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Page 13 text:
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Page 12 text:
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to the constitution of the new six-year night courses he was entrusted by the late Dean Hartmann with the negotiations which led to their oiiicial registration by the N. Y. State Department of Education. ln April 1932, two days after the death of Dean Hartmann, he was honored by the Trustees by being appointed Acting Dean and again in May 1933 by being made Dean of the Schools of Engineering. To his continual regret, these promotions and subsequent reorganization denied Dean Bateman that intimate contact with the general student body which he enjoyed so greatly in the classroom and when Chairman of the Student Relations Committee. Even under the pressure of administrative duties, however, his happiest moments were those spent in advisory service with the many students who, due to various adverse circum- stances found themselves in diiiiculties, scholastic and otherwise. Throughout the busy years of his teaching activity he was an active member in Professional Societies, Clubs, and Alumni Associations. He was a member of the Council of the American Society for Engineering Education, United En- gineering Societies Library Board and Executive Committee, Standing Committee of Professional Recognition of the Engineers' Council for Professional Develop- ment, Committee on Abbreviations of the American Standards Association, Ad- visory Committee on Biography of the ASME, Publications Committee of 4-the ASME, as well as being an active member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, American Society for Engineering Education, New York Electrical Society, The Newcomen Committee, and the Tau Beta Pi Association. He was a Fellow in the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Director of the New York Electrical Society over the years 1940-117, and President of the latter group for the years 19411-1163 further, he was Chairman of the Survey Committee of The Barstow Award for the New York Electrical Society, and Chairman of the Committee on Meetings of the Middle Atlantic Section of the American Society for Engineering Education. XN7ell known were his activities in the Century Association, and the Grolier, Engineers, and Columbia University Clubs. He was always actively connected with Cooper Union Alumni affairs, having been a charter member of the Cooper Union Day Alumni Association
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Page 14 text:
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Dunn R005 Gifford Henry Olds GANO DUNN, electrical engineer, doctor of science from City College, Rut- gers, Columbia, Lehigh, and New York Universities. Doctor of Laws from Bow- doin Collegeg recipient of the Edison, Hoover, Townsend Harris and other medals. Trustee of The Cooper Union since 1924 and President since 1935, suc- ceeding the late R. Fulton Cutting. Member of National Academy of Sciencesg former Chairman of National Research Council, former President of American Institute of Electrical Engineers. President of the G. Wl1ite Engineering Cor- poration, engaged in engineering and construction in United States and foreign countries. W ELIHU ROOT, JR., lawyer, has been a Trustee of The Cooper Union since 1929, In 1909 he became a member of the firm of Root, Clark, Bruckner R Bal- lantine. A Major in the 304th Infantry A.E.F. 1917-1919, Mr. Root also served during Vlforld VVar II as a member of the United States Army Air Corps Strategic Target Board and received tl1e Presidential Medal for Merit. He received his A.M. from Hamilton, in 1905, a LL.D. in 1939 and a LL.B. from Harvard in 1906. He is a Trustee of Hamilton College, New York Public Library and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. WALTER S. GIFFORD, executive, has been a Trustee of The Cooper Union since 1931. In February 1948, he was elected chairman of the Board of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company after having been its presi- dent since l925 and is a director of the First National Bank of New York and trus- tee of Johns Hopkins University, General Education Board, Rockefeller Founda- tion, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He is also chairman of the Com- munity Service Society of New York, and a member of the Board of Overseers of Harvard University. He received his A.B, from -Harvard in 1904 and holds honorary degrees from Vlfilliams, Colgate, Oberlin, and Union colleges, and in 1946 was awarded the Presidential Medal for Merit. BARKLIE HENRY, the youngest of the Cooper Union trustees, served in the U. S. Naval Reserve during VVorld YV ar 11, having been commanding oilicer of a submarine chaser, and of two destroyer escorts. He retired to inactive duty with the rank of commander. In 1935 he was appointed a trustee of the Cooper Union. Active in the field of hospital and welfare work in New York City, Bark- lie Henry is a director and member of the executive committee of the United States Trust Company of New York. Mr. Henry was born in Ventnor, N. in 1902, and graduated from Harvard in 19211. IRVING S. OLDS, lawyer and business executive, became a Cooper Union trustee in 1945. Since 19110, he has been Chairman of the Board of Directors of the United States Steel Corporation. Mr. Olds is a trustee ol the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the New York Historical Society, and Yale University. Born in Erie, Pennsylvania, in 1887, Mr. Olds graduated from Yale in 1907, and from Harvard Law School in 1910. He is a collector of American naval prints. TRUSTEES
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