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T THE % 3 LIBRARIES COLUMBIANA THE fi it COLUMBIANA The Koch Store Caters Especially to Women who Must Have the Best the Market Affords HE advantages of shopping at this well-stocked superbly-appointed and thoroughly depend- able store are readily apparent to every woman who seeks and demands tone and individuality in her purchases, whether for personal adornment or home use. Go where you will, we do not believe any other retail establishment caters to the wants of women folk with the same fidelity of purpose, nor brings to her very door a more exhaustive assemblage of high-grade merchandise at lower prices. The Koch reputation stands back of every sale we make, and that has stood for quality in the strictest sense years before many of our competitors had begun business. It is distinctly to your advantage to shop where you get Best Values and where Quality is Paramount First, Last, and Always Sho — I- Koch Ccvs Between Lenox and Seventh Avenues a Tiffany Co. Tiffany Co. call attention to the wide scope of their business and to the variety of their stock, as indicated in the following departments: DIAMONDS AND PRECIOUS STONES: Notable stock of mounted and unmounted stones; Oriental and American pearls, etc. DIAMOND RESETTING: Old family jewels reset; pearl necklaces enlarged and improved by richer pearls; exchange allowance made for old stones and pearls JEWELRY: Rings, brooches, bracelets, bangles, necklaces, hair ornaments, waistcoat buttons, sleeve links, scarf pins, stick pins, watch pins, hat pins, collar pins, earrings, etc. WATCHES AND CHAINS: Plain gold watches, split second and repeaters, for men; plain gold, enameled, and diamond mounted watches for ladies. Plain and complicated watches repaired on the premises. Plain and jeweled watch chains, fobs, watch pins, etc. GEMS AND MINERALS: Tourmaline, amethyst, topaz, kunzite, chrysoprase, turquoise matrix; collections of amber, coral, and jade beads; also richly carved objects of rock crystal, lapis-lazuli, and nephrite FAVRILE GLASS AND METAL WARE: Vases, bowls, wine glasses, cups, candlesticks, compotiers, decanters, cabinet pieces, etc. FANCY GOODS: Imported novelties, French enamels, miniatures, ivory carvings, gold mesh bags with precious stones, cigar and cigarette cases, match boxes, card cases of gold, silver, and leather; library articles, desk sets, game boxes, boot pulls, etc. OPERA GLASSES: Opera, field, and marine glasses; lorgnettes of gold, silver, shell, and pearl; barometers, ther- mometers, compasses, etc. TOILET ARTICLES: Gold, silver, ivory, shell, and fancy wood toilet articles, manicure sets, etc. POCKET CUTLERY AND RAZORS: Gold and sil- ver pen-knives, Swedish razors, scissors, safety razor sets, cigar cutters, cigar box openers, etc. FANS: Rich modern and antique lace and painted fans with pearl, shell, and ivory sticks. All kinds of fans repaired SILVERWARE: Complete dinner and tea services, chests of forks and spoons; presentation pieces, loving cups, etc. Silverware cleaned and repaired UMBRELLAS, CANES AND WHIPS: Parasols, um- brellas, canes, whips, and riding crops, mounted in gold and silver, some with enamel, others set with jewels; gold and silver spurs, stirrups, etc. BRONZES AND MARBLES: Statuettes, busts, animals, groups, etc. by noted European and American sculptors; memorial tablets, etc. LEATHER GOODS: Automobile, shopping, and traveling bags; suit cases, portfolios, portemonnaies, card cases, blotters, belts, etc. CLOCKS: Hall clocks in woods to harmonize with house decorations; bronze and marble clock sets; mantle, night, au- tomobile, and traveling clocks. All kinds of clocks repaired STATIONERY: Invitations to weddings and other social occasions and public ceremonies; marriage announcements, visiting cards, stationery for professional and commercial purposes; dies engraved for ciphers, monograms, residences, yachts, and heraldic devices SILVER PLATED-WARE: Candelabra, salvers, dinner and tea services, forks, spoons, etc. FAVRILE LAMPS AND ELECTROLIERS : Favrile glass and metal lamps for library, desk, piano or hall; large hanging shades, for dining room; candlesticks, etc. TABLE CUTLERY: Breakfast, dinner, and tea knives; carvers, game shears, etc. POTTERY AND GLASS: Examples of the latest prod- ucts of European and American potteries; notable collec- tion of plates, cut glass; complete dinner services, etc. SAFE DEPOSIT: Unequaled facilities for the storage of silverware, jewelry, laces, and art objects. Steel vault with boxes for securities and other valuables REPAIRS: Jewelry, silverware, bric-a-brac, china, glass- ware, watches, clocks, music boxes, bronzes, marbles, ivories, fans, enamels, and art objects of every description repaired MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT: Correspondence so- licited. Cuts, photographs or careful descriptions sent upon request. Goods on aporoval to patrons or to those who will make themselves known by satisfactory references. Tiffany Co. Blue Book, no illustrations, upon application Fifth Avenue and 37th Street, New York b THE KNOX HAT KNOXJ 2TEW YORK Is universally recognized as the Standard by which all others are judged 452 FIFTH AVE. 204 FIFTH AVE. 165 BROADWAY Corner 40th St. Near 25th St. Singer Building c THE | o race iflann THE LARGEST PRIVATE SECONDARY SCHOOL IN THE UNITED STATES The usual College prep- aration and special oppor- tunities in Physical, Man- ual, and Art Education Address SAMUEL T. DUTTON Superintendent Readier ' Collciic (Columbia llnhuTsttu NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER - - gresiieni JAMES E. RUSSELL 8 an rpEACHERS ' COLLEGE represents an outlay of five million dollars for the study of edu- cation and the training of teachers. There are twenty-five departments, with seventy- five officers of instructions; two schools of obser- vation and practice, with seventy-five instructors and 1300 pupils; an educational library surpassed only by those of Leipzig and Paris; along with the facilities of all other parts of the university. The present attendance is 1356 resident and 2150 partial students, representing every State and Territory, 150 other college and universities, and 250 teachers ' training schools. Four fellowships and fifty scholarships are awarded annually. Five degree of Ph.D., 51 of M.A., and 104 of B.S., were awarded in 1908. The demand upon the College for its graduates is four times the supply. The Board of Publications issues five series, in- cluding 115 volumes and pamphlets. DESCRIPTIVE CIRCULARS WILL BE SENT UPON APPLICATION d THE LARGEST PACKAGE AND THE BEST POWDER LKHN v FINK ' S ' VIOLET- LUXURY TOR THE TOILET TAElLE We CFSSlTr FOR THE HEALTH AMD COf ,4k DElikut   t-ro-6 .sMAVI iLltHTruL AFTER p ERruME R CrU IL S ' ZE OF cMf? SOLD AT 25C. GL4SS W TH GILT SCREW CAP OVER THE SIFTER TOP. FAMOUS IN LITERATURE David Harum by Edward Noyes Westcott People You Know by George Ade Tristram of Blent by Anthony Hope You Never Can Tell by Bernard Shaw Three Men on Wheels by Jerome K. Jerome Little Rivers by Rev. Henry Van Dyke Talks with Bismarck by Carl Schurz ' Mr. Dooley ' on General Grant by F. P. Dunne (Mr. Dooley) and numerous other Standard Books speak of APOLLINARIS, thus recog- nizing it as the Standard Table Water of the World. Ctje jHortarboarb THE YEARBOOK OF BARNARD COLLEGE AND THE JUNIOR CLASS BOOK OF THE CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Columbia Mnioersity : in % City of fork : 1 yH9 Copyright, 1909 BY DOROTHY BROWNING KIRCHWEY V .). F. TAP LEY CO. New York P rarb of (trustees (Chairman SILAS B. BROWNELL, LL.D. Btrr-(£liatrmatt MRS. A. A. ANDERSON (Eliuk FREDERICK S. WAIT GEORGE A. PLIMPTON SILAS B. BROWNELL, LLD. MRS. JOSEPH H. CHOATE MRS. ALFRED MEYER GEORGE A. PLIMPTON MRS. JAMES TALCOTT MRS. HENRY FAIRFIELD OSBORN MRS. A. A. ANDERSON FREDERICK S. WAIT EDWARD W. SHELDON REV. WILLIAM M. GROSVENOR, D.D. SETH LOW, LL.D. FREDERIC B. JENNINGS of (trustees MRS. HENRY N. MUNN NICOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, Ph.D., LL.D (Cantab.), Litt.D. (Oxon.) ALBERT G. MILBANK MRS. FRANCIS P. KINNICUTT MISS CLARA B. SPENCE CHARLES STEWART SMITH HOWARD TOWNSEND MISS FLORENCE COLGATE MRS. MALCOLM D. WHITMAN JOHN S. MILBURN MISS MARY STUART PULLMAN }E L. RIVES 7 NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER A.B., Columbia, 1882; A.M., 1883; Ph.D., 1SS4; Univ. Fellow in Philosophy, 1882-1885; student at Berlin and Paris, 1884-1885; LL.D., Syracuse, 1898; Tulane, 1901; Johns Hopkins, Princeton, University of Pennsylvania, and Vale, 1902; University of Chicago, 1903; St. Andrew ' s, Manchester, 1905; Cambridge, 1007; Litt.D., University of Oxford, 1905; Officier de Legion d ' Honneur, 1900. Since 1885 in Columbia University; Assist- ant in Philosophy, 1885-1886; Tutor, 1886-1889; Adjunct Professor, 1889-1890; Dean Faculty of Philosophy, 1890; Professor of Philosophy and Education, and President, since January, 1902. WILLIAM TENNEY BREWSTER Acting Dean and Professor of English A.B., Harvard College, 1892; A.M., Harvard University, 1893. Harvard College and Radcliffe College, 1893-1894; Columbia College and Barnard College, 1894-1900; Tutor, 1900-1902; Adjunct Professor, Barnard, 1902-1906; Professor. 1906-; Acting Dean, 1907-. Phi Beta Kappa. EDWARD DEL EVAN PERRY .lav Professor of Creek A.B., Columbia, 1875; Ph.D.. Tubingen, 1879; LL.D., Columbia, 1904. Columbia, Tutor in Greek and Sanskrit; 1880-1883; Tutor in Greek and Instructor in Sanskrit; 1883-1891; Professor of Sanskrit, 1891-1895; Jay Professor of Greek, 1895-. Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN BATES CLARK Professor of Political Economy A.B., Amherst College, 1872; A.M., Ph.D.; LL.D., Amherst, 1897; Princeton University, 1896. Carleton College, 1877-1881 ; Smith College, 1882-1893; Amherst College, 1892-1895; Lecturer at Johns Hopkins University, 1892-1894; Columbia, 1894-. Phi Beta Kappa. Note. — The pictures inserted are those of the Professors, Adjunct Professors, and Instructors, giving courses in Barnard College. Except in the case of the Acting Dean, the order is that of Academic Seniority 10 FRANK NELSON COLE Professor of Mathematics A. B., Harvard, L882; Ph.D., Harvard, L886. Lecturer in Mathe- matics, Harvard, 1885-1887; Instructor and Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Michigan, 1888-1895. Professor of Mathe- matics, Columbia University, since 1895. JAMES HARVEY ROBINSON Professor of History A.B., Harvard, 1887; post-graduate courses at Harvard and in Germany; (PH.D., Freiburg, 1800). Lecturer on European History, University of Pennsylvania, 1891; Associate Professor, 1892-1895; Professor of History, Columbia University, since 1895; Acting Dean of Barnard College, 1900-1901. CALVIN THOMAS Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures A. P., University of Michigan, 1874; A.M., 1877; LL.D., 1004. versity of Michigan, 1886-189(5; Columbia, 1896-. 11 CARLO LEONARDO SPERANZA Professor of Italian Doctor of Jurisprudence, University of Padua, 1866; A.M., Columbia University, 1886. Yale, 1880-1883; New York University, 1888-1890; Columbia University, Instructor in the Romance Languages and Literatures, 1883-1886; Adjunct Professor, 1890-1901; Professor of Italian, 1902-. HERBERT GARDINER LORD Professor of Philosophy A.B., Amherst, 1871; A.M., causa honoris, 1900. University of Buffalo, 1895-1898; Columbia, 1900-. Phi Beta Kappa. 12 LIVINGSTON FAR RAND Professor of Anthropology A.B., Princeton, 1888;. A.M., 1891; M.D., Columbia, 1891 HENRY EDWARD ( HAMPTON Professor of Zoology A.B., Columbia University, L893; Ph.D.. 1 sou. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1895-1896; .Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, 1895-1903; Biological Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, 1904-1906; Columbia University, 1896-. Sigma Xi. CHARLES KNAPP Professor of Classical Philology A.B., Columbia, 1887; A. M., 1888; Ph.D., 1890. Prize Fellow in Classics, Columbia, 1887-1890; Tutoral Fellow in Classics, Columbia, 1889-1890; Barnard, Instructor, L891-1902; Adjunct Professor, 1902- 1906; Professor, 1906-. Phi Beta Kappa. 13 A.B. versity, HENRY L. MOORE Professor of Political Economy , Randolph-Macon College, 1892; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Uni- 1896. Johns Hopkins University, 1896-1897; Smith College, 1897-1902; Columbia, 1902-. Phi Beta Kappa. HERBERT MAULE RICHARDS Professor of Botany S.B., Harvard, 1891; S.D., 1895. Harvard, 1891-189S; 1898-. Sigma Xi. Ran HENRY ROGERS SEAGER Professor of Political Economy Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1890; Ph.D., University of Penn- sylvania, 1894. University of Pennsylvania, 1895-1901 ; Columbia, 1902-. 14 MARGARET E. MALTBY Adjunct Professor of Physics A.B., Oberlin, 1882; S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1891; A.M., Oberlin, 1891; Ph.D., Gottingen University, 1895. Wellesley College, 1889-1893; Gottingen University, 1896-1897; Lake Erie College, 1897-1898; Barnard, Instructor in Chemistry, 1900- 1903; Adjunct Professor of Physics. 1903-. LOUIS AUGUSTE LOISEAUX Adjunct Professor in the Romance Languages and Literatures Certificat d ' Etudes Primaires Superieures, Academic de Dijon, 1887; Brevet d ' Instituteur, 1887; B. es L., 1894. Cornell University, 1891- 1892; Columbia, Tutor in French, 1892-1893; Tutor in the Romance Languages and Literatures, 1893-1900; Instructor, 1! 00-1904; Adjunct Professor, 1904- CHARLES A. BEARD Adjunct Professor of Politics Ph.B., De Pauw, 1898; A.M.. Columbia, 1903; Ph.D., 1904. Colum- bia University, Curtis Fellow, 1902-1903: Lecturer in History, 1904-1907: Adjunct Professor of Politics, 1907-. 15 WILLIAM ROBERT SHEPHERD Professor of Histbry B Columbia, 1893; A.M., 1894; Ph.D., 1896; Prize Lecturer History, ' 1896; Lecturer, 1899-1900; Tutor, 1900-1902; Instructor, 1902-1906; Adjunct Professor, 1906-1908; Professor, 1908-. JAMES THOMSON SHOTWELL Professor of History A.B., Toronto, 1898; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903. Columbia, University Scholar in European History, 1898-1899; Fellow n, European Hater 1899-1900; Assistant, 1900-1901; Lecturer, 1901-1903; Instructor, 1903-1905; Adjunct Professor, 1905-1908; Professor, 1908-. GEORGE WILLIS BOTSEORD Adjunct Professor of History AB University of Nebraska, 1884; A.M., 1889; Ph.D., Cornell University 1891. Kalamazoo College, 1886-1890; Bethany College, 1891-1895 ' • Harvard, 1895-1901; Columbia, 1901 -. Phi Beta Kappa 16 EDWARD KASNER Adjunct Professor of Mathematics B.S College of the City of New York, 1896; A.M., Columbia Uni- versity, 1897; Ph.D.. 1899. Phi Beta Kappa. CURTIS HIDDEN PAGE Professor of the Romance Languages and Literatures A.B., Harvard, 1890; A.M., 1891; Ph.D., 1894. Western Reserve University, 1891-1892; Harvard University, 1893-1894: Student al Umjersity of Paris, 1894-1895; Columbia University, Lecturer, 1895 Qn« ; ronf°5 l 896 1900 ? Lecturer 1900-1906; Adjunct Professor, 1906-1908; Professor, 1908-. Phi Beta Kappa. DANIEL JORDAN 1 Adjunct Professor of Romance Languages and -Literatures i f m U : V T Sity ° f Besau ?° 88; B.Pd., University of (he ILS-Tt University SthoIar ' 1895 - 1896 stuc o 19m 1o ' i ■r 18 - 190 °J 1900-1903; In- structor, 1903-190 ; Adjunct Professor, 1907-. WILLIAM PEPPERRELL MONTAGUE Adjunct Professor of Philosophy A.])., Harvard, 1896; A.M., 1897; Ph.D., 1898 Harvard, 1898-1899; University of California, 1899-1903; Columbia, Lecturer, 1903-1904; Tutor, 1904-1905; Instructor, 1905-1907; Adjunct Professor, 1907-. 18 MABEL FOOTE WEEKS Adjunct Professor of English A.B., Raddiffe, 1894. Dr. Sachs ' School for Girls. MAI! 110 EtEIMER Instructor in Chemistry A.B., Vassar, 1897; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr, L904. Vassar Colic Graduate Scholar, 1897-1898; Assistant, 1898-1899; Fellow al Hi Mawr, 1899-1902; Student at University of Berlin, 1902-1903; Barna Lecturer, 1903-1904; Instructor, 1904-. Phi Beta Kappa, GERTRUDE MARY HIRST Instructor in Classical Philology Cambridge Classical Tripos (Part I), 1890; A.M., Columbia, Uni- versity, 1900; Ph.D., 1902. Assistant, 1901-1903; Tutor, 1903-1905; Instructor, 1905-. 19 WILHELM ALFRED BKAUN Instructor in the Germanic Languages and Literatures A.B., Toronto University, 1895; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903. Alma College, 1897-1S98; Fellow in German, Chicago University, 1898-1899; Fellow in German, Columbia, 1899-1900; Barnard, Assistant, 1900-1901 : Tutor, 1901-1906; Instructor, 1906-. TRACY ELLIOT HAZEN Instructor in Botany A. 11, University of Vermont, 1897; A.M., Columbia University, 1899; Ph.D., 1900. Director, Fairbanks Museum of Natural Science, St. Johnsbury, Yt., 1901-1902; Assistant at Columbia, 1902; Tutor at Barnard, 1003 1!)07: Instructor, 1907-. Phi Beta Kappa ; Sigma Xi. B.Sc RAYMOND C. OSHURN Instructor in Zoology Ohio Stale University, ISDN; M.Sc, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1906. Starling Medical College, 1898-1899; Fargo College, 1899-1902; High School of Commerce, 1903-1907; Barnard, 1907- 20 JOHN DRISCOLL FITZ-GERALD Instructor in Romance Languages and Literatures A.I ' ,., Columbia, 1895; Ph.D., 1906; Assistant, Columbia, L898-1902- Tutor, 1902-1907; Instructor, 1907-. MARGARET CALHOUN Director of Physical Education A.B., Vassar, 1901. Barnard, 1907-. 21 (Otltcr Members of tlic faculty EDWIN R. A. SELIGMAN McVickar Professor of Political Economy A.B., Columbia University, 1879; LL.B,, 1884; Ph.D., 1884; LL.D., 1904. Lecturer at Columbia, 1885-1887; Adjunct Professor, 1888-1891; Professor, 1891-. Phi Beta Kappa. HERBERT LEVI OSGOOD Professor of History A.B., Amherst, 1877; A.M., 1880; Ph.D., Columbia, 1889; LL.D., Amherst, L907. Worcester Academy (Mass.), 1877 1879; Boys ' High School, Brooklyn, 1882-1889. Columbia, I889-. Phi Beta Kappa. GEORGE RICE CARPENTER Professor of Rhetoric and English Composition A.B., Harvard College, 1S8G; D.C.L., University of the South, 1907. Harvard College, 1888-1890; Institute of Technology, 1890-1893. Columbia, 1893-. Phi Beta Kappa. FRANKLIN H. GIDDINGS Professor of Sociology and the History of Civilization A.B., Union College, IS77; LL.D., Oberlin College, 1900. Bryn M a wr College, 1888-1894; Columbia. 1894- . Phi P.eta Kappa. JAMES RIGNALL WHEELER Professor of Greek Art and Archaeology A.B., University of Vermont, 1S80; A.M., Ph.D., Harvard, 1885. Student at American School at Athens, 1882-1883; Universities of Berlin and Bonn, 1885-1886; Johns-Hopkins University, 1886; Har- vard, 1888-1889; University of Vermont, 1889-1895; American School at Athens, 1892-1803; Columbia University, Professor of Greek, 1895-1906; Professor of Greek Art and Archaeology, 1906-. Phi Beta Kappa. NELSON GLENN McCREA Professor of Latin A.B., Columbia University, 1885; A.M., 1886; Ph.D., 1888. Columbia University, University Fellow in Classical Philology, L885-1888; Tutorial Fellow in Latin, 1888-188 9; Tutor, 1889-1895; Instructor, 1895- 1000; Adjunct Professor, 1000-1003; Professor, 1903-. Phi Beta Kappa. 22 ©titer (Officers of 3lnstructtmt HENRI FRANCOIS MULLER Tutor in Romance Languages and Literatures B. es I,., University of Paris, 1S97. Columbia, 1903- ELEANOR KELLER Tutor in Chemistry A.I ' .., Columbia, 1900. IDA H. OGILVIE Tutor in Geology A.I ' .., Bryn Mawr, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903. Lecturer, Barnard, 1903-1905; Tutor, L905-. THEODORE LESLIE SHEAR Tutor in Classical Philology A. B., New York University, 1900; A.M., 1903; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1901. Butler Fellow in Greek, New York University, 1900-1901; Fellow in Greek, Johns Hopkins University, L903-1904; Student at American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1904-1905; Student at University of Bonn, 1905- 1900; Barnard, 190G-. Phi Beta Kappa. HAROLD CHAPMAN BROWN Tutor in Philosophy B. A., Williams, 1901; M.A., Harvard, 1903; Ph.D., 1905. Harvard, 1903-1905; Columbia. Assistant, 1906- 1907; Tutor, 1907-. Phi Beta Kappa. PAULINE HAMILTON DEDERER Tutor in Zoology A.B., Barnard, 1901; A.M., Columbia, 1907. Barnard, Assistant and Lecturer, 1903-1907; Tutor, 1 907- ALEXANDER OTTO BECHERT Tutor in the Germanic Languages and Literatures A.B., Columbia, 1903; A.M., 1904. University Fellow in German at Columbia, 1904-1905; Curtis High School, 1905-1906; College of the City of New York, 1905-1906; Barnard, Lecturer, 1906-1907; Tutor, 1907-. Phi Beta Kappa. MARION E. LATHAM Tutor in Botany A.B., Barnard, 1903; A.M., Columbia, 1905. Phi Beta Kappa. ALLEN WILSON PORTERFIELD Tutor in Germanic Languages and Literatures A.B., West Virginia University, 1900; A.M., 1901. West Virginia University, 1899-1905; Carl Schurz Fellow at Columbia, 1905-1906; Barnard, 1906- 23 EDGAR HOWARD STURTEVANT Tutor in Classical Philology A.B., Indiana University, 1898; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1901. Indiana University. 1001-1902; Maryville College, 1902-1903; University of Missouri, 1903-1905; Indiana University, 1905-1907; Barnard 1907-. WILLIAM C. KRATHWOHL Tutor in Mathematics A.B., Harvard, 1907. Barnard, 1907-. JOHN LAWRENCE GERIG Tutor in Romance Languages and Literatures A. B., University of Missouri, 1898; A.M., 1899; Ph.D., University of Nebraska, 1002. University of Missouri, 1898 1899; University of Nebraska. 1899-1903; Williams College, 1905-1906; Lecturer, Columbia, 1906-1908; Tutor, loos . Phi Beta Kappa. MAUDE ALICE HUTTMAN Tutor in History B. S., Columbia, 1904; A.M., 1905. Barnard, Assistant, 1905-1907; Lecturer, 1907-1908; Tutor, 1908- GRACE LANGFORD Tutor in Physics S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1000. Wellesley College, 1899-1906; Barnard, Assistant. 1906-1908; Tutor, 1908-. CLARK WISSLER Lect urer in Anthropology A.B., Indiana University, 1897; A.M., 1X00; Ph.D., Columbia, 1001. Indiana University, 1895-1897; Ohio State University, 1897-1899; Columbia, Assistant in Psychology, 1899 1900; Fellow in Psychology, 1000-1001; New York University, 1001-1002; Columbia, Assistant in Anthropology, 1903-1905; Lecturer, 100. )-. ALGERNON DE V. TASSIN Led urer in English A.B., Harvard, L892; A.M., 1893. EUGENE E. AGGER Lecturer in Economics A.B., University of Cincinnati, 1001; A.M., 1002; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1906. Teaching Fellow, University of Cincinnati, 1901-1902; Columbia, 1002-. 24 ROBERT E. CHADDOCK Lecturer in Political Economy A.B., Wooster University, 1900; A.M., Columbia, 1906; Ph.D., 1908 . Wooster University, 1900-1905; Columbia University, 1905-. HERBERT WOODROYV Lecturer in Psychology A.B., University of Michigan, 1906. Princeton University, 1907; Columbia, L907-. VIRGINIA CROCHERON GILDERSLEEVE Lecturer in English A. P., Barnard, IS!)!); A.M., Columbia, L900; Ph.D., Columbia, L908. Barnard, Assistant, 1900-1903; Tutor, L903-1907; Lecturer, 1908- Phi Beta Kappa. LOUISE HOYT GREGORY Assistant in Zoology A.l!., Vassar, 1!)(). .; A.M., Columbia, 1907. Yassar College, 1903 1905; Barnard, 1905-. EDWARD HALL GARDNER Assistant in English A.B., Amherst, 1905; A.M., Columbia, 1908. Williston Semi nary for Boys, 1905-1907; Barnard, 190S-. Phi Beta Kappa. HERMON W. FARWELL Assistant in Physics A.B., Dartmouth, 1902; A.M., l!)()(i. Dartmouth College, 1904-1906; Columbia, 1906-. Phi Beta Kappa. MRS. JULIANA HASKELL Assistant in Germanic Languages and Literatures A. P., Columbia, 1904; A.M., 1905; Ph.D., 1908. Assistant at Barnard, 1908-. Phi Beta Kappa. ANNIE LOUISE MACLEOD Assistant in Chemistry A.M., McGill University, 1904; M.Sc, 1905. McGill University. 1906 1908; Barnard, 1908-. MARGARET APPLETON KINGSLEY Assistant in Botany A.B., Smith College, 1908. CHARLES JONES OGDEN Assistant in Classical Philology A.B., Columbia,, 1900; LL.B., A.M., 1903. ALICE DOROTHY BREWSTKl! Assistant in English A.B. Columbia 1906; A.M., 1907. Barnard, 1908-. Phi Beta Kappa. 25 (Lite (Imnuth of P nrarSb (College Had Barnard College reeeived any other name, the friends of the higher education of women in New York City had shown themselves most ungrateful to President F. A. P. Barnard of Columbia College. It was in 1879, fourteen years after Vassar College had been established in this country, and six years after (lirton College had been opened in Kngland, that President Barnard in his annual report set forth some reasons in favor of admitting young women to Columbia College. We have it on iiis own authority that these reasons failed to attract the serious attention of the trustees. In no wise discouraged, however, year by year he advanced new arguments, urging always that Columbia should make her resources available to nil the youth in her environment. He stood for uncom- promising co-education. He objected to isolated colleges for women on the ground that they cannot, or at leasl in general will not, give instruction of equal value, though it may be the same in name, with that furnished to young men in the long-established and well-endowed colleges of highest repute in the country. Further, the affiliated college, of which Girton was at that time the best-known example, seemed to him a cumberous method of conveying by conduit a stream whose fountain-head should be free to all. In 1883 many hundreds of citizens residing in New York and vicinity presented to the Trustees of Columbia a memorial asking for the admission of women to Columbia College on the same terms as were laid down for the admission of men. In reply the Trustees declared themselves against co-education at Columbia. They declared also that Columbia was not in position to provide within itself for the training of women otherwise than by co-education. Their last resolution deserves to be quoted in full: Resolved, that this Board deem it expedient to institute measures for raising the standard of female education by proposing courses of study to be pursued outside the College, but under the observation of its authorities, and offering suitable academic honors and distinctions to any who, on examination, shall lie found to have pursued such courses of study with success. As the result of this resolution the Collegiate Course for Women at Columbia College was inaugu- rated. By this the Columbia B.A. was offered to any woman who could for four years pass examina- tions identical with those required of men. The knowledge requisite to the passing of such examina- tions she was expected to obtain as best she could by private study or by work with tutors. The Collegiate Course for Women pleased no one. President Barnard ' s report in the fall of 1S83 contained no allusion to the education of women; in 1884 he gave but a brief paragraph to the subject, stating that six women had availed themselves of the privileges offered by the Collegiate Course. Women 26 found it very difficult to obtain outside the College such training as would enable them to | ass the college examinations; the college authorities were reluctant to give to women, on the strength of examinations only, degrees which in the case of men involved not merely examinations but class- room duties and classroom opportunities as well. Yet, meager as the direct results of President Barnard ' s efforts of five years seem to have been, the resolution which led to the establishment of the Collegiate Course for Women was after all of far-reaching consequence. I y that resolution the Trustees of Columbia committed themselves to the policy of bestowing Columbia degrees on women. An inevitable corollary ot that policy was that Columbia should see to it that, as it respected its own degrees, the degrees granted to women should lie bestowed only on terms fully equivalent to those on which degrees were granted to men. The logical outcome has been the unique position which Barnard occupies to-day among women ' s colleges: it is an independent college for women, with a corporation and a faculty of its own, invested with all the powers commonly belonging to such bodies, yet at the same time an integral part of a great university, sharing in all its manifold resources, its library, its instruction and instructors, and above all in its degrees. In January, 1SS8, Mrs. Alfred Meyer, who had been a student in the Collegiate Course for Women and knew by personal experience the inadequacy of this device, made an appeal in The Nation to public-spirited citizens to cooperate in securing genuine collegiate education for women in New York. Later in this year a meeting of sympathizers with the movement ratified a memorial petitioning the Trustees of Columbia College to give their ' ' official sanction to a Society for the Instruction of Women by the Professors and Other Instructors of Columbia College, under a manage- ment entirely satisfactory to your honorable Board. In July, 1889, with the sanction of the Trustees of Columbia, the society was incorporated by the Regents of New York State as Barnard College. The first chairman of the Board of Trustees of Barnard College, and the man who, from the beginning until his death in 1895, was the chief spokesman for Barnard College to the community, was the Rev. Arthur Brooks. No happier choice could have been made. Dr. Brooks came of scholarly stock; his love of learning, of fair play, of freedom for development, combined in an enthusiastic support of the ideas for which Barnard stands. His talents and his weight with people of many different ways of thinking gave at once a certain prestige to the work. In October, 1889, the first class of Barnard College, eight in number, assembled in a private house, at 343 Madison Avenue, the second house above Forty-fourth Street, on the east side of the avenue. Seven instructors were selected from the Columbia staff. Their names were as follows: Dr. N. L. Britton (Botany); Dr. W. H. Carpenter (German); Dr. Mortimer Lamson Earle (Greek) ; Dr. Thomas Scott Fiske (Mathematics); Dr. N. G. McCrea (Latin); Dr . B. O ' Connor (French); Dr. E. A. Wasson (English). Of the seven, Messrs. Carpenter, Fiske, and McCrea are now Professors at Columbia; Dr. Britton is Director of the New York Botanical Garden. Dr. Earle died in September, 190 ). Each of these seven first instructors was giving over again at Barnard a course which he was already teaching at Columbia. This simple arrangement accomplished two things at once: (1) it 27 guaranteed, as nothing else could have done so well, the exact equivalence of the Columbia work for men and the Barnard work for women; (2) it made for economy, a matter of overwhelming importance to the ardent supporters of the new experiment, in that the outlay for instruction thus obtained was much less than the sum that would have been necessary to secure seven men of equal powers from without the Columbia staff. For many years this mode of obtaining instructors at Barnard remained in operation; a teacher at Barnard who was not actively engaged in teaching at Columbia was an exception. In the desire of all concerned that the Barnard course for women should be equivalent to the Columbia course for men is to be seen the reason for another practice of the early days, that whereby (lie examination papers which Barnard students had to pass in courses conducted by instructors not giving exactly the same work at Columbia, were those set by the Columbia instructors for the men. The Barnard instructor in such cases reported a term mark; the final rating, however, was determined by the Columbia instructor. In this way, then, as the result of ten years of work, Barnard College had at last been established on an enduring basis; ;it last the women of New York and vicinity had an opportunity to receive precisely the same collegiate education as men, to hear the same professors, to use the same books, to share the mental breadth that comes of life in a university as distinguished from a college, and were yet spared as undergraduates the problems that arise from co-education in the narrow sense. Turning now to consider those whose guidance contributed most to the development of Barnard, I cannot begin better than by quoting from an article entitled The Rise of Barnard College, con- tributed by Mrs. George Haven Putnam (Miss Emily James Smith) to The Columbia University Quarterly for June, 1900. At the outset in 1889 The academic administration of the College was placed in the hands of a committee of the Board, whose chairman, Miss Ella Weed, was admirably suited for the work. Her remarkable clearness of view and strength of purpose made her a good director of an experimental enterprise: and she had the fortune to possess, together with sound ideas, the tact requisite to make them prevail. Barnard ' s problem was two-fold: to recommend itself to Columbia on the one hand, and to the public on the other. There was, when Barnard opened, very little provision in New York schools for preparing girls for college, and there were constant requests for a relaxation of the entrance requirements in this or that particular. The new college, moreover, attracted the notice of many women of mature years but with insufficient preliminary training, who were with difficulty made to conceive the nature of college and university work. It needed fortitude on the part of the Trustees to insist upon compliance with a rigorous standard, and to be content to see small classes enter, while considerable numbers were turned away. In all these difficulties Miss Weed ' s ability and temperament were invaluable, and her firmness had much to do with setting the college in a patli which has constantly grown smoother, thanks to her initiative. She served as chairman of the Academic Committee until her death in 1894. I may also quote here certain words of Mrs. Alfred Meyer, to whom Barnard owes so much: Now, just a word on that historic first class of Barnard. As the poverty of a judge is the best proof of his honesty, so the smallness of this class was the best proof of Barnard ' s integrity, of her 28 determination to exert a real and beneficial influence upon women ' s education in New York. We look back with a wonder ' that is akin to awe ' when we realize the heriosm of this decision. Think of the temptation to prove our right to be by big classes and overflowing rooms! ( The Barnard Annual, I, 23). I remember Miss Weed well. She had for some years been the executive head of a large private school for girls in New York City. Her duties there consumed the mornings; she kept office hours at Barnard in the afternoons. Her office was the hall bedroom at the head of the flight of stairs leading from the drawing-room (or shall 1 say parlor?) floor. It was my privilege to work under Miss Weed both at the private school to which I have referred and at Barnard. I can testify from personal observation to the qualities to which Mrs. Putnam so generously refers. It was fell by all interested in those early years in Barnard ' s welfare that the college, as a practical thing, was in large measure the creation of Miss Weed. In the first volume of The Barnard Annual, pages 2.V27, there is a most discriminating review, by Mr. V. S. Brownell, of Miss Weed ' s life and work. Miss Weed had done her work as Chairman of the Academic Committee of the Trustees. After her death the Trustees determined to furnish the college with a formal head and appointed as the first Dean Miss Emily James Smith, afterwards Mrs. George Haven Putnam, who served until Feb- ruary 1, 1900. During Mrs. Putnam ' s administration great progress was made. One mentions first, naturally, the removal of the college to its present site. At first the college had occupied only part of the house on Madison Avenue; later it claimed the whole house and was obliged to rent space also in a building on the west side of Madison Avenue, as well as at 518 Fifth Avenue (here the science laboratories were grouped). When the removal of Columbia to its present site became a determined fact, it was inevitable that Barnard too should secure permanent buildings in the neighbor- hood of Columbia ' s new home. In 1S96 the present site was purchased. In the fall of 1897, when Columbia came to Morningside Heights, Milbank Hall and Brinckerhoff Hall were completed and occupied. In 189S Fiske Hall was added. In October, 1898, again, the foundations of an endowment fund were laid. Another most important result of Mrs. Putnam ' s administration was the signing in 1900 of the agreement which at present governs the relations of Barnard College to Columbia University; that agreement is printed annually in the first pages of the Announcement. One outcome of this agreement was the establishment at Barnard of a faculty in the true sense of that word. I have already said that at first the instructors at Barnard were men who were duplicating there courses conducted by them at Columbia. Up to 1900 no teacher had any definite title as the result of his position there: all Barnard instructors, whatever their rank at Columbia, were on an equality at Barnard. The beginnings of a different arrangement, however, go back as far as 1895. In that year three professor- ships were established at Barnard College, two of which fell within the Faculty of Political Science, one within the Faculty of Pure Science. Estimating the amount of lecturing to be given by the incumbents of these professorships at six hours a week for each, the Faculty of Political Science, for example, furnished Barnard with twelve hours a week of lectures, to lie given in part by them, in part by other professors of the University. In this way both institutions were benefited; Columbia 29 enlarged its staff, and Barnard had the range of a group of specialists instead of being confined to its own two professors. A similar arrangement was made with the Department of Mathematics, by which Barnard added a third professor of mathematics to the common stock of the University. One other point connected with the teaching staff of the early years of the College deserves special mention here. The teaching of botany from the first was done in fact in part by Dr. Britton, in part by Dr. Emily L. Gregory, who was appointed in 18S9 as Lecturer in Botany. The laboratory side (if the botanical work was from the outset in Dr. Gregory ' s -charge. She subsequently became Professor of Botany, being the first person to hold the title of professor specifically at Barnard College. She remained in charge of the Department of Botany until her death in 1898. In January, 1!)00, as already stated, an agreement was formally drawn up between Columbia and Barnard covering instruction at the two institutions. By this Barnard agreed to restrict its work to undergraduate instruction, and to provide such undergraduate instruction for all four years as soon as practicable; Barnard bound herself also to contribute professorships to the common stock from time to time. Up to the time of this agreement women graduate students of the University had registered at Barnard; henceforth they were registered at Columbia, under the proper Faculty, exactly as men graduate students had been registered. The Announcement of 1900-1901 showed a faculty (in the strict sense) of sixteen members; of these five were distinctly Barnard professors. The Announcement of 1908—1909 shows a faculty of thirty members, of whom fifteen are Barnard professors. In 1900 Mrs. Putnam resigned the Deanship. From February .1, 1899, to September 1, 1899, she had had leave of absence on account of ill-health; during that period Professor Thomas Scott Fiske was Acting Dean of the College. After Mrs. Putnam ' s resignation, Professor James Harvey Robinson was acting Dean until May 1, 1901, when Miss Laura Drake Gill was inaugurated as Dean. Miss Gill served the college for six full years. For the academic year of 1907-1908 she received leave of absence; in the latter part of 1907 she resigned the Deanship. Of necessity under Miss Gill ' s administration the external evidences of progress were far less marked than they had been under the administration of Miss Weed or Mrs. Putnam. The foundations of Barnard had already been laid: the buildings more immediately necessary had already been erected; the general educational policy, that of close affiliation with Columbia, had already been irrevocably determined, with effects that nothing could or can prevent. It remained for Miss Gill to develop the college along the lines already marked out, and especially to seek to strength its material resources. In these things she achieved marked success. During her administration Milbank Quadrangle became the property of the College, the endowment fund was greatly increased, and Brooks Hall was erected. Not every student now at Barnard may know that Fiske Hall, the western third of our college building, was for several years occupied as a dormitory, until the increase in the number of students compelled the use of this part of the building, too, for lecture courses and laboratory work. For several years after this con- version of Fiske Hall to academic uses there was a slight falling off, or at least no increase, in the number of students, and the lack of a dormitory was severely felt. The purchase of Milbank Quadrangle and the erection of Brooks Hall are the two visible monuments of Miss Gill ' s administra- tion. Brooks JIall is becoming more and more the center of the social life of the College, and i 30 ministering largely to the developmenl of college spirit. As Presidenl Butler says in his report, dated November 2, 1908, During her incumbency of the office of Dean, .Miss (lill had devoted herself to the discharge of its duties with great zeal and energy, and she had had the satisfaction of witnessing a steady and noteworthy growth of the College, both in resources and in student attend- ance. In May, 1901, 264 regular students were enrolled at Barnard College; students in music and students from the University and Teachers College brought the total enrolment to 384. In January, L908, there were 425 undergraduates at Barnard; the total enrolment was 624. The number of regular students in the second term of 1907-1908 was 4.53. During Miss Gill ' s incumbency of the Deanship, again, the sum of donations to the College was increased from $980,142 to $2,739,488. To complete the record of the Deans of the College it is necessary to add thai since July i, 1907, Professor William T. Brewster has been Acting Dean. To me it has been absorbingly interesting to watch the rise and growth of Barnard College. W hen I he Collegiate Course for Women was established at Columbia in 1883 I was a freshman at Columbia. Naturally I had no knowledge of this course for some years afterwards. In the years of my fellowship at Columbia (1887-1890) I gained some knowledge experimentally of the workings of the system. I can testify personally to the difficulty which women found in securing the academic honors and distinctions which the Trustees of Columbia expressed themselves as willing, under certain conditions, lo bestow; I can attest also the dissatisfaction which the teaching staff at Columbia felt with the arrangement. I can recall perfectly the interest which, in common witli many others, I felt when Barnard College at last began its work. It was not my privilege to teach at Barnard by formal appointment until 1891. However, for a week or more I taught as a substitute during the first year of Barnard ' s life, so that I have taught some part, at least, of every class at Barnard save the class of 1894, the second class to enter the college. I remember the house at Madison Avenue well. In those days it was easy to keep the roll of one ' s classes; there was a colored door-boy of wonderful memory, named James. It was not necessary to chain him, in old Roman fashion, to his post ; lie was always there. In a perfectly proper way he knew all that was going on within the building. One could always learn from him whether a given student had been present in class or not. In view of the small space at the disposal of the college it would seem that opportunities for social enjoyment must have been limited. At teas and similar functions the rooms were indeed crowded; but one could always be sure of seeing those whom he cared to see, since there was no chance for them to be lost through scattering about a large building. The smallness of the college and the limited number of students made possible a closer relation between students and instructors than obtains at the present time (though perchance I am here but a mere laudator temporis acti). I recall with very great pleasure several classes which I had in the early years, in which the whole class and 1 sat round about a not very large table, meeting then on a physical equality symbolic of that intellectual equality which, after all, spite of the differences in age between instructor and pupils, should obtain between them as common seekers after truth. I find my own feeling on this point confirmed by what Dr. Charles S. Baldwin said, in the first volume of The Barnard Annual (34): Quite as real . . . has been the intellectual intimacy between instructor and student brought about by small 31 classes. What the college man vaguely longs for when he hails his professor ' s invitation to call, or makes excuses for invading the study, the college woman realizes when there are only ten in class and those ten sit about a table. And the individual appeal is quite as valuable for the instructor as for I lie student. What professional solemnity can withstand a table? I have seen the college grow from a small, virtually homogeneous, body, on the side of the teachers and the pupils alike, to a faculty representing endless subdivisions of human knowledge and a student body of 600, heterogeneous in the extreme, with widely different motives for coming to college (nay, perhaps, with no motives at all), finding it difficult to unite for any purpose, divided by the very wealth of the courses open In them. I have seen the intellectual feast provided for the students becoming ever richer and more varied, and I have watched with never flagging interest the attitude of the students toward their privileges, their opportunities and their duties. At the risk of seeming to preach I shall close by reminding Barnard students that the opportunities offered to (hem are indeed unique among those offered by women ' s colleges, in the number and the quality of the teachers whose lectures they are privileged to attend, in the library facilities so readily accessible, in the multitudinous things offered by New York that, rightly used, make for culture, things whose value is so deeply appreciated by teachers that Columbia has little difficulty in attracting to its faculty scholars from all parts of the world. Of those to whom much is given much likewise is required. Charles Knapp. 32 ORGANIZATIONS. tElic Associate JUumnae of JSarnarb CoIIw Officers Madalene Heroy Woodward (Mrs. R. S. W oodward, Jr.), 1 1)01 President Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve, 1899 . Vice-President Elizabeth C. Roberts, 1901 Corresponding Secretary Agnes Durant Halsey (Mrs. C. 15. Halsey), 1905 Recording Secretary Ruth Bouton Howe, 1903 Treasurer Mary Stuart Pullman, 1893 .... Alumnee Trustee JHrectors at iCaro,e Aurelie Marie Reynaud, 1899 Eva Sherwood Potter, L896 Anna E. H. Meyer, 1898 Helen Wilking Cooley, 1905 Alice Goddard Chase, 1896 Jfinance (Committee The Vice-President, Chairman The Treasurer Eva Sherwood Potter, 1S96 •Statistic (Committee Anna E. H. Meyer, 1898, Chairman Helen Wilking Cooley, 1905 Virginia Tucker Boyd, 1906 Alice Dorothy Brewster, 1906 The Corresponding Secretary ' tttoents ' Aio (Committee Mabel Parsons, 1895, Chairman May Amerman Johnson, 1903 Helen Esrkine, 1904 Alma Frank Wallach, 1901 Caroline Brombacher Staeey (Mrs. S. C), 1895 ittemhersliip (Commitec Louise E. Peters, 1904, Chairman Sophie Parsons Woodman, 1906 The Treasurer Mary Maxon, 1908 The Corresponding Secretary J .uoitor Pauline Hamilton Dederer, 1901 35 Alumnae Bata iFarmrr Jlrjottonla nf llir Alumurc AsFnriatiim Alice Maplesden Keys, 1893 .... Agnes Invin Baldwin (Mrs. C. 8.), 1894 . Ella Fitz Gerald Bryson (Mrs. F. G.), 1894 Mary Stuart Pullman, 1893 Eva ' Sherwood Potter, 1896 Florence Colgate, 1895 Alice Goddard Chase, 1896 1895- 1896 1896 1896- 1900 1900-1904 1904-1906 1906- 1907 1907- 1908 1894 1895 1896 1897 I SOS 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1 ' . M IS Freshman Sophomore Junior Senior Freshman Soph omore Junior Senior Freshman Sophomore Junior Senior Freshman . Sophomore Junior Senior Freshman . Sophomore Junior Senior Freshman . Sophomore Junior Senior Deceased, ifmmrr $rrstiiruts of tl r ItuftftrtraiUtatr Afisnriatirm Agnes Irwin Baldwin (Mrs. C. S.) Jfnrmrr (Class Prrsiftrnts 1893 1894 1895 1896 1S! 7 1898 36 iroline Brombacher Stacey (Mrs. S. G.) Anne Cole Mellick Adelaide Wells Brown . Clara de Lissa Berg Adelaide Hoffman Marvin (Mrs. W. T.) Florence Lippincott Bull (Mrs. F. C.) Florence Lucas Sanville Elizabeth Allen . Anna Ware Sykes (Mrs. G.) Clara Marguerite Applegate Eniilie Josephine Hutchinson . Elizabeth Grace Evans Juliet Stuart Points Marguerite Corlies Newland Louise Stabler Parker (Mrs. G. H.) Mary Stuart Pullman Alice Maplesden Keys Jessie Garretson Finch (Mrs. J. W.) Agnes Irwin Baldwin (Mrs. C. S.) Agnes Irwin Baldwin (Mrs. C. S.) Agnes Irwin Baldwin (Mrs. C S ) Agnes Irwin Baldwin (Mrs. C. S.) Caroline Brombacher Stacey (Mrs. S. G.) Jean Willard Tatlock Florence Colgate Caroline Brombacher Stacey (Mrs. S. G.) Alice Goddard Chase Anna Cole Mellick Bertha Van Riper Overbury (Mrs. F. C.) . Ada Hart Arnold (Mrs. Wm. R.) Bertha Hobbs, Adaline Caswell Wheelock Adelaide Wells Brown Mary Wadhams Dobbs (Mrs. R. L.) Louise Brisbin Dunn Clara de Lissa Berg Louse De Hart Fuller (Mrs. C.) . Susan Isabella Myers Anna E. H. Meyer 1899 :n hi mill 1902 1903 111(14 L905 1906 1! ()7 iaoa - 1909 Ella Rosina Seligsberg Virgi nia Crocheron Gildersleeve Adelaide Hoffman Marvin (Mrs. W. T.) Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve Ellinor Reilly Endicott (Mrs. G.) Florence Lippincott Bull (Mrs. F. ( ' .) Florence Leslie Kyte . Mary Goldsborough West (Mrs. E. ,J.) Mary Lavinia Eaton Madalene Heroy Woodward (Mrs. R. S., Jr.) Pauline Hamilton Dederer Jannetta Gordon Studdiford . Mary Dederiek Hall Elizibeth Allen Ruth Earle Lawrence (Mrs. R.) . Elizabeth Cadmus Coddington May Amerman Johnson . 4 . . . Carita Spencer Anna Ware Sykes (Mrs. G.) Clare Maclellan Howard Katherine Swift Doty . Agnes Lacy Durant Clara Marguerite Applegate Jean Dunbar Egleston Anna Campbell Reiley Emilie Josephine Hutchinson . Cecil Inslee Dorrian Helen Wilking Cooley Anna May Newland f Lillian Howard Perry (Mrs. F. T.) Elizabeth G race Evans Easton (Mrs. C.) Hazel Hudnall Plate Faith Delatour Chipperfield . Helen Perry Reynolds (Mrs. F. B.) . Juliet Stuart Points Jean Disbrow . Evangeline Cole Elizabeth Freeman Fox Mary Osborne Marshall Marguerite Corlies Newland Ellen Kathryn O ' Gorman Ruth Childs Florence Sims Wyeth Eleanor Gay Eva Elise vom Baur 37 Founded April 7, 1902. §ftuna ELEANOR GAY, 1909 President FLORENCE SIMS WYETH, 1909 . Vice-President GERTRUDE HUNTER, 1910 Treasurer KATHERINE GAY, 1911 Secretary fExcruttu? Committee JULIA GOLDBERG, 1909 Chairman GRACE A. REEDER, 1910 ELEANOR GAY, 1909 1 CHARLOTTE VERLAGE, 1911 FLORENCE SIMS WYETH, 1909 I X ' ° ICW ' ANNIE WILSON, 1912 tui pnt (Council ELEANOR GAY, 1909 . Chairman FLORENCE SIMS WYETH, 1909 EVA ELISE VOM BAUR, 1909 GERTRUDE HUNTER, 1910 LILIAN HILLYER EGLESTON, 1910 KATHERINE GAY, 1911 MARY BARTOW POLHEMUS, 1911 JULIA GOLDBERG, 1909 CORNELIA DAKIN, 1912 39 (Lite IJonno, Women ' s Christian Asso- ciation of Sgrmrch Collate Founded 1897 (Officers L909 WINIFRED BARROWS, MARY BAILEY, L910 . LOUISE ALLEN, 1911 . MABEL McCANN, 1910 AURILL BISHOP, lit I 1 MRS. GEORGE P. MERRETT .... . . President Vice-President Treasurer ( ' orresponding Secretary Recording Secretary . General Secretary Chairmen of tanaiitjj Committees H OR TENSE MURCH, ' 09 . . Bible Study F. MAY INGALLS, ' 09 . . Blue Book LEE ALEXANDER, ' 09 . . Chapel YK LETT A JACKSON, ' 10 . . C. S. M. A. THEODORA HALL, ' 09 . . De rational LOUISE ALLEN, Tl . . . Finance DORIS LONG, ' 10 . GRACE REEDER, ' 10 . CHRISTELLA McMURRAY, GERTRUDE HUNTER, ' 10 . JENNIE WYLIE, ' 00 . RUTH HARDY, ' 09 ' 10 ntercollegiale Membership Missionary Philanthropic Reception Silver Bay If nrmer 1897- 8— ELEANOR FRANCES OSBORNE, 1898 1898- 9— KATHERINE VAN HORNE, 1900 1899- 1900— EVELYN OSBORNE, 10OO 1900- 1— GRACE MALVINA PETERS, 1902 1001 -2— GRACE MALVINA PETERS, 1902 1902-3— JEAN WALLACE MILLER, 1903 1908-9— WINIFRED ceaibents 1903- 4— JEAN HERRING LOOMIS, 1004 1904- 5— AGNES LACY DURANT, 1005 1905 6— ELEANOR SANFORD HOLDEN, 1906 1906- 7— SOPHIE PARSONS WOODMAN, 1907 1907- 8— AGNES MILLER, 1908 BARROWS, 1909 Helen Aiguier Lee Alexander Gladys Arkenburgh Beatrice Aron Winifred Marrows Marion Boyd Emma Hugbee Annette Carroll Edna Cassebeer Lillian Anderson Mary Bailey Lena Mohan Gladys Bonfils Madeline Borland Frances Burgei Clara Cooper Clarita Crosby Helen Crossman Hettv Dean Mildred Downs Marguerite Druding Louise Allen Aliee Bennet I Josephine Bosch Helen Bradbeer Helen Brown Juanita Brown Emilie Bruiting Ruth Burns Eleanor Burns Anna Callan Ruth Carroll Therese Cassel Helen Coombs Florence Anderson Georgina Berrian Helen Black Hazel Bristol Hazel Burkholder Emily Burr Rosalind ( !ase Catherine Craddock Ethel Cochrane Cornelia Dakin IF Beatrice Anderson, ' 05 Margaret Bailey, ' 7 Mabel Boote. ' 07 Mabel Browne, ' 06 A nes Donohugh, ' 01 Aliee Draper, ' 05 Anne Carroll, ' 07 Lucetta Johnson, ' (17 Jessie Condit, ' 06 Ruth Childs Hazel Davies Cecile Debouy Margaret Frink Julia ( roldberg F:thel Goodwin Alice ( iranl Theodora Hall Kathleen Hanley 1909 Rufh Hardy Elinor Hasfines Charlotte Haithwaite Ethel Hodsdon Anna Holm Evelyn Holt F. May Installs F thel Ivimey Alice .laKgard Kane Tuns Pih Lois Ker r I lor tense Murch Helen Newbold Maud Smith 1 lelen Scheuer Mildred Schlesinger Edith Seguine Elsie Smith Lucy Thompson Edith Talpey Comfort Tiffany Laura Turnbull Lois West away Ethel Weston ' Mildred Wqodhull Jennie Wylie Elise Eddy Margery Eggleston Lilian Egleston Maude Emery K.lna Fancher Bertha Firebaugh Carrie Fleming Marie Flint Harriet Fox Marian ( ribson Eleanor ( ! rah am ( ! race 1 lenderson 1 9 in Bessie Holzman Florence Hopewell Stella Hopewell Gertrude Hunter Anne Huntington Violetta Jackson Vora Jaques Ethel Lawrence Doroth y Kirch we v Clara Lewis Adelaide Loehrsen Doris Lone Cli i isiclla MacM urray Naarnie Maison Mabel McCann Elizabeth Nitchie Jessie Nottingham Edna Palmer ELie 1 ' laut ( Irace Reeder I torot hy Reilly Margaret Renton Florence Rose Helen Savitz Johanna Sch watte Acnes Shaw Ethel Shaw Rose Slawter Leone Spalding Natalie Thome ( Hive Thompson Julia Wagner Hazel aj t Alma Wiesner Helene Wise Helen Worrall Mary Conroy Harriet Currier Edith Deacon Agnes Denike Mildred Dodge Estelle Ellisson Jessie Fox Penelope Jirdner Elsie Gleason Louise ( 1 reenawalt Ruth Hakes Margaret Hart Alice Hdl 1 9 1 1 Madeline Hirsh Charlotte Hodge Olga Ihlseng Louie Johnson Ethel Kemptori Anna Kugler Ethel Leveridge (irace Lovell (irace McKee Edna McKeever Mildred Messing Sue Minor Addie Morgenstern Louise Ockers Mary Polhemus Ittilie Prochazka Mabel Reids Marguerite Reynor Helen Runyon ( ici rrgiana Sandford Mildred Sanborn ( lert rur le Saul Mary Shaw {Catherine Sickels Ruth Sidell Louise Sillcos Claudia Sonn Jeanette Steinecke ( Jamillfl St ewarl Natalie Stewart Elizabeth Thompson Kate Tiemann .1 Blanche Van Anda ( ' hai lot te Verlage Adelaide Waite Genevieve Watson ( ieraldine Willets Eleanor Doty Grace Fischer Louise Fitz Eliazbeth Gray Genevdeve Greene May Green wi ild Harriet Hale Anna Hallock Phebe Hoffman 1912 Caroline Kahn Isabel Koss Elizabeth Jones Frieda .In. I Bertha Junghans Lucy Landru Eleanore Myers Edith Morris Emma Rapelye Elizabeth Ready Frances Rogers Grace Rogers Marion Roy Etta Schweis Rena Sinn Gladys Segee Virginia Smith M a rgaret Sout lici t on Jessie Stevenson Cora Thees FJdith Valet I l n enee Van Vramken Margaret Watson Mary Wegener Annie Wilson .1 Estelle W Iruff Elsa Wunderlick JW embers of the Alumnae Auxiliary Jean Loomis Frame, ' 04 Marv Hall, ' 02 Eleanor Holden, ' 06 .Madeline Herov Woodward, Abbv Leland, ' 05 Jean Miller. ' 03 Lily Murray, ' 05 Susan Myers. ' OS Florence Gordon, ' 117 ill ' 07 Eleanor Osborne, Laura Barker. ' 05 Josephine Baddock Catherine Post, ' 06 Elizabeth Post, ' 06 Marion Simons. ' 00 Marguerite Smith. ' 05 Carita Spencer, ' 02 41 06 Edna Stitt, ' 06 Elizabeth Tredwell, ' ( 7 Mary West, (III Caroline Wheelock, ' 97 Amelia Wohlfarth. ' 99 So] rhie WOOr I man , ' I I Elizabeth Wyman, ' 98 Janetta McCook Whitman, ' 02 tlilctic Association Officers HAZEL WOODHULL, 1910 MABEL D. McCANN, 1910 LILLIAN H. SCHOEDLER, 1911 CLARITA F. CROSBY, 1910 . VERA A. FUESLEIN, 1911, . HERLINDA G. SMITHERS, 1909 OLGA K. IHLSENG, 1911 LEONE F. SPALDING, 1910 . VERA A. FUESLEIN, 1911 ETHEL S. LEVERIDGE, 1911 G. ANNA YER PLANCK, 1909 Jformcr yrcsiitcnts Mary Hunt Budd, 1902 Helen Wilking Cooley, 1905 Katharine Louise Rapp, 1907 Elsbeth Kn .elier, 1903 Edith Berkeley Handy, 1905 Clarette Papin Armstrong, 1908 Adelaide E. Smithers, 1909 42 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Chairman Tennis Committee Basketball ' ' Swimming ' ' ' ' Baseball ' 1 Handball ' ' Hockey ' ' Bowling ' ' Members Helene Boas Dorothy ( ' alman Lilian ( ' losson Cecile Dehouy Marie Demarest Calm Hoke Edith Josephi Lois Kerr 1909 Rose Levy Edna Phillips Byrde Shale Adelaide Smithers Florence Wyeth Herlinda Smithers Edith Talpey Laura Turnbull Anna Ver Planck 1910 ( ' la rice Auerbach ( ' larita Crosby Helen ( ' rossman Mildred Downs Edna Fancher ( ' arrie Fleming Harriet Fox Gretchen Franke Nannette Hamburger Grace Henderson Bessie Holzman Vora Jaques Helen Worral 1 Dorothy Kirchwey Mabel MeCann Mary Nammack Rosetta Piatt Elsie Plant jhaniia Schwarte Laura Stryker Agnes Thompson Julia Wagner Alma Wiesner Helene Wise Hazel Woodhull •1911 Juanita Brown Emilie Brunirig Eleanor Burne Ruth Burns Evelyn Dewey Adele Duncan Ethel Feleh Vera Fueslein irace Gilleaudeau Penelope ( iirdner Elsie Gleason Louise Greenawalt Irma Heiden Marjorie Johnston Eva Mordecai Marian ( )berndorfer .Mary Polhemus Helen Runvon Georgiana Sandlord Lillian Schoedler ( lamilla Stewart Natalie Stewart Elizabeth Thompson Adelaide Waite 1912 Florence Anderson Helen Black Hilda Boegehold Pauline ( ' ahn Rosalind ( ' ase Eleanor Doty Katherine Fancher Rebecca Fischel Elizabeth Gray Harriet Hale Anna Halleck Mildred Hambutgei Elsa Heller Blanche Hershfield Phoebe Hoffman Marguerite Ken- Marguerite Kutner Paula Lambert Lucy Landru Elinor Lanklin Susan Leerburger Eleanor Matthews Lucille Mordecai Eleanore Myers Grace Rogers May Scully Rena Sinn V irginia Smith Liliie Stein Mary Stine Edith Valet Gretchen W althcr Mary Wegener Lucille Weil Alice Zinnner Special Elizabeth Frookes C6rai uatc Florence Sainmet 43 Officers HERLINDA SMITHERS, 1909 . President AGNES BURKE, 1911 . ADELAIDE RICHARDSON, 1909 . Vice- President MARGARET KENNEY, 1909. MARGUERITE D. C. DRUDING, 1910 E . Commitiee AGNES T. O ' DONNELL, 1910 executive o omnuuee Secretary Treasurer Josephine Derapsey Antoinette Fransioli Mary Godley Hetty Dean Marguerite Druding Elizabeth English Agnes Burke Eleanor Burne Mary Conroy Georgia A. Cerow Gertrude C. Cusack Mary V. Diehl iMcmbcrs— limy Kathleen Hanley Eleanor Kloster Margaret Kenney Eleanor Martin Marie King Josephine O ' Brien Herlinda Smithers 1 9 1 11 Josephine McGrath Dorothea Mahon Virginia Mollenhauer Mary Nammack Agnes T. O ' Donnell Margaret M. O ' Donnell 19 II 1 Edith Deacon Grace Gilleaudeau Olive King Ethel Leveridge 19 1 % Irene D Kecnan Mary Mulqueen Lucy E. Landru Elizabeth O. Reardon M. Amanda Loughrin Margaret O ' Rourke Edith M. Valet 45 Adelaide Richardson Antoinette Riordan Adelaide Smithers Grace Shaw Lora Sweeney Alice O ' Gorman Angelina Seveso Mary P. Scully Marie A. Sheehan Elizabeth M. Stack Officers MARY NAMMACK, 1010 President ANTOINETTE FRANSIOLI, 1909 . GRETCHEN FRANKE, 1910 . . Vice-President MARION MONTESER, 1910. . . BESSIE HOLZMANN, 1910 . . . Fifth Member Secretary Treasurer Mathilde Abraham Beat rice Beekman Eva vom Baur Annette Carroll Josephine Dempsey Tessie Barrows Frances Burger Margery Fggleston Blanche van Anda Agnes Burke Therese Cassel Vera Fueslein Hannah Falk Antoinette Fransioli Anna Gordon Ruth Hardy Lilian Egleston Edna Fancher Gretchen Franke Penelope ( iirdner Irma Heiden Anna Herrmann Florrie Holzwasser Jttcmhcrs— 1909 Rita Hochheimer Jennie Hubbard Lois Kerr Eleanore Kloster May Herrmann Bessie Holzman Vora Jaques ) mi Marjorie Johnston Eva Mordecai Addie Morgenstern Ottilie Prochazka 46 Jessie Levy Eleanor Martin Helen Newbold Ella Oppenheim Lena Mandel Marion Monteser Mary Nammack Helen Runyon Rose Salmowitz Lillian Schoedler Hetta Stapff I lelen Scheuer Byrde Schale Dean Smith May Stark Lois Westaway Elsie Plaut Julia Wagner Alma Wiesner Amy Weil Linda Weymaim ( ' harlot te Verlage Officers CECILE DEBOUY President LOUISE ALLEN . Vice-President EVELYN HOLT Secretary OLGA IHLSENG . . Treasurer NATHALIE THORN E Fifth Member JH on dcrs 1909 Theodora Hall Kuth Hardy Elinore Hastings Evelyn Holt Pauline Johnson Beatrice Beekman Annette Carroll Jessie Cochran Ce ' cile Debouy Hannah Falk Antoinette Fransioli Eleanore Kloster Julia ( ioldberg Kathleen Hanley Frances Burger Gretchen Franke Edna Heller Grace Henderson May Herman Vora Jaques Louise Allen Blanche van Anda Josephine Bosch Emilie Bruning Edith Burns Amelia Cldment Helen Coombs Edith Deacon Evelyn Dewey Pauline Cahn Georgia Cerow Ethel Craddock Eleanore Doty Katherine Fancher Elsa Heller Phoebe Hoffman Ernestine Isabel Caroline Kahn Hortense Muxch Helen Newbold 1 9 1 Doris Long Dorothea Mahon Naarnie Maison Marion Monteser Rose Moses Mary Nammack Fanny Rosenfelder Antoinette Riorden Edna Scales Edith Seguine Adelaide Smithers Herlinda Smithers Lucy Thompson Florence Wyeth Elsie Plaut Florence Read Agnes Thomson Nathalie Thorne 1 9 I 1 Bertha Eaches Estelle Ellison Grace Gilleandeau Penelope Girdner Madeline Hirsh Olga Ihlseng Ethel Leveridge Addie Morgenstern Eva Mordecai 1 9 1 2 Paula Lambert Lucy Landin Irene London Alice Martin Eleanor Matthews Margaret O ' Rourke Emma Rapelye Hildegarde Rees May Scully Marion Pratt Louise Ockers Alice O ' Gorman Bertha Rothschild Lillian Schoedler Elizabeth Thomson Charlotte Verlage Gladys Segee Rena Sinn Alice Solis Virginia Smith Elizabeth Stack Edith Valet Margaret Watson Alice Zimmer 47 CLASSICAL CLUB (Officers HILDA WOOD President ELSIE SMITH Secretary-Treasurer Gertrude Hirst, Ph.D. Charles Knapp, Ph.D. Edward D. Perry. Ph.D LL.D. W. Barrows] L. Closson M. Dann H. Davies C. Debouy J. Dempsey H. Fa M Fiink H. Crossman B. Firebaugh R. Frame M . ' ribson N. Hamburger A. Bishop E. Gleasan A. Grant M. Haithwaite A. Jaggar M. McLean H. McPherson J. O ' Brien H. Rich A. Richardson 13 10 B. Holzman V. Jackson D. Long E. Nitchie A. O ' DonneU M. Sanborn L. Saul M. O ' DonneU E. Rawclilfe L. Spaulding M. Weinstein R. West M. Steinecke A. Van Buskir] 48 Iie (Colling dtltments Jkzzatmtwn GERTRUDE L. HUNTER, 1910 . MRS. ELSA HERZFELD NAUMBERG MISS HUBBARD MRS. SIMKH( VITCH ELSIE PLAUT, L910 r ndergraduate Elector ( rrdduate Elector Advisory ' ommittee Secretary Sub-electors 1909 ? 1911 KATHARINE GAY EVELYN DEWEY 1910 DOROTHY DQRCHWEY GRACE REEDER 1912 IDA MAY BLOUNT LILLIE ST EIN Full Members MISS HUBBARD MRS. SIMKHOYTTCH MISS WEEKS .MISS GILDERSLEEVE 1909 Eleanor la y Theodora Hall Ruth Hardy Sara Koine Blanche Samek 1 lean Smith Helen Scheuer Lois West a way Chapter Members 1910 Clarice Auerbach Lilian Egleston Nannel te 1 [amburger ( ierl rude Hunter I oro1 hy Kirchwey Elsie Plant Grace Reeder Hazel Wayt Helen Black Ida May Blount Harriet Hale Elsa Heller 1912 Ernestine Isabel Lucile Mordecai 1911 Stella Bloch Agnes Burke Evelyn Dewey Katharine Gay Louise Greenawalt Madeline Hirsch Ruth Moss Mabel Reid Margaret Southerton Lillie Stein 50 ittanaaum (Committee MYRA McLEAN, 1909 . EUNICE H. MILLER, 1909 ANTOINETTE FRANSIOLI FLORENCE READ HELEN BROWN . Chairman Treasurer Sub-Chairman 1909 L910 mil 51 met (tthtb JULIA GOLDBERG, 1909 Leader Jfirst Sopranos Lee Alexander. 1909 Gladys Arkenburgh, 1909 Helen Black, 1912 Margaret Frink, 1909 Julia Goldberg, 1909 Lucy Landru, 1912 Adelaide Richardson, 1909 Fannie Rosenf elder, 1909 Nathalie Thorne, 1910 Rosalind Case, 1912 Jessie Cochran, 1909 Edith Deacon, 1911 Cecile Debouy, 1909 Bertha Eaches, 1912 Katherine Gay, 1911 ' cconb Sopranos Phoebe Hoffman, 1912 Jennie Hubbard, 1909 Pauline Johnson, 1909 Margaret Kutner, 1912 Eleanor Kloster, 1909 Lugarda Mayer, 1912 Eva Mordecai, 1911 Mary Polhemus, 1911 Lillian Schoedler, 1911 Lucy Thompson, 1909 Annie Wilson, 1912 C. Margaretta Walther, 1912 Eva vom Baur, 1909 Stella Bloch, 1911 Helen Brown, 1911 Juanita Brown, 1911 Eleanor Doty, 1912 Anna Gordon, 1909 Olga Ihlseng, 1911 Hortense Murch, 1909 Mary Wegener, 1912 Anna ver Planck, 1909 Mildred Schlesinger, 1909 Herlinda Smithers, 1909 Charlotte Verlage, 1911 52 Jfltoaiod (EM Officers BYRDE SHALE, 1909 ... . Leader ROSE ADELAIDE LEVY, 1909 Business Manager ETHEL G. WESTON, 1909 . . Director M embers Susan Leerburger, 1912 Rose Adelaide Levy, 1909 Byrde Shale, 1909 Jttanoolins Estelle Ellison, 1911 Lucile Mordecai, 1912 Rose Salmowitz, 1911 Piano Rose Gersteiri, 1911 $5arnai o Chapter of the 3lntercoUeo,tate Socialist $ atutv (Officers UNA BERNARD LOIS WEST A WAY FRANCES BURGER President Secretary Treasurer ii cm hers OSraimntc Amy Hill, 1905 Gertrude Stein, 1908 Marguerite Newland, 1908 Una Bernard Eleanor ( ray Theodora Hall Frances Burger Louise Allen Agnes Burke Katherine Gay Lena Cohen 1909 Ella Oppenheim Blanche Samek Priscilla Stanton 1 9 1 I )oris Long Alma Wiesner Hill Louise Greenawalt Madeline Hirsh Augusta Lustgarten Penelope Girdner 1912 Emma Rapelye Edith Valet Lucy Thompson Lois Westaway Jessie Nottingham Marie Maschmedt Marie Rivkin I )orothy Salwen Marion Rice 54 Sarttarh (Cltaptrr nf thr (Unllryintr iE ual £ irffraiw ICrayur of Nrut $ ink i tatr ANNA M. GORDON, 1001) MARIE L. FLINT, 1910 (Officers President ANTOINETTE L. CARROLL, 1909 Secretary-Treasurt 1 ' ice-President Jttem Ihts faculty Charles A. Beard, Ph D. John L. Gerig, Ph.D. Maude A. Iluttman, A.M. -Mary K. .Simkhovitch, A.B. .lames T. Shotwell, Ph.D. Antoinette Carroll Anna Cordon Elinor Hastings Ethel Ivimey Prances Burger Elizabeth Dunnet Doris Long Louise Allen I .ena Cohen Calm Hoke iuoa Pauline Johnson Una Logan 1 3 10 Lilian Egleston Margaret Renton 19 1 1 Mary.Rivken IU 12 Kaiig Tung Pih Olga Rilke Anna Ver Plank Lois West away Marie Flint Harriet Fox- Dorothy Reilly I loiothv Sal wen Rebecca Fishol Alma Webster Powell BARNARD COLLEGE Ifork JMta (Columbia Iftniuerstty) fflljapter of |)lti IS eta IKappa iflratcrmtg Hantarb prttmi CHARLOTTE E. MORGAN, 1904 VIRGINIA CROCHERON GILDERS LEE VE, 1899 MARION E. LATHAM, 1903 HELEN WILKING COOLEY, 1905 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer (Eljartrr iKrmbrrs Louise Stabler Parker, 1893 (Mrs. G. H.) Ella Fitzgerald Bryson, 1894 (Mrs. F. G.) ( ' aniline Garnar Broinhacher Stacey, 1895 (Mrs. S. G.) Gertrude L. W. Oppenheimer, 1896 (Mrs. E.) Elsie Clews Parsons, 1896 (Mrs. Herbert.) Louise Brisbin Dunn, 1897 Adaline Caswell Wheelock, 1897 Jessie Wallace Hughan, 1898 Susan Isabella Meyers, 1898 Helen St. Clair Mullan, 1898 (Mrs. G. V.) Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve, 1898 Elsie Mabel Kupfer, 1899 Grace Harriet Goodale, 1899 Martha Ornstein, 1899 Elinor Ten Broeck Reiley Endicott, 1900 (Mrs. G.) Jeannette Bliss Gillespy, 1900 Laura D. ( iill Deceased. JHrmberfi CLASS OF 1901 Cordelia Wendt Amy Loveman Helen Elizabeth Catlin Cerise E. A. Carman Lisa Delavan Bloodgood Marie Louise W. Noeggerath (Mrs. J. E.) CLASS OF 1902 Elizabeth Allen Elsa Patterson Campbell Ada Blanche Clouse Neiswender 58 CLASS OF 1903 Helen Louise Cohen Helen Louise King Louise Kohn Minnie Margaret Beifekl Mabel Denton I ura Elsie I .ichten Elsbeth Kroeber Marion Elizabeth Latham Ethel Manter Pool Katherine Ellen Poole CLASS OF 1904 Katharine Swift Doty Jean Dunbar Egleston Charlotte Elizabeth Morgan Dorothy Russell Nevins CLASS OF 1905 Margaret Cecilia Byrne Lily Sylvester Murray Carrie Kaplan Helen Wilking Cooley Frances Hope Purdon Leavitt (Mrs. S.) Emilie Josephine Hutchinson Mary Lock Grace MacColl Alice Haskell Alice Dorothy Brewster Gertrude Louise Cannon Juliet Stuart Points Amalie Louise Althaus Helen Carter Clara Cecilia Eaton Dorothea Eltzner Ethel Grace Everett Helen Loeb Kaufmann (Mrs. M. J.) CLASS OF 1906 Elizabeth Iverson Toms Edith Somborn Mabel Emma Browne Faith Delatour Chipperfield CLASS OF 1907 Charlotte Oesterlein Marguerite Baer Israel Mary Elizabeth Lord Annie Laurie Manley Lilian llellin 1908 Mrs. Julianna Haskell, 1004 Evelyn Blunt MacDonald Mabel Louise Peterson Edith ( lushing Richardson Florence Martha W olff 59 flappa appa ftamma Jfetonitg Winifred Harrows Antoinette Fransio Mary Witter Bailey Madeline Borland 31 n facilitate Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve Priscilla Dixon Stanton Hilda Wood Louise Comfort Tiffany 1910 Harriet Ruth Fox Lilian Hillyer Egleston Dorothy Browning Kirchwey Bertha Harriet Firebaugh Alptya ©micron |Jr Jffraternttg 1909 Beatrice Marguerite Aron Adelaide Agnes Richardson Jennie Dwight Wylie Jessie Isabelle Cochran Hetty Anna Dean Hazel Irene Wayt 1UI0 Mary Voorhees Jaques Special Eugenia Converse Lee Lora Rose Sweeney 60 I appa JMplta ITIicta Jffratcrnity JVIpItci Heta Cliaptcr 1909 Lee Frances Alexander Cecile Katherine Debouy Una Mirrielees Bernard Eleanor Gay Ruth Childs Theodora Hall nun Eleanor Lavine Graham Ethel Lord Shaw Nathalie Thorne (Samma |3l}i cta Jffratcnutu 1909 Helen Louise Aiguier Helen Newbold Sara Rome 191U Florence Estelle Rose Helen Elizabeth Savitz Helen Darlington Worrall 61 Eva Elise vom Baur Lilian Wadsworth Closson Hilda Warren Hedley Edna Margaret Fancher Florence Ethel Greene Gertrude Laura Hunter 31 n facilitate Margaret Appleton Kingsley 1909 Ethel Marguerite Ivimey Una Logan Myra McLean i y i a Rhoda Muriel Ivimey Mary Nammack Mildred Woodhull Florence Sims Wyeth Grace Amelia Reeder Hazel Woodhull Pclta pclta Jlclta Jfrattrnitg ;Kl|o CliaptiT Edna Cassebeer Helen Grossman Clarita Crosby Helen McPherson 1910 Florence Hopewell Stella Hopewell jJJost-iintJniate Elizabeth Tredwell 62 Elsie Smith Elizabeth Jenkins Clara Lewis f t $eta pjt fctcrniti) Work $eta Chapter 1909 Anna Sophie Holm Alta Anderson Gladys Alden Bonfils Bertha Eaches 19 10 191 1 Maude Smith Mabel Dorothy McCann Elizabeth Nitchie Mary Badger Wilson Special Eleanor Murtha Epstlon Chapter Marion A. Boyd Lena Bohan Clara Cooper 1909 Eleanore Martin 1910 63 Mary Godley Marguerite I )ruding Antoinette D. Hill T H E G ROVE % t HUH Jttortarluat) DOROTHY BROWNING KIRCHWEY . Editor-in-Chief ELSIE PLAUT Business Manager MARY WITTER BAILEY Assistant Business Manager NANNETTE FRANCES HAMBURGER [ r t Editor GLADYS ALDEN BONFILS MARGERY EGGLESTON HARRIET RUTH FOX LILIAN HILLYER EGLESTON GRACE A. REEDER ELIZABETH N ITCH IE SULAMITH SILVERMAN MARION WEINSTEIN Ex-officio Jformcr 1£iUtc rs-in-(£lncf HELEN BRIGHAM CROCKER, 1895 ANTONIE JUNGE, 1895 ALINE CROQUET STRATFORD, 1897 SUSAN ISABELL MYERS, 1898 GRACE HARRIET GOODALE, 1899 ELINOR TEN BROECK REILEY, 1900 FLORENCE LUCAS SANVILLE, 1901 MARGARET GROTE ELLIMAN, 1902 CLARE MACLELLEN HOWARD, 190.? HARRIET ESTELLE WERTS, 1904 EMILIE JOSEPHINE HUTCHINSON, 1905 FAITH DELATOUR CHIPPERFIELI ), 1906 JULIET STUART POINTS, 1907 HELEN LOEB, 1908 EVA ELISE VOM BAUR, 1909 07 ®Ifc Panrarb bulletin PUBLISHED WEEKLY THROUGHOUT THE COLLEGE YEAH SMtur-in-Clucf ELIZABETH N ITCH IE, 1910 Business jWanauer FRAXCES MAY INGALLS, 1909 Assistant Business jHanauer MARY BAILEY, 1910 x-nfficio FLORENCE WYETII, 1009 jWanauinu Suitors THEODORA HALF, 1909 MYRA McLEAN, 1909 EVA VOM BAUR, 1909 MARY SWEXSOX, 1909 GRACE A. REEDER, 1.910 Associate fcoitors ELSIE PLAUT, 1910 LOUISE ALLEX, 1911 OLIVE THOMPSON, 1910 AGNES BURKE, 1911 MARION YEIXSTEIX, 191(1 LAILA COSTON, Hill FANNY AURILL BISHOP, Hill ADDIE MORGENSTERN, 1911 Conner Isoitors-in-tflnef AMY LOVEMAN, 1901 ANXIE DUXKIX GREEXE, 1905 FRANCES BELCHER, 1902 MARJORIE FERGUSON ELS A ALSBERG, 1902 BROWN, 1906 JEAN W. MILLER, 1903 AGXES MILLER, 1908 LOUISE EDGAR PETERS, 1904 DOROTHEA ELTZXER, 1908 ELIZABETH NITCHIE, 1910 69 HUtrnarit %mx Editor-in-Chief. Assistant Editors Business Manager Assistant Business Manage) First Term — HARRIET RUTH FOX, L910 Second Term— PAULINE JOHNSON, L909 LILIAN WADSWORTH CLOSSON, 1 « « CIIKISTELLA MAOMURRAY, 1910 KATE HUNTINGTON TIEMANN, 1911 JOSEPHINE DEMPSEY, 1909 MADELEINE IllliSII 191 I Suu ' mer £ itol-s- l -(t h icf ALICE DOROTHY BREWSTER, 1906 LILIAN WADSWORTH CLOSSON, 1909 MARGARET HART BAILEY, 1907 71 HARRIET RUTH FOX, 1 ' tIO VIEW FROM HAMILTON HALL coLLeoe eveuss (College Calender December 1(1. Lecture on Labrador, by Dr. Wilfred Grenfell. December 20. Reading of Dickens ' Christmas Carol before the Barnard Union, by Mr. Percival Chubb. January 4. Alumnse Christmas Reunion. January 7. Address in Chapel by Hugh Black. January 9. Lecture before the College Settlement Association, by John Lovejoy Ellio t, on The Essential Thing in Settlement and Neighborhood Work. January 10. Lecture by Mr. MeKaye on the Drama of Democracy. January 11 Missionary Conference at Columbia. January 13. Vaudeville Show given by HMO to L908. January 22 February 1. Mid-year Examinations. February 3. Mid-year Finale. Februarys. Lecture before the Barnard Union, by Mrs. Lucia Ames Mead, on the New Internationalism. February 7. Lecture by Miss Edith Puffer on Esthetics. February 10. Reception for New Freshmen given by Y. W. C. A. February L3. Lecture before the C. S. A., by Miss Maude Miner, on Probation Work in the Night Court. February 15. Basketball game, Barnard 191] ill) vs. Horace Mann (5). February 21. Junior Ball at Hotel Astor. February 2a. Basketball game, Barnard (18) vs. Teachers ' College (6). February 2(5. MacDowell Fund Concert. February 2 S. 1010 Sophomore Tea. March 2. Lecture by Dr. Devine on Philanthropic Work. March (i. 1911 FYeshmaii Show Through the Hedge. Basketball game, Barnard (9) vs. Horace Mann (7). March 9. Address by Dr. Kimble on Work on Randall ' s Island. March 10. Classical Club Play — The Menaechmi of Plautus. March 1 1. Lecture before the Barnard Union, by Mrs. Barclay Hazard, on How Women can Best Serve the State. March 13. Deutscher Kreis Salmagundi Party. Lecture before the Botanical Club, by Dr. C. Stuart Gager, on the Effects of Radium Rays on Plants. March 23. Lecture, by Miss Edith Hamilton White, on The Challenge of the City. March 25. Musicale by Mr. Eugene Haille, given by the German Department. March 27. Creek Games; 1910, 32 points; 1911, 22 points. March 30. Basketball games; 1908 (15) vs. 1909 (8) and 1911 (12) vs. 1910 (0). April 4. German Plays — Kleptomanie and Papa Hat ' s Erlaubt. April 4 and . . Lafayette Convention. April (i. Basketball games, 1911 (4) vs. 1908 (3), and 1909 (7) vs. 1910 (2). April 9. Basketball games, 1911 (24) vs. 1908 (10), and 1909 (14) vs. 1910 (3). April 10. Mandolin and Glee Club Concert. April 11. Basketball games, 1911 (19) vs. 1909 (2) and 1908 (8) vs. 1910 (3). April 13. Silver Bay Luncheon. April 21. 1910 Luncheon in honor of the end of the Brief. 74 April 22. Lecture before the Barnard Union, by Mrs. Horace Kelley, on Woman ' s Suffrage. April 24 and 25. Undergraduate Play, The Taming of the Sinew. May 1 and 2. French Plays. May 5. Silver Bay Entertainment. Deutscher Kreis Entertainment. May 6. Lecture by Robert Hunter on the Spirit of Socialism. May 8. Sorehead Performance of the Taming of the Shrew. May 9. 1910 Dance. May 15. Luncheon by 1911 to 1909. May 20. 1908 Senior Dance. May 21. Field Day, 1911, 35 points; 1909, 18 ' , points; 1910, 12 points; 1908, :U points. Undergraduate Tea at Brooks Hall. May 22. Tree Day. May 24. Baccalaureate Sermon. May 25. Class Day. May 27. Commencement. 1908 Class Supper. September 23. Opening of University. Luncheon given by 1910 to 1912 September 24. Opening of Undergraduate Play Room. September 25. Y. W. C. A. Reception to Freshmen. October 2. The Mysteries. October 16. Junior Entertainment to Freshmen. Marriage of 1912 and 1910 October 20. Lecture by Professor Knapp on the Roman Theatre. October 21. Tea given by the Botanical Club. October 23. Mock Trial. October 20. Lecture by Mrs. Philip Snowden on Women Suffrage in England. October 27. Political Campaign: Taft 161 votes; Bryan, 48; Debs, 49; Chafin, 1. Cake and Candy Sale of C. S. M. A. October 28. 1912 Party. Lecture by Professor Beard on Socialism. October 30. Senior Entertainme nt to Freshmen. The Dippydrome. November 0. Sophomore Play, The Little Minister. November 11. Lecture by Mrs. Rose Pastor Stokes on Socialism as a Practical Possibility. November 10. Deutscher Kreis Entertainment to Freshmen. November 18. Reception of the Alumnae Advisory Committee for the Y. W. C. A. November 20 and 21. Junior Show, Monsieur Beaucaire. November 25. 1910 Cast Luncheon. December 2. Silver Bay Luncheon. 1910 Spelling-Bee. December 8. Basketball game, Barnard (13) vs. Teachers College (12). December 9. Senior Luncheon to Juniors. Lecture by Mr. Moffat against Socialism. December 10. Undergraduate Tea. December 12. Basketball game, Barnard (11) vs. Horace Mann (5). December 14. Mass-meeting concerning Barnard Union. Recognition Meeting of Y. W. C. A. Basketball, 1912 (5)- 1911 (24); 1910 (8)-1909 (14). December 15. Lecture on Paris and OS none, before Classical Club, by Dr. T. S. Shear. December 1G. Freshmen Dance to Juniors. December 18. Sophomore Dance. 75 IRmnxs (tournament SPRING OF 1908 (Class UHictmpions 1908 FLORENCE WOLF 1909 HERLINDA SMITH ERS L910 LILIAN EGLESTON 1911 GRACE GILLEAUDEAU (CnUrnr (£hainpuitt GRACE GILLEAUDEAU, 1911 3Furmrr (Bnllrgr (Champions 1905 CLAIRETTE PAPIN ARMSTRONG, EDITH BERKLEY HANDY, ' 05 1900 JULIA DE FOREST TIFFANY, ' 09 ' 05 1907 FLORENCE WOLFF, ' 08 77 MAY 21, 1908 (Enmmtttrp A. Smithers, 1909, Chairman P. Steinberg, 190S H. Woodhull, 1910 F. Randolph, 1911 HIGH JUMP First Place Hazel Woodhull, 1910, 4 ft, 2 in. Second place Alice Allen, 1909 Third place Ethel Leveridge, 1911 HURDLES First place Lillian Schoedler, 191 I Second place Elsie Gleason, 1911 Third place Muriel Ivimey, 1910 DASH First place Lillian Schoedler, 191 I Second, place ' Vera Fueslein, 1911 Third place Elsie Gleason, 1911 RELAY 1 Herlinda Smithers 2 Edith Talpey 3 Cecile Debouy 4 Hortense Murch Second place, 1911 Third place, 1908 SHOT-PUT First place Lilian Schoedler, 1911, 27 ft. If in. Second place Herlinda Smithers, 1909 Third place Mabel McCann, 1910 First place !• 1909 J BASE BALL THROW First place Hazel Woodhull, 1910, 156 feet Second plade Gertrude Hunter, 1910 Third place Blanche Samek, 1909 TENNIS Grace Gilleaudeau, 1911 Final: 1911, 35 pts. 1909, 18 pts. 1910, 12 pts. 1908, 34 pts. 78 Uarnarii iRrrnrits BASE BALL THROW 1905 Agnes Ernst, 1907, 175 ft. 3 in. STANDING BROAD HIGH JUMP 1905 Florence Mastin, 1908, 6 ft. 4§ in. 1907 Hazel Woodhull, 1910, 4 ft, 5 in. SHOT PUT 1905 Agnes Ernst, 1907 linmnt ' fl Atljlrttr Hrruriis 50 yards run — 6 1 5S., Miss Fanny James, Vassar College. 75 yards run — lOVios., Miss Helen Buck, Mt, Holyoke College. 100 yards run — 13 s., Miss Fanny James, Vassar College. 40 yards hurdle race — 7 1 5S., Miss Marion Anush, Elmira College. 100 yards hurdle— 16 3 1(J s., Miss Martha Gardner, Vassar College. 60 yards hurdle race — lO ' Vs s., Miss Nina Ganung, Elmira College. Running high jump — 4 ft. 6 ins., Miss Helen Schulte, Central High School, St. Paul, Minn. ; Miss Helen Aldrich, National Cathedral School, Washington, D. C. Standing high jump — 3 ft. 6 ins., Miss T. Bates, Bryn Mawr College. Running broad jump — 14 ft. OA ins., .Miss Evelyn Gardner, Poughkeepsie. Standing broad jump — 7 ft,, 1 1 J ins. ; Miss Edith Boardman, National Cathedral School, Washington, D. C. Throwing 8-lb. shot— 33 ft. ! in.; Miss M. Young, Bryn Mawr College. Throwing baseball —195 ft, 3 ins.; Alice H. Belding, Vassar College. Miss 79 ©lass of 1 910 us. (Elass of 1911 THOMPSON GYMNASIUM, FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 1908 GREEK CHORUS wreath awarded to 1910. 8 points. EPIC POETRY CONTEST „azel Woodhull, 1910 Lillian Schoedler, 1911 Mabel McCann, 1910 Ftrs pZace Second place Third place THE DISCUS First place Second place Third place JUMP First place Second place Third place THROWING THE JAVEIJN Josephine Bosch, 1911 Mary Bailey, 1910 Mary Conroy, l ' .tl 1 First place Second place ' Third place HURDLE RACE First place Second place Lillian Schoedler, 1911 Clarita Crosby, 1910 1910 Final  core: (Committees 191Q Dorothy Browning Kirchwey, Chairman Daphne Dame Dieterich Maude Emery Christella MacMurray 1 1 1 1 Ethel Leveridge, Chairman Eleanor Burne Juanita Brown Helen Coombs Emily Bruning Lillian Schoedler 80 5 points 3 5 points 3 5 points 3 5 points 3 5 points 3 32 points 22 Mabel McCann Elizabeth Nitchie Mabel Palliser Hazel Woodhull Katharine Gay Margaret Hart Ex-officio Ex -officio gasket Pall ' VARSITY TEAM, 1908-9 Herlinda G. Smithers, 1909 Captain Ciur-np Heklinda G. Smithers, 1909 1 ,-, , Adelaide E. Smithers, 1909 Forwards Lillian Schoedler, 1911 Center Frances Randolph, 1911] ,., ,, Mary Wegener, 1912 . ■■■• ... Side Centers Nannette Hamburger, 1910] n Molly Conroy, 1911 . Guards Mary Wegener, 1912 ' . Substitute Forward Julia Goldberg,- 1909 ' • ' , • • Substitute Center Ethel Leveridge, 19111 , ,., , Shirley Gleason, 1912 Substitute Guards BASKET BALL RECORD, 1907-8 (flnllegr (fiamrn December 8 { | ar a f d 1 Teachers College 11 I t reshman 12, oltm 6 December 13 Teachers ' College 11, Barnard 8 February 15 Horace Mann 10, Barnard (i February 25 . . . ■. . Barnard 18, Teachers College 6 March G Barnard 9, Horace Mann 7 .ilntrr -(Elans (Sjantra November 7 November 11 November 21 March 30 April G April 9 1909 1908 Score, 14-7 ( 1908 1910 ' 8- -3 1911-1909 ' ' 19- -2 1911-1910 ' 14- -0 f 190S L909 ' 15- -8 1911-1910 ' ' 12- -0 [1911-1908 ' 4- -3 1 1909-1910 ' 7 -2 ( 1911-1908 ' ' 24- 10 1909 1910 • ' 14 -13 191 1 1909 1908-1910 83 Commencement Week MAY 20-27, 1908 IEIjc ffizttiat JBantc EARL HALL Wednesday Evening, May 20, 1908, at 9.00 p.m. (Eammxttss Mary Eleanor Curran Chairman Clairette Papin Armstrong Florence M. Wolff Cornelia Flack Ellen K. O ' Gorman ) r E.V-offUtl) Josephine Prahl Mary Maxon ) 84 FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1908 Priuu-am Steps Oration . . . . ' . Elizabeth Freeman Fox (lass Songs, by the Seniors, led by . . Josephine Prahl Tree Oration Irma Alexander Tree Song . Senior Class Barnard Medley Glee Club Dancing and Refreshments in the Theatre Committee Elizabeth Freeman Fox Chairman Mabel Peterson Ellen K. O ' Gorman Josephine Prahl Mary Maxon 85 E.v-officio L Baccalaureate ertnce UNIVERSITY GYMNASIUM, SUNDAY, MAY 24, AT 4.OO P.M. Rev. Paul Revere Frothingham, of the Arlington Street Church, Boston. Preacher. 80 (Class jBeU) COLUMBIA GYMNASIUM, MONDAY, MAY 25, 1908 PROGRAM Ellen Kathryn O ' Gorman Margaret Hall Yates 1. Salutatory . 2. Class Statistics . 3. Class Day Song 4. Gift to the College ... . Helmina .Ieidell 5. Class Will Adelaide Requa 6. Presentations to the Class Florence Martha Wolff 7. Announcement of Elections to (j B K 8. Valedictory . . Marguerite Corlies Newland Bmxsxv (Elasfi (fDflftrerfi Ellen Kathryn O ' Gorman . President Adelaide Requa Mary Maxon . . . Vice-President Annie Rothenberg . Dorothea Eltzner . . . Historian ©lass Bay (Enmmittre Agnes Miller Jessie Ferguson Houston Florence Sam.met Florence C. Ernst Ellen Kathryn O ' Gorman i r , Secretin- Treasurer ( ' hair man Mabel Louise Peterson Mary Maxon ®I)e § mx x Banquet MAY 25, 1908 (Committee Irma Alexander, Chairman Mary Murtha Ellen K. O ' Gorman ,,. . Marion Chowell Hilda Wells Mary Maxon t ' x -°JJ lcw Stantara Section of ilelta of |)l)t $kta ;SKappa ELECTIONS FROM THE CLASS OF 1908 Clara Cecilia Eaton Dorothea Eltzner Ethel Grace Everett Helen Loeb Kaufman n Florence Martha Wolff 87 Evelyn Blunt Macdonald Mabel Louise Peterson Hll}c (font ffim reib smb Jtfiftp-fourtlj Annual (Commencement COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY GYMNASIUM, WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1908 (Umtfrrrturt of Urgrrra BACHELOR OF ARTS, BARNARD COLLEGE — 97 Jlrtzra an Sjmtnra Kohn Mathematical Prize Mabel Louise Peterson Honorable Mention: Louise May Tattershall Urpartmrntal ijntuira Final f Mabel Louise Peterson , ,. Mathematics Louise May Tattershall Zoology { M, ar y harlotte Axt [ Marian Wilson 1 Elizabeth Freeman Fox (Srnrral Ijmuira Dora Askowith Florence Josephine Mastin Helen Ida Veith Dorothea Eltzner Marguerite Corlies Newland Florence Martha Wolff Elizabeth Freeman Fox Mabel Louise Peterson Jennie Marie Young tSighrst iFtual (Btnnal Ijmuira Evelyn Blunt Macdonald 88 pastern J fofcent (Conference Held under the Auspices of the If own ii Women ' s Christian Association Silver Bay, Lake George, June 20-30, 1908 (Emnmtttrr Ruth Hardy, 1909 Chairman Clarita Crosby, 1910 May Ingalls, 1909 Bertha Firebaugh, 1910 Christella MacMurray, 1910 Elizabeth Fox Martha Boardman Marian Wilson 1909 Winifred Barrows Theodora Hall Ruth Hardy Hortense Murch 1 9 1 H Clarita Crosby Carrie Fleming Adelaide Loehrson Dorothea Mahon Christella MacMurray Grace Reeder Olive Thompson Nathalie Thorne 1911 Louise Allen Ruth Carroll Camilla Stewart 89 SOPHMORE. mXL Lltc opIiomorc lance of tlte (Class of Hi 1 1 THOMPSON GYMNASIUM, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1908, AT 8.00 P.M. (Committer Agnes May Denike, Chairman Marguerite Wootton Reynar Amy Weil Alice Margaret O ' Gorman Katherine Hamilton Sickels Mary Bartow Polhemus j E.v- Ottilie Proehazka Camilla Stewart Charlotte Cecile Marie Verlage J officio 90 of t!tc (Class of 1 9 1 HOTEL MAJESTIC FRIDAY, FEBRl ' ARY 19, 1909, AT 8.30 P.M. (Cnmmtttrr MABEL DOROTHY McOANN . Ch (linnan HETTY ANNA DEAN GRACE HENDERSON ETHEL ELIZABETH LAWRENCE ETHEL LORD SHAW JULIA ANNA WAGNER HAZEL WOODHULL HELENE BENEDICT WISE LILIAN HILLYER EGLESTON } . GRACE A. REEDER i A, ' -° 70 College Song Leader JULIA GOLDBERG 1909 Song Leader . JULIA GOLDBERG 1911 Song Leader . LILLIAN SCHOEDLER 1910 Song Leader . CLARITA CROSBY L9 1 2 Song Leader . HELEN BLACK 92 191 1 Jffresljmcin fycrtti xTltc (Class of Hill presents as its JFrcsliman J lftfto Presented on March 0, 1908 CAST Alice (slightly bewildered) . The Bear T. Roosevelt (who is de-lighted) The Big Stick .... Dorm (Sans Wings) Exchange (Panicky) Indian (warranted Not to Scalp) Bulldog (warranted Not to Bite) Sm ile (from Ear to Ear) Guide (not a Cookie) Rag Doll .... Mammy Doll .... Paper Doll .... French Doll ( ' hush Chorus Freshmen affected Their ( ' rushes Spirits ( lollege Spirit . Senior Spirit Junior Spirit Sophomore Spirit Freshman Spirit Athletic Girl Society Girl Studious Girl Dramatic Girl C. Verlage L. Weymann (). Prochazka E. Gleason T. Cassell Week-Days Camilla Stewart M. Hirsh K. Gay The Nameless ( )ne II. Brown M. Hart L. Schoedler A. Burke E. Burning M. Reynar Marion berdorfer Stella Straus Mildred Dodge Louise ( ireenawalt Hulh Burns Agnes Denike Laura Bennett 1 1. o riel Currier M ' ary Polhemus Katherine Sickels Aurill Bishop Kale Tiemann Monday [. Heiden Tuesday . . M. Shaw Wednesday R. Moss Thursday M. Schwitzer Friday . B. Hays Saturday S.Block lonels . .0. Ihlseng, F. Allen, E. Burne, J. Brown, N. Stewart Josephine Bosch, Eolith Burns, Helen Coombs, Ethel Felch, Lottie Greiff, Charge of the Light Brigade: C Student Chorus: Helen Bradbeer, Grace Lovell, Edna McKeever, Margaret Plummer, Helen Posters-Marion Piatt, Helen Runyon, Mildred San- born, Gertrude Saul, Ruth Stagen, Jeannette Steinecke, Adelaide Wait, Helen Wilkes, Ro se Salmowitz, Hetta Stapff. 95 PR KIRA.M.M plcptomamc Schwank in Einem Akt von Max Hai PERSONNEN Professor Lebrecht Buchner Walt Eveline, seine Frau Lili, seine Tochter . Dr. Richard Frisch Assessor Hastig Antonie, I ienst madchen M. Schwarz I ' rl. Gretchen Franke . Frl. Irma F. Heiden Carl E. Kayser Edward Goodman Frl. Rita Hochheimer PROGRAMM |lapa fiat ' s trkttbt Schwank in Einem Akt von G. von Moser und A. 1, ' Arkonge PERSONNEN Dr. Liebrecht, Schriftsteller . . Walter J. Rose Dorothea, seine Fran . . . Frl. Hetta Staph Karl Liebrecht, sein Neffe . Richard F. Bach Budicke, Schlachtermeister . Alfons F. Spiegel Elise, seine Tochter . Frl. Ottilie Prochazka Aurora Nebelkopf, Dichterin . . Frl. Addie Morgenstern Jette, Dienstmadchen bei Liebrecht Frl. Charlotte Verlage Ort der Handlung Zimmer bei Buchner Ort der Handlung . . . Liebrecht ' s Wohnung 96 Jffrcncl) |)lag Jffactlitc Presented on May 1 and 2, 1908 CAST MlSS TlMMEKS .... Miss Blanche Timmers 1 rT XT . ■} Her Nieces Miss Josephine Timmers J Mlle. de la Gkandmaison, Governess Francoise de la Sauce-Piquante Feliciti ' : Marquand Pupils of Mlle. de la Gkandmaison Miss Elsie Plaut Miss Alice O ' Gorman t Miss Olga Ihlseng Miss May Herrmann Miss Louise Allen Miss Lillian Schoedler Misses E. Burns, H. Coombs, D. Long 97 }t MxfottgxwbmU Association I ' HESE NTS 1% Zmtm of % I)rcttr ft ON APRIL 24 AND 25, 1.908 Baptista (a rich gentleman of Padua) Vincentio (an old gentleman of Pisa) Lucentio (son to Vincentio) . Petruchio (a gentleman of Verona) GREMIO ] •, + r • u suitors to Bianca Hortensio J Franio 1 , , T Biondello J Bryants to Lucent ,„ Grumio (servant to Petruchio) A Pedant A Tailor Nathaniel ] Gregory j Philip [■servants to Petruchio Sugarsop A Cook Katherine Bianca The Widow .... Curtis (servant to Petruchio) Servants Pages . Wedding Guests J daughters to Baptista DRAMATIS PERSONAE H. Fox ). Rilke J. Goldberg F. S. Wyeth L Johnson 8. Silverman K. Gay i S. Bloch E. Vom Baur M. Nammack M. Eggleston A. Requa P. Johnson 0. Ihlseng M. Obendorfer A. Muller J Adelaide Richardson i Jessie Cochran Marguerite Strauss Doris Long Scheuer, A. Rothenberg, E. Plaut F. Read, M. Bailey Misses Wells. Stewart, Alexander, Frink, Heiden, Hirsh, Dieterich, Builds, Schoedler, Sammet, Salmowitz, and McLane N. Hamburger, H. Act I— Padua— A Public Place. Act II — Padua — Baptista ' s House. Act III — A Room in Baptista ' s House. Act Act jy Scene 1 — Before Baptista ' s House. 1 Scene 2 — Petruchio ' s Country House. Y J Scene 1 — Before Lucentio ' s House Scene 2 — Lucentio ' s Garden. Jffnrmrr ItnbrrgraiUtatr Plays She Stoops to Conquer, 1901 The School for Scandal, 1904 The Rivals, 1902 The Butterflies, 1905 The Manceuvers of Jane, 1903 The Critic, 190(3 Old Heads and Young Hearts, ' ' 1907 99 CLhe Class of 1 y 11 PRESENTS AS ITS SOPHOMORE PLAY (the iCtttlc Jtttmster By J. M. BARRIE November 6th and 7th, 1908 V A S T LuKD RlNTOUL .... Captain Halliwell . Gavin Dishart .... Sergeant Davidson Tammas Whammond, Chief Elder Snecky Hob art Andrew Nailmaker J- Elders Silva Tosh Rob Dow Micah Dow Joe Cruickshanks, Atheist Thwaites, Butler Lady Babbie Felice, her maid Jean, Manse servant Nanny Webster Soldiers . Thrums People Scotch Laddies Hart, Currier, Bennett Act I, Act II, M. Obendorfer L. Schoedler X. Stewart J. Brown M. Hirsh O. Ihlseng E. Brunning S. Bloch K. Gay L. Coston M. Sell wit zer E. Burne Frances Randolph Louise Greenawalt Helen Coombs Evelyn Dewey Bishop, Morgenstern, Sickles Etunyon, Bosch, Hums, Sillcox C. Stewart, R. Moss Caddam Wood. Act III Scene 1, Nanny Webster ' s Cottage. Act IV, I Scene 2, The Manse Garden. Jfurnuu- S ' npluinuirc JJIays Hall of Rintoul Castle. Manse Garden. Class of 1902— Love Chases Class of 1903— Left in Charge Class of 1904— Changed Partners Class of 1905— The Mousetrap Class of Class of 1907 — Casting the Boomerang Class of 1908— The Heir-at-Law Class of 1909— The Amazons Class of 1906— The Adventures of Lady Ursula i9 10— Next Door 101 z xe ariass of taut IStornarJi (EnUrge PRESENTS AS ITS JUNIOR SHOW 0 tt%xtnx jEScaucaire By BOOTH TARKINGTON Friday, November 20th Soturdoi , XiirrmhfrJl.il 8.15 o ' clock Afternoon J. 15, Evening 8.15 CAST OF CHARACTERS Beaucaire .... L. Egleston Beau Nash E. Plant WlNTERSET .... (!. Hunter Badger N. Hamburger MOLYNEAUX .... V. Jaques JOELIFFE (!. Franke Lady Mary .... M. Nammack BANTISON . . ■. ; (1. Henderson Rakell C. Crosby TOWNBRAKE L. Spalding Lucy J. Wagner Francois . H. Wayt Miss Presbrey M. O ' Donnell Lady Rellerton M. Monteser Miss Paitelot A. Thomson r N. Thorne Marquis de Merepoix E. Lawrence Servants to Beaucaire . •j T. Barrows Lady Greenbury L. Stryker - J. Schwarte Mrs. Mabsley C. Auerbach Servant to Nash E. Shaw BlCKSIT ..... D. Long Act I — Pump Room at Bath [ Scene 1 — Room of Beaucaire. I Scene 2 — Lady Rellerton ' s Ball Room. Act 11- Act III Gardens of Lord Banteson. Act IV — Assembly Room at Bath. ifnrmcf r l)iituor § ' luitus Class of 1902— The Rose and the Ring. Class of 1903 — A Scrap of Paper. Class of 1904— Everybody ' s Friend. Class of 190.5 — Ye Taming of Ye Shrew. ' Class of 1906 — Arms and the Man. Class of 1907 — Minstrel Show. Class of 1908 — Angelina, the Orphaned Heiress. Class of 1909 — If I were King. 103 LOOKING EAST F ROM T H E FACULTY CLUB Senior (Class CL SS COLORS CLASS FLOWER CLASS MASCOT EVA ELISE VOM BAUR . OLGA RILKE JESSIE ISARELLE COCHRAN . HELEN (iE HTRUDE SCHEUER ADELAIDE E. SMITHERS HELEN PHILLIPS (j)toadz GREEN AM) WHITE FERN AND WHITE O, BULLDOG 10S IRNATTON President Vice-President Recording Secretary ( ' orresponding Secretary Treasurer Historian (Class of HllHl Mathikle Abraham Lee Frances Alexander Helen Louise Aiguier Gladys Stokely Arkenburgh Beatrice Marguerite Aron Winifred Barrows Eva Elise vom Baur Beatrice Beekman Una Mirrielies Bernard 1 lelone Marie Boas Marion Alice Boyd Emma Bugbee Dorothy ( !alman Antoinette Lartigue Carroll Edna M. Cassebeer Ruth Childs Lilian Wadsworth Closson Jessie Isabelle Cochran Margie Elizabeth Dann Hazel Lucile Davies Mary Celia Demarest Ceeile Katherine Debouy Josephine Agnes Dem ' psey Florence Frances Enk Hannah Carolyn Falk Antoinette Fransioli Margaret Huddleston Frink Eleanor Gay Mary Frances Godley Julia Goldberg Anna Miriam Gordon Ethel L. Goodwin Alice Catherine Grant Charlotte Haithwaite Theodora Hall Kathleen Veronica Hanley Elfrida Harder Ruth Gilette Hardy Elinor Isabel Hastings Hilda Warren Hedley ( ' aim Morrison Hoke Rita Hochheimer Ethel Wentworth Hodsden Anna Sophie Holm Mary Elizabeth Holland Evelyn Holt Mary Rankin Hollar Helen Sara Hoyt Jennie Fields Warren Hubbard [• ' ranees May Ingalls Ethel Marguerite Ivimey Alice Granger Jaggard Pauline Dustin Johnson Edith Josephi Kang Tung Pih Margaret Frances Kenney Lois Kerr Marie Bernadette King Vera Eleanor Kloster Vere B. Kupfer Jessie Levy Rose Adelaide Levy Una Logan Matilda J. McKeown M-yra McLean Helen McPherson Eleanor Marion Martin Eunice Hotaling Miller Hortense Dean Murch Helen Newbold Ethel Nyitray Josephine Gertrude O ' Brien Ella Oppenheiih Edna Phillips Helen Phillips Nellie Edna Rich Adelaide Agnes Richardson ( Uga Rilke Antoinette Riordan Sara Rome Fannie Rosenfelder Blanche Samek Edna Rebecca Scales Helen ( tertrude Scheuer Mildred Deshon Schlesinger Edith Christine Seguine Byrde B. Shale Dean Florence Smith Elsie Smith Maude Smith Adelaide E. Smithers Herlinda G. Smithers Priscilla Dixon Stanton May Belle Stark Mary Elizabeth Swenson Edith May Talpey Lucy Irene Thompson Louise Comfort Tiffany Laura Shearer Turnbull Anna Underwood Georgia Anna Ver Planck Lois Bessie Westaway Ethel Genevieve Weston Hilda Wood Mildred Woodhull Florence Sims Wyeth Jennie Dvvight Wylie Total 109 the piston) of t e (£lass of 1909 ALL of the great Nineish historians have felt it incumbent upon them to reprove their erring countrymen for boisterous, active, and rowdyish behavior (we are almost tempted to say vulgar); to make 1909 say nothing, do nothing, be nothing, or, in other words, to make her live up to the ideal of a truly well-bred and efficient class. We arc pleased to be able to announce that at length this ideal is realized. 1909 has subsided. She is, she docs, she says nothing! And all this hath the Teacup done! It has snuffed out MM)!), in this Senior year which we may well dub Under the Teacup. And in Junior year the coming Teacup cast its shadow over us. It made the Junior Ball a dismal failure. Nobody enjoyed it. There was a dark-brown taste in the air. Some even went so far as to call that function a T-r-e-m-e-n-d-6-u-s Success. We know all too well what that means. And then came the Undergraduate Show. We worked hard for parts in that, but we met with no success. We got five of the smallest parts, with a few which did not even count as parts. Nobody knew or cared that they were played in the proper quiet, ladylike, and non-actressy manner of which the better element in College approves. On Field Day we met defeat, quite the correct kind, we assure you, and in quite the proper way. W T e were lost in the ever-approaching shadow of the cup. Bob could hardly give a yap for his friend the Indian. Poor Bob, he was scared stiff, or rather, in a truly gentlemanly way, congealed with horror. And yet. up to this year, 1909 was not. thoroughly reformed, for it. is whispered (on what authority we dare not say) that at the Junior Luncheon (bend closer, let us whisper in your ear) — the toasts were drunk in Citric Acid! And that by girls of from seventeen to the dark middle ages — who ought to know better! (Please don ' t breathe that to a soul. Think of Barnard ' s reputation!) This year, at the very beginning, the Cup fell wi th a click, and 1909 has not emerged. She never will, she never will. The Undergraduate Play Committee tea was followed by 110 an executive committee tea, and then every week came just-any-old-committee teas, and teas of no-committee-at-all. Then the harm began.; Our constitutions were undermined. One poor wretch (alas, we knew her well!) was so overcome by tea that she hopped about on the digits of her pedal extremities, and with airy gesticulations sang this pathetic ditty: Tea, tea, oceans of tea. Tea, tea, oceans of tea. The oceans were a mere delusion of her unhappy brain. We have carefully examined the facts and can assure you that this is so. Once this year 1900 had an attack of her old frenzy and tried to crawl from under the cup, to amuse the Freshman. But we found, to our cost, that paint, pants, and paper do not always capture the youthful fancy. L912 lias the same good taste as her elder sister, and so saw nothing entertaining in or about them. Since that time 1909 has accepted her fate. Her Christmas party was amusing of the sort, but in its deeper aspects a sad commentary on the depredations of the tea habit. The mental outfit of the originators of the school was suffering from them. The dialogue was made up of unhappy references to what could and what couldn ' t be done to 1900, in her depleted state, and to that dread article tea, as found in everybody and every place, from Professor William T. Brewster to the teacher (who, by the way, was once as sane as the present historian). A rabid 1909er composed this limerick: If you meet a young maid of nought nine And inquire for the bulldog so fine, With one look you she ' ll freeze: ' Pray of what use at teas Is that cast-off attachment of mine ' Which serves to prove my point: 1909 is at length perfectly de-natured, exquisitely refined, splendidly null. At length she has even grown modest, and leaves with the College this parting plea, knowing full well that she leaves her reputation behind her, Be to her faults a little blind, Be to her virtues very kind. ill f lJunior (Elass Qpooo) lecSs CLASS COLORS . . . BROWN AND GOLD CLASS FLOWER . . . BLACK-EYED SUSAN CLASS MASCOT . . . OWL (Officers LILIAN HILLYER EGLESTON President GRACE A. REEDER . . . Vice-President HELEN LOUISE CROSSMANN Recording Secretary MARY VOORHEES JAQUES Corresponding Secretary HELEN DARLINGTON WORRALL Treasurer AGNES TERESA O ' DONNELL Historian 112 (Ulass of HI 10 A It a Anderson Lillian Sophie Anderson Clarice Auerbach Mary Witter Bailey Tessie Barrows Lena Bohan Gladys Alden Bonfils Madeline Borland Frances Burger Clarita Frances Crosby Helen Louise Crossman Hetty Anna Dean Mildred Downs Marguerite Dorothy Cecilia Druding Elizabeth Vyse Dunnet Elise Savoye Eddy Margery Katherine Eggleston Lilian Hillyer Egleston Maude Emma Emery Elizabeth English Edna Margaret Faneher Bertha Harriet Firebaugh Carrie Orr Fleming Marie Louise Flint Harriet Ruth Fox Rachel Moore Frame Gretchen Malwine Franke Marion Lathrop Gibson Ellen Lavine Graham Florence Ethel Greene Nannette Frances Hamburger Edna Heller trace Henderson May Therese Herrmann Antoinette Dyett Hill Bessie Holzman Florence Isabel Hopewell Stella Louise Hopewell Gertrude Laura Hunter Anne Huntingdon Violetta Jackson Mary Voorhees Jaques Dorothy Browning Kirchwey Ethel Elizabeth Lawrence Clara Alice Lewis Adelaide Loehrson Doris Long Mabel Dorothy McCann Josephine McGrath Christella Frances MacMurray Dorothea Helen Ma lion Ellen Naar Maison Lena Mandel Grace Edith Meier Virginia May Mollenhauer Marion Julia Monteser Rose Moses Mary Nanunack Elizabeth Nitchie Jessie Ray Nottingham Agnes Teresa O ' Donnell Margaret Mary Alacoque O ' Donnell Edna Adeline Palmer Rosetta Frances Piatt Elsie Plant Elizabeth Rawcliffe Florence Wallace Read Grace Amelia Reeder Dorothy Cecilia Reilly Margaret Renton Florence Estelle Rose Helen Elizabeth Savitz Johanna Julia Sehwarte Agnes Gardner Shaw Ethel Lord Shaw (trace Margaret Shaw Ruth Hillard Sidell Sulamith Silverman Leone Florence Spalding Maude Beulah Stimson Laura MacElwain Stryk Lora Rose Sweeney Agnes Thomson Olive Thompson Nathalie Thome Julia Anna Wagner Hazel Irene Wayt Marion Weinstein Josephine Ray West Alma Wiesner Helene Benedict Wise Hazel Woodhull Helen Darlington Worra Elsie Zeller Total 113 I In nineteen six a youthful band Of maidens from afar and near, Would fain the Isle of Knowledge seek - The dangerous trip caused them no fear. II That ship — The College Entrance Board, So treacherous in name and deed, To them a pleasant voyage gave, And safely to the shore did lead. Ill Straightway the ruling princes gave This band the name of Nineteen Ten, Four years, it seemed, must they remain, Ere widsom ' s books full well they ' d ken. IV In this short time has Nineteen Ten In every branch of knowledge won Renown and glory, praise, and fame, For they each task have nobly done. 114 V These princes, now, have never wished To see their subjects overtaxed — They deem it wise if sports and plays Their minds and spirits oft relaxed. VI In sports has Nineteen Ten oft showed That she so far has found no peer; At Greek Games and on Field Day, too, Has she won laurel crowns each year. VII That Nineteen Ten dramatic art And talent has in high degree, The Isle of Knowledge oft a chance Has had in these few years to see. VIII Though she in plays and sports excels, That is not all that she can do; With great success does Nineteen Ten Give dances, teas, and parties, too. IX All those that know that Nineteen Ten In every sphere has done so well, May now expect e ' en greater things Of her in future years to tell. X The Isle of Knowledge will be proud When every land, in future times, Will sing and praise — for Nineteen Ten Will bring renown to other climes. 115 npl)omorc (Class SI2ac v.x: SOevoc. CLASS COLORS CLASS FLOWER CLASS MASCOT RED AN!) WHITE RED AND WHITE CARNATION THE INDIAN MARY POLHEMUS CHARLOTTE VERLAGE NATALIE STEWART . FRANCES RANDOLPH MARY CONROY . ACNES BURKE . ©ffic CVS President Vice-President Recording Secretary Correspo ndi n g Seer eta ry Treasurer Historian 110 Jttcmhers 1 itlll 5P 1 If 1 1 1 j ' V 1 I DC UK 11 i iiLi 1 ) 1 1 1 w 1 1 1 .11 H;1C 1 ' 11 1 11 till ( ) 1 1 Vp |v ii,i V. 1 1 V I VII 1 1 1 1 i ■- 1 i 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 VI IrH i ,| I I M i H ti I Q 1 1 1 0 ISflMTlf ' t 1 , . 1 1 1 , 1 I t 1 1 1 It I Rfirtna Hlil PndQ Iltlllld I jt 1 1 1 11 1 1 11 ' 1 I 1 1 ( rl f ' r . 1 1 1 III 1 v. 1 1 1 ' 1 I )orot h r nal wen mi) I i cl i 1 1  .VIII 111 1 1 l I 1 ' ' ' 1 .l i l 11 1 ' 1 1 • 1 M. ' ltdll 1 .1 I 1 . ' 111(1 I I ' ' l .fhfl I iPVPPh 1 tro i_jt in i i-ji t_i iti t !VI 1 1 ( 1 ret I naul orn nu lid UIUI II Fstelle Kllison 1 cMt 111 1 j 1 1 I r l ' I 1 ( . t ■1 1 ■i ■I i i i ' 1 1 VII.lt t lilM LH 1 . i ■. i r 1 1 i i i • i ■i — . ii I . ■i . v it i M l.l 1 1.1 ijel 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' i Rnlr chit olrv 1 t It 1 l UKMI||,SK 1 j I I It I 1 t I l 11 iliriwt ■I 1 i - I h i rtiMi fl Mii Ho ud Li Lift UiitXl ul 11 1 .iiit I ' llilfi ' 1 It I II 1 Li It n.lul • MINll ' MIIII I )l INI II I rit: l £ h i v t) I nMt 1 l ' A 1 « 1 1 1 h If( 1 1 ■I i i 1 i i I i 1 , 1 l 1 1 1 1 ,T 1 l V ltllilll.111 Lt he! nchlcsmger lit It II I ) I 1 1 1 1 1 t t I i i i i ' 1 1 ■■1 1 ■l i i t I 1 1 1 M l N It 111 ( ■1 Iff ' 1 ( ' 1 V 1  i V 1 I 1 H t   1 t I I t 1 ill i a r k Simii ii ii or 1 J 1 1 1 lil I 1 t H 1 11 It t I 11 1 1 1 i ■1 i ■1 i 1 I i i W ) 1 lit 11 11 1 1 l 1 1 1 lv ' it mm r lite ( • i A LVill Mill lilt V 1 1 1 V I ' llll ' t l 1 ' 1 V 1 ( 1 ' (  I 1 .IM.I ,111 Ivlt Vtl lvrt Ip Spn writ 7Pi y i t it k ' i 1 1 w 1 1 ,t i I 1 1 ' ) 1 1 1 1 ' 1 ' .l ii W 1 1 .ii.iiiii.i i ' i i 1 VI JNt V lt_ 1 N I t Ml I II f M ' f l N ' 1 l ' 1 VP I 1 Ilt It i il iTlit t 1 . il i,t ililil ni vt fl 1 ■i 1 1 i ■i 1 ' , i ■, , i i i r i i p 1 1 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 ' I ( M 1 1 1 1 1 H ' II ilt I vilMlillllllilll 1 ' i r 1 1 ' 1 ■i - i ■i i i 1 1 ■i 1 1 1 . 1 I 1 1 .. 1 1 1 Nt lllllt til ill il ' V 1 1 1 1 v V r 1 1 • w Rl i .. l ,l It N I 1 1 1 lYt PoiW ' WlhC ( ill ' l MfT 1 t lit HI Lit t III l lilt 1 I 1 1 ( 1 VI 1 llWvlM r . 1 lllllt t( . H NN II 1 ' it Ili ' l ' MWi - 1 i ■1 i ■1 jvdiiit i nit on tvt in J A 1 1 1 1 1 1)111 Ho 1 ■1 - 1 1 ■( i i i ■- 1 - 1 , t i LjIMt V Ilt JMMI . i ip I i nor 1 ,n||KP SlIlOrtY IjtMllNt. nllll DA 1 lii il ' I ' SlllMW I_il t tllltM IJtll lit 1 (1 1 i 1 wt 1 1 rirav i , 1 1 . i ' i 1 1 iiti Mi VI l ( t l l 1 M( 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 it i troii itiiin i i t i i ll R n Rnmo 1 1 1 1 l 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 N I nllKn ( ■l ' i ■i 1 l i - i 1 ill 1 A HI 1 Nt - II t t M.I .ill i 1 i i i ■A 1 i i r ' i ■i i 1 i ■r i i . Mllt , 1 1 M gl IljSut III 1 It l 1(1 tJ l ( 1 j M Tn v ( 1, i 1 1 -i r ' I a V . I I I . U . IjI J 1 ' l It V 1 I t 111 I? nth f n««! it til M ..Jiwr ' i.TP ■Jtiint lit mt nit i M Ruth Carroll Ruth Hakes Agnes Nolns Camilla Stewart Therese Cassel Margaret Hart Marian ( )berndorfer Natalie Stewart Amelia ( ' lenient Irma Heiden Louise ( )ekers Stella Strauss .Molly Conroy Anna Hermann Alice ( ) ' ( lorman Elizabeth Thomson Helen Coombs Alice Hill Mary Polhemus Kate Tiemann Laila Coston Madeline Hirsh Helen Porter Blanche Van Anda Helen Crandell Charlotte Hodge Marion Pratt Anna Van Buskirk Harriet Currier Margaret Hogan Ottilie Prochazka Charlotte Verlage Edith Deacon Florrie Holzwasser Frances Randolph Adelaide Waite Agnes Denike Olga Ihlseng Marguerite Reynar Amy Weil Evelyn Dewey Louie Johnson Mabel Reid Linda Weymann Mildred Dodge Mai jorie Johnston Mamie Rivkin Helen Wilkes Isabelle Doming Ethel Kempton Helen Runyon Geraldine Willets Mary Wilson Total 113 117 lie fttstxrrg of (Class of 191 1 In ye words of ye ancient sage Ye will hear often from ye History ' ' wherein lies a manifold meaning. And ye sage spoke no false saying. For it is known by all men (and women) that History may be repeated in divers ways and by divers people, and accordingly ye Chronicler once again taketh up ye rusty pen to set down in ye ancient way ye deeds and achievements of His Own People. And like all chroniclers, that way is perchance too much His Own Way. But, because of ye long residence among His People, ye Chronicler has overcome this common evil, and he now endeavours to set down as an example for all chroniclers, and for all coming, going and gone genera- tions, a modest yet truthful tale of ye class of 1911. Ye Chronicler has carefully culled ye wealth of interesting lore, and hereafter follows only such facts as are of common interest to all men. Ye Chronicler feels himself bound down by ye confines of these pages, and only ye rudest outlines can be given. Be that as it may, it stands that ye Chronicler essays an interesting subject. Ye class has always been under a burden — ye inability to get what they set out for. Ye other classes may not think in this manner, but it is true as regards ye inner spirit. But ye class deserves credit for striving to uproot ye ancient evil, and they have succeeded right well, so that ye evil never was noticed by ye other classes. They tried hard last year when they gave a Freshman show, and it seemed to find favour in ye eyes of ye critical staff of ye college. Ye papers decreed that it was of good merit — but then, who is there to believe the Press? (For evidences of its real worth, inquire of Somebody Around College). Lately we had another Ming at ye ancient art — ye Chronicler means Ye Little Minister, not a Highland fling — and once again ye vulgar mob was appeased, and ye academic atmosphere was lifted visibly for ye week-end. Ye Bulletin gave it some few kind 118 words, and only punctuation was at times not clearly distinct, but which detail may have been forgotten. For ye greater breadth of mind, ye class devotes part of its time to other necessary evils, such as Field Day, and Greek Games, and ye Athletics in General. On the whole, 1911 does not turn readily to ye gentle sports, because ye other classes feel badly to be left so in ye rear. Ye Chronicler does not believe such a state of affairs, so sad and much to be lamented, can be wholly unconscious, but it always seems to happen to 191 1 — without ye open consent of ye said class ye basket-ball fiends ambled gently along their way, with ye spirit of victory on board and on top, but full of good cheer. In ye Greek Contest of Games they lost because of ye old superstition that ye Freshmen should lose, and ye College decreed that they gracefully did all things but ye Ancient Greek Chorus. But on ye Day in ye Field (which was spent in ye Pedagogical Gym) ye evil habit returned and ye College was lost in ye rear once again. It was ye manner of thing 1909 had done years ago (wherefore the wrath of the Powers). But ye hearts of 1911 had ever gone out to ye hearts of 1909, and ye young ones in ye way of ye College decreed to follow suit. And in ye manner of all good fellows, ye Freshmen ended their year with some nutritious food at a nearby inn down-town, and His Honour Soangataha was placed dutifully on ye shelf for some few days of ye vacation till September. At which time he did valiant work with his hatchet, at ye direful Mysteries, and ye Chronicler records that ye Freshmen fell back into ye rear along with ye other classes. And now ye Chronicler leaves his Own People to fight their way for another year, and with Soangataha at ye head and some Reverence and Enthusiasm in ye hearts of ye class, he fears not for their future. 119 i m b_ GCVOC ' .pOtTOV CLASS COLOBS . . DARK BLUB AND BUFF GLASS FLOWER . . . TEA ROSE CLASS MASCOT . . • DRAGON (Offirrrfi CORNELIA DAKIN ANNIE WILSON ELEANOR DOTY FLORENCE VAN VRAIs ivl .... ROSALIND CASE President Vice-President Recording Secretary ( ' orresponding Secretary Treasurer ELEANORE MYERS 120 istorian (Class of WW 2 Florence Anderson Elsa Heller Marion Rice Jennie Auerbach Rowena Hendricks Ethel Richardson Georgina Berrian Blanche HershHeld Frances Rogers Helen Black Phebe Hoffman Grace Rogers Sarah Blumgarten Ernestine Isabel Marion Roy Ida May Blount Elizabeth Jones Donna Sceva Hilda Boegehold Frieda Jud Etta Schweis Edna Booth Bertha Junghans May Scully Gertrude Borchardt ( ' aroline Kahn ( iladys Segee Maude Brennan Irene Keenan Lewise Seymour Hazel Bristol Marguerite Kerr Marie Shehan Bessie Bunzel Isabel Koss Doris Shelley Hazel Burkholder Margaret Kutner Lena Sinn Pauline ( ' aim Paula Lambert Virginia Smith Rosalind ( !ase Lucy Landru Alice Solis Georgia C ' erow Susan Leerburger Margaret Southerton Ceeile Chilton Irene London Dorothy Spear Margaret Clarihew Amanda Loughren Elizabeth Stack Grace Coffin Lillian Mac Donald Beatrice Stegman Lena Cohen .Jennie Mac Kay Lillie Stein Molly Coyle Alice Martin Jessie Stevenson Catherine Craddoek Eleanor Mathews Mary Stine ( !ert rude ( ' usack Lugarda Mayer Maude Taylor Cornelia Dakin Isabel McKenzie ( lora Thees Irene Dalgleish Eleanore Meyers Ruberta Thompson Mary Diehl Alma Misch Edith Valet Eleanor Doty Lucile Mordecai Florence Van Vranken Katherine Fanehcr Edith Morris Constance Von Wahl ( trace Fischer Isabelle Morrison Lillian Wackwitz Rebecca Fishel Louise Nyitray Catherine Walther Louise Fitz Marjorie O ' Connell Margaret Watson Elinor Franklin Paula Oellrich Mary Wegener Shirley Gleason Margaret O ' Rourke Lucille Weil Irene Glenn Helen Phillips Mildred Weiner Elizabeth Gray Pamela Poor Annie Wilson Genevieve Greene Elsie Ralph Mrs. Emily Wilson May Greenwold Emma Rapelye Jennie Woodruff Harriet Hale Elizabeth Ready Elsa Wunderlich Anna Hallock Elizabeth Reardon Edna Ziegler Mildred Hamburger Florence Rees Alice Zimmer Edith Hardy Vera Rees Marjorie Zucker Florence Hazel Clare Reese Total 121 An historic %dt of 19 12 I WRITE aboul a hero who. Perhaps, is known to all of you. I tell a strange adventure he Encountered not so long ago, But that I deem few people know, So, prythee, listen patiently. II He wandered forth one autumn day, And by a river chanced to stray, Upon whose bank a castle tall, Reared its gray walls majestic ' ly. Aha, methinks I ' ll seek, quoth he, The shelter of yon goodly hall. IV Said he, I am an aged man, A lord of high degree, I am, And known to all both near and far. Sir Wisdom I am called — but you, I prythee, stranger, tell me, do, Your rank and name and what you are. ' ' Good sir, the knight replied, I fear I must entreat your kindness here, For I have sworn an oath that naught Shall make me tell my name until Some beauteous sight my heart shall fill With passion that I long have sought. Ill No sooner said than done, for straight ( )ur hero reached the castle gate And begged for hospitality. A lord with hoary beard and hair Came out to bid him welcome there, W ith gracious cordiality. 122 VI And so our stranger roamed around Sir Wisdom ' s halls unknown, and found I till many a fine and wondrous sight. The library was guarded by A bulldog with a watchf ul eye, That n ' er was known to bark or bite. VII Hut old Sir Wisdom ' s favorite haunt as where an ancien! bird was wo ii Unceasingly to hover round — A splendid owl so fair and strong That Wisdom loved to nestle long Beneath its great wings soft and brown. VIII Hard by the owl ' s retreat, our knight Beheld, one day, a wondrous sight— A fiery dragon, guarding e ' er A treasure — such a noble prize, That e ' en our hero ' s eager eyes Were not allowed to see it there. IX But often he would linger by The dragon — with admiring eye Beholding all her queenly ways. Thai all adored her it was plain — The bull dog loved to entertain Her with his clever cirrus plays. X And in the castle everyone Rejoiced to give her mirth and fun. So harmony reigned over all, Until one day an angry howl Disturbed the musing of the owl. Ami harshly echoed thro ' the hall. XI And straight an Indian, red and white With rage, burst forth into the light. 0 dragon, tremble now, he said, For deep in mystery you shall die! The dragon glared with fiery eye— The Indian trembled, turned and tied! XII Aye, fled with many a mournful howl, And as he disappeared, t he o 1 Proclaimed a joyful victory. Ah, noble one, he cried, how long Must I be burned with passion strong, Fair dragon, won ' t you marry me? XIII Dear lover, dragon whispered low, That you are faithful well I Know, So let us wed without delay. Forthwith in just a week or more, With splendor never seen before, In matrimony joined were t hey. XIV The owl and dragon (happy pair!) Were greatly touched on finding there Our hero, who d been helping, too, To celebrate their wedding day, So they resolved that right away, Their wondrous treasure he should view. XV And so the | or1 als t hat did hide That marvel slowly opened wide, And eagerly our knight did pass Within, but there he stood, with eyes That feasted on the golden prize — Before him stood -the Freshman class! XVI h, wondrous sight, he murmured then When shall I see your like again? With you I ' ll stay in happiness Forever, and the oath I swi ire Conceals my name and me no more- — My name, () dragon, is — Success! 123 (Class af I9W $tstorg of % Class of 1 9 10 Jfrcsltman $ear In reviewing the history of the class of 1910 one is struck by the steady upward sweep of history in its absolute continuity (see Vol. Ill, Anyone ' s History A. lecture notes, 1907-08). Space forbids, however, that we should depict our progress in minute detail. It will be the historian ' s business to select those things which are fundamental and vital and to omit all which are futile and irrelevant, merely mentioning a few things of passing interest — in brackets, of course. When we first entered Barnard — 101 strong — we were easily distinguish-able from the other classes in two ways — we needed little urging to subscribe to the College periodicals, and we could be seen vainly trying to evolve order out of the chaos of the catalogue. [Later on we learned to let the office do the evolving.] Like all Freshmen we had come to college to study, and for a time our conversation was confined to discussions about the Capture of Quebec, the Odes of Horace, Infinity, etc. But after the excitement of choosing our class colors, our motto and our yell, and especially after the important class elections, we began to turn our attention to other things. We elected as Freshman president, Gertrude Hunter; vice-president, Mabel Palliser; corresponding secretary, Ray West; recording secretary, Grace Reeder; treasurer, Mary Bailey; and historian, Mabel Elder. 127 With these capable leaders tainments to Freshmen. First we spent a busy, profitable and pleasant afternoon. in our van, we prepared to meet the onslaught of enter- came the Mysteries; the Sophomore entertainment, when At the 1908 party we attended a delightful combination of county fair and vaudeville, had our silhouettes done. and were told our future. The Seniors introduced us to the dramatic side of college life and gave us The Cool Collegian ; and we learned for the first time that Barnard girls make fine men. By this time we realized that the principal function of every one at college was to entertain 1910, and it was no surprise to us when 1(H)!) gave us a free performance of The Amazons. Needless to say we enjoyed it, and added another item to our growing store of information — that 1909 girls make finer men. It was a blow to us when upper-classmen finally stopped giving us parties, but we soon grew to know the strength of our own resources, and began to do the entertaining ourselves. After surviving mid-years we started in to practise for the Freshman Show; and on .March 1 and 2 presented When Mr. Shakespeare Comes to Town, written by Elsie Plant and Sulaniith Silverman and coached by Edith Somborn, 1906. Elsie Plaut managed this production most ably. The class liked it because there were more than enough parts to go around and because every- one had carte blanche to be as funny as she wanted. We know the jokes were good because the Bulletin said so. Encouraged by our success, we went in for the Under- grad play, and won more parts than any other class. The six who acted in Old Heads and Young Hearts were Lilian Egleston, Harriet Fox, Gertrude Hunter, Dorothy Kirchwey, Mabel Palliser, and Hay West. We now turned our attention to athletics, and in the Greek games made the best Freshman score ever, only losing to L909 after a hard struggle. The lots had been in the Sophomores ' favor; and even Hazel Woodhull ' s and Mabel McCann ' s jumping could not conquer Fate. Between Creek games and Field Day we amuset instance, we gave a party and bridal shower to Maude Penrose, who had just announced her engagement, Later on we became accustomed to these events and ceased to celebrate them. 128 d ourselves in various wavs. For On Field Day, we decided that the most polite thing to do was to allow most of the points to go to our sister class. In this we were successful and scored a novelty. Our last meeting as Freshmen took the form of a luncheon at the Hotel Regent, where we listened to toasts and prophesies, and where each of us promised every one of her class-mates to write often during the next three months. After this last burst of Freshman optimism we separated for the summer. 129 Uttycn Mr. l)akespcarc (ttmnes to %aton 0oWs Peter Pan Rasters Jttusic, iLaou, 3t ion ano tin Jrlouse Written by ELSIE PLAUT and SULAMITH SILVERMAN Given in two doses by the Class of ioio on March i and 2, 1907, at Brinckerhoff Theatre, Barnard College Taken all in all, this is our Freshman Show, and we shall not look upon its like again. Prologue (by Grace Reeder) Mr. Shakespeare Times Telegram Herald World Sun Journal The Critics ' tao,clanii People The Lion The Mouse . Music Master Fraulein Jenny . Her German Friend The Spaghetti Man Mlle. Modiste . Milliner, the First Milliner, the Second Chorus Lady Peter Pan Wendy . Michael Epilogue § tact,estruck People, alias iBarnaro -:§Tnocnts Fri Juniors Mathematics Latin A English A Chemistry 6 . French 2 Economics A Music English Elizabeth Nitchie Helen Crossman Bertha Firebaugh Mary Bailey Tessie Barrows Elise Eddy Julia Wagner Lilian Egleston Sophomores Seniors Botany 52 History A English B German 6 Psychology A Cooking . English 23 Italian 2 . Margery Eggleston Mabel B. Palliser Muriel Ivimey Ethel Shaw Elsie Plant Vora Jaques Mary Nammack Harriet Fox Dorothy Kirchwey Adelaide Loehrsen Gretchen Franke Naarnie Maison Alma Wiesner Clarice Auerbach May Herrmann Stella Hopewell Rose Slawter Hazel Woodhull Ray West Marion Monteser Miss Marion Filer Gertrude Hunter Johanna Schwarte Marion Weinstein Mabel McCann Edna Fancher Florence Hopewell Helen Worrall Maud Penrose Gladys Bonfils Note: QUITE some time is supposed to have elapsed between Acts I and II Lyrics by Edna Fancher Orchestral Accompaniments by the Mandolin Club. 131 •§HipIinnuuT Wear With the coining of Sophomore year the class of 1910 was plunged into an endless round of college activities We looked in vain for the traditional systematized leisure, and concluded in despair that times had changed. Our officers for Sophomore year were: President, Mabel Palliser; vice-president, Hazel Woodhull; corresponding secretary, .Mabel McCann; recording secretary, Hetty Dean; treasurer, Ray West; historian, Elizabeth Nitchie. The first thing we noticed about Sophomore year was that it was hard, and that studies seemed to interfere constantly with our college course. We are glad to be able to state that our Acting Dean has confirmed our opinion; he has proved conclusively by means of a diagram that Sophomore year is the hardest year in college. To relieve the mental strain caused by History A and English B, we took Physical Ed. at Teacher ' s College and disported ourselves scientifically. At least three girls found that they could climb the ropes. After much urg- ing from Hazel Woodhull and Miss Calhoun, a really respectable number turned out fox basket-ball practice. We almost always had two line-ups; but the team-work was slightly marred by the fact that all four girls at one end of the held usually tried to play forward at once. We found that this was a democratic and indeed a useful practice — the ball was easily thrown into the basket. However, we lost to 1011 in the Freshman- Sophomore game. The members of our team were: Hazel Woodhull, captain, Mary Nammack, Daphne Dieterich, Nannette Hamburger, Mabel McCann, and Maude Emery. During the first term of Sophomore year we took part in am 132 managed a great many activities. Violetta Jackson organized our Mysteries, and introduced several novelties. The Sophomore Play, Next Door, was managed by Florence Rose with great success; the members of her committee were Grace Meier, Muriel Ivimey, Julia Wagner, Gladys Bonfils, Mabel Palliser, and Hazel Woodhull. The class found a new friend in our coach, Mrs. Jessup. Mary Bailey was chairman of the Sophomore Dance committee, and was aided by Marguerite Druding, Lilian Egleston, Edna Heller, Ethel Lawrence, Mabel Palliser, and Hazel Woodhull. On December 20 we held our dance in the Brinckerhoff Theatre and had a jolly time, with just the right combination of class, college, and Christmas to put us in good spirits. Just before mid-years Elsie Plaut got up a vaudeville show for 1908, in which any one acted who could do a stunt. But it was in the second term of Sophomore year that 1910 really began to show its originality. In the Mid-year Finale given by the college, the Sophomores presented the first Barnard Shadow Show to the accompaniment of Daphne Dieterich ' s lovely singing. The Greek Games were managed by Dorothy Kirchwey with her committee, Elizabeth Nitchie, Daphne Dieterich, Maud Emery, Christella MacMurray and Mabel McCann, and were a great improvement over the Games of other years. They were more distinctively Greek than heretofore; they were a great deal more dignified and impressive; and the Greek chorus was really beautiful. The chorus is indebted to Mrs. T. Leslie Shear for help in the planning and arranging of the costumes. Lilian Egleston composed the music and Elizabeth Nitchie translated the Greek for the song. Not the least part of the affair was the new kind of triumph held the next day by 1910 and 1911. Another great innovation which 1910 carried through successfully was the Sophomore Tea managed by Elsie Plaut. It was at this tea that we realized anew the artistic value of our colors — brown and gold. Again, in our second dance we showed our originality not only in planning new and attractive favors for the cotillion dances, but in deciding to have a dance at all. The success of our entertainment was clue to our Entertainment Committee, Elsie Plaut, chairman, Grace Reeder, Ethel Shaw, Helen Crossman, and Laura Stryker. The combination of Field Day and the Undergraduate Tea proved a complete success, although, as usual, the Field Day part of the afternoon was damp and threatening. 1911 134 1 1 •■ipfc won Field Day, as they well deserved to; but 1910 boasted several first places — namely, high jump and baseball throw, both won by Hazel Woodhnll. Again we ended our year of college life together with a luncheon — this time at the Hotel Majestic — and said good-bye to our president, Mabel Palliser, who was leaving Barnard for Yassar. During the summer of 1908 we still kept up our intercourse with one another; for, at Clarice Auerbach ' s suggestion we started a Round Robin— or rather several of them— and each girl told the class in general what she was doing and where she was, and incidentally wrote down what gossip she hail heard about the i ;irls who had already put in letters. Before college opened, on September L4th, Daphne Dieterich was married at St Paul ' s chapel to Mr. Schuyler Imbrie. 135 SOPHOMORE BASKET BALL TEAM B R O K S H A L L Architect ' s Drawing 1 %l]c Class of HUH PRESENTS AS ITS SOPHOMORE PLAY By ELEANOR MAUDE CRANE November 8th and 9th, 1907 Dramatis Personae Professor Courtney Martin M. B. Palliser Will Webster L. Egleston George Chester D. Kirchwey Fred Harper S. Silverman Orange ■B. Firebaugh Betty Armstead Grace Henderson Mrs. Thornton Harriet Fox Alice Armstead . , . . . . Mary Nammack Kathleen Covington Hazel Woodhull Bobs A Puppy Acts I, II, Suburban Cottage on Long Island Act III, Mrs. Thornton ' s House in Town 139 Junior Wear . Tlio first thing 1912. With such When 1910 returned to college as Juniors, we found many changes in the building, notably the conversion of the old Sophomore Study into a reading-room. We were sorry to miss 1911 from our end of the hall; but we realized that after 1910 had once occupied the Sophomore Study, it could not be profaned by any following class. Our officers for Junior year are: President, Lilian Egleston; vice-president, Grace Reeder; corresponding secretary, Vora Jaques; recording secretary, Helen Crossman; treasurer, Helen Worrall; historian, Agnes O ' Donnell. In between the times when we have been learning how to file cuts at the office, we have busied ourselves with in- numerable activities. Perhaps some of us think that life is easy and sing our joy aloud, but the majority have their hands fi which has occupied our attention has been welcoming our sister class, a responsive set of sisters, it is no wonder that we have enjoyed every bit of our inter- course with them. It was at their invitation that we undertook to prosecute 1911 in a great trial. Of course we won our case; the defendants did not even show fight, but beat a hasty and ignominious retreat. At our party to 1012, Lilian Egleston, our president, was married to Annie Wilson, the Freshman chairman. It was a large and prosperous wedding, and friends and relatives of all ages and all times attended. Uncle Sam, Fluffie Ruffles, Teddy Roosevelt, Henry VIII, his six wives, and dozens of other guests came in full costume. Gertrude Hunter officiated at the ceremony, which was short and — er — impressive. It was managed by the entertainment committee: Bertha Firebaugh. chairman, Clarita Crosby, Mildred Downs, Edna Fancher, Naarnie Maison. Our last and greatest achievement has been our Junior Show, Monsieur Beaucaire. Under the management of Grace 140 Meier, aided by Clarice Auerbach, Marguerite Druding, Edna Heller, Bessie Holzman, Mary Nammack, Florence Read, Lilian Egleston, and Graca Reeder, we presented what has been called the best Junior show ever. Lilian Egleston, Gertrude Hunter, and Mary Nammack played the three leading parts, and the class felt ful ly rewarded for their work by the ap- preciativeness of the audience. We are looking forward to many more college events in this and our Senior year. Our Junior Hall is being managed by Mabel McCann, Ethel Shaw, Helen Savitz, Hazel Woodhull, Grace Hen- derson, Ethel Lawrence, Helene Wise, and will un- doubtedly be a grand suc- cess. With our basket-ball team — Nannette Hamburger, captain, Margery Eggleston, Rosetta Piatt, Mabel Mc- Cann, Bessie Holzman, Clarita Crosby, Maud Emery — we hope to win many games. It will be a pleasure, also, to see other classes trying to equal our past achievements, for we that we have raised the standard effectually — although we cannot help others will stay just a trifle down balow. And as for our Mortarboard — well, how do vou like it? mall then know fearing that the 141 GREEK CHORUS. Words by Elizabeth Niti hie. Music by Lilian Egleston. 3 3 4- 4 -c- i i i - s n jr •  .0- E - ros, un-conquered in strife ; Eros in thrall all things hold - ing, Resting the whole night 4 -5 ± -f=2- iF- m m :-T _J N q=pj: =h=l= :ta= i— I- tliroujjh . on the soft blooming cheeks of the maidens ; O ' er the sea. . . . dost thou ma and -(52- 42- - - - 9- -22- 5±fe HE dwell ' st in the halls of the rus-tics: Thee there is none can es-cape, nei 42. - - -•- 1 I ther of gods nor of b 7 € 2 8= F l -r i m nidi- - tals, Men who live but a day. -l — On those whom thou holdest conies madness. tz .(SZ- tz_ T II The music, by Lilian Eelcston, was suggested by an old Greek chant. The words, by Elizabeth Nitchie, are a translation of the Love Chorus from the Antigont of Sophocles. 144 Eros, unconquered in strife, Eros, in thrall all things holding, Hosting the whole night through On the soft blooming cheeks of the maidens, Over the sea dost thou roam And dwell ' st in the halls of the rustics. Thee there is none can escape, Neither of gods nor of mortals, Men who live but a day ; On those whom thou boldest comes madness. The hearts of the just dost thou turn To evil aside for their ruin. Thou stirrest up anger and strife — Yea, e ' en among men that are kindred. Victorious aye is the love glance That passeth between youth and maiden ; It sits in the seats of the mighty, The peer of the law and its power; For never may mortals o ' ercome In strife with divine Aphrodite. 145 A ' (Laast Let ' s drink a toast to 1910, The class we love the best — And then, of course, to be polite, Let ' s drink to all the rest. A toast to Barnard College, then, And her bloomin ' facultee. And finally we can ' t leave out O ur University. So here ' s to those with whom we wor And those who work us here, Here ' s — well, let ' s be broad-minded- To our whole terrestrial sphere! MO Iftlje Wreck of tljc J oplfomorcs It was the good class 1910 That went to English B.; The professor had brought in a number of briefs .Marked B, C, F, and D. Of B ' s there were few, so little was said, The C ' s were soon out of the way, The D ' s were countless as grains of sand ; Of the F ' s there was plenty to say. The professor he sat behind his desk And slandered one brief with delight, And he watched how his words the victim pierced, Her face now red, now white. Then up and spake the poor maiden, Who scarcely a word dared say; ' ' I put it in the analysis, For I thought that the proper way. Last Tuesday you said it was ' Statement of Facts, ' To-day it ' Discussion ' should be. The professor passed his hand o ' er his brow, And a learned smile smiled he. Clearly and loudly rang the bell, All breathed a sigh of relief. These parting words the professor spake — Consult me on your brief! Come into the office my trembling Soph ' more, And do not tarry so, For I have a hundred other briefs To murder e ' er I go. Professor! I see an ' s-u-b, ' O say, what may it be? It means subdivide as far as you can! And he turned to page number three. Professor! I notice ' Incomplete, ' O say, what may it be? Some topic to write in sentence form, Begin with the article ' the! Professor! I think I see my mark, say, what may it be? But the professor answered never a word He ' d given the girl a 1). Then the maiden sadly took her brief, That deserved at least a ( ' ; And with pity she thought of the hls next year Who ' d repeat that English 15. And seven long days and nights she spent 1 n city libraries. She read the papers and magazines, And books and ologies. The issues she now reduced to four, The analysis all was done, The discussion ne ' er would be complete- She had only just begun. She stuck where before at hostile hosts, Some mighty shafts she had hurled, For the cruel professor refused to take As ref ' rence, the New York World. Her brief rewritten and folded Hat, Brought the maiden little reward. The professor raised her mark to D plus. The beast! her classmates roared. At noontime on the next Monday The maiden once more passed A third long brief into the box. And swore it was her last . The issues were stated in perfect form, The discussion was clear as could lie. The professor saw he could find no fault, So he raised her mark to C. The task of the maiden at last was done (And she only received a C). Would that such labor would save us all From repeating English B. 147 m)c HUH eardilti ' How far that little scandal throws its beams; so shines a bad deed in the daily press. Pcftfre cinlt After 1 It is a jolly sophomore Who goes off on a spree. mean exams with threatening marks, From nothing stop ' st thou me. II Pink books, pink books everywhere, My courage all did sink. Pink books, pink books everywhere, Of nothing could I think. in My marks did come — I understood, And fell down in a fit. They were all Z ' s (F was too good), So college I did quit. fltantco ! A trade last, other than on my sweet dispositi Slimness preferred. — G. Pshaw. Botany 51-52, Principles of the Morphology and Physiology of Plants. Prerequisite: 1. Unlimited knowledge (inherited or instinctive) of the morphology and physiology of all plants. 2. A vivid imagination. 8. A profound interest (assumed or otherwise) in the subject. 4. The art of coming early and staying late in the laboratory. 5. Five years ' experience in mind reading. 6. An inexhaustible amount of patience. 7. A humble and forgiving spirit. Students well prepared along these lines will find this a very helpful and interesting course. itfooks of the IJcar An authoritative article by Morthea Dahon entitled All My C uties. Numerous original photographs will accompany this effusion, including some perfect beauties from the Columbia Summer School. In fact, the author has solemnly agreed to send in at least one hundred photos. The illustrations alone will be worth the price of the book. t A book in a lighter vein is How I Retain My Juvenile Appearance by Maarnie Naison. Every young person interested in pleasing the public will immediately procure this work. 4 Social The Society for the Promotion, Propagation, Promul- gation, and Perpetuation of Proficient Puns report its first annual banquet. It was given in honor of the ten new members and to celebrate the annihilation of the S. S. W. At the close the President arose to make a speech, but the society was resourceful and a motion to adjourn was quickly put through. jHusinus of the (Senile Cmm Little D ' s in Latin, Little F ' s in Math., Makes a Freshman ' s troubles, And a parents ' wrath. Gather ye cuts while yet ye may, Old time is still a-flying; The Sytem that ' s in vogue to-day, To-morrow may be hieing. To the work that we do And the brains that we use, To the play we pursue, And the hours we lose. To the workfellows, too, — Work or play, as you choose- A Toast ! 148 SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF THE 1910 SEARCHLIGHT BORN IN SOPHOMORE YEAR SLAIN BY THE GRUEL HAND OF RE- LENTLESS FATE THE GOOD DIE YOUNG The Wages of Sin: or, A War on Cuts. W. T. Brewster. , Me, and Mine: or, Things of General Interest. C. Knapp. The Torment in Pleasure: or, How I Feel at Coll ege Teas. A. 0. Bechert. The. Power of Words: or. The Blows that Sear. H. M. Richards. A Social Pillar: or, You Can Count on Me. W. Braun. The Execution of Language: or, Vowels and How to Treat Them. A. Tassin. The Value of Research: or, What Athens Meant to Me. T. L. Shear. Faithful Achates: or, My Devotion to One. E. Kasner. French Chivalry: or, Henri and I. J. L. Gerig. The Beatific Self: or, I ' m So Happy. H. C. Brown. 1 19 ($n tltc ibcrh) of fymtgtyi ant jBtscusston (BEING A SCENE FROM LIFE, SELECTED TO ILLUSTRATE THE APPLICATION AT BARNARD OF THE THEORIES OF MR. JOHN STUART MILL.) Scene: Daily Themes. Time: 11.25 a.m., every Tuesday and Thursday. The Professor: I am going to read you a set of themes this morning by one person. Then I shall ask you to comment on them, both individually and as a set. (He reads one theme. A pause.) Professor: Are there any comments on this theme? (A pause.) Professor: Aren ' t there any comments on this theme? (A pause.) Professor: There are a good many comments that might be made on this theme. (.4 pause.) Professor: Well, I will read another theme. (He reads another theme. A pause.) Professor: Are there any comments on this theme? (A pause.) Professor: Well, anything else? (A pause.) Professor: I am to take it for granted, then, that this is a perfect theme? (A pause.) Professor: Or that you are absolutely indifferent to the theme? {A long pause.) Valiant Student (feebly): I don ' t altogether agree with the writer ' s point of view. Professor (encouraged): Well, how about the theme itself? (A pause.) Professor: Is it a good theme? (A pause.) Second Student (cautiously) : Doctor, isn ' t there some bad grammar in the second phrase of the third sentence of the first paragraph of that theme? Professor: Well, perhaps. But what about the theme as a whole? (A pause.) Professor: What do you think of the style? (A pause.) Professor: What do you think of the subject? (.4 pause.) Professor: How do you like it? (A pause.) Second Student (suddenly) : I think it ' s a right sweet thought. Professor (hastily) : Weli, I will read another theme. (Bell rings. Exeunt omnes. Curtain.) 150 |Jama Bama ttcrscs FROM THE SENIOR VERSION OF THE DIPPYDROME GIVEN BY THE CLASS OF 1909 TO THE CLASS OF 1912, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1908 Written by Florence Gerrish and Florence Wyeth. I Every little girl up here, Is afraid of the Dean, you know. He says, Take a D or two, And don ' t you dare go in the show. IV If you break a leg or two, And need the informaree, Just pay a call on Mrs. George, And politely ask, Please, may I have the key ' . ' II If you want to have some lunch, And you don ' t want to eat off the floor, You had better come down quick; In fact, you ' d better come the day before. V What are all these rows of chairs? Not a girl to be seen? Why — its the new kind of chapel!- Now, wasn ' t that mean? Ill If you want to rehearse, Where none will interfere, Put in your application now — Perhaps you ' ll get a room next year. VI If you hear a funny joke And with laughter you ' re ready t( You must keep it all inside, And run out of the building first. burst, VII Oh, see the lovely ventilators, They ' re supposed to bring in the air. But we have found a better use, j For we put our cups and papers there. 151 %i tin as $S }t is ranslateit Original passage: Puella amata! Mi cara, carior, carissima! Ad me, veni, adveni, perveni! I. First Prof ' s interpretation (with gestures and emotion). loved One, to me dear, dearer (boo! boo!) dearest! To my arms, come (boo! hoo!) Speed! hasten! (boo! hoo! Ou!). II. Stroud Prof ' s eonception (influenced by legitimate aid, edition de luxe). () esteemed object, subject of my admiration! Prithee move thyself in my direction. III. Third Prof ' s translation (scientifically inclined). O collection of stimuli that excites in the seat of my affections this pleasurable emotion! Accelerate the movement of thy pedal extremities and approach me! 12 Waltz 13 Two Step 14 Waltz . 1.5 Two Step 16 Waltz 17 Two Step 18 Waltz . 1!) Two Step 20 Waltz . 21 Two Step 22 Waltz . jjunior all ODrfcer of lanrpa 1 Waltz . a. Shaw I ' m Here Because I ' m Here 2 Two-Step L. Egleston Popularity ' ' And He Blames My Dreamy Eyes ' ' :5 Waltz . J. Wagner 4 Two-Step . D. Mahon Rainbow 5 Waltz . G. Hunter . There Never Was a (Jirl Like You 6 Two-Step . X. Thome . Mile. Mischief 7 Waltz . M M cCa n n Dearie 8 Two-Step . R. West . Woman, Lovely Woman 9 Waltz . . E. Plaut . . Old Faithful li) Two Step . E. Heller . I ' m So Parisian 11 Waltz . . M f ' ss Maltby Just Our Style INTERMISSION . Savitz . S. Silverman H. War rail H. Grossman G. Meier D. Dieterich X . Hamburger E. Lawrence The Transfer I). Kirchwey A.Shaw . Sweetheart Days Oh, the Deuce, What ' s the Use? Ask the Man Sympathy The One I Love the Best Gave That to Me ' I ' m a True Loving Wife I ' ll Show You How Society Swing We ' re Growing Fond of You Noah Knew a Thing or Two Merrily I Roll Along 1.52 He stood beside the swinging door That led to Barnard ' s halls, A youth whom oft we saw of yore A-holding up the walls. He used to gather in the mail. He had a smile most rare, He often leaned upon the rail With proud and haughty air. What Wilfred ' s work was, few did know, His labor, none could see; But he is here no more, and oh! The difference to me! JMmtk, Bunk Flunk, flunk, flunk, Marks the clock relentlessly As I long in vain to recover The facts that I ' ve crammed in me. O well for the lucky sharks, That they write without dismay! O well for the knowing grinds, That they win their reward this day! And cruel time drags on And my hair is growing hoar; But O for a hold on a vanished date, And a rule that returns no more! Flunk, flunk, flunk, Tis the knell of the Powers that Be! And a chance to retrace my wayward steps The Future holds for me. 153 JVppItei Dramatics Extensive Engagement! Indefinite Engagement! Until Further Notice! (The piiilolouij department Miss MEYER (Lite HHotaiuj Department PRESENTS PRESENTS PRESENTS Miss HIRST and Dr. KNAPP The Two Famous Stars The Leading Exjinneuts HERSELF Dr. RICHARDS and OF IN Miss LATHAM (Classical Utfe IN Second in IN The Lion and The Great Divide Command the Mouse (Earning $Haga Hiwkfii Miss Maltby in A Lady of Quality. Mr. Muller in A Gentleman of France. Mrs. Ligget in Her Own Way. Mr. Tassin in An English Daisy. Professor Lord in Foxy Grandpa. Professor Knapp in If I Were King. Mr. Sturtevant in The Merrymaker. Professor Brewster in The Fortunes of a King. Woonitow and Gardner in Boys Will Be Boys. Professor Shotwell in The Road to Yesterday. 154 History a. xtx ztz from jExams Note. — Give all dates, especially those of the future. Answers must be based on facts. I. 1. (1) Write a short sketch, definitely describing the evolution of mankind from creation to the millenium, physically, mentally, morally, socially, politically, economi- cally, educationally, consitutionally, historically, externally, internally, com- paratively, etc. Describe sources. German 3. 1. Uebersetzen Sie die folgenden Satze. (If you have read them before.) 2. Verdeutschen Sie Ausdriicke 5 und (i. (If you happen to know how.) N.B. — Exams don ' t count anyway. Omit 7 if you get tired. English 23. Fill out the following quotations from Wordsworth: 1. I cannot 2. How does the 3. but 4. Thou hast 5. Whither is — Use sensible, honest, simple language. Do not pad. English 52—1908. 1. Give a list of the reading you enjoyed in this course. (Must not exceed six pages.) 2. Of what use is a Brief? 3. Draw an outline Brief on — Style is the Woman. 4. Suggest briefly how English B might be made valuable. French A. Note. — A thousand pardons for taking up three hours of your valuable time. 1. Pardon us, but would you mind giving the principal parts of aller ? 2. Would you be so kind as to conjugate the verb to be ? 3. May we trouble you to explain the use of the Subjunctive? Latin A. Text Books used in these exams are the property of the College of the Department of Classical Philology and are to be returned (no violence!) at the close of the examination. Students should not mark up the property of the College of the Department of Classical Philology. 1. In above passage what sort of poetry did I say we had? (Use the Knappianesque system of deduction, for which I can offer no authority.) What are its laws? Are they obeyed? How? When? Why? Where? Because? Where else have you encountered such poetry? ALT A ANDERSON L97 Liberty Street Long Branch, N. J. Alta Anderson was born in Eatontown, N. J., on October 27, 1887. She prepared for college at the ( ' battle High School, Long Branch, N. J. She spent her Freshman and Sophomore years at Smith, and then transferred to Barnard, entering the Junior Class this fall. She is specializing in English, which is her favorite subject. Pi Beta Phi. LILLIAN SOPHIA ANDERSON 318 Forty-third Street Brooklyn, N. V. Lillian Ai She prepared entering Ban ISSN. Since C. A. derson was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., on January b lor college at the Girls ' High School in Brooklyn, lard she has been particularly interested in the Y. V In Sophomore year she was on the Membership Committee of that organi- zation and in Junior year on its Mission Study Committee. Her chief athletic interest has been swimming. After graduating from college, she expects to become a teacher. Her major as well as her favorite subject is Mathematics. 150 CLARICE AUERBACH 304 West 87th Street New York City Clarice Auerbach was born in New York City on May ' _ ' . ' !, ISSN. She prepared for college at the Ethical Culture High School. Her principal athletic interests in college ha ve been basketball and tennis. She is a member of the Athletic Association and was a Vice-Elector of the College Settlement Association in 1 HOT- 1 DOS. She has held the following positions: Study Decoration Committee, 1D07-1D08; Freshman Reception Committee, fall of 1908; Undergraduate Tea Committee; Junior Show Committee. She took part in the Freshman Show and in the Junior Show. She is specializing in Social Science; her favorite study is Sociology. MARY WITTER BAILEY Grace Church Clergy House 92 Fourth Avenue, N. Y. C. Mary Bailey was horn in Branford, Conn., on October 7, 1SSS. She prepared at Mrs. Leslie Morgan ' s School for Girls. Her athletic interests in college have been tennis, archery, and the Greek Games, and she is a member of the Athletic Association. She took part in the Freshman Show and in the Undergrad in 1908. She has held the following positions: Freshman year, Class Treasurer and Vice- Elector of the C. S. A.; Sophomore year, Treasurer of the Y. W. C. A. and the C. S. M. A.; Chairman Membership Committee of C. S. M. A.; Associate Editor of the Bulletin, and Chairman of the Sophomore Dance Committee; Junior year, Vice-President of Y. W. C. A. and Assistant Business Manager of the Bulletin and of The Mortar- board. She is a Volunteer Student Assistant in History A. She is specializing in German, and her favorite study is Biology. Kappa Kappa Gamma. 157 TESSIE BARROWS 102 West 105th Street New York City Tessie Barrows was born in New York City on February 10, 1S89. She prepared for college at the Washington Irving High School and at the Wadleigh High School. Since entering Barnard she has been a member of the Philosophy Club and of the Ueutscher Kreis, in which organization she is on the Membership Committee for 1908-1909. She took part in the Freshman and Junior Shows and was in the Greek Chorus in Sophomore year. After graduating she expects to teach. Her major is German; her favorite study, Philosophy. LENA BOHAN 441 West Fifth Street Plainfield, N. J. Lena Bohan was born in Morristown, N. J., on August 29, 1888. She prepared for college at the Plainfield High School, Plainfield, N. J. Since she entered Barnard her interests have been varied. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A. and of the Deutseher Kreis. After gradu- ating from college she expects to become a teacher. She is specializing in her favorite subject, German. Chi Omega. 158 _ . . . . fjn GLADYS ALDEN BONFILS 147 Union Avenue Jamaica, N. Y. Gladys Bonfils was born in New York City, N. V ., on November 7, 18cS8. She prepared at the Jamaica Hi ;li School. In college she has been on the Undergraduate Tea Committee in 1906-1907, the Sophomore Show Committee, Chairman of the Y. W. C. A. Philanthropic Committee in 1907-1908, and on the Y. W. C. A. Finance Committee and The Mortar- board in 1908-1909. In athletics her interests have been tennis and swimming. She has written for the Bear, composed several songs, and contributed art work to The Mortarboard. She was in the Fresh- man Show. After graduating she expects to become a secondary teacher. Her major is German and her favorite study, Zoology. Pi Beta Phi. MADELINE BORLAND 116 East 37th Street New York City Madeline Borland was born in New York City on February 17. 1889. She obtained her preparation for college under private instruc- tors and at the Brereley School in this city. She entered Barnard as a regular but on account of illness in Freshman year she was obliged to drop the regular course and become a special. Her favorite subject is Economics. Kappa Kappa Gamma. 159 FRANCES BURGEE 1602 Eastern Parkway Brooklyn Frances Burger was horn in Russia on August 19, 1888. She pre- pared for college at the New Bedford High School, New Bedford, Mass. Since entering Barnard she has been a member of the Deutscher Kreis, La Societe Francaise, the Barnard Chapter of the Collegiate Equal Suf- frage League, and the Y. W. G. A. She has been interested in athletics, particularly track work. She lias been on the Program Committee of the Intercollegiate Socialist Club, and is now treasurer of that Society. After graduating she expects to teach and study for a higher degree. She is specializing in History, her favorite subject. CLARITA FRANCES CROSBY 3136 Hull Avenue Bedford Park New York City Clarita Crosby was born in New York City on September 2(i, 1889. She prepared for college at the Morris High School. Since entering Barnard she has taken part in Field Day and in basketball, and in the Greek Games in 1907. She has written several class songs and she was an Editor of the 1910 Searchlight. In 1907-1908 she was on the Class Decorating Committee and the Silver Ray Committee of the Y. W. C. A.; in 1908-1909 she was a member of the Class Entertain- ment Committee, of the Junior Reception Committee for Freshmen, Chairman of the Class Song and Cheer Committee, Class Cheer Leader, Treasurer of the Athletic Association, and a member of the Botany Club. She took part in the Junior Show. She is specializing in Biology; her favorite subject is Botany. Delta Delta Delia. 160 HELEN LOUISE GROSSMAN 105 Clinton Avenue Jamaica Helen Crossman was born on March 9, 1889, in Jamaica, N. V. She prepared for college at the Jamaica High School. Since entering she has been interested in tennis and the 1908 Greek Games. She is a member of the Athletic Association and of the Classical Club. In 1007-1908 she was on the Class Entertainment Committee, and in 1908-1909 she was on the Y. W. C. A. Devotional Committee, on the Class Executive Committee, and Recording Secretary of the class. She took part in the Freshman Play. She is majoring in Mathematics and expects to teach it after graduating. It is her favorite subject. Delta Delta Delta. HETTY ANNA DEAN Little Silver New Jersey Hetty Dean was born in Little Silver, N. J., on August 21, 1888. She prepared for college at the Newark Seminary, Newark, N. J. Since entering Barnard her interests have been varied. She was a member of the Class Executive Committee in Freshman year, Recording Secre- tary of the Class in Sophomore year, and on the Junior Ball Committee. She is a member of the Craigie Club. After graduating she expects to teach. She is specializing in English. Her favorite study is Sociology. Alpha Omicron Pi. 101 MILDRED DOWNS 75 Fairview Avenue Jersey City, N. J. Mildred Downs was born in Jersey City on July L ' 7, 1888. She prepared for Barnard at the Bergen School for Girls, Jersey City. Since entering college her chief interests have been athletics— par- ticularly javelin throwing in the 1908 Greek Games, and basketball. She is on the Scrub Team in basketball. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A., and for the year 1908-1909 is a member of the Missionary Committee. She is also a member of the Class Entertainment Com- mittee for the same year. She is majoring in Mathematics, her favorite study. MARGUERITE DOROTHY CECILIA DRUDING 144 West 104th Street New York City Marguerite Druding was born in New York City on January 14, INST. She prepared for college at the Normal College. Since entering Barnard she has been a member of the Athletic Association, the Craigie Club, and the Y. W. C. A. In 1906-1907 she was on the Freshman Show Committee; in 1907-1008 she was on the Sophomore Dance Com- mittee; in 1908-1909 she was a member of the Junior Show Committee and of the Executive Committee of the Craigie Club. She is specializ- ing in Biology, which is her favorite study. Chi Omega. 102 ELIZABETH VYSE DUN NET East 89th .Street, corner Avenue F Brooklyn Elizabeth Dunnet was born in Brooklyn, N. V., on November 10, 1885. She obtained her preparation for college at the Manual Training High School, Brooklyn. Since entering Barnard, in her Sophomore year, she has been particularly interested in the sciences, especially Zoology and Physiology. She expects to study medicine after graduat- ing from college. She is specializing in Zoology, which is her favorite study. ELISE SAVOYE EDDY 1!) West 34th Street Bayonne, N. J. Elise Eddy was horn in Bayonne, X. J., on September 28, 1.886. She obtaiued her preparation for college at the Newton High School, Newton- ville, Mass. Since entering Barnard she has been particularly interested in the Y. W. C A. and has done a greal deal of work in the Association. In Junior year she was a member of its Missionary Committee. After graduating from college she expects to become a teacher. She is majoring in Mathematics, and this is her favorite study. 163 MARGERY EGGLESTON ' M Central Avenue Tompkinsville New York Margery Eggleston was born on Staten Island, New York, on Novem- ber 18, 1888. She prepared for college at the Staten Island Academy, Staten Island. In athletics she took part in the Greek Games, both Freshman and Sophomore years, and she has been on the Class Basket- ball team ever since she entered. In 1 90(i— 1 !)07 she was on the Class Executive Committee; in 1 ()7 190S on the Class Pin Committee; and in 1908-1909 on the Swimming Committee of the Athletic Association; and on The Mortarboard. She is a member of the Deutscher Kreis, the Y. W. C. A., and the Philosophy Club. She took part in the Fresh- man Show and the 1908 Undergraduate Play. Her major as well as her favorite subject is Knglish. LILIAN HILLYER EGLESTON 707 North Broad Street Elizabeth, N. J. Lilian Egleston was born in Elizabeth, N. J., on .May 7, 1887. She prepared at Miss Porter ' s School, Farmington, Conn. In college she has been a member of the Collegiate Equal Suffrage League and the College Sett lenient Association. She has been Class Tennis Champion since Freshman year, and had charge of the Greek chorus in 1908. In 1006- 1007 she was Chairman of the Class Decoration Committee; in 1907- 1908 on the Class Song and Cheer Committee and the Deutscher Kreis Entertainment Committee; in 1908-100!) she was Class President and on the V. W. C. A. Chapel Committee. She was in the Freshman Show, the Undergrad Play, 1007, the Sophomore Show, and Junior Show. Her major subject is Music, and her favorite is Zoology. Kappa Kappa Gamma. 164 MAUDE EMMA EMERY 36 Avon Avenue Newark, N. J. Maude Emery was horn in Boston, Mass., on January 6, 1888. She obtained her preparation for college at the Newark High School, Newark, N. J. Since entering Barnard her interests have been chieflv athletic. She has pi; iyed on the 1910 Basketball Team since Fresh- man year, and she served on the Greek Games Committee in Sophomore year. She is a member of the V. W. ( ' . A. She is specializing in Latin, which is her favorite study. i ELIZABETH ENGLISH 521 West 179th Street New York City Elizabeth English was born in Ireland on July 0, 1888. She obtained her preparation at the Yonkers High School and at St. John ' s Academy in Yonkers. Since entering Barnard her interests have been varied. She is specializing in Latin, and this is also her favorite subject. After graduating from college she expects to go into teaching. 165 EDNA MARGARET FANCHER New Brighton Staten Island, N. Y. Edna Fancher was born in New Brighton, S. I., on February 3, 1889. She prepared for college at the Curtis High School, Staten Island. Since entering Barnard she has been a member of the Deutscher Kreis, Y. W. C. A., the Philosophy Club, and the Athletic Association. In 1906-1907 she was on the Freshman Show Committee, and in 1908- 1909 she has been on the Class Entertainment Committee, on the Philanthropic Committee of the Y. W. C. A., and Sub-Treasurer of the Undergraduate Association. She expects to teach after graduating. Her major subject is German, which is her favorite study. Alpha Phi. BERTHA HARRIET ITREBAUGH (id 7 East 163d Street New York City Bertha Firebaugh was born in Austin, Texas, on October 1, 1888. She prepared at the Morris High School. In athletics she has taken part in the Tennis Tournament, Greek Games, and Field Day, in Fresh- man year, and the Greek Chorus in Sophomore year. She belongs to the Classical Club. In 1906-1907 she was on the Y. W. C. A. Reception Committee and the Undergraduate Tea Committee; in 1907-1908 she was Chairman of the Silver Bay Committee and the 1910 Undergraduate Study Tea Committee; in 1908-1909 she was Chairman of the Class Entertainment Committee and on the Y. W. C. A. Devotional Com- mittee. She took pail in the Freshman Show and the Sophomore Play. She is majoring in Greek and Latin and expects to teach them. Her favorite study is Latin. Kappa Kappa Gamma. 166 CARRIE ORR FLEMINCi 450 East 26th Street Brooklyn Carrie Fleming was born in North East, Pennsylvania, on August 13, 1886. She prepared for college at the Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn. Since entering Barnard her interests ha ve been varied. In her Freshman year she was a member of the Undergraduate Tea Committee; in 1007 and 1908 she was an usher at the Freshman Show and the Sophomore Play; in 1908 she was a member of the Blue Book Committee of the Y. W. C. A. and Vice-President of the C. S. M. A. Her major and favorite subject is History. After graduation she expects to teach. MARIE LOUISE FLINT 4030 Richardson Avenue New York City Marie Flint was born on March 18, 1888, in New York City. She prepared for college at the Morris High School. She is a member of the Intercollegiate Committee of the Y. W. C. A., and was one of the Silver Ray Delegation from Barnard in Freshman year. Her chief athletic interests have been swimming and tennis. She is Secretary and Treasurer of the Barnard Chapter of the Collegiate Equal Suffrage League. She is specializing in Mathematics, which is her favorite subject. 16 ' , HARRIET RUTH FOX 622 West 152d Street New York City Harriet Fox was born in Bryn Mawr, Pa., on June 10, 1890. She prepared at Normal College. Since entering Barnard she has been Associate Editor of the Barnard Bear, 1907-1908, Editor-in-Chief, 1908-1909; Associate Editor of the Bulletin, 1908, and on The Mortarboard. She was in the Greek Chorus in 1908. She is a mem- ber of the Athletic Association, the Y. W, C. A., the C. S. M. A., the Philosophy Club, and the Collegiate Equal Suffrage League. She is a Student Assistant in the Philosophy Department. Her major subject is English, and she intends to teach it after graduating. Kappa Kappa Gamma. RAY MOORE FRAME 27 South 13th Avenue Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hay Frame was born in Mt. Vernon on June 23, 1S90. She pre- pared for college at the Mt. Vernon High School. Since she entered Barnard she has been a member of the Classical Club and the Y. W. C. A. In athletics her interests have been varied. She has taken part in the Greek (James and field Day, both Freshman and Sophomore years, and has gone in for basketball and swimming. In her Junior year she was a member of the Freshman Reception Committee. She expects to teach after graduating. Her major subject is Latin, which is her favorite study. 1G8 GRETCHEN MALWINE FRANKE Bound Brook New Jersey Gretchen M. Franke was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., on December 23, 188S. She prepared for Barnard at the Bound Brook High School. Since entering college her chief interests have been dramatic. She took part in the Class plays both Freshman and Junior years and also in the Deutscher Kreis play in 1908. She was Treasurer of the Deutscher Kreis in 1907-1908 and Vice-President in 1908-1909. In 1908-1900 she was a member of the (lass Executive Committee and of the French Play Heading Committee. She belongs to the Societe Francaise. Her future occupation will be teaching. Her major subject is German. MARIAN LATHROP GIBSON 529 West 123d Street New York City Marian Gibson was born in New York City on December 5, 1SS7. She obtained her preparation for college at the Englewood High Sd 1, Englewood, N. J. Since entering Barnard she has been a member of the Y. W. C. A., the C. S. M. A., the Athletic Association, and the Classical Club. In athletics her chief interest has been tennis. After graduating she expects to become a teacher. She is majoirng in Latin, which is her favorite study. ELEANOR LA VINE GRAHAM Greenville, South Carolina Eleanor Lavine Graham was born in Asheville, N. G, on August 23, 1SS8. She prepared for college at the Girl ' s Latin School of Balti- more. She entered college at the beginning of Junior year, trans- ferring from Randolph Macon Woman ' s College. She is specializing in German. Kappa Alpha Theta. N ANNETTE FRANCES HAMBURGER 58 East 128th Street New York City Nannette Hamburger was born in New York City on August 16, INNS. She prepared for college at the Ethical Culture High School. She entered Barnard at the beginning of Sophomore year. She has been much interested in athletics. She is Captain of the 1010 Basket- ball team, 1908-1909, and 1910 member of the Hockey Committee. She took part in Field Day in 190S and in the Greek Chorus that same year. She lias written for the Bear, composed Class songs, and contributed a rt work to The Mortarboard, of which she is Art Editor. She is a member of the Classical Club and of the Philosophy Club, and is Vice- Elector of the College Settlement Association, 1908-1901). 170 EDNA HELLER 21 West 90th Street New York City Edna Heller was born on March 23, 1890, in New York City. Prepara- tory to college she studied at the Horace Mann IIi di School. Her chief athletic interest since entering college lias been swimming. She is a member of the Society Francaise and served on the French Play Reading Committee in 1908. In Freshman year she served on the Class Decora- tion Committee and was a member of the Deutscher Kreis. She w as on the Sophomore Dance Committee and the Junior Show Committee. She is very much interested in Settlement work. She is specializing in the Romance languages and in German. Her favorite subject is French. GRACE HENDERSON Westchester New York City Grace Henderson was born in Westchester, N. Y., January 31, 1889. She prepared for college at the Morris High School. Since entering college she has been interested in tennis, basketball, swimming, and track work. She was in the Greek (lames, 1908. She took part in the Sophomore Play, in the Show given by the Sophomores to the Seniors, and in the Junior Show. In 1907-1908 she was a member of the Mys- teries Committee, and in 1908-1909 of the Entertainment Committee of the Young Women ' s Christian Association, and of the Junior Hall Committee. She belongs to the La Societe Francaise, the Philosophy Club, and the College Settlement Association. She expects to go into Journalism. She is specializing in English, and her favorite study is Literature. 171 MAY THERESE HERRMANN 112 East 65th Street New York City May Herrmann was born in New York City, on May 25, 1890. She prepared for college under private instructors. Her chief interest since she entered Barnard lias been in La Societe Francaise, of which she is a member. In Junior year she was Chairman of the French Play Reading Committee and on the Patrohness Committee of the French Play. She took part in the Freshman Show in 1906 and in the French Play in 1907. She is majoring in her favorite study, the Romance Languages. ANTOINETTE DYETT HILL 740 Belvedere Avenue Plainfield, N. J. Antoinette Dyett Hill was born on the 31st of January in the year 1887. Her birthplace is New York City, but she removed thence to Plainfield, N. J., which is now her home. It was at the High School in this town that she obtained her preparation for college. Since entering Barnard she has been interested in different phases of college life and in sundry college affairs, although she has taken no very active part in them. She is not specializing in her favorite subject, which is German. Her major subject is Mathematics. Chi Omega. 172 BESSIE HOLZMAN 149 Wes1 122d Streel New York City Bessie Holzman was born in New York City on November !), INNS. She prepared for college al the Wadleigh High School in this city. Since entering college she lias been interested in basketball and she was in the Greek Chorus in 1908. She belongs to the Deutscher Kreis, and is a member of the Executive Committee of that organi- zation for 1908-1909. She was is majoring in English. the Show Co She FLORENCE ISABEL HOPEWELL 532 Broadway Flushing, L. I. Florence Hopewell was horn on May Hi, ISSN, in Brooklyn, N. V. She obtained her preparation for college at the Flushing High School, Flushing, L. I. Since she entered Barnard she has been a member of the Y. W. C. A. She was in the Freshman Show in 1907. She has been particularly interested in her music and has devoted much time to its study. Her major as well as her favorite study is Latin. Delta Delta Delta. 173 STELLA LOUISE HOPEWELL .332 Broadway Flushing, L. I. Stella Hopewell was horn on September 29, 1886, in Brooklyn, N. Y. She prepared for college at the Flushing High School, Flushing, L. I. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A. In her Freshman year she took part in the Freshman Show; in Sophomore year she served as a sub- treasurer of the Undergraduate Association. Her chief interest during her college course has been in Music. She is specializing in History, which is her favorite study. Delia Delta Delta. GERTRUDE LAURA HUNTER 836 West Fourth Street Plainfield, N. .). Gertrude Hunter was born in Weatherly, Pa., on September 17, 1SSS. She prepared at the Plainfield High School. In college her chief athletic interest has been basketball. She contributed to the Bear, and wrote one of the Greek Games Epics in Freshman year. She was in the Freshman Show, the Undergraduate Play of 1907, and the .Junior Show. She was Class President Freshman year, Class Cheer leader, and Secretary and Treasurer of the Undergraduate Association in 1907-1908 and 1908-1909, respectively. She belongs to the Y. W. C. A. and the Athletic Association, and is Undergraduate Elector of the Col- lege Settlement Association. She is specializing in History, and her favorite subject is English. Alpha Phi. 174 RHODA MURIEL IV1MEY 60 Clinton Place University Heights New York City Muriel Ivimey was born in London, England, on November 1, 18X8. She obtained her preparation for college at the Morris High School. Since entering Laniard her chief interests have been athletic. In 1907 she took part in the Greek Games, and in 1908 she entered both the Greek Games and Field Day. She acted in the Freshman Show and in the Sophomore entertainment to the Seniors. She was also on the Sophomore Play Committee. She has been out of college dining 1908-1909, but expects to return next fall, entering the class of 1911. She has contributed to The Mortarboard. Here favorite subject is Botany, in which she is specializing. After graduating she expects to become a librarian. Alpha Phi. VIOLETTA JACKSON 900 East 107th Streel New York City Violetta Jackson was horn in Rye, N. Y.. on February 19, L888. She prepared for college at the Morris High School. Since entering Barnard, her interests have been varied. In Sophomore year she was Chairman of the Mysteries Committee, Secretary of the V. W. C. A., and on the Mission Study Committee of that organization; in Junior year she was on the Class Entertainment Committee, on the Y. W. C. A. Devotional Committee and President of the C. S. M. A. She is a member of the Classical Club. She is majoring in Latin, and languages are her favorite st udies. 175 MARY VOORHEES JAQUES 1 1 2 W. Jersey Street Elizabeth, N. J. Vora .Tuques was born in New York City, on July 7, 1889. She prepared for college at the Battin High School, Elizabeth, N. J. Her chief athletic interests in college have been tennis and swimming. She is a member of the Athletic Association. She was in the Freshman Show and took the part of Lord Molyneux in Monsieur Beaucaire. She is a member of the Societe Francaise, the Deutscher Kreis, the Philosophy Club, and the Y. W. C. A. She served on the Class Execu- tive Committee in Sophomore year and is Corresponding Secretary of the class for Junior year. Alpha Omicron Pi. DOROTHY BROWNING KIRCH WEY 908 St. Nicholas Avenue New York City Dorothy Kirchwey was born in Albany, N. Y., on September 3, 1888. She prepared for college at the Horace Mann School. Since entering college her athletic interests have been tennis and swimming. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A., the Athletic Association, and the Phil- osophy Club. She took part in the Freshman Show, the Undergraduate Play in Freshman year, and in the Sophomore Play. In 1906-1 907 she was Chairman of the Class Entertainment Committee; in 1907-1908 Chairman of the Greek Games Committee, and in 1908-1909 Editor-in- Chief of the Mortarboard. She received General Honors in Freshman year. She is specializing in German and English. Kappa Kappa Gamma. 176 ETHEL ELIZABETH LAWRENCE 535 Union Avenue New York City Ethel Elizabeth Lawrence was born in New York City on December 14, 1887. She prepared for college at the Morris High School. Since entering Barnard she has been interested in tennis, basketball, and track work. She was in the Freshman Relay Team on Field Day, 1907, and in the Greek Chorus, 1908. She took part in the Junior Show. In Freshman year she was on the Undergraduate Tea Commit- tee: in Sophomore year on the Sophomore Dance Committee and the Y. W. C. A. Reception and Entertainment Committee, and the follow- ing year she was on the Junior Ball Committee. Her major subject is Botany. CLARA ALICE LEWIS 87 Hamilton Place New York City Clara Lewis was born in Manchester, Yt., on December 7, 1886. She prepared for college at the Hughes High School, Cincinnati, Ohio. After completing her first year ' s work at the University of Cincinnati, she transferred to the Sophomore class at Barnard. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A., and in Junior year she was on the Class Executive Committee. Her major subject is Music, and this is also her favorite. Delta Delta Delta. ADELAIDE LOEHRSEN 2133 Third Avenue New York City Adelaide Loehrsen was born in New York City on May 23, 1887. She prepared for college at the Morris High School. Since entering college her interests have been chiefly in the Y. W. C. A. She was a member of its Bible Study Committee, and she was one of the dele- gation to Silver Hay in 1908. She has also done a good deal of settle- ment work. She took part in the Freshman Show. In Freshman year she was a holder of the Trustees Competitive Scholarship. She is majoring in Mathematics and expects to teach it after graduating. Her favorite studv is Botany. DORIS LONG 42 Lenox Road Brooklyn, N. Y. Doris Long was born in Babylon, L. I., on July 3, 1880. She pre- pared for college at the Babylon High School and at Berkeley Institute in Brooklyn. Since entering college she has been a member of the Inter-Collegiate Socialist Society, the Classical Club, the Y. W. C. A., La Societe Franchise, the Deutscher Kreis, and the Barnard Chapter of the Collegiate Equal Suffrage League. She took part in the Under- graduate play in 1908 and in the Junior Show. In Junior year she was chairman of the Intercollegiate Committee of the Y. W. C. A. She is specializing in English, which is her favorite study. 178 MABEL DOROTHY McCANN 69 Ashford Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Mabel McCann was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., on November 17, 1SSS. She prepared at the Jamaica High School. Since entering Barnard she has been on the Greek Games Committee in Freshman and Sopho- more years; on the Undergraduate Tea Committee, 1907-1908; Cor- responding Secretary of the Class for 1907-1908, and Chairman of the Freshman Reception Committee, 1908. She was on the 1910 Basket- ball Team, in the Greek Games, and the Greek Chorus in 1908. She was Treasurer of the Athletic Association in 1907-1908 and Vice-Presi- dent in 1908-1909. She is Corresponding Secretary of the Y. W. C. A. for 1908-1909. She was in the Freshman Show. She is Chairman of the Junior Ball Committee for 1908-1909. Her major subject is Chemis- try. Pi Beta Phi. JOSEPHINE McGRATH Livingston Manor New York Josephine McGrath was born in Liberty, N. Y., on November 21, 1887. She obtained her preparation for college at the Livingston Manor Public School, under the Regents, and at the Ursuline Academy in this city. Since entering Barnard her interests have been varied. In Junior year she became a member of the Craigie Club. She is specializing in Physics, and her favorite subject is Psychology. L CHR I STELLA FRANCES MacMURRAY Nyack, N. Y. Christella MacMurray was born in Elizabeth, N. J., on November 16, 1887. She prepared at the Plainfield High School. Since enter- ing college she has been, in Sophomore year, a member of the Y. W. C. A. Devotional Committee and of the Silver Bay Committee, and in Junior year, Chairman of the Mission Study Committee. She has also been on the 1908 Greek Games Committee, and Undergraduate Editor of the Bear for 1908-1909. In athletics she won first place in quoits at the 1907 Greek Games, and she has been interested in basketball. After graduating she expects to teach. Her major and favorite subject is English. DOROTHEA HELEN MAHON 229 West 138th Street New York City Dorothy Mahon was born in New York City on April 25, 1889. She prepared for college at the Horace Mann School and the Wadleigh High School. Since entering Barnard, in February of Freshman year, she has been interested in swimming and basketball. In Freshman year she entered the wrestling matches in the Greek Games. In the spring of Sophmore year she was one of the Barnard Delegation to the Silver Bay Conference; in Junior year she was on the Patroness Com- mittee of the French Play. She is a member of the Societe Francaise and the Craigie Club. She is specializing in Latin and Philosophy, .•mil her favorite subject is Ethics. 180 ELLEN NAAR MAISON 1470_Cahoon Avenue Ogden, Utah Naarnie Maison was born in New York City on January 30, 1888. She prepared for college at the Rutherford High School. Since enter- ing college her interests have been varied. She was an Editor of the ' ' 1910 Searchlight in Sophomore year. In 1906-1907 she was a mem- ber of the Class Decoration Committee, in 1907-1908 of the Class Song and Cheer Committee, and in 1908-1909 of the Class Entertain- ment Committee. She took part in the Freshman Show. After leaving college she expects to teach. Her major subject is Philosophy, which is her favorite study. MISS MARGARET E. MALTBY Brooks Hall Miss Margaret E. Maltby was elected by the Class of 1910 as its honorary member, in the spring of Freshman year. Every day since then we have had new cause to be glad that she is our classmate. In all our activities she has been constantly ready to join with us and to help us. She has acted as patroness at our plays and dances, and has been our hostess at several teas in the Electrical Laboratory. She has given us her counsel and advice when we needed it. Most of all, she has given each one of us a chance to know her personally, and therefore to feel that she is not only our classmate, but our friend as well. 181 LENA MANDEL 135 Avenue C New York City Lena Mandel was born in New York City on May 19, 1889. She prepared for college at the Washington Irving High School in this city. Since she entered Barnard her interests have been varied. In Athletics she has been particularly interested in swimming and basket- ball. She has also done a good deal of Settlement work. She is a member of the Deutscher Kreis. She is completing her college course in three years and will, therefore, graduate in 1909. After leaving col- lege she expects to teach German, her major subject. Her favorite study is Experimental Psychology. GRACE EDITH MEIER 2263 Aqueduct Avenue University Heights, City Grace Meier was born in New York City on October 7, 1889. She prepared for college at the Morris High School. Since entering Bar- nard her interests have been chiefly athletic. In Sophomore year she entered the hurdle race, relay race, and dash in the Greek Games, and on Eield Day went in for the same events. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A. In Sophomore year she was a member of the Sophomore Play Committee and of the Undergraduate Play Committee, and the following year she was Chairman of the Junior Show Committee. Her major subject is Latin. Her favorite study is German. 182 VIRGINIA MAY MOLLKN H A UER 2178 Grand Avenue University Heights, N. Y. C. Virginia Mollenhauer was born in New York City on August 26, 1886. She prepared for college at the Morris High School and the Ursuline Seminary. After completing her first two years at St. Angela College, New Rochelle, N. Y., she transferred to the Junior Class at Barnard. She is a member of the Craigie Club. After graduating from college she expects, to become a teacher. Her major as well as her favorite subject is English. MARION JULIA MONTESER 60o Van Cortlandt Park Avenue Yonkers, N. Y. Marion Monteser was born in New York City, on July 23, 1889. She prepared for cc )llege at the Yonkers High School. Since entering Barnard she has taken pari in the 1907 Creek games and in Field Day the same year. She was on the Class Mascot Committee in Freshman year, Sec- retary of La Societe Francaise, and on the Exchange Committee in Sophomore year, and Treasurer of the Deutscher Kreis in Junior year. She was in the Freshman Show and the Junior Show and was an usher at the Sophomore Play. She is specializing in German. i L_ ±Jkm 183 ROSE MOSES 103 West 88th Street New York City Rose Moses was born in Montgomery, Ala., on November 16, 1888. She prepared for college at the Wadleigh High School. Since entering Barnard her chief interests have been athletic — particularly tennis and swimming. She is on the Class Decoration Committee for the year 1908-1909. She is a member of La Societe Francaise, the Deutsche! - Kreis, the Southern Club, and the Athletic Association. Her major subject is Mathematics, and she expects to teach this in High School after she graduates. Her favorite study is Mathematics. MARY NAMMACK 42 East 29th Street New York City Mary Nammack was born in New York City on December 7, 1890. She prepared for college at St. Elizabeth ' s Preparatory School, Convent Station, New Jersey. Since entering Barnard she has been a member of the Deutscher Kreis, the Athletic Association, the Societe Francaise, the Craigie Club, and the Botanical Club. In Freshman year she was on the Class Entertainment Committee, the Class Constitution Committee, and the Greek Games Committee ; in Sophomore year she was Chairman of the German Play Committee, and in Junior year President of the Deutscher Kreis. She was on t he Class Basketball team both Fresh- man and Sophomore years, and won her numerals. She was in the Freshman Show, the Sophomore Play, and the Undergrad. Play in 1908, and took the part of Lady Mary Carlisle in the Junior Show. Her favorite and major subject is Botany. After graduating she expects to study medicine at Johns Hopkins. Alpha Phi. 184 ELIZABETH N ITCH IE 137 Prospect Park West Brooklyn Elizabeth Nitchie was born in Brooklyn on March 5, 1SS9. She prepared at Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn. Since entering Barnard she has been on the Greek Games Committee, and the Bible Study Committee of the Y. W. C. A., 1907-1908. In Freshman year she received second place in the Greek Games epics; in Sophomore year sh? was Class Historian and on the Barnard Bulletin ; in Junior year she was Editor-in-Chief of the Bulletin and on The Mortarboard. She received honors in Greek and General Honors in 1906, and was a candidate for the Earle Prize in 1907-1 90S. She belongs to the Classical Club. Her major subjects are Latin and Greek; her favorite study is Greek. Pi Beta Phi. JESSIE KAY NOTTINGHAM 460 Nineteenth Street, Portland Heights Portland, Oregon Jessie Ray Nottingham was born in Portland, Ore. She prepared for college at the Allen Preparatory School, and did one year ' s work in the University of Oregon. Since entering Barnard in her Sophomore year she has been a member of the Y. W. C. A. and of the Intercol- legiate Socialistic Society. Her chief athletic interests have been swimming and other outdoor sports. In the fall of 1908 she was a member of the Executive Committee of the Brooks Hall Self-Governing Association. Her favorite study is English, in which she is majoring. 185 AGNES TERESA O ' DONNELL 2801 Briggs Avenue New York City Agnes O ' Doimell was bora in Asheville, N. C, on December 24, 1SSS. She j repared for college at the Wadleigh High School. Since entering Barnard her chief interests have been literary. In her Sopho- more year she wrote an epic for the Greek Games, and in Junior year she was Class Historian and contributed to The Mortarboard. She is a member of the Craigie Club, and in 1908-1909 was on the Executive Committee of that organization. She belongs to the Clas- sical Club and to the Deutscher Kreis. Her major subjects are the Classics; her favorite study is Music. MARGARET MARY ALACOQUE O ' DONNELL 2681 Briggs Avenue New York City Margaret O ' Doimell was bom on August 12, 1887, at Anderson, S. C. She prepared for college at the Wadleigh High School in this city. Since entering Barnard her chief interests have been in swimming and in College Dramatics. She had a part in the Junior Show, 190S. She is a member of the Classical Club, of the Craigie Club, and of the Deutscher Kreis. She expects to become a teacher after she graduates from college. Her major subject is German; her favorite study is Economics. 186 EDNA ADELAIDE PALMER 657 West 183d Street New York City Edna Palmer was born in Elkhart, Ind., on January 25, 1SS7. She prepared for college at the Morris High School. Since entering college her athletic interests have been running, tennis, and discus throwing. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A., and is Secretary of the C. S. M. A. for 1908-190! ' . In Freshman year she was a member of the Class Tea Committee; in Sophomore year on the Mysteries Com- mittee and Chairman. of the Distribution Committee of the Clearing House Committee for Social Workers in Columbia University. After graduating she intends to become a sociologist. Her major subject is History; her favorite study is German. ROSETTA FRANCES PL ATT 259 West 109th Street New York City Rosetta Piatt was born in Astoria, L. I., on September 27, 1888. She obtained her preparation for college at the Wadleigh High School. Since entering Barnard her interests have been varied. She has con- tinued to devote herself to the study of music and has gone in for athletics — particularly basketball. After graduation from college she expects to become a teacher. Her major subject is Mathematics. 187 ELSIE PLAUT 302 Central Park West New York City Elsie Plaut was born in New York City on November 22, 1889. She prepared at the Alcuin School. Since entering college she has been on the 1910 Searchlight, Associate Editor of the Barnard Bulletin, and Business Manager of The Mortarboard. She is a member of the Deutscher Kreis, the Athletic Association, the Philosophy Club, and the College Settlement Association. In Freshman year she was Chairman of the Freshman Show Committee, and was one of its authors, and was also a member of the Entertainment Committee. In Sophomore year she was Chairman of the Class Entertainment Com- mittee. She was also Treasurer of the Societe Francaise and of the Barnard Union, 1907-1908, Secretary of the College Settlement Associa- tion, 190S-1909. She took part in the French plays, Freshman and Sophomore year, and in both the P ' reshman and Junior Shows. She is specializing in English. ELIZABETH RAWCLIFFE 639 :ast 233d Street Wakefield, N. Y. Elizabeth Rawcliffe was born in Staten Island on June 2, 1887. She obtained her preparation for college at the Morris High School in I his city. Since entering Barnard her interests have been varied. In Sophomore year she entered the javelin throwing in the Greek Games. She is specializing in the Classics and is a member of the Classical Club. After graduating from college she expects to teach. Her favorite subject is Latin. 188 FLORENCE WALLACE READ 70 Morningside Avenue West New York City Florence Read was born in Huntingdon, Pa., on April 9, 1887. She studied at the Wadleigh High School preparatory to coming to college. Her athletic interests since entering college have been basket- ball, tennis, and jumping, and she is a member of the Athletic Associa- tion. She took the part of a page in the Undergraduate Show, 1908. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A., Societe Francaise, and of the Socialist Club. She is a Volunteer Student Assistant in History A, at college, and after graduation will probably be engaged in Social Settlement or Historical Research work. Her major subject is History. GRACE A. REEDER Hast i ngs-on-H udson New York Grace Reeder was born in Normal, 111., on December 8, 1888. She prepared for college at the Yonkers High School. Since entering Barnard she has been on the Managing Board of the Bulletin, an Editor of the 1910 Searchlight, an Associate Editor of The Mortar- board. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A. and Chairman of the Membership Committee of that Association for the year 1908-1909. In Freshman year she was on the Class Constitution Committee and Secretary of the Class. In Sophomore year she was on the Under- graduate Play Committee, and in Junior year she was on the Executive Committee of the Undergraduate Association and Vice-President of the Class. She is one of the Sub-Electors of the C. S. A. Her major is History; her favorite study is Sociology. Alpha Phi. 1S9 DOROTHY REILLY 1036 Post Avenue East Richmond, N. Y. Dorothy Reilly was born in New York City on February 28, 1889. She obtained her preparation for college at the Curtis High School. Since she entered Barnard her interests have been varied. She is a member of the Craigie Club. Her major subject is German, and she expects to continue the study of this language after she graduates from Barnard. German is also her favorite subject. MARGARET RENTON 207 Schermerhorn Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Margaret Renton was born in Brooklyn on .March 2, 1888. She prepared for college at the Girls High School in Brooklyn. Since- enter- ing Barnard her interests have been varied. She is a member of the Barnard Chapter of the Co llegiate Equal Suffrage League, and of the Deutscher Kreis. She has been particularly interested in music of all kinds, and after graduating she expects to continue her studies in that line. Her major subject is German, and her favorite study is Music. 100 FLORENCE ESTELLE ROSE Hackensack New Jersey Florence Rose was born in Brooklyn on July 19, 1888. She pic- pared for college at the Hackensack High School. Since entering col- lege her interests have been varied. In her Sophomore year she was an Editor of the 1910 Searchlight, a member of the Undergraduate Play Committee, and Chairman of the Sophomore Play Committee. In Junior year she was oh the Class Song and Cheer Committee and the Undergraduate Study Tea Committee. She belongs to the Y. W. C. A. Her major subject is Mathematics. Gamma Phi Beta. HELEN ELIZABETH SAVITZ 43 Ross Place Westficld, N. J. Helen Savitz was born in Slatington, Pa., on September 5, 1889. She prepared for college at the Westfield High School. Since entering col- lege her interests have been varied. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A., and has always been very much interested in the Silver Bay Conference. In Freshman year she was Chairman of the Class Decorating Committee, and in Junior year she was a member of the Undergraduate Tea Com- mittee. Her major subject is Latin, and her minor German. Gamma Phi Beta. 191 I i JOHANNA JULIA SCHWARTE 210 Nelson Avenue Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Johanna Schwarte was born on September 24, 1887, in Saratoga Springs, N. Y. She prepared for college at the Saratoga Springs High School. She lias been interested in basketball in college and is a member (it (he Athletic Association. She also belongs to the Y. W. C. A. She took part in both the Freshman and Junior shows and she has con- t ibuted to the Mortarboard. She is specializing in Science and is a member of the Botanical Club. Her major subjects are Botany and Zoology, which she will probably teach after leaving college. AGNES GARDNER SHAW Rockland Lake New York Agnes Shaw was born in Boon, Iowa, on November 15, 1889. She prepared for college at the Haverstraw High School. Since entering college her interests have been varied. In athletics she has devoted herself chiefly to tennis. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A. After graduating from college she expects to teach. Her major subject is French; her favorite study is History. 192 ETHEL LORD SHAW 420 West 148th Street Ethel Lord Shaw was born in New York City on October 16, 1887. She prepared for college at Normal College, New York City. Since entering Barnard she has been a member of the V. W. C. A., and of the Athletic Association. In athletics she has been particularly interested in tennis. In 1906-1907 she took part in the Freshman Show, and in 1908-1909 she was in the. Junior Show. Her favorite subject is History, and she is majoring in it. Kappa Alpha Theta. J GRACE MARGARET SHAW 56 Waller Avenue White Plains, N. Y Grace Shaw was born in White Plains, N. Y., on July 20, 1SSS. She obtained her preparation for college at the White Plains Hfigh School. Since she entered Barnard her interests have been varied. In athletics she has gone in for basketball and for discus throwing in the 1908 Greek Games. She is specializing in History, and her favorite study is Psychology. RUTH HILLARD SIDELL 87 Harrison Avenue Westfield, N. J. Ruth Sidell was bom on May 21, 1888. I ' a. Slie prepared for her college course School at Somerville, N. .). She entered Freshman year, doing college in three am been interested in the Y. W since she has been in college [er birthplace is Williams, at the Somerville High Barnard in February of one-half years. She has 0. A., of which she has been a member She is particularly fond of Mathematics, subject in which she is specia i zing. SULAM ITH SI LV K R M AN 45 East 75th Street New York City Sulamith Silverman was born in Galveston, Texas, on November 2, 1887. She prepared for college at the New York Normal College. Since entering Barnard her interests have been chiefly literary. She has contributed to the Bear, the Bulletin, and the Columbian, and was one of the authors of the Freshman Show. She was Chairman of the Class Pin Committee in Sophmore Year. She is a member of the Philosophy Club, and is a member of the Editorial Staff of The Mortarboard. Her favorite study is English, in which she is special- izing. LEONE FLORENCE SPALDING 18 Woodland Avenue New Rochelle, N. Y. Leone Spalding was horn in New Rochelle on August , 1NN9. She prepared at the New Rochelle High School. Since entering Barnard she has taken pari in the Greek Gaines, both Freshman and Sophomore years. She was on the Undergraduate Tea Committee 1906-1907, the Class Song Committee 11)07-1908, and the Class Entertainment Committee for this year. She is also Chairman of the Baseball Committee of the Athletic Association for the year 1908-1909. She is also a member of the V. W. C. A. and of the Classical Club. She was in the Junior Show. Her major subjects are the Classics: her favorite subject is Music. MAUDE BEULAH STIMSON 68 West 40th Street New York City Maude Stimson was born in New York City February IS, 1888. She prepared for college at St. Mary ' s School in this city. After com- pleting her first year ' s work at Vassar, she transferred into the Sopho- more Class at Barnard. She is a member of the Philosophy Club and the Societe Franchise. She is specializing in French, and this is her favorite study. 1!).) LAURA MacELWAIN STRYKER 9 Lake Street White Plains, N. Y. Laura Stryker was born in Hammondsport, N. Y., on November 2(5, 1887. She prepared for college at the White Plains High School, White Plains, N. Y. Since entering Barnard she has been a member (if the Athletic Association and of the C. S. M. A. In Sophomore year she was on the Class Entertainmenl Committee, and in the following year she took part in the Junior Show. In athletics she has been particularly interested in swimming. She is specializing in Zoology, and her favorite studies arc Mathematics and German. LORA ROSE SWEENEY 333 Park Avenue Paterson, N. J. Lora Sweeney was born in Paterson, N. J., on August 28, 1889. She prepared for college at the Paterson High School and Normal Schools. Since entering Laniard in Junior year she has become a member of the Craigie Club. She is studying at New York Uni- versity and will probably take her degree from there. English is her favorite subject. Alpha Omicron Pi. 196 AGNES THOMSON 3 West 92d Street New York City Agnes Thomson was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on November 22, 1888. She prepared for college al the Normal High School and com- pleted her lirst two years at Normal College. She entered Barnard in Junior Year. She is a member of the Athletic Association, the Societe Francaise, and the Y. W.. C. A. She took part in the Junior Show. Her major subject is English; her favorite study is German. OLIVE THOMPSON 420 West 118th St reet New York City Olive Thompson was born at Southington, Conn., August 12, 1887. Her preparation for college was obtained at Wadleigh High School. Since Freshman year her chief athletic interests have been swimming and tennis. She is a member of the Deutscher Kreis and of the Ath- letic Association, and holds the position of Associate Editor of the Bulletin, and is on the Class Decorating Committee for 1908 1909. During her college course she has done a large amount of tutoring. After graduation she expects to teach, to study, and to travel. Her favorite si udy is ( rerman. 197 NATHALIE THORNE 418 St. Nicholas Avenue New York City Nathalie Thorne was born in Augusta, Ga., on August 8, 1887. She prepared for college at the Wadleigti High School. Since enter- ing Barnard she has been active in the Y. W. C. A., a member of the Blue Book Committee in 1907-1908. and of the Intercollegiate Com- mittee in 1908-1909. Her athletic interests have been chiefly tennis and the Greek Games of 1907. She belongs to the C. S. M. A., and is a member of the Executive Committee of La Societe Franchise. In 1907-1908 she was on the Mysteries Committee, and in 1908-1909 Chairman of the Class Decoration Committee. She took part in the Junior Show. She expects to become a Tutor in Chemistry. Kappa Alpha Theta. JULIA ANNA WAGNER 236 East 31st Street New York City Julia Wagner was born in New York City on May 15, 1888. She prepared for college at the Delancey School in this city. Since entering Barnard she has been a member of the Y. W. C. A., the Deutscher Kreis, La Societe Francaise, and the Athletic Association. She took part in the Freshman Show and in the Junior Show. In athletics she entered the javelin throwing in the 1908 Greek games and the shot put in Field Day of the same year. She is majoring in Modern Languages; her favorite studies are French and German. 198 HAZEL IRENE WAYT Hil Franklin Street Astoria, L. I Hazel Wayt was born in Ann Arbor, Mich., on September 15, 1SS7. She prepared for college at the Detroit High School and at the Bryant High School, Staten Island. Since entering Barnard in February of Freshman year she has been a member of the College Settlement Asso- ciation and of the V. W. C. A. She is on the Undergraduate Play Committee, and the Class Decorating Committee in Junior year. In athletics she has been particularly interested in swimming. After graduating she expects to become a teacher. Her favorite as well as her major subject is English. Alpha Omicron Pi. MARION WEINSTEIX 1 7 Spencer Avenue Waterbury, Conn. Marion Weinstein was horn in New York City on January I!), 1.888. She prepared for college at the Crosby High School, Waterbury, Conn. Since she entered Barnard her interests have been chiefly literary. She has contributed to The Mortarboard and the Hear, and in 1908 - ' he wrote an epic for the Greek Games. In athletics she has been interested in tennis, swimming, and basketball. In 1906-1907 she was on the Class Decoration Committee, and in 1908-1909 she was an Associate Editor of the Bulletin and of The Mortarboard. She took part in the Freshman Show. Her major subject is Latin. 10!) Ray studied jhief at JOSEPHINE RAY WEST 552 West 186th Street New York City West was born in New York City on .Tune 16, 1888. She at the Wadleigh High School before entering college. Her iletic interests in college have been field hockey and swimming. She took part in the Freshman Show and in the Undergraduate Play, in 1!K)7. She is a member of the Classical Club, and the Societe Francaise, and she is Student Assistant in the Department of Phil- osophy. She was Corresponding Secretary of the Class in 1906-1007, and Treasurer in 1007-1908. Her probable future occupation will be Librarian. She is specializing in Languages. ALMA WIESNER 12 Union Avenue Mamaroneck, N. Y. Alma Wiesner was born in New York City on November 20, 1887. She prepared for college at the Mamaroneck High School. Since enter- ing Barnard her interests have been varied. She is a member of the Deutscher Kreis, the Socialist Club, the Athletic Association, and the Y. W. C. A. She is mi the Class Scrub Basketball Team and has been interested in swimming. In 1906-1907 she took part in the Freshman Show. She is specializing in English and is making a second major in German. After graduating she expects to teach. Her favorite study is English. 200 HELENE BENEDICT WISE 106 Central Park West New York City Helene Wise was born in New York City, on September 25, 1889. She prepared for college under private instructors. Since she entered Barnard her interests have been largely athletic. She lias taken part in the tennis tournaments, and has done a great deal of skating. She is a member of the Philosophy Club and of the Athletic Association. In Freshman year she- was on the Class Entertainment Committee and in Junior year on the Junior Ball Committee. Her favorite study is Philosophy and her major subjects are Philosophy and German. HAZEL WOODHULL 501 West 120th Street New York City Hazel Woodhull was born in Montclair, X. J., on She prepared IS! t(). liege, I ay : ■e She at the Horace Mann School. She has been, in winner of the high jump in both the Greek (lames and field Captain of the 1910 Basketball Team, both Freshman and Sop] years, and President of the Athletic Association, in Junior year took pari in the Freshman and Sophomore Shows, and was on the Undergraduate Play Committee in 190S. In 1907-1908 she was N ice- President of the Class and on the Undergraduate Executive Committee. In 1908-1909 she was on the Junior Pall Committee. She belongs to the V. W. C. A. After graduating she expects to teach kindergarten. tier major Alpha Phi. Iijci t is English, and her favorite subject is Psychology, 201 HELEN DARLINGTON WORRALL 2014 Fifth Avenue New York City- Helen Worrall was horn in New York City on August 26, 1888. She prepared at the New York Collegiate Institute. She has been, since entering Barnard, a member of the Athletic Association. Her interests in athletics have been swimming and basketball. In 1906— 1907 she was on the Undergraduate Tea Committee and the Class Entertainment Committee; in 1907-1908 she was Chairman of the Class Decoration Committee, and on the Mysteries Committee; in 1908- 1909, on the Freshman Reception Committee, on the Y. W. C. A. Bible Sludv Committee, and Class Treasurer. She took part in the Freshman Show. Her major subject is Social Science, and her favorite study is Sociology. Gamma Phi Beta. ELSIE ZELLER 1254 Clinton Place Elizabeth, N. .1. Elsie Zeller was born in Rahway, N. J., on July 23, 1887. She pre- pared for eollege at the New York Collegiate Institute. After com- pleting her first two years at Yassar College, she transferred to the Junior Class at Barnard. Her chief interests have been athletic — particularly hockey and basketball. She is specializing in German, and her favorite subject is Chemistry. 202 FLORENCE ETHEL GREENE 280 Pavonia Avenue Jersey City, N. J. Florence Greene was born in Jersey City on January 14, 1SSS. She prepared for college at Hasbro uek ' s Institute. She spent her Fresh- man and Sophomore years at the Woman ' s College of Baltimore, transferring to Barnard at the be- ginning of Junior year. Alpha Phi. ANNE ELDERKIN HUNTINGDON Hartsdale New York Anne Huntington was born in New York City oil May 7, 1889. She prepared for college at the Misses Rayson ' s School and completes her Fresh- man year at Wellesley College. She transferred to Barnard as a Sophomore in 1007. Her major subject is English and her favorite the study of the Fine Arts in general and especially the history and technique of painting. Jiormer JH embers of tlte Class of Hi 1 Eva Bessie Bachner Marion Bachner Edith Hazel Bryant Clara Cooper Elfrida Dora Cowen Daphne Dame Dieterieh Mabel Frances Elder Vera Belle Emerson Marie Augusta Hose Frugone Elizabeth Naomi Gray Fannie Gruenstein Amy Harton Neda Ludmi Juliette Leo Catherine Vincent ia, McCann Madeleine Whitlock Macy Edith Katherina Michel ' s Mabel Bird Palliser Maud Elizabeth Penrose Edna Adelina Schuleman Wilhelmina Shaffer Amy Leah Silbernagel Hose Derrickson Slawter Mary Edith Stetler Julia Blanche Van Anda Wadelton (Officers af tlie elf-uooernment Association of HI rooks J§M HELEN SCHEUER, L909, First Term „ ., J . rc iilcii WINFRED BARROWS. 1909, Second Term j GERTRUDE HUNTER, 1910 Vice-President LILIAN EGLESTON, 1910 Treasurer HELEN BROWN, 1911 . Secretary 203 •Statistics Note: The names are given in a descending scale, corresponding to the number of votes receivei 1. In most cases, the names of all who received seven or more votes are inserted, though it was impossible to use any fixed and arbitrary line of division because of the greater scattering in some cases than in others. Prettiest: Kay West; Mabel McCann ; Vora Jaques; Hazel Woodhull; Helen Savitz. Best look in; : Gertrude Hunter; Hazel Woodhull; Vora Jaques; Ray West. Best dressed: Madeline Borland; Eelene Wise; Nathalie Thorne. Best dancer: Lilian Egleston; Bessie Holzman; Clarita Crosby. Best athlete: Hazel Woodhull. Best actress: Lilian Egleston; (iertrude Hunter. Most musical: Lilian Egleston; Margaret Kenton. Wittiest: Marion Weinstein; Grace Reeder. Hardest worker: Nannette Hamburger; Lena Mandel; Elizabeth Nitchie and Hay West. Most versatile: Nannette Hamburger; Dorothy Kirchwey; Harriet Fox; (iertrude Hunter and Elsie Plant. Cleverisi: Elsie Plant; Harriet Fox; Grace Reeder; Marion Weinstein. Best-natured: Helen Crossman; Rose Moses; Bertha Firebaugh. Most energetic: Dorothy Kirchwey; Nannette Hamburger; Ray West; Elsie Plaut. Most scholar! y: Elizabeth Nitchie; Harriet Fox. Most popular: Gertrude Hunter; Lilian Egleston; Grace Reeder. Best-all-round: Gertrude Hunter; Lilian Egleston. The average height of the class is 5 feet V, inches. 204 3Jtt Jfantltatr Favorite: Professor Shotwell, Professor Brewster, Professor Montague, Professor Crampton. Pleasantest: Professor Moore; Miss Maltby; Dr. Braun; Professor Beard. Most scholarly: Miss Hirst; Professor Montague; Professor Shotwell; Professor Page. Best teacher: Professor Knapp; Professor Montague; Dr. ( ' haddock; Mr. Bechert. Best lecturer: Professor Shotwell. (Umirsra Most difficult: .History A (21); Physics 11 (13); Mathematics A and English B (9). Easiest: Gymnasium (12); French (10); Psychology (8). Most valuable: History A (25); English (9); Biology (7). Most interesting: History and Biology (11); Psychology and Philosophy (7). Favorite: English (11); History (10); German (8); Mathematics (7). Jfattartf Author: Thackeray (12); George Eliot (10); Stevenson (8); Dickens (7); Scott (6). Poet: Tennyson (30); Browning (11); Longfellow and Shelley (6). Novel: Vanity Fair (8); Adam Bede (5). Poem: Idylls of the King (13). Play: Monsieur Beaucaire (11); Peter Pan (9); Taming of the Shrew (8). Character in history: Lincoln (23); Napoleon (12); Professor Beard (1); Professor Shot- well (1). Character in fiction: Babbie (6); Jean Valjean (4). Actor: Sothern (18); Mansfield (17); L. Egleston (1); F. Wyeth (1). Actress: Maude Adams (37); Julia Marlowe (8). Amusement: Dancing (15); Sailing, Canoeing, Rowing, etc. (8); Theater (7); Reading Hi). College next to Barnard: Vassar (17); Wellesley and Smith (11); Bryn Mawr (7); Williams (2); Trinity (1); Yale (1). 205 THE 1310 MOTORB0AT The Editors wish to express their thanks to the many individuals outside the Board who have helped them in the preparation of the hook. Among the students, they wish especially to thank Christella MacMurray and Doris Long-, L910, Sophie Woodman, 11)07, .Mary Builds and Florence Sammet, 1908, and Kate Tiemann and Amy Weil, L91 1, for the use of photo- graphs and snap-shots; Gertrude Hunter and Johanna Schwarte, 1910, for contributions to the Literary department; Clarita Crosby, Helen Crossman, Nathalie Thome, 1910, and especially Muriel Ivimey, ex— 1910 (whose help, in spite of her absence from college, has been most generously given), for drawings, headings, and other art work. They wish to acknowledge the kindness of Professor Knapp in writing, at their request, the article on The Growth of Barnard College, and of Professor Rudolf Tombo, Jr., Managing Editor of the Columbia University Quarterly, in giving them the use of the cuts of the Uni- versity buildings and grounds. They also wish to express their indebtedness for ideas in general arrangement and in the art work, to many college year-books, particularly the 1909 Mortarboard, and the Yale Pot- Pourri for the years 1007 and 1908; and for many suggestions in the composition of the Class Hook Section, to the Yale Academic Senior Class Hooks of 1005, 1007, and 1008. To the entire Barnard Faculty the Board wishes to express its gratitude. Professor Brewster, Miss Maltby, and many others, have been constantly ready to help with their advice and co- operation; and the Editors particularly appreciate the generosity and kindness on the part of the Faculty which have enabled them to make the section containing the Faculty pictures so nearly complete. 208 3lni cx frontispiece 3 Portrait of Professor Brewster 4 Dedication 5 Trustees 6 Faculty 8 Portrait of President Butler 9 Members of the Faculty and Other Officers of Instruction 10 The Growth of Barnard College. By Pro- fessor Knapp 26 Organizations 33 Associate Alumnae 35 Undergraduate Association 3D Y. W. C. A 40 Athletic Association 42 C. S. M. A 44 Craigie Club 45 Deutscher Kreis 46 Societe Franchise 47 Classical Club 48 Philosophy Club 49 College Settlements Association 50 Students ' Exchange 51 Glee Club 52 Musical Club 53 Socialist Club 54 Equal Suffrage League 55 View of Barnard College 5G Fraternities 57 View through the Grove 64 Publications 05 Mortarboard Ii7 Bulletin 69 Bear 71 Columbia Library from Hamilton Hall 72 College Events 73 College Calendar 74 Athletics 76 Tennis 77 Field Day 78 Greek Games 80 Greek Chorus 81 Basket Ball 83 Commencement Week 84 Senior Dance 84 Tree Day 85 Baccalaureate 86 Class Day 87 Commencement 88 Silver Bay 89 Sophomore Dance 90 Junior Ball 91 Song Practice 92 Dramatics 93 1911 Freshman Show 95 German Play 90 College Events: Dramatics — Continued. French Play 97 Undergraduate Play 99 191 1 Sophomore Play 101 1910 Junior Show 103 Looking East from the Faculty Club.. 1( ( The Classes 107 Senior Class 108 1909 Class List 109 1909 History 11(1 Junior Class 112 1910 Class List 113 1910 History 114 Sophomore Class 116 1911 Class List 117 1911 History. 118 Freshman Class 120 1912 Class List 121 The Classes: Freshman Class — Continued. 1912 History 122 The Class of 1910 124 Toast 125 Class Picture 126 History of Freshman Year 127 1910 Freshman Show 131 History of Sophomore Year 132 Sophomore Basket Ball Team 136 Architect ' s Drawing of Brooks Hall 137 1910 Sophomore Play 139 History of Junior Year 140 Literature! 1 43 Individual Pictures and Biographies 156 Former Members of the Class 203 Statistics 201 ' ' The Motorboat . . 206 Editors ' Note 208 210 ADVERTISEMENTS ESTABLISHED 1818 ftcntlrmrtrjs IJfurms tying ©uoiis, BROADWAY cor TWENTY- SECOND ST. NEW YORK. Breakfast Jackets, Dressing Gowns, Knitted Mufflers, English Blazers, Polo Ulsters, Pipes, Tobacco Jars, Walking Sticks, Luncheon and Tea Baskets NOVELTIES FROM THE WEST END LONDON SHOPS SERIES OE BOOKLETS MAILED ON REQUEST Don ' t Forget doing to Europe On Going Away Packing of Your Luggage Care of Wardrobe Clothes and the Hour ESTABLISHED S57 EIMER and AMEND MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS OF (Chemicals m (Clicmttal Apparatus 205, 207, 209 and 211 THIRD AVENUE, NEW YORK Corner of 18th Street Finest Bohemian and German Glassware, Jena Normal Glassware, Royal Berlin and Meissen Porcelain, Purest Hammered Platinum, Balances and Weights, Zeiss Micro- scopes and Bacteriological Apparatus, Chemically Pure Acids and Assay Goods. i GREETING TO 1910 Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume CHARTERED IN 1902 Makers of GAPS, GOWNS AND HOODS to the American Colleges and Universities; to Barnard, Columbia, Normal College, Princeton, Bryn Mawr, Wellesley, Mt. Holyoke, Harvard, Yale, University of Chicago, Leland Stanford, and the others. Illustrated bulletin, samples, etc., upon request RICH GOWNS FOR PULPIT AND BENCH Cotrell Leonard ALBANY, N. Y. THE GIRL QUESTION IS EASILY SOLVED Present her with a box OF PETER THOMSON Boys ' and Misses ' Sailor Suits a Specialty Ladies ' Tailor-made Suits and Riding Habits Boys ' and Youths ' Norfolk and Sack Suits PHILADELPHIA 1118 Wa lnut Street NEW YORK 14 and 16 West 33d Street F. W. Devoe Co. ' s ARTISTS ' TUBE COLORS Canvas Academy Boards, Fine Brushes for Oil and Water-Color Paintings, etc. ARE PERFECTLY RELIABLE AND CAN BE HAD OF ALL DEALERS Everything in Artists ' Materials F. W. DEVOE G. T. RAYNOLDS GO. Fulton and William Streets, New York 176 Randolph Street - Chicago CATALOGUE ON APPLICATION GEORGE M. CLARK. ESTABLISHED 18T0. HARTWELL A. WILKINS. ELEVENTH AVENUE, COR. OF WEST 24th STREET. AND FOOT OF EAST 128th STREET, New York. WE DEAL IN WOOD EXCLUSIVELY AND DELIVER AT RESIDENCES IN ANY PART OF THE CITY; PUTTING AWAY IN CELLARS WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE. CARGOES FURNISHED OF VIRGINIA PINE. OAK AND HICKORV. TELEPHONES: 4909-4910 Chelsea. 16-566 Harlem. DRY HICKORY FOR OPEN FIRES. VIRGINIA PINE KNOT6. SELECTED HARD WOOD. LIGNUM VITAE. NEW BEDFORD DRIFTWOOD. NORTH CAROLINA LIGHT-WOOD. VIRGINIA PINE AND OAK KINDLING WOOD Telephone Connection, 9110 River. M. BUCHSBAUM CHOICE MEATS POULTRY S E A FOOD 828 AMSTERDAM AVENUE Between 100th and 101st Sts. NEW YORK £l|cfficlt Jffarms SLAWSON-DECKER COMPANY Dairy Products Haiu Wffirr 524 WEST 57™ STREET, NEW YORK r o g CORSETS THE NEW TAPERING WAIST IN STUDENT LIFE a fountain pen is known as a WATERMAN ' S IDEAL That name is also synonymous with quality, efficiency and service in a fountain pen. Ask your dealer. Columbia Pharmacy 114th STREET AND BROADWAY 110th STREET AND BROADWAY Perfect Soda HUYLER ' S CONFECTIONS ALL ELSE PERFECT, TOO JOHN F. KLIPP THE BUSINESS OF The Columbia University Press Bookstore EXTENDS FROM FRANCE TO JAPAN Mail Orders Filled Promptly IL ' ihnirtcs mib Heaoino. (Clubs Supplied Telephone. r K68 Cortlandt LEMCKE BUECHNER WEST HALL Broadway, near 117th Street AARON LAUTKRBACH SAMUEL LAUTERBACH Aaron Lauterbach and Brother I) i anuui os ano Precious giants 170 Broadway, New York Corner Maiden Lane Room 305 Third Floor WATCH REPAIRING BY EXPERIENCED WORKMEN ELMER E. SANBORN . . , twtkx ♦ ♦ ♦ High Grade Sterling Silver Table Ware and Silver Novelties. Rich Cut Glass in all Appropriate Forms and Beautiful Designs. Solid Gold Watches, Thin Model, Finest and Latest r Up-to-Date Movements. Elegant Jewelry in Elaborate Designs 248 WEST 125th STREET = = = = = = NEW YORK STORES 592 FIFTH AVENUE, between 47th and 48th Streets 425 FIFTH AVENUE, (38th Street Entrance; 2145 BKOADWAY, between 75th and 76th Streets 22W) BKOADWAY, between 81st and 82d Streets 218 AMSTEKDAM AVENUE, between C9th and 70th Streets 701 EIGHTH AVENUE, between 44th and 45th Streets 005 SEVENTH AVENUE, between 57th and 58th Streets . «41 MADISON AVENUE, between 59th and OOth Streets . 125th STHEET and MOKN1NGS1DE AVENUE Gl EAST 125th Street, between Madison and Fourth Avenues NEWPORT STOKE, 158 BELLEVUE AVENUE, Newport, K.I. Works, 6-8-10-12 MANHATTAN STREET CLEANERS AND DYERS 125th ST. AND MORNINGSIDE AVE. TELEPHONES (Astor Apartments ' ; (Sherman Square 5376 2119 1682 1437 4136 1546 4329 3210 973 38th Street Columbus Riverside Columbus Bryant Columbus Plaza Morningside Harlem 7 76 Newport 32 lO Morningside THE COLLEGE BOOK STORE A. G. SEILER, Prop. NEW AND SECOND-HAND BOOKS STATIONERY AND COLLEGE NOVELTIES STUDENTS ' DISCOUNTS ALLOWED OUR PRICES THE LOWEST 1224 Amsterdam Avenue Near 1 20th Street Wxtk (guarantee mxb Capital and Surplus - $12,000,000 The Depositor ' s Best Guarantee is a Capital and Surplus large in Proportion to Deposits, Coupled with Conservative Management JJrhmte anit Business .Accounts olicitcu 175 BROADWAY, MANHATTAN 196 MONTAGUE STREET CONNECTING WITH 175 REMSEN STREET, BROOKLYN 350 FULTON STREET, JAMAICA 67 JACKSON AVE., LONG ISLAND CITY ▼ Ammratt nnb Jffomgn Teachers ' Agency Supplies Colleges, Schools, and Families with Pro- fessors, Teachers, Tutors, and Governesses, resident or visiting, American or Foreign. Parents aided in choice of schools : : : Mrs. M. J. Young-Fulton 23 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK A WOMAN of particular ideas, who has been through all the trials and tribulations of laundry work poorly done, and knows the desires of others, has reached the conclusion that the only way to get satisfactory work is to do it herself. The outgrowth of this idea is the Devonshire Sanitary Laundry SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO Lingerie, Waists and Gowns Margaret Freedman AN EXCLUSIVE LINE OF Madam Andre DRY GLEANING AND DYEING 2874 BROADWAY Phone : 5056 Morningside Millinery and Millinery Novelties jVtillinctrg 31m porter 2064 SEVENTH AVENUE Between 123d and 124th Streets (Compliments of JVrcliitect Telephone, 7 HO Morningside FLORISTS 1241 AMSTERDAM AVENUE Corner 121st Street FRESH CUT FLOWERS EVERY DAY DECORATIONS A SPECIALTY Buckmann Grocery Co. 1295 AMSTERDAM AVENUE Grocers and Wine Merchants The Best of Everything to Eat and Drink Trv our Delicatessen and other departments for Chafing Dish Supplies Telephone, 2294 Morningside WE K N O W THE STUDENTS ' WANTS ' Phone 3965 Morningside Open Sundays by appointment MRS. L. TOBIN Hairdressing and Manicuring Parlor (Formerly of Shaw ' s) Facial and Scalp (Electric Vibrator) Massage, Shampooing, Scientific Hair Clipping. Marcel Waving a Spec ialty. Hair Goods of Every Description. Combing Made to Order. 25 cents MANICURING Ladies ' Waited on at Home by Appointment 1245 AMSTERDAM AVENUE Between 121st and 122nd Streets NEW YORK BLAKE and WILLIAMS 211 WEST 20th STREET NEW YORK Heating and Ventilating: Installing Heating and Ventilating IN DOMESTIC SCIENCE BUILDING A Corner in Manicuring SHAW ' S 32 WEST 34th ST. I Waldorf-Astoria Block) Jtttss 3lrene Perry popular prices ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW 31 west 33rd street Repair Work Special Orders WATCH OUR WINDOWS The sixth letter to the BARNARD GIRLS KINSMAN ' S Wm.H. Christian We have seen some of you lately, hut not as many as we would like to have come to us when they want fresh candies and good soda. We also have a large assortment ol toilet artic les, soaps and perfumes. QUICK : : PRINTING KINSMAN ' S Prescription }J I tar m a c it 125th STREET AND EIGHTH AVE. (Northeast Corner) 1{ it It Iter Stamps tiuu atttiu 260 WEST 125th ST. Telephone 4113 .Worninjrside T H E Oscar =Duryea School Inc. 200 WEST 72nd STREET D URYEA-sES THE TICS DANCING AND DEPORTMENT Telephone 6212 Columbus Tennis Players will be interested to know that we carry a complete line of the best models of rackets — all popular shapes. 909 Rackets are now ready for inspection — look them over — all prices. Wi- re-string rackets on the premises. Alex. Taylor Co. (Formerly Johnson Taylor) Athletic (Outfitters to Jttctt ano Wo men 16 EAST 42nd STREET (Opposite Hotel Manhattan) MARCEL HARD RUBBER COMBS At All First Class Department and Drug Shops viii CROWN BATHODORA A Perfect Bath Powder SOFTENS THE WATER SAVES THE COMPLEXION SCENTS THE SKIN Always Ueinemfoer the lii  ' Three in Crown Goods Lavender Salts the 40-Year Favorite Your old love, Crab Apple Blossom, Inexpensive Jeunesse Doree, the leading perfume of London Society Sold at all leading Prug and Department Stores THE CROWN PERFUMERY CO. OK LONDON Depot of American Importation, 311 East 2(lth Street, New Yoik Corollas Hair Preparations MEDAL OF EXCELLENCE k Corollas Hair Tonic $1.00 bottle, $5.00 h doz. jhj) Corollas Cream $1.00 jar, $5.00 i doz. a Corollas Shampoo 50c. bottle, $3.00 i doz. AT ALL FIRST-CLASS DRUGOISTS H. W TAYLOR CO., Proprietors, 34 E. 22A St. Mmes. M. E. Taylor-Kaler, Consulting Parlors: 34 E. 22d STREET, NEW YORK TOILET — :-ry— BRUSHES MADE BY CHAS. LOONEN. PARIS, FRANCE ARE THE BEST Ed. Pinaud ' s Extract Flirt The latest Paris sensation in perfumes. Flirt is an exiiuisite bouquet of indescribable delicacy. For sale by first-class dealers everywhere. Ed. Pinaud ' s Beauteviva ' A liquid complexion powderl A delight to women of refinement. Im- parts a velvety appearance to the skin and enhances its natural beauty. PARFUMERIE ED. PINAUD LI). PINAUD BUILDING (Dept. M. B.), N. Y. 99 For Burning Purposes Always Use K0-H0-LI-A Your Chafing-dish Burner or your .Al- cohol Gas-stove, etc. will give the longest and the lies! possible service if you use KOHOLIA Unlike cheap alco- hol it does not gum nor liar the wick, nor soot the vessel, nor smoke, nor emit an offensive odor. Also excellent lor cleaning glass, etc. Low-priced and guaranteed to satisfy Sotd at the House Furnishing Depart- ment of Department Stores FREE SAMPLE SENT OX REQUEST S. STERNAU CO. BROOKLYN, N. Y. So concentrated that the stoppered bottle placed in a drawer will perfume the entire contents. So exquisitely delicate and refined that its elusive fragrance seems rather to follow than to cling to you. The greatest creation of Kerkoff. Djer-Kiss (DEAR- KISS) For sale everywhere WARNING! Many Rain Coats are sold as Cravenettes which are not — therefore bear in mind when purchasing it is NOT A ft it RAIN COAT unless this Circular Reg- istered Trade Mark is stamped on the cloth. and this silk label is sewed at the • TRADE MM . collar or elsewhere. Look for both and insist upon seeing them Cravenette Rain Coats come in a large variety of cloths, and are for sale by the leading Clothing, Hab- erdashers and Department Stores throughout the civilized world. A postal to us will bring booklets telling all about them. B. PRIESTLEY CO. MANUFACTUTERS OF DRESS GOODS, WOOLENS, WORSTEDS, MOHAIRS, CRAVENETTES, CLOTHS, ETC. BRADFORD, ENGLAND AM ERIC AN SELLING OFFICES 100 FIFTH AVENUE - - NEW YORK CITY (Corner 15th .Street) Twentieth Street House 44 WEST 20th STREET Ifnncliecm, jUtenumn (Lea, Dinner PRIVATE DINING ROOMS Special Luncheons or Dinners arranged at short notice. Room and Board tor College Girls ' Guests Telephone: 559 Chelsea HORTON ' S is used by nearly everybody. Try it ! ou will like it. DEPOTS 142 WEST 125th STREET no EAST 125th STREET 598 6th AVENUE 305 4th AVENUE Black Boyd Mfg. Co. KLKCTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES AND ARTISTIC BRONZE WORK 23 EAST 22nd STREET, MANHATTAN r GOOD TEETH ARE WOMEN ' S GREATEST ATTRACTION The possession of beau tif ill eyes is entirely a gift of nature. The possession of good teeth is largely a matter of care. The ordinary brush cannot reach those parts of the teeth that it is most necessary to keep clean. The tufted bristles and the curved handle of t he Pro- phylactic Tooth Brush en- ables it to penetrate every crevice and depression Prophylactic Tooth Brushes are made in a clean factory by clean people and sterilized be- fore packing. Each brush is packed in an individua ' ellow box to prevent handling. TAATtl r r TTCTJT7C Three Sizes; Two Styles; lUUlXl rJKUSllliS Three Textures The texture of each brush is marked on each box — no need I of handling bristles. The styles are: Prophylactic. rigid handle, and Prophylactic Special, ' new flexible handle. Three sizes : «@S = FLORENCE MAN UFACTURING CO., Florence, Mass. The genuine is always sold in a yellow box. Refuse every substitute offered you. There Is Nothing so Soothing as a Mothei ' s Kiss EXCEPT MRS. WINSLOW ' S SOOTHING SYRUP Millions of Mothers will tell you It soothes the child. It softens the gums. It allays all pain. It cure Wind Colic. It is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It is absolutely harmless and for Sixty years has proved the best remedy for Children Teething. BE SURE YOU ASK FOR MRS. WINSLOW ' S SOOTHING SYRUP AND TAKE NO OTHER DR. LYON ' S PERFECT TOOTH POWDER Cleanses preserves and beautifies the teeth, and purifies the breath Established in 1866 acemos encuadernaciones Nous arsons la reliure Wtt binfoen IWclicr cin Rilegkiayto libri Aevojxev B Shix Ang Hangwage Ann Let us quote you prices 3ooK-{L anufactum£ 531-535-Slcst37 ,H St I
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Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.