. Morton memorial; a history of the Stevens institute of technology, with biographies of the trustees, faculty, and alumni, and a record of the achievements of the Stevens family of engineers. , manufacturers of railroad and de-pot seatings and settees, and also of ceilingand panel work, with factory and cutting-mills at Jersey City. He reorganized thiscompany in 1900 as the American VeneerCo., for the manufacture of veneer and cab-inet work, automobile bodies and mud-guards, car-ceilings and built-up work of all kinds, Mr. Seguine having retired, and taking entire control as preside


. Morton memorial; a history of the Stevens institute of technology, with biographies of the trustees, faculty, and alumni, and a record of the achievements of the Stevens family of engineers. , manufacturers of railroad and de-pot seatings and settees, and also of ceilingand panel work, with factory and cutting-mills at Jersey City. He reorganized thiscompany in 1900 as the American VeneerCo., for the manufacture of veneer and cab-inet work, automobile bodies and mud-guards, car-ceilings and built-up work of all kinds, Mr. Seguine having retired, and taking entire control as presidentand general manager, 1900-02. In 1902 hebecame associated with Senator V. W. Mac-farlane, of Greenville, Me., as secretary andgeneral manager of the Moosehead Case &Power Co., and secretary of the GreenvilleManufacturing & Veneer Co., both of Green-ville, Me. He is a member of the Phi Gamma Deltaand Phi Delta Phi fraternities of the NewYork University; of the Jersey City andPalma clubs, Jersey City; and of the ThetaNu Epsilon fraternity of Stevens Institute. Ayres, Brown (, 78, , 88), was born in Memphis, Tenn., May 25, 1856. Heattended the Washington and Lee Univer-. ROWN Ayres sity, Virginia, 1871-74, and entered Stevensin 1874, where he took the regular coursein Mechanical .Engineering until the Senioryear, when he specialized somewhat in phys-ics and chemistry, and graduated in theClass of 78 with the degree of Bachelor ofScience. He entered Johns Hopkins Uni-versity, at Baltimore, in 1878, taking thepostgraduate courses in physics and mathe-matics, and in 1879 was appointed Fellow inPhysics in that University. While holdingthis fellowship he was elected to the pro-fessorship of Physics in the University ofLouisiana (now Tulane University of Louis-iana), at New Orleans. He received the de- THE ALUMNI 301 gree of Doctor of Philosophy from Stevens111 1888. In 1894 he was appointed Dean ofthe newly created College of Technology ofTulane University of Louisiana, to t


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