29 

 LIST OF PAPERS TO BE READ. 



ADDRESS BY THE RETIRING PRESIDENT, 



PKOFESSOK DAVID W. DENNIS, 



At 11 o'clock Thursday morning. 



Subject : " Photomicrography as It May be Practiced To-Day ." 



The following papers will be read in the order in which they appear on the program, 

 except that certain papers will be presented '^ parri patsu " in sectional meetings. When a 

 paper is called and the reader is not present, it will be dropped to the end of the list, unles 

 by mutual agreement an exchange can be made with another whose time is approximately 

 the same. Where no time was sent with the papers, they have been uniformly assigned ten 

 minutes. Opportunity will be given after the reading of each paper for a brief discussitn. 



iV. B.— By the order of the Academy, no paper can be read until an abstract of its contents 

 or the icritten paper has been placed in the hands of the Secretary. 



GENERAL. 



1. The Leonids of 1900, 15 m .Tohu A. Miller. 



2. Mosquitoes and Malaria, 10 m Robert Hessler. 



*3. Outline of a Course of Reading on General Biological Prob- 

 lems, 10 m C. H. Eigeumann. 



4. A Shell Gorget Found near Spiceland, Ind., 10 m Joseph Moore. 



5. A Harbor at the South End of Lake Michigan, 15 m. . J. L. Campbell. 



MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICS. 



6. Some Properties of the Symmedian Point. 8 m Robert J. Aley. 



7. Note on McGinnis's Universial Solution, 5 m Robert .T. Aley. 



8. Graphic Methods in Elementary Mathematics, 10 m. .Robert J. Aley. 



9. The Automatic Temperature Regulator, 6 m Charles T. Knipp. 



*10. Concerning the Sphere as a Space-Element, 10 m. . . .D. A. Rothi'ock. 



11. The Cayleyan Cubic, 20 m C. A. Waldo and John A. Newlin. 



12. The Use of the Bicycle Wheel in Illustrating the Principles 



of the Gyroscope, 15 m Charles T. Knipp. 



13. The Cyclic Quadrilateral, 10 m J. C. Gregg. 



14. Note on the Determination of Vapor Densities, 5 m., 



Charles T. Knipp. 



'Author absent, paper net presented. 



