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Page 21 text:
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THE HATCHET John Lane Van Ornum, C. E. William Palm Professor of Civil Engineering. B. S. in Civil Engineering, University of Wisconsin, 1888; C. E„ 1891. En¬ gaged in railroad, municipal and government engineering in Wisconsin, Michigan, Georgia, Florida and Tennessee. Chief Topographer, Mexican Boundary Survey. Major in Third U. S. Volunteer Engineers in the war with Spain. Member of American Society of Civil Engineers, American Society for Testing Materials, International Society for Testing Materials, Society for Promotion of Engineering Education, National Irrigation As¬ sociation. Fellow American Association for Advancement of Science. Pres¬ ident. Engineers ' Club of St. Louis, 1903. Member Academy of Science of St. Louis. Beta Theta Pi. Frederick Aldin Hall, A. M., Litt. D. Collier Professor of Greek. A. B. Drury College, 1878. Principal of Drury Academy, 1878-1893. Studied at. University, Gottingen, 1891-1892. Instructor in Greek, Drury College, 1881-1893. A. M.. Drury College, 1SS1. Goodell Professor of Greek, Drury College, 1893-1901. Dean of Drury College, 1899; Litt. D.. 1901. Professor of Greek, Washington University, 1901. Member of American Philological Association, aud member of Archaeological Institute of America. Trustee of Drury College. President. Washington University Association. President St. Louis Classical Club. Frederick William Shipley, A. B., Ph. D. Professor of Latin. A. B. University of Toronto, 1892. Fellow in Latin, University of Chicago. 1894-1897. Student American School for Classical Study in Rome, 1895-1896. Assistant in Latin. University of Chicago, 1897-1898. Head of Department of Latin, Lewis Institute, Chicago, 1898-1901. Ph. D., University of Chicago. 1901. Professor of Latin, Washington University, 1901. Secretary of the Faculty of the College. Member of Managing Committee of American School for Classical Study in Rome. Member of Council of Archaeological Institute of America, and Secretary of St. Louis Society of the Institute. Member of American Philological Association and the Classical Association of the Middle West and South. Chi Psi. Gaston Douay, A. M. Professor of French Language and Literature. Educated in France. Traveling Fellow of the Ministere du Commerce, 1889- 1892. Taught French in New York in Preparatory School, then as lecturer in the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures, Columbia Uni¬ versity, New York, 1892-1897. Instructor, then Assistant Professor, and then Professor of the French Language and Literature, Washington Univer¬ sity, 1897. Member of the Modem Language Association of America. Henry Caples Penn, A. M. Professor of English. A. B. Central College, 1885. Teacher of Language, Hendrix College, 1885- 1887. Assistant Professor of English, University of Missouri, 1887-1904. Harvard Graduate School (Townsend Scholar), 1892-1894. A. M. Harvard, 1893. Berlin University, 1902-1903. Professor of English, Washington Uni¬ versity, since 1904. 15
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Page 20 text:
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THE HATCHET U ndergraduate Francis Eugene Nipher, A. M., LL. D. Wayroan Crow Professor of Physics. Ph. B. Towa Slate University. 1S70. A. M„ 1875. Assistant in Physics. Iowa State University, 1870-1874. Assistant Professor of Physics, Washington University, 1S74-1875. Wayman Crow Professor of Physics, Washington University, since 1875. LL. D., Washington University, 1905. Recording Secretary Academy of Science of St. Louis, 1S85-1890. President Engineers ' Club of St. Louis, 1S90. Director Missouri Weather Service, 1877-1887. Di¬ rector Magnetic Survey of Missouri, 1878-1883. Member California Eclipse Expedition, 1889. Ex-offlcio Trustee Missouri Botanical Garden, 1889-1890. Vice-President American Association for Advancement of Science, and Chair¬ man Physics Section at Washington Meeting, 1891. Member of American Physical Society. Author of “Theory of Magnetic Measurements,” with an appendix on the Method of Least Squares,” 180(1. Physical Society of France, 1900. Electricity and Magnetism, 1895. Beta Theta Pi. William Trelease, S. D., LL. D. Eugelmann Professor of Botany and Director of the Shaw School of Botany in Washington University since 1885. B. S. Cornell, 1880. S. D. Harvard, 18S4. Charge of Summer School of Botany, Harvard, 1883-1881. Lecturer on Botany, Johns Hopkins, 1S84. Professor of Botany, University of Wisconsin, 1883-1885. Director of Missouri Botanical Garden since 1889. President of Botanical Society of America, 1894-1895. Member of National Academy of Sciences, and of principal American and foreign Botanical Societies. Editor-in-Chief for America of Botanisches Cen- tralblatt. Associate Editor of American Naturalist and Botanical Gazette. LL. D., University of Wisconsin, 1902; University of Missouri, 1903. Delta Upsilon; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. Otto Heller, Ph. D. Professor of the German Language and Literature. Gymnasium at. Dresden and Prague. Abiturientenexamen. 1881. Universities of Prague. Liepzig, Vienna, Berlin. 1881-188(1. Teacher of Greek, LaSalle College, Philadelphia, 1886-1888; of German in the Forsythe School and W. S. Blight’s School, Philadelphia, 1886-1891. Instructor in German and French, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1891-1892. Professor of the German Language and Literature, Washington University. 1S92. University of Chicago summers 1895-1897; Ph. D., 1897. University of Berlin, 1900-1901, Member of Royal Prussian Germanistic Seminar. Summer Schools, University of Ver¬ mont, Amherst. College, etc., since 1886. Head of German Department Chau¬ tauqua Institution, 1906. Member of Modern Language Association of America. American Philological Association, Goethe Society of Weimar. Edward Harrison Keiser, Ph. D. Eliot Professor of Chemistry. B. S. Swartbmore College, 1880: M. S., 1881. Fellow in Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University, 1882-1884; Ph. D., 1884; Instructor in Chemistry, 1884- 1885. Professor of Chemistry, Bryn Mawr College, 1885-1899. Professor of Chemistry, Washington University, 1899. Member of American Philo¬ sophical Society, American Chemical Society, German Chemical Society of Berlin, Society of Chemical Industry of London, St. Louis Chemical Society, Academy of Science, St. Louis. 14
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Page 22 text:
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THE HATCHET Arthur Oncken Lovejoy, A. M. Professor of Philosophy. A. B. University of California, 1895. A. M„ Harvard, 1897. Harvard Uni¬ versity, 1895-1898. .James Walker Fellow of Harvard University, in the Uni¬ versity of Palis, 1898-1899. Assistant. Professor of Philosophy, Stanford University, 1899; Associate Professor, 1900. Professor of Philosophy In Washington University, 1901 Secretary of the Western Philosophical As¬ sociation. 1903-1900: Robert Heywood Fernald, M. E., A. M., Ph. D. Professor of Mechanical Engineering. B. M. E. Maine State College, 1S92. Graduate Student in Architecture, Mas¬ sachusetts institute of Technology, 1892-1S93. Instructor in Mathematics and Mechanical Engineering, Case School of Applied Science, Cleveland, O., 1893-1890. Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the same insti¬ tution, 1890-1900. M. E. Case School of Applied Science, 1898. Graduate Student, Columbia University, New York City, 1900-1902. Fellow Columbia University, 1900-1901. M. A. Columbia University, Ph. D. Columbia Uni¬ versity. 1902. Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Washington University, 1902. Member of American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education, Engineers ' Club of St. Louis, Academy of Science of St. Louis. Beta Theta Pi. Frederick Maynard Mann, C. E., M. S. Professor of Architecture. B. C. E. University of Minnesota, 1892; C. E., 1898. B. S. Massachusetts In¬ stitute of Technology, 1894; M. S., 1895. N. P. R. R. Construction Depart¬ ment, 1890-1892. Instructor in Architectural Design, University of Penn¬ sylvania, 1895-1S98. Practicing Architect, Philadelphia, 1898-1902. Professor of Architecture, Washington University, 1902. Member American institute of Architects; T Square Club, Philadelphia; St. Louis Architectural Club. Sigma Xi. Psi Upsilon. Edgar James Swift, A. B„ Ph. D. Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy. A. B. Amherst College. Student of Psychology and Pedagogy, Berlin and Leipzig. Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy, State Normal School, Stev¬ ens Point, Wis., 1895-1900. Fellow in Psychology, Clark University, 1902-1903. Ph. D., Clark University, 1903. Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy, Wash¬ ington University, 1903. Phi Beta Kappa. Alexander Chessin, A. M., C. E„ Ph. D. Professor of Mathematics. A. B. Imperial College of History and Philology, St. Petersburg, 1883. Ph. L). Imperial University of St. Petersburg, 1888. Envoy to European Uni¬ versities of the Ministry of Russia, 1888-1890. Polytechnic Institute, Zurich, Switzerland, 1S91-1893. C. E., 1893. Lecturer on Partial Differential Equa¬ tions. Harvard University, and on Celestial Mechanics, Johns Hopkins Uni¬ versity, 1S94. Lecturer on Russia and the Russians before the Lowell Insti¬ tute, Boston. Associate Professor of Mathematics, Astronomy and Me¬ chanics, Johns Hopkins University, 1895-1898. Professor of Mathematics, Washington University, 1901. 16
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