ELEVEN NEW APPOINTMENTS to the faculty, all effective with the beginning of the fall term, were recently announced by President Dickey. The resignation of Dr. Harold M. Bannerman as Professor of Geology, and the return from leave of absence of F. Cudworth Flint, Professor of English, were also announced by President Dickey.
Four of the appointees will serve with the rank of Assistant Professor—Karl A. Hill '38, Assistant Professor of Management and Industrial Relations at the Tuck School; John B. Lyons, Assistant Professor of Geology; Van Harvey English, Assistant Professor of Geography and Curator of Maps; and Edward J. Butler, Assistant Professor of Engineering and Management at the Thayer School.
Those appointed with the rank of instructor are: Thomas W. Braden Jr. '40, English; M. Carr Wilson '41, Physics; Victor M. Powell, Public Speaking; William J. Eckel, Electrical Engineering at Thayer School; Richard J. Allenby Jr. '44, Physics; James Radcliffe Squires, English; and John T. Hanley '46, assistant in engineering at Thayer School.
Hill, a native of Littleton, N. H., received his A.B. from Dartmouth in 1938 and his M.C.S. from Tuck School in 1939. He has taught business administration at Nichols Junior College and was associated with Holtzer-Cabot in Boston. Lyons, Harvard '38, also received his A.M. and Ph.D. degrees at graduate school at that university, was employed by the U. S. Geological Survey, served as a pilot with the USAAF and was associated with a radio concern in Buffalo.
The new addition to the department of geography, English, is a graduate of Colo-rado State College of Education in 1936, and holds a Ph.D. degree from Clark University, Worcester, Mass. He served in the army with the rank of captain and also with the State Department, attending the reparations conference in Moscow and the Potsdam Conference. In addition to his teaching duties he will catalogue a collection of 50,000 maps given to the College by the War Department.
Of the instructors, Braden, Wilson, Allenby. and Hanley are Dartmouth graduates, while Eckel graduated from N.Y.U. in 1940, and received his Master's degree from Lafayette College in 1942. Squires graduated from the University of Utah in 1940 and obtained his M.A. at Chicago in 1946. Powell received his A.B. from the University of Minnesota in 1939 and his M.A. from the University of Missouri in 1946.
Braden, co-author of Sub Rosa, a book describing the operations of the 0.5.5., is a former editor-in-chief of The Dartmouth. He will teach the writing course given by Prof. Sidney Cox, who is on special leave because of illness. During the war Braden served with the King's Royal Rifles and later transferred to the O.S.S.