56-J 



I \n: FELLOWS. 



Sj ci i"\ II. — 6. 

 any. 



L. II. Bailey, 

 D. II. Campbell, 

 J. M. < !oulter, 

 ( . G. Pringle, 

 John I>. Smith, 

 VV. Trelease, 



Ithaca, X. Y. 



Palo Alto, ( ;tl. 



Chicago. 



( Charlotte, Vt. 



Baltimore. 



Si . Louis. 



Section III. — 9. 



Zoology and Physiology. 



Joel A. Allen. New York. 



W. K. Brooks, Lake Roland, Md. 



C. B. Davenport, 



Cold Spring Harbor, X. Y. 

 F. P. Mall, Baltimore. 



S. Weir Mitchell, 

 II. F. Osborn, 

 A. E. Venill, 

 C. O. Whitman. 

 E. U. Wilson, 



Philadelphia. 

 New York. 



Xivv Haven. 



Chicago. 



New York. 



Si < i [OS IV. — 8. 



.1/. dicint and > 



John S. Billings, New York. 



W. s. Halsted, Baltinv 



Abraham Jacobi, New York. 



W. W. Keen. Philadelphia. 



William < ►sler, Bait imo 



I . Mitchell Prudden, New York. 

 Win. II. Welch, Ba tin 



II. C. Wood, Philadelphia. 



Class III. — Moral and Political Sciences. — 24. 



Ski mi in I. — 0. 



Philosophy and Jurisprudence 



Joseph II. Choate, New York. 



Melville W. Fuller. 



William W. I [owe, 



Charles S. Peirce, 



(i. W. Pepper, 



T. 1L. Pynchon, 



Washington. 

 New < h leans. 

 Milford, Pa. 

 Philadelphia. 

 Hartford, Conn. 



Section II. — 6. 



Philology and Archaeology. 

 Timothy Dwight, New Haven. 



B. L. Gildersleeve, Balti ■■•. 



I ( . < '. ( rilman, Baltimore. 



T. U. Lounsbury, New Haven. 

 Rufua B. Richardson, New York. 

 A. 1). White, Ithaca, N.Y. 



Si i i in n III. — 7. 

 Political Economy and History. 

 Henry Adams, Washington. 



(J. 1*. Fisher, New Haven. 



Arthur T. Hadley, New 1 la\ en. 



Henry C. Lea. Philadelphia. 



Alfred T. Mahan, New York. 



II. Morse Stephens, Ithaca. 



W. (i. Sumner, New Haven. 



Section IV. — 5. 



Literature and tht Fim Arts. 



James B. Angell, Ann Arbor, Midi. 



II. II. Furin B8, Wallingford, Pa. 



K. S. < rreenough, Florenc 



Herbert Putnam, Washington. 



John S. Sargent, Lond m. 



