Article

WHO'S WHO IN THE FACULTY

December, 1922
Article
WHO'S WHO IN THE FACULTY
December, 1922

Page, Curtis Hidden, Professor of English.

Born, Greenwood, Mo., 1870.

A.B., Harvard, 1890; A.M., 1891; Ph.D., 1894; Studied, University of Paris, 1894-95; Institute of Higher Studies, Florence, 1900.

Awarded Bowdoin Prize, 1890; Sohier Prize, 1891; First prize in Poetry Contest, 1907; Delivered Ropes Lectures on Comparative Literature, University of Cincinnati, 1911.

Instructor in French and English, Western Reserve University, 1891-92; Instructor in French, Harvard, 1893-94; Tutor, Lecturer, Assistant Professor and Professor, Department of Romance Languages, Professor of English, Columbia University, 1895-1909; Professor in English Literature, Northwestern University, 1909-11; present position since 1911.

Frequent lecturer in courses of Free Public Lectures of Board of Education, New York City, 1902-09: also before numerous clubs and societies throughout the country.

Captain, Ordnance Reserve Corps, Dec. 1917-Oct. 1918; promoted to Major, U.S.A. Oct. 1918, Chief Intelligence Officer, May 13-Aug. 10, 1918, President, Examining Board, Ordnance Training School for Officers, Oct.-Dec. 1918, President of allspecial courts, Officers Training Corps, Oct.-Dec. 1918; Senior Instructor, OfficersTraining Corps, Nov. 1918-Feb. 1919, all at Camp Hancock, Ga.; Commissioned Major,U.S.R., Jan. 1920.

Published: "Cyrano de Bergerac's Voyage to the Moon, with Life of Cyrano, etc." (Doubleday, McClure and Co., 1899); "The Songs and Sonnets of Pierre de Rosenard", translated into English in the original meters (Houghton-Mifflin Co., 1903); "Translations from Theophile Gautier", in Little French Masterpieces (G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1903); "British Poets of the Nineteenth Century" (Benjamin H. Sanborn & Co., 1904; revised edition, 1911); "The Lives, Heroic Deeds, and Sayings of Gargantua and His Son, Pantagruel" by Francois Rabelais, with introduction and notes (G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1904; new edition, 1912); "Chief American Poets" (Houghton-Mifflin Co., 1905); "Moliere: The Best Plays", a new translation, the verse plays being for the first time rendered into English verse: Two Volumes (G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1908); "Tartuffe, or the Hypocrite", in the Harvard Classics, edited by President Eliot (Crowell, 1909); "The Romantic Emancipation", in the Columbia University Lectures on Literature (Columbia University Press, 1911); Moliere's "The Learned Ladies", "The Tradesman Turned Gentleman", "The Affected Misses, and The Doctor by Compulsion", and "Tartuffe, or the Hypocrite" (G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1912); Moliere's "The Misanthrope", forthcoming-. "The Miser" (G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1913); "The Man who Married a Dumb Wife", by Anatole France, translated with an introduction, (The John Lane Co., 1915); Sections on "Later American Poetry" in the Cambridge History of American Literature (G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1916-17); forthcoming-. "The Golden Treasury of American Songs and Lyrics" (MacMillan Co.); "The Chief British Poets from Wyatt to Milton" (Houghton-Mifflin Co.); "The Chief British Poets from Dryden to Burns" (Houghton-Mifflin Co.); "A Book of Japanese Poetry" (Houghton-Mifflin Co.); associate editor, Poet Lore and The Pathfinder; co-editor, Putnam's series of French Classics for English readers; author of verses, essays, stories, articles, and reviews in numerous publications.

Member: Modern Language Association of America; Poetry Society of America; Dunlap Society; Dante Society (Honorary vice-president); Concordance Society (Treasurer, 1907, 10); Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Upsilon; Century Club, of New York; Cliff Dwellers, of Chicago; Authors Club, of London; United Service Club, of Washington.

Bruce, Harold Rozelle, Assistant Professor of Political Science.

Born, Clinton, Wisconsin, Oct. 13, 1890.

A.B., Beloit College, 1912; A.M., University of Wisconsin, 1919; Ph.D., 1920.

Instructor in Public Address, Pomona (Cal.) College, 1912-14; Assistant in Political Science, University of Wisconsin, 1918-20; present position since 1920.

Travelling Representative, Macmillan Publishing Co., 1914-18.

U. S. Army, 1918; 2nd Lieutenant, Field Artillery.

Member: Delta Sigma Rho (Hon.).

Hardy, Ashley Kingsley, Professor of German.

Born, Keene, N. H., April 6, 1871

A.B., Dartmouth, 1894; Studied, University of Berlin, 1894-95, University of Leipzig, 1895-97, 1898- 99; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1899.

Instructor in German, Dartmouth, 1897-98, 1899-1902; Assistant Professor of German and Instructor in Old English 1902-17; present position since 1917.

Appointed Advisory Council, Simplified Spelling Board, 1909: Executive Committee, Modern Language Section, N. H. State Teachers' Association, 1913-14; Chairman, Modern Language Section, N. H. State Teachers' Association, 1915 and 1916; Chairman, Committee on establishing Modern Language Library in connection with State Library, 1916; Trustee, Howe Library, 1917....; Trustee, Dartmouth Savings Bank, 1919....; Member of Corporation Dartmouth Savings Bank.

Chairman, Dartmouth group of Translators for Post Office Department, 1918; Assistant Registrar, Selective Draft, 1918; Associate member, Legal Advisory Board for Grafton County, 1918; Clerk, Bureau of War Risk Insurance, summer of 1918.

Published: "Die Sprache der Blickling-Homilien", 1899; edited Wildenbruch's "Das edle Blut" (Holt, 1906); compiled, German portion of "A Bibliography of Useful. Books for the Library of Teachers in Secondary Schools" (Heath, 1907); numerous reviews and papers; Associate editor, Dartmouth Alumni Magazine, 1907-11.

Member: Modern Language Association of America; American Dialect Society; Association Phonelique Internationale; Alpha Delta Phi; Phi Beta. Kappa; Sphinx; Sons of American Revolution (President N. H. Society, 1921.).

McCallum, James Dow, Assistant Professor of English.

Born, Brooklyn, N. Y., June 25, 1893.

A.8., Columbia, 1914; A.M., 1915; Ph.D., Princeton, 1921.

Instructor in English, University of Kansas, 1915-16; Princeton, 1919-20; Dartmouth, 1921-22; present position since 1922.

Translator connected with Censorship Board; Seaman, U. S. Navy.

Robinson, Kenneth Allan, Assistant Professor of English.

Born, Biddeford, Me., August 10, 1892.

A.8., Bowdoin, 1914; A.M., Harvard, 1916.

Instructor in English, Dartmouth, Feb. 1916-1919; present position since 1919.

Zug, George Breed, Professor of Fine Arts.

Born, Pittsburg, Pa., Sept. 10, 1867.

A.8., Amherst, 1893; studied, Harvard, 1893-94; University of Berlin, 1894-95; Sorbonne, 1899-1900; American School for Classical Studies at Rome, 1901 and 1902.

Instructor in History of Art, University of Chicago, 1903-08; Assistant Professor of History of Art, 1908-13; Assistant Professor of Fine Arts, Dartmouth, 1913-20; present position since 1920.

European Art Correspondent for Chicago Record-Herald, 1912; art" critic for Chicago Inter-Ocean, 1912-13.

Published: Numerous reviews and articles.

Member: Chi Phi.

Tanch, Joseph William, Assistant Professor of Mathematics.

Born, Annapolis, N. S., 1884.

B.S., Acadia University, Nova Scotia, 1912; Ph.D., Yale, 1919.

Principal, Annapolis, N. S. High School; Teacher, Royal, Amherst, and Picton Academies; Assistant in laboratories at Acadia and Yale Universities; University Tutoring School, New Haven, Conn.; Instructor in Mathematics, Dartmouth, 1919-20; present position since 1920.