Article

TWO PROFESSORS ADDED TO DARTMOUTH TEACHING CORPS

June 1921
Article
TWO PROFESSORS ADDED TO DARTMOUTH TEACHING CORPS
June 1921

Announcement has been made of the election of Everett Walton Goodhue as professor of economics at Dartmouth College. He will begin his work in Hanover with the opening of the academic year in September, 1921.

Professor Goodhue comes to Dartmouth with a wide background of experience, a record as an unusually successful teacher, and a thorough knowledge of the methods and processes of the College, as well as with a complete command of his subject. He is a graduate of Dartmouth in the class of 1900.

Following his graduation from college, Mr. Goodhue became a resident worker at the South End House in Boston as a fellow in sociology. In 1905 he received the degree of Master of Arts from Dartmouth. From 1903 to 1907 he was instructor in sociology and economics at Colgate University, from 1907 to 1909 associate professor, and from 1909 to 1921 professor of economics. This last academic year Mr. Goodhue has spent as professor of economics at Cornell University.

Announcement is also made of the appointment to the Thayer School faculty of Professor Harold J. Lockwood as professor of Electrical Engineering.

Professor Lockwood, who will take over the work formerly done by Professor F. E. Austin, supplementing this in kindred lines, comes to Dartmouth from an assistant professorship at Lafayette, where he has been on the faculty for the last decade in charge of the work in technical physics and specializing in applied electricity. At the same time Professor Lockwood has been associated with the summer school of surveying conducted by the department of civil engineering at Lafayette.

Professor Lockwood comes with the highest recommendations of all those with whom he has been associated as a man of unquestioned scholarship, fine teaching ability, and popularity among students. He is a member of the Sigma Nu and Tau Beta Pi fraternities.