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Page 30 text:
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I Z I-q i 2 S L 1 Q - S Z 2 il 535315 ,yi S Tl ll WWW s .,, g Richard Ager Newhall, Ph.D., Professor of European History Was graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1910. Took his M.A. degree there in 1911 and his Ph.D. degree at Harvard in 1917. Graduate student and Instructor in History at the latter institution from 1911 to 1917. During the War he served as second lieutenant with the 28th Infantry fist Divi- sion A.E.F.J and was wounded at Cantigny. Instructor and Assistant Professor at Yale, 1919-19245 Professor at Williams in 1924. Dr. Newhall has published The English Conquest of Normandy 1416-14241 and A Study in Fifteenth Century War- fare. He is also one of the editors of the Berkshire Studies in European History, in which series he has written the volume on The Crusades. Prof. Newhall is a member of the c1mBK Society and the :DPA Fraternity. The Reverend Joseph Hooker Twichell, B.D., College John Preston Comer, Ph.D., A. Barton Hepburn Profes- sor of Government Received his B.A. from Trinity College, Texas, in 1907 and taught there the following year. Received his M,A, from Columbia in 1915 and his Ph.D., in 1927. Was Assistant and later Professor in Political Science at the Southern Methodist University. Instructor in Government at Columbia, 1920-1921. Was called to Williams in 1924, and was appointed A. Barton Hepburn Professor of Government in 1928. Professor Comer is a member of the ASQ: Fraternity. Pastor 1... ,.,. ..,...... . -, - --fem C.. s . . -- - -A wwf' f , 1 IMAX I Q! -Q' E E 3 S E Z i i 1 i l 1 1 l 2 1 M 'Z i' 'B It 5 -. Received his AB. from Yale in 1906, his B.D. from Hartford S Theological Seminary in 1910, and did post-graduate work in : the United Free Church College of Glasgow, Scotland. Has 5, held pastorates in Milford, N. H., Danbury, Ct., and North E 2 Adams Mass Congregational Churches. Was Chaplain of the E 2 303rd F A Regiment in the World War, serving nine months E S overseas Was called to Williams in 1925. Mr. Twichell be- E :'- longs to AAcIm and Scroll and Key Societies. E 3 E E E E E E Charles Louis Saiford, B.A., Director of Music E E Was graduated from Williams in 1892, and received the degree E E of A.B. from Harvard in 1894. Was at one time Director of Z E Music inlthe Barringer High School, Newark, N. J., and 'at E E Polytechnic Preparatory School, Brooklyn, N. Y. Was Orgamst gu- E and Choir Master at St. George's Church, New York City, E - when called to Williams in 1923. Mr. Safford is a member of E the Players' and Williams Clubs of New York City, and of the E - KA Society. E E E I E I I f - 'Q' W... H ...,.v2 el 1lIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Il' Q alll IIII III IIIIIII IIIIIIII I I IIII I I I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIEI Q. I25I
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Page 29 text:
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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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Page 31 text:
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I Jiffwvhv-X lfgiwi' it-Til if if-1?,T '-t,-ti ,,' .-..:7:-.,,.,.':...-.-- -'--, .zz :v---.- -..N at tfl . , ' Ill l 1 U -- Orie William Long, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Ger- , 5 man -gtg l E Was graduated from Centre College in 1903. Pursued grad- lil E uate work at Harvard, 1903-04. Taught modern languages in ' g Corsicana High School, 1904-06. After studying at the Uni- 3 1 3 versity of Berlin in 1906, was called to Texas Christian College E S as Professor of Modern Languages, 1906-1910. Studied at -5 ' E Harvard, receiving his M.A. in 1911 and Ph.D. in 1913. Was 5 'E Instructor in German at M.I.T. in 1912-13 and Professor of 3 gl Modern Languages at W.P.I., 1913-16. Called to Williams as E E Assistant Professor and Chairman of the German Department E E in 1916. Appointed Associate Professor in 1925. Dr. Long is E E a member of the KA fSouthernD Fraternity. E John Fitch King, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Chem- E isiry E Was graduated from Oberlin College in 1917 with a B.A. de- E gree, Magna cum Laude, receiving final honors in Chemistry. 2 L11 Studied at the University of Wisconsin, 1916. Graduate stu- E rf- dent and assistant at Johns Hopkins University, 1917-19189 . graduate student at Harvard University 1918-1919, receiving the degree of M.A. in 19195 graduate student at Johns Hopkins 5 University, 1919-1920, receiving the degree of Ph.D. in 1920. S Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Oberlin College, 19205 In- E structor of Quantitative Analysis, Johns Hopkins 1920-19215 3' Instructor of Chemistry, Johns Hopkins School for Teachers E I- and Technical Workers, 1920-1921. Was appointed Assistant E is Professor of Chemistry at Williams in 1921 and Associate Pro- E H- fessor in 1925. Was for ten months in the Research Division E I ' of the Chemical Warfare Service, U. S. Army. Has written ' 1:11 articles for the Journal of Physical Chemistry and the Journal ll 'j of the American Chemical Society. ly! U53 Elbert Charles Cole, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Biology , l l 1551 Was graduated from Middlebury in 1915, received his M.A. ' 1 from Trinity in 1918, and his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1924. W I-1 Instructor in Biology at the Hartford High School, 1915-1922. I ffl Instructor in Biology at Trinity College, 1918-1919, and Austin Z UF? Teaching Fellow at Harvard, 1922-1924. Was called to Wil- EQ' liams in 1924. Dr. Cole is a member of the AND Fraternity, 1 ,641 the qmlglq Society, the PA Graduate Scientific Fraternity, the ,i 1- American Association for the Advancement of Science, the E Ili American Society of Zoologists, and the American Association E llfzfl of University Professors, and a member of the teaching staff E f- and corporation of the Marine Biological Laboratory. Dr. E Cole was appointed Associate Professor in 1928. E James Beebee Brinsmade, Ph.D., Associate Professor of E , Z Physics E Graduated from Yale in 1906 and later studied at Harvard, E where he received the degrees of M.A. in 1913 and Ph.D. in E N- 1917. Assistant in Physics at Harvard, 1914-1917, Instructor E W- in Physics, 1917-1918. First Lieutenant in the U. S. Army 1' - Signal Corps and Air Service, 1918-1919. Called to Williams E ' in 1919. Made Assistant Professor in 1920, and Associate Pro- 2 H fessor in 1928. Visiting Research Fellow at California Insti- E tute of Technology, 1926-1927. Has published articles in the E Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and in the S Physical Review. Is a member of EE and of the x11Y Fratern- ' ity. E . I 94 i 1.-. V, 1 I I l 4, .. . . .-.-..,.- , , h .iwtflllifhs e I 5, tu ll ll Illl mum nm u l l II n m Ill llllllllllllllllllllllll gfl i l26l
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