Arthur H. Steinhaus


Arthur H Steinhaus was an American physical fitness expert and sports physiologist.

Biography

Arthur H Steinhaus was born in Chicago, Illinois, on October 4, 1897. He received his B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in zoology and physiology and his B.P.E. and M.P.E. from George Williams College in physical education.

Career

For fifty years, 1915–1965, Steinhaus was associated with George Williams College as a student, teacher, Dean, and finally Dean Emeritus. After his retirement as Dean Emeritus, he was appointed Distinguished Service Professor by the Chicago College of Osteopathy on limited assignment to the Department of Physiology, and then served as a visiting professor at Michigan State University from 1966-1969. He taught in summer and evening sessions at the Universities of California, Colorado, Wisconsin, Saskatchewan, Southern California, and Northwestern. He served appointments as Fulbright Professor to Germany and Japan, did research in Germany and Denmark, and lectured in Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and Malaysia.

Recognition

In 1944 Steinhaus was on leave to serve as Chief of the Division of Physical Education and Health Activities in the US Office of Education. During the war he was a Civilian Advisor to the US Navy on matters of physical fitness and physical rehabilitation. He conducted research on the physiology of exercise and spent a year in Europe as a Guggenheim Fellow in the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. He was elected into the National Academy of Kinesiology in 1930 as Fellow #29 and went on to serve as the Academy's President during 1943-1945. His writings appeared in purely research journals such as the American Journal of Physiology, in professional journals such as the American Journal of Public Health, and in popular magazines such as Coronet and Look.

Death

He died on February 8, 1970, in Lansing, Michigan.

Research interests

After 1923, he was interested in research to disclose the effects of habits of living on health and well-being. "Habits of living" include eating, drinking, exercising, fatigue, rest, relaxation, smoking and various emotional states. In later years his interest centered on interrelationship of mind and body with emphasis on mental health and "total fitness." A good deal of his scholarly work was directed toward interpreting the findings of research for the average practitioner in physical education—a kind of "middleman" function.

Archive

Arthur H Steinhaus' papers are located in the Special Collections of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville and MS.1127. Two well-developed and extensive Finding Aids have been prepared, which includes a biographical summary, quoted above, with permission of J. B. Beals.

Theses and dissertation

  1. Master of Physical Education, Young Men's Christian Association College, 1926. "Graduation thesis in candidacy for the degree of MPE. "The influence of physical work on the basal metabolism"