UIHistories Project: A History of the University of Illinois by Kalev Leetaru
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Repository: UIHistories Project: Illio - 1895 [PAGE 26]

Caption: Illio - 1895
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David Kinley, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Political Economy and Social Science, was born in Dundee, Scotland, in 1861, and came to this country in 73. He fitted for college at Phillip's Academy, Andover, Mass., and graduated from Yale in 1884. For six years he was principal in the high school of North Andover. After a year's work at Johns Hopkins he was elected instructor in History and Political Economy in that institution, and Instructor in Political Economy and Logic in the Woman's College at Baltimore. In *92 he went to the University of Wisconsin as fellow and instructor in the School of Economics.

He has written articles upon the Ethical Basis of Labor Legislation, Immigration, Relation of the Church to Social Reform, Influence of the Independent Treasury on Business; is a contributor to the New York Independent on social topics; and is author of " T h e Independent Treasury System of the United States." He is a special lecturer on Money and Banking in the University of Wisconsin. He is a member of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, the American Statistical Association, the Wisconsin Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Wisconsin Historical Society, and of the Council of American Economic Association.

3. D. Bruner*

James Dowden Bruner, Ph. D., Professor of Romance Languages, attended Georgetown College, at Georgetown, Ky., and Franklin College, at Franklin, Ind. During '85 and '86 he was instructor in Latin at Georgetown- College, and from '87 to '89 was instructor in French and German at Franklin, In October, '90, he entered Johns Hopkins University as a graduate student in Romance Languages. The summer of '91 was spent in Paris for a more thorough mastery of the French, and for carrying on certain linguistic investigations in the National Library. In February, '92, he went to Italy in order to study the Pistojese, one of the group of dialects of TusModern Lan cany guage Notes, and is preparing for the publisher his thesis on the Pistojese dialect. He is also preparing for publication several Italian manuscripts of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.

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