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THE 5 LIBRARIES COLUMBIANA A Convenient Shopping-Place for Those Who Seek Distinctive, Depen dabl e Merchandise at Moderate Prices THE KOCH STORE is situated in the heart of Manhattan ' s residential district. It is within easy access of any section of Upper New York. Its stock are enormous, aggregating millions of dollars. Every facility to make shopping easy and comfortable is to be found. No other store offers better varieties of dependable merchandise at all times. The prices are extremely moderate. You should investigate its offerings. I Koch 125th STREET, WEST, NEW YORK CITY Tiffany Co. Out-of-Town Service Tiffany Co. ' s out-of-town service is an important feature of their business, and reaches patrons in all parts of the world. Intending purchasers are invited to correspond, with the assurance that their inquires will receive the most exacting attention, regardless of the amount involved. Photographs and descriptions of diamond, pearl and precious- stone jewelry; silverware, fancy goods and other articles, will be sent upon request. Tiffany Co. are strictly retailers and do not employ agents or sell their wares through dealers. The Tiffany Blue Book, 700 pages, sent upon request Fifth Avenue 37th Street New York THE KNOX HAT KNOX NEW YORK. Is universally recognized as the Standard by which all others are judged 452 FIFTH AVE. 196 FIF TH AVE. 161 BROADWAY Corner 40th St. Near 23rd St. Singer Building C. G. Gunther s Sons BLISHG I Furs K S T A I! M S H K I) IS 8 O An extensive assortment of all desirable furs. Fashion Booklet sent on request. 391 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, New York. Try it for ten days at our expense then you ' ll realize the U.S. Automatic Pencil Sharpener is the only practical pointer ever produced. Of rr Send us $3.50— we ' ll ship a com- UT KJjjeT: plete U. S. Automatic Pencil Sharpener with 2 extra knives, prepaid — use it for 10 days — test it in every reasonable way — make the machine prove itself all we claim for it — then if you ' re not satisfied ship it back collect and get your $3.50 back. Surely this offer proves our Confidence ? Of l . Costs only 1 cent a day — saves ur Claims: 10c. a day in time, dirt and annoy- ance wherever three pencil users work. Curs off enough and no more — after pencil is sharpened you can turn the handle all day — it can ' t cut off more than necessary. No parts to break or be put out of order. It does not grind — it cuts — the blades cut downwand with the grain of the pencil wood without twisting the pencil, making it impossible to break the lead. Get our book, A Saving Pointer — tells you how to stop an important office leak— its free — ask for it. Trial of U. S. Automatic Pencil Sharpener is proof that it is saving, practical, indispensable in every office. Gef one on trial to-day — now DEPT. 6 AUTOMATIC PENCIL SHARPENER CO. INCORPORATED Spring Crosby Streets, New York City Ct)e jWortarboarD THE YEAR-BOOK OF BARNARD COLLEGE PUBLISHED BY THE CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Vol. XVII Columbia Mnfatttity : m the Citg of j cto |£ork : 1910 COPYRIGHT, 1910 B Y EDITH LOUISE ALLEN PRESS OF THE CHAS. L. WILLARD CO. NEW YORK eOIGflCIOT) 3 c that hate tro the trail in lon$ $one iajs C o strange f rotitterc;,atii jra$$e thrtf lerclanii me A 25o Bifei BishRoaft e thb booh, too, 9efoUotct« m our stepMiwfipm faint iream£,that trae oar foot imprint on heath n braHe,anii ttntare after u$: to igethbbooli; Sale of our memories mi Heart-Desires, brought from the storiefc jear we fteiicate ♦ E. LOUISC ALLEN EDITOR-IN-CHIEF [ I (£l|airntan: Silas B. Bkownell, LL.D. Hirr-OIliatrman: Mrs. A. A. Anderson. CHlrrk: Frederick S. Wait. ulrrasitrfr: George A. Plimpton. [ 12] Silas B. Brownell, LL.D. 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. Mrs. Henry N. Munn. Nicholas 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. Mrs. Gino C. Speranza. Mrs Malcolm D. Whitman. John G. Milburn. Miss Mary Stuart Pullman. George L. Rives. Deceased. [ 13] We must pardon much to men of genius. ' NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER. A.B., Columbia, 1882; A.M., 1883; Ph.D., 1884; Univ. Fellow in Philosophy, 1882-1885; student at Berlin and Paris, 1884-1885; LL.D., Syracuse, 1898; Tulane, 1901; Johns Hopkins, Princeton, University of Penn ylvania, and Yale, 1902 ; University of Chicago, 1903; St. Andrew ' s, Manchester, 1905; Cambridge, 1907; Litt.D., University of Ox- ford, 1905 ; Officier de Legion d ' Honneu r, 1906. Since 1885 in Columbia University; Assistant in Philosophy, 1885-1886; Tutor, 1886-1889 ; Adjunct Professor, 1889-1890 ; Dean Faculty of Philosophy, 1890 ; Professor of Ph ilosophy and Education, and Presi- dent since January, 1902. WILLIAM TENNEY BREWSTER Acting Dean and Professor of English A.B., Harvard College, 1892; A.M., Harvard Univer- sity, 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. 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. EDWARD DELEVAN PERRY Jay Professor of Greek 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 Pro- fessor of Greek, 1895-. Phi Beta Kappa. Note. — The pictures inserted are those of the Professors, Adjunct Professors, and Instructors, giving courses in Barnard College. Kxeept in the case of the Acting Dean, the order is that of Academic Seniority. 1 16] FRANKLIN H. GIDDINGS Professor of Sociology and the History of Civilization. A.B., Union College, 1877; LL.D., Oberlin College, 1900. Bryn Mawr College, 1888-1894; Columbia, 1894-. Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN BATES CLARK Professor of Political Economv A.B., Amherst College, 1872; A.M., Ph.D.; LLD., Amherst, 1897; Princeton University. 1896. Carleton College, 1877- 1881; Smith College 1882- 1893; Amherst College, 1892- 1895; Lecturer at Johns Hop- kins University, 1892-1894; Columbia, 1894-. Phi Beta Kappa. FRANK NELSON COLE Professor of Mathematics A.B., Harvard, 1882 ; Ph.D., Harvard, 1886. Lecturer in Mathematics, Harvard, 1885-1887 ; Instructor and As- sistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Michigan, 1888-1895; Professor of Mathematics, Columbia Univers- ity, since 1895. [17] JAMES HARVEY ROBINSON Professor of History A.B., Harvard, 1887 ; post-graduate courses at Harvard and in Germany; (Ph.D., Freiburg, 1890). Lecturer on European History, University of Pennsylvania, 1891 ; As- sociate Professor, 1892-1895; Professor of History, Col- umbia University, since 1895; Acting Dean of Barnard Col We, 1900-1901. CALVIN THOMAS Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures A.B., University of Michigan, 1874 ; A.M., 1877: LL.D., 190L University of Michigan, 1886-1896; Col- umbia, 1896-. 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-. [ 18] WILLIAM P. TRENT Professor of English Literature A.M., University of Virginia, 1884; LL.D., Wake For- est College, 1899; D.C.L., University of the South, 1905. University of the South, 1888-1900; Columbia, 1900-. 2fl HERBERT GARDINER LOUD Professor of Philosophy A.B., Amherst, 1871; A.M., causa honoris, 1900. University of Buffalo, 1895-1898; Columbia, 1900-. Phi Beta Kappa. LIVINGSTON FARRAND Professor of Anthropology A.B., Princeton, 1888; A.M., 1891; M.D., Columbia, 1891. [ 19] HENRY EDWARD CRAMPTON Professor of Zoology A.B., Columbia University, 1893; Ph.D., 1899 Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, 1895-1896; Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, 1895-1903; Biologic- al 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, Colum- bia, 1889-1890; Barnard, Instruc- tor, 1891-1902; Adjunct Profes- sor, 1902-1906; Professor, 1906- . Phi Beta Kappa. HERBERT MAULE RICHARDS Professor of Botany S.B., Harvard, 1891; S.D., 1895. Harvard, 1891- 1898- ; Barnard, 1898-. Sigma Xi. Absent on leave. [20] HENRY ROGERS SEAGER Professor of Political Economy Ph. P., University of Michigan, 1890; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1894. University of Pennsylvania, 1895- 1901 : Columbia, 1902-. MARGARET E. MALTBY Adjunct Professor of Physics A.B., Oberlin, 1882; S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Tec hnology, 1891 ; A.M., Oberlin, 1891 ; Ph.D., Gottingen University, 1895. Wellesley College, 1889-1893; Gottin- gen University, 1896-1897; Lake Erie College, 1897 1898; Barnard, Instructor in Chemistry, 1900-1903; Ad- junct 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, 1900-1904; Adjunct Professor, 1904-. Absent on leave. [21] WILLIAM ROBERT SHEPHERD Professor of History A.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, Uni- versity Scholar in European History, 1898-1899; Fellow in European History, 1899-1900; Assistant, 1900-1901 ; Lecturer, 1901-1903; Instructor, 1 9 - 1905; Adjunct Professor, 1905- 1908; Professor, 1908-. GEORGE WILLIS BOTSFORD Adjunct Professor of History A.B., University of Nebraska, 188-t; A.M., 1889: Ph.D.. Cornell University, 1891. Kalamazoo College, 1886- 1890; Bethany College, 1891-1895; Harvard. 1895-1901 : Columbia, 1901-. Phi Beta Kappa. EDWARD KASNER Adjunct Professor of Mathematics U.S. College of the City of New York, 1896; A.M., Col- umbia University, 1897; Ph.D., 1899. Phi Beta Kappa. WILLIAM PEPPERRELL MONTAGUE Adjunct Professor of Philosophy A.B., Harvard, 1896; A.M.. 1897; Ph.D., 1898. Hal- yard, 1898-1899; University of California, 1899-19013 Columbia, Lecturer, 1903-1904; Tutor, 1904-190:); In structor, 1905-1907; Adjunct Professor, 1907-. GRACE A. HUBBARD Adjunct Professor of English A.B.. Smith College, 1887 ; A.M., Cornell, 1892. Smith College, 1 892-1 90L Phi Beta Kappa. [ 23] MARY KINGSBURY SIMKHOVITCH Adjunct Professor of Social Economy A.B., Boston University, 1890. Phi Beta Kappa. MARIE REIMER Instructor in Chemistry A.B., Vassar, 1897; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr, 1904. Vassar College, Graduate Scholar, 1897-1898; Assistant, 1898- 1899; Fellow at Bryn Mawr, 1899-1902; Student at Uni- versity of Berlin, 1902-1903; Barnard, Lecturer, 1903- 1904- ; Instructor, 1904--. Phi Beta Kappa. [24] GERTRUDE MARY HIRST Instructor in Classical Philology Cambridge Classical Tripos (Part I), 1890; A.M., Col- umbia, University, 1900; Ph.D., 1902. Assistant, 1901- 190. ' 5; Tutor, 1903-1905; Instructor, 1905-. WILHELM ALFRED BRAUN Instructor in the Germanic Languages and Literatures A.B., Toronto University, 1895; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903. Alma College, 1897-1898; Fellow in German, Chi- cago University, 1898-1899; Fellow in Germari, Columbia, 1899-1900; Barnard, Assistant, 1900-1901 ; Tutor, 1901 1906 ' ; Instructor, 1906-. TRACY ELLIOT HAZEN Instructor in Botany A.B., University of Vermont, 1897; A.M., Columbia University, 1899; Ph.D., 1900. Director, Fairbanks Mu- seum of Natural Science, St. Johnsbury, Vt., 1901-1902, Assistant at Columbia, 1902; Tutor at Barnard. 1903- 1907; Instructor, 1907-. Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. RAYMOND C. OSBURN Instructor in Zoology B.Sc, Ohio State University, 1898; 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-. THEODORE LESLIE SHEAR Instructor in Classical Philology A.B., New York University, 1900; A.M., 1903; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1901. But- ler Fellow in Greek, New York- University, 1900-1901; Fellow in Greek, Johns Hopkins University, 1903-1904; Student at American School of Classical Studies at Ath- ens, 1904.-1905; Student at Uni- versity of Bonn, 1905-1906; Bar- nard, 1906-. Phi Beta Kappa. HENRI FRANCOIS MULLER Instructor in Romance Languages and Literatures B. es L., University of Paris, 1897. Columbia, 1903-. [26] HENRY MORGAN AYRES Instructor in English A.B., Harvard, 1902; Ph.D., 1908- . Lecturer Colum- bia University, 1908-1909: Instructor, 1909. HENRY RAYMOND MUSSEY Adjunct Professor of Economics A.B., Beloit College, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia, 190.5: N. Y. U., ' 1903-1905 ; Bryn Mawr, 1905-1907; Pennsyl- vania, 1907-1909; Barnard. 1909-. MARGARET CALHOUN Director of Physical Education A.B., Vassar, 1901. Barnard, 1907-. i 27 ] RAYMOND WEEKS Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures A. B., Harvard, 1890; A.M., 1891 ; Ph.D., 1897. Uni- versity of Michigan, 1891-93; Traveling Fellow to Harvard University, 1893-95 (Universities of Paris and Berlin) ; Uni- versity of Missouri, 1895-1908; Student at University of Paris, 1904-05 ; University of Illinois, 1908-09; Columbia and Barnard, 1909. ffitltrr fMrmbrra nf tltr Jffantllu HERBERT LEVI OSGOOD Professor of History A.B.. Amherst, 1877; A.M., 1880; Ph.D., Columbia, 1889 ; LL.D., Amherst, 1907. Wor- cester Academy (Mass.), 1877-1879 ; Boys ' High School, Brooklyn, 1882-1889. Columbia, 1889-. Phi Beta Kappa. JAMES RIGNALL WHEELER Professor of Greek Art and Archaeology A.B., University of Vermont, 1880; A.M., Ph.D., Harvard, 1885. Student at American School at Athens, 1882-1883; Universities of Berlin and Bonn 1885-1886 ; Johns-Hopkins Uni- versity, 1886; Harvard, 1888-1889; University of Vermont, 1889-1895; American School at Athens, 1892-1893; 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, Uni- versity Fellow in Classical Philology, 1885-1888; Tutorial Fellow in Latin, 1888-1889; Tutor, 1889-1895; Instructor, 1895-1900; Adjunct Professor, 1900-1903; Professor, 1903-. Phi Beta Kappa. ♦Absent on Leave [28] ©tltrr (ifftrrra nf 3uatrttrttmt JOHN LAWRENCE GERIG Instructor in Romance Languages and Literatures ELEANOR KELLER Tutor in Chemistry A.B., Columbia, 1900. IDA H. OGILVIE Tutor in Geology A. B., Bryn Mawr, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903. Lecturer, Barnard, 1903-1905; Tutor, 1905-. HAROLD CHAPMAN BROWN Tutor in Philosophy B. A., Williams, 1901 ; M.A., Harvard, 1903; Ph.D. , 1905. Harvard, 1903-1905; Colum- bia, 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, 1907-. 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; Bar- nard, 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-. [2 9 ] EDGAR HOWARD STURTEVANT Tutor in Classical Philology A.B., Indiana University, 1898; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1901. Indiana Univers- ity, 1901-1902; 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-. 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, 1900. Wellesley College, 1899-1906; Bar- nard, Assistant, 1906-1908; Tutor, 1908-. ALGERNON DE V. TASSIN Lecturer in English A.B., Harvard, 1892; A.M., 1893. EUGENE E. AGGER Lecturer in Economics A.B., University of Cincinnati, 1901 ; A.M., 1902; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1906. Teaching Fellow, University of Cincinnati, 1901-1902; Columbia, 1902-. VIRGINIA CROCHERON GILDERSLEEVE Lecturer in English A.B., Barnard, 1899 ; A.M., Columbia, 1900 ; Ph.D., Columbia, 1908. Barnard, Assistant, 1900-1903; Tutor, 1903-1907; Lecturer, 1908-. Phi Beta Kappa. CARLOTTA J. MAURY Lecturer in Geology [30] HERBERT A. CLARK Lecturer in Physics B.S., IT. of Nebraska, 1898; A.M., U. Nebraska, 1905; Syracuse U., 1905-08; Col- umbia, 1908-09; Barnard, 1909-. HARRY L. HOLLINGWORTH Instructor in Psychology A.B., Nebraska, 1906; Ph.D., Columbia, 1909; Neb raska, 1904-1906; High School Prin- cipal, 1906-07; Columbia, 1909; Phi Beta Kappa. Sigma Zeta. MRS. JULIANA HASKELL Assistant in Germanic Languages and Literatures A.B., Columbia, 1904; A.M., 1905; Ph.D., 1908. Assistant at Barnard, 1908- . Phi Beta Kappa. WILLIAM HALLER Assistant, in English A.B., Amherst, 1908; Amherst College, 1908-1909; Barnard, 1909- . HUGH HARRIS CALDWELL Assistant in English A.B., Davidson, 1903; Youngs College, 1905-07; Alabama Presbyterian College, 1907- 1909; Barnard, 1909-. .MARGARET APPLETON KINGSLEY Assistant in Botany A.B., Smith College, 1908. LOUISE HOYT GREGORY Assistant in Zoology A.B., Vassar, 190:3; A.M., Columbia, 1907. Vassar College, 1903-1905: Barnard, 1905, CHARLES JONES OGDEN Assistant in Classical Philology A.B., Columbia, 1900; LL.B., A.M., 1903. CECILIA SILLCOX Assistant in Chemistry A.B., Barnard, 1908; Barnard, 1909. [3i ] ARTHUR A. LIVINGSTON Assistant in French ALICE DOROTHY BREWSTER Assistant in English A.B., Columbia, 1906; A.M., 1907. Barnard, 1908-. Phi Beta Kappa. ELIZABETH C. COOK Assistant in English BURTON WARREN KENDALL Assistant in Physics S.B., Mass. Inst. Technology, 1906; M. L T., 1906-1908; Twett Fellow in M. I. T Graduate work Columbia, 1908-1909; Barnard, 1909-. JULIET STUART POINTS Assistant in History A.B., Barnard, 1907; Barnard, 1909-. Phi Beta Kappa. EDNA REBECCA SCALES Assistant in Mathematics A.B., Barnard, 1909; Barnard, 1909-. Phi Beta Kappa. Officers of Administration N. W. Liggett, A.B., Bursar Anna E. H. Meyer, A.B., Secretary Virginia Tucker Boyd, A.B., Clerk Mabel Foote Weeks, A.B., Mistress of Brooks Hall Frederick A. Goetze, M.Sc, Consulting Engineer Bertha L. Rockwell, Librarian of Barnard College [32] 3tt Ulrmnnam GEORGE RICE CARPENTER, A.B. D.C.L Professor of Rhetoric and English Composition (1893-1909) Died April 8, 1909 JAMES HUME CANFIELD, LL.D., Litt. D. (Oxon) Librarian of Columbia University Died March 29, 1909 [33] Lilian Egleston, 1910 - - - - President Helen Brown, 1911 ------ Vice-President Marion Weinstein, 1910 - Secretary Treasurer Kate Tieman, 1911 - - - - - Librarian I 36] Vista from Brooks Hall RETURN TO BROOKS HALL AT TWILIGHT Close the gate softly, friend of mine, And bide just a wee Out here under the twilight sky! For that click of the gate is the magic sign That we have crossed the boundary line, And now in our own little world are free, With the commonplace world passed by. The shores of Jersey scarce are faintly lined, Yet lights gleam soft in myriad array Upon their slopes ; below, not seen, but felt, The soundless river flows its ceaseless way. The campus stretches mistily before Our vision, to the point where shrubs and trees Loom dark and strangely huge, as gracefully They bend to meet the murmuring evening breeze. And Brooks ! dear Brooks ! how fair The shadows shifting down thy columns are. — And at the cloister ' s end, as in a frame, That arch of purple sky, where shines one star ! Yet all this silence. Brooks, is but without, — As witness every cheerful college light Flashing from windows up and down thy height. — Of life and stir within they leave no doubt. With one last ling ' ring look upon the scene O ' er which the hush of twilight ' s hour descends, We turn, and enter through the welcoming door, To life, and light, and merriment, and friends. [37] STUDENT ' S ROOM AROUND THE FIRE God gave all men all earth to love But since our hearts are small — Ordained for each one spot should prove Beloved over all. Assnriatr AUtmnar of Sarttarii (ttollnjF (Mtrmi Aurelie M. Reynaud, 1899 . .President Ellinor Reiley Endicott (Mrs. George Endicott), 1900 Vice-President Elizabeth Roberts Compton (Mrs. Alfred 1). Compton), 1901.. . .Corresponding Secretary Elizabeth T. Thompson, 1903 Recording Secretary Ruth B. Howe, 1903 Treasurer Mary S. Pullman, 1893 Alumnae Trustee Strrrturs at IGargp Alice G. Chase 1896. Anna E. H. Meyer 1898. Helen W. Cooley 1905. Anne McKenney Harrington 1902 Eva S. Potter 1896. (Mrs. Howard S. Harrington). I 42 I Itfinmtrr (Hommittrr The Vice-President, Chairman. Ruth B. Howe 1903. Anne McK. Harrington 1902. Aurelie M. Reynaud, ex-officio. liitislir (Eommtttcr Anna E. H. Meyer 1898, Chairman. Dorothy Brewster 1906 . Virginia Boyd 1906. Elizabeth Roberts Compton 1901 Amy ' Loveman 1901. (Mrs. Alfred G. Compton). titurnts Aiu (Cmnmtttrr Mabel Parsons, 1895, Chairman Dorothea Eltzner 1908. Alma E. Wallach 1901. Helen Erskine 1904. Caroline G. Stacey ' 1895 (Mrs. Sidney G. Stacey). Urntbrralttp (Unmmittrr Sophie P. Woodman 1907, Chairman. Ruth B. Howe 1903. Elizabeth R. Compton 1901. Mary Maxon 1908. Frances May Ingalls 1909. iSffitiuutt rlinlarBltip (UnntmilliT Carita Spencer 1902, Chairman. Lily M. Jones 1905 (Mrs. Adam L. Jones). Eva yom Baur 1909. Gertrude Wells 1908. Virginia C. Gildkrsleeve 1899. iEinplmmirttt CCmuintttrr Alice D. Miller 1899, (Mrs. Henry W. Miller), Chairman. Eva S. Potter 1896. Edna F. Brown 1907. I 43 ] F o u n ded April 7 , 1 9 l 2 . (iffirrrs Gertrude L. Hunter 1910 President Lilian H. Egleston 1910 Vice-President Mary B. Polhemus 1911 Treasurer Cornelia H. Dakin 1912 Secretary iExrruliur (Eontmtttrr Grace A. Reeder 1910 Chairman Susan B. Minor 1911. Gertrude L. Hunter ) . „ T TT _ ex-otjicio. Eleanore Myers 1912. Lilian H. Egleston Louise Bartling 1913. § tuiifnt Cjmmril Gertrude Hunter 1910 Chairman Lilian H. Egleston 1910 Dorothy B. Kirchwey 1910. [45] fitt0r (ElaBB n pocu CEjOs CLASS COLORS CLASS FLOWER CLASS MASCOT BROWN AND GOLD BLACK-EYED SUSAN OWL (Offirrrs Dorothy Kirchwey President Hetty Dean Vice-President Julia Wagner Secretary Margaret O ' Donnell Treasurer Marion Weinstein Historian [47] It is a stately Senior — now gaze upon her, do. SENIOR year is a period of awakening. From the very first day of college those who are covering the last lap of the one hundred and twenty-four point course, find themselves enveloped in an atmosphere of sobering thought. Class distinctions fade away and college spirit strengthened by the past three years, becomes a calm, all persuasive force, too deep for utterance. Alma Mater is now a living reality. Studies, too, begin to take on a new aspect. If there have been moments of pure intellectual enjoyment throughout the other years, there are hours of it now. Something like a real sense of appreciation comes to the Senior. A sense of personal equilibrium is another valuable gain. The Senior gets her balance. The moody introspection of Junior year now makes way for cheerful philosophy. The graduating student learns not to take people and things too seriously, but to use her sense of humor to the utmost. She ac- quires poise. Friendships in the last year take firm root. There is something about the coming day of separation that adds a touch of tenderness to them and en- dows them, even now, with the mystic haze of memory. Senior year is full of mean- ing. It is in every sense of the word the culmination. With her face turned toward the sheepskin goal, her eyes looking beyond it into the calling world of struggling humanity, her heart bound to her Alma Mater, the Senior goes forward on her way — half eagerly, half reluctantly to the frontier of life. [48] (ttlasa of lflin Alta Anderson. Lillian Anderson. Clarice Auerbach. Mary W. Bailey. Tessie Barrows. Mary Bishop. Lena Bohan. Gladys A. Bonlils. Frances Burger. Clarita F. Crosby. Helen L. Crossnian. Hetty A. Dean. Mildred Downs. Marguerite D. C. Druding. Elizabeth V. Dunnet. Elise S. Eddy. Margery Eggleston. Lilian H. Egleston. Maude E. Emery. Elizabeth English. Agnes Ennis. Edna M. Fancher. Bertha H. Firebaugh. Carrie O. Fleming. Marie L. Flint. Harriet R. Fox. Ray M. Frame. Gretchen M. Franke. Marian L. Gibson. Eleanor L. Graham. Florence E. Greene. Nannette F. Hamburger. Edna Heller. Grace Henderson. Natalie Henderson. May T. Herrmann. Antoinette D. Hill. Bessie Holzman. Florence I. Hopewell. Stella L. Hopewell. Gertrude L. Hunter. R. Muriel Ivimey. Violetta Jackson. Mary V. Jaques. Dorothy B. Kirchwey Ethel E. Lawrence. Adelaide Loehrsen. Doris Long. Mabel D. McCann. Josephine McGrath. Christella F. MacMurray. Dorothea H. Mahon. Ellen N. Maison. Grace E. Meier. Virginia M. Mollenhauer. Marion J. Monteser. Rose Moses. Mary Nammack. Hazel Nickelson. Elizabeth Nitchie. Jessie R. Nottingham. Agnes T. O ' Donnel. Margaret M. A. O ' Donnel Edna A. Palmer. Rosetta F. Piatt. Elsie Plaut. Maud Petit. Ethel Petit. Elizabeth Rawcliffe. Florence W. Read. Grace A. Reeder. Beatrice Rich. Dorothy Reilly. Margaret Renton. Florence E. Rose. Corinne Russell. Helen E. Savitz. Johanna J. Schwarte. Agnes ' G. Shaw. Ethel L. Shaw. Grace M. Shaw. Ruth H. Sidell. Sulamith Silverman. Leone F. Spalding. Maude B. Stimson. Laura MacE. Stryker. L. Comfort Tiffany. Agnes Thomson. Olive Thompson. Nathalie Thorne. Julia A. Wagner. Hazel I. Wayt. Marion Weinstein. Alma Wiesner. Helene B. Wise. Hazel Woodhull. Helen D. Worrall. [49] dlmttnr QUass CLASS COLORS RED AND WHITE CLASS FLOWER RED AND WHITE CARNATION CLASS MASCOT THE INDIAN Mary S. Conroy President Susan B. Minor Vice-President Ruth Hakes Corresponding Secretary Marguerite Reynar Recording Secretary Ottilie Prochazka Treasurer Edith Deacon Histo rian [5i ] It is a frisky Junior that skips before the crowd. JUNIOR! What wealth of meaning lies in that one word. For this third year — the ideal of the Freshman and the happy oasis of memory to the Senior —is one of the great mile stones in the four years of college life. The Junior takes her place in the ranks of the Upper Classmen. She has served her apprenticeship of required work and now enters upon a new phase of existence where studies are elective and life rilled with the keen enjoyment of actual accomplishment. It is this mutual joy of living which draws together so closely the Freshman and Junior classes. In a way these two occupy parallel positions in col- lege ; each stands at the lowest rung of a new ladder — Lower Classmen and Upper Classmen. Each ste p brings the Junior nearer the top, where her Alma Mater stands waiting to give the passport to new lands. There is an exhilaration in this climb of Junior year. The laggard is no longer driven to her task; voluntarily she quickens her pace as she finds new wonders opening before her. The days of forced study are over, and she is eager for knowledge. Her horizon has broadened and she begins to take an interest in the people about her. Before her dazzled view there stretches a living world into which she longs to go out and learn. [52] ChtBa nf 1911 E. Louise Allen. Helen L. Amy. Alice L. Bennet. F. Aurill Bishop. Stella Bloch. Ida Bokshitsky. Josephine A. Bosch. Helen E. Bradbeer. Helen Brown. Juanita Brow.n. Emilie E. M. Bruning. Agnes M. Burke. Eleanor Burne. Edith C. Burns. Ruth A. Burns. Anna M. Callan. Ruth Carroll. Therese Cassell. Amelia A. Clement. Ethel M. Cochrane. Mary S. Conroy. Helen C. Coombs. Laila A. Coston. Helen H. Crandell. Harriet J. Currier. Edith M. Deacon. Agnes M. Denike. Evelyn Dewey. Isabel T- Doming. Mildred Dodge. Adele Duncan. Levantia V. Eaton. Estelle J. Ellisson. Ethel L. Felch. Vera A. Fueslein. Katharine Gay. Rose Gerstein. Grace Gilleaudeau. Penelope M. Girdner. Elsie Gleason. Louise de F. Greenawalt. Elizabeth Gray. Lottie J. Greiff. Ruth J. Hakes. Margaret T. Hart. Elizabeth Hasler. Irma F. Heiden. Anna L. Herrmann. Augustina Hess. Alice T. Hill. Madeleine Hirsh. Charlotte M. Hodge. Margaret R. Hogan. Florence Holzwasser. Olga K. Ihlseng. Louie E. Johnson. Ethel M. Kempton. Olive King. Anna A. Kugler. Ethel S. Leveridge. Grace G. Lovell. Augusta Lustgarten. A. Leila Martin. Grace McKee. Edna J. McKeever. Theresa Mayer. Mary R. Maschme dt. Mildred K. Messing. Susan B. Minor. Eva C. Mordecai. Addie F. Morgenstern. Ruth L. Moss. Agnes M. Nobis. Marian Oberndorfer. Louise E. Ockers. Alice M. O ' Gorman. Mary B. Polhemus. Helen M. Porter. Marion Pratt. Ottilie Prochazka. Frances M. F. Randolph. Mabel J. Reid. Marguerite W. Reynar. Mamie E. Rivkin. Helen De M. Runyon. Louise Rusk. Rose L. Salmowitz. Dorothy Salwen. Mildred L. Sanborn. Georgiana Sandford. Gertrude Saul. Ethel Schlesinger. Lillian H. Schoedler. Myrtle Schwitzer. Angelina Seveso. Mary B. Shaw. Katherine H. Sickels. Louise M. Sillcox. Ruth M. Stagen. Jeannette A. Steinecke. Natalie Stewart. Stella Straus. Bernice M. Taber. Elizabeth Thomson. Kate H. Tiemann. Anna S. Van Buskirk. Charlotte C. M. Verlage. E. Adelaide Waite. Amy Weil. Linda C. Weyman. Helen E. Wilkes. Geraldine Willets. [53] CLASS COLORS DARK BLUE AND BUFF CLASS FLOWER TEA ROSE CLASS MASCOT DRAGON ©ffirrra Rosalind Case President Eleaxore Myers Vice-President Irene Glenn Recording 1 Secretary Mary Mulqueen Corresponding Secretary Florence de L. Lowther Treasurer Edith Valet Historian It is a bantam Sophomore that ' s strutting into view. jA ND so we pass into Sophomore year! The Freshman returns to college in the fall of her second year, no longer the heedless and inexperienced en- thusiast, but a creature wise in her own conceit. She expects to conquer! And what does she find? It is the same college, but somehow the glamor of the past year has become inexplicably tarnished. The illusion is not quite so perfect as it used to be. Her point of view has shifted. She is looking at tilings, not with the ecstasy of the newcomer, but with the vanity of one who knows all about it — one who has climbed high and now looks back upon the stragglers below. But even as poor Humpty Dumpty she is doomed to fall. Sophomore year is a time of awakening to the world of fact, where the student realizes for the first time that after all her wisdom is false pride and her resources nothing of which to boast. The Sophomore finds out her own inefficacy — she learns to know herself. Then with that knowledge comes the realization that life is not all roseate, but that there are dark patches in the sky. She has eaten of the tree of knowledge and is forced beyond the Eden of Illusion. [56] ©laaa of 1912 Florence Anderson. Jennie Auerbach. Mabel Barrett. Georgina Berrian. Sarah Blumgarten. Haze l Boegehold. Edna Booth. Gertrude Borchardt. Maude M. Brennan. Hazel K. Bristol. Bessie Bunzel. Hazel Burkholder. Pauline Cahn. Rosalind C. Case. Georgia Cerow. Catharine Chaffee. Rosemary Clark. Grace Coffin. Lena Cohen. Molly Coyle. Gertrude Cusack. Cornelia H. Dakin. Irene L. Dalgleish. Mary DiehL Eleanor M. Doty. Martha Emmons. Alice B. Evans. Katharine S. Fancher. Grace Fischer. Rebecca Fischel. Louise Fitz. Henrine Fitzgerald. Elinor Franklin. Irene Frear. Shirley Gleason. Irene Glenn. Zella Gough. Elizabeth P. Gray. Kathleen Gray. Genevieve Van V. Greene. Grace Green. May Greenwold. Dorothy Griffin. Harriet Hale. Anna Hallock. Mildred Hamburger. Edith Hardy. Florence Hazel. Elsa Heller. Rowena Hendricks. Blanche Hershtield. Mildred Hodges. Phebe Hoffman. Ernestine Isabel. Irene Johnson. Elizabeth Jones. Frieda Jud. Bertha Junghaus. Caroline Kahn. Irene Keenan. Virginia King. Isabel Koss. Margaret Kutner. Paula C. Lambert. Lucy Landru. Frances Latske. Esther Lewontin. Irene London. Amanda Loughren. Florence D. Lowther. Lillian Mac Donald Jennie MacKay. Alice Martin. Eleanor Matthews. Celestine Maxwell. Isabel McKenzie. Eleanore Myers. Alma Misch. Lucile Q. Mordecai. Edith Morris. Estelle Morrison. Rose Moynahon. Mary Mulqueen. Margaret J. Naumberg. Eleanor Neu. Minnie Newman. Sophia Newmark. Isabelle Noyes. Louise Nyitray. Margerie O ' Connell. Paula Oellrich. Margaret O ' Rourke. Helen E. Philips. 1 1 elen Plummer. Pamela Poor. Pearl E. Ralph. Emma Rapelye. Elizabeth Ready. Elizabeth Reardon. Florence du B. Rees. Vera Rees. Hildegarde Reese. Molly Rice. Ethel Richardson. Frances Rogers. Grace Rogers. Hester Rusk. Elfrida Roeder. Etta Schweiss. May Scully. Gladys R. Segee. Marie Shehan. Doris Shelley. Rena Sinn. Virginia Smith. Dorothy Spear. Elizabeth Stack. Beatrice Stegman. Jessie M. Stevenson. Mary Stine. Christine Straiton. Beatrice Stenbuck Lila Sherin Margaret Southerton Cora Thees. Ruberta Thompson. Edith Valet. Florence Van Vrankeu. Dorothea Von Doenhoff. Henrietta Von Tobel. Constance Von Wahl Catharine Walther. Margaret Watson. Mary Wegener. Lucille Weil. Mildred Weiner. Eleanor Wigand. Anne Wilson. Margaret Wood. Estella Woodruff. Elsie Wunderlich. Edna Ziegler. Alice Zimmer. [57] iFrrshmau (ttlass CLASS COLORS GREEN AND WHITE CLASS FLOWER FERN AND WHITE CARNATION CLASS MASCOT BULLDOG (iDfttrrrs Priscilla Lockwood President Louise Bartling Vice-President Mary W. Stewart Recording Secretary Ruth Mauley Corresponding Secretary Helen Dana Treasurer Marion Newman Historian [59] ' It is a tender Freshman that walks upon the scene. FRESHMAN! The word in itself is significant. For in spite of the pert and officious meaning which colloquial use has given it, the term fresh stands for all that is unimpaired and brisk, strong and full of vitality, and so the youngest class was rightly called. Upper Classmen smile knowingly at the inexperience, greenness as they call it, of the incoming class. But is not this inexperience a help rather than a hindrance to the newcomers? For with a clear field for untried energy to grasp the do and don ' ts of college life, the Freshmen make a quick advance aided by the Seniors as models, the Juniors as guides, and the ever ready Sophomores as phys- icians for the conceit chronic to late high school graduates. It is a common college saying that Freshmen are known by their incessant cheering and continual yelling. This is indeed true, but why should it be considered a detriment to the class? The newcomers are only expressing their unspoiled joy at the realization that they are a part of the college, and their gratitude for the possibilities and future before them. And so their cheers and yells are as it were pledges that they will seize every oppor- tunity and surpass even what is expected of them. They are filled with the thought that Freshman year is the nicest, the best — only until they are Sopho- mores, and so on all the way through. [60] (£1 1BB 0f 1013 Nathalie Armstrong. Marthe Ballot. Edith Balmford. Alice Barrett. Louise Bartling. Florence Block. Emma Brombacher. Rosalie Brooks. Alice Brown. Grace Brown. Madeleine Bunzel. Ester Burgess. Clara Buttenwieser. Gertrude Campion. Marguerite Cassidy. Dorothy Cheeseman. Dorothy Child. Louise Comes. Helen Crosby. Mabel Daly. Helen Dana. Sarah Davis. Estelle Dieches. Amy Dessar. Maria D. de Villabilla. Elizabeth Donovan. Isabella Douglass. Bessie Downs. Helen Dwyer. Alberta Edell. Doris Fleischman. Edith Fleming. Helen Foland. Etta Fox. Marjorie Franklin. Vera Feeley. Rhoda Freudenthal. Mariette Gless. Harriet Goldman. Rebecca Goldstein. Saida Gottlieb. Miriam Greiselle. Edith Halfpenny. Naomi Harris. Gladys Hasberg. Ethel Hawkey. Margaret Herbst. May Hessberg. Mary Hildebrand. Mary Hillas. Eleanor Houghton. Emma Hubert. Imogene Ireland. Edith Jones. Marguerite Kalt. Mollie Katy. Edythe Keely. Margaret Kelly. Dorothy Langford. Pauline Latzke. Adelaide Le Count. Edith Le Quesne. Sophie Lingg. Priscilla Lockwood. Edith London. Helen Ludlow. Bessie Mac Donald. Augusta Magid. Ruth Marley. Hazel Martin. Virginia McGivney. Josephine Melsha. Gertrude Morris. Amelia Mumford. Mary Mumford. Irene Murphy. Marguerite Neugass. Marion Newman. Katherine Noble. Eleanor Obizen. Anna O ' Gorman. Elizabeth O ' Malley. Ruth Osterberg. Eddie Parks. Jessie Payne. Sally Pero. Harriet Poore. Celea Rabinovitz. Lillie Reilly. Carmen Reuben. Beatrice Reynolds. Margaret Richey. Lola Robinson. Marjorie Robinson. Edith Rosenblatt. Ethel Rossin. Goldie Roth. Anna Salzman. Helen Sandford. Mary Smalley. Harriet Seibert. Jean Shaw. Regina Shannon. Muriel Slade. Susan Smith. Joan Sperling- Mabel Stebbins. Alene Stern. Mary W. Stewart. Anna Suratt. Ethel Terrel. Helen Tobias. Marion Tully. Ruth Tyndall. Marguerite Van Dwyn. Jeanette Van Raalte. Irma Von Glahm. Sarah Voorhees. Mary Voyse. Ethel Webb. Alice Weeks. Varian White. Edith Wiener. Priscilla Lee Wolf. Marian Wollf. [61 ] utltr fmmg Hmtmt s QUyrtattatt AafiDriattDit Founded 1897 OMtrrra Mary W. Bailky 1910 President Christklla MacMitrray 1910 Vice-President Laura Bennett 1911 Corresponding Secretary Margaret T. Hart 1911 Recording Secretary Anne Wilson 1912 Treasurer Mrs. George P. Merrett General Secretary (Uljairmrn of (Unmmittrm Bible Study — Helen Crossman, ' io. Blue Book — Olive Thompson, ' io. Chapel — Helen Brown, ' n. Devotional — Anna Hallock, ' 12. Finance — Anne Wilson, ' 12. Membership — Helen Worrall, ' 10. Missionary — Elizabeth Nitchie, io. Church Club — Philanthropic — Addic Morgenstern, ' 11. Reception — Louise Allen, ' 11. Silver Bay — Florence Rose, ' 10. Intercollegiate — Doris Long, ' 10. ( Sub-committee.) Poster — Estellc Ellisson, ' 11. Visiting — Mabel Reid, ' 11. Carrie Fleming ' 10. [62] lam L. Anderson. M. Bailey. L. Bohan. F. Burger. C. Fleming. M. Flint. B. Holzman. G. Hunter. E. Lawrence. L. Allen. H. Amy. L. Bennett. A. Bishop. J. Bosch. H. Bradbeer. H. Brown. J. Brown. E. Bruning. R. Burns. A. Callan. R. Carroll. T. Cassel. E. Cochrane. H. Coombs. F. Anderson. G. Berrian. S. Boegehold. H. Bristol. H. Burkholder. R. Case. G. Coffin. M. Coyle. C. Dakin. E. Doty. M. Emmons. K. Fancher. H. Fitzgerald. G. Fischer. I. Frear. N. Armstrong. M. Ballot. F. Block. R. Brooks. L. Comes. M. Daly. S. Davis. M. De Villabilla. I. Douglas. A. Edell. E. Fleming. D. Long. E. Maison. C. MacMurray. M. McCann. J. Nottingham. E. Nitchie. E. Palmer. G. Reeder. M. Renton. L. Coston. H. Currier. A. Denike. M. Dodge. E. Ellison. P. Girdner. E. Gleason. L. Greenawalt. R. Hakes. M. Hart. A. Hill. O. Ihlseng. L. Johnson. E. Kempton. G. Lovell. T. Glenn. E. Gray. G. Green. G. Greene. M. Greenwold. H. Hale. A. Hallock. E. Hardy. P. Hoffman. E. Jones. F. Jud. B. Junghans. C. Kahn. T. Koss. F. Lutzke. H. Goldman. R. Hawkey. M. Hillas. T. Treland. E. Tones. M. ' Kalt. E. Kelly. D. Langford. P. Lutzke. A. Le Count. E. Le Quesne. D. Reilly. B. Rich. F. Rose. H. Savitz. A. Shaw. E. Shaw. J. Schwarte. R. Sidell. L. Spalding. 1911 L. Martin. G. McKee. E. McKeever. M. Messing. S. Minor. A. Morgenstern. E. Morris. L. Ockers. M. Polhemus. H. Porter. O. Prochazka. M. Reid. M. Rcynar. H. Runyon. L. Rusk. 1912 E. Myers. I. Noyes. P. Poor. E. Rapelyc. E. Ready. C. Reese. E. Richardson. F. Rogers. G. Rogers. M. Roof. M. Roy. H. Rusk. E. Schwcis. G. Segee. R. Sinn. 1913 P. Lockwood. H. Ludlow. B. MacDonald. H. Martin. G. Morris. K. Noble. S. Pero. H. Poore. E. Parks. M. Robinson. L. Robinson. N. Thorne. H. Wayt. A. Wiesner. H. Wise. 1 1. Worrall. J. Wagner. M. Sanborn. G. Sandford. G. Saul. M. Shaw. K. Sickels. L. Sillcox. J. Steinecke. G. Tall man. E. Thomson. A. Waite. G. Willets. A. Van Buskirk. V Smith. M. Southerton. J. Stevenson. C. Thees. H. Trieschmann. F. Watson. M. Wegener. A. Wilson. E. Woodruff. E. Wunderlick. F. Van Vranken. E. Zieglcr. G. Slade. M. Stebbins. M. Stewart. E. Terrel. M. Tully. R. Tyndall. E. Webb. A. Weeks. . V. White. S. Voorhis. ( — Associate Members.) Special — E. Burr. [6 3 ] Atltlrltr Asaoriatimt Wffitstz Ethel S. Leveridge 1911 President Lillian Schoedler 1911 Vicc-Prc side lit Amy Weil, 1911 Secretary Mary Wegener 1912 Treasurer [64] C. Auerbach. C. Crosby. H. Crossman. M. Eggelston. C. Fleming. H. Fox. N. Hamburger. B. Holzman. 191D M. McCann. G. Nottingham. E. Plaut. G. Schwarte. A. Thomson. J. Wagner. H. Woodhull. 1911 F. A. Bishop. A. Burke. S. Bloch. J. Brown. E. Bruning. E. Burne. E. Burns. T. Cassel. L. Coston. M. Conroy. A. Duncan. E. Dewey. E. Ellison. V. Fueslem. E. Gleason. G. Gilleaudeau. P. Girdner. I. Heiden. F. Holzwasser. O. Ihlseng. E. Leveridge. L. Martin. G. McKee. S. Minor. E. Mordecai. R. Moss. M. Oberndorfer. L. Ockers. M. Polhemus. F. Randolph. E. Riorden. M. Rivkin. H. Runyan. D. Salwen. L. Schoedler. M. Schwitzer. L. Sillcox. J. Steinecke. E. Thomson. A. Waitc. A. Weil. L. Weyman. 1912 H. Borghold. M. Barret. P. Calm. G. Cusack. R. Case. G. Coffin. M. Coyle. E. Doty. E. Franklin. H. Fitzgerald. G. Fischer. S. Gleason. K. Gray. G. V. Greene. M. Greenwold. A. Hallock. E. Heller. P. Hoffman. M. Hodges. M. Hamburger. B. Hirshfield. E. Isabel. T. Keenan. I. Koss. M. Kutner. P. Lambert. F. Lowther. L. Mordecai. M. Mulqueen. E. Myers. C. Maxwell. M. Naumberg. E. Neu. G. Rogers. H. Rusk. G. Segee. V. Smith. G. Shaw. L. Sherin. M. Scully. E. Stack. L. Stein. M. Stine. C. Straiton. C. Thees. D. Van Doenhoff. M. Wegener. C. Walther. C. von Wahl. E. Wigand. L. Weil. A. Wilson. E. Ziegler. 1913 L. Bartling. R. Goldstein. A. Magid. A. Salzman. M. Bunzl. H. Goldman. V. McGivney. M. Stewart. E. Burgess. M. Gless. I. Murphy. A. Surnt. C. Buttenweiscr. S. Gottlieb. C. Martin . M. Stebbins. M. Ballot. M. Hillas. T. Mekha. A. Stern. A. Barret. E. Halfpenny. M. Neugass. G. Tallman. F. Block. E. Hawkey. M. Newman. 1 1. Tobias. R. Brooks. N. Harris. K. Noble. M. Tully. L. Comes. E. Hubert. E. Oeizen. R. Tyndall. D. Child. T. Ireland. E. O ' Mally. M. Van Duyn D. Cheesman. M. Kelley. E. Parks. I. von Glahn. M. Daly. M. Katz. T. Payne. S. Voorhis. I. Douglas. M. Kalt. S. Pero. E. Webb. H. Dana. E. Kelley. H. Poore. V. White. E. Fleming. D. Langford. E. Rosin. M. Wolf. D. Fleishman. G. Latzke. G. Rothe. A. Weeks. E. Fox. A Le Count. C. Reuben. E. Wiener. V. Fieley. S. Lingg. S. Robinson. P. Wolf. M. Franklin. P. Lockwood. E. Rosenblatt. R. Freudenthal. B. MacDonald. H. Siebert. [65] La Societe Francaise President — Olga K. Ihlseng 1911. Vice-President — Alice O ' Gorman 1911. Fiftli Member of Executive Committee Secretary — Paula C. Lambert 1912. Treasurer — Marion Pratt 1911. Martha Ballot 1913. F. Burger. G. Francke. G. Henderson. M. Hermann. M. V. Jaques. E. Lawrence. D. Long. D. Mahon. E. N. Maison. M. Montesef. R. Moses. M. Nammack. E. Plaut. F. Read. M. Stimson. N. Thome. J. Wagner. 1 !) 1 1 E. L. Allen. A. Clement. E. Dewey. M. llirsh. A. Morgenstern. A. ' O ' Gorman. C. Verlage. T. Bosch. M. Conroy. E. Ellisson. O. K. Ihlseng. L. Ockers. L. S. Schoedler. A. Weil. E. Bruning H. Coombs. G. Gilleaudeau. L. Johnson. M Pratt. E. Thomson. E. Burns. E. Deacon. P. Girdner. E. -Leveridge. E. Mordecai. K. Tietnann. G. Berriam. E. Doty. G. Greer. i 9 i a P. C. Lambert. E. Matthews. M. Scully. C. Thees. S. B lumgarten. M Emmons. G. Green. L. Laudru. C. Maxwell. G. Segee. E. Valet. ir. Bristol. A. Evans. I. Glenn. F. Latzke. M. Newman. D. Shelley. M. Watson. p. Cahn. K. Fancher. E. Isabel. I. London. E. Rapelye. R. Sinn. E. Wiegand G. Cerow. H Fitzgerald. C. Kahn. A. Loughren. E. Ready. V. Smith. A. Zimmer. R. Clark. R. Fishel. I. Koss. F. Lowther. F. Rees. E. Stack. M Ballot. L. Comes. E. Fox. 1 1 15 M. Katz. H. Martin. A. O ' Gorman. J. Van Raath. R. Brooks. S. Davis. M. Gless. E. Kelly. P. McGinny. G. Roth. M de Villabilla. G Brown. E. Dieches. H. Goldman. P. Lutzke. I. Murphy. A. Shannon. S. Voorhees. M Bunzel. A. Dessar. M. Hessberg. E. London. M. Keugass. J. Sperling. V. White. C. Buttenwieser. E. Donovan. E. Halfpenny. R. Lyndall. M. Newman. A. Stern. E. Wiener. 1 1 Childs. H Dwyer. [66] Srtttarljrr iKrns ©fftrrrB President — Gretchen Franke 1910. Secretary — Pauline Cahn 1912. Vice-President — Vera A. Fueslein 1911. Treasurer — Bessie Holzman 1910. 1 ! I o c. Auerbach. F. Burger. E. Fancher. B. Holzman. M. Nammack. J. Schwarte. M. Weinstein. T. Barrows. M. Eggleston. G. Franke. M. V. Jaques. A. O ' Donuell. J. Wagner. A. Wicsner. L. Bohan. L. Egleston. M. Hermann. D. Long. E. Plant. 19 11 S. Bloch. V. Fueslein. I. Heiden. A. Kugler. O. Prochazka . G. Saul. S. Straus. C. Verlage. E. Burns. P. Girdner. A. Hermann. M. Messing. M. Pratt. L. Schoedler. K. H. Tiemann L. Weyman. E. Bruning. L. Greenawalt. E. Kempton. A. Morgenstern H. Runyon. H. Stapff. S. Blumgarten. L if X TO D. von Doenhoff. I. Koss. E. Myers. D. Spear. E. Wigand. G. Borchardt. G. Fischer. M. Kutner. L. Nyitray. C. Thees. A. Wilson. B. Bunzel. E. Franklin. I. London. P. Oelreich. H. von Tobel. E. Wunderlich. H. Burkholder. E. Heller. E. Misch. E. Schweis. E. Valet. E. Ziegler. r. Cahn. B. Hershfield !. L. Mordecai. G. Segee. G. Venner. A. Zimmer. 1 !) 1 3 M. Bunzel. M. Gless. M. Hessberg. M. Newman. E . Rossin. A. Stern. E. Webb. 1). Fleischman. R. Goldstein. E. Hubert. E. Oerzen. G . Roth. M. Tully. E. Wiener. M. Franklin. G. Hasberg. M. Neugass. E. Rosenblatt. J. Sperling. J. Van Raalte. M. Wolff. [67] CLASSICAL CLVB President — Elizabeth Nitchie ' 10. Secretary-Treasurer — Nannette Hamburger ' 10 1 1 • - A. Anderson. H. Crossman. M. Emery. E. English. B Eirebaugh. R. Frame. L. Bennet. A. Bishop. I. Bokshitzki. H. Brown. 1910 M. Gibson. E. Nitchie N. Hamburger. M. O ' Donnel B. Holzman. A. O ' Donnel. V. Jaques. D. Long. G. Meier. M. Weinstein. 1911 A. Duncan. E. Gleason. G. Lovell. E. McKeever. A. Van Buskirk H. Savitz. R. Seidell H. Waite. M. Sanborn. R. Salmowitz R. Stagen. J. Steinecke. M. Coyle. H. Hale. A. Hallock. 1912 M. Hamburger. M. Shehan. E. Valet. [68] The Philosophy Club When a pairty wha listens disna ' care what the pairty wha speaks means, and when the pairty what speaks disna ' ken what he means himself — that is metaphysics. President — Margery Eggleston, 1910. Honorary Vice-President — Prof. William P. Montague. Secretary — Edna M. Fancher, 1910. Treasurer — Tessie Barrows, 1910. 1910 T. Barrows. E. Fancher. N. Hamburger. C. MacMurray. E. Plant. A. Wiesner. H. Dean. G. Franke. V. Jackson. E. N. Maison. F. Rose. H. Woodhull M. Eggleston. H. R. Fox. D. B. Kirchwey. J. Nottingham. M. Weinstein. H. Worrall. 1911 E. L. Allen. E. Dewey. M. Maschmedt. L. Coston. L. de F. Greenawalt. E. McKeever. 1912 M. Hamburger. Graduate: Sara L. Montgomery. [6 9 ] fflnlbgp g rttlrmrnt0 AsBnriatimt Elector — Charlotte Hodge, ' 11. Secretary-Treasurer — Evelyn Dewey, ' 11. E. Fancher. G. Frank e. 1910 M. Hamburger. G. Henderson. G. Hunter. E. Plaut. G. Reeder. H. Wayt. S. Bloch. A. Burke. E. Dewey. B. Bunzel. H. Hale. E. Heller. P. Hoffman. 1911 K. Gay. M. Hirsh. C. Hodge. 1912 E. Isabel. L. Mordecai. R. Moss. M. Oberndorfer. A. Weil. M. Southerton. B. Stenbuch. D. Langford. 1913 P. Lockwood. P. Wolf. [70] CQRflMS CIKEB President — Mary Nammack, 1910. Vice-Pres. — Agnes O ' Doxnell, 1910. Treasurer — Agnes Burke, 1911. Secretary — Edith Deacon, 1911. lain H. Dean. M. Druding. E. English. J. McGrath. D. Malum. V. Mollenhauer. M. Xanimack. A. T. O ' Donncll. M. M. O ' Donnell. G. Shaw. A. M. Burke. E. Burne. M. S. Conroy. E. M. Deacon. G. Gilleaudeau. E. Leveridge. A. O ' Gorman. A. Seveso. E. A. Riordon. G. A. Cerow. G. Cusack. M. V. Diehl. K. Gray. 1312 T. Keenan. L. Landru. A. Laughlin. T. McKenzie. M. Mulqueen. E. Reardon. M. O ' Rourke. M. P. Scully. M. A. Shehan. E. M. Stack. E. M. Valet. R. Maynahan. R. Brooks. G. Campion. E. K. Donovan. H. Dwyer. V. Feeley. 1913 M. L. Glees. M. Kelly. V. McGivney. J. Melsha. A. Mumford. M. Mumford. T. Murphy. A. O ' Gorman B. O ' Malley. L. Reilly. R. Shannon. S. Smith. M. Villabilla. [7i ] lantarft flHjapter nf tl)t jhttmnllpgutt? Mamie E. Rivkin 1911 — President. Frances Burger 1910 — Secretary. Dorothy Salwex 1911 — Treasurer. 1910 D. Long. S. Bloch. I. Bokshitzky. A. Burke. 1911 R. Gerstein. L. Greiff. A. Hess. O. Ihlseng. E. Leveridge. M. Maschmedt. R. Salmonwitz. L. Cohen. J. Ingerman. E. Levantin. 1912 M. Naumberg. M. Newman. H. Phillips. L. Rees. B. Stenbuck. F. Bloch. M. Bunzl. 1913 D. Fleischman. C. Rabinowitz. C. Reuben. A. Salzman. P. Wolfe. [72] Sarnari (Hljaptrr nf tljr (ttnlkgtal Equal uffraij ffiragw of 5fam § nrk 8 tair When women get into politics, Reforms will be great. Two-dollar bills will be marked down To a dollar ninety-eight. President — Evelyn Dewey 1911. Secretary-Treasurer — Mamie E. Rivkin 1911. E. Dunnet. L. H. Egleston. H. R. Fox. 19 10 M. L. Flint. G. L. Hunter. D. B. Kirchwey. D. Long. L. Nytre. G. A. Reeder. 19 11 S. Bloch. A. Burke. L. Coston. E. M. Deacon. K. Gay. P. Girdner. E. Gray. M. T. Hart. L. Cohen. M. Hamburger. 19 13 M. Naumberg. I. F. Heiden. A. Hess. O. K. Ihlseng. F. M. F. Randolph. V. Rees. 1 9 1 3 Freshmen not eligible. M. Reid. H. Runyon. D. Salwen. C. Von Wahl. [73] A A ft T7txrvr rr j ® umz vac c Lillian Schoedler College Song Leader ilrmbrns of UJnmmittrr Mary Nammack Senior Member Lillian Schoedler Junior Member Christine Straiton Sophomore Member Dorothy Cheeseman Freshman Member [74] Helen Worrall, 1910 Chairman Carrie Fleming, 1910 Treasurer Ruth Hakes, 1911 Sub-Chairman 1911 Henrietta vox Tobel, 1912 Sub-Chairman 1912 [75] Sarnari (Mtaptrr Kmmmn iatujlttrrB of tire flfeimlutum Men and women are to be taken as they are, and the investigation of their past, present and future shall be done with perfect candor. Regent — Florence de Loiselle Lowthek (Mrs.) Vice-Regent — Eleanor Doty. Treasurer — Hazel Knox Bristol. Secretary — Anne Stavely Wilson. Registrar — Emma Louise Rapelye. Historian — Penelope Morgan Girdner. 19 10 Violetta Jackson. Nathalie Thorne. 1 !) 1 1 Agnes Denike. Penelope Morgan Girdner. Susan Brown Minor. 1 1) 1 3 Hazel Knox Bristol. Elizabeth Tompkins Jones. Cornelia Heale Dakin. Isabelle Fleming Noyes. Eleanor Doty. Emma Louise Rapelye. Florence de Loiselle Lowther. Anne Stavely Wilson. [76] We are all of us in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars. [77] Nrut fnrk Srlta (fflnlumhta Imurratt ) (ttljapter nf lit fea Kajjjia iffratmttty Sarnarb § rrtinn OPfftrrra i£ Charlotte E. Morgan, 190-t President Katherine Swift Dotv, 1904 Vice-President Marion E. Latham, 1903 Secretary [ Helen Wilking Cooley, 1905 Treasurer (Uljartrr iHrmbrrfs Louise Stabler Parker, 1893 (Mrs. G. H.) Helen St. Clair Mullan, 1898 (Mrs. G. V.) Ella Fitzgerald Bryson, 1894 (Mrs. F. G.) Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve, 1898. Caroline Garnar Bromacher Stacey, 1895 Elsie Mabel Kupfer, 1899. (Mrs. S. G.) Grace Harriet Goodale, 1899. Gertrude L. W. Oppenheimer, 1896 (Mrs. E.) Martha Ornstein, 1899. Elsie Clews Parsons, 1896 (Mrs. Herbert.) Elinor Ten Broeck Reiley Endicott, 1900 Louise Brisbin Dunn, 1897. (Mrs. G.) Adaline Caswell Wheeloek, 1897. Jeannette Bliss Gillespy, 1900. .Jessie Wallace Hughan, 1898. Laura D. Gill. Susan Isabella Meyers, 1898. ' Deceased Cordelia Wendt. Amy Loveman. Helen Elizabeth Catlin. ifflrmbfrs CLASS 1 Cerise E. A. Carman. Lisa Delavan Bloodgood. Marie Louise W. Noeggerath (Mrs. J. E.) CLASS OF 1908 Elizabeth Allen. Elsa Patterson Campbell. Ada Blanche Clouse Neiswender. [78] Helen Louise Cohen. Helen Louise King. Louise Kohn. CLASS OF 1 it :{ {Catherine Ellen Poole. Elsbeth Kroeber. Mar ion Elizabeth Latham. Ethel Manter Pool. Minnie Margaret Beifeld. Mabel Denton. Uora Elsie Lichten. CLASS OF 1!I04 Dorothy Russell Nevins. Katharine Swift Doty. Jean Dunbar Egleston. Charlotte Elizabeth Morgan. CLASS OK 190 - Margaret Cecilia Byrne. Lily Sylvester Murray. Carrie Kaplan. Helen Wilking Cooley. Fr ances Hope Purdon Leavitt (Airs. S.) Emilie Josephine Hutchinson. Mary Lock. CLASS OF 1 it O ( Grace MacColl. Elizabeth Iverson Toms. Alice Haskell. Edith Somborn. Alice Dorothy Brewster. Mabel Emma Browne. Faith Delatour Chipperheld. Gertrude Louise Cannon. Juliet Stuart Points. Amalie Louise Althaus. Helen Carter. CLASS OF 1 !!( ' Lilian Hellin. Charlotte Oesterlein. Marguerite Baer Israel. Mary Elizabeth Lord. Annie Laurie Manley. CLASS OF llllld Mrs. Julianna Haskell, 1904. Clara Cecilia Eaton. Evelyn Blunt MacDonald. Dorothea Eltzner. Mabel Louise Peterson. Ethel Grace Everett. Edith dishing Richardson. Helen Loeb Kaufmann ( Mrs. M. J.) Florence Martha Wolff. Mathilde Abrahams. Una M. Bernard. Helene M. Boas. Alice C. Grant. CLASS OF 1 ! ( !) Helen Phillips. Edna R. Scales. Josephine Ray West. Hilda Wood. [79] Mary Witter Bailey. Lilian Hillyer Egleston 3n jFarultatr : Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve. Juliet Stuart Points. ism Bertha Harriet Firebaugh. Harriet Ruth Fox. Louise Comfort Tiffany. 1911 Katharine Gay. Charlotte Morse Hodge. Grace Coffin. Eleanor Doty. Jean Dunbar Egleston. Antoinnette Fransioli. Susan Brown Minor. Mary Bartow Polhemus. Charlotte Cecile Marie Verlage. 1912 Eleanore Myers. Pamela Poor. 3n llniurrattatr : Eleanor Cary Hunsdon. Hilda Wood. Nathalie Henderson. Dorothy Browning Kirch wey. Natalie Stewart. Kate Huntington Tiemann. Florence du Bois Rees. Margaret Watson. Ethel Pool. 1910 Hetty Dean. Mary Voorhees Jaques. Beatrice Rich. Hazel Wayt. 1911 Louise Rusk. Lillian Schoedler. 1912 Elizabeth Jones. Margaret Kuttner. Hester Rusk. [8o] Ruth Childs. Kappa Alalia SFli ta iFratmtttti Alplja 2rta (Cljaptrr Graduate : Una Mirrielees Bernard. Cecile Katherine Debouy. 1 i 10 Eleanor Lavine Graham. Ethel Lord Shaw. Nathalie Thorne. Edith Louise Allen. Agnes May Denike. Penelope Morgan Girdner. Ottilic Prochazka. Mary Braman Shav Louie Estelle Johnson. Katherine Hamilton Siekels Camilla Stewart. 191S Hazel Knox Bristol. Irene Louise Dalgleish. Bertha Junghaus. Cornelia Heale Dakin. Elizabeth Perine Gray. (Mrs.) Florence de Loiselle Lowther. Isabelle Fleming Noyes. Emma Louise Rappelyc. (gamma pit Ifrta 3Fratmttti| 3nta (Uliaptrr 1910 Florence Estelle Rose. Helen Elizabeth Savitz. Helen Darlington Worrall. 1911 Alice Laura Bennett. Ruth Carroll. Margaret Tower Hart. Fanny Aurill Bishop. Grace Gilleaudeau. Alice Margaret O ' Gorman. Helen Brown. Ruth Johnston Hakes. Marion Pratt. Marguerite Wotton Reynar. Helen Elizabeth Wilkes. Mabel Barrett. Rosalind Corwin Case. Katherine Story Fancher. Helen Cook Plummer. Mary Mulqueen. Ethel Scarlett Richardson. Frances Elizabeth Rogers. In Universitate : Helen Newbold. [8i ] Alalia ptt Jffratmttty Mu (Chapter 3to iFarultatr : Margaret Appleton Kingsley. 1910 Edna Margaret Fancher. Florence Ethel Greene. Gertrude Laura Hunter. Rhoda Muriel Ivimey. Mary Nammack. Grace Amelia Reeder. Hazel Woodhull. 1911 Agnes Madeleine Burke. Evelyn Dewey. Louise de Forest Greenawalt. Frances Maud Fitz Randolph. 1918 Phebe Hoffman. Cora Thees. Anne Wilson. §Hta irlta if Ita ifiratmtttij Stin (Ehaytrr 1010 Clarita Crossby. Helen Louise Crossman. Florence Isabelle Hopewell. Stella Hopewell. 1911 Helen Elizabeth Bradbeer. Ruth Augusta Burns. Ethel May Cochrane. 1912 Grace Marion Fischer. Grace Barrington Green. May Greenwold. Edith Francis Hardy. Grace Madeline Pearson. I 82 ] p Ida pit iFratmutu Nnu fork toa £l|a ttrr Alta Anderson. Gladys Alden Bonfils. Mabel Dorothy McCann. Elizabeth Nitchie. 1911 Juanita Brown. Levantia Eaton. Bernice M. Tabor. Anna Van Buskirk. Adele Duncan. Ethel S. Leveridge. Elizabeth Thomson. 1918 Dorothy Griffin. Virginia King. Lucy Landru. Edith Valet. Margaret Wood. Special Eleanor Murtha. (£lit GDnmja iffratmtitg lEpatlmt (Cltaptfr 1910 Lena Bohan. Clara Cooper. Marguerite Druding. Antoinette Dyett Hill. Eleanor M arion Martin. 1911 Estelle James Ellisson. Grace Irene McKee. Georgiana Sandford. 1918 Georgina Berrian. Florence Louise Hazel. Paula Claire Lambert. Elizabeth Reardon. In Universitate: Elizabeth Mitchell Back. Irita Bradford. [83] There is much to be said in favor of modern journalism: by giving us the opinion of the un- educated, it keeps in touch with the ignorance of the community. £uttiir-tu-(£hirf ELSIE PLAUT, 1910 IhumtfSii ifttanagpr Olive Thompson 1910 Asst. Sitrfttraa IHanaiun Mary Bailey 1910 iEx-ntttriu Lilian Egleston 1910 fRanammi iEi Um s Elizabeth Nitchie 1910 Marion Weinstein 1910 Fanny Aurill Bishop 1911 Grace A. Reeder 1910 Agnes Burke 1911 Assnriatr libitum Louise Allen 1911 Laila Coston 1911 Addie Morgenstern 1911 lucile mordecai 1912 Eleanore Myers 1912 Anne Wilson 1912 Gertrude Borchardt 1912 [87] Published monthly as a literary supplement to Barnard Bulletin. ?Bitur-itt-(!IljiFf Harriet R. Fox, 1910 Assistant Suitors Christella MacMurray, 1910. Kate H. Tiemann, 1911. Agnes M. Burke, 1911. Lucile Mordecai, 1912. SuHinpBB HJanagrr Assistant iBuBinrBs iHauagrr Madeline Hirsh, 1911. Amy Weil, 1911. £x-(§ffirui Elsie Plaut, 1910. Olive Thompson, 1910. [ 89 ] COMMENCEMENT WEEK SUNDAY, MAY 30 4.00 P. M. Baccalaureate Sermon, Rev. Wm. T. Manning. Gymnasium 8.30 P. M. Barnard Senior Dance. Earl Hall MONDAY, MAY 31 (Enmmtttrr Lee Alexander, Chairman. Jessie Cochran. Hannah Falk. Mildred Woodhull. Beatrice Aron. Margaret Frink. Cecile Debuoy. 3Ex-(§ffirui Eva Vom Bauer. Olga Rilke. [ 92 ] (§ur ipm rrii anit JFtf ti| - ttftlt Annual (Emmnrummntt COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY GYMNASIUM WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1909 (£mtff rritu! of Qryrrrs Bachelor of Arts, Barnard College, ' 97 Prizes anfc Bfmtora kohn mathematical prize Mary Celia Demarest, 1905). herman botanical prize Mildred D. Shlesinger, 1909. flarsheim prize Helen Hopkins Crandell, 1911. ijmtnrablr iHrntum Margaret Tower Hart, 1911. Srpartmrntal ?Snmirs ENGLISH Mathilde Abrahams. MATHEMATICS Mary C. Demarest. Edna R. Scales. Mathilde Abrahams. Una M. Bernard. Mary C. Demarest. (Smrral t muira Edith Josephi. Edna Phillips. Helen S. Phillips. i iglirst JFinal (Srnrral ffimwra Alice Catherine Grant. Sara Rome. Josephine Ray West. Hilda Wood. [ 93 ] fart 1 Milbank (Clmstrr Senior Song Steps Oration .... Olga Rilke Acceptance of Steps by the Junior President fart 2 Franks l|all 1 Ivy Song . Written by Ethel Hodsdon 2 Ivy Oration . . . Lilian Closson 3 Unveiling of Tablet 4 Maypole Dance [ 94 ] (ElaBs Say l xntxmB COLUMBIA GYMNASIUM — FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1909 program of thr Dan 1 Overture Columbia Philharmonic Orchestra 2 Class Roli Jessie Cochran 3 Salutatory Eva Vom Baur 4 Class Will Hortense Murch 5 Class History Adelaide Richardson 6 Class Day Song Words and Music by Lucy Thompson 7 Presentation to the Class Mary Swenson 8 Gift to the College Eleanor Gay 9 Statistics Julia Goldberg 10 Announcement of Elections to T P K 11 Valedictory Florence Sims Wyeth IS Class Day Song Words by Lillian Closson (Class Hail (Emnmittrf Julia Goldberg, Chairman. Adelaide Richardson - . Pauline Johnson Mary Swenson. Florence Sims Wyeth. Eva vom Baur, Ex-officio. Olga Rilke. Ex-ofjicio. Bnxxot Uamiurt FISKE HALL 6.30 P. M., JUNE 4, 1909 (Unmmittrr Dean F. Smith, Chairman. Ruth Hardy. Vera Kupfer. Mathilde Abrahams. Sara Rome. Eva vom Baur, Ew-ofpcin. Margie Dunn. Lois Kerr. Olga Rilke, Ex-ofjicio. [ 95 ] (Tune: Sweet Genevieve} Again the Palisades grow dark, The morning winds have left our heights, Our river shows a gleam of gold, And one by one spring up far lights. How oft those lights have called us home ! How well we know that sunset ' s flare ! Oh, classmates, shall we ever find New hills, new r ivers quite so fair? Oh, 1909, dear 1909, Our praises fail that would be thine ; We cannot say on this last day How we have loved thee, 1909. [ 96 ] Mttufrrjrauitatf Aaanrtattnu PRESENTS BRINCKERHOFF THEATER, BARNARD COLLEGE APRIL 16 and 17, 1909 Orsino, Duke of Illyria II. VVavt Sebastian, brother to Viola M. Woodhui l Antonio, a sea captain, friend to Sebastian H. Black A Sea Captain, friend to Viola 7. Brown Valentine j Gentlemen attending C. Crosby Curio gn the Duke. P. Hoffman- Sir Toby Belch, uncle to Olivia J. Dempsey Sir Andrew Aquecheeck L. Closson Malvolio, steward to Olivia M. Oberndorfer Fabian j Servants to O. Ihlseng Feste, a Clown Olivia E. vom Baur Olivia Hazel Woodhull Viola Frances Randolph Maria, Olivia ' s woman Louise Allen ( L. Weymann Officers i u I it. Hunter ( E. BUGBEE Sailors i T tt I. Heiden A Priest L. Mordecai _ ( H. Aiguier LOROS j E. Smith { E. Myers Ladies in Waiting â– { „ T I hi. Lawrence _ ( M. Stine Pages c „ S. Bloch Musicians: Misses Holzmann, Case, Salmowitz, Leerburger, Ellisson, Goldberg, Ver Planck, Mordecai, Arkenburgh Scene: A city in Illyria, and the sea-coast near it. Mr. Alfred Young, Stage Director. Madeline Hirsch, Property Mistress COMMITTEE Herlinda G. Smithers, ' 09, Chairman. Myra McLean, ' 09. Hazel Wayt, ' 10. Grace Meier, ' 10. Frances Randolph, ' 11. Maude Brennan, ' 12. Ex-officio : Eleanor Gay. Florence Wyeth. [ 99 1 NoTTA PROGRAM ME S. LeERBURGER NOTTABAND R. CASE 1. ianrr of tljr (Ulaaara I. Freshman Romp E. Jones, G Segee, F. Hazel, E Isabel, A. Solis, M. Southerton, E. Woodruff, E. Myers II. Sophomore Barn-Dance F. Van Vranken, C. Straiton, A. Wilson, M. Kutner, P. Ralph, M. Stine, M. Wood III. Junior Waltz E. Doty, G. Greene, C. Thees, I. Dalgleish, G Herrian, B. Yunghaus, P. Hoffmann, H. Black IV. Senior March R. Sinn, M. Kerr, P. Lambert, I Glenn, D. Shelley, L. Weil, G. Venner, E. Valet 2. Hrrtuto. of tljr Unurrijrauuatf Aaauriattmt President H. Bristol Vice-President M. Brennan Chairman of Executive Committee M. Weiner Secretary E. Rappelyk Treasurer M. Hamburger Up per classmen B. Bunzel, R. Case, F. Rogers, V. Smith, E. Hershfield Fresh Freshmen L. Stein, F. Matthews, R. Fischel, H. Burgehold, G Crow. M. Mulqueen, S. Blumgarten. I, Keenan 3. ahrrr Centra in SnlTttaun (Sipn I. Class in Physical Culture II. Students ' Marathon III. Basket-Ball Game Miss Cartoon M. Hamburger Miss See-Saw Mr. Wegener Mr. Wiggles G. Fischer Students A. Zimmer, F. Anderson, E. Franklin, M. Scully, E. Reardon, H. Hale, L. Nyitray, J. Mackay, E. Booth, M. Stine 4. ijmu nattgcatrgfricii Jfort Hull tltr Sragim Bull-Dog L. Mordecai Owl E. Grey Indian P. Cahn Dragon C. Darin 5. (Ulaaa Ifgttttt: Hail to the Dragon Bold. Committee: S. Leerburger (Chairman), I. Dalgleish, E Heller, P. Hoffmann, L Mordecai. K. Fancher, C Dakin, A. Wilson I Ex-officio) [ 103 ] The Class of 1912 Presents as its Sophomore Show ®ltr imtrit of tit? King liy HAROLD MAC DONALD NOVEMBER 5th AND 6th, 1909 (£aat af (Hharartrrs Edwin Royston ( ' . vox Wahi Sir Michael Drayton P. Hoffman Philip Dkayton S. Blumgarten William, Prince of Orange ( ' . Thees GODEMAR De RoXDIXIACQUE G. BoRCHARDT Major William Bextxick E. Heller CoUXT SCHOMBERG M. RoOF Sergeaxt Morsehead G. Fischer Christopher Kidd D. vox Doexhoff Simox Emmet A. Evaxs First Coxspirator L. Mordecai Secoxd Coxspirator E. Meyers Philippa Drayton Mildred Hamburger Lady Mary Roystox Florence Lowther Prudence Emmet Anna Wilson Guards E. Booth. M. Coyle, I. Keenan, E. Mathews, V. Rees and H. M. Rusk (Eomutittrr Hazel Bristol, Chairman Cornelia Dakix Mildred Hamburger Martha Emmoxs Florence van Vranken Elizabeth P. Gray Rosalind Case, Ex-ofpcio Eleanor Myers, Ex-officio [ 105 ] THE CLASS OF 1911 PRESENTS D ' Arcy of the Guards By LOUIS EVAN SHIPMAN As its Junior Show— Nov. 19 and 20, 1909 Major John D ' Arcy Colonel Jennison Major Dalrymple Captain Dacier Captain Kelter Captain Farquhar Captain De Courcey C A S T O F C H A R A C T ERS Of the Grenadier Guards — on the staff of Lord Cornwallis Officers of the Grenadier Guard? M. Orerndorfer G. San ford L. SCHOEDLEB I. BOKSHITZKY R. Hakes K. Sickles M. Reynar Captain Gregory, Surgeon of the Grenadier Guards K. Gay Sergeant Tripp, of the Grenadier Guards A. Morgenstern Captain Millhausen ) TT . E. Bruning y Hessian Officers Captain Raah ) ( A. Weil Captain Henry Townshend w Sf ' ffili h gton the J - Brown Samuel Davis, of the Society of Friends X. Stewart Sambo, Servant at Townshend ' s M. Schwitzer Mrs. Townshend Eva Mordecai Pamela Townshend, her daughter Frances Randolph Cynthia Deane, her niece Louie Johnson British Soldiers L Heidkn, V. Fueslein, L. Weymax, E. Burne ACT I.— Garden at the Townshend house. Philadelphia. ACT II. — Sitting room of the Townshend house. Morning. Two months have elapsed. ACT III.— The same. The same night. ACT IV. — The same. Morning. Five weeks have elapsed. The entire action of the piece takes place in Philadelphia, during its occupation by the British, under Sir William Howe and Lord Cornwallis, in the autumn and winter of 77-78. General Washington and the American army were encamped twenty miles from Philadelphia at Valley Forge. Stella Bloch Ida Bokshitzky COMMITTEE Madeleine L. Hirsh, Chairman Vera Fueslein Mary Polhemus Mildred Messing Jeannette Steinecke Molly C onroy ) „ . Lx-omcio Sue Minor ) Coached and staged by Miss Florence Gerrish [ 107 ] LE POINT DE MIRE A Comedy in Four Acts By EUGENE LABICHE B A. Willis, Manager Miss Elsie Plai t, Barnard Manager Dean I,axi;mi ir, Columbia Assistant CAST OF CHARACTERS Carbonel (rentier) A. Bruno, ' 11 Mme. Carbonel Miss C. Debouy, ' 09 Josephine (domestique) Miss L. Allen, 11 Mlle. Berthe (fille de Carbonel) Miss G. Gianella, T. ( ' . M. Duplan (ancient, notaire) H. C. Olinger, ' OS Perugin A. Krxjemmer, ' 10S Mme. Perugin Miss E. Holt, ' 09 Mlle. Lucie ( fille de Perugin) Miss Cochran, ' 09 Cesenas D. Langmuir, ' 10 Mme. Cesenas Miss G. Henderson, ' 10 M. Edgakd Lajouchere G. C. Loening (Pg) Un Chasseur W. Remsen, ' 10 Maurice Duplan (fils de Duplan) A. M. C. McMaster, ' 09 Jules Pries (architecte) P. C. Hopkins (Pg) Un Domestique W. Remsen, ' 10 Un Jardinier D. Langmuir, ' 10 Time — Present. ACT I.— The Carbonel Home in Paris. ACT II. — The home of the Cesenas in Paris. ACT III. — The country home of the Perugins, at Montmorency. ACT IV. — A garden scene at Courbevoie, the home of M. Duplan. [ 108] (Sermatt flays Presented by DEUTSCHER KREIS OF BARNARD and DEUTSCHER VEREIN OF COLUMBIA Lustspiel in einem Akt Von LUDWIG FULDA PERSONEN. Dr. Felix Yolkhart C. E. Kayser Hermine, seine Frau Miss Louise De F. Greenawalt Baron Hubert von Berkow Rudolph vom Saal Bauman, ein Kellner • . C.J. W. Meisel Lotte, ein Kammermadchen Miss Antoinette Riordon Ort der Handlung: Das Speisesaal des Herrn Dr. Volkhart ' s. lEturr JHubb liriratlmt Lustspiel in einem Akt Von ALEXANDER ZECHMEISTER PERSONEN Jakob Zorn ) Briider, Professoren E. P. Boas Wiehelm Zorn an einer Universitat R.H.Weber Gertrude, ihre Tante Miss R. Hochheimer Luise, ihre Nichte Miss S. L. Blumgarten Ort der Handlung: Eine Universitatsstadt. 3m Martrsalnu Erfitrr Klaasr Lustspiel in einem Akt Von HUGO MULLER P E RSONEN Baron Ernst von Wallbach A. C. McMasters Elise Miss G. M. Franke Ein Kellner E. F. Koenig 1 Ort der Handlung: Eine Kleine Eisenbahn station. [ 109 ] kOP HOMO December 7, 1909 (Enmmittrr Eleanor Doty, Chairman. IsABELLE NoYES Isabel Koss I It EN E DALGLEISH Eleanor Neu Mary Stine Rosalind Case ) ' Ej-offic Eleanore Myers ) w VliW WDHTYOV.WILLTOVWT YOV WILL YOV JOltl THE DAHCE? t no] ®lir Hattmrf April 8, 1910 (Cnmmtttrr Agnes Dkxikk, Chairman. Adele Duncan Penelope Girdnek Louise Greenawai.t Louie Johnson Addie 3 1 ( ) iu; e n st i r n AlJCE O ' GOKMAN Mary Conroy ) Susan 15. Minor Ex ' ° iEastmt § tuiirttt (£m Umm Held Under the Auspices of the f txxxxxxx, WomxiB (Striatum ABaonattnn Silver Bay, Lake George, June 25,— July 1, 1909 (Enmmittrr Florence Rose, 1910, Chairman. Carrie Fleming, 1910. Helen Bradbeer, 1911. Phebe Hoffman, 1912. Dorothy Mahon, 1910. Ki th Hakes, 1911. Gladys Segee, 1912. Lillian Anderson, 1910. Ethel Felch, 1911 . Elizabeth Jones, 1912. irlriiatrs 19D9 1 909 Lucy Thompson. 1910 Helen Crossman. Vora Jacques. Christella MacMurray. Alma Wiesner. Mildred Downs. Gertrude Hunter. Florence Reed. Helen Worrall. Elise Eddy. Naarnie Mason. Hazel Wayt. 1911 Josephine Bosch . Louise Greenawalt. Margaret Hart. Katherine Sickels. Agnes Nobis. 1918 Genevieve Greene. Anne Wilson. t H2 ] VARSITY SWEATER WINNERS, 1 908- 19 09 ' Varsity Team 1909-1910. Nannette Hamburger, 1910 Captain Line-Up Ethel Leveridge Nannette Hamburger Dorothy Chesseman Mary Wegener Shirley Gleason Elsie Gleason Lillian Schoedler Mary Conroy Helen Dana Basket Ball Record 1908-1909. College Games December 8 Barnard 13, Teachers College 1 1 December 13 Barnard 22, Horace Mann 7 January 9 Barnard 18, Horace Mann 5 January 12 Teachers College 16, Barnard 10 February 6 Barnard 14, Horace Mann 10 February 24 Barnard 20, Teachers College 5 Inter-Class Games December 14 January 13 February 3 February 17 March 3 March 8 1911 vs. 1912 Score 24-5 1909 a 1910 14-8 1911 1910 13-0 1909 1912 19-13 1911 a 1909 10-2 1912 a 1910 25-2 1911 1912 16-3 1909 1910 10-7 1911 a 1910 11-0 1909 a 1912 9-8 1911 a 1909 20-2 1910 1912 6-4 [115] SnuttB (Smuutamntt Spring of 1909 (Enllrnr (Uliamptmt Grace G. Gilleaudeau, 1911. (Class (HljannJtmtH 1909 — Herlinda Smithers 1911 1910— Lilian Egleston 1912 ifnrmrr (Cnllryr (Cltantptmts 1903 Edith B. Handy, ' 05 1906- 1904— Edith B. Handy, ' 05 1907 1905 — Clairette P. Armstrong, ' 08 1908 Grace G. Gilleaudeau Mary Wegener Julia DeF. Tiffany, ' 09 -Florence Wolff, ' 08 Grace G. Gilleaudeau, ' 11 [ n6] 3ram nf 19 1 1 — Jntmlaaa (ttltantjjtou ©ram in linrknj i A. Bishop Forwards } V. Fueslein p „ B k « O. Ihlseng Half Backs ' f Wait ' B. Hasler I L. Martin l L. Ockers Goal Tender — S. Minor Center — E. Leveridge ftrrarb 1911-1910 — 6-4 1911 — Champions 1913-1910 — 2-0 1911-1913 — 4-2 1913 — Second Place 1913-1912 — 6-2 1911-1912 — 4-0 1910 — Third Place 1912-1910 — 0-6 [ 7 ] REOC. GAM, ISO (Ikrrk (Clients March 26, 1909. on bit 1911 Kate H. Tiemann, 1911, First Place LlTCILE MORDECAI Eleanork Myers Maude Biiennan, 1912, Third Place 1912, Second Place g ttlt Store Susan B. Minor, 1911, First Place Pearl Ralph, 1912, Second Place Jennie MacKay, 1912 Third Place Eleanor Burne, 1911, First Place Mary Wegener, 1912, Second Place Mary Rice, 1912, Third Place TjiuriurH 1 Lillian Schoedler, 1911, First Place Mildred Davis, 1911, Second Place Mary Wegener, 1912, Third Place Final Score— 191 1 =251 . ; 1912=211 , [ii8] HURDLES 1. Lillian Schoedler, 1911. 2. Mildred Davis, 1911. 3. Clarita Crosby, 1910. SHOT PUT 1. Lillian Schoedler, 1911. 2. Elsie Gleason, 1911. 3. Chrystene Straiton, 1912. BASEBALL THROW 1. Hazel Woodhull, 1910. 2. Mamie Wagener, 1912. 3. Helen Wilkes, 1911. HIGH JUMP 1. Elsie Gleason, 1911. 2. Hazel Woodhull, 19101 3. Eleanor Wigand, 1912 j Sag MA V , igog RELAY 1. 1911 Tied Fueslein, Davis, Gleason. Schoedler. 2. 1910 — McCann, Meyer, Crosby. 3. 1909 — Talpey, Debouy, Murch. BASEBALL 1909 | and V 1910 versus 1911 and 1912 11-17 BASKET BALL (Played before Field Day.) 1. 1911 Won 6 out of 6 2. 1909 Won 4 out of 6 3. 19101 1912 | Won 1 out of 6 Total— 1911=42 1910=11 1912=10 1909=6 [HQ] ©ttr JInltttral ArturitfeH BIG BILL ELECTED AT BARNARD. A campaign of flare, fudge and fury. — The Times. Taft — 161 - - Lucy Thompson Debs — 49 E. Louise Allen Bryan — 48 - - Gertrude Huntf.r [ 120 ] Nature needs many quills to make a goose — A man can make himself a goose with one. t 121 ] I. ilorpl)nl0gg of Arabrmir Wnba ar lloamtn ' larnarfc THE WILD COLUMBIAN JUNIOR BALL BELLE BROOKS DORMITORIA A KNOXIOUS WEED TERPSICHORIA A hot house species of the out of town family. In full bloom April 8. Responds 11 requires delicate care and much watching readily to slightest attention. and attention. Usually kept from view in the For best results plant near Wild evenings, night air being considered injurious Columbian. [122] JACK - IN - THE - PULPIT FAMILIUS FACULTATIBUS Much cultivated in January and May. THE GRIND FLOWER A NIGHT-BLOOMING SERIOUS Found frequently in the vicin- ity of the Ellaweed. SWEET BILLYUM DEANUS AMATUS In appearance this plant is a cross be- tween hayseedia and cultura. Native to Harvard but adapts itself readily to civil- ization. Grows high on a long stalk and twines around chair legs. [123] PROPOSITION XXIII. liven external Points. flniblrm of -Dnitntrtimt -To let fall a flunk on a given person from any P o A 1- M GIVEN. — Let AB be the given straight person, and P one of the given external Points. To let an F fall on the person A B from the prof. P. DESTRUCTION. — From the prof. P as a center, with a question sufficiently- large describe an exam, cutting A B in two points, J. S. Points and the points she can give you in History (9-10). From these points as centers of interest, with ignor- ance greater than one-half A B ' s, describe 2 quizzes intersecting at the point of A B ' s greatest knowledge (zero). Draw PO and prolong the agony to meet A B at M. (high noon). Then from M as a starting point, with a few facts equal to N.G., draw the conclusion P. D. Q. and then drop the curtain. COROL LAR I ES I. — Given an angle, let me assume it. — B. Brewster. II. — Given a point, let me make it. — Miss Hubbard. III. — Given a triangle — let us be the angles. — Weeks, Hubbard, Gildersleeve [ 124 ] THE COLLEGE LAUNDRY Exclusive Use of Hot Air in all Departments. Fancy Dying BROADWAY and 119th STREET Near Grant ' s Tomb New York, 191 TERMS See Mrs. Liggett Knappkins For rates apply to Room 331 Spreads 25c. — delivered daily 12-1 Cases Rates vary with supply and demand and quality of material Collars 5c. to 50c., according to height (Special orders of M. Guerig) Spats To be had for the asking Ties Reduced rates to professors (This is our Charity Branch) Applied tresses All locks attended to at shortest notice FLAT WORK LIST All jokes, plays, skits by 1010 • Promptly (sup) pressed at no charge whatever Shams Special agent Dr. Cook Notasho Let it dye. Trust us with the work — guaranteed NOTICES 1 . No attention paid to male orders. 2. Spats patched up free of charge. Special rates to 1911 and the Y. W. C. A. 3. Cuffs delivered personally (free to 1912) 4. Limited cut rates furnished on request. 5. Guarantees to straighten out crushed and engaged cases. 6. Fraternity Dying according to age and size. [ 125 ] ijrnu Wt iti Sfoflljmnt April 1. 19 9 Free Tickets for the Opera! Fifty Tickets for Tristan and Isolde reserved for 1912. Sign in the ex- change before one o ' clock. Matty? r Oh! where is my wandering ma to-night, Oh! where can mother be ! She has hied her forth to a suffrage fight As happy as she can be. The range is cold on the kitchen trail, The cupboard is bleak and bare, For mother is lodged in the county jail For pulling the speaker ' s hair. (with apologies to life.) [126] The R i q hi B rci rh e rs al ' Barnard 1910 was born in Philadelphia, July 4th, quite a time ago, but on account of the noise moved to Weebawken. She prepared for college at Jonesville Female Seminary, and tbough preferring Wellesley and Teachers College, fortunately came to Barnard. Since entering Bar- nard her chief interests have been athletic. She rides daily in the subway, and walks from there to college. Her favorite pastime is walking through the Campus to Brooks Hall, although she sometimes goes around by Claremont Avenue. Sometimes, in order to be broad-minded, she goes by Broadway. She is a member of the Y. W. C. A., C. S. M. A., W. C. T. U. In Sophomore year she showed her musical ability by serving on the committee for the Selection of Hymns for Chapel ; in Junior year, she was third member of the Sub-committee for the Suppression of Noise in the Halls. She loves flowers and is kind to animals. Her major subject is Prehistoric Archaeology, but her favorite study is Embroidery. Requiescat in pace. [ 128] Comedy of Errors ' ' See SCHOEDLER £8, BROWN — in the — CRUSH ACT A play that appeals to all overs, and lovers of lovers. FRESHMAN CLASS OF 1911 IN ' Much c do Jlbout Nothing ALL STAR CAST Realistic portrayal of political corruption. —LIGGETT in The Ledger SOPHOMORE c s You Like It CLASSY LITTLE COMEDY ! — Introducing — D ' ARCY OF THE GUARDS Supported by a BALLET DE NIKE Don ' t miss it ! ! ! ! JUNIOR Well that Ends Well Positively the Last Appearance — of a — GLITTERING GALAXY OF BEAUTIES Next bill! under same management IS MATRIMONY A FAILURE? SENIOR [129] Published annually by the Faculty of Barnard College. Our Motto — Every one who is incapable of learning has taken to teaching. Expurgated copies for 1910 and the Y. W. C. A. Our Price — Nothing at all. Thrown away with our reputations STAFF Editor-in-chief: WILLIAM-TENNY BREWSTER, t Miss Gildersleeve Managing Editors - Miss Hubbard Art Editors -! J ' r L° taK e Miss Weeks ' Dr ShotweH Comic Section — Editor-in-chief Juvenile — Dr. Knapp Jokes — Science (Domestic) — Miss Bisscll Puns — Fashions — Mr. Tassin Cartoons — r , B , Dr. Braun . Good Form Column , Mjss Manchester Driitralxon TO THE CLASS OF 1911 Ye that have picked your steps to follow ours, And helped us most our high ideals to reach ; Most glorious class, our model in all things. We have the God-given lot Your greatness to appreciate ; and you, In youthful trust, reciprocate our love Therefore, to you we dedicate this book. (Written specially for this occasion by the Editor-in-Chief.) 3lmuuulr IGrltcra tn Ittrlr (Eljarltr Dear Uncle Charlie: Uncle Charlie, although he is awfully fond of animals, I am a little girl in my teens, and I want to tell you has rather a distaste for ponies. He doesn ' t quite know about my pony. He goes with me every day to college and why, but when he went to Rome, you know, he rode on a I don ' t know what I could do without him to carry me donkey. Try donkies, Bessie. I always agree with don- through. Did you have a pony when you were a little boy? keys. More news next year. Your little friend, BESSIE JUNIOR. UNCLE CHARLIE (Unmtr ubtlrmrut Edited by the Acting Dean. The brightest things that people have laughed at. I. — A pun. (From one of my classes.) aigs — years and years ago. (long intermission as students Prof. — What is currency? grasp the facts). What about them? Freshman — Something that runs. Long silence on part of students. Prof.— Is a dog current then ? Brilliant elucidation by professor. (Immense applause bv class. Modest chuckles from Prof.) Years and years ago, two were bad. II. — A joke. ( From another of my classes.) Lolld noises by the claSS ' Prof.— Years, ye-ars, and years ago there were three III.— A cartoon.— See the 1911 Mortarboard. Notes in Flashing Style— by One Who Knows. I have noticed that a great many short coats are being worn this year. It is quite the thing for the early morning jaunt to classes and seems to have been taken up by men in high positions. Negligee collars are economical but Mussey. A well chosen tie is a mark of character. You know a gent by his spats. All the same, if you really want to see some- thing nifty in good style for professors, come into my elocution class, any day at all, at any old time [130] Art President Duller 1 I The Editor-in-Chief The editors wish to call the attention of the readers to the peculiar impressionistic touch for which each artist is famous Such bold dashes of color! Such rough filmy outlines! Such vast spaces to be filled by the reader ' s imagination! We beg to apologize for the lack of pictures in this department, but our artists quarrelled as to whether it was fair to give the editor-in- chief a full length portrait and Pres. Butler only a miniature. Everybody voted Most popular with the girls for himself. Most perfect gentleman — George. Neatest — Miss Reimer. Most modest — Dr. Knapp. Biggest bluffer — Dr. Knapp. Best natured — Honors divided between Miss Meyer and Mrs. Liggett. Most gullible — You never can tell ' till you try. Biggest fusser — Alexander Otto Bechert. Cutest — Dr. Agger. Biggest jollier — Dr. Braun. Best actor — Mr. Tassin. Best dressed — Mr. Tassin. Biggest grinds — The door boys. Best all around — Prof. Brewster. Best friends to the College — George 191 1. Lavinas, Rose, S rirnrr — EUmtrsttr Miss Bissell. Given at Brooks Hall daily — hours 8.00-8.30, 12. 00-1.00, 6.30 and spasmodic ejaculations whenever the Head of the Department gets a stray pupil and a chance, at one and the same time. Great stress laid on reiterated recapitulation of the dear dead yesterdays. How to save and be happy. (faaab Storm (Column Letters answered by Dr. Braun and Miss Manchester according to the nature of the query. Letters strictly confidential. References. My dear Dr. Braun: 1 am a young professor twenty-three years of age, and susceptible to blushing. Can you give me any idea how to cure such an affliction. Yours with devotion, OTTO. ANSWER— Go to all the Barnard teas; watch the dainty creatures generously pass the cake to their neighbors; watch the poor things starve them- selves out of charity. You will lose your bashiul- ness in manly attempts to feed them. Frequent undergraduate teas especially and the campus at noon. My dear Dutchess: I am a young man far on in years, and I am second cousin to a lady friend of mine at Brooks Hall. What requirements must I pass before I can call on her there? She is a beautiful young lady and we have been introduced. Sincerely. C. HARTLEY. ANSWER. — Please send me answers in full to following requirements: (1) your family; (2) your position; (3) your character; (4) your salary; (5) your intentions; (6) your fraternity; (7) do you like music? Then perhaps if I have time I shall be able to consider your case. [131] Sft0t0rjj 9-10 You clip and you cut and you clip, And you paste and glue and stick. It ' s half-past one and there ' s lots that isn ' t done; All this fuss a bout the Budget makes you sick. You scan every column, every sheet ; You can even clip news from an ad. Oh! curses on the man who invented this old plan, It ' s enough to drive a sane, young Brownie mad. [13- ' ] ttrmtnmtrs A Behold these hatless Brownies, Behold their hairless pates, What makes them look so frightened? What doom for them awaits? Oh, Mussey ' s long statistics Of dying nation ' s woes, Of contract rent, and cash ill spent, In terror has them froze ! Charmed with each little woeful phiz. Says Mussey, with great glee, Off with your hats and let me see Those features which inspire me. 3tt 3taltate The omnipresent Brownies Are here in Facultate, And they treat the little Brownies In a way they hadn ' t oughte. One makes us learn our German verbs And grins with wicked glee: The other grins and quizzes us On Greek philosophy. [i 331 laakrt lull Twelve girls a ' praneing round the floor And sitting on the ball, Hundreds crowded round the sides, Shrieking through the hall. Alas, that noble womanhood Could be so ungenteel, And let a college yell become A merely feline squeal. UlrarljcrH (Enllpgp Oh, see these T. C. ' s, With their little umbrell — By their youthful expression We know them well. They soar high in learning While we fall quite flat. (What ' s happened? Good gracious! Each has on her hat.) [i34l Oh! Brooks Hall is an awful place, Though you would ne ' er suppose it. The Brownies there would raise your hair, Their life? — oh, don ' t disclose it. They eat and drink from morn till night, They howl in quiet hours, They talk about the good trustees And slander all the powers. They never think of studying, But laugh the whole day long, And when a good soul tries to work They laugh and mock — how wrong ! So flee the place, all Brownies good, Eschew contamination, Such sinful waste, such vulgar taste Results from education. [1351 It. is not short, it is not tall, My beastly locker in the hall ; But one thing that I know, is that It ' s much too small to hold my hat. ' Tis plain to see it ' s foolish plan Was drawn up by some thoughtless man To think that such as it can mar Hats that among the noblest are ! And with its pesky combination Cause wrath and woe and consternation I turn to left and curse my fate, It opens not, and I am late. Alas ! alas ! my weary head ! I ' ve done my sorry best, [136] ulljr ©rail of an 3ttirtatt JMaBrot [ ' 37 ] field day falls Luncheon Landina iMj. 3fr? Bhutan Urar (if fir rrs Katharine Gay President Margaret Tower Hart Vice-President Helen Brown Recording Secretary Louise Greenawalt Corresponding Secretary Camilla Stewart Treasurer E. Louise Allen Historian [i39] THE CLASS OF 1911 PRESENTS AS ITS FRESHMAN SHOW ©tyrnttglj tiff T|ri gr Presented on March 6, 1908 CAST Alice (slightly bewildered) Camilla Stewart The Bear M. Hirsh T. Roosevelt (who is de-lighted) K. Gay The Big Stick The Nameless One Dorm (Sans Wings) H. Brown Exchange (Panicky) M. Hart Indian (warranted Not to Scalp) L. Schoedler Bulldog (warranted Not to Bite) A. Burke Smile (from Ear to Ear) E. Bruning Guide (not a Cookie) : M. Reynar Rag Doll Marian Oberndorfer Mammy Doll Stella Straus Paper Doll Mildred Dodge French Doll Louise Greenawalt Ruth Burns Agnes Denike Laura Bennett Harriet Currier Athletic Girl Mary Polhemus Society Girl Katherine Sickcls Studious Girl Aurill Bishop Dramatic Girl Kate Tiemann Monday J. Heiden Crush Chorus Freshmen affected Their Crushes College Spirit C. Verlage Senior Spirit L. Weymann Spirits Junior Spirit O. Prochazka Sophomore Spirit E. Gleason Freshman Spirit T. Cassell Week Days Tuesday B. Hayj Wednesday M. Shaw (Thursday M. Schwitzer Friday R. Moss Saturday S. Bloch Charge of the Light Brigade: Colonels O. Ihlseng, L. Allen, E. Burne, J. Brown, N. Stewart STUDENT CHORUS: Helen Bradbeer, Josephine Bosch, Edith Burns, Helen Coombs, Ethel Felch, Lottie Greiff, Grace Lovell, Edna McKeever, Margaret Plummer, Helen Porter, Marion Pratt, Helen Runyon, Mildred Sanborn, Gertrude Saul, Ruth Stagen, Jeannette Steinecke, Adelaide Wait, Helen Wilkes, Rose Salmowitz, Hetta Stapff. [Mi] (SUes 1910 urraita (EUas 1911 March 27, 1908 GREEK CHORUS Laurel wreath awarded to 1910, 8 points. EPIC POETRY CONTEST Frances Randolph, i 9 L 1 ) t? : i. t i Agnes Burke j F,rst Place 5 P° nts Louise Allen, 191 1 Second Place, 3 points Agnes O ' Donnell, 1910 Third Place, 1 point THROWING THE DISCUS Grace Shaw, 1910 First Place, 5 points Mabel McCann, 1910 Second Place, 3 points Rosetta Piatt, 1910 Third Place, 1 point HIGH JUMP Hazel Woodhull, 1910 First Place, 5 points Lillian Schoedler, 191 1 Second Place, 3 points Mabel McCann, 1910 Third Place, 1 point THROWING THE JAVELIN Josephine Bosch, 1911 First Place, 5 points Mary Bailey, 1910 Second Place, 3 points Mary Conroy, 191 1 Third Place, 1 point HURDLE RACE Lillian Schoedler, 191 1 First Place, 5 points Clarita Crosby, 1910 Second Place, 3 points FINAL SCORE { 10-32 points. I 191 1 — 22 points. Ethel Leveridge, Chairman. Juanita Brown Eleanor Burne Katherine Gay ) E x . ffi c i Emily Bruning Lillian Schoedler Margaret Hart i Helen Coombs [144] SHOT PUT 1. Lillian Schoedler, 191 1; 26 ft., 4 in. 2. Herlinda Smithers, 1909; 26 ft., 1% ' n - 3. Mabel McCann, 1910; 25 ft. 4 in. 20 YARD DASH 1. Lillian Schoedler, 191 1. 2. Vera Fueslein, 191 1. 3. Elsie Gleason, 191 1. May 21, 1908. BASEBALL THROW 1. Hazel Woodhull, 1910; 150 ft. 2. Blanche Samek, 1909. 3. Helen Wilkes, 191 1. TENNIS 1. Grace Gilleaudeau, 191 1. 2. Florence Wolff, 1908. HURDLES 1. Lillian Schoedler, 1911. 2. Elsie Gleason, 1911. 3. Muriel Ivimey, 1910. RELAY r. 1909 — Smithers, Talpey, Debouy, Murch. 2. 191 1 — Randolph, Leveridge, Bishop, Fueslein. 3. 1908 — Robinson, Sammet, Steinberg, Maston. HIGH JUMP r. Hazel Woodhull, 1910; 4 ft., 2 in. 2. Alice Allan, 1909; 4 ft., 1 in. 3. Ethel Leveridge, 191 1; 4 ft. BASKET BALL (Played for Field Day) 1. 1 Q 1 1 Won 6 out of 6 2. 1908 Tied j Won 2 out of 6 3. 1909 I Won 2 out of 6 Total: 191 1 — 42 1909 — i6] 2 1910 — 12 1908— 31 2 [145] HOTEL MAJESTIC, JUNE 4, 1908. ©casta Toastmistress Agnes Burke The Mascot E. Louise Allen Gerrish Edith Deacon The President (1907-1908) Frances Randolph The President (1908-1909) Katharine Gay The Class Mary Polhemus (Eommtttrr Addie Morgenstern, Chairman. Eva Mordecai. Louise Sillcox. Mildred Messing. Irma Heiden. [i 4 6] P p t r r |I a n Peter Pan .... Wendy John Micah Nibs Slightly Soiled The Twins Mr. Darling . . Mrs. Darling . . Nana Nurse . . . .F. Randolph . . .Eva Mordecai L. Johnson S. Bloch . . . .E. Leveridge . . . . E. Deacon J. Brown I M. Messing M. Hirsh . Katharine Gay A. Burke Camilla Stewart [147] [148] ©fftrrra Mary Polhemus President Charlotte Verlage Vice-President Natalie Stewart Recording Secretary Frances Randolph Corresponding Secretary Mary Conroy Treasurer Agnes Burke Historian [M9] QUjr (ttlaBB of 1011 Presents as its Sophomore Play THE LITTLE MINISTER By J. M. BARRIE November 6th and 7th, 1908 CAST LORD RINTOUL M. Oberndorfer CAPTAIN HALLIWELL L. Schoedler GAVIN DISHART N. Stewart SERGEANT DAVIDSON J. Brown TAMMAS WHAMMOND, Chief Elder M. Hirsh SNECKY HOBART j , O. Ihlseng ANDREW NAILMAKEP Elders j E. Bruning SILVA TOSH i i S. Bloch ROB DOW K. Gay MICAH DOW L. Coston JOE CRUICKSHANKS, Atheist M. Schwitzer THWAITES, Butler E. Burne LADY BABBIE Frances Randolph FELICE, her maid Louise Greenawalt JEAN, Manse servant Helen Coombs NANNY WEBSTER Evelyn Dewey SOLDIERS Bishop, Morgenstern, Sickles THRUMS PEOPLE Hart, Currier, Bennett, Runyon, Bosch, Burns, Sillcox SCOTCH LADDIES C. Stewart, R. Moss ACT I, Caddam Wood. ACT II { S cene I Nanny Webster ' s Cottage. ' I Scene 2, The Manse Garden. ACT III, Hall of Rintoul Castle. ACT IV, Manse Garden. [i5i] 1911 BASKET BALL TEAM CHAMPIONS FRESHMAN AND SOPHOMORE YEARS [154] BANNER WON BY 1911 ON FIELD DAY SOPHOMORE YEAR — APRIL 7, 1909 SCORE 1911 42 point 1910 11 1912 10 1909 6 [•SSI 19U a fnui-WnuiB Bapifamars Hattr? — Thompson Gymnasium, Dec. 18, 11)08 (Snmmittrr Agnes Denike, Chairman. Alice O ' Gorman. Marguerite Reynar. Camilla Stewart. Ottilie Prochazka. Katherine Sickels. Amy Weil. Ex-officio: Mary Polhemus, Charlotte Verlage. fljjltmnnrr 2umrl|fmt — Hotel Majestic, June 1, 190 ' J Toast Mistress Madeleine Hirsh To the Mascot Ethel S. Leveridge To the President ( ' o8- ' o9) Louie Johnson To the President ( ' og- ' io) Mary Polhemus To the Class Mary Conroy (Cummtttrr Mary Conroy, Chairman. Louise Greenawalt. Helen Bradbeer. Ruth Hakes. Marion Pratt. Charlotte Hodge. Hetta Stapff. Ex-officio: Mary Polhemus, Charlotte Verlage. 1 1561 [i.S7] flarltamnttanj Stfftrulttw And Yet They Want the Vote! Class Meeting December 8 Nominations for treasurer were in order; December 1 — Suggestion for a Class Party [160] (ttlass g tattstuB There are lies; there are worse lies, and there are statistics. Best all round Lillian Schoedlek Most famous in the future Evelyn Dewey Cleverest Louise Allen Wittiest Agnes Burke Prettiest Katherine Sickels, Louise Greenawalt Best looking Mary Conroy Best actress Marian Oberndorfer Best dressed Agnes Denike Best natured Rose Gerstein Most scholarly Margaret Hart, Kate Tieman Most athletic Lillian Schoedler Most strenuous Lillian Schoedlek Biggest fusser Louise Greenawalt Our optimist Olga Ihlseng Our pessimist Juanita Brown Our perfect lady Kate Tieman, Ottilie Prochazka Our best wife All of us, especially Agnes Denike Our new woman Mamie Rivkin Best loved Mary Polhemus [161] Th e Bulletin k tiM Steroriis irf 1911 A t Ij I r 1 1 r a Championship Basket Ball (i) (2) Championship Tennis (1) (2) Championship Hockey (3) Field Day (1) (2) Greek Games (2) D r a m a 1 1 r a Plays Given : Through the Hedge (1) The Little Minister (2) D ' Arcy of the Guards (3) In Undergraduate Plays: The Taming of the Shrew (1) Biandello, Tranio, Gremio Twelfth Night (2) Viola, Maria, Malvolio, Fabian ipubltrattmta The Bear : Associate Editors, two (1), five (2), three ( j) Managing Editors, two (3) Ahmttttatrattott Associate Editors, one (2), two (3) Business Staff, two (3) ionarsi President of the French Society (3) Socialist Society (3) Suffragist Society (3) Athletic Association ( 3) College Settlement Association (3) Margaret Hart — General (2) Leader of the College Song Practice Adelaide Waite — Departmental (i) (2), General (2) Gertrude E. Saul — General (1) Helen Crandall — Departmental (2) Kate Huntington Tieman — General (1) (2) Departmental (2) [162] Thus departs Soangctaha, In the glory of the sunset, In the purple mists of evening, To the island of alumnae, To the land of the Broader Knowledge, To the Kingdom of Life ' s Labor. l ' 63l ' WHAT rage for fame attends both great and small BETTER BE DAMNED THAN MENTIONED NOT AT ALL JOSEPHINE A. BOSCH HELEN E. BRADBEER HELEN BROWN 660 E. 163d STREET, 149 E. LINCOLN AVENUE, BOONTON, N. J. NEW YORK. MOUNT VERNON, N. Y. The very Pink of Courtesy. She is a great observer and Existence is a merry treat. she looks right through the deeds of men. JUAN IT A BROWN 94 SHELTON AVENUE. JAMAICA, N. Y. Never imagine yourself not to be otherwise, than what it might ap- pear to others tha t what you were, was not otherwise than what you had been would have appeared to them to be. EMILY E. M. BRUNING 317 73d STREET, BROOKLYN. Her stature tall — I hate a dumpy woman. AGNES M. BURK E MORRISTOWN, N. Y. A deal of Ariel, just a streak of Puck. [166] ELEANOR BURNE DOUGLASTOWN, N. Y. Oh, it is excellent to have a giant ' s strength! EDITH C. BURNS 162 EIGHTH AVENUE, BROOKLYN, N. Y. I dare to do what may become a woman. RUTH A. BURNS 27 SOUND VIEW, PORTCHESTER, N. Y. Master alike in Speech and Prose Of James great antiseptic style. A. MAY CALLAN 816 E. 176th STREET, NEW YORK. RUTH CARROLL WARWICK, N. Y. THERESE CASSEL 1976 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK. Why so rapt and mute, young sinner? Prithee, why so mute? So sweet and calm and holy was her soul, That it scarce seemed that she to earth belonged. Young in the ways of the world. [ 167I AMELIA A. CLEMENT 50 BUCHANAN PLACE. NEW YORK. ETHEL M. COCHRANE 137 RICH AVENUE, MOUNT VERNON, N. Y. MARY P. CONRO Y 13 TOWNSEND AVENUE. STAPLETON, N. Y. I love tranquil solitude and such society as is quiet, wise and good. Be not careless in deeds, nor confused in words, nor ram- bling in thoughts. ' Tis beauty truly bent, whose red and white Nature ' s own sweet and cun- ning hand laid on. HELEN C. COOMBS 312 S. BROADWAY, YONKERS, N. Y. LAILA A. COSTON SCRANTON. PENN HARRIET J. CURRIER 330 W. 28th STREET, NEW YORK. A life of sorrow and privation, a hard life indeed do these poor devil artists have of it. Inviolate be the sacred right of man. The freedom of debate. — So well She knows her own, that what she wills to do or say Seems wisest. [168] EDITH M. DEACON 502 W. 143d STREET, NEW YORK. AGNES M. DENIKE 22 HAMILTON TERRACE, NEW YORK. EVELYN ' DEWEY 23 ST. NICHOLAS TERRACE, NEW YORK. Society is founded on Hero Worship. It is such a strain keep- I am a firm believer in Woman ' s ing men up to the mark! Rights; especially the right to do as she pleases. MILDRED DODGE ISABELLE J. DORN1NG ADELE DUNCAN 185 BERKELEY PLACE, 124 W. 181st STREET, 101 W. 85th STREET, BROOKLYN. NEW YORK. NEW YORK. I ' d rather like the violet grow How weary, stale, flat and On with the dance, let joy be Unmarked, in the shaded vale. unprofitable unconfined! Seem to me all the uses of No sleep till morn, when youth this world. and pleasure meet. [169] LEVANCHIA V. EATON 191 CLAREMONT AVE., NEW YORK. ESTELLE J. ELLISON 60 PROSPECT PLACE, BROOKLYN. ETHEL L. FELCH 52 W. 105th STREET, NEW YORK. Everything ' s got a moral A good example of hard work. It is only the intellectually If you can only find it. lost that ever worry. VERA A. FUESLEIN 888 E. 176th STREET, NEW YORK. I will follow thee, my friends, to the last gasp, with truth and loyalty. KATHARINE GAY 205 W. 106th STREET, NEW YORK. She is no arguer, she is judgment. ROSE R. GERSTEIN 130 MANHATTAN AVENUE, BROOKLYN. From Psyche-knot to pompadour She tried them every one. ' Tis quite a burden, we confess, A crown of glory to possess. [I O] GRACEG. GILLEAUDEAU HAWTHORNE PARK. MAMARONACK, N. Y. PENELOPE N. GIRDNER 47 W. 71st STREET, NEW YORK. ELSIE GLEASON 239 DECATUR STREET, BROOKLYN. RUTH J. HAKES ILION, NEW YORK. MARGARET T. HART 207 DYCKMAN STREET, NEW YORK. ELIZABETH B. HASLER ENGLAND. Friends, if we be honest To do easily what is difficult And panting time toiled with ourselves, we shall be f or others is the mark of talent. after her in vain, honest with each other. IRMA F. HEIDEN ANNA L. HERRMANN AUG USTINA HESS 118 E. 74th STREET. 1224 UNION AVENUE, 878 LAFAYETTE AVENUE, NEW YORK. NEW YORK. BROOKLYN. A person who is bounded by I have never found the limit Say and do everything accord- straight lines of conduct, hav- of my capacity for work. ing to soundest reason, ing all her corners right, she is called square. (17 1 ALICE T. HILL 783 GREENE AVENUE, BROOKLYN. Inveterate in virtue. MARGARET R. HOGAN WHITTIER HALL, NEW YORK Taking sides is the foundation of sincerity. MADELEINE HIRSH 25 W. 87th STREET, NEW YORK. An honest friend! What wad ye wish for mair, man? FLORENCE HOLZWASSER 468 RIVERSIDE DRIVE, NEW YORK. There was a little woman, and she had an earnest soul, And she said to the soul: Let us try, try, try. CHARLOTTE M. HODGE 316 W. 108th STREET, NEW YORK. Blunt as the fencer ' s foils that hit but hurt not. OLGA K. IHLSENG 541 W. 124th STREET, NEW YORK. Hold the fort! I am coming! [173] LOUIE E. JOHNSON ETHEL M . KEMPTON ANNA A. KUGLER 460 W. 153d STREET, 9 VAN COURTLANDT PARK AVE , 441 E. 134th STREET, NEW YORK. YONKERS. NEW YORK. She is pretty to walk with So shaken as I am A penny for your thoughts. And witty to talk with and wan with care. And pleasant to think on. ETHEL S. LEVERIDGE GRACE G. LOVELL AUGUSTA LUSTGARTEN 277 EAST BROADWAY, 202 W. 8ad STREET, 528 W. 125th STREET, NEW YORK. NEW YORK. NEW YORK. Possess ' d with such a gentle Art thou pale for weari- A mind forever voyaging sovereign grace, of such en- ness of climbing Heaven? The strange seas of thought alone, chanting presence and dis- course. [174] A. LAILA MARTIN AMBERSON AVENUE, VAN COURTLAND TERRACE. N. Y. GRACE McKEE PORT WASHINGTON, L. I. EDNA J. McKEEVER 17 BANK STREET, NEW YORK. Those that come late among us -nV VertUC ' S ° nne ' ' tH ° U Rather inclined to be good. Are no less welcome therefore. . nere, . Is to restrain and kepen well thy tonge. MARY R. MASCHMEDT 62 ORCHARD STREET, ASTORIA, L. I. THERESE MAYER 41 E. 72d STREET, NEW YORK. MILDRED K. MESSING 113 BROAD STREET, STAPLETON. N. Y. Innocence abroad! I find few sensible people but those who are of my own way of thinking. Mocking the air with colors gaily spread. [175] SUSAN B. MINOR FREEHOLD, N. J. I have tried in my time to be a philosopher, but, I don ' t know how, cheerfulness was always creeping in. RUTH L. MOSS 230 ST. NICHOLAS AVE.. NEW YORK. Season your admiration for a while. EVA C. MORDECAI 319 W. 105th STREET, NEW YORK. Outweeps a hermit and outprays a saint. AGNES M. NOBIS BRYN MAWR PARK, YONKERS. How sad and bad and mad she was, But then how she was sweet! ADDIE F. MORGENSTERN 45 W. 88th STREET, NEW YORK. She draweth out the thread of her verbosity finer than the staple of her argument. MARIAN OBERNDORFER HOTEL ENDICOTT, 81st ST. and COLUMBUS AVE., N. Y. Exceeding fair she was in that she never studied to be fairer than nature made her. [176] LOUISE E. OCKERS OAKDALE, L. I., N. Y. A girl of cheerful yesterdays And confident to-morrows. HELEN M. PORTER 175 BEECH STREET, YONKERS. I know, teacher, I know. ALICE M . O ' GORMAN 318 W. 108th STREET, NEW YORK. The warmth within that comes from cold without. MARION PRATT 57 W. 45th STREET. NEW YORK. As good be out of the world as out of fashion. MARY B. POLHEMUS 19 HILLSIDE AVENUE, ENGLEWOOD, N. J. The soul that laughs and loves and rides for the right has the world at her feet while she is young. OTTILIE PROCHAZKA 138 W. 13th STREET, NEW YORK. By Heaven, she ' s a dainty one! [177] FRANCES M. F. RANDOLPH 425 W. 114th STREET, NEW YORK. MABEL J. REID 82 MORNINGSIDE AVENUE. NEW YORK. MARGUERITE W. REYNAR BOONTON, NEW JERSEY. If all the world ' s a stage and all the This world is frivolous Logic is logic — that ' s all I say. people players, but for the giddy. It ' s up to you to be the leading lady. MAMIE E. RIVKIN 521 W. 151st STREET, NEW YORK. HELEN DE M. RUNYON 40 W. 131st STREET, NEW YORK. LOUISE RUSK 7 TRINITY STREET, MONTCLAIR, N. J. Give me my vote and may the rest go hang. For such a faithful tender heart Can never break in vain! She meant no wrong to any, She sought the good of many. [1 8] ELIZABETH RIORDAN 523 W. 152c! STREET, NEW YORK. We would that we could serve you; but in truth Your face is new to us. MILDRED L. SANBORN 1477 LEXINGTON AVENUE, NEW YORK. Let gentleness my strong enforcement be. ROSE L. SALMOWITZ 23 BROOME STREET, BROOKLYN. The tower of strength Which stood four-square to all the winds that blew. GEORGIANA SANFORD 431 W. 121st STREET, NEW YORK. A merry heart doeth good like a medicine. DOROTHY SALWEN 1931 BERGEN STREET, BROOKLYN. She delights in being different. GERTRUDE E. SAUL 429 NINTH AVENUE, LONG ISLAND CITY, N. Y. She never followed wicked ways, un less when she was sinning. [179] ETHEL SCHLESINGER 61 W. 74th STREET, NEW YORK. LILLIAN H. SCHOEDLER 240 PURDY STREET, STEINWAY, L. I. CAROLINE E. SEEL 505 W. I22d STREET, NEW YORK. For those who love, The stars that have most Wake, dreamer, from thy study, the world is wide. glory have no rest. MYRTLE SHWITZER 16 E. 96th STREET, NEW YORK. Seriously comic. ANGELINA SEVESO 43 TILLARY STREET, BROOKLYN. Hereafter. in a better world than this, We shall desire more love and knowledge of you. MARY B. SHAW 512 W. 149th STREET, NEW YORK. That ' s what I always have said. [180] KATHERINE H. SICKLES 596 RIVERSIDE DRIVE, NEW YORK. LOUISE M. SILLCOX 527 W. 121st STREET, NEW YORK. RUTH M . STAGEN 459 BEMENT AVENUE, WEST BRIGHTON, N. Y. To doubt her fairness were to want an eye. A trusty villain, sir, that very oft, when I am dull with care and melan- choly, lightens my humor. Sober, steadfast and demure. HETTA STAPFF JEANNETTE A. STEINECKE NATALIE STEWART 67 EAST END AVENUE, 55 LYNCH STREET, 1754 TAPPING AVENUE, NEW YORK. BROOKLYN. NEW YORK. Wisdom is humble that A dash of enthusiasm is not What will Mrs. Grundy say? he knows no more. a thing to be despised. [I8l] STELLA STRAUS 504 RICHMOND TERRACE, NEW BRIGHTON, N. Y. And for each passerby a smile. For every one a word. BERNICE M. TABOR HALTON, KANSAS. Journeys end in lovers meeting Every wise man ' s son doth know. GLADYS G. TALLMAN 3605 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Truth hath a quiet breast. ELIZABETH THOMPSON KATE H. TIEMANN HELEN F. TRIESCHMANN 568 W. 161st STREET, 82 N. ARLINGTON AVE., 600 W. 133d STREET, NEW YORK. E. ORANGE, N. J. NEW YORK. Why did you laugh then when I said Man delights not me! I have immortal longings in me. Her ways are ways of pleasant- ness and all her paths are peace. [182] ANNA S. VAN BUSKIRK 21 W. 123d STREET, NEW YORK. CHARLOTTE C. M. VERLAGE 201 W. 79th STREET, NEW YORK. E. ADELAIDE WAITE HACKENSACK, N. J. Ah, could I throw aside They fool me to the top of my bent. When she was good, she these earthly bonds was very, very good. That bind me down where But when she was bad, lowly mortals sigh. she was better. AMY A. WEIL 300 W. 100th STREET, NEW YORK. I could no more resist the ten- dency of my emotions than cease building castles of dreams. LINDA C. WEYMANN 148 E. 16th STREET, NEW YORK. Shy to illumine, but a jewel of a friend. HELEN E. WILKES IRVINGTON, N. J. If for herself she will not love. Nothing can make her. [183] GERALDINE J. WILLETS 34 MAMARONACK AVENUE. WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. A little learning scattered o ' er A frolic of four years — or more. HELEN CRANDALL HEMPSTEAD, L. I. The finest spirits are not gregarious, They do not love a crowd. 3 a r m r r fH r m h r r a a f 19 11 Madeleine Bogert. Dorothy Dwyer. Elizabeth Dunnet. Bertha Eaches. Dorothy Henry. Bessie Bosa Hays. Makjorie Johnston. Herma Levy. Edith McClenahan. Camille Ste vart. Claudia Sonn. Bertha Bothschild Elsass. Elizabeth Thorne. Jeannette Vose. Blanche Van Anda. Genevieve Watson. Mary Wilson. Helen Amelia Flarsheim. Died September, 1907. [184] ®1jp Mmvb uf EhttnrB OF THE 1911 Utartarlroarii wish to express their gratitude for the kind assistance of Professor William Tenny Brewster. Professor Tombo. Fanny McLane, 1907. Muriel Ivimey, 1910. Ruth Stagen, 1911. Myrtle Schwitzer, 1911. Ottilie Prochazka, 1911. Lillian Schoedler, 1911. Laila Coston, 1911. Dorothy Spear, 1912. Dorothy Cheeseman, 1913. Maria Diaz Villabilla, 1913. Marguerite Allen. Leonie Fueslein. hs 5 ] Norn, book, aturr m Iran? fmtaljrii tljr?, hub tltou liaat finteffrii ua, k Btnh tl)tt fortlj to fintal) ttym Hjo imrr our work titantaa. [i86] Jd3T £f I 187] ADVERTISEMENTS AND ALL THE NEWS NOT FIT TO PRINT NOTICE K net— Serving his sentence in Structuiie and Style. ESTABLISHED 1851 EIMER and AMEND MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS OF Glljrmtrala mh (C miral Apparatua 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. [.88] ESTABLISHED 1818 BROADWAY cor. TWENTY- SECOND ST. NEW YORK. Polo Ulsters, English Blazers, Angora and Shetland Knitted Garments, Traveling Rugs, Motor Clothing, Liveries, Trunks, Bags. Novelties from the West End London Shops. Clothing, Furnishings, Hats And Shoes for Men and Boys Send for Illustrated Catalogue New V ork â– Not associated dl-1 iii HJSfis P L with any other Philadelphia tSl rJSJ TKgJjgES New York Store 54 50 58 % vmtpt ) Vt L, Wm SPRING SHOWING HIGH CLASS OUTER APPAREL FOR WOMEN AND MISSES SUITS Exclusive foreign novelties together with our own original productions. GOWNS The new art shades in crepe meteor and cashmere de soie for evening wear. COATS AND WRAPS The hest productions from abroad and at home. MILLINERY A specialty is the reproduction of Pari s hats at moderate prices. [189] Matches, E. Louise Allen Poker, Irma F. Heiden Draught(er), Helen Coombs Coal Shovel, Margaret T. Hart Damper, Katharine Gay Smoke, Kate H. Tieman Roaster, Agnes Burke Lid-lifter, Francis F. M. Randolph Sandpaper, Evelyn Dewey Fuel, Susan B. Minor Stove polish, Mary Conroy L.F.HN i, TWO ESSENTIALS COMPLETE TOILET RIVERIS TALCUM POWDER The Best Toilet and Face Powder PEBECO TOOTH PASTE The Best Dentifrice — Keeps Teeth White YOUR DRUGGIST HAS THEM ASK H I M WRI G LE Y S tr  E nn PEPSIN GUM l 2 - 5 CHARLES FRIEDGEN Ctjemtgt ana rucjgtet i 2 20 Amsterdam Avenue Cor. 1 20th Street 1 101 Amsterdam Avenue Cor. 114th Street NEW YORK [190] All of the Engravings in this book as well as those in the 1911 Olfllmnbtatt are productions ot the Ifagopran iEngramng (En. 39 East 20th Street New York City Illustrators and Engravers for College Annuals [191] To little T. C. in a Prospect of Flowers. Old friends have the privilege of free speech! ' Then be not coy, but use your time And while you may go merry, For having lost but once your prime You may forever tarry. Frank Brothers Fifth Avenue Boot Shop Near 27th Street New York The mark of the Metropolis is upon our shoes. They are made to meet the requirements of women who know shoe styles and wear them. Shoes in all leathers and shapes. High and low cut. Afternoon or Evening Slippers in exclusive and original designs, correct shapes and colorings with varying heights of heel. CAMMEYER fith Ave. and 20th St. Alexander Shoes Unequaled assortment of pleasing styles for young women. The Daytona Pump with welted soles, made of black and tan calfskin at Of white buckskin at $7 oo ANDREW ALEXANDER Sixth Avenue and Nineteenth Street NEW YORK Broadway 34th Street Purveyors of Exclusive Modes in Apparel for Women and Misses [192] Southern Pacific Steamships NEW YORK and NEW ORLEANS Choice of Rail Lines Returning Southern Pacific Sunset Route NEW ORLEANS to SAN FRANCISCO Luxuriously Appointed Steamships, ' Trains of Superior Equipment THE BEST ROUTE FO.R COMFORTABLE TRAVEL AND PICTURESQUE SCENERY between THE EAST AND THE WEST For all Information Apply to any Ticket Agent, or Address L. H. NUTTING, Gen. Pass. Agent, 1158,366, 1 BROADWAY. NEW YORK [193] Marriage is a desperate thing. E. L. A. Special Rates to Students Von Horn Textor 1546 Broadway Hauswaldt ' s Vigor Chocolate Is an agreeable and easily digestible medium of nourishment, and is the best substitute for cod- liver oil. It is highly recommended by physicians. FOR SALE AT ALL FIRST CLASS DRUGGISTS AARON LAUTF.RBACH SAMUEI, I AUTERBACH AARON LAUTERBACH BROTHER StammtiiB auft â„¢ViSr 170 BROADWAY, NEW YORK Telephone, 6S6S Cortlandt Comer Maiden Lane HISTORICAL COSTUMES OF ALL PERIODS FANCY DRESS FOR ALL OCCASIONS F. TEXTOR, Manager 161 WEST 49th STREET, NEW YORK Formerly 34 East 20th Street OSCAR F. BERNNER ulhratriral mxb Btvttt Win Ulakrr Manufacturer and Dealer in GREASE PAINTS, POWDERS, ROUGES, ETC. 9 WEST 28TH STREET - NEW YORK Bel. Broadway and Fifth Ave. Telephone 2235 Madison Square Wigs and Beards Amateur Performance to Hire Tableaux Make Up CARL A. WUSTL Costumes for Theatricals, Old Folks Concerts, Tableaux Dickens Parties, Etc. 40 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK Between 16th and 17th Streets TELEPHONE STUYVESANT 1623 [194] ALICE BOUGHTON PHOTOGRAPHER Charlotte Russe, Water Ices, 17 dllLy ILCa, dKCa, CIL. USeU by nearly everybody. Try (wK) them. You will like them. DEPO TS 305 FOURTH AVE. 142 WEST 125th ST. 312 MADISON AVENUE 5Q8 SIXTH AVF 110 FAST 195th ST NEW YORK 115 PARK ROW 302 COLUMBUS AVE. Phone. 2529 Audubon n r s Telephone Connection ' W D. V. BAZINET 7ir V QL t • DEVELOPING iKflbak Jj U|IJllUMi ENLARGEMENTS 2 Dry-Goods and Novel ties Books, Stationery, Magazines, Circulating Library, Pictures, Framing, Pianos, Music 1228 Amsterdam Ave, bet. 120 121st Sts. 1092 Amsterdam Ave. bet. 113 114th Sts 146 HAMILTON PLACE NEW YORK CITY Near 144th Street and Amsterdam Avenue SOLICITS THE STUDENTS ' PATRONAGE Telephone 4973 W. Audubon G. GALBRUN Wm. H. Christian [Formerly with L. Sherry and H. Maillard] MANUFACTURER OF ijfrrnrh anil American 3rr (Hrranta. mh STattnj Srra, oubntta anil (C anuria QUICK PRINTING ffiUthhrr Stamps, Engrailing 1652 AMSTERDAM AVENUE NEW YORK Between 141st and 142d Streets 260 WEST 125th ST. Telephone 4113 Mo rningsidc [195] IVho ' s Whose or Private Property — God bless us three — Jo, John and Me! A. D. Hlf f INQ ' Drawing Inks, Eternal Writing Ink, Engrossing 1 U ' JUl l , nk Taurine Mucilage, Photo Mounter Paste. Drawing Board Paste. Liquid Paste, Office Paste. Vegetab ' e Glue, Etc.. ARE THE FINEST AND BEST INKS AND ADHESIVES. Emancipate yourself from the use of corrosive and ill- smelling inks and adhesives and adopt the Higgins ' Inks and Adhesives. They will be a levelation to you, they are so sweet, clean and well put up. At Dealers Generally CHAS. M. HIGGINS CO., Mfrs. BRANCHES: CHICAGO. LONDON. 271 Ninth Street, Brooklyn, N Y. Sljr larnari. rltonl fnr (Strls COLLEGE PREPARATORY 423 West 148th Street nf ijmtsrijnlii Arts 226 West 79th Street, New York City. J attonal CaiijeUral J cfjooi FOR GIRLS Mount £t. Mian, Waalitngtmt, i. QL Standing within the Cathedral Close of St. Peter and St. Paul ' | HE ideal of education of the Cathedral School for Girls is in accordance with the highest standards of intellectual training and acquirements now generally accepted by our best schools and colleges. Resident and Day Pupils Principal. MRS. BARBOUR WALKER, M.A., Columbia University [196] (ttnlumbta Umu rsttg NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER . . President JAMES E. RUSSELL Dean HP EACH ERS COLLEGE represents an outlay of five million dollars for the study of education and the training of teachers. There are thirty-five departments, with one hundred officers of instruction; two schools of observation 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 1541 resident and 2032 partial students, representing every State and Territory, 150 other col- leges and universities, and 250 teachers ' training schools. Four fellowships and fifty scholarships are awarded annually. Four degrees of Ph. D., 5 1 of M. A., and 139 of B. S., and 248 professional diplomas were awarded in 1908. The demand upon the College for its graduates is four times the supply. The Board of Publications issues five series, including 125 volumes and pamphlets. Descriptive circulars will be sent upon application WINSOR NEWTON ARTISTS ' OIL AND WATER COLORS ARE THE WORLD ' S STANDARD Best, Winton, British, ' Kensington and School of Art Canvas CHARPAS DRAWING PAPER Registered No. 305349 A New Self-Fixing Paper for Charcoal, Chalk, Crayon and Pastel Drawing O. W. DRAWING PAPER A Hand-Made Paper, manufactured under the direction of the Royal Society of Painters in Water Color 31 HANDBOOKS ON THE FINE ARTS B y Mail 30c. each THE WINTON WHITE FOR OIL-COLOR PAINTING COMPRESSED RUSSIAN CHARCOAL, Made in seven degrees WINSOR NEWTON ' S ILLUSTRATION BOARDS WINSOR NEWTON, Limited 298 Broadway, New York Send 3-cent Stamp for Complete Catalog 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 C. T. RAYNOLDS CO. Fulton and William Streets, New York 176 Randolph Street - Chicago CATALOGUE ON APPLICATION [197] I George — think so far as one can see that everybody ' s wanting me. Erecting to 19U Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume CHARTERED IN 1909 Makers of CAPS, GOWNS AND HOODS to the American Colleges and Universities ; fo Barnard, Columbia, Normal College, Princeton, Br) n 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. CAPS AND GOWNS COX SONS VINING 262 4th Ave., New York. TRADE Onyx J Hosiery AT ALL SHOPS Lord Taylor WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS PETER THOMSON Naval and Merchant Tailor Boys and Misses Sailor Suits a Specialty Ladies Tailor Made Suits Riding Habits. Boys and Young Mens Norfolk, Sack and Xuxedo Suits. MEN ' S DEP ' T, 2nd FLOOR. MADE-TO-ORDER ONLY 1118 Walnut St., PHILADELPHIA. NO AGENCIES 14-16 West 33rd St., NEW YORK. COLLEGE GIRLS APPROVE THE LOMBARD BLOUSE Send for illustrated booklet of our various styles ALSO OUR ;NEW FLANNEL TENNIS SHIRT Henry S. Lombard 22 to 26 Merchants Row, Boston, Mass. TAYLOR ON IT X MEANS ITS THE BEST ATHLETIC ARTICLE YOU CAN BUY. It is to be found here on Sweaters, Skates, Shoes c. ' ALEX. TAYLOR CO. ATHLETIC OUTFITTERS 16 E. 42nd St., N. Y., Opp. Ho. Manhattan Discount to Students [1 9 8] GEORGE M. CLARK. ESTABLISHED 1870. HARTWELL A. WILKINS. DEALERS IN ELEVENT AVENUE, COR. OF 4esT 4th 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 HICKOR . TELEPHONES: 4909-4910 Chelsea 16-566 Harlem DRY HICKORY FOR OPEN FIRES. VIRGINIA PINE KNOTS. SELECTED HARD WOOD. LIGNUM VITAE. NEW BEDFORD DRIFTWOOD. NORTH CAROLINA LIGHT-WOOD. VIRGINIA PINE and OAK KINDLING WOOD. THE BUSINESS OF The Columbia University Press Bookstore EXTENDS FROM FRANCE TO JAPAN Mail Orders Filled Promptly LEMCKE BUECHNER WEST HALL Broadway, near 117th Street c o M P L I M E N T A R Y Arnmrmt attb Jfarrimt Teachers ' Agency Supplies Colleges, Schools, and Families with Profes- sors, Teachers, Tutors, and Governesses, resident or visiting, American or For- eign. Parents aided in choice of schools. : : : Mrs. M. J. Young-Fulton 23 Union Square, New York 199] Only the shots that hit are the shots that count. The Home Insurance Co. Office: No. 56 CEDAR STREET NEW YORK One Hundred and Thirteenth Semi-Annual Statement JANUARY, I 910 SUMMARY OF ASSETS: Par Value Market Value Cash in Banks and Trust Cos. . . . $1,552,444 43 Real Estate 1,543,892 06 United States Bonds . . .$ 385,000 00 433 750 00 State and City Bonds . . 5,558,333 33 5,477,833 33 Rail Road Bonds . . . . 6,308.000 00 6,124,430 00 Miscellaneous Bonds . . . 900,000 00 760,000 00 Rail Road Stocks . . . 5,806,000 00 8,071,275 00 Miscellaneous Stocks . . 1,150,000 00 1,582,000 00 Bank and Trust Co. Stocks . 125,000 00 427,800 00 Bonds and Mortgages, being 1 st lien on Real Estate 69,800 00 Premiums uncollected, in course of transmission and in hands of Agents 1,264,447 46 $27,307,672 28 LIABILITIES: Cash Capital $ 3,000,000 00 f Reserve Premium Fund 10,244,415 00 Reserve for Losses 958,639 76 Reserve for Re-Insurance and other claims . 621,780 56 Reserve for Taxes 100,000 00 Reserve as a Conflagration Surplus . . . 1,200,000 00f Surplus over contingencies and all liabilities including capital ljJ82,836 96t $27,307,672 28 Surplus as regards policy-holders, $15,382,836 961 DIRECTORS LEVI P. MORTON CORNELIUS N. BLISS F LDRIDGE G. SNOW GEORGE H. HARTFORD HRNRV P. NOYES LUCIEN C. WARNER john claflin lord meyer levi c. weir john h. flagler f:manuel h. a. correa samuel d. styles WILLIAM D. BALDWIN ELBRIDGE G. SNOW, president EMANUEL H. A. CORREA, VICE-PRESIDENT AREUNAH M. BURTIS, SECRETARY FREDERIC C. BUSWELL. VICE-PRESIDENT CHARLES L. TYNER, SECRETARY CLARENCE A. LUDLUM, ASS ' T SECRETARY HENRY J. FERRIS, ASS ' T SECRET ' Y New York, January 11, 1910 THE Chas. L. Willard Co. SPECIALISTS ON COLLEGE WORK. LEATHER DANCE CASES. CLASS DAY PROGRAMS INVITATIONS, EMBOSSED STATIONERY. ETC. PRINTERS OF THE MORTARBOARD 56 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK. Hunk Btint A. G. SEILER, Prop. New and Second-Hand Books, Stationery and College Novelties Students ' Discounts Allowed Our Prices the Lowest 1224 Anuitrrftam Aunmr Near 120th Street The Chas. H. Elliott Company The Largest College Engraving House in the World Commencement Invitations Class Day Programs and Class Pins Dance Programs and Invitations Menus Leather Dance Cases and Covers Fraternity and Class Inserts for Annuals Fraternity and Class Stationery Wedding Invitations and Calling Card WORKS : 17th STREET and LEHIGH AVENUE PHILADELPHIA. PA. [200] I â– â–
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GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
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.