rofessor Hussey has also made a number of reports in
Spanish of his work in the observatory at the South American University
of La Plata. Other members of the Literary Faculty whose total
publications might be mentioned are Professor E.C. Case, of the
Departments of Geology and Paleontology, seventeen; Professor A.F.
Shull, Zooelogy, twenty-two; Professor William H. Hobbs, Geology,
twenty-six; Professor A.H. Lloyd, Philosophy, twenty-one; Professor Fred
Newton Scott, Rhetoric, fifteen; and Professor H.H. Bartlett, Botany,
thirty-one.
Almost every member of the Medical Faculty has made many contributions
to various medical journals. The University Bibliography includes twelve
papers by Professor A.M. Barrett, eighteen by Professor C.D. Camp,
eighteen by Professor D.M. Cowie, fifteen by Professor G. Carl Huber,
eighteen by Professor F.G. Novy, twenty-two by Professor Reuben
Peterson, twenty-six by Professor U.J. Wile, and thirty-nine by
Professor A.S. Warthin.
In the Law School Dean Henry M. Bates is represented by eleven papers
and Professor Ralph W. Aigler by twenty-six.
The Dental College is represented by nineteen papers by Professor
Russell W. Bunting and eleven by Professor C.J. Lyons, while the
Homeopathic Medical School shows three books and eighteen articles by
Professor W.A. Dewey.
During the late war the abilities of such members of the Faculty as were
not in active service and the facilities of the University laboratories
for research were employed widely by the Government. The Faculty of the
Department of Chemical Engineering entered government service almost to
a man and an entirely new teaching force had to be secured. Many
technical questions, including those connected with poison gas warfare
and the development of the government nitrate plants, whose erection was
under the charge of Professor A.H. White, as Lieutenant-Colonel in the
Army, were investigated in the Chemical Laboratories. The Department of
Physics carried on extended researches in co-operation with the Bureau
of Standards in Washington. Many special problems were investigated in
the Medical Laboratories, as in the Department of Anatomy, where a study
of the repair of peripheral nerves after severance was instituted by Dr.
G. Carl Huber, first under the National Research Council, later under
the office of the Surgeon General, which sent several medical officers
to the University for purposes of instruction and to assist him. Dr.
Stac
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