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Page 33 text:
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ERNEST CARROLL MOORE A.B., LL.B. Ohio Normal University, 1891 and 1894 respect- ively; A.M., Columbia, 1896, Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1898; LL.D, University of Southern California, 1916, Univer- sity of Arizona, 191}. Instructor in Philosophy, 1897-1898; Instructor in Education, 1901-1901; Assistant Professor of Education, 1901-1906; Dean of the Summer Session, 1905- 1907, University of California; Superintendent of Schools, Los Angeles, 1906-1910; Professor of Education, Yale, 1910-1914, Harvard, 1913-1917; President of the Los Angeles State Normal, 1917-1919; Professor of Education and Director of the Southern Branch, University of California, 1919. GUY. G. PALMER Monmouth College, 1885-1887; Infantry and Calvary School, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, 1897-1898; Field Officers ' Short Course, Langres, France, Fall of 1918. Private, Corporal, Sergeant, Companies I and H , 8th U. S. Infantry; Second Lieutenant, 1891; Captain, 1901; Major and Lieuten- ant Colonel, 1917; Colonel, 1910; retired at own request, August 31, 1910. Colonel of Infantry, National Army (World War), August 5, 1917-March 15, 192.0; Commander, 341st Infantrv Regiment, 86th Division (Black Hawk Division), National Army; Assigned Professor of Military Science and Tactics, University of California, Southern Branch, November II, 1910. Citation: Awarded silver star for conspicuous gallantrv in action in assault on Fort Juan de Cuba, July i, 1898, recommended for brevet for gallantry in action, Decem- ber 1 and 16, 1899, Luron, P. I. WILLIAM CONGER MORGAN B.A. Yale College, 1896; Ph.D. Yale University, 1899. Siliman Fellow, Yale University, 1896-1899; Professor ot Chemistry, Washburn College, 1899-1 901 ; Instructor of Chem- istry, 1901-1906, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, 1906-1913, University of California; Professor of Chemistry, Reed Col- lege, 1913-1910; Professor of Chemistry, University of Califor- nia, Southern Branch, 1910.
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Page 32 text:
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twenty- light UNIVERSITY is just as strong as the individuals who com- pose its teaching force are strong. Holding in its hands the plasticity of the students, the faculty might easily be conceived as the supreme influence which tears down or builds up the character and reputation of the institution. The Southern Branch has been favored in respect to its faculty. From a teaching staff of three members in the first days of the Los Angeles State Normal to the present faculty of some two hundred members, this institution has proved to be a lodestone attracting men and women who hold the highest respect in their field of work. From the Director down to the newly arrived Associate, it may be said that there is no mediocrity. No set back will come from the faculty of the Southern Branch. Such a thing is impossible. To the contrary, the teaching staff will act as an impetus and inspiration to the successful future of the University of California in the South.
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Page 34 text:
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thirty CHARLES HENRY RIEBER A.B. University of California, 1888: A.M. Harvard, 18 . Ph.D. Harvard, 1900. Principal of Public Schools, Placcrvillc, California, 1889-1890; Instructor Mathematics, Belmont, California School, 1890-1898; Assistant in Philosophy, Har- vard, 1S98-1901; Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Stanford University, 1901-1903; Assistant Professor of Logic, 1903- 1905; Assistant Professor of Philosophy, 1905-1910, Professor of Philosophy, 1910-1911, University of California; Dean of the Summer Session, University of California, 1907-1915; Professor of Philosophy and Dean of the College of Letters and Science, University of California, Southern Branch, 1911. FRANKJ. KLINGBERG A.B. University of Kansas, 1907; A.M. University of Kansas, 1908, Yale University, 1909; Ph.D. Yale University, 1911. Fellow in European History, University of Kansas, 1907-1908; Bulkley Fellow in History, Yale University, 1908-1911; Assistant Professor of History, Associate Professor of History, Professor of History, University of Southern California, i9ix- 1918; Instructor of History, Los Angeles State Normal, 1918-1919; Associate Professor of History, University of California, Southern Branch, 1919. WILLIAM JOHN MILLER B.S. College of the Pacific, 1900; Ph.D. Johns Hopkins, 1905. Student at Stanford University, 1900-1901; Instructor of Geology and Chemistry, College of the Pacific, 1901-190}; Fellow in Geology, Johns Hopkins, 1904-1905; Field Assist- ant, U. S. Geological Survey, summers of 1905 and 1906; Professor of Geology, Hamilton College, Clinton, New York, 1905-1914; Professor of Geolog) ' , Smith College, 1914-1914; Field Geologist, New York State Museum, 1906-1914; Profes- sor of Geology, University of California, Southern Branch, 192.4.
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