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Page 17 text:
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VOLUME XLV, 1906 John Ernest Lansing, A.B., A.M., Assistant Pro- fessor of Chemistry. A.B. Harvard 1S9S. .M. Harvard 1900. Traveled in Kurope 1898-99. Student in Harvard Graduate Sehoo 1S99-1901. Instructor in Natural Sciences at Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass. 1901-5. Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Hobart College 1905. William Robert Brooks, M.A., I).Sc., F. R. A. S., Professor oj A s ronom r. M.A. Hobart 189». I).Sc. Hamilton 1898. J B K. Fellow Royal Astronomical Society, Member Selenographic.il Societv of Great Britain, Member British Astronomical Association, Fellow American Association for the Advance- ment of As:ronomy. Lecturer on Astronomy and other subjects since 1870. Contributor to literary and scientific periodicals. Karly worker in photography and its applica- tion to Astronomy. Established Red House Observatory, 1874, making all its telescopes. Became director of the Smith Observatory in 1888. Discoverer of twenty-live comets, the first one Oct. 21, 18S1, the twenty-fifth Jan. 26, 1906. Winner of ten Warner Gold prizes for cometary discoveries Seven medals from the Astronomical Society of the Pacific Lick Observatory. Lalande Medallist of the Paris Academy of Sciences awarded “for numerous and brilliant astronomical discoveries.” Professor of Astronomy Hobart 1900, Gold Medal for photographs of comet discoveries in Hobart exhibit St. Louis World’s Fair 1904. Aktiilr Avery Bacon, A.B., A.M., Prouder- !fOis y Professor of Physics. A.B. Dartmouth College 1897, A.M. 1901. Tutor in Physics Oberlin College, 1897-98. Assistant in Physics, Dart- mouth 1898-1900. Instructor in Mathematics and Astron- omy 1900-01. Mathematical Master of Volkmann School, Boston, 1901—3. Professor of Physics, Hobart College 1905. Member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Member of tire Phi Delta Theta Fraternity.
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Page 16 text:
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12 Tl IE ECHO OF THE SENECA John Archer Silver, A.B., A.M., Pn.IX, Profes- sor of History and Instructor in Economics and Politics. A. IE Princeton, iSSfi; A.M. iNSS. J B l . (J. H. U.) 1895. Instructo in JatTua College, Ceyl u, 1SS6-SX. Student at the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, Mass., 1888-90. Stu- dent of Philosophy and History in the Universities of Berlin. Heidelberg and Paris, 1890-92. Student of History and Philos ophy in the Graduate Department of the Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, 1S92-95 ; Ph.I). (J. II. U.) 1895. Author of “The Pro- visional Government of Maryland (1774-77).” Professor of His- tory. Hobart, 1S95; Instructor in Economics and Politics, 1897. Member of the American Historical Association. Member of the Kappa Alpha Society. The Rev. Joseph Alexander Leighton, A.B., B.l Ph.I)., Chaplain and Pastor of Hobart Colic. Professor Philosophy and Psychology. TEA. and Governor General’s Medallist in Science, Trinity University, Toronto, oStji. Graduate Scholar 1S91 ;, and Eellow 1X9J-4. in the Sage School of Philosophy of Cornell University. Ph.D. Cornell 1894 4 Student Harvard I Diversity and Episcopal Theological School 1894-96. IE D. Episcopal Theological School 1S96. fI B K. Assistant, Grace Church, New York, 1896-7. Student in Berlin and Erlangen 1897. Examiner in Philosophy,Trinity University 1893-6. Member of the American Psychological Association. Author of “The Study of Individuality,” “The Inlinite New and Old,” (1902), and numerous ai tides and Reviews in the Philosophical Review and th t Journal of Philosophy: “Typical Modern Conceptions of God, with a Constructive Essay,” 1901 ; “ What is Per- sonalityV in Proceedings of Church Congress for 1902. Vice-President of American Philosophical Association. lowARD Parker Jones, A.IT, A.M., Ph.I)., Profes- sor of the German and French Languages and Literatures. A.IE Kings College. Nova Scotia. iSS.p A.M.,1891 ; Student Iieidel- beig University 1884-86; Ph.D. 18S6; at Paris 18S6-7. 'P B K. Professor of Modern Languages, King’s College, N. S., iSS8-g2. Instructor in German, Cornell University, 1893-9S. Author of “Jones’s German Reader,” Associate Professor of the German ami French Languages and Literatures, Hobart 189S-9; Professor of deiman and French Languages and Literatuies, 1901.
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Page 18 text:
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14 THE ECHO OF THE SENECA John Muikmkid, A.B., A.M.y Assistant Professor of Rhetoric, Elocution and English. A.H. Columbia University 1900, A.M. 1901. Student at Ameri- can Academy of Dramatic Arts. Instructor in Rhetoric and English, Hobart College 1901. Instructor in Elocution 1903. James Drew Recan, A.I!., Instructor in German and French. A.H. Amherst College 1900. Two years in Germany and France. Amherst 1899-1900. Instructor in the German and French languages, Hobart College, 1902. Howard Cousens Griffin, A.B., Instructor in Chemis- try. A.H. Howdoin College 1904. 1 B K. Assistant in Chemistry at How doin 1903-04. Instructor in Chemistry Hobart College, 1904. Member of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. Herbert Lemuel Wilbur, A.B.,A.M„ Instruc- tor in Latin and Greek. Easton, Mass. Public Schools, 18S8. Amherst, A.H. 1892. Principal New England High Schools, (Oakland, Maine, Southboro, Mass., Naugatuck, Ct.), 1892- 1898. Teachers’ College, New York, Higher Diploma and Columbia, A.M., 1900. Supervising Principal, Fish- kill-on-Hudson, N. Y., 1900. The University of Chicago, Fellow in Education, 1901-02. Hamilton College, Assist- ant Professor Latin and Greek, 1902-3. Superintendent, Heaver, Pennsylvania, 1903-1904. Since then, engaged in educational lecture work, and director of a summer school of philosophy for teachers. Instructor in Greek and Latin, Hobart 1905-6.
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