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Page 31 text:
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Dean Bartlett and Director Wheeler Walter M. Bartlett, D.D.S., Dean of the School of Dentistry, received his professional training at Washington University, where he obtained his degree in 1890. He is at present professor in prosethic dentistry. Dr. Bartlett was at one time president of the St. Louis Den¬ tal Society and also of the Missouri State Board of Dental Examiners, and is at present a member of the National Dental Association and Honorary member of the Texas State Dental Society. He has practiced in St. Louis since 1890. Miss Claribel Wheeler, Director of the School of Nursing, came to Washington in 1923 from Cleveland where she was for seven years the principal of the School of Nursing at the Mt. Sinai Hospital. She graduated from the Vassar Brothers Hospital School of Nursing at Poughkeepsie in 1909. She returned here and was for four years the Superintendent of Nurses. Miss Wheeler was in charge of the School of Nursing at the Teacher ' s College of Columbia University 1912-13, and for three years Super¬ intendent of the United Hospital of Rye and Port Chester at New York.
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Page 30 text:
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Deans Goode and Marriott Richard L. Goode, M.A., LL.D., the Dean of the School of Law, has been associated with Washington University for thirteen years. He received all of his legal training at Drury College and from a lawyer in Springfield, with whom he practiced for twenty years. Judge Goode was Judge of the Court of Appeals in St. Louis from 1901-1910, and professor of equity at Washington University 1906-10. In 1915 he became professor of law and Dean of the School of Law. In 1919 he left Washington to become a Judge of the Supreme Court of Missouri, but returned to his former office in 1921. Williams M. Marriott, B.S., M.D., has been Dean of the Medical School since 1913, and a member of the faculty for thirteen years. He received, his B.S. from the University of North Carolina, and his M.D. from Cornell University Medical School. From 1910-14 he was instructor in biology and chemistry at Washington Univer¬ sity, and during the next four years was a mem¬ ber of the faculty of Johns Hopkins University. In 1917 he returned to Washington as professor in pediatrics. Dr. Marriott is physician in chief at the St. Louis Children’s Hospital, and pedia¬ trician in chief at Barnes Hospital. Ptxgc Twcnty ' two
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Page 32 text:
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Frederick W. Shipley, A.B., Ph.D., Dean of the School of University Extension, has been a professor at Washington since 1901. He is a noted archeologist, having been president of the Archeology Institute of America 1913-17, of which organization he is now honorary presi¬ dent. He has also been connected with the ar¬ cheological journals of the country at different times. Dr. Shipley received his A.B. from Uni¬ versity of Toronto, and his Ph.D. from the Uni¬ versity of Chicago. He studied in Rome and at the Vatican Library 1895-97, and the follow¬ ing year was instructor of Latin at University of Chicago. During the past few years Dr. Shipley has devoted his time to university ex¬ tension work. Otto Heller, Dean of the Graduate School, received part of his college training in Europe and part in America. On the Continent he attended the universities of Prague, Munich, Vienna, and Berlin. From the University of Chicago, in 1900, he received his degree of Doc¬ tor of Philosophy. Dr. Heller was professor of modern languages at the Massachusetts Insti¬ tute of Technology during 1892, but since that time, he has held the chair of German Language and Literature at Washington University. He has been literary editor of the St. Louis Post- Dispatch since 1919. Edmund Henry Wuerpel, Director of the School of Fine Arts, studied at St. Louis School of Fine Arts and also at Paris from several prominent artists. He is honorary member of American Artists Association at Paris, and ex-president of the Society of Western Artists. He exhibited at Paris Exposition in 1900 and in Paris Salons. Mr. Wuerpel has been a member of a number of national and international awarding juries. He won the bronze medal at International Exposition at Buenos Aires, first prize at St. Louis Artists’ Guild 1914, and silver medal at Seattle Exposition. He has made many mural decora¬ tions, among his most recent is the one at the Missouri State Capitol in 1922. He has been director in the St. Louis School of Fine Arts since 1909. Page Twenty-fow
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