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UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 23 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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UNIVERSITY OF

CALIFORNIA  , one of the largest and most important of state
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universities in
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America, situated at Berkeley, California, on the E.
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shore of
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San Francisco
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Bay . It took the place of the College of California (founded in 1855), received California's portion of the Federal
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land grant of 1862, was chartered as a state institution by the legislature in 1868, and opened its doors in 1869 at
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Oakland . In 1873 it was removed to its
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present site . In the revised state constitution of 1899 provision is made for it as the head of the state's educational
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system . The grounds at Berkeley cover 270 acres on the
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lower slopes (299-900 ft.) of the Berkeley Hills, which rise r000 ft. or more above the university; the view over the bay to San Francisco and the
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Golden
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Gate is superb . In
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recent years new and better buildings have gradually been provided . In 1896 an international architectural competition was opened at the expense of Mrs
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Phoebe R . Hearst (made a regent of the university in 1898) for plans for a
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group of buildings harmonizing with the university's beautiful site, and ignoring all buildings already existing . The first prize was awarded in 1899 to Emile Benard, of Paris . The first
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building begun under the new plans was that for the college of mines (the gift of Mrs Hearst), completed in 1907, providing worthily for the important school of
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mining, from 1885 directed by Prof . S . B .

Christy (b . 1853); California Hall, built by state appropriation, had been completed in 1906 . The Greek theatre (1903), an open-air auditorium seating 7500 spectators, on a hill-side in a grove of towering eucalypts, was the gift of William Randolph Hearst; this has been used regularly for concerts by the university's
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symphony orchestra,under the professor of
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music, John Frederick Wolle (b . 1253), who originated the Bach . Festivals at Bethlehem, Pa.;
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free public concerts are given on
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Sunday afternoons; and there have been some remarkable dramatic performances here, notably Sudraka's Mricchakaltika in
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English, and Aeschylus's Eumenides in Greek, in
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April 1907 . There are no dormitories . Student self-government
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works through the " Undergraduate Students' Affairs Committee " of the Associated Students . The faculty of the university has its own social club, with a handsome building on the grounds . At Berkeley is carried on the
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work in the colleges of letters, social sciences, natural sciences, commerce, agriculture,
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mechanical, mining and
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civil
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engineering, and chemistry, and the first two years' course of the college of medicine—the Toland Medical College having been absorbed by the university in 1873; at Mount Hamilton, the work of the Lick astronomical department; and in San Francisco, that of dentistry (1888),
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pharmacy, law,
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art, and the concluding (
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post graduate or clinical) years of the medical course—the San Francisco Polyclinic having become a
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part of the university in 1892 . Three of the San Francisco departments occupy a group of three handsome buildings in the western part of the city, overlooking Golden Gate Park . The Lick astronomical department (Lick
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Observatory) on Mount Hamilton, near San Jose, occupies a site covering 2777 acres . It was founded in 1875 by James Lick of San Francisco, and was endowed by him with $700,000, $61o,000 of this being used for- the
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original buildings and equipments, which were formally transferred to the university in 1888 .

The art department (San Francisco

Institute of art) was until 1906 housed in the former home of Mark Hopkins, a San Francisco " railroad king "; it dated from 1893, under the name " Mark Hopkins Institute of Art." The building was destroyed in the San Francisco conflagration of Igoe; but under its present name the department resumed work in 1907 on the old site . At the university
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farm, of nearly 750 acres, at Davisville, Yolo county, instruction is given in
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practical agriculture, horticulture, dairying, &c.; courses in irrigation are given at Berkeley; a laboratory of plant pathology, established in 1907 at Whittier,
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Riverside county, and an experiment station on 20 acres of land near Riverside, are for the study of plant and tree diseases and pests and of their remedies . A marine biological laboratory is maintained at La Jolla, near San Diego, and another, the Hertzstein Research Laboratory, at New
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Monterey; the Rudolph Spreckels Physiological Laboratory is in Berkeley . The university has excellent anthropological and archaeological collections, mostly made by university expeditions, endowed by Mrs Hearst, to Peru and to
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Egypt . In 1907 the university library contained 16o,000 volumes, ranking, after the destruction of most of the San Francisco
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libraries in 1906, as the largest collection in the vicinity . The building of the Doe library (given by the will of Charles Franklin Doe), for the
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housing of the university library, was begun in 1907 . The university has also the valuable Bancroft collection of 50,000 volumes and countless
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pamphlets and
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manuscripts, dealing principally with the
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history of the Pacific Coast from
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Alaska through Central America, and of the Rocky Mountain region, including
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Montana,
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Utah,
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Wyoming,
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Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and Western
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Texas . This collection (that of the historian Hubert Howe Bancroft) was acquired in 1905 for $250,000 (of which Mr Bancroft contributed $100,000), and was entrusted (1907) to the newly organized Academy of Pacific Coast History . The library of Karl Weinhold (1823-1901) of Berlin, which is especially rich in Germanic linguistics and " culture history," was presented to the university in 1903 by John D . Spreckels . The university publishes The University of California Chronicle, an official record; and the-re are important departmental publications, especially those in
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American archaeology and
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ethnology, edited by Frederic Ward Putnam (b . 1839), including the reports of various expeditions, maintained by Mrs Hearst; in physiology, edited by Jacques Loeb (b .

1859); in

botany, edited by William Albert Setchell (b . 1864) ; in zoology, edited by William Emerson Ritter (b . 1859) ; and in astronomy, the publications of the Lick Observatory, edited by William Wallace Campbell (b: 186a) . In 1902, under the direction of Henry Morse Stephens (b . 1857), who then became professor of history, a department of university extension was organized; lecture courses, especially on history and literature, were de-livered in 1906-1907 at fifteen extension " centres," at most of which classes of study were formed . Annexes to the university, but having no corporate connexion with it, are the Berkeley Bible Seminary (Disciples of Christ), the Pacific Theological Seminary (Congregational), the Pacific Coast Baptist Seminary and a Unitarian school . The growth of the university has been extremely rapid . From 1890 tao 1900 the number of students increased fourfold . In the latter
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year the university of California was second to Harvard only in the number of
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academic graduate and undergraduate students, and fifth among the educational institutions of the country in
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total enrolment . In
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July 1907 there were 519
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officers in the faculties and 2987 students, of whom 226 were in the professional
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schools in San Francisco . In addition there were 707 students in the 1906 summer session, the total for 1906-1907 thus being 36841 of this number 15o6 were
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women . The university conferred 482 degrees in 1907, 546 in 1906, 470 in 1905 .

The affairs of the university are administered by a

board of twenty-three regents, seven state officials and heads of educational institutions, being members ex officio, and sixteen other members being appointed by the governor and senate of the state; its instruction is governed by the faculties of the different colleges, and an academic senate in which these are joined . The
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gross income from all
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sources for 1905-1906 was $1,564,290, of which about $800,000 was income from investments, state and government grants, fees, &c., and the remainder was gifts and endowments . There is a permanent endowment of more than $3,000,000, partly from munificent private gifts, especially from Mrs Hearst and from
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Miss Cora
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Jean Flood . The
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financial support of the state has always been generous . No tuition
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fee is charged in the academic colleges to students
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resident in the state, and only $10.00 annually to students from without the state . The university maintains about 90 under-graduate scholarships, and ro graduate scholarships and
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fellow-
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ships . All able-bodied male students are required to take the courses in military science, under instruction by an officer of the
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United States army detailed for the purpose .
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Physical culture and hygiene are prescribed for all men and women . A state law forbids the sale of liquor within one mile of the university grounds . To realize the ideal of the university as the head of the educational system of the state, a system of inspection of high schools has been
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developed, whereby schools reaching the pre-scribed standard are entitled to recommend their graduates for
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admission to the university without examination . It was anticipated at one time that the foundation of the Leland Stanford Junior University at Palo Alto would injure the state institution at Berkeley; but in practice this was not found to be the case; on the contrary, the competition resulted in giving new vigour and enterprise to the older university . Joseph Le
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Conte (professor from 1872 to 1901) and Daniel C .

Gilman (resident in 1872-1875) deserve mention among those formerly connected with the university . In 1899 Benjamin Ide Wheeler (b . 1854) became president . He had been a graduate (1875) of Brown University, and was professor first of
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comparative
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philology and then of Greek at Cornell University; his chief publications are Der griechische Nominalaccent (1885) ; Analogy, and the Scope of its Application in Language (1887) ; Principles of Language Growth (1891); The Organization of Higher
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Education in the United States (1897); Dionysos and Immortality (1899); and
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Life of Alexander the
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Great (1900) .

End of Article: UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
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