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Page 28 text:
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4 -----1-gfff'1'f'77 ek, gf- --5------'-H -,W 1 1- W- . , f :7'T ' , .-,. .,.., -A - .N , .-,. gl rv:-1-1 adrift, ' t,',,....w.. 1 1,. l 4 , l A 4 K 'lil' ' w is wlwils 1 --1195 .PH -s.,,-...--ffo'..- -f--refill +-EH 'Lf-V' X-.L-:ff f'f.S.l.flX:j'.lL...Lf-ff:' .Q mr' l 1 I ' fl '0 l 'll L1 l 'l,f 1y4,l Brainerd Mears, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry Was graduated from Williams in 1903 and was Assistant in Chemistry, 1904-07. Received his M.A. from Williams in l -W? 1905, and his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University, where he gr ,,-- jr, , held a Fellowship in Chemistry, in 1908. Appointed Instructor ,,.- 5, in Industrial Chemistry at the University of Illinois in 1908. jj, Called to Williams as Instructor in Chemistry in 1909, and g' yi was made Assistant Professor in 1910, and Professor in 1917. ,ffq Dr. Mears is a member of the Gargoyle, clmlgli, EE, AXE 50- tif cieties and the 1-JAX Fraternity. fill if E+ . Sherwood Owen Dickerman, Ph.D., Lawrence Professor of the Greek Language and Literature 'ggi i Was graduated from Yale in 1896. Student of the American LZS, School of Classical Studies, Athens, 1897-1899. Received the degree of Ph.D. from Halle University, Germany, in 1909. In- QI-,I structor in Greek at Yale, 1899-1903 and 1905. Was called to flu, -4 Williams in 1909. iii if Iiiiill A -..l fiat, F 'U 3 , , is li Georege Burwell Dutton, Ph.D., Professor of English Lzt- 5 erature Was graduated from Williams as Valedictorian in the class of I 15' 3 1907. Studied at Harvard University, 1907-1910, receiving the I11' J degree of M.A. in 1908 and that of Ph.D. in 1910. Was called fll to Williams as instructor in 1910, became Assistant Professor fffglj of English in 1914, and Professor of English Literature in 1921. Atvj, Mr. Dutton is a member of the qxl3K and Gargoyle Societies liiyll ' and the KIDIIA Fraternity. lg-g, riff: i :Ei I ji oil ' u I , I gl Albert Harp L1ckl1der, Ph.D., Professor of Public Speak- gffi l ing and Dramatic Liferafure fi, l Was graduated from Randolph-Macon College in 1896, re- ceiving the degree of M.A. in 1897. Was a Fellow at Johns 'gif f Hopkins University in 1906, and took the degree of Ph.D. there QJLQ in 1907. English Master at Norfolk Academy, Norfolk, Va., 1899-1903. Instructor in English at Johns Hopkins, 1907-1908. Eflli Instructor in English at Dartmouth College, 1908-1911. Assist- 1 ant Professor of English at Dartmouth, 1911-1914. Was called 5311, to Williams in 1914 as Assistant Professor of English Litera- L5 , ture, and made Professor of Public Speaking and Dramatic gf: f Literature in 1921. Has published Chapters on the Metric of the Chaucerian Tradition. Dr. Licklider is a member of the L- rIrllK Society and the EX Fraternity. 'ij r 9 J lfllf, L MTM--N Qlf tl ,ji 'PF -.w 4 E WW-'P A 'f5 2T'17TT'TTMTM' 'A M' T'M ':-l-'M' ' ' l. 'L3 N u lilllllllllll-Ll.l.l.ll.llllllllilluillllslllUlllll,QiQll.lllslWll1llf5PMlllllll?llllllLUlllllUQ.lllEllllllllfg- I23l
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,,. x 1540 L X .V lgflq l glial' liltlgiil 553: Monroe Nichols Wetmore, Ph.D., Professor of Latin hkzgl Was graduated from Yale in the class of 1888. For five years was Assistant Principal of Harrisburgh Academy and for Efjfgiix ' seven years was Instructor in Latin and Greek at the Staten llfll Island Academy. Received the degree of M.A. from Yale in :Lil pgfil 1900 for work done in Latin. Was elected Foote Fellow in ljllf Ilgf Latin at Yale in 1902, receiving the degree of Ph.D. from that ,i' 2,21 institution in 1904. Was called to Williams in 1904 and be- HL: came Assistant Professor of Latin in 1905, Associate Professor fl' in 1911, and Professor in 5913. dSpeIptdthe gear 1920-1921lin I ,Eli Italy and Greece, Has pu is e an n ex erborum Vergi i- 1 QA anus and an Index Verborum Catullianus. 21 liijli - , .mr?E ,1 'flit vl James Bissett Pratt, Ph.D., Mark Hopkins Professor of Mig 153 Intellectual and Moral Philosophy . l Was graduated from Williams as Valedictorian in the class E ,fi-fl of 1898 Studied Philosophy at Harvard University, 1898-99. E AF il Attended Columbia Law School, 1899-1900. Head of Latin L-ii lilfgj Department in Elmira Free Academy, 1900-02. Studied phil- .mf lifi osophy at the University of Berlin, 1902-03, and at Harvard, il ff2ll 1903-05, receiving the degree of Ph.D. from that institution in ' ,Q 1905. Instructor in Philosophy at Williams, 1905-06, Assistant I ffgfjg Professor in 19065 Professor in 1913. Dr. Pratt's books are: E Wit: The Psychology of Religious Belief, What is Pragmatism? igffjn India and Its Faiths, and Democracy and Peace, The Religious , -ixlgjl Consciousness, Essays in Critical Realism, Matter and Spirit. I :iii He is a member of the c1mBK and Gargoyle Societies and the li Qftil VA Society. I I .r ,1,1i.,v Walter Wallace McLaren, Ph.D., LL.D., William Brough l-:gl lv --4 . ' ,J if-jj, Professor of Economics t ' A ' ill Gigli Was graduated from Queens University in Kingston, Canada, sifgjlg 1899 and received the degree of Ph.D. from Harvard in 1908, ii-jg! and the degree of LL.D. from Lawrence College in 1927. Was i called to Keiogijuko, Tokyo, Japan, in 1908 to a chair of Econ- ,C-,jug omics and Politics, in 1914 he was called to Williams. Dr. 9 McLaren is the Editor of Japanese Government Documents 5 lirjgjll published by the Asiatic Society of Japan in 1914, and the grill author of A Political History of Japan during the Meiji Era, l :gl :tg 1867-1912, published in London and New York, 1916. Profes- Yl- 'Vffifi sor McLaren is a member of the KA Society. ju gfgif 'sz- I,l fill I. ,nil '--.W s.. -if - I 'f if '- Hfjjlg William Howard Doughty, Jr., LL.B., Professor of Gov- E at f , ,fig Q ernment Was graduated from Williams in 1898. Graduate work at E Qkfll Columbia University, 1898-1901, receiving the degree of LL.B. g ,LEU in 1901. Practiced law in New York City, 1902-05. Called to 2 gf,-1,1 Williams in 1906, and was made Professor in 1917. Professor E 9 Doughty is a member of the Gargoyle Society and the KA i-, gl-3-5 -,-' r Society. Q, hr'-i I li. ll I ili',. L fave--,. ' ff' f' f ': 1i'T?':'?' vw' 'iii ':iY:P'T ' T ' ' 'TGV' '- T7:N'5ii-is f' 9 li . .egllllllilllllf l -7 I 11 Rf: lf l 52 l22l
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.. - 'fu-X L, 1 -fig 77 rQ.Tf'T- Tig 156,115 , 533' fra 'j:3-tgfj.,-A - ,ja .-, 74 2 ,Wie 33,fs?3ff.'i'fj', jf, , r YV I tv RIN.-', I .M . ' William Newnham Chattin Carlton, L.H.D., Librarian E Studied privately under the Reverend Samuel Hart, D.C.L., 1893-1899. Received the honorary degree of M.A. from Trinity 'iii in 1902, and L.H.D. in 1915. Was Librarian at Trinity College X 1899-1909. Instructor in English at Trinity, 1901-1903. Was 'Pl ' X Librarian at the Newberry Library, Chicago, 1909-1919. Was l Director of the American Library in Paris, 1920-1921. Was - 5 called to Williams in 1922. Mr, Carlton is a member of the ,f, S American Historical Association, the American Library Asso- F' E ciation, American Library Institute, the Bibliographical Society E E of America, the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian , E Studies, The Wayfarers Club fChicagoD, the Coifee House E E - Club fNew Yorkj, and Les Amis d'Edouard, Paris, fBibli- I I ophilesj 3 - .-: 5 Guerdon Norris Messer, M.P.E., Professor of Hygiene ' E and Physical Education and Director of Athletics E 1 3 Was graduated from the Y. M. C. A. College, Springfield, E, Mass., in 1909, receiving the degree of B.P.E. Studied at the ' E- Harvard Graduate Summer School of Physical Education in '- g 1910. Was Director of Physical Education in the public schools 4 E of Birmingham, Ala., 1909-1911. Director of Physical Educa- 3 -. tion, Worcester Academy 1911-1917. Inspector of Physical -1 E Education, New York State Department of Education, 1917- E I 1920. Professor of Physical Education and Director of Athlet- E 'S ics at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1920-1922. Was called E E to Williams in 1922. Professor Messer received the degree of E S M.P.E. in 1927 from Springfield College. He is the author of E - numerous articles on Physical Education and Athletics and E :,. How to Plav Basketball. E 1 ' 1 I Otto Eduard Lessing, Ph.D., Professor of German '1 : i 3 Was graduated from the University of Michigan in 1895, where ' E he continued as a graduate student and was awarded the i E degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Studied in Germany at the E E Universities of Tubingen and Munich. Was professor of gg German at the University of Illinois until 1922. Called to E E Williams in 1923 as Professor of German. He is the author 5' , of the following books: Schiller and G.illparzer, Grillparzer 9 Q , and Neue Drama, Rebekka Ca plaY21 Whitman's Prosasch- - riften, Horace Traubel's Weckrufe Ctranslationj, Die Neue E ' Form, Masters in Modern German Literature, Geschichte der E I Deutschen Literatur, and Liebe im Herbst fversej, and Brueck 3 - en Ueber den Atlantik. Professor Lessing is a member of the E ' Modern Language Association of America and the Swabian 3 E Schiller Society, and the rlxBK Society. E E Ames Haven Corley, Ph.D., Professor and Chairman in E -. Romance Languages : Was graduated from Ohio Wesleyan in 1901 and appointed the E E same year to government educational work in the Philip- E 2 pines for three years in organizing schools. Followed three E E years of travel about the world and study in Europe, Instruc- g ' tor and Associate Professor of Romance Languages in Pomona E ' College for three years. Received the degree of M.A. from E Harvard in 1911 and instructor there in French in 1912, being 2 called to Yale at the end of that year, remaining at Yale as E instructor and Assistant Professor, receiving the degree of E 5 Ph.D. from that University in 1914. Was called to Williams E i in 1924. Dr. Corley is the editor and collaborator of various E 2 texts. He IS a member of the LDAC-0 Fraternity. if TQ? MH'-'W H-' 'P W liww I I f l3+l
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