The following changes in the faculty have occurred since those recorded in the August number of THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE. The names of those newly appointed are also repeated from that list and biographical material added.
RESIGNATIONS
Mark Skidmore, Instructor in French.
Andrew T. Weaver, Instructor in Oratory, to become Instructor in Evanston Academy of Northwestern University.
APPOINTMENTS
Ralph L. Theller, Evans Assistant Professor of Oratory. Professor Theller holds the degree of LL.B. from the Boston Evening Law School and A.B. from Dartmouth in 1909. Since graduation he has been master in the Hotchkiss School.
Robert B. Rudd, Instructor in English. Mr. Rudd received the degree of A.B. from Hamilton College in 1909. His next three years were spent in England as a Rhodes Scholar, receiving . the degree of A.B. Oxon. in 1912.
Elden B. Hartshorn, Instructor in Chemistry. Since his graduation from Dartmouth in 1912 with the degree of B.S., Mr. Hartshorn has been in the United States Pension Office.
Harold B. Belcher, Instructor, in Economics. Mr. Belcher took his A.B. degree from Dartmouth in the class of 1912. His last year was spent in the Harvard Graduate School where he received the degree of A.M.
Albert M. C. McMaster, Instructor in French. Mr. McMaster received his degrees from Columbia University, that of A.B. in 1910 and A.M. in 1912. He has been an instructor in Columbia University and in its Summer Session and also in Williams College. He has as well been active in the editing and translating of French works.
Harry Worthington Hastings, Instructor in English. Mr. Hastings graduated from Brown in 1904 with the degree of A.8., and received that of A.M. from the same college in 1906. He has been an instructor in Brown, Simmons, and Radcliffe Colleges.
Grover Cleveland Loud, Instructor in English. After graduating from Harvard in the class of 1912 with the degree of A.8., Mr. Loud was instructor for one year in the Brookline High School.
David Lambuth, Instructor in English. Mr. Lambuth graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1900 with the degree of A.8., and took his master's degree one year later from Columbia University. From 1904-1906, he was an instructor in Vanderbilt University, and from 1910-1913 Professor of English, Psychology, and Philosophy in Granbez College, Juiz de Fora, Brazil. He has also been an editor of Far East and other missionary periodicals, and is the author of numerous magazine articles on Brazilian politics.
Edward S. Allen, Instructor in Mathematics. Mr. Allen holds from Harvard the degrees of A.8., 1909, and A.M., 1910. Since graduation he has been master in the Berkshire School, Sheffield, Massachusetts.
Edward W. Supple, Instructor in French. Mr. Supple received the degree of A.B. from Harvard in 1911, and since then has been an instructor in the Newman School, Hackensack, New Jersey.
Max O. H. M. Muller, Prussian Exchange Teacher. Dr. Muller has been a student at the Universities of Jena, Bonn, Kiel, and Greifswald, taking his doctor's degree in the last named university. He has also studied in Paris and Lausanne, and has taught in Stolp, Pommerania, and Stettin.
Edgar M. Medlar, Instructor in Bacteriology (Medical School). Dr. Medlar holds the degree of B.S. from Doane College, Nebraska, that of A.M. from the University of Nebraska, and M.D. from the Harvard Medical School".
Herman Henry VanHorn, Instructor in Anatomy. Mr. VanHorn received the degree of A.B. from Yale in 1904, and since that time he has taught in Buena Vista College, the University of Missouri and Tulane University.
PROMOTION
Professor Charles E. Bolser, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, has been appointed Professor of Organic Chemistry, this appointment to take effect in 1914.
LEAVE OF ABSENCE
Professor Frank A. Updyke, who had been granted leave of absence for the entire year, was obliged to return for the first semester to fill a vacancy occurring in the department at the last moment. He will, however, be away during the'second semester.
Professor Walter V. Bingham has been granted leave of absence for the second semester.