UNIVERSITY PRESS PUBLICATIONS Publications issued by the University since January 1, 1918. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES Changes in the Chemical Composition of Grapes during Ripening, by F. T. Bioletti, W. V. Cruess, and H. Davi. Vol. 3, pp. 25–36, March 9. A New Method of Extracting the Soil Solution, by Charles B. Lipman. Vol. 3, pp. 131-134, March 15. AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY AND ETHNOLOGY The Yana Indians, by T. T. Waterman. Vol. 13, pp. 35-102, pl. 1-20, February 27. Yahi Archery, by Saxton T. Pope. Vol. 13, pp. 103–152, pl. 21–37, March 6. Yana Terms of Relationship, by Edward Sapir. Vol. 13, pp. 153173, March 12. The Language of the Salinan Indians, by J. Alden Mason. Vol. 14, pp. 1–154, January 10. Clans and Moieties in Southern California, by Edward Winslow Gifford. Vol. 14, pp. 155–219, March 29. BOTANY Abscission of Flowers and Fruits in Solanaceae, with special reference to Nicotiana, by John N. Kendall. Vol. 5, pp. 347-428, pls. 49-53, March 6. An Account of the Mode of Foliar Abscission in Citrus, by Robert W. Hodgson. Vol. 6, pp. 417-428, February 1. CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY Parallels and Coincidences in Lucretius and Virgil, by William A. Merrill. Vol. 3, pp. 135-247, March 15. Parallelisms and Coincidences in Lucretius and Ennius, by W. A. Merrill. Vol. 3, pp. 249–264, March 15. Caesar's Use of Past Tenses in Cum-clauses, by H. C. Nutting. Vol. 5, pp. 1-53, February 9. ENGINEERING The Possible Treatment of Mangenese Ores in California, by E. A. Hersam. Vol. 2, pp. 1-56, March 26. ENTOMOLOGY New Genera and Species of Encyrtinae from California, parasitic in Mealybugs (Hymenoptera), by P. H. Timberlake. Vol. 1, pp. 347-367, March 28. GEOLOGY Anticlines near Sunshine, Park County, Wyoming, by C. L. Moody and N. L. Taliaferro. Vol. 10, pp. 34-38, pls. 34-38, January 31. The Franciscan Sandstone, by E. F. Davis. Vol. 11, pp. 1-44, pls. 1-2, March 20. PHILOSOPHY Footnotes to Formal Logic, by Charles H. Rieber. Vol. 3, pp. 1-177, March 23. PSYCHOLOGY An Experimental Study of Abnormal Children, with Special Reference to the Problems of Dependency and Delinquency, by Olga Bridgman. Vol. 3, pp. 1-59, March 30. ZOOLOGY Differentials in Behavior of the Two Generations of Salpa democratica relative to the Temperature of the Sea, by Ellis L. Michael. Vol. 18, pp. 239–298, pls. 9–11, March 11. A Synopsis of the Bats of California, by Hilda Wood Grinnell. Vol. 17, pp. 223-404, pls. 14-24, January 31. The Pacific Coast Jays of the Genus Aphelocoma, by H. S. Swarth. Vol. 17, pp. 405-422, February 23. The Musculature of Heptanchus maculatus, by Pirie Davidson. Vol. 18, pp. 151-170, March 9. The Factors Controlling the Distribution of the Polynoidae of the Pacific Coast of North America, by Christine Essenberg. Vol. 18, pp. 171-238, pls. 6-8, March 8. BARBARA WEINSTOCK LECTURES ON MORALS IN TRADE Higher Education and Business Standards, by Willard Eugene Hotchkiss. Delivered April 13, 1916. New York, Houghton, 1918. Creating Capital: Money-Making as an Aim in Business, by Frederick I. Lipman. Delivered October 17, 1916. New York, Houghton, 1918. Training for the United States Navy and for the Merchant PUBLISHED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS BERKELEY Entered as second-class matter, April 28, 1910, at the post office at Berkeley, California under the Act of July 16, 1894 THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA CHRONICLE PUBLISHED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE EDITORIAL COMMITTEE OF THE ACADEMIC SENATE MR. MORSE A. CARTWRIGHT General Editor THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA CHRONICLE publishes contributed articles, the chief addresses of general interest delivered at the University from time to time by distinguished visitors, and also as many as possible of the public addresses delivered at home or abroad by members of the faculty. Papers upon all subjects are admitted to its pages, provided the manner of their presentation is such as arouses general rather than technical interest. Each number contains also the UNIVERSITY RECORD, which presents in brief the annals of the University for the quarteryear preceding each issue of the magazine. Issued quarterly, in January, April, July, and October SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, ONE DOLLAR A YEAR SINGLE COPIES, TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Foreign postage, twenty cents a year additional Subscriptions should be addressed to UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS BERKELEY -1918 The University of California, responding with an instinctive loyalty and an eager patriotism to the nation's call for service, is dedicated to the vitally important task of training men and women throughout the state in war work. With upwards of three thousand stars shining from its service flag, the University, through its several departments, its faculty, its alumni and its student body, is employing its full resources in striving towards the one great goal of bringing the war to a "speedy and successful termination." On the firing line in France, with the nation's battle fleet, in the shipyards, in the laboratories of war science, in the mines and on the farms, at home and abroad, wherever the call to serve has come, University men and women are at work. The University has given of its members, gladly and proudly. Not only are Californians listed on the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps rolls, but names on the lists of the California Council of Defense, the National Council of Defense, the United States Shipping Board, the Pacific Coast Research Conference, the United States Department of Agriculture, the United States Public Service Reserve, the War Trade Board, the Red Cross, and scores of com |