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Page 18 text:
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OJljp (grant) QDli) Matt of the itill EDWIN CORTLANDT BOLLES, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., S.T.D., LL.D. Dickson Professor of English and American History and Chaplain of the College. SET; t BK Di. Bolles graduated from Trinity College in 1855 and was ordained in the Universalist Ministry in 1861. At the outbreak of the Civil War he joined a Maine regiment as an army chaplain and during the war he became acquainted with the leaders of both sides, being a personal friend of General U. S. Grant. Following the Civil War, Dr. Bolles was the pastor of the Universalist Church at Portland, Me., from 1865-70. In 1870 he became the Professor of Microscopy at St. Lawrence University. In 1887 Dr. Bolles held the Univer¬ salist Pastorate at the Church of the Divine Paternity, New York City. He has held the Dickson Professorship of English and American History at Tufts since 1899. Dr. Bolles has made the daily student chapel sessions popular among the undergraduate body since 1913, when he was called upon to deliver his inspiring five-minute talks at the chapel exercises. This position of the col¬ lege chaplain he has filled during the past five years despite his age of eighty years. Dr. Bolles is a lecturer of note, having given many addresses in the Lowell Institute courses. He has trav¬ eled extensively and has made large collections of historical data and manuscripts. He received his Master of Arts degree in 1859 from Trinity College, and the honorary degrees of Ph.D. from St. Lawrence University in i860, S.T.D. from Tufts in 1880, and LL.D. from Trinity in 1905. . . - . rwm mi r • m ....fi’w; ' .. • j f 1 Twelve
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Page 17 text:
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... ffihr dlumbn ij GARDNER CHACE ANTHONY, A.M., S.D. Dean of the Engineering School c. c. A.M., Tufts, 1889 (Hon.); Sc.D., 1905 (Hon.); Student at Brown Uni¬ versity and Tufts College, 1875-1878; Practical Mechanical Engineering, 1878-1885; Teacher, Rhode Island School of Design, and Director and Founder Rhode Island Technical Drawing School, 1885-1893; Dean, Bromfield-Pearscn School, and Professor of Technical Drawing at Tufts College, 1893; Dean, Engineering School, Tufts College, 1898; Acting Head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering, 1909; Treasurer, Tufts College Athletic Association, 1912; Member, American Society of Mechanical Engineers; President of Society for the Promotion of En¬ gineering Education, 1913-14 and Vice-President in 1911-12; Member of American Association for the Advancement of Science; American Asso¬ ciation of University Professors; National Geographical Society. Author of Technical Drawing Series including “Elements of Mechanical Draw¬ ing,” “Machine Drawing,” “Essentials of Gearing” and “Descriptive Geometry,” also various contributions to engineering and educational literature. •i 13 Hf LEE SULLIVAN McCOLLESTER, A.B., B.D., D.D. Dean of the Crane Theological School J A 9 ; $BK A.B., Tufts, 1881; B.D., 1884; D.D., 1899; Ordained to the Universalist Ministry, 1884-. Pastorates, Claremont, N. H., 1884-88, Detroit, Mich.. 1889-1912; Dean, Crane Theological School, 1912; President of Univer¬ salist General Convention, 1915-17; Chairman of Board of Trustees; Member of Michigan and Massachusetts Societies S. A. R.; Michigan Sons of Colonial Wars; Mason K. T. and 33rd; Boston Ministers’ Club. In Detroit where he was pastor for twenty-four years, he was on many charity boards; the Commission of Fifty for adjusting Street Car Con¬ troversy; at different times President and Secretary of Michigan Uni¬ versalist Convention; Trustee of Buchtel College; President of New England Society; Vice-President of Unitarian Conference; Chairman of Universalist Extension Committee. Published, “Passing of the Old Homestead,” “A New Emphasis on Four American Affirmations,” many tracts, newspaper articles, “Universaiism” in the new International Encyclopedia. CHARLES ERNEST FAY, A.B., A.M., Litt.D. Dean of the Graduate School, Wade Professor of Modern Languages 0 A X; B K A.B., Tufts, 1868; A.M., 1872; Litt.D., 1900 (Hon.); Instructor of Mathe¬ matics, Tufts, 1868-69; Studied in Europe, 1869-70; Instructor in Mod¬ ern Languages, Tufts, 1869-71; Wade Professor, Modern Languages, 1871-. Member, American Philological Association; Charter Member, Modern Language Association of America, and Modern Language Asso¬ ciation of New England (President, 1905); Charter Member, New Eng¬ land Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools (President, 1888-89); President, Appalachian Mountain Club, 1878, 1881, 1893, I 9 °S; First President, American Alpine Club, 1902-08; re-elected, 1916; Fellow, Harvard Travellers Club (Vice-President, 1909); Hon. Member, Alpine Club (London), Italian Alpine Club, Alpine Club of Canada, Cambridge Shakespeare Society; Corresponding Member, Philadelphia Geograph¬ ical Society, Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences, Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences; Editor of Appalachia since 1878; Editor, Alpina Amer¬ icana since 1907; Author of numerous magazine articles, and lectures on literary and geographical subjects. Eleven
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Page 19 text:
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M 77 a hr Jlmntui WILLIAM LESLIE HOOPER, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., LL.D., Sc.D. Professor of Electrical Engineering 0 A X; $BK A.B., Tufts, 1877; A.M., 1878; Ph.D., 1898; LL.D., 1915; Instructor, Math¬ ematics and Sciences, Bromfield Academy, Harvard, Mass., 1878-80; Prin¬ cipal, Bromfield Academy, 1880-82; Assistant Professor, Physics, Tufts, 1883-90; Professor, Electrical Engineering, 1890-. Acting President, 1912-14. Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences; Fellow, American In¬ stitute of Electrical Engineers; Member, American Association for the Ad¬ vancement of Science; Society for Promotion of Engineering Education. Author of “Electrical Problems” and numerous articles. FRANK WILLIAMS DURKEE, A.B., A.M. Professor of Chemistry A T; B K A.B., Tufts, 1888; A.M., 1889; Instructor in Chemistry, 1889. Member, American Chemistry Society, Society of Chemical Industry, German Chem¬ ical Society, Institute of Mining Engineers. Author of papers on “Oxidation of Sodium Sulphide and Hydro-Sulphite to the Sulphate by Electrolysis;” “Action of the Water of the Hub Coal Mine upon Cast Iron;” Technical Papers; Edited, “Experiments in General Inorganic Chemistry,” and “Notes on Qualitative Analysis.” LEO RICH LEWIS, A.B., A.M. Professor of History and Theory of Music Z A.B., Tufts, 1887; A.B., Harvard, 1888; A.M., Harvard, 1899; Graduate, Munich Conservatory of Music, 1892; Instructor of French, Tufts College, 1892-5; Professor of History and Theory of Music, Tufts College, 1895-. Chairman of Medford Music Committee at 315th Anniversary, 1905; Chair¬ man, Board of Examiners in Music in College Entrance Examination Board, 1909-14; Vice-President, Music Teachers National Association, 1910-12; Member, Eastern Educational Conference in Music; International Music Society; National Society for the Study of Education. Editor, Zeta Psi Songbook, 1897-1904; Church Harmonies, New and Old; Tufts Song Book, 1906-1915; Editor, Tufts College Graduate. Author or Editor of about fifty published compositions and treatises. SAMUEL CHANDLER EARLE, A.B., A.M. Professor of English A.B., Harvard, 1894; A.M., Harvard, 1895; Assistant in English at Tufts College, 1895; Studied in the Graduate School of Harvard University, 1894- 96; Instructor in French, Tufts College, 1896; Assistant Professor of Eng¬ lish, Tufts College, 1902; Professor of English, 1906-. Member of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Member of the National Council of Teachers of English; Member of the Committee on the Preparation of College Teachers of English. Author, (with H. J. Savage and F. E. Seavey) Sentences and Their Ele¬ ments, The Theory and Practice of Technical Writing, Various Articles in “The English Journal,” “Engineering Education,” “The Educational Re¬ view,” and other periodicals, CHARLES HARRIS CHASE, S.B. Professor of Steam Engineering C. C. S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1892; In employ of General Electric Co., 1892-94; Boston Electric Co., 1894-96; Instructor, Steam En¬ gineering, Tufts, 1896-1902; Assistant Professor, Steam Engineering, 1902- 1908; Professor of Steam Engineering, 1908-. Author of various engineering reports and tests; Member, American So¬ ciety of Mechanical Engineers, Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education. iair Th irleen
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