  1891  Baker,  1903 

Avey,  19 1 5  Beard,  1892 


-i8s- 


Beck,  1892 
Benedict,  1903 
Bennett,  1913 
Bliss,  1893 
Blomgren,  1893 
Britan,  1902 
Brown,  1901 
Buchner,  1893 
Burton,  1907 
Cameron,  A.,  1900 
Cameron,  E.  H.,  1906 
Churchill,  1901 
Cockayne,  1908 
Cory,  1905 
Cowling,  1909 
Cranford,  1895 
Cutler,  1896 
Cutten,  1902 
Davies,  A.  E.,  1898 
Davies,  H.,  1896 
Davis,  1901 
Eby,  1913 
Fairchild,  1904 
Freeman,  1908 
Gilbert,  1894 
Green,  1897 
Hegstrom,  1894 
Hess,  1899 
Hitchcock,  1900 
Hood,  1902 
Hume,  1901 
Hurst,  1905 
Jacobson,  1889 
Johnson,  1899 
Kawabe,  1904 
Kendall,  1899 
Krohn,  1889 
*Kudo,  1903 
Lenfest,  1905 
Light,  1893 
Lloyd,  1898 
Loomis,  1911 


McAllister,  1900 
McLane,  1889 
Manship,  1901 
Martin,  1905 
Matsumoto,  1899 
Metcalf,  1913 
Miyake,  1901 
Montgomery,  1901 
Moore,  1895 
Morgan,  1895 

*Morita,  1892 
Mutch,  1894 
Nakashima,  1889 
Park,  1904 
Patterson,  1913 
Petty,  1915 

♦Phelps,  1874 
Porter,  1889 
Quittmeyer,  1904 
Rail,  1903 
Reed,  1913 
Richards,  1894 
Riley,  1902 
Runkle,  1893 
Sargent,  1905 
Seashore,  1895 
Shumaker,  1902 
Smith,  J.  J.,  1915 

*Smith,  T.  L.,  1896 
Sneath,  1890 
Stearns,  1898 
Taylor,  1901 
Ten  Broeke,  1891 
Todd,  191 1 
Veblen,  1884 
Wallin,  1901 
Warfield,  1893 
Warnock,  1899 
Weigle,  1905 
Williams,  1909 
Withers,  1904 
Zehring,  1897 


DEPARTMENT  UNDETERMINED 


1861 
Eugene  Schuyler,  B.A.  Yale  University   1859,   LL.B.   Columbia 

University  1863. 
Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 
United  States  Consul  to  Moscow,   Minister  Residentiary  to  Rou- 

mania,  Servia,  and  Greece,  and  Consul-General,  Constantinople. 
Died  1890. 

1866 
Charles  Fraser  MacLean,  B.A.  Yale  University  1864,  J.U.D.  Uni- 
versity of  Berlin  1869. 
Dissertation:    A   critique  of  John   Stuart   Mill's   examination   of 

Hamilton's  philosophy. 
Justice  of  Supreme  Court  of  New  York  State  (1869-Dec.  1900). 
2122  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

1869 
Edward  Thomson  Nelson,  B.A.  Ohio  Wesleyan  University  1866. 
Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 

Assistant  in  Mineralogy,  Professor  of  Natural  History,  Physiol- 
ogy, and  Geology,  Ohio  Wesleyan  University,  Delaware,  O. 
Died  1897. 

1872 
Richard  Chapman  Weldon,   B.A.   Mount  Allison   College   1866, 

M.A.  1870. 
Dissertation:    Contrabrand  of  war. 

Dean  of  Law  School,  George  Munro  Professor  of  Constitutional 
and   International    Law,    and    Lecturer    on    Shipping,    Dalhousie 
University,  Halifax,  N.  S.     (Retired.) 
"The  Brae,"   Dartmouth,  N.  S. 

1873 
Charles  Pomeroy  Otis,  B.A,  Yale  University  1861. 
Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 

Professor  of  Modern  Languages,  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Tech- 
nology, Boston,  Mass. 
Died  1888. 


-i87- 

1875 
Neander  Nicholas  Cronholm,  B.A.  Pennsylvania  College   1873, 

LL.B.  New  York  University  1876. 
Dissertation:     The    development    of    the    Swedish    constitution. 
(Incorporated  in  his  History  of  Sweden,  published  in  Chicago, 
New  York,  London,  1902.) 
Lawyer,  Wilmette,  111. 

Nathan  Willard  Harris,  B.A.  Bates  College  1873. 
Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 
Lawyer,  and  Mayor,  Auburn,  Me. 
Died  1902. 

1876 
Edward  Sheffield  Cowles,  B.A.  Yale  University  1873. 
Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 
Died  1883. 

1877 
John  Gary  Boals,  B.A.  Macon  College  1869. 
Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 
Covington,  Tenn. 

Anton  Sander,  B.A.  Luther  College  1874. 
Dissertation:    (Title  not  known.) 
Died  1881. 

1878 
John  Wesley  Peck,  B.A.  Yale  University  1874. 
Dissertation:    Subject:   A  review  of  some  old  French  poem.  (Exact 

title  not  known.) 
Superintendent  of  Schools,  Derby,  Conn.  (1893-1912). 
269  Caroline  St.,  Derby,  Conn. 


ALPHABETICAL  LIST 
(*  indicates  that  the  graduate  is  deceased.) 

Boals,  1877  *Otis,  1873 

*Cowles,  1876  Peck,  1878 

Cronholm,  1875  *Sander,  1877 

*Harris,  1875  *Schuyler,  1861 

MacLean,  1866  Weldon,  1872 
*Nelson,  1869 


INDKX 


PAGE 

Abbe,  Elisabeth  F.,  1903,  Classics 19 

Abbott,  Ellen  C,  1900,  German   40 

Abbott,  Frank  F.,  1891,  Classics  15 

Abel,  Annie  H.,  1905,  History 165 

Abel,  George  F.,  1903,  Philosophy  and  Education 179 

Abernethy,  Julian  W.,  1878,  English  ' 45 

Adams,  Arthur,  1905,  English  54 

Adams,  Eleanor  N.,  1914,  English  61 

Adams,  John  C,  1904,  English   54 

Adams,  Warren  A.,  1896,  German  40 

Agard,  Harry  L.,  1911,  Mathematics   74 

AiKiNS,  Herbert  A.,  1891,  Philosophy  and  Education  172 

Aimes,  Hubert  H.  S.,  1905,  History 165 

♦Albro,  Alice  H.,  1898,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 124 

Alcock,  Frederick  J.,  1915,  Geology I47 

Alden,  Carroll  S.,  1903,  English  53 

Alexander,  Arthur  C,  1895,  Physics  79 

Allen,  James  T.,  1898,  Classics  17 

Allen,  May  A.,  1908,  Classics  21 

♦Allen,  Oscar  D.,  1871,  Chemistry 86 

Allison,  William  T.,  1910,  English  58 

Ambler,  Joseph  A.,  1913,  Chemistry no 

Amerman,  George  L.,  1892,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 123 

Anderson,  Frederick,  1915,  Romance  Languages   38 

Anderson,  Luther,  1907,  History  166 

Andreen,  Gustav  a.,  1898,  German   40 

Andrews,  Clarence  E.,  1912,  English  59 

Armsby,  Henry  P.,  1879,  Chemistry  87 

AsAKAWA,  Kan-Ichi,  1902,  History  163 

Ashley,  Raymond  H.,  1906,  Chemistry  100 

♦Atwater,  William  O.,  1869,  Chemistry  86 

Austin,  Martha,  1898,  Chemistry 91 

AvEY,  Albert  E.,  1915,  Philosophy  and  Education  184 

Bacheler,  Muriel,  191 5,  Philosophy  and  Education  184 

Bacon,  Susan  A.,  1911,  German  43 

Bailey,  Edward  M.,  Jr.,  1910,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc.  . . .  130 

Bailey,  William  B.,   1896,   Social   Sciences    150 


— 190 — 

PAGl 

Baitsell,  George  A.,  1914,  Zoology,  etc 121 

Baker,  George  M.,  1905,  German  41 

Baker,  Thomas  N.,  1903,  Philosophy  and  Education 179 

Baldwin,  Edward  C.,  1898,  English 48 

Baldwin,  Ernest  H.,  1901,  History  162 

Ball,  Stanley  C,  1915,  Zoology,  etc 122 

Barber,  Kate  G.,  1906,  Botany  116 

Barbour,  Alice  M.,  1913,  English  59 

Barbour,  Amy  L.,  1902,  Classics   19 

Barbour,  Erwin  H.,  1887,  Geology  137 

♦Barker,   Mrs.   Charles  A.    (Albro),   1898,   Physiological 

Chemistry,   etc 124 

Barnes,  Bayard,  1898,  Chemistry 91 

Barney,  Ida,  191 1,  Mathematics   74 

Barnum,  Charlotte  C,  1895,  Mathematics  68 

Barrell,  Joseph,  1900,  Geology 139 

Barss,  William  R.,  1912,  Physics   83 

♦Bartlett,  Arthur  H.,  1904,  English 54 

Bartley,  William  T.,  1895,  Classics  15 

Bassett,  Samuel  E.,  1905,  Classics  20 

Bateman,  Alan  M.,  1913,  Geology  146 

Bates,  Joseph  S.,  1915,  Chemistry 113 

Bauer,  John,  1908,  Social  Sciences  154 

Baumann,  Emil  J.,  1915,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 134 

Beach,  Frederick  E.,  1893,  Physics  78 

Beadle,  John,  1894,  Classics  15 

Beard,  Gerald  H.,  1892,  Philosophy  and  Education 172 

Beardsley,  Alling  p.,  1902,  Chemistry  94 

Beck,  Lars  H.,  1892,  Philosophy  and  Education 172 

Beckwith,  Isbon  T.,  1872,  Classics  10 

Beebe,  Silas  P.,  1904,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 127 

♦Beecher,  Charles  E.,  1889,  Geology  137 

Beggs,  Gertrude  H.,  1904,  Classics  20 

Benedict,  Mary  K.,  1903,  Philosophy  and  Education  180 

Benedict,  Stanley  R.,  1908,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 128 

Bengis,  Robert,  1913,  Chemistry  no 

Benham,  Allen  R.,  1905,  English  55 

Benjamin,  Gilbert  G.,  1907,  History   166 

Bennett,  Charles  A.  A.,  1913,  Philosophy  and  Education 183 

Berdan,  John  M.,  1899,  English  50 

Bidwell,  Percy  W.^  1915,  Social  Sciences  158 

Bill,  Earl  G,,  1908,  Mathematics  72 


— 191— 

PAGE 

Billings,  Anna  H.,  1898,  English   48 

Bishop,  Avard  L.,  1906,  Social  Sciences  154 

BissELL,  Leslie  D.,  1896,  Physics 79 

Blackwell,  Henry  D.,  1903,  English   53 

Blake,  John  C,  1903,  Chemistry 95 

Blakslee,  Thomas  M.,  1880,  Mathematics  66 

Blatherwick,  Norman  R.,  1914,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc.  133 

Bliss,  Charles  B.,  1893,  Philosophy  and  Education  173 

Blomgren,  Carl  A.,  1893,  Philosophy  and  Education  173 

Blood,  Alice  P.,  1910,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc. 130 

Blumenthal,  Philip  L.,  1912,  Chemistry  108 

BoALS,  John  C,  1877,  Department  undetermined   187 

BoGGS,  Theodore  H.,  1908,  Social  Sciences  155 

BoLTWooD,  Bertram  B.,  1897,  Chemistry  90 

BosTWicK,  Arthur  E.,  1883,  Physics  78 

BoswoRTH,  Rowland  S.,  191  i,  Chemistry  107 

BoucHET,  Edward  A.,  1876,  Physics  78 

♦Bourne,  Edward  G.,  1892,  History  159 

BowDEN,  Joseph,  Jr.,  1897,  Physics  79 

Bowen,  Clarence  W.,  1882,  History 159 

Bowman,  Isaiah,  1909,  Geology  143 

Brackett,  James  R.,  1880,  English  45 

Bradley,  Harold  C,  1905,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 127 

Bradley,  Walter  M.,  1908,  Chemistry  102 

Bradner,  Lester,  Jr.,  1891,  Semitic  Languages   28 

Bradshaw,  Margaret  R.,  1902,  English  51 

♦Brandelle,  David  W.,  1908,  History 166 

Brautlecht,  Charles  A.,  1912,  Chemistry 109 

Bristol,  Howard  S.,  1905,  Chemistry  99 

Britan,  Halbert  H.,  1902,  Philosophy  and  Education  178' 

Britton,  Wilton  E.,  1903,  Botany  116 

♦Broatch,  James  W.,  1898,  English  49 

Bronson,  Howard  L.,  1904,  Physics  81 

Brown,  David  W.,  1878,  Classics  11 

Brown,  Ernest  W.,  1900,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 125 

Brown,  Harry  G.,  1909,  Social  Sciences   155 

Brown,  Herbert  S.,  1908,  Semitic  Languages  32 

Brown,  James,   1905,   Chemistry   99 

Brown,  Lester  D.,  1903,  Classics   19 

Brown,  Theodore  H.,   1913,  Mathematics    75 

Brown,  William  A.,  1901,  Philosophy  and  Education  177 

Browning,  Philip  E.,  1892,  Chemistry  88 


— 192 — 

PAGE 

Brownson,  Carleton  L.,  1897,  Classics  17 

Brubacher,  Abraham  R.,  1902,  Classics  19 

Bruce,  Harold  L.,  1915,  English 62 

Buchner,  Edward  F.,  1893,  Philosophy  and  Education 173 

Buck,  Carl  D.,  1889,  Classics 14 

BuLAND,  Mable  E.,  1909,  English 57 

♦BuMSTEAD,  Arthur,   1900,  Semitic  Languages   31 

Bumstead,  Henry  A.,  1897,  Physics   79 

BuNN,  Henry  W.,  1896,  English  47 

Bunnell,  Frank  S.,  1903,  Classics  19 

Burgess,  Horace  T.,  1909,  Mathematics  73 

BuRNAM,  John  M.,  1886,  Classics  13 

Burnham,  Gerald,  1912,  Chemistry  «  109 

BuRNHAM,  Josephine  M.,   1910,  English   58 

Burr,  Harold  S.,  1915,  Zoology,  etc 122 

Burton,  Marion  L.,  1907,  Philosophy  and  Education  182 

Bush,  Katharine  J.,  1901,  Zoology,  etc 120 

Bushnell,  Curtis  C,  1895,  Classics   16 

Bushnell,  George  E.,  1878,  Classics   11 

Cairnes,  DeLorme  D.,  1910,  Geology 144 

Cameron,  Alexander,  1900,  Philosophy  and  Education   177 

Cameron,  Edward  H..  1906,  Philosophy  and  Education 182 

Camp,  Burton  H.,  191 1,  Mathematics  74 

Campbell,  Mrs.  George  N.  (Buland),  1909,  English 57 

Campbell,  Marian  D.,   1907,  English   56 

Canby,  Henry  S.,  1905,  English  55 

Capps,  Edward,    1891,    Classics    IS 

Carnahan,  David  H.,  1905,  Romance  Languages  37 

Carter,  Henry  H.,  1914,  English   61 

Case,  Shirley  J.,  1906,  Semitic  Languages   31 

Caskey,  Lacey  D.,  1912,  Classics   23 

Castle,  Clarence  F.,  1888,  Classics  13 

♦Castor,  George  D.,  1907,  Semitic  Languages  32 

Chase,  Frank  H.,  1896,  English 47 

Chase,  Frederick  L.,  1891,  Mathematics   67 

Chen,  Chin-Tao,  1906,  Social  Sciences  I54 

Chernoff,  Lewis  H.,  1914,  Chemistry 112 

Chittenden,  Russell  H.,  1880,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc.  . .  123 

Chunn,  Mark  W.,  1888,  Semitic  Languages  27 

Church,  Howard  W.,  1913,  German  43 

Churchill,  William,  1901,  Philosophy  and  Education  177 


—193— 

PAGE 

Claghorn,  Kate  H.,  1896,  Social  Sciences  150 

Clapp,  Edward  B.,   1886,  Classics   13 

Clapp,  Samuel  H.,  1908,  Chemistry  102 

Clark,  Charles  U.,  1903,  Classics  19 

Clark,  Clarence  C,  1903,  English  53 

Clark,  Evert  M.,   191  i,   English   58 

Cleaveland,  Elizabeth  W.,  1910,  English 58 

Cleland,  Herdman  p.,  1900,  Geology  139 

Cockayne,  Charles  A.,  1908,  Philosophy  and  Education  182 

Coe,  Wesley  R.,  1895,  Zoology,  etc 120 

Cohen,  George  H.,  1914,  Classics  24 

Cole,  Erma  E.,   1910,  Classics   22 

♦Collier,  Peter,  1866,  Chemistry  86 

Collings,  Harry  T.,  1910,  German  43 

Collins,  Edward  D.,  1899,  History  161 

CoLTON,  Arthur  W.,  1893,  English  46 

Conover,  Henry  H.,  1907,  Ma'thematics   72 

Cook,  Mrs.  Albert  S.  (Merrill),  1910,  English  58 

Cooke,  Charles  M.,  Jr.,  1901,  Botany  116 

Cooksey,  Charlton  D.,  1909,  Physics   82 

Cooper,  Bessie  D.,  191 1,  History  168 

CoRBiN,  Alberta  L.,  1901,  German   41 

Corley,  Ames  H.,  1914,  Romance  Languages  38 

Cory,  Charles  E.,  1905,  Philosophy  and  Education   181 

Coulter,  Charles  W.,  1914,  Social  Sciences  157 

♦CowLES,  Edward  S.,  1876,  Department  undetermined   187 

Cowling.  Donald  J.,  1909,  Philosophy  and  Education  183 

Cramblet,  Wilbur  H.,  1913,  Mathematics  75 

Crandall,  Clark  E.,  1891,  Semitic  Languages   28 

Cranford,  William  L,  1895.  Philosophy  and  Education  174 

Crawford,  Ralph  D.,  1913,  Geology  146 

Creelman,  Harlan,  1894,  Semitic  Languages   29 

Cressman,  Edmund  D.,  1913,  Classics 23 

Cronholm,  Neander  N.,  1875,  Department  undetermined 187 

Cross,  Wilbur  L.,  1889,  English   ; 45 

CuLBERTSON,  WiLLiAM  S.,  1911,  Social  Scicnccs  156 

CuMiNGS,  Edgar  R.,  1903,  Geology  140 

Cummins,  George  W.,  1887,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 123 

Curtis,  Robert  W.,  1904,  Chemistry   96 

CuRTS,  Paul,  1909,  German  42 

Cutler,  Anna  A.,  1896,  Philosophy  and  Education   175 

Cutler,  James  E.,  1903,  Social  Sciences  153 

7 


—194— 

PAGE 

CuTTEN,  George  B.,  1902,  Philosophy  and  Education  179 

Dadourian,  Haroutune  M.,  1906,  Physics  81 

Dahl,  George,  1913,  Semitic  Languages  34 

♦Dahl,  Olaus,  1891,  Semitic  Languages  28 

Dana,  Edward  S.,  1876,  Geology  136 

Daniels,  Amy  L.,  1912,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 132 

Daniels,  Archibald  L.,  Jr.,  1912,  Mathematics  75 

Daniels,  John  H.,  1892,  Semitic  Languages   29 

Davidson,  Charles,  1892,  English  46 

Davies,  Arthur  E.,  1898,  Philosophy  and  Education  175 

Davif^,  Henry,   1896.  Philosophy  and  Education   175 

Davis,  George  W.,  1891,  Semitic  Languages  28 

Davis,  Walter  W.,  1901,  Philosophy  and  Education 177 

Dawkins,  Mrs.  Edgar  B.   (Bacheler),  191 5,  Philosophy  and 

Education    184 

Day,  Arthur  L.,  1894,  Physics   79 

Day,  Clive,  1899,  History  161 

Dean,  Arthur  L.,  1902,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 126 

Dean,  Ernest  W.,  1914,  Chemistry 112 

Deane,  Sidney  N.,  1914,  Classics   24 

Deforest,  Frederick  M.,  1898,  Classics   17 

Deforest,  John  B.,  191 5,  Romance  Languages   38 

Deforest,  Lee,  1899,  Physics  79 

Dewing,  Henry  B.,  1908,  Classics  21 

Dickerman,  Elizabeth  S.,  1896,  Mathematics  68 

Dickinson,  Mrs.  George  L.  (Lovewell),  1898,  English  49 

DoDD,  Edward  L.,  1904,  Mathematics   71 

Dodd,  Loring  H.,  1907,  English   56 

Dodge,  Louise  P.,  1900,  Classics  18 

Dondlinger,  Peter  T.,  1904,  Social  Sciences  153 

Downs,  Charles  R.,  1912,  Chemistry  109 

Downs,  Edgar  S.,  1901,  Physics  80 

Dox,  Arthur  W.,  1909,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 129 

Drushel,  William  A.,  •■1908,  Chemistry   103 

Drysdale,  Charles  W.,  1912,  Geology   145 

♦DuBois,  Augustus  J.,  1873,  Mathematics  65 

DuBuY,  Jean,  1894,  Social  Sciences  150 

♦Dudley,  Charles  B.,  1874,  Chemistry  87 

Dunn,  John  J.,  1898,  Romance  Languages  36 

Dunning,  Harry  W.,  1897,  Semitic  Languages  30 

Durham,  Willard  H.,  1909,  English 57 


—195— 

PAGE 

DwiGHT,  WiNTHROP  E.,  1895,  Social  Sciences  150 

Easton,  Morton  W.,  1872,  Classics  10 

Eaton,  George  F.,  1898,  Geology  138 

Eby,  Samuel  L.,  1913,  Philosophy  and  Education  183 

Edgar,  Graham,  1909,  Chemistry   104 

♦Edgren,  August  H.,  1874,  Classics  11 

Edwards,  Alba  M.,  1906,  Social  Sciences  I54 

Eldridge,  Jay  G.,  1906,  German  42 

Elkins,  Marion  G.,  1912,  Botany  117 

♦Elofson,  Carl,  1891,  Semitic  Languages 28 

Emerson,  Sara  A.,  1903,  Semitic  Languages   31 

Emery,  Wilson  B,,  1914,  Geology  146 

Evans,  Alexander  W.,  1899,  Botany  116 

EwELL,  Arthur  W.,  1899,  Physics   80 

Fairbanks,  Charlotte,  1896,  Chemistry   89 

Fairchild,  Arthur  H.  R.,  1904,  Philosophy  and  Education 180 

Fairchild,  Fred  R.,  1904,  Social  Sciences  I53 

Fairchild,  Henry  P.,  1909,  Social  Sciences   155 

Farr,  Hollon  a.,  1904,  German  41 

Farrington,  Oliver  C,  1891,  Geology  137 

Ferguson,  James  F.,  1912,  History  168 

Field,  Arthur  S.,  1909,  Social  Sciences  155 

Fine,  Morris  S.,  191  i,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 131 

Fisher,  Irving,  1891,  Social  Sciences  149 

Flint,  William  R.,  1909,  Chemistry  104 

Flora,  Charles  P.,  1905,  Chemistry 99 

♦Fogelberg,  Joseph,  1905,  German  41 

Foley,  Emily  H.,  1902,  English  52 

FooTE,  Harry  W.,  1898,  Chemistry  92 

Forbes,  Edwin  H.,  1895,  Geology 138 

Ford,  William  E,,  1903,  Geology  140 

Foster,  Mrs.  Allyn  K.   (Foley),  1902,  English   52 

Foster,  Ora  D.,  1911,  Semitic  Languages  33 

Fowler,  Henry  T.,  1896,  Semitic  Languages  30 

Freeman,  Frank  N.,  1908,  Philosophy  and  Education  182 

♦Fullerton,  Edward  G.,  1896,  English  47 

Gage,  George  E.,  1909,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 129 

Gaines,  John  M.,  1900,  Social  Sciences  152 

Gale,  Arthur  S.,  1901,  Mathematics ' 69 

Galpin,  Stanley  L.,  1904,  Romance  Languages   37 


— 196 — 

PAGE 

Game,  Josiah  B.,  1909,  Classics  22 

Garver,  Milton  S.,  1904,  Romance  Languages zi 

Geis,  Silas  W.,  1901,  History  163 

Geiser,  Karl  F.,  1900,  History  162 

*GiBBS,  JosiAH   W.,   1863,   Physics    'J'] 

Gibson,  Robert  B.,  1906,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 128 

GiES,  William  J.,  1897,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 124 

Gilbert,  Joshua  A.,  1894,  Philosophy  and  Education  174 

Gilbert,  Ralph  D.,  1904,  Chemistry   97 

Girty,  George  H.,  1894,  Geology 137 

Goldschmidt,  Samuel,  1914,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc.  ...  133 

GooDELL,  Thomas  D.,  1884,  Classics  12 

♦GooDSPEED,  George  S.,  1891,  Semitic  Languages  28 

Graham,  Mary,  1895,  Social  Sciences   150 

Granville,  William  A.,  1897,  Mathematics  68 

Graves,  Arthur  H.,  1907,  Botany   117 

♦Graves,  Joseph  A.,  1878,  Classics  12 

Green,  Gervase,  1897,  Philosophy  and  Education   175 

Greene,  Maria  L.,  1895,  History  160 

Gregory,  Herbert  E.,  1899,  Geology  138 

Griffiths,  William,  1891,  Semitic  Languages 28 

Grinnell,  George  B.,  1880,  Geology   136 

Gruener,  Gustav,  1896,  German  40 

Gruener,  Hippolyte,   1893,  Chemistry   88 

GuBELMANN,  Albert  E.,  1907,  German  42 

Guest,  Herbert  H.,  1912,  Chemistry   109 

Gundelfinger,  George  F.,  1909,  Mathematics 73 

Guy,  Harvey  H.,  1903,  History  164 

Haigazian,  Armenag  H.,  1898,  Semitic  Languages 30 

Haigh,  Frank  L.,  1912,  Chemistry   109 

Hale,  Frank  E.,  1902,  Chemistry   95 

Hale,  Will  T.,  1914,  English   61 

Hale,  William  H.,  1863,  Classics   9 

Hall,  Arthur  P.,  1886,  Classics  13 

Hall,  Asaph,   1889,  Mathematics   (i"] 

Hallander,  Lars  J.  E.,  1905,  German  41 

Hamilton,  Herbert  F.,  1907,  English 56 

Hanford,  George  A.,  1902,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 126 

Hanscom,  Elizabeth  D.,  1894,  English  46 

Hargrove,  Henry  L.,  1902,  English  52 

Harlow,  Ralph  V.,  1913,  History  169 


—197— 

PACK 

Harmon,  Austin  M.,  1908,  Classics 22 

♦Harper,  William  R.,  1875,  Classics  11 

♦Harrington,  Bernard  J.,  1871,  Chemistry  86 

Harris,  Ella  I.,  1899,  English  50 

Harris,  Isaac  F.,  1915,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 134 

Harris,  Lynn  H.,  1914,  English   61 

Harris,  Martha  A..  1896,  English  47 

♦Harris,  Nathan  W.,  1875,  Department  undetermined   187 

Harrison,  Frederick  B.,  1908,  English   57 

Harstrqm,  Carl  A.,  1899,  Classics  18 

Hart,  Joseph  H.,  1900,  Physics  80 

Harvey,  Ruth  S.,  1908,  Geology  142 

Harwell,  Robert  R.,  191 5,  Semitic  Languages  34 

♦Haskell,  Willabe,   1876,   Classics   11 

Hastings,  Charles  S.,  1873,  Physics  ^^ 

Hathaway,  Charles  M.,  Jr.,  1902,  English 52 

Havemeyer,  Loomis,  1915,  Social  Sciences  158 

Havens,  Franke  S.,  1899,  Chemistry  92 

Hawkes,  Herbert  E.,  1900,  Mathematics  69 

Heath,  Fred  H.,  1909,  Chemistry  104 

Hedrick,  Henry  B.,  1915,  Mathematics 75 

♦Heermance,  Theodore  W.,  1898,  Classics   17 

Hegstrom,  Victor  H.,  1894,  Philosophy  and  Education 174 

Hemingway,  Samuel  B.,  1908,  English  57 

Henderson,  Yandell,  1898,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 125 

Hendrix,  Byron  M.,  1915,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 134 

Henry,  Aurelia  I.,  1905,  English 55 

Hess,  William  M.,  1899,  Philosophy  and  Education 176 

Hewes,  Laurence  L,  1901,  Mathematics  69 

Hewitt,  Mary  C,  1901,  History  163 

Heyl,  Frederick  W.,  1908,  Chemistry  103 

HiLDiTCH,  Warren  W.,  1909,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc.  ...   129 

♦Hileman,  Albert,   1906,  Chemistry   100 

Hill,  Arthur  J.,  1913,  Chemistry  no 

Hill,  David  U.,  1913,  Chemistry  no 

Hill,  Raymond  T.,  191  i,  Romance  Languages  38 

HiLLHousE,  James  T.,  1914,  English   61 

Hitchcock,  Clara  M.,  1900,  Philosophy  and  Education  177 

Hoffman,  Charles,  1912,  Chemistry  no 

Hogan,  Albert  G.,  1914,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 133 

Holden,  Louis  H.,  1903,  Semitic  Languages  31 

Holder,  Francis  J.,  1908,  Mathematics  'JZ 


PAGE 

Holt,  Lucius  H.,  1905,  English  55 

Hood,  Joseph  F.,  1902,  Philosophy  and  Education  179 

Hooker,  Davenport,  1912,  Zoology,  etc 121  ■ 

Hooker,  Henry  D.,  Jr.,  1915,  Botany  118 

HoRSWELL,  Charles,  1891,  Semitic  Languages  28 

Hovey,  Edmund  O.,  1889,  Geology  : 137 

Howe,  William  T.  H.,  1896,  Chemistry  90 

Hubbell,  Harry  M.,  1913,  Classics  24 

Hull,  Albert  W.,  1909,  Physics  82 

Hull,  Mrs.  Albert  W.  (Walker),  1909,  Mathematics  73 

Hulst,  Nelson  P.,  1870,  Chemistry  86 

Hume,  Robert  E.,  1901,  Philosophy  and  Education  177 

Hunt,  Agnes,  1900,  History  162 

♦Hunt,  Washington  L,   1892,  Classics   15 

Huntington,  Ellsworth,  1909,  Geology 143 

Hurst,  Albert  S.,  1905,  Philosophy  and  Education  181 

Hyde,  Edmund  M.,  1882,  Qassics  12 

Ichihara,  Morihiro,  1892,  Social  Sciences  149 

Ingersoll,  James  W.  D.,  1894,  Classics  IS 

Ingham,  Charles  S.,  1896,  Classics  16 

Jackson,  Holmes  C,  1899,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc.   125 

Jacobson,  Fritz,  1889,  Philosophy  and  Education  171 

Jamieson,  George  S.,  1904,  Chemistry   97 

Jenkins,  Edward  H.,  1879,  Chemistry  87 

Jensen,  Gerard  E.,  1913,  English   60 

Johns,  Carl  O.,  1906,  Chemistry  loi 

Johnson,  Carl  W.,  1904,  German   41 

Johnson,  Jesse  B.,  1895,  Mathematics   68 

Johnson,  Treat  B.,   1901,  Chemistry   93 

Johnson,  William  S.,  1905,  English  55 

Johnson,  William  S.,  1899,  Philosophy  and  Education  176 

Jones,  David  B.,  1910,  Chemistry  106 

Jones,  John  L.,  1911,  Mathematics   74 

Jones,  Louis  C,  1899,  Chemistry  92 

JuDsoN,  Alexander  C.,  1911,  English 59 

Kawabe,  Jiroku,  1904,  Philosophy  and  Education  180 

Kawanaka,  Kannosuke,  1909,  Semitic  Languages   33 

♦Keep,  Robert  P.,  1869,  Classics  9 

Keiser,  Clarence  E.,  1912,  Semitic  Languages  33 


—199— 

PAGE 

Keller,  Albert  G.,  1899,  Social  Sciences  151 

Kellogg,  George  D.,  1898,  Classics  18 

Kellum,  Margaret  D.,  1905,  English  55 

Kendall,  Edward  G.,  1899,  Philosophy  and  Education  176 

Kennedy,  David  A.,  1878,  Classics   12 

Kent,  Charles  F.,  1891,  Semitic  Languages  29 

Kerlin,  Robert  T.,  1906,  English   S6 

Kershner,  Jefferson  E.,  1885,  Mathematics (i(> 

Kilbourne,  Frederick  W.,  1897,  English  48 

Kimura,   Shunkichi,   1896,   Mathematics    ' 68 

Kindle,  Edward  M.,  1899,  Geology i39 

Kirkham,  William  B.,  1907,  Zoology,  etc 121 

Kleiner,  Israel  S.,  1909,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 129 

Klingberg,  Frank  J.,  191 1,  History  168 

Knox,  James  H.  M.,  Jr.,  1894,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc.  . .   124 

KoHMANN,  Edward  F.,  1915,  Chemistry  113 

Kreider,  David  A.,  1895,  Chemistry  89 

Krohn,  William  O.,  1889,  Philosophy  and  Education  171 

*KuD0,  TozABURO,  1903,  Philosophy  and  Education   i8o 

KuNKEL,  Beverly  W.,  1905,  Zoology,  etc 120 

KuziRiAN,  Simon  B.,  1913,  Chemistry  iii 

Lagerquist,  Walter  E.,  191  i.  Social  Sciences 156 

Lamond,  John  K.,  1910,  Mathematics  TZ 

Laney,  Francis  B.,  1908,  Geology 143 

Langley,  Ralph  W.,  1910,  Chemistry  106 

Lanman,  Charles  R.,  1873,  Classics 10 

Larson,  Joshua,  1901,  Mathematics   70 

Lathrop,  William  G.,  1909,  Social  Sciences  156 

Latourette,  Kenneth  S.,  1909,  History  167 

Law,  Jessie  M.,  1901,  History  163 

Lawrence,  Henry  W.,  Jr.,  1910,  History  167 

Lawton,  Ellis  E.,  1906,  Physics  82 

Learned,  Dwight  W.,  1873,  Classics  10 

Learned,  Henry  B.,  1909,  History  167 

Lenfest,  Bertram  A.,  1905,  Philosophy  and  Education 181 

Lent,  Frederick,  1906,  Semitic  Languages  Z'^^ 

Lester,  Oliver  C,  1904,  Physics  81 

Lewis,  Charlton  M.,  1898,  English  49 

Lewis,  Howard  B.,  1913,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 132 

Lewis,  Robert  C,  1912,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 132 

LicHTi,  Otto,  191  i,  Semitic  Languages  33 


— 200— 

PAGE 

LiDDLE,  Leonard  M.,  1909,  Chemistry  105 

Light,  Jeremiah  K.,  1893,  Philosophy  and  Education  173 

LiNHART,  George  A.,  1913,  Chemistry   iii 

Linton,  Edwin,  1890,  Zoology,  etc 119 

Little,  Charles  N.,  1885,  Mathematics  66 

Lloyd,  Warren  E.,  1898,  Philosophy  and  Education  176 

Lockhart,  Clinton,  1894,  Semitic  Languages  30 

Lockwood,  Edwin  H.,  1901,  Mathematics  70 

LocKwooD,  Laura  E.,  1898,  English  49 

LoNGLEY,  William  H.,  1910,  Zoology,  etc 121 

LooMis,  Francis  E.,  1866,  Physics   yj 

LooMis,  Herbert  N.,  1911,  Philosophy  and  Education  183 

Lord,  Arthur  P.,  1899,  History  161 

Lord,  Louis  E.,  1908,  Classics  22 

LouGHLiN,  Gerald  P.,  1906,  Geology  142 

LovELL,  George  B.,  1909,  German  42 

Lovewell,  Bertha  E.,  1898,  English  49 

LovEWELL,  Joseph  T.,  1874,  Physics  78 

Lowe,  Walter  L,  1897,  History  160 

LuciAN,  Arsene  N.,  1914,  Physics   84 

Lumley,  Fred  E.,  1912,  Social  Sciences   157 

.  Luquiens,  Frederick  B.,  1905,  Romance  Languages 37 

♦Luquiens,  Jules,  1873,  Classics   10 

Lyman,  John  F.,  1909,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 130 

Lytle,  Ernest  B.,  1908,  Mathematics  72 

McAllister,  Cloyd  N.,  1900,  Philosophy  and  Education  177 

McClenon,  Raymond  B.,  1905,  Mathematics  71 

McCoLLUM,  Elmer  V.,  1906,  Chemistry loi 

McCoRMAc,  Eugene  L,  1901,  History 163 

McCuNE,  William   P.,  1912,  English    59 

MacCurdy,  George  G.,  1905,  Social  Sciences   154 

McFarland,  Boynton  W.,  1896,  Chemistry  90 

Macfarland,  Charles  S.,  1899,  Semitic  Languages  30 

McFarland,  David  F.,  1909,  Chemistry   105 

McGouGAN,  Alexander  G.,  1912,  Physics  83 

McGregor,  Ernest  F.,  1910,  Social  Sciences  156 

McLane,  William  W.,  1889,  Philosophy  and  Education  171 

MacLean,  Charles  F.,  1866,  Department  undetermined  186 

MacLean,  Mary  E.,  1905,  English   56 

McVey,  Frank  L.,  1895,  Social  Sciences  150 

Maddox,  John  L.,  1914,  Social  Sciences  157 


201 

PAGE 

Madsen,  Albert  A.,  1907,  Semitic  Languages  32 

Mallory,  Herbert  S.,  1904,  English  54 

*Manatt,  James  I.,  1873,  Classics  10 

Manship,  Winfield  S.,  1901,  Philosophy  and  Education  178 

Mar,  Frederic  W.,  1891,  Chemistry   87 

Marble,  Fred  E.,  1897,  Semitic  Languages   30 

Martin,  Herbert,  1905,  Philosophy  and  Education  181 

Maryott,  Carlton  H.,  191 1,  Chemistry  107 

Mason,  Lawrence,  1913,  English  60 

Matsumoto,  Matataro,  1899,  Philosophy  and  Education  176 

Maxson,  Ralph  N.,  1905,  Chemistry  100 

Meara,  Frank  S.,  1892,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 124 

Medway,  Herbert  E.,  1904,  Chemistry 97 

Mendel,  Lafayette  B.,  1893,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc.  . . .  124 

Mendell,  Clarence  W.,  1910,  Classics   23 

Menge,  George  A.,  1906,  Chemistry  loi 

Merriam,  Henry  F.,   1903,  Chemistry  96 

Merrill,  Elizabeth,  1910,  English   58 

Merrill,  Helen  A.,  1903,  Mathematics    70 

Merriman,  Mansfield,  1876,  Mathematics  65 

Metcalf,  John  T.,  1913,  Philosophy  and  Education  183 

Miller,  Edwin  C,  1910,  Botany  117 

Miller,  Frank  J.,   1892,  Classics    IS 

Miller,  John  M.,  1915,  Physics 84 

MiMS,  Stewart  L.,  1912,  History 169 

Minnig,  Harley  D.,  1915,  Chemistry  113 

Mitchell,  James  L.,  1896,  History   160 

Mitchell,  Philip  H.,  1907,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 128 

Mitchell,  Sydney  K.,  1907,  History  166 

Mitchell,  Mrs.  Sydney  K.  (Hewitt),  1901,  History 163 

MiYAKE,  IsHiRO,  1901,  Philosophy  and  Education  178 

Montgomery,  George  R.,  1901,  Philosophy  and  Education  ....  178 

Moody,  Seth  E.,  1906,  Chemistry 102 

Moore,  Eliakim  H.,  1885,  Mathematics   67 

Moore,  Frank  G.,  1890,  Classics   14 

♦Moore,  Frederick  W.,  1890,  Social  Sciences 149 

Moore,  John  M,,  1895,  Philosophy  and  Education  174 

MoREHEAD,  James  C,  1905,  Mathematics  71 

Morgan,  William  C,  1899,  Chemistry  93 

Morgan,  William  S.,  1895,  Philosophy  and  Education  174 

♦MoRiTA,  Kumato,  1892,  Philosophy  and  Education  173 

Morris,  Mrs.  Charles  G.  (Woodbridge),  1898,  English  50 


202 

PAGE 

MuRCH,  Herbert  S.,  1906,  English  56 

Mutch,  William  J.,  1894,  Philosophy  and  Education  174 

Myers,  Irene  T.,  1900,  English 51 

Myers,  Victor  C,  1909,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 130 

Nakashima,  Rikizo,  1889,  Philosophy  and  Education  171 

♦Nelson,  Edward  T.,  1869,  Department  undetermined  186 

Nettleton,  George  H.,  1900,  English  51 

Neuenschwander,  Elise,  1913,  Romance  Languages  38 

Newton,  Howard  D.,  1908,  Chemistry 103 

Nichols,  Edward  W.,  1913,  Classics   24 

Nichols,  George  E.,  1909,  Botany  117 

Nichols,  Robert  H.,   1896,  English   47 

Nicholson,  Edward  K.,  1900,  Social  Sciences 152 

Nicholson,  Watson,  1903,  English   53 

NicoLET,  Ben  H.,  1913,  Chemistry iii 

Noble,  Levi  P.,  1909,  Geology  143 

Noble,  Willis  C,  Jr.,  1913,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 132 

Norton,  John  P.,  1901,  Social  Sciences 152 

Norton,  John  T.,  Jr.,  1901,  Chemistry  94 

Notestein,  Wallace,  1908,  History  166 

Nutting,  Herbert  C,  1897,  Classics  17 

Nye,  Irene,  191 1,  Classics  23 

Oertel,  Hanns,  1890,  Classics  14 

Olmsted,  George  K.,  1898,  Social  Sciences 151 

Olsen,  Julius,  1902,  Physics   80 

O'Neill,  John  J.,  1912,  Geology  145 

Osborne,  Thomas  B.,  1885,  Chemistry  87 

Osgood,  Charles  G.,  1899,  English   50 

♦Otis,  Charles  P.,  1873,  Department  undetermined   187 

Owen,  Edward  T.,  1900,  Classics   18 

♦Packard,  Lewis  R.,  1863,  Classics  9 

Padelford,  Frederick  M.,  1899,  English 50 

Page,  Leigh,  1913,  Physics  84 

Painter,  Theophilus  S.,  1913,  Zoology,  etc 121 

Palmer,  Edith  S.,  1914,  German   43 

Palmer,  Elizabeth  H.,  1905,  Classics  21 

Palmer,  Howard  E.,  1910,  Chemistry 106 

Palmer,  Margaretta,    1894,   Mathematics    67 

Palmer,  Walter  H.,  1914,  Classics   24 


—203— 

PAGE 

Park,  Mary  I.,  1904,  Philosophy  and  Education  180 

Parker,  William  H.,  1899,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 125 

♦Parks,  William   H.,   1888,   Classics    14 

Parmelee,  Julius  H.,  1910,  Social  Sciences  156 

Parry,  John  J.,  1915,  EngHsh  62 

Patterson,  Gaylord  H.,  1890,  Semitic  Languages  27 

Patterson,  Herbert  P.,  1913,  Philosophy  and  Education 184 

Patterson,  Robert  A.,   1915,  Physics    85 

Payne,  William  B.,  1877,  Chemistry  87 

Pearson,  Alfred  J.,  1896,  German   '. 40 

Pearson,  Charles  C,  1913,  History  169 

Peck,  Harvey  W.,  1913,  English  60 

Peck,  John  W.,  1878,  Department  undetermined  187 

Peirce,  Alton  W.,  1896,  Chemistry   90 

Peirce,  Leona  M,,   1899,   Mathematics    69 

Peirce,  Paul  S.,  1900,  History  162 

♦Perkins,  Claude  C,  191  i.  Chemistry  107 

Perkins,  George  H.,  1869,  Zoology,  etc 119 

Perkins,  Perry  B.,   1908,   Physics    82 

Perrin,   Bernadotte,  1873,  Classics   10 

Peters,  Charles  A.,  1901,  Chemistry   94 

Peters,  John  P.,  1876,  Classics   11 

Petersen,  Walter,  1908,  Classics 22 

Peterson,  Conrad  A.,  1906,  History  165 

Peterson,  Samuel,  1897,  Social  Sciences  151 

Petty,  Orville  A.,  1915,  Philosophy  and  Education 184 

Pharr,  Clyde,  1910,  Classics  23 

Phelps,  Isaac  K.,   1897,  Chemistry   91 

Phelps,  Mrs.  Isaac  K.   (Austin),  1898,  Chemistry  91 

♦Phelps,  Moses  S.,  1874,  Philosophy  and  Education  171 

Phelps,  Vergil  V.,  1910,  History  168 

Phelps,  William   L.,   1891,   English    45 

♦Phillips,  Andrew  W.,  1877,  Mathematics  66 

Pierce,  Frederick  E.,   1908,   English    57 

Pierce,  Frederick  W.,    1909,   German    43 

Pitman,  Frank  W.,  1914,  History  169 

Platner,  Samuel  B.,  1885,  Classics  13 

Plimpton,  Samuel  J.,  1912,  Physics  84 

Pogue,  Joseph  E.,  1909,  Geology  143 

Pollard,  Edward  B.,  1893,  Semitic  Languages 29 

Porter,  Frank  C,  1889,  Philosophy  and  Education  172 

Pratt,  Alexander,  Jr.,  1901,  Social  Sciences  152 


— 204 — 

PAGE 

Pratt,  Joseph  H.,  1896,  Geology   138 

Pratt,  Julius  H.,  Jr.,  1887,  Physics  78 

Price,  Clifton,  1896,  Oassics  16 

Prince,  Walter  F.,  1899,  History  161 

PuLMAN,  Oscar  S.,  Jr.,  1903,  Chemistry  96 

Quittmeyer,  Ernest  M.,  1904,  Philosophy  and  Education  180 

Rall,  Edward  E.,  1903,  Philosophy  and  Education   180 

Randall,  David  L.,   1907,   Chemistry    102 

Randall,  Mrs.  Herbert  (Sawtelle),  1896,  English  48 

Rather,  Ethel  Z.,  1908,  History   167 

Raymond,  Percy  E.,  1905,  Geology  142 

Reed,  Edward  B.,   1896,  English    47 

Reed,  Solomon  L.,  1913,  Philosophy  and  Education  184 

Reeds,  Chester  A.,  1910,  Geology  144 

Reedy,  John  H.,  1915,  Chemistry   113 

Reilly,  Joseph  J.,  1912,  English   59 

Reinecke,  Leopold,  1914,  Geology  146 

Reinhart,  Mrs.  George  F.  (Henry),  1905,  English  55 

Rettger,  Leo  F.,  1902,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 126 

Reynolds,  Artemus  W.,  1893,  Semitic  Languages 29 

Rice,  Chauncey  B.,  1901,  Physics  80 

Rice,  John  P.,  1909,  Romance  Languages  38 

Rice,  William  N.,  1867,  Zoology,  etc 119 

Richards,  George  S.,  1894,  Philosophy  and  Education  174 

Richardson,  Robert  K.,  1902,  History   163 

Richardson,  Roland  G.  D.,  1906,  Mathematics  72 

♦Richardson,  Rufus  B.,  1878,  Classics   12 

Rider,  Paul  R.,  1915,  Mathematics   76 

Riley,  Isaac  W.,  1902,  Philosophy  and  Education   179 

Risteen,  Allan  D.,  1903,  Physics  81 

Roberts,  Charlotte  F.,  1894,  Chemistry  89 

Roberts,  Edwin  J.,  191 1,  Chemistry  108 

Roberts,  Peter,  1901,  Social  Sciences  152 

Robertson,  William  S.,  1903,  History 164 

Robinson,  Chalfant,  1902,  History  164 

Robinson,  Henry   H.,   1903,   Geology    141 

Robinson,  James  J.,  1888,  Classics  14 

Robinson,  Maurice  H.,  1902,  Social  Sciences  IS3 

Robinson,  William  A.,  1913,  History  169 

♦RocKwooD,  Charles  G.,  Jr.,  1866,  Mathematics   65 

RocKWooD,  Elbert  W.,  1904,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 127 


—205— 

PAGE 

*RoGERS,  Cornelia  H.  B.,  1894,  Romance  Languages  36 

*RoGERS,  Sara  B.,  1894,  History  159 

Root,  Robert  K.,  1902,  English  52 

Rorer,  William  D.,  1907,  History  166 

Rose,  Mrs.  Anton   R.    (Swartz),   1909,  Physiological   Chem- 
istry, etc 130 

Rose,  Bruce,  1913,  Geology  146 

Rose,  William  C,  191  i,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 131 

Runkle,  Erwin  W.,  1893,  Philosophy  and  Education  173 

Sage,  Eben  C,  1890,  Semitic  Languages  2'] 

Saiki,  Tadasu,  1907,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 128 

♦Sander,  Anton,  1877,  Department  undetermined  187 

Sanders,  Frank  K.,  1889,  Semitic  Languages  27 

Sanderson,  James  C,  191  i,  Physics  83 

Sargent,  Charles  E.,  1905,  Philosophy  and  Education  181 

Sarle,  Clifton  J.,  1906,  Geology  142 

Savage,  Thomas  E.,  1909,  Geology  144 

♦Sawtelle,  Alice  E.,  1896,  English   48 

Saxton,  Blair,  1915,  Chemistry  1 14 

Schneider,  Edward  C,  1901,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc.  ...  125 

Scholes,  Samuel  R.,  191  i,  Chemistry  108 

ScHREiBER,  Carl  F.,  1914,  German  44 

Schultz,  William  E.,  1915,  English 62 

Schumacher,  Charles  A.,  1894,  English  46 

*ScHUYLER,  Eugene,  1861,  Department  undetermined  186 

Scott,  George,   1890,   Classics    14 

Scott,  Mary  A.,  1894,  English  46 

Scott,  Walter  M.,  1915,  Chemistry  114 

Seashore,  Carl  E.,  1895,  Philosophy  and  Education  175 

Sellards,  Elias  H.,  1903,  Geology  141 

Sellew,  George  T.,  1898,  Mathematics 68 

Seronde,  Joseph,  191 5,  Romance  Languages 39 

Seymour,   Charles,   1911,  History   168 

Shackford,  Martha  H.,  1901,  English 51 

Shearin,  Hubert  G.,  1902,  English   52 

Sheldon,  Ernest  W.,  1910,  Mathematics  74 

Shepard,  Norman  A.,  1913,  Chemistry  112 

Shepard,  William   K.,   1900,   Physics    80 

*Shepardson,  Daniel,  Jr.,  1891,  Semitic  Languages  29 

Shepardson,  Francis  W.,  1892,  History  159 

Sheridan,  Susan  S.,  1902,  English  52 


— 2o6 — 

PAGE 

Sherman,  Lucius  A.,  1875,  English  45 

Sherrick,   Sarah   M.,   1896,  History   160 

Sherwood,  Margaret  P.,  1898,  English  49 

Shumaker,  Elmer  E,,  1902,  Philosophy  and  Education  179 

Skinner,  Joseph  J.,  1876,  Mathematics  66 

Sledd,  Andrew,  1903,  Classics  19 

Smith,  Burke,  1904,  Mathematics   71 

Smith,  Clara  E.,  1904,  Mathematics  71 

Smith,  Ernest  E.,  1891,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 123 

Smith,  Herbert  A.,  1897,  English   48 

Smith,  John  J.,  1915,  Philosophy  and  Education  184 

Smith,  Percey  F.,  1891,  Mathematics  67 

♦Smith,  Theodate  L.,  1896,  Philosophy  and  Education  175 

Smith,  Thomas  A.,  1877,  Mathematics 66 

Smyth,  Mary  W.,  1910,  English  58 

Sneath,  Elias  H.,  1890,  Philosophy  and  Education  172 

Snell,  Florence  M.,  1914,  English  62 

Snyder,  Horace  M.,  1897,  Physics   79 

Sperry,  Joel  A.,  2d,  1914,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 133 

Staaf,  Oscar  E.,  1907,  Romance  Languages  zi 

Staley,  M.  Victor,  1895,  Classics  16 

Stanley,  Frederick  C,  1905,  Geology  142 

Stanley,  Louise,  191  i.  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 131 

♦Starkweather,  George  P.,  1898,  Mathematics 68 

Statiropoulos,  Joannes  G.,  1905,  Chemistry 100 

Stearns,  Thomas  C,  1898,  Philosophy  and  Education 176 

Stehle,  Raymond  L.,  1915,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 134 

Stevens,  Neil  E.,  1911,  Botany  117 

Stevens,  William  O.,  1903,  English   53 

Stibitz,  George,  1889,  Semitic  Languages 27 

Stookey,  Lyman  B.,  1902,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 126 

Stromquist,  Carl  E.,  1903,  Mathematics 70 

Strong,  Frank,  1897,  History   160 

Strong,  Wendell  M.,  1898,  Mathematics  69 

Sumner,  George  S.,  1897,  History  161 

Swain,  Robert  E.,  1904,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 127 

SwARTZ,  Mary  D.,  1909,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 130 

Sweeney,  Margaret,  1901,  English  51 

Takagi,  Senjiro,  1910,  Social  Sciences  156 

Talbot,  Mignon,  1904,  Geology  141 

Tarbell,  Frank  B.,  1879,  Classics  12 


207 — 

PAGE 

Taylor,  Emerson  G.,  1899,  English  50 

Taylor,  Robert  L.,  1900,  Romance  Languages  36 

Taylor,  Thomas  S.,  1909,  Physics  82 

Taylor,  William  J.,  1901,  Philosophy  and  Education  178 

Ten  Broeke,  James,  1891,  Philosophy  and  Education 172 

Tennant,  George  B.,  1907,  English  57 

Terry,  Mrs.  Alfred  H.  (Campbell),  1907,  English  56 

Tew,  Susan  D.,  1895,  Classics  16 

Textor,  Lucy  E.,  1904,  History  164 

Thompson,  Elbert  N.  S.,  1903,  English   '. 54 

Thompson,  George  C,  1896,  Classics  16 

♦Thompson,  Guy  V.,  1894,  Classics  i5 

Thompson,  Maud,  1906,  Classics 21 

Thompson,  Wilmot  H.,  1906,  Classics   21 

Thorne,  Clifford,   1901,  Social  Sciences   I53 

Thornton,  William  M.,  Jr.,  1914,  Chemistry  112 

Thorstenberg,  Edward,  1904,  German  41 

Thorstenberg,  Herman  J.,  1906,  History 165 

Tillotson,  Edwin  W.,  Jr.,  1909,  Chemistry  105 

TiLTON,  Asa  C,  1900,  History  162 

Tinker,  Chauncey  B.,  1902,  English  53 

Todd,  Arthur  J.,  191 1,  Philosophy  and  Education  183 

Tolman,  Herbert  C,  1890,  Classics  ' 14 

Towles,  John  K.,  1908,  Social  Sciences  I55 

Troxell,  Edward  L,  1914,  Geology  146 

Tucker,  Emma  C,  1913,  English   60 

TucKEY,  Edson  N.,  1904,  Social  Sciences  I53 

TuKEY,  Ralph  H.,  1906,  Classics   21 

TuTTLE,  William  R.,  1897,  Social  Sciences  151 

Twenhofel,  William  H.,  1912,  Geology  145 

Underhill,  Frank  P.,  1903,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 126 

Underwood,  Charles  E.,  1912,  Semitic  Languages 34 

Valentine,  William,  1900,  Chemistry   93 

Van  Buren,  Albert  W.,  1915,  Classics  24 

Van  Deventer.  Harry  B.,  1907,  Classics  21 

Van  Name,  Ralph  G.,  1902,  Chemistry  95 

Van  Name,  Willard  G.,  1898,  Zoology,  etc 120 

Veblen,  Thorstein  B.,  1884,  Philosophy  and  Education  171 

Vestling,  Axel  E.,  1907,  German  42 

Villa VASO,  Mrs.  Ernest  J.  (Rather),  1908,  History  167 


— 208— 

PAGE 

Wadlington,  Mary  E.,  1914,  English  62 

Wager,  Charles  H.  A.,  1895,  English 47 

Wagner,  Charles  P.,  1902,  Romance  Languages  36 

Wahlin,  Gustaf  E.,  1906,  Mathematics   72 

Walden,  Percy  T.,  1896,  Chemistry  90 

Walden,  Mrs.  Percy  T.   (Whittelsey),  1898,  Social  Sciences  151 

Walker,  Claude  P.,  1897,  Chemistry  91 

Walker,  Curtis  H.,   1905,  History   165 

Walker,  Mary  S.,   1909,  Mathematics   7^ 

Wallin,  John  E.  W.,  1901,  Philosophy  and  Education  178 

Walradt,  Henry  P.,  191 1,  Social  Sciences  157 

Ward,  Arthur  G.,  1907,  German  42 

Ward,  Brownlee  R.,   1904,  History   165 

Ward,  Freeman,  1908,  Geology  143 

Ward,  Hiram  L.,  1909,  Chemistry   106 

Warfield,  Edwin  A.,  1893,  Philosophy  and  Education 173 

Warnock,  John  D.,  1899,  Philosophy  and  Education 176 

Warren,  Chakles  H.,  1899,  Geology  139 

Waters,  William  E.,  1887,  Classics  13 

Weber,  William,  1901,  Semitic  Languages  31 

Weigle,  Luther  A.,  1905,  Philosophy  and  Education  182 

Weldon,  Richard  C,  1872,  Department  undetermined  186 

Weller,  Charles  H.,  1904,  Classics  20 

Weller,  Stuart,  1901,  Geology   140 

Welles,  Mary  C,  1904,  Classics  20 

Wells,  John  E.,  1915,  English   62 

Wells,  Philip  P.,  1900,  Social  Sciences  152 

Westerfield,  Ray  B.,  19 13,  Social  Sciences 157 

Westlund,  Jacob,  1898,  Mathematics  69 

Weston,  Arthur  H.,   191 1,  Classics   23 

Weston,  Sidney  A.,  1903,  Semitic  Languages  31 

Wetmore,  Monroe  N.,  1904,  Classics  20 

Wheeler,  Arthur  L.,   1896,   Classics    16 

♦Wheeler,  Henry  L.,   1893,   Chemistry    89 

Wheeler,  Lynde  P.,   1902,  Physics   81 

Wheeler,  Ruth,  1913,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 133 

Wheelock,  Frank  E.,  1910,  Physics 83 

White,  Albert  B.,  1898,  History 161 

*White,  Caroline  L.,  1898,  English  49 

White,  George  B.,   1903,   Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 127 

White,  Wilbert  W.,  1891,  Semitic  Languages  29 

Whitehead,  Philip  B.,   1914,  History   169 


— 209 — 

PAGE 

Whitman,  Charles  H.,  1900,  English 51 

Whitmore,  John,   1892,  Physics   78 

Whitney,  Marian  P.,  1901,  Romance  Languages  36 

Whiton,  James  M.,  1861,  Classics  9 

Whittelsey,  Sarah  S.,  1898,  Social  Sciences  151 

WiELAND,  George  R.,   1900,  Geology   140 

Wilcox,  Alexander  M.,  1880,  Classics  12 

Wilder,  Amos  P.,  1892,  Social  Sciences  149 

Willard,  Harley  R.,  1912,  Mathematics  75 

Williams,  Clarence  R.,   1912,  Semitic  Languages 34 

Williams,  Henry  S.,  1871,  Zoology,  etc 119 

Williams,  Merton  Y,,  1912,  Geology  145 

Williams,  Robert  D.,  1909,  Philosophy  and  Education  183 

Williams,  Stanley  T.,  1915,  English  63 

WiLLiSTON,  Samuel  W.,  1885,  Geology 136 

Wilson,  Alfred  M.,   1889,   Semitic  Languages    27 

Wilson,  David  W.,  1914,  Physiological  Chemistry,  etc 134 

Wilson,  Edwin  B.,  1901,  Mathematics  70 

Wilson,  Morley  E.,  1912,  Geology   145 

Wilson,  Wallace  A.,  191 1,  Mathematics  75 

Winter,  De,   1904,  English   54 

Winton,  Andrew  L,,  1904,  Chemistry   97 

Winton,  Mrs.  Andrew  L.  (Barber),  1906,  Botany 116 

Withers,  John  W.,  1904,  Philosophy  and  Education   180 

WoLCOTT,  John  D.,  1898,  Classics   18 

♦Wolodarsky,  Meyer,  1899,  Semitic  Languages   30 

Wood,  George  W.,  1877,  Social  Sciences   149 

Wood,  Ruth   G.,   1901,   Mathematics    70 

Wood,  William  H.,  1909,  Semitic  Languages  33 

Woodbine,  George  E.,   1909,  History   167 

Woodbridge,  Elisabeth,  1898,  English    50 

Woodrow,  Jay  W.,  1913,  Physics   84 

♦Worrall,  John  H.,   1862,  Mathematics   65 

Worthington,  Euphemia  R.,  1908,  Mathematics  73 

Wrenshall,   Richard,   1915,  Chemistry   114 

Wright,  Alice  L.,   1901,  English   51 

♦Wright,  Arthur  W.,   1861,  Physics   'J7 

Wright,  Henry  B.,  1903,  Classics   20 

Wright,  Henry  P.,   1876,  Classics   11 

Wright,  Rose  A.,  1914,  English   62 

Wright,  William   J.,    1915,    Geology    I47 

Wylie,  Laura  J.,   1894.  English   46 


210 

PACK 

YoKOYAMA,  Masajiro,  1904,  Social  Sciences   153 

York,  Harry  C,  1908,  Semitic  Languages  32 

Young,  George  A.,  1904,  Geology  141 

Young,  Helen  L.,   1910,  History   168 

Young,  Mary  G.,  1914,  History  170 

YuASA,  KicHiRO,  1891,  Semitic  Languages 29 

♦Zartman,  Lester  W.,  1906,  Social  Sciences  154 

Zehring,  Blanche,  1897,  Philosophy  175 

Zimmerman,  Charles  H.,  1897,  Classics  17 


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