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Page 31 text:
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as .milium ■mi i iuinm (,( A MimiMiiimniiiiin: % Phil Harold Hembdt, A. M., Ph. D. Professor of English Language and Literature. Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Sigma Rho; A. B., New York Uni- versity, 1901; A. M., 1904; Ph. D., 1915; Principal, High School, Mt. Kisco, N. Y., 1901-05; Normal School Superior, Wisconsin, 1905-13; author of Home English and School English, Irish Life in Irish Fiction The Influence of the Royal Society on English Style, Guide to Novel Reading, Analysisof English Prose Style; Influence of Science on English, 1926; Phi Gamma Delta; present position since 1913. Arthur Henry Harrop, A. M., Ph. D. Professor of Latin and Greek Languages and Literature. Phi Beta Kappa, A. B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1894, A. M., 1896; A. M., Harvard University, Mass., 1903; Ph. D., Boston University, 1905; Vice-President and Professor of Latin and Greek, Union College, 1894-95; same at Missouri Wesleyan College, 1896-97; Acting Assistant Professor of Greek at Wesleyan University, Connecticut, 1905; Professor of Latin, University of Denver, 1905-13; Registrar and Instructor of Latin and Greek, Allegheny College, 1913-15; author of College Training, Fraternity Scholarship, What the College and University Ought to Do for the Student in Latin, Latin and Greek as First Aids in the Study of Psychology, The Story of Ammi Bradford Hyde; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; present position since 1915. Arthur Merton Chickering, M. S., Ph. D. Professor of Biology and Geology. Sigma Xi: Ph. B., Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University, 1913; M. S., University of Wisconsin, 1916; Ph. D., Univer- sity of Michigan, 1927; further graduate work at the Univer- sity of Michigan, Summer Sessions, 1919-24; Instructor of Biology, Beloit College, Wis., 1913-18; Instructor in Zo- ology at University of Michigan Summer Session, 1921-22; School Year University of Michigan, 1925-26; Papers in Cytol- ogy; Member of the A. A. A. ' s; Member of the American Micro- scopical Society, 1915; Treasurer, 1926; Member of the Ameri- can Nature Association; Member of the Michigan Academy of Science; Vice-President Zoology Section, 1910-20; present position since 1918. En E» 3T)fi b O -yifjp 111 ■ «» ' n rmmT Page Twenty-five
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Page 30 text:
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» E [ f A L B To NTAN) j7fiSg miiiiiiiiiimrr Frederick Lutz, A. M., Litt. D. Professor Emeritus of Modern Languages. A. B., Berea College, 1876; A. B., Harvard, 1878; A. M. Baldwin-Wallace College, 1879; studied at Jena, Freiburg, Geneva, Munich and Marburg; Litt. D., Albion College, 1911; Member of the Harvard Faculty until 1885, when he came to Albion College; thirty-five years as head of the Modern Language department, Albion College; Secretary of the Faculty for eighteen years; formerly a member of the Modern Language Association, the Classical Association, and the Dante Society; Author of The Elementary German Reader; German Derivatives; Co-Author of English Etymologies. Frederic Samuel Goodrich, A. M., D. D. Professor of Biblical History and Literature. Phi Beta Kappa; Psi Upsilon; A. B., Wesleyan University Connecticut, 1890; A. M., University of Michigan, 1898; Yale University, Connecticut, 1898; University of Chicago, Summer Sessions; University of Berlin, D. D., Defiance College, 1909; Assistant Instructor in Greek, Wesleyan University, Connecti- cut, 1891-92; Acting President of College, January 21, 1924, to July 15, 1924; present position since 1892. Edwin Roscoe Sleight, A. M. Professor of Mathematics. B. S., Albion College, 1901; A. M., 1902; Professor of Mathe- matics, Montevideo, Uruguay, South America, 1902-04; Michigan Military Academy, 1904-06; Carthage College, Illinois, 1906-08; Bay View Summer School professor; Alpha Tau Omega; present position since 1908. imtnnnmunninniinnui.rff jji q qTK7| QmTTTTT iiiiiiiiiiiiraiiiltU ' lU«Tni ll P Jy Piigc Twenty-four
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Page 32 text:
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pmn miiriiiiiniiMi ad(A L B IO N KJ TaTQJK mujiH.Mmnm.Lnrn David Lindsay Randall, Ph. D. Professor of Chemistry. Sigma Xi; A. B., Yale University, Connecticut, 1904; A. M., Yale University, Connecticut, 1905; Ph. D., 1907; Instructor in Chemistry, University of New Hampshire, 1907-10; Pro- fessor of Chemistry and Faculty Secretary, Baker University, Kansas, 1910-18; Associate Professor of Chemistry, Wesleyan University, Conn., 1918-19; Member of the American Chemical Society; Sigma Phi Epsilon; present position since 1919. Albert Johnston McCulloch, A. M.; Ph. D. Professor of Political Science. A. B., University of Missouri, 1894; A. M., 1895; Ph. D., University of Denver, 1905; Columbia University, 1914, 1926; Instructor in History, University of Missouri,. 1894-95; Pro- fessor of History, North East Missouri Teachers ' College, 1919; Professor of History, Morningside College, Iowa, 1923- 24; Author of The Loan Office Experiment in Missouri; ' ' Member Political Science Association of America, and of Academy of Political Science of New York; Pi Kappa Delta; present position since 1919. Donald Monroe Gilbert, Ph. D. Professor of Modern Languages. Phi Beta Kappa; Ph. B., We sleyan University, Connecticut, 1908; Certificat d ' etudes Francaises, University of Paris, 1910; A. M., West Virginia University, 1917; Ph. D. ' University of Wisconsin, 1920; Instructor in French, Northwestern Uni- versity, 111., 1909-10; Instructor of English, Corozal, Porto Rico, 1908-09; Supervising Principal, Corozal and Humacao, Porto Rico, 1911-14; Instructor in English and French, Insti- tute) Nacional, Panama, 1914-15; Instructor in Romance Languages, West Virginia University, 1915-18; University of Cincinnati, 1918-19; Graduate Work and Assistant in Romance Languages, University of Wisconsin, 1919-20; Delta Kappa Epsilon; present position since 1920. % • • »1 1 •■•(•! till Bill! Illlllll ■••■■• 111 k o TT] I Vage Twenty-six
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