196 



SCIENCE 



[N. S. Vol. XXXIV. No. 



TABLE III 



Doctorates Distributed According to Subjects 



English 



History 



Philosophy 



Economics 



German 



Education 



Latin 



Romance 



Sociology 



Oriental , 



Greek 



Political Science 



Theology 



Philology and Compara 



tive Literature 



Law 



Music 



Classical Archeology.... 



Total , 



195 



179 



121 

 105 

 84 

 82 

 51 

 51 

 50 

 46 

 44 

 36 

 36 

 28 

 17 



7 

 4 

 3 

 1 



conferred in any science except chemistry. 

 In the total number of degrees conferred, 

 chemistry and physics are followed by zo- 

 ology, psychology, mathematics, botany 

 and geology. There were 3.3 degrees con- 

 ferred in English, 26 in history and in 

 philosophy, and 23 in education. The de- 

 grees conferred in foreign languages ap- 

 pear to be few in comparison with the num- 



ber of teachers required in these subjects 

 — 11 in Latin, 7 in Greek, 12 in Romance 

 languages and 7 in German. 



The institutions which this year con- 

 ferred two or more degrees in a science 

 are: in chemistry, Johns Hopkins, 11; 

 Harvard, 9 ; Chicago and Yale, 8 each ; 

 Columbia, 6; Cornell, 5; Wisconsin, 4; 

 Brown, 3; Clark and Illinois, 2 each; in 

 physics, Chicago, 6 ; Columbia, 5 ; Penn- 

 sylvania, Stanford and "Wisconsin, 3 each; 

 Clark, Cornell, Harvard, Johns Hopkins 

 and Princeton, 2 each; in zoology, Co- 

 lumbia, Cornell and Harvard, 4 each; 

 Chicago, Cincinnati, Clark and Indiana, 

 2 each; in psychology, Clark, 7;^ Chicago, 

 6 ; Columbia, 4 ; Pennsylvania, 3 ; in math- 

 ematics, Yale, 5 ; Chicago, 4 ; Clark, Johns 

 Hopkins, Pennsylvania and Princeton, 2 

 each; in botany, Chicago and Cornell, 4 

 each; Columbia, 3; Harvard and Johns 

 Hopkins, 2 each; in geology, "Wisconsin, 

 4; Columbia, 3; Chicago, Cornell, Har- 

 vard and Johns Hopkins, 2 each; in agri- 

 culture, Cornell, 6 ; Missouri, 2. 



The names of those on whom the degree 

 was conferred in the natural and exact 

 sciences, with the subjects of their theses, 

 are as follows : 



UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 



Henry Foster Adams : ' ' Some Problems of 

 Autokinetic Sensations. ' ' 



Charles Orval Appleman : ' ' Some Observations 

 on Catalase. ' ' 



Eiehard Philip Baker : ' ' The Problem of the 

 Angle-bisectors. ' ' 



Jasper Converse Barnes : ' ' Experimental .An- 

 alysis of Voluntary Movement. ' ' 



George William Bartelmez : ' ' The Bilaterality 

 of the Pigeon's Egg; A Study in Egg Organ- 

 ization. ' ' 



William Hunt Bates : ' ' An Application of Sym- 



° At Clark education appears to be included 

 under psychology, and in some other cases the 

 thesis in psychology Ms not based on experimental 

 work. 



