OP ARTS AND SCIENCES. 547 



1886. The New Requisitions for Admission at Harvard College. Top. 



Sci. Month., XXX. 195. 

 1889. The Chemical Elements. History of the Conception which this 



Term involves. Pop. Sci. Month., XXXIV. 733. 

 1889. Address at the Commencement Dinner. 



1889. Concluding Address to the Freshman Class of Harvard College. 



1890. Report of the Director of the Chemical Laboratory of Harvard 



College. Presented to the Visiting Committee of the Overseers. 

 1890. A Plea for Liberal Culture. 

 1892. The Value and Limitations of Laboratory Practice in a Scheme of 



Liberal Education. 

 1892. Memoir of Joseph Lovering. These Proceedings, XXVII. 372. 



Also many Reviews and Reports, including Annual Reports as 

 Director of the Chemical Laboratory during many years. 



Eight hundred and seventy-first Meeting. 



January 9, 1895. — Stated Meeting. 



The President in the chair. 



The election of two Vice-Presidents to fill the vacancies 

 occasioned by the amendment of the Statutes adopted on the 

 10th of October, 1894, resulted in the choice of 



Benjamin A. Gould, Vice-President for Class I. 

 George L. Goodale, Vice-President for Class II. 



The following gentlemen were elected members of the 

 Academy : — 



Robert Tracy Jackson, of Boston, to be a Resident Fellow 

 in Class II., Section 1 (Geology, Mineralogy, and Physics 

 of the Globe). 



John Eliot Wolff, of Cambridge, to be a Resident Fellow 

 in Class II., Section 1. 



Samuel Fessenden Clarke, of Williamstown, to be a Resident 

 Fellow in Class II., Section 3 (Zoology and Physiology). 

 ' William Thomas Councilman, of Boston, to be a Resident 

 Fellow in Class II., Section 3. 



Charles Benedict Davenport, of Cambridge, to be a Resi- 

 dent Fellow in Class II., Section 3. 



