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Carson, J O, Chemist in factory in Chicago...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OCCUPATIONS OF SENIORS. | 6/20/1902 | See Source »

Assistant Professor T. W. Richards, of the Department of Chemistry, was offered this summer a full professorship at the University of Gottingen, with a new laboratory built for his use. The position was perhaps the best ever offered from abroad to an American chemist, involving purely research work, with no class-room duties. Professor Richards, however, declined to leave Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Changes in the Faculty. | 9/26/1901 | See Source »

John Andreas Widtsoe, S. B. summa cum laude 1894; Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy in the Utah Agricultural College, also Chemist to the U. S. Agricultural Experiment Station of Utah. To study Chemistry...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Graduate School Fellowships. | 6/17/1898 | See Source »

Among the remaining fifty were numbered an orange grower, a farmer, a geologist, a capitalist, a chemist, a planter, a cadet in the revenue service, an assistant paymaster in the U. S. Navy; a landscape architect, and a few theological students, engineers of various kinds, and bank clerks...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Senior Class Statistics. | 5/19/1897 | See Source »

...following summary: Officers of instruction, 202; students, 2811, a gain of 179 over last year. The university has suffered a serious loss by the death of Professor Theodore G. Wormley, on January 3. Dr. Wormley was a member of the Medical Faculty for twenty years, and was a chemist and toxicologist of great reputation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PENNSYLVANIA LETTER. | 1/13/1897 | See Source »

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