* * * 负责本工程的安全管理及施工组织设计 * * * 负责本工程的安全技术措施的制定 * * * 负责本工程的安全操作规程的制定 * * New Appointments at the University pt in street. A larger number of new appointments in instruction was announced during commencement week of this year than had been announced on any similar occasion in the history of he University. This was due to the fact that the increase in the University appropriation made possible the creation of a considerable number of new positions. Below is given a list of these positions with the names and something of the educational history of those persons elected to the rank of assistant professor and above. Charles S. Skilton has been elected by the Board of Regents to succeed D.an George B. Penny of the School of Fine Arts. The new dean of the School of Fine Arts comes to the University from the New Jersey State Normal School where he has been instructor in instrumental music for the past six years. Mr. Skilton's early training was received at Northampton, Massachusetts. He graduated from the Northampton high school in 1883 and entered Yale University in the fail of the same year. He received his A. B. degree from Yale in 1889 and spent the next two years in teaching the languages at Siglars Preparatory School for boys, Newburgh, New York. From 1891 to 1893 Mr. Skilton pursued his studies in music abroad at the Royal High School in Berlin and returned to this country in 1893 as Director of Music in the Salem Female Academy, North Carolina. He served in that capacity for a period of three years. The year 1896-97 be spent in the further study of music under Buck, Shelly, and Miss Kate Chittenden of New York City. Since 1897 Mr. Skilton has taught at Trenton, New Jersey. Mr. Skilton makes a specialty of lecture recitals. He has composed several cantatas and operettas which have been presented by his pupils. In 1897 a sonata written by him for violin and piano won first prize at the Music Teachers' National Association in New York. As a conductor he has had a wide experience ranging from organizing amateur choirs and choruses to conducting professional singers and orchestral players. Mr. Skilton is a contributor to the periodicals Rindu and Musician. The new Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures elected by the Board is Mr. Ralph E. Bassett who has been in the University of Missouri since 1900. Mr. Bassett holds the degrees of A. B., 1889, and A. M., 1890, from Harvard University. From 1890 to 1892 he was instructor of modern languages in the Belmont school, Belmont, Massachusetts, and held a similar position at De Pauw University, Greencastle, in 1892-93. Mr. Skilton spent the year 1893-94 abroad studying at Paris. In the absence of the regular incumbent he was acting professor of modern languages in New Hampshire College during 1894-95, and held a similar position in the Agricultural and Mechanical Arts Col lege, Charlestown, South Carolina, from 1896 to 1897. The two following years he spent at Syracuse University as instructor of Romance languages. In 1899-00 he held the same position in Western Reserve University, and in 1900 was elected assistant professor of Romance languages in the University of Missouri. Mr. Bassett is engaged in editing French and Spanish texts; two of which are nearly ready for publication. William W. Lawrence of Cambridge, Massachusetts, has been elected by the Regents to the position of Associate Professor of English Literature. Mr. Lawrence has been an instructor in German in Harvard University for three years past. He graduated from Bowdoin College in 1898, and studied abroad at the University of Leipse in the year following his graduation. He entered the graduate school at Harvard in 1899 and has taught Anglo-Saxon in the summer sessions. In the graduate school of Harvard he is enrolled for the doctor's degree in English, and expects to receive the degree at this year's commencement. The new position of Assistant Professor of Economics which was made at the June meeting of the Board of Regents was also filled at that time by the election of Arthur J. Boynton of Harvard University. Mr. Boynton received the bachelor's degree from Beloit College in 1896. He taught the next three years in the high school of Sparta, Wisconsin. He entered the Harvard graduate school in 1900 and took his A. B. degree from Harvard in 1901 and his A. M. degree in 1902. The year 1901-02 he spent in graduate work in Columbia University. He is now at work on a thesis' the subject of which is "The Economics of the Corn Belt." Mr. Erich Muenter of Chicago, Illinois, has been elected to the new position in Germanic Languages and Literatures. Mr. Muenter was born and educated in Germany. He attended the Gymnasium at Uelzen, Province of Hanover, from 1878 to 1888. In 1889 he came to the United States. Six years later he entered the University of Chicago,taking the Bachelor's degree in 1899. He taught French and German at Racine College in the year 1895-96. He taught the same subjects in the Kenwood Preparatory School, Chicago, during 1896-97. During the next five years, with the exception of fourteen months spent abroad, he gave instruction in German in the South Side Academy, an affiliated school of the University of Chicago. From July 1900 to September 1901, Mr. Muenter was traveling and studying abroad. In 1901 he gave instruction in English at the Royal Academy of Oriental Languages in Berlin. ical Geometry, which is used as a textbook in fifty-three educational institutions in this country. The new Assistant Professor of Mathematics is Mr. Charles H. Ashton of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Mr. Ashton holds the degrees of A. B., Union College, 1877, and A. M., Harvard, 1893. He has been an instructor in mathematics at Harvard for six years past, and is the author of Ashton's Plane and Solid Analyt Edwy Lycurgus Taylor, elected to the new position of Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, was prepared for college at the Albany College, Albany, New York. He entered Yale University in the fall of 1898 and graduated in civil engineering in 1901. He was elected to membership in Sigma Xi at Yale. The year following his graduation Mr. Taylor assisted in teaching railroad surveying at Yale and studied higher mathematics. During the present academic year he has been instructor in surveying and mechanical drawing at Yale and has also been studying civil engineering. A F. Hendrix, the new Assistant Professor of Latin, graduated from Central College, Fayette, Missouri, in 1897, and took his master's degree the next year. He taught in the Carthage high school, Carthage, Missouri, from 1898 to 1901. Since that time he has been enrolled in the graduate school of the University of Chicago. Frederick H. Wood, of Kansas City, Missouri, has been elected to the position of Assistant Professor of Law of the University of Kansas. Mr. Wood has been practicing law in Kansas City for several years past. He graduated from the School of Arts of the University of Kansas in 1898 and from the School of Law in 1900. He is the son of Mr. F. A. Wood who lives on north Ohio street, this city. Mr. Wood is also a member of Phi Beta Kappa. David Ford McFarland, newly 口口口口口口口口口口 WOLF'S BOOK STORE. We invite all Students to come to our store and look over Our Stock of Books, Stationery, Pictures and Art Novelties. WOLF'S BOOK STORE, Phone 515 Blue. 922 Mass. Street EASTERN STAR BAKERY ...Makes Good Things to Eat... Parties Supplied. If you eat our bakings once you will eat no other. HENRY GERHARD, Prop. elected Assistant Professor of Chemistry, is an alumnus of the University, class of 1901. He spent the two succeeding years after graduation in teaching and studying chemistry in the University. Last fall Mr. McFarland left Lawrence to spend the year in advanced work at Yale. He was elected in his senior yar to membership in Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi. Three assistantships were filled by the Board of Regents at the commencement meeting. Miss Lulu Gardner, a student of the University, was made assistant in Rhetoric and English Language. Mr. Elmer V. McCollum, a member of this year's graduating class in the School of Arts, was elected laboratory assistant in Chemistry. Mr. McCollum was this year elected to membership in Sigma Xi. Mr. U. S. G. Plank was made assistant in Physical Education. Mr. Plank was the secretary of the city Y. M. C. A.for a number of years and has lately been in charge of the disciplinary work at Haskell Institute. K. S. U. Students buy their Text Books and Supplies at... Rowland & the Stevenson BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS. 819 MASS. ST. 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