xt7v9s1khv4m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7v9s1khv4m/data/mets.xml Lexington, Kentucky (Fayette County) State University of Kentucky 1909 yearbooks ukyrbk1909 English [na], Lexington, Ky Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. University of Kentucky Yearbook Collection KENTUCKIAN MCMIX text KENTUCKIAN MCMIX 1909 2012 true xt7v9s1khv4m section xt7v9s1khv4m   University Archives Margaret I.    ing Library - North
University of Kentucky Lexington, Kentucky    40506  11111!  ;:
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iliii 
 '09 KENTUCKIAN
 .
THE UNIVERSITY   PART I
EDITOR'S   PAGE   ................................................................     5
I.Y MEMORIAM ..................................................................      6
HISTORY OF UNIVERSITY  .....................................................     9
TRUSTEES ......................................................................    IS
ALUMNI   ........................................................................    17
FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION OFFICERS ................................    iS
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE .................................................    37
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCE ............................................    43
COLLEGE  OF  LAW   ..............................................................    65
SCHOOL OK CIVIL ENGINEERING  .............................................    71
SCHOOL OF MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING...............    77
SCHOOL OF MINING ENGINEERING  ..........................................    85
\C\IK.\1Y......................................................................    90
I'll YSICAL EDUCATION ........................................................    92
M 11 .ITARY  DEPARTMENT   .....................................................    96
THE CLASSES   PART II
SENIOR ......................................................................... 102
JUNIOR  .........................................................................   135
SOPHOMORE..................................................................  145
FRESHMAN  .....................................................................  151
ATHLETICS   PART III
F( II )T  BALL  .....................................................................  iS7
BASE  BALL ......................................................................  i73
BASKET   BALL...............................................................      ,80
TR \CK   .........................................................................    l8p
GYMNASIUM TEAM  ....................................................      rg6 
! i
KENTUCKIAN
MCMIX
Being an Annual of Information Concerning the
STATE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
Published by the
SENIOR CLASS OF THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
Lexington, Kentucky.
MAY, 1909.  EDITORS' PAGE
1STE more year has passed and again the Senior Class inflicts upon an indulgent and long-suffering public the series of pictures, articles, poor jokes, and near-poems that constitute a college annual. We offer no excuses for this iniquity and beg that our readers, especially the members of the class of ''09, remember that the deed was not of our choosing, and that the above-mentioned class is in reality the culprit, we the faltering tools. As such we realize that our weakness in being led astray entitles us to a share of the penalty, and for this we stand waiting with bowed heads.
Being cognizant of the fact that the essential feature in the success of an annual lies in its opportune appearance before the public, we have directed our main efforts toward having the '09 Kentuckian appear two weeks earlier than the usual time, Commencement week, at the expense of the quality as well as of the quantity of material appearing within this volume. But, worthy censors, we beg leave to remind you of one or two facts, before you render judgment upon our work. Firstly, it is not our intention to give to the world a masterpiece of rhetoric or literary art, but simply a compendium of facts and occurrences, which, when perused in after years, will bring back the fleeting fancies and fond memories so dear to the life of the college boy or girl; and if this volume ever brings a moment of happiness into a life burdened with responsibilities and sorrows, then shall we feel amply repaid for our time and labor. Secondly, this work is not compiled nor edited by professional men, nor does it represent the work of years: it is simply the product of leisure hours (and to these we must add those hours in which we have necessarily slighted our class work) of a number of college boys and girls, to whom life presents other and equally difficult problems. So, again we beg, be not over harsh in your censure.
By wajr of conclusion, we wish to express our heartfelt appreciation and sincere gratitude to all those, who by word of suggestion have exhibited their interest in the '09 Kentuckian, and more particularly to those who by practical assistance have made it possible for us to publish this volume. And by this, the consummation of our joint labors, we wish, in part, to show the appreciation of our class for all that has been done for us by our Alma Mater, our Faculty, and our associates
in college.
THE  STAFF. IN MEMORIAM
JOHN HENRY NEVILLE
"What is man that thou art mindful of him?"Ps. 8:4-
Professor Neville, the Nestor of classical learning at State University of Ken-lucky, is dead, and, in departing, leaves no superior to take his place. He was born November 16, 1827, in Christian County, Kentucky. Often have we heara him say: '-'My birthplace was fourteen miles south of that of Jefferson Davis, ana it is strange that I was not as inveterate a Confederate as he." It was not, however, to be so, for, while still young, he moved to Tazwell County, Illinois. After.receiving the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1849, and that of Master of Arts in WM, from Bethany College, West Virginia, he became Professor of Greek, Latin, and Higher Mathematics at Eureka College, Illinois. He was one of its founders, as we'll as a professor of this institution for five years. From 1857 to 1858, he was Professor of Latin and Greek in Christian University, Canton, Missouri. His whole inclination was toward a literary life, and in 1859, he returned to his native state and taught until 1865 in Kentucky University of Harrodsburg. When the same m i ii uiion was reorganized and incorporated with Transylvania University, he still retained his connection with it until 1880. In this year, he became Dean of the Classical Department and Professor of Latin and Greek at Kentucky State College, which position he held until his death. In 1899, the State College of Kentucky conferred on him the degree of Doctor of Laws.
Dr. Neville was a scholar of wide and varied erudition. A refined and thoughtful man, he gave to all that courtesy which marks the majesty of a gentleman. Though not without the tendency to meditation, revery and introspection which accompanies genius, he lived his own life of unremitting study and unceasing application. In conversation, his historical remarks were concise, graphic, and . i 111 11 i undue explanatory comment, betraying a fine sense of historical minded-ness. Carefully and quietly, he studied the political and social questions of his day, never ceasing to be a scholar and a philosophical thinker. In his work, the Professor was exact: he had no tolerance for illiteracy, no patience with mediocrity. Of the reality of the future world, he had full assurance, and on occasions spoke to his classes of its nearness to him.
"Calmly he looked to either side and here Saw nothing to regret or thereto fear."
Whatever the future may hold in store for individual history, the Doctor's students will never allow his memory to fall within the shadow of oblivion. In the class-room, he was devoted, kind, patient, and indulgent: he extended to each the same unreserved candor which he demanded for himself. We shall never forget Ins beautiful and consummate translation of the Carminum XIV, Liber II oil [orace, and of the last chapter of the Agricola of Tacitus. The surest evidence of his greatness is evinced by the permanent conquest he has made of the esteem and affection of a loyal student constituency; and in after years, he shall live as the centra]  figure of their most pleasant reminiscent moods, when they may truly
:-:n   thai
"There he stands in memory to this day,  erect, self-poised, A  witness to ages as they pass, That simple duty has no place foi   fear."
6
i TftE
UNIVERSITY
Part I
n i i
PRESIDENT JAMES K.  PATTERSON 1879
HISTORY OF THE UNIVERSITY
The State College of Kentucky, now the State University, owes its existence to the land grant of Congress, approved July 2, 1862. By this Act, allotment of 30,000 acres was made to each state in the Union for each representative. Kentucky had at that time nine Representatives and two Senators, and, therefore, received under this apportionment 330,000 acres of public lands. Congress required that the proceeds of the sale of these lands or the rental,
if located upon lands hitherto unoccupied and held by the respective institutions, should be. applied to the endowment and maintenance of colleges in which should be taught those branches of learning related to agriculture and the mechanic arts, without excluding classics and including military tactics. Most of the states which availed themselves of this bounty established institutions in compliance with the requirements of Congress, which became the nuclei of still larger intitutions of university proportions. The State of Kentucky committed the cardinal mistake, when it established its Agricultural and Mechanical College in 1865, of attaching it to a denominational institution instead of placing it upon an independent footing. Thirteen years of valuable time were thus practically lost, namely, from 1865 to 1878. The Legislature of 1878 intervened and dissolved the connection which had been established in 18C5 with the denominational institution referred to. The question of its permanent location was determined by a commission appointed by the Legislature for this purpose. President Patterson, who had become President of the institution in 1869, appealed to the citizens of Lexington and the County of Fayette to make an effort to retain it in the City of Lexington. The City Council, upon his appeal, voted $30,000 in city bonds, and the Fiscal Court of Fayette County, $20,000 in Fayette County bonds, to be applied in the erection of buildings for the use of the re-established institution, or for the purchase of land for its agricultural operations. The city had previously agreed to give the city park, consisting of fifty-two acres of ground, for the erection of buildings and for carrying on its operations. With this offer, lie went before the commission and succeeded in inducing them to name Lexington as the permanent site of the College. In 1880, President Patterson applied to the Legislature for additional endowment and obtained the passage of an act giving the proceeds of one-half of one cent on every hundred dollars of taxable property owned by white persons for its maintenance. This brought in a large addition of revenue to that previously obtained from the interest upon the proceeds of the sale of the public lands. Here it may be worth while to note that the magnificent donation of lands by Congress was virtually sacrificed through the culpable negligence of the Commonwealth. Three hundred and thirty thousand acres were sold for $165,000, namely, 50 cents per acre.    Had this allotment of land been judiciously and economically managed,
9 it could, within ten years after the allotment, have been sold for twenty times that amount.
In 18.82, the denominational colleges made a united effort to procure the repeal of the half-cent tax. The President defended the institution before the Legislature and succeeded, after a contest which lasted for three months, in having the measure to repeal laid upon the table of the House of Eepresentatives. The constitutionality of the act was then assailed by the aggrieved colleges. This also was argued before the General Assembly, was tried in the Chancellor's Court in Louisville and in the Magoffin Circuit Court, and carried thence into the Court of Appeals, and ultimately decided in favor of the State College. The President of the College argued the cause before the joint committees of the Senate and House. He also mainamed the constitutionality of the act against some of the ablest members of the bar, namely. Judge Lindsay, Bennett Young, Alexander H. Humphrey, and James Trabue, and was victorious along the whole line.
In 1887, he was largely instrumental in procuring the passage of the Hatch Act by Congress, which provided an annual income of $15,000 per annum for the maintenance of the Experiment Stations established in connection with these land grant institutions. In 1890, he rendered like service in procuring an additional $25,000 per annum of endowment from Congress for the College. In 1893, the revised charter, which was mainly his work, made liberal provision for the appointment of county representatives to whom is given exemption from all fees and traveling expenses once coming and once returning to the institution each year. In 1900 and 1902, he obtained $90,000 from the Legislature for the erection of the Gymnasium and of Patterson Hall, the latter a home for young ladies. In 1904, he secured from the Legislature an annual additional income of $15,000 per annum. The constitutionality of this was also questioned and his argument before the Court of Appeals was mainly instrumental in determining a decision in the iilliniiiitivc.
In 1908, the Legislature made an appropriation of $20,000 per annum for increased income. In l'.HKi. Congress passed at Act, known as the Nelson Bill, giving an additional $25,000 per annum for the further endowment of the institutions established  under Hie /Vet of 1862.
Within the last twenty-nine years, the institution has increased its matriculation of college and university students ten-fold. It has now, instead of six professors as then, more than fifty professors, assistant professors and instructors. In 1882 it had but two buildings, namely, the Main Building and the Old Dormitory. There are now on the College grounds and on grounds immediately adjacent fourteen or fifteen buildings. Its income has grown from $10,000, in 1880, to $125,000, in 1909. This income represents at four per cent a capitalized endow-inciil of over I hive million dollars. Its buildings and grounds, including the College Farm, are worth aboul  $800,000.
The Legislature of L908 changed the style and title of the institution from State College to State University.   In this capacity it has membership in the Asso- ciation of American State Universities. Its standard of admission conforms to that adopted by the Association of State Universities at its recent session in Washington, namely, fifteen units, covering a period of four years in an accredited high school. Its courses of instruction embrace a college of Science and Liberal Arts, a college of Education for the preparation of teachers for high schools and colleges, four engineering courses, namely, Mechanical, Civil, Electrical, and Mining, College of Agriculture and College of Law. It is the only institution in Kentucky which is doing University work.    Last year, its matriculation roll numbered 1064.
During a period of thirty years, it has lost but few of the prominent members of its educational staff. Dr. Robert Peter in 1894, Prof. F. M. Helveti the same year, Milford White in 1908, and Prof. John Ii. Neville in 1908these were all eminent in their respective lines of work. Dr. Robert Peter became Professor of Chemistry in 1832, in Transylvania University, and for years was recognized as one of the foremost chemists in America. Prof. P. M. Helveti was a man of rare attainments in ancient and modern languages, in French and German and English literature, in history and in music. Prof. Milford White, though comparatively young, had already impressed himself strongly upon the young teachers of Kentucky as a man of marked ability. Prof. John Ii. Seville was recognized as facile princeps the best classical scholar within the limits of the Commonyealth. It is somewhat remarkable that in a period covering thirty years, the necrology of the institution has been so small. It is now manned by an educational staff which compares favorably in point of ability and attainments with that of any other institution in America. Its success may be measured by its high standing among the institutions forming the Association of American Universities, and by the further fact that of all the alumni whom it has graduated since 1871, there is not more than one-half of one per cent of failures. Its graduates are in demand everywhere and the demand far exceeds the ability of the institution.
Alma Mater esto perpetua.
jK*H          '
1909
11
 LIFE OF PRESIDENT PATTERSON
James Kennedy Patterson was born in Glasgow, Scotland, March 26th, 1833. Tn 1842. the President's father and family sailed for America, and settled in the thinly populated district of southern Indiana. There were no educational facilities nearer than Madison, distant forty miles, whose schools he attended during the term of 1849 and 1850. After a year spent in teaching in the common schools, lie resumed his studies in Hanover Academy. Attending college and teaching, alternately, he graduated from Hanover College in 1856, the leader of his class during his undergraduate course.
Immediately after obtaining his degree, he became principal of G-reenville Presbyterial Academy, Muhlenburg County, Ky., which position he held for three years, when he became principal of the Preparatory Department, and afterward Professor of Latin and Greek, in Stewart College, now Southwestern University, Clarksville, Tenn. At the beginning of the Civil War, he left his southern position and became principal of the Transylvania High School, Lexington, Ky., and, in 1865-69, held the Professorship of Latin and Civil History in Kentucky University.
At the latter date, lie began, as President of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Kentucky, an administration so eventful, so stormy, and so replete with monumenta] results! From a condition of bankruptcy, he has created a constantly increasing income: from a rude and imperfect organization, lie has educed a modem university, strong, vigorous and symmetrical. While engaged in this arduous task, he has been constantly trammeled by the fiercest and most determined opposition, and assailed by the bitter invective of implacable and influential foes.
In 1880, he carried a measure through the Legislature appropriating a tax of one-twentieth of a mill on the dollar for the benefit of the Agricultural College, henceforward known as the State College. The denominational institutions at once attacked this measure on the ground that it was inimical to their interests and unconstitutional as well. Since the most distinguished lawyers of the Commonwealth declined to defend the constitutionality of the Act, it devolved upon President Patterson to maintain the integrity of State College against the formidable attacks of the associated colleges. An elaborate argument was made by Judge Lindsay before the joint committee of the House and Senate, and, at its conclusion, the case of the College appeared absolutely hopeless. Though not a lawyer, the President ventured to address the committee, and presented his arguments with such facility and adroitness as to completely nonplus his opponents and to convince
the committee of the cogency and soundness of his reasoning. In the courts he was matched against no common antagonistsJudge Lindsay, Alexander P. Humphrey, Bennett H. Young, and James Trabue; however, in 1870, when Judge Holt of the Court of Appeals handed down an affirmative decision, it was based upon the lines which the President had laid down and upon the arguments which he had presented in his brief.
The President is ever vigilant, endeavoring to lengthen the ropes and strengthen the stakes, of that institution with whose history his life has been so closely interwoven. Tn 1885, he established the Agricultural Experiment Station in connection with the College, and in 1SS7, was largely instrumental in procuring the passage by Congress of the Hatch Act, endowing Experiment Stations with $15,000 a year. He was also equally efficient and successful in procuring from Congress the passage of the Morrill Act of 1890, giving $25,000 per annum to each State in the Union for the further endowment of state institutions established under the Land Grant of 1862. As the initiator of each forward step, the course of instruction and the number of buildings have, under his supervision, gradually increased, until, in 1908,
13
ii he   obtained   from   the  Legislature   $25,000   per   annum   for   additional jncome, $200,000 for buildings and a change of name from State College to State University
P^etfpatterson received the degree of Doctor of PMlosoph y from. College, Indiana, in 1875, and that of Doctor of Laws from LaFayette OoH  Pennsylvania, in 1896. His studies were for years mainly .c0d^^ parative Philology, the basis of which was a more or less mtimate with Latin. Greel French, German, Gothic, Anglo-Saxon, and Sanskrit Leslie, in 1875, appointed President Patterson as a delegate from Kentucky fc fte International Congress of Geographical Sciences, and to the British Aviation for the Advancement of Science. Again, he received like recognition at the_handfl of Governor Buckner, when selecting a scholar to represent Kentucky at the Britisn Association for the Advancement of Science, 1890.
During his long term of office, the gates of the Temple of Janus have not at all times been closed. He has, however, preserved a singular equanimity, worthy of the line inscribed in the Council Chambers of Calcutta-''^ aequa in ardms. As a testimonial of his labors in this world, lie will have a monument more lasting than brass; all that education is in Kentucky today, despite its deficiencies, is due to the thrift, the sagacity, the jealous care of this fighting Scotsman.
H TRUSTEES
 IS BOARD OF TRUSTEES
His Excellency, Augustus E. Willson, Governor of Kentucky, Chairman, Ex-Officio.
President James Kennedy Patterson, Member, Ex-Officio.
Hon. John G. Crabisi:. Superintendent Public Instruction. Member, Ex-Officio.
TERM  EXPIRES JANUARY,   ioio.
Basil M. Brooks, Esq..........................Slaughtersville.
*David P. Frazee, Esq...............................Lexington.
Hon. Frank A. Hopkins, ........................Prestonsburg.
Charles B. Xichols, Esq...........................Lexington.
Judge  Robert L. Stout  ............................Versailles.
TERM  EXPIRES JANUARY,  1912.
Judoe   11 i:\ifv  S. Barker   ...........................Louisville.
Eon. Tibbis Carpenter  ............................Scottsville.
Denny P. Smith, Esq..................................Cadiz.
Hon. Claude B. Terreli..............................Bedford.
TERM   EXPIRES JANUARY,  1914.
Hoy. Cassius .M. Clay  .................................Paris.
Etwel   D.wies.  Esq...................................Kensee.
Richard C. Stoll, Esq.............................Lexington.
Lours L. Walker.  Esq..............................Lancaster.
Richard X. VVathen, Esq............................Lebanon.
EXECUTIVE' COMMITTEE.
Charles B. Nichols, Acting Chairman.
Cassits M. Clay.               Claude B. Terrell.              Hywel Davies.
Dwin ('.  Frazee, Secretary of Board and Executive Committee.
ased.
16 
STATE UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
OFFICERS.
L. K. Frankel, '00   .......................President.
Katherine T. Hopson, '06  .................Vice President.
Brooke G. Hefner, '97  .....................Secretary-Treasurer.
EXECUTIVE  COMMITTEE.
J. D. Turner, '98, Chairman.
Mary E. Sweeney, '06.                      S. B. Marks, '99.
J. Craig Shelby, '04.                        Sarah M. Chorn, '03.
COMMITTEE  ON   HONORARY   MEMBERSHIP.
W. S. Webb, '01, Chairman. Mary L. Atkins, '95.                        H. B. Spears, '07.
COMMITTEE ON NECROLOGY.
E. C. Stoll, '95, Chairman.
0. M. Shedd, '01.                               V. E. Muncey, '91.
Marguerite McLaugi-ilin, '03.
LEGISLATIVE  COMMITTEE.
W. H. Scherffius, '99, Chairman. J. D. Turner, '98, Secretary.
Denny P. Smith, '93.                       J. O. H. Simrall, '97
Clyde Gra/dy, '02.                              J. W. Gilbert, '01.
J. W. McParlix, '93.                          J. W. Woods, '96.
E. E. Moorman, '02.                          A. E. Marshall, '01.
S. L. Pottinger, '92.                          G. G. Brock, '98.
E. C. Terrell. '06.                             J. W. Carnahan, '96.
ANNUAL  REPORT  OF THE  ALUMNI. Mary E. Sweeney, '06, Editor-in- Chief.
Associate Editors.
C. E. Schoene, '07.                            J. D. Turner, '98.
Brooke G. Hifner, '97.                      W. S. Hamilton, '07.
17
ffttipf ALUMNI CLUBS
NEW YORK.
J. I. Lyle.................................President.
B. P. Ellis ................................Vice President.
J. F. Mossellman  .........................Secretary-Treasurer.
CHICAGO.
W. L. Buonaugh...........................President.
Henry Bewlay...........................Vice President.
L. C. Brown ...............................Secretary-Treasurer.
CINCINNATI.
J. T. Eaig .................................President.
Geo. Morgan ..............................Secretary.
PHILIPPINES.
A. M. Kirby ...............................President.
H. E. Stephens ............................Vice President.
J. E. Ammeeman   ..........................Secretary-Treasurer.
LOUISVILLE.
Dr. Harry Davidson .......................President.
Miss Charlotte Bliss ......................Vice-President.
Edward Wuetele ..........................Secretary-Treasurer.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Philip Eiefkin...........................President.
H. L. Amoss  ..............................Vice President.
W. G. Campbell ...........................Secretary-Treasurer.

18 FACULTY
Wt YOU E.VEC STUDIED
 FACULTY
JAMES KENNEDY PATTERSON, Ph. D., LL. D., F. S. A., President of the University.
Beta  Theta   Pi.
A.  M.,   1850,  and  Ph.  D.,   1875,  Hanover  College,  Indiana;  F.  R.  H.  S.,  1880,  London, England; F. S. A., 1881, Edinburg, Scotland; LL. D., 1895, Lafayette College, Pennsylvania; Member of International Congress of Geographical Science, 1875; Mem Kentucky   Commission   for   Awarding  Rhodes   Scholarships   at   Oxford   University. Principal Greenville Presbyterial Academy,  1856-59;  Professor of Greek and Latin, Stewart    College,    Clarksville,    Tennessee,    1859-61;    Principal    Transylvania    High School, Lexington, Kentucky,  1861-65;  Professor of History and Metaphysics, S College of Kentucky  1866;   President  State  College  of  Kentucky,   1866-1908;   President State University of Kentucky,  1907.
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE.
CLARENCE WENTWORTH MATHEWS, B.  S, Dean of College of Agriculture.
Sigma Chi.
B. S., Cornell University, 1891.    Professor of Horticulture, Botany and Agriculture, Kentucky State College and State University, 1892.
JOHN JULIAN HOOPER, B. S., Assistant Professor of Animal Husbandry.
B. S., Texas State College, 1901. Assistant in Texas Experiment Station, 1901-02; Assistant Professor of Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, Kentucky State University, 1906.
ALFRED HOLLEY GILBERT, B. S., Instructor in Botany.
B. S., 1904, University of Vermont. Special Agent, Seed Division, Department of Agriculture, 1904-05; Instructor in Agriculture, Boston Farm School, 1906; Instructor in Horticulture and Botany, State University, 1906.
W. D. NICHOLLS, B. S., Assistant in Agriculture.
 COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCE.
ARTHUR  McQUISTON  MILLER,  A.   M.,
Dean of the College of Arts and Science.   Professor of Geology, Zoology, and Entomology.
Sigma Chi.
A. B.. Princeton, 1884; A. M., Princeton, 1887; Student at Munich; Fellow of Geological Society of America. Teacher at Wilson College, Cambridge. Mass.; Professor of Geology and Zoology, Kentucky State College and Kentucky State University, 1S92.
JOSEPH WILLIAM   PRYOR.  M. D.,
Professor of Anatomy and Physiology.
Kappa  Alpha.
M. D., 1876, State Medical Society. Ex-President Fayette Medical Society. Connected with Kentucky State College since 1S82; Professor of Physiology and Anatomy, 1891.
FRANKLIN  ELLIOTT  TUTTLE,  A.  M.,  Ph.  D.,
Professor of Chemistry. Theta Delta Chi.    Phi Kappa Phi.
A.  B.,  Amherst,  1889;  A.  M.,  Goettingen,   1893;   Ph.   D.,  Goettingen,   1893.    Insti
Chemistry and Mineralogy, Pennsylvania State College, 1889; Assistant Professor of Analytical Chemistry, 1893: Professor of Quantitative Analysis, 1905; Professor of Chemistry,  Kentucky State University,  1906.
RALPH NELSON MAXSON, Ph. D., Professor of inorganic Chemistry.
Sigma Xi.
B. S., Rhode Island State College, 1902; Ph. D.. Yale University, 1905. Assistant Instructor, Academic Department, Yale University; Assistant in Organic Chemistry, Yale University, 1903; Assistant in General Chemistry, Y^ale University, 1904; Instructor in General Chemistry, Pennsylvania State College, 1905; Assistant Professor of Chemistry,  State University,  1906;  Professor of Inorganic Chemistry,  1908.
JAMES THOMAS  COTTON  NOE. A. M., Professor of Education.
Phi   Delta  Theta.
A. B., 1887, and A. M., 1891, Franklin College; Graduate Student of Cornell, 1892-93. and University of Chicago. 1899. Principal Secondary Schools, 1887-93; Instructor in English, Williamsburg Institute. 1893-94: Attorney at Law. 1894-98; Principal Harts-ville Masonic Institute, 1898-1901 : Superintendent City Schools, Pineville, 1901-04; Professor of English and History, Lincoln Memorial University, 1904-06; Assistant Professor, Department of Education. 1906-08, State University; Professor, Department of Education, Kentucky  State University,  190S.
ALEXANDER ST. CLAIR MACKENZIE, A. M., F. R. S. L., Professor of English and Logic. 21 THEODORE TOLMAN JONES, A M..
Professor of Greek and Latin.
A. B., Kentucky State College, 1902; A. M., Kentucky State College, 1903; A. M, Harvard, 1908. Assistant Professor in French, German, and Mathematics, State College, 1902-03; Assistant Professor in English and Mathematics, 1903-04; Assistant in Greek, Latin, and German,  1904;  Co-Principal of  Summer  School of Arts,  1903
JAMES GARRARD WHITE, A. M., Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy.
A.  M.,  Kentucky   State  College.    Professor  of   Mathematics  and  Astronomy,   Kentucky State College, 1868.    Teacher, Bay View Summer School.
ALFRED  CHARLES ZEMBROD,  A.  M.,
Professor of Modern Languages.
Pi Kappa Alpha.
A.   M.,  Heidelberg University.    Member  of  Modern  Language Association of  America;
Member of Modern Language Association of Ohio; Member of American Historical Society. Professor of Modern Languages and Literature, Heidelberg University, 1893-99; Assistant Professor in History, 1896-99; Professor of Modern Languages, Kentucky University (Transylvania), 1899-1906; Professor of Modern Languages, Kentucky State College, now Kentucky State University, 1906.
MERRY LEWIS PENCE, M.  S., Professor of Physics.
B.   S., Kentucky State College, 1881; M. S., Kentucky State College,  1884.    Professor of
Civil Engineering, Kentucky State College,  1889-92;  Professor of Physics, 1894
LLOYD CADIE DANIELS, Ph. D.,
Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
B. S. in Chem. Engin., 1905, Georgia School of Technology; Ph. D., 1908, University of Pennsylvania. American Chemical Society. Student Assistant, Georgia School of Technology 1904-5. Assistant in Laboratory of Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company, Ensley, Alabama, 1905-06; Chemist for Decatur Car Wheel Company, Birmingham, Alabama, 1906; Assistant Professor of Chemistry, State University, 1908.
EZRA L. GILLIS, A. B., Assista)it Professor of Education.
RALPH MORRIS, A. B., Assistant Professor of English.
Phi Delta Theta.
A. B., 1902, Harvard. Harvard Club of Japan. The Asiastic Society of Japan. Private Tutor, Harvard, 1903-05; Lecturer in English, Dai Ichi Ko To Gakko (Government First High School), Tokyo. Japan. 1905-07; Lecturer in English. Keio Gijuku, 1906-07, Tokyo.
22


 JOSEPH MORTON DAVIS, A. B., B. S.,
Assistant  Professor  of Ma