viii MINUTES. 



Afternoon Session, 2 o'clock. 



Hampton L. Carson, M.A., LL.D., Vice-President, in the Chair. 



Professors Stephen A. Forbes, Dayton C. Miller, Henry A. 

 Bumstead and Julius Stieglitz, recently elected members, sub- 

 scribed the Laws and were admitted into the Society. 



The following papers were read : 



Symposium on Psychology in War and Education 



" Introduction," by Lightner Witmer, Ph.D., Director of the 

 Psychological Laboratory and Clinic, University of Penn- 

 sylvania. 



" Methods," by J. McKeen Cattell. 



" Psychological Examining and Classification in the United 

 States Army," by Robert M. Yerkes, Ph.D., Chairman of 

 Division of Research Information, National Research 

 Council, Washington. (By invitation.) 



" The Relation of Psychology to Special Problems of the 

 Army and Navy," by Raymond Dodge, Ph.D., Professor 

 of Psychology, Wesleyan University. (By invitation.) 



" Relation of Psychology to the National Research Council," 

 by James R. Angell, A.M., Litt.D., Chairman of the Na- 

 tional Research Council, Washington. (By invitation.) 



" Psychological Methods in Business and Industry," by 

 Beardsley Ruml, Ph.D., Philadelphia. (By invitation.) 



"The Individual in Education," by Arthur J. Jones, Ph.D., 

 Professor of Education, University of Pennsylvania. (By 

 invitation.) 



which were discussed by Prof. Webster and Mr. Carson. 



Evening Session, 8: jo o'clock. 



Robert WilHam Wood, LL.D., Professor of Experimental 

 Physics, Johns Hopkins University, spoke on " Invisible Light in 

 War and Peace" (with experimental illustrations). 



