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By All Means Become Acquainted with The Biggest and Best Store in Upper New York During the Scholastic Year It is a store which will appeal particularly to women, and its nearness to Barnard College makes it a most popular shopping-place for collegians. It caters to a critical and discriminating clientele who must and will have the best merchandise the world ' s foremost marts produce. Every purchaser at the Koch Store is assured fair and courteous con- sideration, because being a locality store it naturally seeks to make each customer a satisfied and a permanent one. It goes without saying that such an establishment, noted for its aggressive and progressive policy, quotes prices that are at all times moderate and in keeping with market conditions. You owe it to yourself to become acquainted with this busy store. s KOCH CO 125th STREET, WEST NEW YORK CITY TIFFANY CO. EXPERIENCE HAS PERFECTED TIFFANY CO. ' S PRODUCT, ESTABLISHED THEIR STANDARD, MADE THEIR REPUTATION, AND PROVED THEIR GUARANTEE PRECIOUS STONES, JEWELRY, PEARLS, WATCHES, CLOCKS, BRONZES, LAMPS, SILVERWARE, CHINA, GLASS, LEATHERS, STATIONERY THE TIFFANY BLUE BOOK WILL BE SENT UPON REQUEST. IT IS FULL OF INFORMATION, BUT CONTAINS NO ILLUSTRATIONS FIFTH AVENUE AND 37th STREET NEW YORK Telephone, 4335 Bryant FRANCESCA TEXTOR Theatrical and Historical COSTUMER Fancy Costumes Made to Order for All Occasions Amateur Plays Artistically and Correctly Costumed Everything for Sale or Hire Of the late firm of Van Horn Textor 160 West Forty-eighth Street, New York Formerly 34 East Twentieth Street O ' DONNELL ' S NEW RESTAURANT BROADWAY AT 61st STREET Telephone, 8357 Columbus College Luncheons and Dinners receive special attention ml :m W$em ■B ffl f 7 - Vocal and Instrumental Music by Best Professional Artists Cuisine and Service of the Highest Class Private Dining Rooms for parties of from six to two hundred. Special Menus arranged for Luncheons, Dinners, Suppers and Banquets. Close to The New Theatre THE KNOX 4 —KNOX; jV-CW YORK. HAT Is universally recognized as the Standard by which all others are judged 452 FIFTH AVE. 196 FIFTH AVE. 161 BROADWAY Corner 40th Street Near 23rd Street Singer Building FAMOUS IN LITERATURE ' DAVID HARUM By Edward Noyes Westcott ' PEOPLE YOU KNOW By George Ade ' TRISTRAM OF BLENT By Anthony Hope ' YOU NEVER CAN TELL By Bernard Shaw ' THREE MEN ON WHEELS By Jerome K. Jerome ' LITTLE RIVERS By Rev. Henry Van Dyke ' TALKS WITH BISMARCK By Carl Schurz ' MR. DOOLEY ' ON GENERAL GRANT By F. P. Dunne (Mr. Dooley) THE DISENTANGLER ' S By Andrew Lang THE FIGHTING CHANCE By Robt. W. Chambers THE HONORABLE PETER STERLING By Paul Leicester Ford A LITTLE BROTHER OF THE RICH By Joseph Medill Patterson and numerous other Standard Books speak of APOLLINARIS thus recognizing it as the Standard Table Water of the World. JAMES McCUTCHEON CO THE LINEN STORE REGISTERED TRADE MARK ESTABLISHED HALF A CENTURY Importers and Retailers of FINE TABLE LINENS, HOUSEKEEPING LINENS, HANDKERCHIEFS, FRENCH AND AMERICAN LINGERIE, CORSETS, WASH- ABLE DRESS FABRICS, LADIES ' WAISTS, AND OUTER GARMENTS, ETC. 5th Avenue and 34th Street New York City Chartered 1822 The farmers ' Loan and Trust Company The Company is a legal depositary for moneys paid into Court, and is authorized to act as Executor, Administrator, Trustee, Guardian, Receiver, and in all other Fiduciary capacities. Acts as Trustee under Mortgages made by Railroad and other Corporations, and as transfer agent and Registrar of Stocks and Bonds. Receives deposits upon Certificates of De posit, or subject to check, and allows interest on daily balances. Manages Real Estate and lends money on bond and mortgage. Will act as Agent in the transaction of any approved financial business. Fiscal Agent for States, Counties and Cities. and 22 WILLIAM STREET 15 Cockspur St. 28 Bishopsgate LONDON Branch, 475 Fifth Avenue PARIS NEW YORK 41 Boulevard Haussmann Letters of Credit, Payable Throughout the World. Foreign Exchange, Cable Transfers EDWIN S. MARSTON, President SAMUEL SLOAN, Vice-President AUGUSTUS V. HEELY, Vice-President and Secretary WILLIAM B. CAKDOZO, Vice-President CORNELIUS R. AGNEW, Vice-President HORACE F. HOWLAND, Assistant Secretary ROBERT E. BOYD, Assistant Secretary WILLIAM A. DUNCAN, Assistant Secretary BOARD OF DIRECTORS HENRY A. C. TAYLOR CHARLES A. PEABODY WM. WALDORF ASTOR OGDEN MILLS FRANKLIN D. LOCKE J. WILLIAM CLARK GEORGE F. BAKER CLEVELAND H. DODGE HUGH D. AUCHINCLOSS A. G. AGNEW SAMUEL SLOAN D. H. KING, Jr. PERCY A. ROCKEFELLER WILLIAM ROWLAND MOSES TAYLOR PYNE STEPHEN S PALMER ARCHIBALD D. RUSSELL JOHN W. STERLING EDWARD R. BACON A. V. HEELY JOHN J. RIKER ROBERT C. BOYD HENRY HENTZ H. V. R. KENNEDY F. A. VANDERLIP JAMES A. STILLMAN EDWIN S. MARSTON The Young Bride ' s Ally. Culinary inexperience is a formidable handicap to the young bride who has started out to make her husband comfortable and keep him happy. At this critical period blessed is she who can cook. Only when preparing- dessert is the housewife with no experience in cooking on the same footing as her more accomplished sister. Both using serve the same delicious desserts, their preparation requiring no greater skill than the ability to boil water. ' ' They can be made in a minute. Nothing short of magic could produce dishes so delightful and so beautiful from any other material. They are so good that they cover up very agree- ably the deficiencies of any dinner. JELL-O costs 1 Oc. at all grocers ' . The beautiful Recipe Book, DESSERTS OF THE WORLD, illustrated in ten colors and gold, sent free to all who ask us for it. The Genesee Pure Food Co„ Le Roy, N. Y., and Bridgeburg, Can. COPYR I G H T 19 11 BY ELEANORE MYERS PRINTED BY THE CHAS. L . WILLARD CO. 156 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YO R K lIUrtarbDarii Vol. XVIII THE YEARBOOK OF BARNARD COLLEGE AND THE JUNIOR CLASS BOOK OF THE CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE The trifles of our daily lives, The little things scarce worth recall, Whereof no visible trace survives — These are the mainsprings, after all. Columbia Untoemtp : in tfje Citp of J2eto gorfe : 1911 {Co $£erti)a Hucretta ocfetoell Co fjer tofjo in our Hanb of Poofes ts queen, glnb atbsi us as! our toearp fjeabs toe uenb ' tv learning ' s pages! — patient anb sierene, £ ur cfjeerp helper anb our lopal frienb; Cfjat our affection map ue bulp sljoton, ®83e bebtcate tfjisi uoofe to tie fjer oton. Lucile Mordecai Eleanor Doty Margaret Naumburg Irene Glenn, Art Editor Cornelia Dakin Chrystene Straiten Dorothy Spear Cora Thees Pauline Cahn Eleanore Myers, Editor-in-Chief Edith Morris, Business Manager f Pickles D. Spear ) r Cold Water M. Xaumburg J | Spoon C. Dakin I Soothing Syrup C. Thees V . Chili Sauce E. Morris | Sweet Oil I. Glenn [ Milk of Human Kindness E. Doty Salt P. Cahn Vichy C. Straiton Vinegar L. Mordecai Yeast E. Myers } INGREDIENTS ENTIRELY USED UP IN THE 1912 MORTARBOARD. Wt totjo in tbis great toorlb babe trabeleb far, 1 3n manp a region, manp a changing clime, 3 29e toho babe Sougbt tofjere bale anb mountain are, 5 H Sunlit Country anb a 3lanb Sublime, $ause noto before tfje portals of a lanb OTIjerein btoell Houtb anb Enotolebge banb in banb. $ause, pea, anb enter, for tottbtn tfjesJe gates (Eternal outb foreber toorfes anb plays, Peeking tfje Jtlount of ISitsbom that atoaits GTfjc eager feet tbat treab her climbing toaps, 0v, laugbing, trips along on pleasure bent, WLit ) k it anb Jop anb Jfrtenbsbtp bjell content. ■Slut ere pe step tottbtn this College Hanb, nb toanber through its bptoaps far anb toibe, 3That pe map see anb rtghtlp ttnberstanb, Accept this little message as pour guibe: Pe not too critical— too toorlblp toise — nlp be pottng again anb spmpathi e. §9e Bragon conbuctetf) ft Stranger tfjrougf) College Hanbe. BARNARD FROM THE CAMPUS $toarb of Qtvuxttt Chairman Silas B. Brownell, LL.D. tce=Cf)atnnan Mrs. A. A. Anderson Clerk 1 1 oward Town se n i i treasurer George A. Plimpton Mrs. Henry N. Munn. Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D.. LL.D. ( Cantab.), Lilt. I). ( ( xon. ) Albert G. Milbank. Mrs. Francis P. Kinnicutt. Miss Clara II. Spence. Howard Town send. Mrs. Gino C. Speranza. John G. Milburn. Miss Mary Stuart Pullman. George L. Rives. Miss Charlotte S. Baker. Silas J!. 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. Frederick B. Jennings. Deceased. [15] ©fje Jf acultp That is the zvay zvith you men, you don ' t understand us, you cannot. iPreStbent 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 Pennsylvania, and Yale. 1902; University of Chicago, 1903; St. Andrew ' s, Manchester, 1905; Cambridge, 1907; Litt.D., University of Oxford, 1905; Officer de Legion d ' Honneur, 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 Philosophy and Education, and President, since Jan- uary, 1902, [16] [17] VIRGINIA CROCHERON GILDERSLEEVE Dean-elect and Professor of English To those who know thee not, no words can paint And those who know thee know all words are faint. A.B., Barnard, 1899; A.M., Columbia, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia, 1908; Barnard Assistant, 1900-1903; Tutor, 1903-1907; Lec- turer, 1908-1910; Professor, 1910; Dean-elect, 1910. Phi Beta Kappa. [18] WILLIAM TENNEY BREWSTER Provost and Professor of English Full well they laughed with counterfeited glee At all his jokes, for many a joke had he. A.B., Harvard College, 1892; A.M., Harvard University, 1893. Harvard College and Radcliffe College, 1893-1894; Columbia College and Barnard College, 1894-1900; Tutor, 1900-1902; Ad- junct Professor, Barnard. 1902-1906; Professor, 1900- ; Acting Dean, 1907-1910; Provost, 1910. Phi Beta Kappa. [19] EDWIN R. A. SELIGMAN McVickar Professor of Political Economy 1 am not in the roll of common men. A.B.. Columbia University, 187!); LL.B., 1884; Ph.D., 1884; LL.D., 1904. Lecturer at Columbia, 1885-1887; Adjunct Professor, 1888-1891 : Professor, 1891-. Phi Beta Kappa. HERBERT LEVJ ( )SG( X D I ' rofessor of I tist ry His resons he spake ful solempnely. A.B., Amherst. 1811 ; A.M., 1880 ; 1 ' h.l )., Columbia, L889; LL.D., Amherst, 1907. Worcester Academy (Mass.). L877-1879; Boys ' High School, Brooklyn, 1 882- 1 889. Co- lumbia, 1889-. Phi Beta Kappa. EDWARD DELEVAN PERRY Jay Professor of Creek Poets that lasting marble seek, Must come in Latin A.B., Columbia, 1875; Ph.D., Columbia. 1904. Columbia, Tutor in Creek and Sanskrit; L880-1883; Tutor in Greek and Instructor in Sanskrit; 1883-1891; Professor of Sanskrit, 1891-1895; Jay Pro- fessor of Greek, 1895-. Phi Beta Kappa. ' in Greek. ' Tubingen, L879; LL.D. [20] FRANKLIN H. GIDDINGS Professor of Sociology and the History of Civilization New worlds for old. A.B., Union College, 1877; L.L.D., Oberlin College, 1900. Bryn Mawr College, 1888-1894 ; ( olumbia, 1894-. Phi Beta Kappa. r JOHN BATES CLARK Professor of Political Economy He looks quite through the thoughts of men. A.B., Amh erst College, 1872; A.M., Ph.D.; LL.D., Amherst, 1897 ; Princeton University, 1896. Carleton College, 1877- 1881; Smith College, 1882-1893; Amherst College, 1892-1895; Lecturer at Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, 1892-1894; Columbia. 1894-. Phi Beta Kappa. FRANK NELSON COLE Professor of Mathematics He could distinguish and divide A hair ' twixt south and southwest side. A.B., Harvard, 1882; Ph.D., Harvard, 1886. Lecturer in Mathematics, Harvard, 1885-1887; Instructor and Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Michigan, 1888- 1895; Professor of Mathematics. Columbia University, since 1895. [21] JAMES HARVEY ROBINSON Professor of History ' Tis pleasant, sure, to see one ' s name in print, A book ' s a book altho, there ' s too much in it. 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, Colum- bia University, since 1895 ; Acting Dean of Barnard College, 1900-11)01. CALVIN THOMAS Gebhard Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures Wrath upon my tongue and thunder in my eye. A.B., University of Michigan, 1874; A.M., 1877; LL.D.. 1!)0 1. University of Michigan, 1886-1896; Columbia, 1896-. CARLO LEONARDO SPERANZA Professor of Italian Profound his forehead zvas, tho ' not severe. Doctor of Jurisprudence, University of Padua, 18G6 ; A.M., Columbia University, 1886. Yale, 1880-1883; New York University, 1888-1890; Columbia University. In- structor in the Romance Languages and Literatures, 1883- 1886; Adjunct Professor, 1890-1901; Professor of Italian, 1902-. [22] WILLIAM P. TRENT Professor of English Literature Bid me discourse, I will enchant thine car. 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, 1.888-1900; Columbia, 1900-, PIER BERT GARDINER LORD Professor of Philosophy Truth is truth to the cud of reckoning. A.B., Amherst, 1871; A.M., causa honoris, 1900. Uni- versity of Buffalo, 1895-1898; Columbia, 1900-. Phi Beta Kappa. NELSON GLENN McCREA Professor of Latin I am more an antique Roman than a Dane. ' A.B., Columbia University, 1885; A.M., 1886; Ph.D., 1888. Columbia University, University Fellow in Classical Philology, 1885-1888; Tutorial Fellow in Latin, 1888-1889; Tutor, 1889-1895; Instructor, L895-19O0; Adjunct l ' rofes- sor, 1900-1903; Professor, 1903-. Phi Beta Kappa. [23] LIVINGSTON FARRAND Professor of Anthropology What is so simple as primitive moukcydom Born in the sea with a cold in its head. A.B., Princton, 1888; A.M., 1891; M.D., Columbia, 1891- HENRY EDWARD CRAMPTON Professor of Zoology I ' m the apostle of mighty Darzwnity, Stands for Divinity — sounds much the same — Ap ' o-theistical Pan-Asininity Only can doubt whence the lot of ns came. A.B., Columbia University, IS ' . ' ;]; Ph.D., Columbia Uni- versity, 1899 ; Columbia University, 1893-1895 ; Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, 1895-1890; Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, 1895-1903; Biological Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, 1904-1906; Columbia University, 1896- ; Associate of Carnegie Institution, 1903- ; Curator of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, 1909- Sigma Xi. CHARLES KNAPP Professor of Classical Philology The world knows only tivo, that ' s Rome and I. A.B., Columbia, 1887; A.M., 1888; Ph.D., 1890. Prize Fellow in Classics, Columbia, 1887-1890 ; Tutoral Fellow in Classics, Columbia, 1S89-1890; Barnard, Instructor, 1891- 1902; Adjunct Professor, 1902-1906; Professor, 1906-. Phi Beta Kappa. [24] HERBERT MAULE RICHARDS Professor of Botany 1 will not equivocate ; I will not excuse; J zyill not retreat a single inch; and 1 WILL be heard! S.I!., Harvard, 1891; S.D., 1895. Harvard, 1891-1898 arnard, L898-. Sigma Xi. MARGARET E MALTBY Assistant Professor of Physics Light seeking light doth light of light beguile. A.B., Oberlin, 1882; S.J!., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 1891; A.M., Oberlin, 1891; Ph.D., Gottingen University, 1 895. Wellesley College, 1889-1893: Gottingen University, 1896-1897; Lake Erie College, 1897-1898; Barnard, Instructor in Chemistry, 19 fessor of Physics. 1903-. 900-1903 ; Adjunct Pro- LOUIS AUGUSTE L( )ISEAUX Assistant Professor of the Romance Languages ami Literatures And gladly would he learn, and gladly teach — Certificat d ' Etudes Primaires Superieures, Academic de Dijon, 1887; Brevet dTnstituteur, 1887; 1!. es L., 1894. Cornell Lhiiversity, 1891-1892; Columbia. Tutor in French, 1892-189:!; Tutor in the Romance Languages and Litera- tures, 1893-1900; Instructor. 1900-1904; Adjunct Professor. 1904-. t. [25] JAMES THOMSON SHOTWELL Professor of History — Speaking with this one and that, And cramming letters and parcels into his pockets capacious. A.B., Toronto, 1898; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903. Columbia University Scholar in European History, 1898-1899; Fel- low in European History, 1899-1900; Assistant, 1900-1901; Lecturer, 1901-1903; Instructor, 1903-190.1; Adjunct Pro- fessor, 1905-1908; Professor, 1908-. GEORGE WILLIS BOTSFORD Professor of History Fair Greece! sad relic of departed worth! I in mortal, tho ' no more! tho ' fallen, ( real! A.B., University of Nebraska, 1884; A.M., 1889; Ph.D., Cornell Cniversity, 1891. Kalamazoo College, 1886-1890; Bethany College, 1891-1895; Harvard, 1895-1901 ; Columbia, 1901-. Phi Beta Kappa. EDWARD KASNER Professor of Mathematics To be great is to be misunderstood — by Freshmen. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1896; A.M., Columbia University, 189 ' Phi Beta Kappa. Ph.D., 1899; Barnard, 1900-. WILLIAM PEPPERRELL MONTAGUE Associate Professor of Philosophy A reasoning, self-sufficing thing. An intellectual all-in-all. A. P.. Harvard, ls« ; ; A.M.. 18D7 ; Ph.D.. 18!)8. Harvard. 1898-1899; University of California, 1899-1903; Columbia, Lecturer. 1903-1904; Tutor. L904-1905; Instructor. 1905- 1907; Adjunct Professor. 1907-. GRACE A. HUBBARD Associate Professor of English 1 only speak right on. A.B.. Smith College. 1887; A.M., Cornell, 1892. Smith College, 1892-1004; Barnard Lecturer, 1905-. Phi Beta Kappa. MARIE REIMER Associate Professor of Chemistry How gloriously her gallant course she steers. A.B., Vassar, 1897; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr, 1904. Yassar College, Graduate Scholar, 1897-1898; Assistant. 1808-1899; Fellow at Bryn Mawr, 1899-1902; Student at University of Berlin, 1902-1903; Barnard, Lecturer, 1903-1904; In- structor, 1904-. Phi Beta Kappa. [27] ADAM LEROY JONES Chairman of Committee on Undergraduate Admissions And who is this that guards the nates of Knowledge? Fear him and tremble, all ye xvlio iyish to enter college. A.B., 1895, Williams College; Ph.D., 1808; Columbia Uni- versity; Assistant in Philosophy, Columbia University, 1898- 1901; Lecturer, 1901-1902; Tutor, 1902-1905. Preceptor in Philosophy. Princeton University, 1905-1909; Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Chairman of Committee on Undergraduate Admissions, Columbia, L909-. HENRY RAYMOND MUSSEY Assistant Professor of Economics .I smile that pals to flight all rare and troubles, withal it teaches us of poverty and rents. A.B., Peloit College, 1! ; Ph.D.. Columbia. 1905; N. Y. U, 1903-1905; Bryn Mawr, 1905-1901 ; Pennsylvania, 1907- 1909 : Barnard, 1909-. ■I RAYMOND WEEKS Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures 1 speak in a monstrous little voice. A.B., Harvard, 1890 ; A.M., 1891; Ph.D.. 1897. Uni- versity of .Michigan. 1891-93; Traveling Fellow to Harvard University, L893-95 (Universities of Paris and Berlin); University of Missouri, 1895-1908; Student at University of Paris. 1904-05; University of Illinois, 1908-09; Columbia and Barnard. 1909-. [28] WTLHELM ALFRED BRA UN Assistant Professor of the Germanic Languages and I literatures Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. A.B.. Toronto University, 1.895; Ph.D., Columbia. 1903. Alma College. 1897-1898; Fellow in German. Chicago Uni- versity. 189.8-1899; Fellow in German. Columbia, 1899 1900; Barnard, Assistant. 1900-1901; Tutor. 1901-1906; In- structor. 1906-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910- TRACY ELLK )T [-IAZEN Assistant Professor in Botany A primrose by the river ' s brim. Primula farinosa L. Calyx tubular: corolla salver, 5-lobed; ovary l-celled; stamens 4-5 — was to him — .hid it zvas nothing mare. A.B., University of Vermont, 1891 ; A.M., Columbia Uni- versity, 1.899; Ph.D., 1900. Director, Fairbanks Museum of Natural Science. St. Johnsbury, Vt., 1901-1902, Assistant at Columbia, LOOS ; Tutor at Barnard, 1903-1901 ; Instructor. 1907-1910; Assistant Professor. 1910-. Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. RAYAH )ND C. ( )SBURN Assistant Professor of Zoology Szveet is the tare that nature brings i Our meddling intellect. Mis-shapes the beauteous forms of things We murder to dissect. P.. 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, L903-1907 ; Barnard, L907-. [29] LA RUE VAN HOOK Associate Professor of Classical Philology What a thing this learning is! A.B., University of Michigan, 1.899; Ph.D., Univer- sity of Chicago, 1904. Member of American School of Classical Studies, Athens, Greece, 1901-2; Acting Professor of Greek, University of Colorado, 1902-3 ; In- structor, Washington University, St. Louis, 1904; Preceptor, Princeton University, 1905-1910; Columbia University, 19 10-. MABEL FOOTE WEEKS Associate Professor of English A lady? ah yes. if a lady be one -who is gracious and quiet in all things. A.B., Radcliffe, 1894. Dr. Sach ' s School for Girls. Barnard. 190?-. MARGARET CALHOUN Director of Physical Education Divinely tall and most divinely fair. A.B., Yassar, 190]. Barnard, 190?-. ©tfter jWemt)er£ of tfje Jfacultp JAMES RIGNALL WHEELER, Ph.D. Professor of Greek Art and Archaeology The world knows nothing. of its greatest men. 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, 1 885-1 88 ( i ; Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, 1SSG; Harvard. 1XXX-1XX9 ; University of Vermont, 1X89-1895; American School at Athens, 189 2-1893; Columbia University. Professor Of Greek, 1895-1906; Professor of Greek Art and Archaeology, 1906-. Phi Beta Kappa. HENRY L. MOORE, Ph.D. Professor of Political Economy A man of cheerful yesterdays and confident to-morrows. JOHN LAWRENCE GERIG, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of the Romance Languages and Literatures Life is not so short but there is always time for courtesy. A.I!.. 1898. A.M., 1X99, University of Missouri; Ph.D.. February, 1902, University of Ne- braska; Eleve Titulaire de l ' Ecole cles Hautes Etudes, Paris, 1904. Teaching Fellow in Romance Languages, University of Missouri, 1898-1899; Teaching Fellow and Instructor in Romance Lan- guages, Sanskrit, and Comparative Philology, University of Nebraska, 1899-1903; Student, Uni- versity of Paris, 1903-1905; Instructor in Romance Languages, Williams College, 1905-1906; Columbia University, 1906-. ©ti)tv ©Itittvx of 3tt£tructton GERTRUDE M. HIRST Instructor in Classical Philology Cambridge Classical Tripos (Part I), 1890 ; A.M., Columbia University, 1900; Ph.D., 1902. Barnard Assistant, 1901-1903; Tutor, 1903-1905; Instructor, 1905-. HENR] FRANC( IS MULLER Instructor in Romance Languages and Literatures B.esL., University of Paris. 1897. Columbia, 1903-. ELEAN( )R KELLER Instructor in Chemistry A.M., Columbia, L900. Assistant in Chemistry, Barnard, 1 900- 1 90 1 ; Lecturer in Chemistry, Barnard, 1901-1904 ; Tutor in Chemistry, Laniard, 1904-1910; Instructor in Chemistry, Barnard. 1910-. [31] IDA H. OGILVIE Instructor in Geology A. B., Bryn Mawr, 1900 ; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903. Lecturer, Barnard, 1903-1005; Instructor, 190r -. HAROLD CHAPMAN BROWN Instructor in Philosophy B. A., Williams, 1901; M.A., Harvard, 1903; Ph.D., 1905. Harvard, 1903-1905; Columbia, Assistant. 1 906-1 9o; ; Instructor, 190I-. Phi Beta Kappa. PAULINE HAMILTON DEDERER Instructor in Zoology A.B., Barnard, 1901; A.M., Columbia, 1907. Barnard, Assistant and Lecturer, 1903-1907 ; [nstructor, 1907-. ALEXANDER TT I BECHERT [nstructor in the Germanic Languages and Literatures A.I ' ,.. Columbia, 1903; A.M., 1901. University Fellow in Herman at Columbia, 1904-1905; Curtis High School, 1905-1906; C ollege of the City of New York, 1905-1906; Barnard, Lecturer, 1906-1907; Instructor. 1907-. Phi Beta Kappa. MARK N E. LATHAM I nstrucb r in B itany A.B., Barnard, 1903 ; A.M., Columbia, 1905. Barnard, Assistant. 1905-1907; Tutor, 1909- 1910; Instructor, 1910-. Phi I tela Kappa. ALLEN WILS N P IRTERFIELD Instructor in Germanic Languages and Literatures A.B., W est Virginia University, 1900; A.M.. 1901. West Virginia University, 1899-1905; Carl Schurz Fellow at Columbia. 1905-1906; Barnard, 1906-. EDI iAR I [ WARD STURTEVANT [nstructot in Classical Philology A. B., Indiana University, 1898; Ph.D., University of Chicago. 1901. Indiana University, P.)0l-l!i0vH Marvville College, 1 902-1 903 ; University of Missouri. 1903-1905; Indiana University, 1905-190 ; Barnard, 1907-. WILLIAM P. KRATHW )HL Instructor in Mathematics A. P.., Harvard, 1907. Barnard. 1907-. [32] MAUDE ALICE IIUTTMAN Instructor in 1 fistory B.S., Columbia, 1904; A.M. 1905. Barnard, Assistant, 1905-1907; Lecturer, 1907-1908; Tutor, 1908-1910; Instructor, 1910-. GRACE LANGFORD Instruct! r in I ' hysics S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1900. VVellesley College, 1899-1906; Barnard, Assistant, 1906-1908; Tutor, 1908-1910; Instructor, 1910-. HARRY L. HOLLINGWORTH Instructor in Psychology A.B., Nebraska, 1906; Ph.D., Columbia, 1909; Nebraska, 1904-1906; High School Prin- cipal, 1906-1907; Columbia, 1909-. Phi Beta Kappa. Sigma Zeta. LOUISE IIOYT GREGORY Instructor in Zoology A.B., Vassar, 1903; A.M., Columbia, 1907. Vassar College, 1903-1905; Barnard, 1905-. MRS. JULIANA HASKELL Instructor in Germanic Languages and Literatures A.B., Columbia, 1904; A.M., 1905; Ph.D., 1.908. Assistant at 1 laniard, 1908-1910; In- structor, 1910- Phi Beta Kappa. EUGENE E. AGGER Instructor in Economics A.B., University of Cincinnati. 1901; A.M., 1 902 ; Ph.D., Columbia University. 1906. Teaching Fellow, University of Cincinnati. 1901-1902; Columbia, 1902-. HAROLD B. CURTIS Instructor in Mathematics A.B.. Cornell, 1907; Ph.D.. Cornell. 1910. Instructor Wells College. 1907; Fellow in Mathematics, Cornell, 1909-1910; Barnard. Instructor, 1910-. Phi Beta Kappa. WILLIAM HAULER Assistant in English A.B., Amherst. 1908; Amherst College, 1908-1909; Barnard. 1909- I 33 ] BURTON WARREN KENDALL Assistant in Physics S.B., Mass. Inst. Technology, 1906; M. I. T., 1906-1908; Twett Fellow in M. I. T. ; Graduate work Columbia, 1908-1909; Barnard, 1909-. CECILIA SILLCOX Assistant in Chemistry A.B., Barnard, 1908; Barnard, 1909. ELIZABETH C. COOK Assistant in English ALICE DOROTHY BREWSTER Assistant in English A.B., Columbia, 1906; A.M., 1907. Barnard, 1908-. Phi Beta Kappa. CHARLOTTA J. MAURY, Ph.D. Assistant in Geology MARGARET APPLETON KINGSLEY Assistant in Botany A.B., Smith College, 1908. A.M., Columbia. 1910. Barnard, 1908-. GRACE GOODALE Assistant in Classical Philology A.B., Columbia, 1899; Assistant in Classical Philology, Barnard, 1910-. KATHERINE SWIFT DOTY Assistant in History A.B., Barnard, 1904; A.M., Columbia, 19 05. Assistant in History, Barnard, 1910-. Phi Beta Kappa. HARRIET R. FOX Assistant in English A.B., Barnard, 1910. Phi Beta Kappa. MARY NAMMACK Assistant in Chemistry A.B., Barnard, 1910. [34] Ktcer£ of Strmtntetratton 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 Helen Peck Young, Secretary to the Provost W t$t Heat old ptofes in black and tofiite, 1 lode, indeed 3 do— Hf tV fftde me flD ' sf tottf) all tfietr misfit— l0o an St or ttoo. [35] ELLA WEED READING ROOM [38] BROOKS HALL DINING-ROOM ®f)e Ss octate Alumnae of amarb College FOUNDED JANUARY 25, 1895 INCORPORATED DECEMBER 13, 1901 poarb of Directors Alice Goddard Chase,, ' 96 President Ellinor T. B. Endicott, ' 0( rice-President Elizabeth C. R. Compton, ' 01 Corresponding Secretary Elizabeth I. Thompson, ' 03 Recording Secretary Ruth Bouton Howe, ' 03 Treasurer Mary Stuart Pullman, ' 93 Alumnae Trustee Eva Sherwood Potter, ' 96 1 Helen W. Cooley, ' 05 | Gertrude L. Hunter, ' 10 Directors-at-Large Anne McK. Harrington, ' 02 | Marguerite Newland, ' 09 J Amy Loveman, ' 01 Auditor Jfinance Committee Ellinor T. B. Endicott, ' 00 Chairman Ruth Bouton Howe, ' 03 Treasurer Anne McK. Harrington, ' 02 Statistics Committee Anna E. H. Meyer, ' 98 Chairman Alice Dorothy Brewster, ' 06 Amy Loveman, ' 01 Virginia Tucker Boyd, ' 06 And the Corresponding Secretary Stubents ' ib Committee Mabel Parsons, ' 95 Chairman Helen Erskine, ' 0-1 Dorothea Eltzner, ' 08 Caroline G. B. Stacey, ' 95 Sara Steans Hess, ' 00 jHemtjergfjtp Committee Sophie Parsons Woodman, ' 07 ... Chairman Mary Maxon, ' 08 The Corresponding Secretary F. May Ingalls, ' 09 And the Treasurer [42 j eal of tfje gls octate Slumnae of parnarb College Besigneb ant $resenteb bp CfjarleS £ Sborne in memory of bis baugbter Cbelpn ©sftorne, parnarb, 1900 3Tf)c Symbolism of tfje besign is as follotoS: tfje flame upon tfje altar typifies tfje eternal fire of GTrutfj; tfje enbleSS cfjatn represents tfje eberincreasing number? of tfje Alumnae; tfje top Signifies Jfrienbsfjip; tfje crest is tfjat of tfje Jlarnarb family anb tfje use of tfje Cngltsfj lettering is in accorbance tottfj tfje Cnglisfj origin of tfje family of tfje founber. [43] M. Polhcmus H. Dana M. Hirsli GTtje Unbergratmate !3te8ottatton (Officers Mary B. Polhemus, 1911 President Katharine Gay, 1911 Vice-President Constance von Wahl, 1912 Treasurer Helen M. Dana, 1913 Secretary Cxecuttue Committee Madeleine L. Hirsh, 1911 Chairman Eleanor M. Doty, 1912 Mary B. Polhemus ) „ Oifi ' Sallie E. Pero, 1913 Katii vrine Gay J Margaret Brittain, 1914 tubcnt Council Mary B. Polhemus, 1911 Chairman Katharine Gay, 1911 Frances M. F. Randolph, 1911 Constance vox Wahl, 1912 Cora R. Tiiees, 1912 Helen M. Dana, 1913 [mogene B. Ireland, 1913 Madeleine L. Hirsh, 1911 Louise Fox, 19] I Hear ye not the hum of mighty workings? [45] ( With Apologies to Stevensoti) Little Indian, Sioux or Crow — What e ' er you be, for don ' t know — Little Bull-dog, green and white That barks with all your main and might — Little Lion, fair to see — Oh, don ' t you wish that you were me? Indian, you ' re a savage brute, Xaught but wars and contests suit — Little yapping Bull-dog, you Over nothing fuss and stew — Lion, you ' re a seemly cub, But too little — there ' s the rub — Oh, you faulty comrades three. Don ' t you wish that you were me? I was born in days of yore. Bred in knightly deeds and lore — I have wandered down the ages, Wrapt in scroll and vellum pages. To the present now I pass As mascot of the Junior class — No deed could more wondrous be, So don ' t you wish that you were me? [47] Mentor Clas CLASS COLORS RED AND WHITE CLASS FLOWERS RED AND WHITE CARNATION CLASS MASCOT THE INDIAN tlittv Frances Maude Fitz Randolph President Agnes May Denike Vice-President Irma Fanny Heiden Recording Secretary Juanita Brown Corresponding Secretary Vera Amanda Fueslein Treasurer Helen H. Crandell Historian [48] Class of 1911 ' The enemy of peace and author of all strife ' Helen L. Amy Alice L. Bennet F. Aurill Bishop Stella Bloch Ida Bokshitsky Josephine A. Bosch Helen E. Bradbeer Helen Brown Juanita Brown Emilie E. M. Bruning Agnes M. Burke Eleanor Bvtrne Edith C. Burns Ruth A. Burns Emily Burr 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 J. Doming Mildred Dodge Mildred Du Bois 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 Laura Gray Lottie T. Greiff Ruth J. Flakes Margaret T. Hart Elizabeth Hasler [rma F. Heiden Anna Herreslmf Augustina Hess Alice T. Hill Madeleine Hirsh Charlotte M. Hodge Margaret R. Hogan Florence Holzwasser R. Muriel Ivimey Olga K. Ihlseng Louie E. Johnson Ethel M. Kempton Anna A. Kugler Ethel S. Leveridgc Grace G. Lovell Augusta Lustsarten A. Leila Martin Grace McKee Edna J. McKeever Theresa Mayer Alary R. M.aschmedt Elsie Mehler 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 I. Reid Mamie E. Rivkin Helen De M. Runyon Louise Rusk Rose L. Salmowitz I ' n ithy Sal wen Mildred L. Sanborn Georgiana Sandford Gertrude Saul Ethel Schlesinger Lillian H. Schoedler Myrtle Schwitzer Angelina Seveso Mary B. Shaw Louise M. Sillcox Gladys Smith Ruth M. Stagen Jeannette A. Steineckc Natalie Stewart Maud Stimson Stella Straus Bernice M. Taber Elizabeth Thomson Kate H. Tiemann Gladys Tallman Helen Trieschmann Blanche Van Anda nna S. Van Buskirk ( harlotte C. M. Verlage Amy Weil Linda C. Wevman Helen E. Wilkes Geraldine Willets [49] funtor Class CLASS COLORS DARK BLUE AND BUFF CLASS FLOWER TEA ROSE CLASS MASCOT DRAGON ttittv Cora Rohde Thees President Eleanor Mandeville Doty Vice-President Alice Craige Martin Recording Secretary Margaret Southerton Corresponding Secretary Mary Mulqueen Treasurer 50 1 Class; of 1912 ' That pure perfect pink of perfection Florence Anderson Jennie Auerbach Mabel Barrett Georgina Berrian Sarah Blumgarten Edna Booth Gertrude Borchardt Bessie Bunzel Hazel Burkholder Pauline Calm Evelyn Cameron Rosalind C. Case Georgia Cerow Rosemary Clarke Grace Coffin Lena Cohen Molly Coyle Gertrude Cusack Cornelia H. Dakin Irene L. Dalgleish Mary Diehl Eleanor M. Doty Martha Emmons Alice B. Evans Grace Fischer Rebecca Fischel Louise Fitz Henrine Fitzgerald Elinor Franklin Irene Frear Shirley Gleason Irene Glenn 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 Marion Heilprin Elsa Heller Rowena Hendricks Mildred Hodges Phebe Hoffman Virginia Hough Ernestine Isabel Eugenia Ingerman Irene Johnson Elizabeth Jones Frieda Jud Bertha Junghans Caroline Kahn Irene Keenan Virginia King Isabel Koss Margaret Krtner Olga Lacey Paula C. Lambert Lucy Landru Frances Latzke Esther Lewontin Irene London Amanda Lough ren Florence D. Lowther Lillian MacDonald Jennie MacKay Alice Martin Eleanor Mathews Celestine Maxwell Label McKenzie Alma Misch Lucile Q. Mordecai Edith M. Morris Isabel Morrison Mary Mulqueen Eleanore Myers Margaret J. Naumburj. Eleanor Xeu Minnie Newman Isabelle Noyes Louise Nyitray Marjorie O ' Connell Paula Oellrich Margaret O ' Rourke Grace Pearson Helen E. Phillips Helen Plummer Pamela Poor Emma Rapelye Elizabeth Ready Elizabeth Reardon Florence du B. Rees Vera Rees C. Hildegarde Reese Ethel Richardson Frances Rogers Grace Rogers Hester Rusk Etta Schweis May Scully Gladys R. Segee Philadelphia Sharpe Doris Shelley Lila Sherin Virginia Smith Abbie Smith Margaret Southerton Dorothy Spear Elizabeth Stack Beatrice Stegman Lillie E. Stein Chrystene Straiton Bertha Stenbuck Cora Thees Ruberta Thompson Edith Valet Dorothea von Doenhoff Henrietta von Tobel Florence Van Vranken Constance von Wahl Alva Wallander Catharine Walther Margaret Watson Amy Weaver Lucille Weil Mildred Weiner Eleanor Wigand Anne Wilson Margaret Wood Estella Woodruff Elsa Wunderlich Edna Ziegler [51] npoj OcV y. A ivot CLASS COLORS GREEN AND WHITE CLASS FLOWER FERN AND WHITE CARNATION CLASS MASCOT BULLDOG ©fftcerg Imogene Belle Ireland President Sally Pero Vice-President Marguerite Kalt Recording Secretary Eleanor Oerzex Corresponding Secretary Louise Comes Treasurer Marguerite Allen Historian [52] Class of 1913 ' There ' s nothing ever happened I don ' t know ' Lillie Reilly Marguerite Allen Nathalie Armstrong Marthe Ballot Edith Balmford Alice Barrett Louise Bartling Annie Beall Rosalie Brooks Alice Brown Grace Brown Madeleine Bunzl ksther Burgess Clara Butteuwieser Gertrude Campion Marguerite Cassidy Dorothy Cheesman Dorothy Child Clara Colla Louise Comes Helen Crosby 1 [elen Dana Sarah Davis Amy Dessar Maria D. de Villavilla Elizabeth Donovan Isabella Douglass Bessie Downs Helen Dwyer Alberta Edell Vera Feeley Doris Fleischman Edith Fleming Helen Foland Etta Fox Marjorie Franklin Rhoda Freudenthal Emma Frieder Mariette Gless Harriet Goldman Rebecca Goldstein Saida Gottlieb Miriam Grenelle Ruth Guy Edith Halfpenny Naomi Harris Gladys Hasberg Ethel Hawkey May Hessberg Mary Hildebrand Mary Hillas Pauline Horkheimer Eleanor Houghton Emma Hubert Imogene Ireland Marguerite Kalt Mollie Katz Margaret Kelly Pauline Latzke Sophie Ling Theresa Lint Priscilla Lockwood Edith London Bessie MacDonald Augusta Magid Hazel Martin Maliel Mason Virginia McGivney Josephine Melsha Lillian Meyer Gertrude Morris Amelia Mumford Mary Mumford Irene Murphy Marguerite Neugass Marion Newman Sophie Newmark Katherine Noble Eleanor Oerzen Anna O ' Gorman Elizabeth O ' Malley Ruth Osterberg Eddie Parks Sally Pero Lillie Reilly Beatrice Reynolds Margaret Richey Lola Robinson Marjorie Robinson Edith Rosenblatt Goldie Roth Marion Roy Leontine Sage Anna Salzman Helen Sandford Jean Savage Constance Shook Elsa Schubert Harriet Seibert Jean Shaw Regina Shannon Muriel Slade Mary Smalley Joan Sperling- Mabel Stebbins Alene Stern Mary W. Stewart Anna Surut Ethel Terrel Helen Tobias Marion Tully Viola Turck Ruth Tyndall Irma Unti Marguerite Van Duyn Jeanette Van Raalte Irma Von Glahn Sarah Voorhis Mary Voyse Lillian Waring Ethel Webb Varian White Harriet Wilmot Emily Wilson Marian Wolff [53 1 CLASS COLORS CLASS FLOWER CLASS MASCOT BROWN AND GOLD YELLOW CHRYSANTHEMUM THE LION (Officers Louise Herrick Fox President Margaret Brittaix rice-President Dorothy Margaret Fitch Recording Secretary Ruth Estelle Guernsey Corresponding Secretary Winifred Dorothy Boegehold Treasurer Florence Harris Historian [54] Cte of 1914 Youth without greenness of folly Louise Adams Ruth Guernsey Margaret Peck Anna Adikes Eleanor Hadseli Hattie Peterson Bessie Adler Harriet Harrer Lucie Petrie Sophie Andrews Daisy Harris Julia Pierpont Bertha Badames Florence Harris Gertrude Roff Mabel Baldwin Esther Hawes Isabel Randolph .Marion Barber Gertrude Hearn Margaret Reid Jean Barrick Beatrice Heineman Corinne Reinheimer Gladys Bateman Edna Hess Edith Reinheimer Minnie Baum Edythe Higgins Florence Rhoades Ethel Beers Rita Hilborn Kathleen Robinson Judith Bernstein Gertrude Hochschild Frances Roever Marguerite Bevier Marion Hoey Hazel Rogers Winifred Boegehold Fanny Jacobson Luisa Ros Margaret Brittain Laura Jeffrey Mary Ross Virginia Brittain Annie Kelly Elizabeth Schmidt Kate Brown May Kenny Marguerite Schorr Lucilla Bunzl Irma Koscherak Jeanette Schulman Caroline Burgevin Margaret Carman Mary Lawler Fanny Schwartzman Charlotte Lewine Florence Schwarfwaelder Julia Carroll Emily Lowndes Elizabeth Scovil Olga Cawein Ella McCrodden Gladys Seldner Ethel Cherry Grace McLaughlin Cecile Seligman Mildred Clark Helen McVickar Clara Schackleton Marie Clinch Elizabeth Macauley Angela Shannon Alice Clingen Helen Mahon Hattie Sondheimer Caroline Cohn Ruth Mauser Gertrude Stephens Eunice Curtice Elizabeth Mathison Helen Stiles Jane Dale Eleanor Mayer Sarah Sturges Edith Davis Frances Mills Ruth Talmage Helen Downes Sidney Miner Henrietta Thaw Katherine Elmendorf Jean Mohle Edith Thomas Aline Fink Margaret Morgan Regina Tobias Dorothy Pitch Claudia Moritz Bertha Treadwell Louise Fox Helen Monnt Amy Vorhaus Hortense Friedman Edith Mulhall Lillian Walton Etta Friend Lulu Nicola Charlotte Wells Jessie Gaittur Iphigene Ochs Edith Williams Frances Gates Frances O ' Donnel Harriet Wilmot Ethel Goede Alta Ord Rose Marie Wise Isabel Greenbnrg Regina O ' Sullivan Gertrude Greenwald Adelaide Owens Christina Grof Florence Palmer [55] ®te !?oung Women ' Christian as octatton of ISarnarb College FOUNDED 1897 Officers Helen Brown, 1911 President Anne Wilson, 1912 Vice-President Varian White, 1913 Corresponding Secretary Louise Comes, 1913 Recording Secretary Priscilla Lockwood. 1913 Treasurer Cijatrmen of Committees Bible Study— Anna I hillock, ' 12 Blue Book — Harriet Male, ' 12 Chapel — Margaret Southerton, Devotional — Mildred Sanborn, Extension — Aurill Bishop, ' 11 Finance — Priscilla Lockwood, ' 13 Membership — Florence Van Vranken, ' 12 ' 12 ' 11 Missionary — Mabel Reid, ' 11 Church Club — Pamela Poor, ' 12 Philanthropic — Phebe Hoffman, ' 12 Reception — Ottilie Prochazka, ' 11 Silver Bay— Edith M. Morris, ' 12 Intercollegiate — Laura Bennett, ' 11 Poster Sub-Committee — Helen Coombs, ' 11 [56] H. Amy L. Bennett A. Bishop J. Bosch H. Bradberr H. Brown J. Brown E. Bruning R. Burns A. Callan R. Carroll R. Case M. Covle C. Dakin E. Doty M. Emmons G. Fischer H. Fitzgerald I. Frear E. Gray G. Green G. Greene M. Allen N. Armstrong D. Cheesman L. Comes H. Dana S. Davis I. Douglas B. Downs L. Adams S. Andrews M. Barber E. Beers M. Bevier M. Brittain O. Cawein E. Cherry M. Clark A. Clingen IT. Dowries 19 11 T. Cassel H. Currier A. Denike M. Dodge E. Ellisson P. Girdner E. Gray L. Greenawalt R. Hakes M. Hart A. Hill L. Johnson G. Lovell G. McKee E. McKeever L. Martin A. Morgenstern L. Ockers M. Polhemus H. Porter O. Prochazka M. Reid H. Runyon M. Sanborn G. Sanford G. Saul M. Shaw L. Sillcox G. Tallman A. Van Buskirk 19 12 M. Greenwold H. Hale A. Hallock E. Hardy P. Hoffman E. Jones F. Jud B. Junghans V. King I. Koss L. MacDonald J. McKay E. Morris E. Myers P. Poor E. Rapelye E. Ready C. Reese E. Richardson G. Rogers E. Schweis G. Segee V. Smith D. Spear M. Southerton C. Thees F. Van Vranken H. von Tobel A. Wilson E. Woodruff E. Wunderlich 19 13 H. Goldman E. Hawkey M. Hillas I. Ireland E. Jones M. Kalt P. Lockwood B. MacDonald G. Morris K. Noble E. Parks S. Pero L. Robinson M. Robinson H. Seibert M. Stebbins M. Stewart R. Tyndall S. Voorhis M. Voyse E. Webb V. White 19 14 D. Fitch L. Fox J. Gaither F. Gates C. Groff R. Guernsey E. Hadsell H. Harrer E. Higgins L. Jeffrey R. Mauser E. Mathison F. Mills S. Miner J. Mohle H. Mount E. Mulhall A. Ord M. Peck H. Peterson J. Pierpont I. Randolph F. Rhoades K. Robinson F. Roever IT. Rogers L. Ros E. Scovil M. Stitt S. Sturges B. Treadwell E. Williams R. Wise K?rar ' lSliH! 1911 Annie Van Buskirk Anna Callan Laila Coston Estelle Ellisson Penelope Girdner Elsie Gleasson Ruth Hakes Olga Ihlseng 1912 Edna Booth Molly Coyle Shirley Gleason Eleanor Mathew Eleanore Myers Pamela Poor Emma Rapelye Gladys Segee Nathalie Armstrong Sophie Audi Dorothy Cheesman Louise Fox Sarah Davis Helen Foland Sophie Lingg Priscilla Lockwood Eleanore Oerzen Eddie Parks Margaret Richey Margaret Peck Kathleen Robinson Hazel Rogers Mary Ross Elizabeth Scovil ALUMNAE Violetta Jackson, 1910 OFFICERS Pamela Poor. 1912 President Annie Van Buskirk, 1911 .Vice-President Sarah Davis, 1913 Nathalie Armstrong, 1913 . Treasurer .Secretary [58] Z )t Cratgtr Club Officers Alice O Gorman. 1911 President Mary Muloueex. 1912 Vice-President Georgia Cerow. 1912 Treasurer Margaret Kelly. 191 3 Secretary 19 11 A. Burke M. Druding A. O ' Gornian E. Burne G. Gilleaudeau E. Riordan M. Conroy E. Leveridge A Seveso E. Deacon D. Mahon G. Shaw 19 12 G. Cerow O. Lacey M. 0 Rourke G. Cusack L. Landru E. Reardon M. Diehl A. Loughren M. Scully K. Gray I. McKenzie E. Stack I. Keenan M. Mulqueen E. Valet 19 13 R Brooks M. Kelly L Murphy G. Campion V. McGivney E. O ' Malley F_ Donovan J. Melsha L. Reilly H. Dwyer A. Mumford R Shannon V. Feelev M. Mumford M. de Villavilla M. Gless 19 14 A. Adikes E. Macauley R. O Sullivan M. Carmen H. Mahon L. Petri E. Higgins G. McLaughlin L. Ros M. Hoej E. Mayer E. Schmidt M. Kenny L. Xicola A Shannon M. Lawler F. CVDonnell E. Thomas Associate Member Anna O ' Gorman [59] Stfjlettc Ss octatton (Officers Lillian Schoedler, 191] President Dorothy Cheesman, 1913 rice-President Sally Pero, 1913 Secretary Lucille Weil, 1912 Treasurer [60] A. Bishop H. Brown J. Brown A. Burke E. Burne E. Booth P. Calm R. Case G. Cerow R. Clarke L. Cohen G. Cusack E. Doty M. Emmons H. Fitzgerald M. Ballot A. Barrett L. Bartling G. Brown C. Buttenweiser M. Bunzl G. Campion D. Cheesman D. Child H. Dana S. Davis A. Dessar B. Downes H. Dwyer E. Fleming A. Adikes B. Adler S. Andrews B. Badames M. Barber M. Baum E. Beers W. Boegehold M. Brittain V. Brittain T . Brown N. Carmen E. Cherry M. Clark A. Duncan V. Fueslein G. Gilleaudeau E. Gleason L. Greenawalt R. Fischel E. Franklin S. Gleason I. Glenn K. Gray G. Greene H. Hale A. Hallock M. Hamburger E. Hawes H. Foland E. Fox M. Franklin R. Freudenthal F. Gates M. Gless R. Goldstein S. Gottlieb R. Guy E. Halfpenny N. Harris M. Hessberg M. Hildebrand M. Hillas E. Hubert A. Clingen C. Cohn E. Davis A. Fink D. Fitch H. Friedman G. Greenwald R. Guernsey F. Haas H. Herrer F. Harris E. Hasdell E. Hess G. Hearn 19 11 I. Heiden M. Hirsh Ihlseng Leveridge Moss Polhemus O. E. R. M. 19 12 E. Heller _ M. Heilprin M. Hodges P. Hoffman E. Isabel I. Keenan M. Kutner F. Latzke I. Mackay C. Maxwell 19 13 I. Ireland M. Katz M. Kelly S. Ling E. London P. Lockwood A. Magid V. McGivney H. Martin G. Morris B. MacDonald L Murphy M. Neugass M. Newman S. Newmark 19 14 E. Hiagins R. Hilborn L. Jeffrey A. Kelley M. Kenny M. Klinch C. Lewine E. Macaulay R. Mauser E. Mayer G. McLaughlin T. Mohle M. Morgan C. Morris [ 61 1 F. Randolph M. Reid D. Salwen G. Sanford L. Schoedler L. Mordecai E. Morris M. Mulquccn E. Myers M. Naumberg E. Rapelye E. Richardson V. Smith M. Southerton C. Straiton E. Oerzen E. Parks S. Pero B. Reynolds I. Rica L. Robinson E. Rosenblatt G. Roth L. Sage A. Salzman I I. Sanford H. Seibert M. Slade T. Sperling A. Stern E. Mulhall I. Ochs F. O ' Donnell A. Ord R. O ' Sullivan A. Owens M. Peck L. Petri T. Randolph C. Reinheimer E. Reinheimer A. Robinson F. Roever 11. Rogers M. Schwitzcr J. Steinecke E. Thomson A. Weil L. Weyman M. Scully G. Segee L. Sherin C. Thees C. Von Wahl A. Wallander L. Weil A. Wilson M. Wood E. Ziegler M. Stewart M. Stebbins A. Surut II. Tobias V. Turck A. Tyndall M. Van Duyn M. Villavilla M. Voyse I. von Glahn L. Waring II. Wilmot E. Webb M. Wolff L. M. E. T. F. G. G. I [. Ross Ross Schmidt Schulman Schwa rzenwalder Seldener Stephens Stiles I. Track R. Tobias II. Treadwell L. Walton R. Wise Wunderbahr ist nichts dagegen. (O fficers Irma Heiden, 1911 President Vera Fueslein, 1911 Vice-President Pauline Cahn, 1912 Secretary Madeleine Bunzl. 1913 Treasurer 19 11 s. Bloch V. Fueslein E. Kempton E. Bruning L. Greenawalt A. Kugler E. Burns I. Heiden M. Oberndorfer H. Currier O. Ihlseng O. Prochazka 19 12 S. Blumgarten E. Franklin M. Mulqueen E. Booth E. Heller L. Xvitrav G. Borchardt I. Koss P. Oelrich B. Bunzel M. Kutner P. Poor P. Cahn I. London E. Richardson R. Fischel A. Misch F. Rogers G. Fischer L. Mordecai E Schweis 19 13 M. Bunzl M. Hessberg M. Xeugass C. Buttenweiser M. Hildebrand M. Newman D. Fleischmann E. Hubert S. Xewmark R. Freudenthal S. Lingg E. Oerzen S. Gottlieb T. Lint 1. Rice G. Hasberg L. Meyer E. Rosenblatt L. Bunzl C. Grof 19 14 L. Jeffrey C. Burgwin E. Hadsell A. Kelley C. Cohn H. Harrer I. Koscherak A. Frank D. Harris I. Lewine H. Friedman F. Harris E. Lowndes H. Friend B. Heinemann H. MacVickar G. Greenwald E. Hess II. Mah..n H. Runyon G. Saul M. Stimson S. Straus M. Scully G. Segee D. Spear L. Stein C. Thees E. Valet D. von Doenhoff G. Roth I. Savage E. Schubert C. Shook J. Sperling C. Moritz I. Ochs C. Reinheimer E. Reinheimer F. Roever F. Schwarzwalder C. Seligman C. Verlage A. Weil L. Weyman H. von Tobel E. Wigand A. Wilson E. Wunderlich J. Van Raalte I. von Glahn E. Webb H. Wilmot M. Wolff H. Sondheim R. Tobias I. Track A. Vorhaus L. Walton C. Wells R. M. Wise SPECIAL C. M. Flower 62 Officers Florence de L. Lowthek, 1912 President Frances Latzke, 1912 Vice-President Paula Lambert, 1912 Secretary Martha Ballot, 1913 Treasurer Edith Thomas, 1914 Fifth Member of the Executive Committee 19 11 H. Coombs O. Ihlseng A. O ' Gorman M. Conroy L. Johnson M. Pratt A. Denike E. Leveridge 0. Prochazka E. Dewey L. Martin L. Schocdler E. Ellisson E. Mehler M. Shaw G. Gilleaudcati E. Mordecai E. Thomson P. Girdner A. Morgenstern C. Verlage M. Hirsh L. Ockers A. Weil E. Booth S. Blumgarten G. Cerow R. Clarke E. Doty M. Emmons R. Fischel H. Fitzgerald I. Glenn E. Heller E. Isabel M. Ballot G. Brown R. Brooks C. Buttenweiser M. Cassidy D. Child E. Colla L. Comes E. Craddock 19 12 C. Kahn I. Koss P. Lambert L. Landru F. Latzke I. London A. Lough ren F. Lowther E. Mathews C. Maxwell M. Mul queen 19 13 S. Davis A. Dessar H. Dwyer E. Fox H. Goldman M. Hillas M. Katz S. Ling E. London E. Rapelye E. Ready M. Scully D. Shelley E. Stack V. Smith C. Thees E. Valet M. Watson E. Wigand V. McGivney M. Newman M. Neugass G. Roth J. Savage J. Sperling R. Tvndall I. Unti M. de Villavilla [63] CLASSICAL CLUB Officers Aurill Bishop President Jeannette Steinecke . . . .Secretary-Treasurer 1911 L. Bennett A. Bishop T. Bokshitsky H. Brown T. Cassell A. Duncan R. Gerstein E. Gleason M. Hogan H. Burkholder M. Coyle M. Diehl H. Hale M. Hamburger A. Hallock H. Dana E. Halfpenny A. Van Buskirk 1912 E. Ziegler 1913 E. Kempton G. Lovell T. Mayer E. McKeever R. Salmowitz M. Sanborn G. Saul R. Stagen J. Steinecke I. Keenan J. McKay A. Martin I. McKenzie B. Stegman E. Valet H. Siebert M. de Villavilla [64] ®Uittv Evelyn Dewey, 1911 President Marie Maschmedt, 1911 Secretary Mildred Hamburger, 1912 Treasurer S. Bloch A. Burke H. Crandell H. Currier K. Gay 19U M. Hart I. Heiden M. Hirsh O. Ihlseng E. McKeever M. Poihemus M. Rivkin D. Salwen M. Stimson G. Seeley 1912 A- Evans P. Hoffman M. Southerton H. Hale M. Naumburg Q Thees 1913 M. Cassidy G Slade Honorary Member Pater familias [65] College Settlements Ssteoctatton Charlotte Hodge, 1911 Elector Phebe Hoffman, 1912 . .Secretary-Treasurer 19 11 S. Bloch H. Brown A. Burke E. Dewey K. Gav R. Hakes M. Hirsh C. Hodge O. Ihlseng E. Mofdecai R. Moss M. Obendorfer M. Polhemus C. Verlage A. Weil 19 12 S. Blumgarten B. Bunzel E. Doty II. Fitzgerald E. Franklin I. Glenn G. Greene E. Heller P. Hoffman E. Isabel M. Kutner S. Leerburger F. Lowther L. Mordecai M. Naumburg P. Poor F. Rees P. Sharpe M. Southerton L. Stein F. Van Vranken D. von Doenboff H. von Tobel C. von Wahl M. Watson 19 13 M. Bunzl E. Burgess I. Ireland M. Kalt P. Lockwood E. Oerzen E. Rosenblatt G. Slade M. Stewart A. Surut 19 14 M. Barber E. Beers K. Elmendorf L. Jeffrey E. Mulhall H. Rogers Miss Gildersleeve FACULTY Miss Hubbard Miss Weeks [66] Ruth A. Burxs. 1911 Chairman Eleanor M. Oerzen, 1913 Treasurer COMMITTEE Margaret T. Hart Sub-Chairman, 1911 Sarah Voorhis Sub-Chairman, 1913 Gertrude Morris Sub-Chairman, 1913 [67] Parnarb Chapter of tfje Sntercollegtate i§ octalts;t S octetp Fire in each eye and papers in each hand, They rave, recite, and madden ' round the land. Officers Margaret Naumburg President Eugenia Ingerman Secretary Lena Cohen Treasurer GRADUATE MEMBERS Frieda Higelman Frances Lundquist Gertrude Stein MEMBERS, 1911 Agnes Burke . Katherine Gay Augusta Lustgarten Stella Bloch Lottie Greiff Marie Maschmedt Evelyn Dewey Augustine Hess Mamie Rivkin MEMBERS, 1912 Edna Booth Caroline Kahn Margaret Naumburg Pauline Cahn Eugenia Ingerman Lee Reiss Lena Cohen Frances Latzke Lillie E. Stein MEMBERS, 1913 Theresa Lint Anna Salzman SPECIAL MEMBER Dorothy Jacobi [68] parnarb Chapter of tlje Collegiate Cqual Suffrage Heague of J?eto gorfe H tate ' Tivas blow for blow, disputing inch by inch, For one would not retreat, nor t ' other flinch. ttittv Constance W. von Wahl President Stella Bloch Secretary-Treasurer ifflember FACULTY Harriet Fox, B.A. James H. Robinson, Ph.D. John L. Gerig, Ph.D. Henry R. Seager, Ph.D. William P. Montague, Ph.D. James T. Shotwell, Ph.D. Henry R. Mussey, Ph.D. William P. Trent, M.A.,LL.D.,D.C.L. 19 11 s. Bloch K. Gay 0. Ihlsing M. Rivkin A. Burke L. Greiff S. Luidquiot D. Salwen E. Deacon I. Heiden M. Maschmedt G. San ford E. Dewey T. Hess M. Oberndorfer M. Schwitzer 19 12 E. Booth M. Hamburger L. Stein C. Von Wahl P. Cahn J. Iiigerman C. Straiton L. Weil E. Franklin M. Naumburg F. Van Vranken R. Fischel L. Reiss E. Valet M. Cassidy N. Harris 19 13 A. Martin M. Roy D. Cheesman I. Ireland B. McDonald A. Salzman E. Fox M. Katz M. Newman G. Slade S. Gottlieb E. London M. Robinson E. Welib 19 14 Freshmen nut eligible [69 1 Utoltn Club Edith M. Morris, 1912 Leader Naomi Harris, 1913 Secretary-Treasurer Marjorie Franklin, 1913 Rose Gerstein Rosalind Case Rosemary Clarke Gertrude Campion Helen Dwyer Marjorie Franklin Librarian 19 11 19 12 19 13 Muriel Ivimey Edith Morris Margaret Southerton Gertrude Morris Xaomi Harris Imogene Ireland Sophia Newmark 19 14 Elizabeth Schmidt SPECIAL Louise Lincoln [70] ©lee Club Lillian Schoedler Leader Lucy E. Landru Treasurer and Secretary Jftrfit Soprano Beers, 1914 Brittain, 1914 Bokshitsky, 1911 Carmen, 1914 Gray, 1912 Greenwold, 1912 F. Harris, 1914 M. Kelly, 1913 L. Landru, 1912 E. Morris, 1912 E. Mordecai, 1912 E. Myers, 1912 A. Ord, 1914 M. Reed, 1914 G. Roth, 1913 E. Scovil, 1914 P. Sharpe, 1912 A. Stern, 1913 R. Tobias, 1914 S. Voorhis, 1913 A. Wallander, 1912 L. Waring, 1913 L. Weil, 1912 E. Wigand, 1912 econb Soprano A. Barrett, 1913 E. Deacon, 1911 P. Hoffman, 1912 S. Bloch, 1911 II. Dwver, 1913 [, Ireland, 1913 V. Brittain, 1914 II. Poland, 1913 M. Kutner, 1912 E. Burgess, 1913 R. Fischel, 1912 M. .Morgan, 1914 R. Case, 1912 K. Gay, 1911 M. Polhemus, 1911 M. Clark, 1914 R. Guernsey, 1914 G. Walther, 1912 O. Cawein, 1914 H. Harrer, 1914 M. Robinson, 1913 H. Dana, 1913 N. Harris, 1913 R. Tyndall, 1913 mo J. Brown, 191 1 E. Hadsell, 1914 M. Schorr, 1914 J. Barrick, 1914 B. Heinemarin, 191 1 D. Spear, 1912 H. Crosby, 1913 G. Morris, 1913 C. Straiton, 1912 A. Clingen, 1914 M. Nichols, 1911 C. Verlage, 1911 E. Doty, 1912 G. Pearson, 1912 D. Griffin, 1912 M. Roy, 1913 [71] Lillian Sciioedler College Song Leader ittembera of Committee Lillian Schoedler Senior Member Ciirystene Straiton Junior Member Dorothy Cheesman Sophomore Member Isabelle Randolph Freshman Member 72 | arnarb botanical Club FOUNDED MAY 11, 1896 ©Ktcer 1910=19 11 May A. Parker President Mrs. Henry S. Gibson. First Vice-President Helene M. L ' uas Secretary Professor Herbert M. Richards Mary E. Lord Treasurer Second Vice-President Jloarb of Uirectorg THE OFFICERS AND Mary M. Brackett Jean Broadhurst Helene M. Boas Mary M. Brackett Jean Broadhurst Anna M. Callan Gertrude L. Cannon Margaret Stone Corrigan Mrs. Edward L. Crabbe Aurelia B. Crane Clarita F. Crosby Mabel Denton Bertha Dow Elizabeth V. Dunnet Harriet Elder Emilie Fries Bertha M. Furman .Mrs. Henry S. Gibson Marv Nammack Mildred D. Schlesinger Amelia R. Goodlatte Elizabeth P. Gray Mrs. Walter Granger .Mrs. Margaret Crabbe Greef Linda T. Hanks Dr. Tracy Elliot Hazen Mrs. A. B. Hepburn Ida M. Hope Kathleen Hurty R. Muriel Ivimey Mrs. S. Ely Jelliffe Frieda C. jud .Margaret A. Kingsley Alice A. Knox Elsie M. Kupfer Harriet Lake Lev Marion E. Latham Mrs. G. W. Lee Mrs. B. Harper Emily O. Long Mary E. Lord Florence Middleton Mary Nammack Louise Xyitray Helen L. Palliser May A. Parker Mrs. William C. Popper Anne M. Rae Emma L. Rapelye Dr. Herbert M. Richard- Mrs. C. H. Robison Mildred D. Schlesinger Dorothy Spear Mary C. Thomas Johanna J. Schwarte Elizabeth K. Seward Berenice Silberberg Maud J. Staber Caroline E. Stackpole Dorothy Spear Alexandrina Taylor Mary C. Thomas Elizabeth I. Thompson Martha Thompson Louise Traitel Lucia B. Tunis Annie L. Turnbull Catherine Woolsey Ada Watterson Yerkes Miss Elizabeth Billings Mrs. N. L. Britton Honorary Jtlemljerg Miss Elizabeth O. Abbot Professor Francis E. Lloyd [73] Dr. Daniel Trembly McDougal It is indeed a desirable thing to be well descended, but the glory belongs to our ancestors. pSarnarb Chapter Baugfjter of tfje American Eebolutton Florence de L. Lowther (Mrs. H. S.) Mildred Hodges Treasurer Regent Emma Rapelye Registrar Violetta Jackson 1 ' ice-Regent Katherine Fancheb Historian Ruth Hakes Secretary ALUMNAE Violetta Jackson Nathalie Thorne 1 ' 9 1 1 Penelope Girdner Susan Minor Ruth Hakes Eva Mordecai 19 12 Cornelia Dakin Florence Lowther Eleanor Doty Lucile Mordecai Mildred Hodges Isabel Noyes Elizabeth Jones Anne Wilson OUTSIDE MEMBERSHIP Katherine Fancher Hazel Bristol Lyon [74] i£ pamgf) Club of parnarb College Paula Lambert, ' 12 Chairman MEMBERS, 1911 Geraldine Willets Charlotte Verlage Penelope Girdner Dorothy Mahon MEMBERS, 1912 Paula Lambert Henrine Fitzgerald MEMBER, 1913 Maria de Yillayilla MEMBERS, 1914 Lulu Ros Eleanor Hadsell eusltstf) Club ' Grand, gloomy and peculiar ' ( K I STELLA MacMuRRAY Harriet Fox Agnes Burke Mildred Dodge Margaret Hart Kate Tiemann ®fje eternal triangle Three puppies with a single yelp, Three fools that fool as one. ' ' A-CUTE TRIANGLE Eternal Effervescence Eternal Lunacy Eternal Calamity Effervescence Eleanore Myers, 1.912 Lunacy Lucile Quixote Mordecai, 1912 Calamity Chrystene Straiton, 1912 [76] MEMBERS, 1910 Gertrude Hunter Elsie Plaut Dorothy Kirch wey MEMBERS, 1911 Stella Blocii Evelyn Dewey Helen Crandell Katharine Gay MEMBERS, 1912 Not yet announced SnocfeersT Club of fBarnarb College Motto: Say what you D— please Officers; High Ponderous Pile-driver Lofty Past Grand Sledge-hammer Dorm Knocker . . . . Gladys Segee LuCILE MoRDECAI . . . Agnes Burke IN FACULTATE D. T. Tack-hammer Billy Mighty Morose Mallet Mrs. Liggett Mellifluous Masher ,Mn. PonTnnriCLn, the Cook charter members The Mortarboard Editors of 1912 active members Class of 1911 Emmy Rapelye, 1912 Lillie Stein, 1912 Frances O ' Donnell, 1914 passive members The Faculty [ 77 ] M. Bunzl A. Bishop K. Gay E. Rosenblatt P. Calm L. Stein A. Evans A. Wilson A. Morgenstern H. Dana P. Lockwood E. Myers E. Deacon M. Allen A. Burke L. Mordecai G. Borchardt PUBLISHE D1.W EEKLY Though an angel should write, still ' tis devils must print Agnes M. Burke, 1911 ■ni . , Addie F. Morgenstern, 191] ...[ bJ£Tm£ f LUCILE MORDECAI, 1912 • n M lSS Manager Katharine Gay, inn SSt5ta Bimness Manager hx-offtcio M A NfA GING EDITORS Aurill Bishop, 1911 Eleanore Myers, 1912 Gertrude Borchardt, 1912 Alice Evans, 1912 Liilie Stein, 1912 Anne Wilson, 1912 Helen Crandell, 1911 [ASSOCIATE EDITORS Madeleine Bunzl, 1913 Louise Nyitray, 1912 Helen Dana, 1913 Priscilla Lockwood, 1913 Pauline Calm, 1912 Marguerite Allen, 1913 Edith Rosenblatt, 1913 Gertrude Morris, 1913 [79] Calm F. Rees M. Naumburg M. Hart A. Morgenstern A. Burke K. Tiemann E. Dewey A. Weil Published monthly as a literary supplement to the Barnard Bulletin You shall see it on a beautiful quarto Mi ? ' where a neat rivulet of text sha ll meander through a meadow of margin. Cbitor tn Ctjief Evelyn Dewey, 1911 gUratetant Cbitors Kate H. Tiemann, 1911 Margaret T. Hart, 1911 Margaret Naumburg, 191 2 Florence Rees, 1912 Gertrude E. Morris, 1913 PugmeSS jUanager gtegistant $£u ine jUanager Amy Weil. 1911 Pauline Caiin, 1912 Bflg €x=©fftcto Agnes M. Burke, 1911 Addie Morgenstern, 1911 ' I 81 9 feto Hetter£ recettoeb bp tfje pullettn anb pear, anb bp tbem rejected Steo tfje tt£toer£ Dear Madam : I am writing a treatise on wild animals, and would be obliged for any information you could give me on the form and character of the Barnard Bear. Mr. Natural Scientist. Dear Mr. N. S. : The Barnard Bear is one of the tamest of its species. It is not very large, very hard to handle, never appears when you expect it, and when consumed is extremely hard to digest. Dear Madam : Can you tell me the exact nature of the illness known as D. T. ' s at Barnard? Prospective Freshman. Dear P. F. : This dreaded, popular disease is apt to at- tack one in the Junior or Senior year. Ten- dency toward Billy-usnous is the first symp- tom, usually followed by ravings, limited in length, similar in all patients, and seldom of a serious character. Dear Madam : I am a rich bachelor and have a tidy little sum of money which I should like to give to some charitable institution. Can you ad- vise me of such a one? P. PvOCKGOLD. Dear Sir : Send it to the 1912 Mortarboard. There is no institution more charitable in its views and knocks. The editors have been unable to determine either from the letter or its answer whether the illness referred to is Delirium Tremens or Daily Themes. [82] 3?eto §orfe ©elta (Columbia Umbersrttp) Chapter of $f)t peta Eappa Jfratermtp ?Sarnarb Section Katherine Swift Doty, 1904 President Alice Dorothy Brewster, 1906 Vice-President Marion E. Latham, 1903 Secretary Helen Wilking Coolev, 1905 Treasurer Charter Jtlemberg Louise Stabler Parker, 1893 (Mrs. G. H.) Ella Fitzgerald Bryson, 1894 (Mrs. F. G.) Caroline Garnar Bromacher Stacey, 1895 (Mrs. S. G.) Anna Cole Mellick, 1896 Gertrude L. W. Oppenheimer, 1896 (Mrs. E. Elsie Clews Parsons, 1896 (Mrs. Herbert) Louise Brisbin Dunn, 1897 Adaline Caswell Wheelock, 1897 Jessie Wallace Hughan, 1898 Deceased. Susan Isabella Myers, 1898 Helen St. Clair Mullan, 1898 (Mrs. G. V.) Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve, 1899 Elsie Mabel Kupfer, 1899 Grace Harriet Goodale, 1899 Martha Ornstein, 1899 Ellinor Ten Broeck Reilev Endicott, 1900 (Mrs. G.) Jeannette Bliss Gillespy, 1900 Laura D. Gill Jtlembers CLASS OF 1901 Cordelia Wendt Amy Loveman Helen Elizabeth Catlin Cerise E. A. Carmandack (Mrs. J. G. ) Lisa Delavan Bloodgood Marie Louise W. Noeggerath (Mrs. J. E.) Lisa Delevan Bloodgood Hopkins (Mrs. G. G.) Elizabeth Allen CLASS OF 1902 Elsa Patterson Campbell Ada Blanche Clouse Neiswender [84] Helen Louise Cohen Helen Louise King CLASS OF 1903 Louise Kohn Elsbeth Kroeber Marion Elizabeth Latham Ethel Manter Pool Katherine Ellen Poole Minnie Margaret Beifeld Mabel Denton CLASS OF 1904 Dora Elsie Lichten Falk (.Mrs. K. G.) Katharine Swift Doty Jean Dunbar Egleston Charlotte Elizabeth Morgan Dorothy Russell Nevins CLASS OF 1905 Margaret Cecilia Byrne Carrie Kaplan Frances Hope Purdon Leavitt (Mrs. S.) Carrie Kaplan Medalie (Mrs. G. Z.) Lily Sylvester Murray Jones (Mrs. A. L. ) Helen Wilking Cooley Emilie Josephine Hutchinson Edvvina Leah Levy Grace MacColl Alice Haskell CLASS OF 1906 Alice Dorothy Brewster Elizabeth lverson Toms Edith Somborn Mabel Emma Browne Faith Delatour Chipperfield CLASS OF 1907 Gertrude Louise Cannon Juliet Stuart Points Amalie Louise Althaus Helen Carter Elsie Schachtel Charlotte Oesterlein Abraham (Mrs. J. H.) Marguerite Baer Israel Dessau (Mrs. D.) Mary Elizabeth Lord Annie Laurie Manley Livingston (Mrs. A. A.) Louise Christine Odencrantz Lilian Hellin CLASS OF 1910 8 Mrs. Julianna Haskell, 1904 Clara Cecilia Eaton Evelyn Blunt MacDonald Dorothea Eltzner Mabel Louise Peterson Ethel Grace Everett Smith (Mrs. E. U.) Edith dishing Richardson Helen Loeb Kaufmann (Mrs. M. J.) Florence Martha Wolff CLASS OF 1909 Mathilde Abraham Alice C. Grant Una M. Bernard Sait (Mrs. E. M.) Sara Rome Helene M. Boas Helen Phillips Edna R. Scales Josephine Ray West Hilda Wood Tessie Barrows Frances Burger Harriet Ruth Fox Xannette Hamburger Deceased. CLASS OF 1910 Gertrude Laura Hunter Dorothy Browning Kirchwey Elizabeth Nichie Agnes Teresa O ' Donnell Margaret Mary Alacoque O ' Donnell Etta Adelaide Waite Marion Weinstein [85] appa I appa (gamma Jf ratermtp Jkta CpStlon Chapter Katharine Gay Charlotte Morse Hodge Evelyn Cameron Grace Coffin Helen Manley Dana Katherine Swift Doty 19 11 Susan Brown Minor Mary Bartow Polhemus Charlotte Cecile Marie Verlage 19 12 Eleanor Mandeville Doty Eleanore Myers Pamela Poor 19 13 Priscilla Lockwood Special Mildred du Bois In Universitate Harriet Ruth Fox Natalie Stewart Kate Huntington Tiemann Florence du Bois Rees Margaret Wickham Watson Mary Witherspoon Stewart Eleanor Cary Hunsdon lllpta ©micron $t Jfraternttp lpf)a Cfjaptcr Elizabeth Jones Esther Burgess Louise Sillcox Margaret Kutner 19 11 Lillian Schoedler 19 12 Hester Rusk Eleanor Neu 19 13 Maria Diaz de Villavilla Viola Turck In Universitate Mildred Deshon Schlesinger [86] 3 appa Slpfja ®f)eta Jf ratermtp !Ulpf)a Heta Chapter Graduate Una Mirrieles Bernard Sait Eleanor Gay 19 11 Agnes May Denike Louie Estelle Johnson Penelope Morgan Girdner Ottilie Prochazka Mary Braman Shaw 19 12 Cornelia Heale Dakin (Mrs.) Florence de Loiselle Lowther Elizabeth Perine Gray Isabelle Fleming Noyes Bertha Junghans Emma Louise Rapelye 19 13 Nathalie Victoria Armstrong Sarah Davis Marguerite Allen Marguerite Kalt Nancy Beall Katherine Noble (gamma $tn peta Jf ratermtp Hfota Chapter Alice Laura Bennett Fanny Aurill Bishop Helen Brown Ruth Carroll Mabel Barrett Rosalind Corwin Case 19 11 Grace Gilleaudeau Ruth Johnston Hakes Margaret Tower Hart 19 12 .Mary Mulqueen Helen Cook Plummer 19 13 Louise Comes Sophie Claire Lingg i Universitate : Alice Margaret O ' Gorman Marion Pratt Helen Elizabeth Wilkes Ethel Scarlett Richardson Frances Elizabeth Rogers Constance Shook Varian White Helen Newbold [87] Slpf)a $f)t Jf ratermtp Jfflu Chapter 3n Jfacultate: Margaret Appleton Kingsley Agnes Madeleine Burke Evelyn Dewey Phebe Edith Hoffman Philadelphia Sharpe Dorothy Howland Cheesman 19 11 Louise de Forest Greenawalt 19 12 Margaret Southerton Cora Thees 19 13 Marietta Louise Gless Gertrude Laura Hunter In Universitate Mary Nammack Rhoda Muriel Ivimey Frances Maud Fitz Randolph Florence Van Vranken Anne Stavely Wilson Imogene Belle Ireland Grace A. Reeder Belta Belta Belta Jf ratermtp Bf)o Chapter Helen Elizabeth Bradbeer Ruth Augusta Burns Grace Marion Eischer Irene Louise Frear May Green wold Grace Barrington Green 19 11 19 12 Annie E. Fisher Lila Marjorie Sherin 19 13 Dorothy Kinch In Universitate Ethel May Cochrane Clara May Feeney Edith Frances Hardy Marjorie Nichols Grace Madeline Pearson Jessie Ross Elizabeth A. S. Tredwell [88] $t $5eta $fn Jfratermtp Jleto § orfe Jlcta Cfjaptev 19 11 Juanita Brown Levantia Eaton Anna Van Buskirk Adele Duncan Ethel S. Leveridge Elizabeth Thomson 19 12 Dorothy Griffin Virginia King Lucy Landru Edith M. Morris Edith Valet Margaret Wood 19 13 Gertrude Morris Lola Robinson Sarah Voorhees Lillian Waring Harriet Wilmot Special Eleanor Murths Cfn ©mega Jf ratermtp Cpsitlon Cfjapter 19 11 Estelle James Ellisson Grace Irene McKee Georgiana Sandford Gladys Griffith Tallman Marguerite Dorothy Druding Gladys Hollingsworth Smith 19 12 Georgina Berrian Florence Louise Hazel Paula Claire Lambert Elizabeth Reardon 19 13 Elizabeth Downs Universitate Elizabeth Mitchell Back Lrita Bradford Antoinette Dyett Hill Maude Le Normand De Bretteville Kathleen Isabel Martin Willie Wellington Daniel [89] Breathes there a man with soul so dead Who never to himself hath said, ' This is my own, my native land. ' o jfWfea (Stlbersleebe, (Greeting : Wt, tfje class of 1912, tfjrouglj tfje mebtum of tfje Jfflortarboarb, bcsire to cxtenb a fjeartp anb sincere welcome. Wt congratulate tfje College upon tfje appointment of one of its alumnae to tlje important anb exalteb position of Dean of $£arnarb. Wit are fjappp to auatl ourselbes of tl)is opportunity to recorb, in tfje pages of tins Class Jloofe of 1912, our lobe anb esteem, to plebge a Ijeartp support in our neto relationship, anb to express our earnest besire for Success in Ijer abbeb responsibilities. [  3 | jff T seems fitting that the words of personal greeting for which the Editors have courteously 41 offered me a place here, should deal especially with that social side of our college life which the Mortarboard naturally emphasizes. The function of our annual publica- tion is, of course, to provide a record of our doings for the benefit of posterity, to afford amusement by good-natured satire of the weaknesses and foibles of the Faculty and the stu- dents, and especially to serve, in the years after graduation, as a pleasant memento of the crowded and happy months of our undergraduate life. Nothing else, except, perhaps, the re- reading of one ' s old pack of daily themes, brings back college days so vividly. The file of Mortarboards on my shelves affords a striking series of pictures of the student interests in years gone by, and offers material for an elaborate history of that favorite subject for Freshman and Sophomore themes, Social Life at Barnard. Such a solid sociological study I will leave for some future investigator; but it is especially interesting to me just now to glance back at stu- dent activities in the days when I first knew Barnard, and compare them with the varied and complex social life set forth in the pages of the present volume. The earliest Mortarboard in my collection is not a Mortarboard by name, but its predecessor, The Barnard Annual. This copy was published in the spring of 1895, and sold to me the fol- lowing fall by a diplomatic editor, who urged that it was the duty of every Freshman to acquaint herself with the college activities of the year preceding her entrance. It is illuminating to glance at the student interests represented in this 1895 volume. The roll of organizations includes, of course, the classes, and the Undergraduate Association, which had been founded in 1892 ; the Barnard Chapter of the College Settlements Association; the Greek Club; the Novel Club, an energetic society which, according to its constitution, composed one complete novel each term; the Hap-Hazard Club, a purely social organization; the Banjo Club; the Barnard College Literary Society, which engaged in debating and literary work; the Arthur Brooks Literary Society; and one Greek letter fraternity chapter. The absence from this chronicle of any mention of dramatics and athletics must strike us at once. The undergradu- ate activities and amusements of that time were more largely literary ; partly because of the character of the students who entered in those early days, partly because in our cramped quar- ters in the small Madison Avenue house there was but scanty room for plays and none whatsoever for basketball. In following the changes apparent in the later volumes of the series, it is interesting to see, as the college grows in size, in complexity, in opportunities, the rise and fall of various organ- izations and forms of activity. Some seem to have been of forced and artificial origin, due, perhaps, to a deliberate imitation of institutions at other colleges and not adapted to our cir- cumstances or meeting any real need or taste of Barnard students. These soon perished. So did the clubs representing some marked inclination of a single class, like the Novel Club of ' 95 and the Debating Society of ' 04, which flourished for a time, but died when their founders were graduated. On the other hand, we have developed some original and peculiar institu- [94] tions which seem to suit our taste and circumstances and which have lived and prospered. Of these perhaps the most interesting is our Greek Games. As one turns the pages of these chronicles of past years, one is impressed anew by the fact that the very varied and complex character of our metropolitan student body demands a rather wide range and variety of organizations and activities. One realizes also that there must be some limit to their number, and that this can be best attained by the prompt abandonment of any institution which does not meet a real need and desire of some group of undergraduates. We are often told, and rightly, that a student should belong only to those clubs or committees or dramatic casts to which she is willing and glad to give time, energy, and really competent support. Indeed, the Student Council has done much to promote this policy. Most of us have wasted dreary hours in trying to prop up some moribund organization for which no one really cared. The greatest pleasures in our lives are derived generally from doing the things we can do really well; and we can get the greatest satisfaction out of undergraduate social activities, I imagine, if we limit our field, and accept office or membership only in those societies to which we can contribute time, enthusiasm, and some really worthy achievement. This is no place for preaching, and 1 have no desire to dwell here on the fact which the college world knows as well as I do — that our main business at Barnard is with our work in courses, and that our social interests, precious and important as they often are, must not interfere unduly with the performance of that task. W ith these reservations I can approve, on the whole, most heartily of the publications, the plays, the games, the clubs which have de- veloped in Barnard. No one could feel otherwise who had herself experienced the very solid advantages to be gained from this side of college life — the real and valuable education in or- ganization, in executive work, in knowledge of human nature, the hours of pleasure on which one can look back witli lasting joy, and above all the sincere and sane and enduring friendships developed among those who work together. [95] jfaretoell to 1910 from 1912 Have you felt the spell of the growing spring? Have you heard the breezes call ? Does the blood in your veins leap up and sing? — And your pulsing heart like a clarion ring, With the red, red life through all? Ah, 1910, have you felt that spell, That you gaze with eager eyes, And the wistful feeling no tongue can tell, And only the young can interpret well, Where the romany pathway lies? That you gaze where the road leads on — away — And is lost in the distant blue? Where the checkered lights and shadows play, And the mist of the Future lies alway, And the sun of Hope shines through ? At the gate of our own little world we stand, — And the gate is open wide ; — Behind is the happy College Land, Where we strayed together, hand in hand, And labored, side by side. Before us the World lies, green and fair, — The World that is ever new, — And the white, white road is winding there Among the hills and the valleys where The sunlight pierces through. You stand at the edge of that road, dear Ten, And your gaze is far away, — We feel the throb of your heart, and then Our hearts grow sad and wistful again, With longing to have you stay. For we must go back, and the heavy door Of our own little world must close. And the sisters who led us on before, Must follow that path the whole world o ' er, To the land that no man knows. But who can grieve when the sun is high, And the spring is in the air? — When the calling breezes hurry by. And laughter lights the moistened eye, And life is young and fair. Some time on that romany way, dear Ten, We shall be traveling, too ; — ■There must be a turn in the road, and then We ' ll find you there and be happy again With love and laughter and you ! [97] Baccalaureate erbtce SUNDAY, MAY 29 4 p. m. Baccalaureate Sermon President Rush Rhees of University of Rochester Gymnasium Parnarb Mentor ©ance MONDAY, MAY 30 8.30 p. m. at Earl Hall Committee Chairman Florence Read Nathalie Thorne Helen Wise Ex- Officio Hetty Dean Mabel McCann Clarita Crosby Bertha Firebaugh Grace Henderson Grace Meier Dorothy Kirch wey [98] COLUMBIA GYMNASIUM MONDAY, MAY 30 program of Baj Overture Barnard Undergraduates Salutatory Dorothy Browning Kirchwey Class Prophecy Marion Weinstein Musical Class History Marion Weinstein The 1910 Hall of Fame Elsie Plaut Class Day Poem Mary Nam mack Presentation to College Lilian Egleston Presentation to Classes Hazel Woodhull Announcement of Elections to Phi Beta Kappa Miss Latham Valedictory Gertrude Hunter Class Day Song Nannette Hamburger Committee Elsie Plaut, Chairman Mary Bailey Nannette Hamburger Ex-Officio Mary Nam mack Grace Reeder Marion Weinstein Dorothy Kirchwey Hetty Dean 1910 luncheon at barnard columbia class day, p.m. 99 ] [100] STEPS ORATION MINUET 3top Bap pageant of tfje College §9ear 1. Septemiier — Opening Exercises 2. October — Mysteries 3. November — Junior Show (Monsieur Beaucaire) 4. December — Holidays 5. January — Examinations 6 . Febru a R V — B A SKETBALL 7. March — Greek Games 8. April — Undergraduate Play 9. May — Tennis 1912 Supper to tfje Mentors [ loi ] SABRINA RESCUES THE LADY COMUS AND THE LADY Comu£ GIVEN BY 1910 FOR 1912 CAST The Lady Gertrude Hunter Comus Dorothy Kirchwey Shepherd Nannette Hamburger Brothers Hazel Wayt and Elsie Plaut Sabrina Clarita Crosby fairies M. Stine E. Myers P. Cahn L. Stein G. Green F. Van Vranken NYMPHS H. Fox G. Fisher B. Holzman E. Morris M. Eggleston T. Barrows A. O ' Donnell L. Weil G. Franke comus ' rout L.Anderson H. Hale C. von Wahl M. Kutner E. Isabel M. Hamburger M. Wegener L. Moruecai I. Glenn greek chorus from ivy day pageant [103] TOje ©ne Huniiteii anb Jf tftp txtf) Annual Commencement COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY GYMNASIUM, WEDNESDAY, JUNE FIRST Conferring of Degree BACHELOR OF ARTS, BARNARD COLLEGE $rt?e£ ano Honors KOHN MATHEMATICAL PRIZE Adelaide Loehrsen, 1910 herrman botanical prize Prize Divided — Eleanor Doty, 1912; Louise Nyitray, 1912 FLARSHEIM PRIZE Margaret Hart, 1911 Honorable Mention Kate Tiemann, 1911 THE JENNY A. GERARD MEDAL Gertrl de Hunter, 1910 Departmental honors CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY Marian Gibson Elizabeth Nitchie GERMAN ENGLISH May Herrmann Doris Long MATH EMATICS Adelaide Loehrsen Rose Moses Etta Waite Tessie Barrows Lilian Egleston Agnes O ' Donnell Margaret O ' Donnell PHILOSOPHY Eleanor Graham Dorothy Kirchwey Marion Wein stein Clarice Auerbach Mary Bailey Tessie Barrows Frances Burger GENERAL HONORS Bertha Firebaugh Marian Gibson Nannette Hamburger HIGHEST FINAL GENERAL HONORS Harriet Fox Dorothy Kirchwey Elizabeth Nitchie Agnes O ' Donnell May Herrmann Gertriide Hunter Margaret O ' Donnell Adelaide Waite Marion Wein stein trustee Huncfjeon to 1910, Proofed i all, 1.30 p.m. miumnae deception to 1910, Jiarnarb, 4 p. m. [104] All, all are gone, those old familiar faces. Mentor banquet WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, G.30 P. M. Committee Helen D. Worrall Clarice Auerhach Margery Eggleston Bessie Holzman Chairman Marion Monteser Rose Moses Olive Thompson 1 1 azel Wayt Dorothy Kirchwey Ex-Officio Hetty Dean Coasts Agnes Shaw Where are the crushes of yesterday Dorothy Kirchwey It ' s hot; it smokes Vora Jaoues A little nonsense now and then, gives relish to the hest of men Gertrude Hunter All of us together, let us serve the white and blue Hazel Woodhull A fowl on the plate is worth two in the game Elsie Plaut Let us see ourselves as others see us Tessie Barrows Our desserts are small Sulamith Silverman There are coffee grinds and other kinds Toast Mistress, Marion Weinstein SERENADE BY 1912 TO 1910 BROOKS HALE One last long play together 1912 bids her sisters farewell [105 1 Tune — Sole Mio The world is sleeping, Night her watch is keeping, And with the dawn of day We shall be far away. Then let not sorrow For the coming morrow Dim now our loving greeting to our sisters. CHORUS Oh sun, caress her! Oh fortune, bless her ! Oh hope, smile on her — our 1910 ! Oh love, oh joy, attend her! Our 1910, dear 1910. [106] Cfje g tage Men may be proud; but faith! for aught 1 sec, They neither walk nor look so zvell as zvc — Why should not then we women act alone? Or whence are men so necessary grown? FINAL SCENE Antonio Benedick Hero Beatrice Don Pedro Leonato Jttudj Sbo Shout J2otf)tng BY WILLIAM SHAKSPERE Presented by The Undergraduate Association of Barnard College April 15 and L6, 1910. CAST OF CHARACTERS Don Pedro C. Thees, 1912 fH. Poore, ' 13 Don John I. Bokshitsky, 1911 ] M. Southerton, ' 12 Claudio H. Woodhull, 1910 M. Barrett, ' 12 Benedick C. von Wahl, 1912 ' S. Voorhis, ' 13 Leonato C. Crosby, 1910 minstrels c RoBINSONi  13 Antonio S. Block, 1911 S. Leerburger, ' 12 Balthazar L. Weil, 1912 ' K. Gray, ' 12 Conrade J. Brown, 1911 LE. Morris, ' 12 Borachio E. Myers, 1912 . f D. von Dqenhoff, ' 12 Friar Francis N. Hamburger, 1910 watchmen |g Bruning, ' 11 Dogberry D. Kirchwey, 1910 f R. Moss, ' 11 Verges E. Rosenblatt, 1913 j G. Segee, ' 12 Sexton J. Schwarte, 1910 | E. Morris, ' 12 Hero Mildred Hamburger, 1912 choir bo s | g. Morris, ' 13 Beatrice Harriet Fox, 1910 | C. Walther, ' 12 Margaret Eleanor Doty, 1912 I H. Burkholder, ' 12 Ursula Mary Nammack, 1910 fN. Thorne, ' 10 ro fV. McGlVNEY, ' 13 INCENSE BOYS ] M pages | D Child, ' 13 f M. Bailey. ' 10 First Watch B. MacDonald, 1913 | V. Fuesleix, ' 11 Second Watch B. Bunzel, 1912 ladies -, McCann. ' 10 Messenger G. Roth, 1913 I M. Kutner. ' 12 Priest A. Bishop, 1911 f E. Plaut, ' 10 lords ?. Bonfils ' 10 i S. Minor, 1 1 I E. Parks, ' 13 The Scene is Laid in Messina Coach ■Mr. Alfred Young Musical Director R. Case, ' 12 Property Mistress • E. Deacon, ' 11 Committee H. Wayt, Chairman E. Plaut M. Oberndorfer E. Dewey M. Hamburger N. Armstrong E.v-Officio G. Hunter L. Egleston [109] CHOIR BOYS FROM THE CHURCH SCENE THE CLOSING DANCE GCrelatonep of tfje OTelte JUNIOR PLAY OF THE CLASS OF 1912 {Efjeatrtcal Jfolfe Tom Wrench 1 Ferdinand Gadd James Telfer Augustus Colpoys - Rose Trelawney Avonia Bunn Mrs. Telfer (Miss Violet) Imogen Parrott, of the Royal Olymp O ' Dwyer, Prompter at the Pantheon Mr. Denzil ] Mr. Mortimer j Mr. Hunston }■Miss Brewster Hallkeeper at the Pantheon .... Of the Bagnigge- Wells Theatre ic Theatre. Theatre . . r C. von Wahl V. Hough L. Weil «j J. McKay Mildred Hamburger Anne Wilson Els a M. Heller Phebe Hoffman A. B. Evans f M. Heiltrin Of the | E. Booth Pantheon -j E. Hardy Theatre | Isabelle Morrison I E. Myers Jlon fjeatrtcal Jfolfe Vice-Chancellor Sir William Gower, Kt F. Lowther Arthur Gower ) His } E. Doty Clara de Foenix f Grandchildren ) Florence Van Vranken Miss Trafalgar Gower, Sir William ' s Sister Ernestine Isabel Captain de Foenix, Clara ' s Husband E. Franklin Mrs. Mossop, a Landlady Lucile Mordecai Mr. Ablett, a Grocer M. Coyle Charles, a Butler I. Glenn Sarah, a Maid Grace Greene The First Act at Mr. and Mrs. Telfer ' s Lodgings in No. 2, Brydon Crescent, Clerkenwell. May. The Second Act at Sir William Grower ' s, in Cavendish Square. June. The Third Act again in Brydon Crescent. December. The Fourth Act on the stage of the Pantheon Theatre. A few days later. Period somewhere in the early sixties. Coached and Staged by Mrs. W. P. Jessup Property Mistress Florence Van Vranken Assistant Property Mistress Philadelphia Sharpe Wigs by Todt Furniture loaned by Baumann M. Hamberger (Chairman) E. Heller Committee E. Franklin L. Weil Ex-officio C. Thees E. Doty Costumes by Koehler P. Hoffman L. Landru [113] g opf)omore $lap of tfje Claste of 1913 ®ualtti Street November nth and 12th. By J. M. Barrie CAST OF CHARACTERS Valentine Brown E. Parks Ensign Blades A. Magid Lieutenant Spicer H. Crosby Major Budd E. Webb Luckwater G. Roth Recruiting Sergeant E. Houghton Master Thomas D. Child Susan E. Rosenblatt Phoebe D. Cheesman Miss Willoughby f S. Vorhees Miss Fannie B. MacDonald Miss Henrietta D. Fleischman Patty J. Sperling Coach Miss Florence Gerrish Committee D. Cheesman (Chairman) Business Manager E. Burgess Property Mistress Helen Foland Assistant Property Mistress E. Parks Make-up Mistress E. Rosenblatt Costume Mistress G. Morris [ 115 ] Mfjat Cberp arnarbtte lUtotosT 9 Jf it in Jftue Spasms Manager Naomi Harris f Mabel Daly A . r 1 Bessie MacDonald Assistant Managers 4 n c ( Gladys Slade [ Maria de Villavilla Dancing Mistress Dorothy Cheesman Assisted ey Esther Burgess Music Mistress Jessie Payne Setting seated in England. Time: Anno nullo. Spasm L There ' s many a slip ' Twixt cup and lip. Spasm II. Come and trip it as we go ( In the light, fantastic toe. Spasm III. Stay, illusion, If thou has any sound or use a voice, Speak to me. Spasm IV. Is there no play To save the anguish of a torturing hour? Spasm V. Let us all hang together, or we shall each hang separately. [117] %t% Jfemme£ Jforte£ Comebp in ®f)ree gets BY VICTORIEN SARDOU j PRESENTED BY THE FRENCH SOCIETIES OF BARNARD AND COLUMBIA Cast; Quentin A. Bruno, ' 11 Claire Miss R. A. Guy, ' 14B. Jonathan H. H. Duden, T3L. Mme. Toupart Miss T. Trottier, Pg. Toupart F. Laroque, T1S. Mme. Lahorie ..Miss P. C. Lambert, T2B. Lazarowitch ....P. de Villeneuve, ' 13S. Deborah Miss O. K. Ihlseng, TIB. Lachapelle H. C. Jacques, ' 12 Gabrielle Miss C. Kahn, T2B. Jean H. Weeks, ' 12 Jenny Miss E. M. Thomas, T4B. Time 1860. Act 1. A salon in Quentin ' s home in Paris. Act II. A salon in Quentin ' s home in Marville, near Havre. Act III. Same as Act. II. MANAGEMENT George M. Bramwell, ' 11 Manager Joseph Price, ' 13 Assistant Manager Miss Olga K. Ihlseng, TIB Barnard Assistant Manager William Remsen, ' 11 Stage Manager The Management wishes to acknowledge the services of M. Henri Antignat, formerly of the Theatre Municipal du Char- let, Paris, and of M. Sylvian Bruno, as Assistant Coach. [118] 3K SJHere ins PRESENTED BY THE CLASS OF 1909 CAST Francois Villon F. S. Wyeth, ' 09 Louis XI F. Gerrish, ' 09 Tristan L ' Hermite O. Rilke, ' 09 Thibaut D ' Aussigny J. Goldberg, ' 09 Oliver Le Dain K. Gay, ' 11 Noel Le Jolys E. Yom Baur, ' 09 Rene de Montigy A. Weil, ' 11 Guy Taboire L. Thompson, ' 09 Jehan Le Loup E. Seguine, ' 09 Robin Turgis E. Deacon, ' 11 Astrologer M. Woodhull, ' 09 Du Lau M. McLean, ' 09 Poncet de Riviere A. Newbold, ' 09 De Xantoillet E. Goodwin, ' 09 Herald M. Woodhull, ' 09 Katharine de Vaucelles Adelaide Richardson, ' 09 Hugette du Hamel ... Jessie Cochran, ' 09 Mother Villon Lillian Closson, ' 09 Jehanneton Cectle Debouy, ' 09 Blanche Anna Gordon, ' 09 guillemette helen phillips, ' 09 Isabeau Antoinette Riordan, ' 09 Denise Eleanor Gay, ' 09 The Queen Hilda Hedley, ' 09 Ladies of Court, Misses E. Phillips, L. Turnbull, D. Calman, E. Hastings. Courtiers, Misses Levy, Samek, Wey- man, sllcox, schlesinger. Pages, Misses Randolph, Burke, Moss, Currier, Brown, Fueslein. Dancers. Misses Schwitzer, Fueslein. Citizens of Paris, Misses Callan, Hart, Ihlseng, Saul, Hogan, Bennett, Masch- medt, Steinecke, Schwitzer, Magid, John- son, Salmowitz, Goldman, Reid. Soldiers, Misses Bruning, Gerstein, Fox, Lovell, Schlesinger, Sanford, B urne, Tapley. (The Class is indebted to the Class of 1911 for co-operation in the production of this play.) Place : Paris. Time: Reign of Louis XI, during the siege of Paris by Burgundians. Act I. The Tavern. Interior of the Fir Cone Tavern. An Evening in June. Act II. The Court. Garden of King Louis ' s Palace. Next .Morning. Act III. The Masque. The garden in the evening. A week later. Act IV. The Gibbet. An open place in old Paris. The next day. Stage Manager Herlinda Smithers Property Mistress Myra McLean [ H9 ] Mance. DECEMBER 20, 1910 Committee Esther Burgess . . Dorothy Child Priscilla Lockwood Varian White Ex-officio Chairman Jean Shannon Marguerite Kelly Bessie Downs j Imogene Ireland { Sallie Pero FEBRUARY 17 Committee Bertha Junghans Chairman Lucille Weil Isabelle Noves Margaret Watson Virginia King Anne Wilson Ex-officio Cora Thees Eleanor Doty [121] DECEMBER 7, 1909 Committee Eleanor Doty, Chairman. isabelle noyes Isabel Koss Irene Dalgleish Eleanor Neu Mary Stine Rosalind Case } Ex _ offino Eleanore aIyers j [122] COMMITTEE Edith Morris (Chairman) Anna Hallock Mildred Hamburger lucile mordecai Pearl Ralph Gladys Segee e. n- ■( Rosalind Case ( Eleanore Myers greek games MARCH 18, 1910 1912 vs. 1913 GREEK CHORUS Won by 1913 Imogene Ireland Music Helen Dana JVords Dorothy Cheesman Molly Katz ance contest in lyrics Eleanore Myers, 191 2 First place for serious lyric Chrystene Straiton, 1912 First place for comic lyric LUCILE MORDECAI Second place Eleanore Myers J for comic lyric HURDLES Eleanore Myers, 1912 First Pearl Ralph, 1912 Second Mary Wegener, 1912 Third TORCH RACE Won by 1912 place place place discus hurling Shirley Gleason,1912 First place Mary Wegener, 1912 Second place Eleanor Wigand, 1912 Third place STILT RACE Pearl Ralph, 1912. First place Daisy Kalt, 1913. Second place Paula Lambert, 1912 Third place Final Score 1912 40 points 1913 13 points [123] m g tlber Pap Mrs. Merrett Lilian Anderson 1910 Gertrude Hunter Jessie Nottingham Aurill Bishop Louise Ockers Laura Bennett Elizbeth Gray 1911 Helen Brown Elsie Gleason Mabel Reid Ethel Felch Grace Rogers Mary Roof Anna Hallock 1912 Mary Wegener Gladys Segee Harriet Hale 1913 Mary Stine Shirley Gleason Edith Morris Celestine Maxwell Gertrude Morris Mary Stewart Priscilla Lockwood Helen Dana Mabel Daly Dorothy Cheesman Sarah Voorhis [124] A. Weil L. Schoedler M. Wegener H. Dana M. Conroy E. Levcridge S. Gleason D. Cheesman N. Hamburger E. Gleason l arsWp Jlasfcet pall {Eeam 19104911 Ethel Leveridge Forward Dorothy Cheesman Forward Lilian Schoedler Jumping Center Shirley Gleason Center Elsie Gleason Center Mary Conroy Guard Eleanor Burne Substitute Guard Helen Dana Substitute Guard [126] C. Straiton M. Wegener P. Hoffman S. Gleason A. Wilson L. Weil G. Segee 1912 ?tofeet $aU paper Claste (games; Lucille Weil S Gladys Segee 1913-1914 Mary Wegener 1912-1913 Shirley Gleason 1911-1914 ] Eleanor Wigand 1914-1912 ] Anne Wilson 1911-1913 ] Chrystene Straiton ' [127] Wearers of tfje Molly Conroy Basketball Elsie Gleason Basketball Ethel Leveridge Basketball Frances Randolph Basketball Lillian Schoedler Bastkctball and Field Day Amy Weil Basketball Shirley Gleason Basketball Mary Wegener Basketball Dorothy Cheesman Basketball Helen Dana Basketball Sally Pero Field Day 1912 Hocfeep ®eam Mabel Barrett Captain May Scully Harriet Hale Kathleen Gray Eleanore Myers Marion Heilprin Georgie Cerow Anna Hallock Crystene Straiton Gladys Segee Edna Booth ( Gertrude Cusack ecorb [128] M. Scully A. Ilallock E. Booth H. Hale M. Heilprin C. Straiton G. Cusack K. Gray M. Barrett G. Cerow G. Segee Parnarb, Jflap 6, 1910 Cxerctee to commemorate tfte founbtng of Jf telb ®ap prtncfeerfjoff TOjeatre [130] jfielii Bap EVENTS HURDLES 1. Lillian Schoedler, 1911 2. Eleanore Myers, 1912 3. Vera Fueslein, 1911 SHOT-PUT 1. Lillian Schoedler, 1911 2. Anna Hallock, 1912 3. Chrystene Straiton, 1912 SIXTY- YARD DASH 1. Sally Pero, 1913 2. Dorothy Childs, 1913 3. Elsie Gleason, 1911 BROAD JUMP 1. Lillian Schoedler, 1911 2. Muriel Ivimey, 1910 3. Dorothy Shannon, 1913 HIGH JUMP 1. Sally Pero, 1913 2. Elsie Gleason, 1911 3. Rosalind Case, 1912 BASEBALL THROW 1. Hazel Woodhull, 1910 2. Dorothy Shannon, 19] 3 3. Helen Wilkes, 1911 BASEBALL 1913 versus 1912 and 1911 Score 12 to 11 FINAL SCORE 1911— 67 1913—55 1912— 25 1910— 8 [131] ' tlte tot£e to borroto from tf)e goob anb great, ' TOg totee to learn, ' tt gob=ltfee to create. [132] NEW COURSES Recommended for the Barnard Catalogue Bluffing 1—2 —Practical and Professional Bluffing- Dr. T. Greene. All working hours. Pre-requisite — Nerve. This course is invaluable and should be the first elective chosen in Freshman year. Collegiate Witonomy Al A2 How to be clever without showing it. Dr. L. Mordecai. Young Assistant — Charles Knapp. Point — Lost. Pre-requisite — Infinitesimal brains. Punology 23 23. Professor C. Straiton. No point course. Lecture 12 M. daily. Prescribed for Freshmen. Open to especially qualified Seniors. Bossies 6-7. General and Applied. Dr. E. Myers. Student advisor — Annie Nathan Meyer. Points — not counted till gained. Every hour daily except Sunday. Pre-requisite— Butt-Instinct. Open only to Juniors and Trustees. Analytical Character Study Gl S2 Qualitative Analysis. Professor G. Segee. Classes held in the study. Laboratory work in the halls between classes. History B. C. Genealogical or Family History. Miss E. Rapelye, Instructor. For the degree of D. A. R. Pre-requisite. — A family tree unbroken from B.C. to the present. Prescribed for A. Z. of K. A. © Education F. Faculty Instruction. Dr. K. Elmendorf, 1914. All recitation hours. Pre-requisite — Worldly wisdom. Prescribed for Freshman Professors and Instructors. Penmanship O. K. Legible writing. Dr. Dorothy Smear. Rec- ommended for students taking English 1-2. [134] Jleto bbttton£ to tfje Htbrarp CftUbren ' g Jkabing Boom Librarians: Dr. Agger Dr. Knapp Dotty Dimple Series Dr. Harold Chapman Brown Flaxy Frizzle Books Dr. Wilhelm Braun Water Babies Mr. Holm Poems Every Child Should Know Miss Hubbard What Katy Did Miss Kate Doty Five Little Peppers and How They Grew Dr. Richards Little Men Dr. Hazen and Dr. Lord Peck ' s Bad Boy Harry Thurston The Sweet Girl Graduate Harriet Fox and Mary Nammack Parnarb department tore director? Notion Counter The Dog Kennel [Daily Theme Box) Remnant Counter The Lunch Room Dry Goods Mathematics A. Bargain Counter Bulletin Board (Official Sales in January and May) Cold Storage Lofts Apply at Bursar ' s Office Complaint Department Bulletin Office Human Hair Exhibit Economics A, Sections I, IV, and V (A r o connection zvith the Millinery Department) Premium Parlor The Exchange Umbrellas Checked and Lost At the Door For any further information, consult the Floorwalker, Mrs. Jameson. [135] All Willi rtC To ATTEirU £ort - PRACTICE AT %, SlGIA BeloW- C.. STRAiToN IF You JDortT, You Will c STRAiTo ! W Atirej Al-L. G l R.ls ho CAN JM, MEET ME ' N Tri£ Sropj at la. so r L Gr [abiuit To Tjk.a v checks mot counted q . ! MEETItAG. of lis ' ' t° 2.ot SC. CLUB- AT Ho ON eJUSlNESS-T E TO THOSE LlVlN 0, ort I 3 lot ST- Dues are -DUE for EvEft ' jTHiPlt- See. Special OFFER orl ME ' T SCAR}) Lost renin nEM ERSHiP Ct - L - s s x OP To Too Please help The NeehH . Crimps Thamk Fullm RtcEivEP HER - ' an. ®f)e Cale of tfje potentate Inspired by the Commencement Exercises Do you know the Tale of the Potentate, Who sits on a wonderful throne of state, With a tasseled cap on his learned pate And a scarlet gown ' round his person great ? Four years from the time you matriculate, With solemn step and a musing gait, You go with your class to participate In a thing that will make you a Graduate. Then you sit before him all stiff and straight, And he glares at you and your eyes dilate, — Then a brass band thunders and chords vibrate, And the Ph.D. ' s — some six or eight — In dress parade, march by, sedate. Then up arises the Potentate — He pauses and seems to calculate, And says, Maybe if you wait and wait, You ' ll get a sheepskin to mark the date. Then you all get up and evacuate. While he has a nice little tete-a-tete With Dean Van Am, and his cabinate And that is the end of the marvelous fete That always seems to necessitate A girl ' s becoming a Graduate. But what becomes of the Potentate, No man has been clever enough to relate — Some say he must simply evaporate. For out of that gym. be it early or late, Berobed and betasseled, none see him create A stir by appearing in majesty great — And so in pity, I dedicate This tale (which Pm positive has no mate!) To N. M. B.— the Potentate. [137] Said a Junior to a Freshman As they wandered down the hall, If you meet a Soph and Senior, Do not be surprised at all. They ' re odd. Then she lightly tapped her forehead And the Freshman understood. Said the Junior, They can ' t help it, And they would not, if they could. They ' re odd. So don ' t mind their haughty actions, Or their strange and uncouth ways, We must pity their misfortune That throughout their college days, They ' re odd. Then the Freshman hugged the Junior As she rolled her knowing eyes, With an even smile of pleasure, And she murmured in surprise, How odd ! [138 1 grfje 1912 gtoberttemg g fjeet Morris ' s Business School Strictest business methods of signing checks, contracts, themes, etc. FOR REFERENCE, APPLY TO 1912 MORTARBOARD Reasonable Singing Lessons Special Rates to Song Leaders MME. harriette hale Class and College Songs a Specialty Flattering Photography Herrin Mig Kutner ARTISTIC POSES Studio: - The Sun Dial Madame Mildred Weiner Fashionable Costumes Simple College Gowns a Specialty [ 139 ] 3 Eetm=er Mot Just as You Feel About It I sat on high Olympus Hill, When unto me there came, Almighty Zeus, a-riding in His brand new aeroplane. We swiftly passed the asteroids And skimmed the milky way, And finally landed fast and sure On a college near Broadway. And first we saw the Latin class ; Quoth Zeus, They have a snap. The course is really quite a cinch ; In fact they often Knapp. And if through Shear stupidity The class gets in a mess, They ' ll find one gentle, kindly soul To Hirst them out, I guess. And here ' s the room, quoth Zeus the Great, Where one such knowledge learns As who the Provisions of Oxford ate. Or Partook of the Diet of Worms. At teaching the young idea to shoot, The instructor is quite O. K. He never yet has missed his aim And has always Shotwell, they say. Just then I heard an awful noise, A most prodigious clatter ; I seized Great Zeus ' thunderbolt, And shrieked out: What ' s the matter? [140] ' ' Now calm yourself, said Zeus the Great And do not be ridiculous. That is the Math, professor, dear. He ' s dropping perpendiculars. And next a most blood-curdling yell Resounded through the hall. Zeus looked at me and then quoth he : Did you hear the Junior Ball? And now, said he, we ' ll go downstairs And I will show you where The Freshmen fall from highest hope Into deepest, dire despair. When they this portal enter in, Ambition is afire. They always are Boyd up by hope, But they soon fall into Meyer. And there, I ' m sure, they ' d stay for Weeks If someone didn ' t tell Them how to clamber out again And give them Points as well. Now when we came to English B, Zeus, to my great relief, Pulled out his dollar Ingersoll And said: We must be Brief! It is high time that you and I Depart for regions upper — Hera could never tolerate My being late for supper. [141] [143] 30. W$ When you have written all you ever knew Of family history, anecdotes and rhymes ; When all your friends have given you subjects, too, And enemies unwittingly, sometimes ; When you have wandered through each city street With eager eyes that sought a theme, in vain — No subjects lying ' round there could you meet — ■And hopelessly, you ' ve plodded home again. In college no one heeds your mournful cry Of Won ' t you tell me what to write of, please? Give me a subject, dear, or I shall die! And many cries more pitiful than these; Then wrapt in darkest gloom for you life seems. You curse the day that you took Daily Themes ! a Clas tc i;f)ougf)t I passed through the campus and marked with one eye, How the Lion and Dragon were sharing a pie. The pie was made up of ingredients bad — There were war bonnet plumes old Soanga once had Which the Dragon had plucked with a fierce, grisly claw. Bob had given his hide and his tail and a paw. But the Lion and Dragon with appetite hearty, Enjoyed every crumb of their classical party. Of the pie there was left not a bite nor a sup, For the Lion and Dragon ate every tiling up! [ 1 4] iProgreste antr $oetrp BY HENRY R-YM-ND Suppose the zvorld were apple-pie, And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, Would we still have tea to drink? Suppose you were a millionaire, and I were poor; suppose You bought a Paris bonnet rare, and I a suit of clothes ; Suppose that both went out of style ; our money all was spent ; Which good would last the longer while, and who would get the rent ? Suppose I built, with toilsome labor, a hen-house on my land ; Suppose my chicken-hating neighbor, his shotgun in his hand. To pot my chicks, should lie in wait, upon his own back stoop ; Give the marginal utility of that same chicken-coop. Suppose, his secrets with him gone, old Edison were dead, And we had not a single ton of white ash coal, or red; Well, then, with nothing left to burn, to warm our little toes, To Aggericulture would we turn, or freeze, do you suppose? all the tvorld were apple-pie, {There ' s nothing we ' d like better) And all the trees were bread and cheese, What would we do with Fetter? [145] tKfte Strange Stfoenture£ of Habima College Miss College was a damsel fair, With eyes of blue and golden hair. Oh, father, spake she, I ' d adore The halls of Barnard to explore. Alas, my child, ' 1 the parent said, A-shaking of his hoary head, If needs you must leave hearth and home, Go forth, the College world to roam. Oh, fast she ran, and she ran far ' Till all at once she saw a car. Catching the car with skillful hand, She took the car to College and Arrived there just in time to see The Barnard maidens lick T. C. Strange, cried Lavinia, that they should! The Barnard Maidens Lick T. C. For T. C. really can ' t taste good. They are not young or fresh, you know, So why should Barnard lick them so? Lavinia and her trusty car Now found the theatre door ajar. With bated breath they crept within, She took the car to college And heard a most distressing din. No wonder they can ' t sing, she said, The leader has quite lost her head ; ( )h, even if they use all arts The (dee can never sing in parts. [146] ' The knowledge that flowed from the lecturer ' s head. A Freshman ' s cut by a Sophomore. ' A nd there they hit upon a plan. The awful clamour in great dread She quit, and down the hall she sped ; Oh, how contented I should be To calm my shattered nerves with tea Alas, for her, tea was there none. A lecture class had just begun, So in she went and drank, instead. The knowledge that flowed from the lecturer ' s head. Then, much refreshed, she roves again Through the marble balls and corridors, when, Lo and behold, oh, hideous sight. That turns Lavinia weak and white, ( )h, horrid cruelty and gore — A Freshman ' s cut by a Sophomore! Lavinia fell into a swound, And when, much later, she came ' round. Straight to the faculty she ran ; And there they hit upon a plan To curb the Sophomore ' s bloody ire. [147] But lest Lavinia ' s tale should tire I must abbreviate — for then Lavinia hurried home again. She spied her parent far ahead And straight into his arms she sped. She talked ' til she was out of breath And bored her father quite to death. She bored her father quite to death. If you fear you ' ll flunk a course Why not simply stop it ? Just before exams start in Go ahead and drop it. If you find you have a friend Who is not quite proper, Cut her in the hall and then You can calmly drop her. If a girl asks you to call While the snow is blockin ' Traffic, take an aeroplane To the place and drop-in. [148] Hato uto resulting from jWortarboarb Arguments; BILLYITES VERSUS GILDITES Question at Issue Should the dean ' s picture he one-half inch larger than the provost ' s or vice versa? Judge, Miss Annie E. H. Meyer Decision — Pictures should he of equal size. DISCREETS VERSUS INDISCREETS Question at Issue Should the fraternities be knocked? Judge, Precedent Verdict — Not if you can help it. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF VERSUS MORTAR- BOARD BOARD Question at Issue Should the modest Editor-in-Chief ' s complaint, that she got voted on for too many of the class statistics, be sus- tained. Judge, Mortarboard Verdict — Complaint not sustained, as complainant was only the Editor-in- Chief, who has no vote. MORTARBOARD VERSUS HARRIET FOX AND KATE TIEMANN Question at Issue Should there be grinds for the Faculty ? Objections raised They were not dignified. They had never been used before. Judge, Dean Gildersleeve Verdict — Quite evident. AUTHOR VERSUS MORTARBOARD Question at Issue Should these cases be printed ? Objections raised The private affairs of an institution were best kept secret. Objection not sustained, after author ' s plea for insanity. Cfje Cbolutton of tfje ©enu£ Bean, from ©tll to @tlber£leebe The first species of this genus known, goes by the name of Mrs. Putnam. Little has been discovered of this prehistoric ruler, nor of the links which connected her to the following spe- cies, Drake-Gill. From all accounts this species was much feared by the lesser animals be- cause of its peculiar antipathy to the common custom of cheering, which always caused it to grow wild and fierce. Its extraordinary characteristics were all attributed to the Drake part of its anatomy. After six years this Drake had entirely evolved into a Bill, which is only an acting species of the genus Dean. For three years it billed and cooed about the halls of Barnard with long and lingering gait, until it metamorphosed into the genus Provost. At this period the family Barnard came of age, having reached its twenty-first birthday, and so in the natural course of events the last and most perfect species of the genus Dean was evolved as Gill-dersleeve ! [149] THE JOHNNY CHORUS 3 A Junior waltzed to the Bulletin Board, The exams were posted there, She looked for economics A, With her usual blase air. She shrugged her shoulders carelessly, And said in a voice chuck full of glee, Oh, nothing can possibly bother me, I ' m quite immuned you see. Stotmme ' g ong in Jffltb §9ear jftnale 1909 i A Fresh, walked up to the Bulletin Board, The exams were posted there, And when she saw that math came first She had an awful scare; She nearly fainted dead away And turned a dreadful ghastly gray, And as she left they heard her say, . Oh, ! 2 A Soph, walked up to the Bulletin Board, The exams were posted there, She calmly looked for history A, Then twisted up her hair. She turned her patronizing eye On the poor little Freshman standing by And said, My dear little girl, don ' t cry, We ' ve been through this before. A Senior strolled to the Bulletin Board— You ' re quite mistaken there, My dear, she didn ' t stroll up at all, She simply didn ' t care. Hm-hum ( Humming to the end. ) un to pillp If you want to change your course, Run to Billy, run to Billy; If you ' ve talked till you are hoarse, ' Run to Billy, Billiken. Tell him you ' ve discussed all day About the giving of a play — He ' ll say, don ' t give it anyway — Run to Billy, Billiken. Billy, Billv, Bidy, every day we ' re crying! Billy, Billy, Billy, to him we are flying! In our joys and in our woes Everyone to Billy goes. If you ' re bad, and overcut, Run to Billy, run to Billy ; Maybe you don ' t want to, but Run to Billy, Billiken. Summoned by a little card, Though you think it just too hard, He will tell you you ' re debarred, When you run to Billiken. Billy, Billy, Billy, every day we ' re crying ! Billy, Billy, Billy, to him we are flying! Barnard lass in weal or woe, Ever must to Billy go. THE GOD OF THEMES AS THEY OUGHT TO BE [150] 3To Samuel Johnston: n £ be. O Samuel Johnson, Barnard ' s pride, Thou prowling, petted, pampered beast, That on Parnassus ' sunny side On nectar — or sardines — doth feast ; That calmly in the Undergrad, On velvet cushions tak ' st thine ease, Leaving them thickly oversprad With snowy hairs — and, maybe, fleas. Dear Samuel, that with lordly air And waving tail, walk ' st on thy way, With mild meow of meek despair Scorning caresses or display ; Loved Samuel, can thy topaz eyes See our delight when thou deign ' st purr, Or when a stately Senior wise Unbends to stroke thv silkv fur? ' Tis true ! a Senior ' s tender heart Still yearns for something to caress, Which longing Calculus and Art In vain have labored to suppress. Ye bold New Women, crow your fill — Already falls your triumph flat ; Barnard ' s affections hover still Around a tiger pussy-cat ! See the Cast Supper, D ' Arcy of the Guards. ' ome Cutting Comment i Oh, they come in the morning up to college And they come from far uptown, From Hoboken or Fort Lee Ferry, Or they take the auto down ; And as they near the hall of knowledge You may hear them blithely say, It ' s quarter past — no use to hurry — It ' s a half-a-cut to-day! (Just blame it on the Interborougb, That half-a-cut to-day.) II Or it may be that some loved professor, In his flat across the way, Must chase a vagrant collar-button Or a gaudy tie display. Then, as the clock moves ever onward, Those students gladly say, It ' s quarter past — now let us hurry — It ' s a half-a-cut to-day ! ( ' Twas not the fault of the Interborougb., That half-a-cut to-day.) Ill Now, readers, hear ye all the moral Of my sinful roundelay. If in lofty Morningside apartment, Or in Brooks you chance to stay, Yet, if you value high your breakfast, Fret not at the delay ; Remembering the Interborougb Take a half-a-cut to-day ! (Sing blessings on the Interborough, For that half-a-cut to-day.) [151] i£ tr $rt£e anb tfje ©ragon, Good Sir Prise, said the Dragon one fine day, if it please thee to jog around the country a bit, I will show thee some sights which, methinks, thou didst never see the like of, until this hour. Certes, replied the knight, politely tipping his helmet, that would please me right well, for, to meet with new adventures is, methinks, I wot, ever the business of an errant knight. So saying, without more ado, that valiant knight and his noble companion set forth from the goodly inn wherein they had been resting, which hight Junior Study, and never rested until they came to a fast shut door. Sir Prise was exceeding wroth that anything should so rudely bar his way, and anon would have battered down that door with his mighty spear, had not the Dragon whispered in his ear. ' S blood, me friend! Do not so. This is the 1912 cup-board wherein are stored ingredients which are likely to ferment if aught disturbs their customary quiet! Thereupon the two slipt quietly within, and this is what they saw and heard: Yeast was seated on the desk with her dishevelled hair plainly betokening her agitated state of mind. Chili Sauce sat in the corner absorbed in calculations. Sweet Oil was gazing pensively at a piece of card-board. The other ingredients sat or sprawled in vari- ous positions appropriate to scorn and boredom, with the exception of Soothing Syrup, who assumed an attitude of polite attention. Pickles was sorting a pile of grind cards which she held in her lap. How about this for Crampton? said she, reading, ' Eye of newt and toe of frog. ' — Great ! said Yeast, with a broad grin. It ' s not nice enough for him! objected the other ingredients, half angrily. How ridiculous! Why you ' re too soft-hearted for anything! and Yeast looked ready for a fight. Then everybody talked at once very loud and fast, until Yeast rose visibly and banged on the desk for order. Well, so you don ' t want to stick that onto Crampton? asked Pickles, shaking her fountain pen over Cold Water in her perplexity. Please don ' t do that! said that injured person, diluting the ink as she drew her skirts away. You don ' t know Dr. Crampton! said Salt to Yeast, with superior scorn. Oh, very well, we won ' t take the grind — only some of you people who do know him have got to find the dear man a grind that ' s sweet enough for your taste. Go on — we must hurry. The other ingredients resumed their board expression, and the meeting proceeded. How about this for Miss Reimer? said Pickles, as she read another grind. No ! roared Yeast, rising and falling alternately in her excitement. It ' s not half good enough! We want a stunner for her. 1 thought this one very good, said Vinegar, sourly. That ' s because you don ' t know her ! S-s-softy! sputtered Vichy, as she waved her hand out of the window to some Freshmen. Well, said Yeast, rather abashed, what shall we do — Milk-of-human-kindness, you ' ll have to ask your sister. We ' ll leave the question for the present. Vichy, please pay attention — this is not a song practice. I see that Sweet Oil has something to show us, but she ' s too modest to produce it. Will somebody capture that drawing? Here are some that the other girls did, said Sweet Oil smoothly. The clue to this tale may be found on the Editors ' page. [152] clamored the other in- spoiled We want to see yours, ' gredients. Well — all right — only I ' ve completely it. Great! Splendid! Sweet Oil, you ' re a wonder! and all the ingredients woke up and became excited. I ' m afraid we can ' t put it in, said Chili Sauce apologetically, it will be so expensive — a ' ld we have to have a lot more ads as it is — here are some figures ■— and here is a list of people who have not been asked more than fifteen times. Anyway, said Cold Water, looking at the pic- ture, that idea has been used so often before. I can ' t just say where I saw it, but Oh, let ' s have it anyway, said the Spoon, look- ing up from the Zoology book, over which she had been poring. There never has been anything like it in a Mortarboard before, has there? turning to Milk-of-human-kindness. I don ' t know, said she, I ' ll ask my sister. Now, listen, I ' m talking! said Salt in a ness-like voice. I think it would be nice to leave out our class statistics altogether ! Yes! No! Why should we? shouldn ' t we? Everybody has them! ' haven ' t ! They have ! and eleven voices roared at each other until the noise was deafening. Yeast banged for order, but no order came. Fiercer and fiercer grew the fight until the angry ingredients picked up chairs, books, anything, everything, and hurled them at each other. Gadzooks ! exclaimed Sir Prise, as he and the Dragon slank from the room and closed the door behind them. Certes, I never beheld so fell a busi- Why They disagreement between mortal ingredients. My heart for fear near died within me. And in sooth the poor knight was all of a tremble, so that his mail rattled upon his quaking body. Pull thyself together, man, said the Dragon, smoking uneasily, for by my trouth, they be but ingredients, when all is told, and tho ' the battle wax never so fierce, ' twill soon be ended, with no ink spilt, with all their slashing and lashing of tongues. But come, let us be jogging, for, as the scribe hath it, ' Discretion is the better part of valor. ' Thereupon the Dragon proceeded, Sir Prise tread- ing close upon his tail, until they reached a door whereon was inscribed the number ?, ' M). What may this be? asked Sir Prise. This is the class meeting of my beloved follow- ers, the Juniors. At that moment the door opened quietly and a number of fair, yet hungry looking damsels emerged. Forthwith issued strenuous protestations — but what need is there to dwell longer upon this painful subject, for behold the engraving here below and thou shalt have full understanding, as did Sir Prise. The good Dragon blushed with shame, and his royal blue eyes were bedimmed with tears. Alas! said he, my heart is torn with grief. Now, and now only, am I ashamed to be called the idol of 1912! With that he wept full passing sore. Comfort thyself, sweet Chuck, quoth Sir Prise soothingly for behold how great and marvelous thy 1912 is on all other occasions. ' Tis sooth, in faith, sighed the Dragon, and anon they jogged upon their way. JV| J STRESS ' VOJC£ [153] Susanna in mathematics A, Had very nearly passed away. To be polite she was not able When at the logarithm table. She used to make most awful sines And say odd s ' blood and oh gosh lines ! The Prof, would say o secant I Soothe you by feasting you on JJ . Then she would rave and tear her hair, And vow that he was never [ ] Tho ' you ' ve acute smile, some may say, I vow I ' ll = you some day. In wrath, I ' ll punish you, cried he, Into remote 00 Forever after, you I bid Appear amid a pyramid. Behold Susanna has a hat — No other hat could equal that — Adorned it is, with forestry And birds of plumage fair to see, So large it is that it o ' erspreads Not only hers but other heads. In fact no hat could e ' er be wider — In class no one could sit beside her. In economics, Mussey said, While staring at her hatted head, I have a great antipathy To hats ' neath which I cannot see, So tho ' your hat is plainly here, Susanna, you are absent, dear. He said it kindly with a smile So full of teeth and full of guile ; So bright it was and withering, The foliage shriveled up, poor thing! She laid her hat upon her knee, And then she wept full bitterly — Her tear-drops were so salty that They spoiled the plumage on her hat. The moral to this tale is plain — Behold Susanna ' s woe and pain — For ne ' er may hatted lassie pass In Mussev ' s economics class. 154 ] OS €legp on tfje beceasie of parnarb Jofee£ at a @oob ©lb ge DEDICATED TO DR. CHARLES KNAPP Once more ye jokes which now are long since dead, Ye puns, of Mother Wit and I Junior bred. With mournful dirge we wail your woeful fate, And sing your praise, alas, too late, too late ; Here lies the lunch room joke, dead ere its prime, Who has not wielded it in college rhyme? Dead jokes of erring Charlie ECnapp lie here, Well-worn and ancient, hoary, dim and sere. The locker jokes, the hats that will not lit Have called forth many a proof of sparkling wit. Teas, mid-year jokes, all, all are dead, alas ! In doleful train, their feeble spectres pass. The Senior ' s haughty pride and dignity, The frisky Junior ' s gay frivolity, Sophomoric knowledge that can ne ' er be seen, And verdant P ' reshmen, who are evergreen ; They did not die of loss of limb or joint, But of that dread disease, the loss of point. Old History A and poor long suffering Brief What wonder that we scarce restrain our grief ! The jokes are dead, dead ere their prime, but we Are left to cope with stern reality. But, oh the change, now they have passed below To regions where all witticisms go ! Now underneath this mournfully whispering oak, We deck the bier of every dear-loved joke. Here modest violets for the Junior ' s wit, Roses for blushes that engender it. Pale lemon blossoms for the Sophomore Show — Dry carrot tops for Senior jokes, and so We strew the graves wherein our darlings lie, And sadly sob and sound a soulful sigh. Oh, ye companions of our college years Behold the tribute of our hard wrung tears, One last farewell, one melancholy sigh, Wring out your kerchiefs, hang them out to dry. But wherefore do we mourn, tho ' you are dead. Soon each will rise from out its flowery bed, Forever through the future years to flit — A ready tool for many a Freshman wit. The same weak smiles will follow you, which now Adorn each weary, suffering reader ' s brow, And generations yet to be begun Will prove there ' s nothing new beneath the sun. [155] pear Jfacta One day I met the Barnard Bear A-looking sickly, quite ; Said I, Pray, what ' s the trouble, Bear? You look both blue and white. The Barnard Bear growled long and loud, Oh, what a silly question ! Quoth she : You see what ' s troubling me Is simply indigestion ! It ' s your own fault that you ' re not well, The reason let me state, Said I, Your illness cometh from That Undergrad-u-ate. And as I turned away from her She asked me with a sigh, Oh, say, why was the Mortarboard? Why did the dragon fly? Your queries are quite bare of sense, Said I with scornful glance; They chanced to hear the Glee Club sing. And saw the Sophomore dance. These things would not have bothered them But ah, alack-a-day — It really capped the climax When they saw the Junior play. Now, won ' t you tell me why these maids Go yawning through the hall? Said I, They still are tired out From Eleven ' s basketball ! The way the Sophs and Freshies carried On was quite a sin : They all seem captivated by That well-built T. C. Gym. There ' s one more Question, said the Bear, That I am simply dyin ' To have you tell the answer of ; Say, what goes round a lion ? Forbear, said I, you bother me, Your questions are a bore. Go ask the Freshmen and they ' ll say The answer is Roar ! Roar ! Then suddenly the Bear began A shakin ' and a scingin ' , And that was just because she saw The bull-dogging the Injun. Poor thing, thought I, I ' ll pick her up, And, calmly, not to shock her, I ' ll take her right downstairs with me And in the tennis lock-her. And when I ' d done this dreadful deed So loathsome and so gory, I went upstairs to see Soange Scalp the labora Tory. Ctittor ' g g toan g ong Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard my hair is turning gray, Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard I ' ve nearly passed away, Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard I ' m getting lank and thin, Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard, I sometimes swear like sin, Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard, I ' m deeply dyed in gloom; Since I ' ve been on the Mortaboard I often fret and fume ; Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard my lessons have — oh, well, The change that ' s taken place in me I haven ' t time to tell, But when the book is published such pleasure ' twill afford, I ' ll thank my lucky stars that I zvas on the Mortar- board ! [ 156 Ufee [Hayle of tht (Stajgon M)n the firmament abo )e,a brilliant constellation is, By philosophers of eld yclept the € if tje j tek the brujhteM have j hone, Cook W m the of tbo J ra on, JVnakraton E3Z) 1912 iHrmary Innk My salad days when I was green in judgment Cornelia Heal Dakin President Anne Stavely Wilson Vice-President Eleanor Mandeville Doty Recording Secretary Florence Van Vranken Corresponding Secretary Rosalind Corwin Case Treasurer Eleanore Myers Historian [158 1 Jfrestfjman gear Sept. 22. Registered at Barnard Filled sheets and sheets of nasty green paper. Awful mess fixing course. Helped by a perfectly lovely Junior. Have a crush on her. Sept. 23. Opening Exercises Awfully dull. Signed all subscription blanks. I just hate college. Sept. 24. Classes Begin Confusion worse confounded finding rooms. Have German Professor — young and frightened. So are we. Sept. 28. Our First Class Meeting Junior President held it. Have a crush on her. A Miss Wilson and a Miss Doty elected pro tern. Oct. 1. We Stole Sophomore Mascot!! Sophs furious. They steal Anne Wilson and lock her up. Poor Anne ! Oct. 2. Mysteries Old 1912 gloriously victorious. I just love college ! Oct. 16. Freshman Triumph We wear bows and veils, and everything the Sophomores told us not to. Such fun! Junior wedding in the afternoon. We marry our dear sisters. Oct. 23. Mock Trial Lue Mordecai brought in on a stretcher. We sue Sophs for damages. They are condemned for contempt of court. Oct. 21. Mock Campaign Taft elected with much noise and speech- ifying. Mock turtle soup for lunch. Col- lege seems all sham. Oct. 30. Barnard and Billie ' s Circus Seniors ' party to us. Simply grand. Nov. 1. Election of Officers Nov. G. Sophomore Show The Little Minister. Great, though I do say it, as wouldn ' t if I could help it. Nov. 21. Junior Show Monsieur Beaucaire. The most won- derful play ever ! I helped the Juniors dress. Most beeootiful time of my life. Dec. 10. Undergraduate Tea Our study voted the prettiest. Dec. 16. Our Party to the Juniors We give a regular dance. I have 14 crushes. January — College not much fun after all. People do study such a lot. Jan. 20-30. Mid- Year Examinations Was man nicht weiss, das eben brauchte man, und was man weiss, kann man nicht brauchen. Feb. 5. Mid-Year Finale We burlesque the college actors. Our stunt voted the best. [159] March 5, 1912 Nottasho The cleverest and most original Fresh- man show ever given at Barnard. The Juniors say so. Hits on everything from Undergrad. to the Sophomores. They don ' t like it — but who cares ? March 10. Our Mascot Arrives in Nina ' s Arms He is a perfect dream of a dragon, with lovely pink ears. March 26. Greek Games WE WIN almost. Only lost by 2 points. Never was such a close contest. We would have won if — well, what ' s the use? The Juniors are so proud of us. Tonv ' s tail broken in the scuffle. April 16. Twelfth Night Perfectly wonderful Undergraduate Show. May 5. Class Elections Wild excitement ! May 7. Field Day E-nuff-sed. May l 1 Finals ! Simply awful. I ' m sure I flunked them all. June 1. Commencement Week Seniors omnipotent. Sorry to lose old 1909. June 2. 1912 Luncheon We separate for the summer. Rah-Rah for 1-9-1-2. [160 1 MASCOT CHORUS FROM NOTTAS1IO JUST SOME OF US SOPH. CHORUS FROM NOTTASHO THE DUEL FROM TWELFTH NIGHT ' THE FINAL Cllnkl ' S OF NoTTASIlo iSottasrtjo NOTTAPROGRAMME S. LeERBURGER Nottaband R. Case 1. Bance of tfjc Classes; I. Freshman Romp E. Jones, G. Segee, F. Hazel, E. Isabel, A. Sclis, M. Southerton, E. Woodruff, E. Myers IL Sophomore Barn-Dance F. Van Yranken, C. Straiton, A. Wilson. M. Kutr.er, P. Ralph, M. Stinc, M. Wood. III. Junior Waltz E. Doty, G. Greene, C. Thees, I. Dalgleish, G. Bcrrian, B. Junghaus, P. Hoffmann, H. Black IV. Senior March R. Sinn, M. Kerr, P. Lambert, I. Glenn, 1). Shelley, I.. Weil, G. Vernier, E. Valet 2. Jileettng of tfje Unbergrabtiate iHssoctation President H. Bristol Vice-President M. Brennan Chairman of Executive Committee M. Weiner Secretary E. Rapelye Treasurer M. Hamburger Undergraduates P,. Bunzel, R. Case, F. Rogers. V. Smith, B. Hershfield L. Stein, F. Mathews, R. Fischel, H. Boegehold, G. Cerow, M. Mulqueen, S. Blumgarten, I. Keenan 3. tEfjree Scenes in Sfofjnson Hpm I. Class in Physical Culture II. Students ' Marathon. III. Basketball Game Miss Cartoon M. Wegener Miss See-Saw M. Hamburger Mr. Wiggles G. Fischer Students A. Zimmer, F. Anderson, E. Franklin, M. Scully, E. Reardon, II. Hale, L. Nyitray, J. Mackav E. Booth. M. Stine 4. J|oto oangeStegfrteb Bib J2ot lull tfje Bragon Bull -Dog L. Mordecai Owl E. Gray Indian P. Cahn Dragon C. Dakin 5. ClaSS Hpittn: Hail to the Dragon Bold Committee S. Leerburger (Chairman), I. Dalglcish. E. Heller, P. Hoffman, L. Mordecai, K. Fancher, C. Dakin, A. Wilson (Ex-officio) [163] rcefe amejs bs. 1912 (greefe Cfiorusi IV on by 1912 Kate H. Tiemann, 1911 First Place LUCILE MORDECAI, 1912 } Eleanore Myers, 1912 ) Maude Brennan, 1912 Third Place g ttlt ace Susan B. Minor, 1913 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 burbles Lillian Scmoedler, 1911 First Place Mildred Davis, 19 11 Second Place Mary Wegener, 1912 Third Place Final Score: 1911, 25 ; 1912, 2V 2 . [164] $iipl}irauir? f mx And with each step I feel my advanced head strike out a star from Heaven. 0iUctva Rosalind Corwin Case President Eleanore Myers Vice-President Louise Irene Glenn Recording Secretary Mary Mulqueen Corresponding Secretary Florence de Loiselle Lowther Treasurer Edith Moore Valet Historian [165] ;% apf)omore gear Sept. 24. College Opens Great to be back as a Sophomore. Aw- fully green and shrimpy looking set of Freshmen. ( )ct. 1. Mysteries ! Awful rough bouse. We finish the Freshmen. Forbid them to wear puffs or rats. ( )ct. 5. Two big, juicy rats extracted from a naughty Freshman ' s head. ( )ct. 15. SOPH Triumph Rats magnanimously returned to the Freshmen in a rat trap. Oct. 18. ' 1(1 and ' 12 celebrate their paper wedding anniversary. Nov. 5. The Sword of the King Our Soph Show ! The most wonderful, marvelous . . . (adjectives cut down for want of space). Xov. 20. D ' Arcy of the Gu ards 1!M1 ' s Junior Show. Good, but of course, not equal to Monsieur Beaucaire. ' 12 has cast luncheon and then goes to the play. Dec. 12. Sophomore Dance Jan. 26. Mid- Year Examinations Promotion cometh neither from the cast nor from the west, nor yet from the south. Feb. 25. Fancy Dress Party to 1911 March d. 1913 Freshman Show Good in spots, clever — for youngsters. March 18. Greek Games! ! ! ! ! ! Score is 40 to 13 in our favor. ( Highly appropriate. ) Highest score ever reached in Barnard. We are mad with joy! Yet we take our victory tactfully, gracefully. Even the Bulletin comments on it. April 8. Life is Brief April 15. Much Ado about Nothing Grand success — as usual. April 28. If I were King Given by 1909. Almost as good as I910 ' s Junior Show. May 6. Field Day Scarcely worth noting. Held commemo- rative exercises in the theatre. I don ' t know what it was to commemorate, but Mrs. Annie Nathan Mever spoke. [166] May 12. Chanticleer Party to Seniors Lots of fun and a deal of sentiment. Fighting cocks can ' t find themselves. May 1U-25. Finals I ' ve gotten over worrying about exams. May 30. Class Day Helped the Seniors all day. Most bril- liant exercises since 1903 — the faculty say so. May 31. Ivy Day Absolutely perfect. Pageant of the Col- lege Year. Comus on the campus in the evening. We take part as fairies and nymphs and beasts. Thermometer, 32 degrees. Somewhat chilly in gauze. Miss Weeks doses everybody with whisky. Tko ' we to-morrow die, this is to-day. June 1. Commencement Day Senior Banquet. Our hearts are broken. We are dissolved in tears. We serenade the Seniors. One fond kiss and then we sever, One farezvcli, alas, forever. June 2. Sophomore Luncheon Still heart broken at losing 1910. Most of us don ' t think we shall come back to college next year. [167] OLD BETTY ENTRAN ' CE OF NED Sir Michael Draytcn Priest Prince William Philippa Edwin Hentnick De Rondiniacque THE CLASS OF 1912 PRESENTS AS ITS SOPHOMORE SHOW tmfje grtuorb of tfte lUng BY HAROLD MAC DONALD NOVEMBER 5 AND 6, 1909 Cast of Character Edwin Royston C. von Wahl Sir Michael Drayton P. Hoffman Philip Drayton S. Blumgarten William, Prince of Orange C. Trees Godemar De Rondiniacque G. Borchardt Major William Bentnick E. Heller Count Schomberg M. Roof Sergeant Morsehead G. Fischer Christopher Kidd D. von Doenhoff Simon Emmet A. Evans First Conspirator L. Mordecai Second Conspirator E. Myers Philippa Drayton Mildred Hamp.urger Lady Mary Royston Florence Lowther Prudence Emmet Anne Wilson Guards, E. Booth, M. Coyle, J. KeenaN, E. Mathews, V. Rees, and H. M. Rusk. Committee Hazel Bristol Chairman Martha Emmons Elizabeth P. Gray Cornelia Dakin Mildred Hamburger Florence Van Vranken Ex-officio Rosalind Case Eleanore Myers [171] Juntnr $ mv Some think the world was made for fun and frolic, and so do I ' President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Cora Rohde Thees Eleanor Mandeville Doty Alice Craige Martin Margaret Southerton . . . Mary Muloueex [172] Junior l ear Sept. 22. Helped Freshmen Register Dear little things, how helpless they are ! Sept. 28. Opening Exercises Duller than ever Sept. 2d. Freshman Song Practice We teach the little Freshies some songs. They better the instruction. Oct. 7. Mysteries We sing as never before. Chrys dee- lighted ! View everything from the bal- cony. Very tame. Oct. 21. Junior-Freshman Wedding Mr. and Mrs. Leo Dragon united in the holy bonds of matrimony. Any date. Find lessons interesting for the first time since I entered Barnard. Nov. 11. Quality Street given by 1913 Juniors sit in the balcony and pour wrath down on the heads of the impudent Sophomores. Cheer leader saved from tragic end. Special thanks due to H. H., the assistant cheer leader. Dec. 2. Trelawney of the Wells Better than If I were King ( ?). Dec. 13. Suffrage Play Anti ' s wake up and show their spirit. Dec. 14. Extra ! Extra ! , Epoch making event in the history of Barnard! Miss Virginia Gildersleeve is made dean ! College, one smile from ear to ear, or rather from dour to door. Dec. 15. Donation of Chimes to College By Miss Grace Dodge, through Dr. W. Braun. Formal presentation of Miss Gil- dersleeve to the college by President But- ler. She speaks. College spell-bound. Applause in chapel! Dec. 16. Undergrad Mass Meeting to wel- come new Dean. She speaks. Wc sing a song in her honor. Billy speaks. We cheer. Wild enthu- siasm on all sides. Dec. P.). Party to 1910. Dec. 20. Freshman Km Party to lis Ain ' t wc neat — ha-ha — sweet — ha-ha. handsome and fair. ' Id, ' 12, and ' II you ' ll find everywhere. Dec. 22. MORTARBOARD goes to print! ! Dec. 23. St. Lukes Hospital crowded with Mortarboard editors. Special demand for brain-fever medicine to stop ravings and D. T. ' s (real ones this time). [173] i i IT. Sir William: In brief, a drunken debauch Ruse: Raphael, do you wish to break a woman ' s heart? tKrelatonep of tfje OTells g tatt£ttc£ of tfte Clas of 1912 As Voted on by Class In the Editors ' Opinion v„ u; ,t S E. Gray Prettwt • t M. Hamburger Best Looking M. Mulqueen Best D ■• i Mrs. Lowthf.r ' e se 1 Betty Junghans Ana Kraton — The Dragon Best Athlete S. Gi.eason I. Morrison Best Actress C. von Wahl T. Greene Best Dancer G. Greene A. Hallock Best All-round E. Myers Samuel Johnson — College Cat Biggest Grind C. H. Reese Our Associate Members Biggest Fusscr P. Lambert H. von Tobel Biggest Bluffer T. Greene E. Schweis Biggest Dreamer F. Rees Fastest Talker P. Poor G. Fischer Most Famous in Future E. Myers Barnard Building Fund Most Scholarly H. Hale E. Rapelye Bcst-natured H. Fitzgerald Mrs. Liggett Most Artistic I. Glenn Most Musical R. Case Cleverest E. Myers The Mortarboard Editors are too Modest to Com- Witticst C. Straiton mit Themselves Bossiest H. Hale H. Rusk Most Popular in the College M. Polhemus Most Popular in 1911 M. Polhemus Most Popular in 1912 Cora Thees Most Popular in 1913 D. Cheesman This means that the Editors agree with the class. W81W 3KHt)o m tije Jfacultp accorbms to 1912 R T , ( Prof. William T. Brewster vest LAiiea | Migs VlRG1NIA Q Gildersleeve 3-est Teacher Dr. Charles Knapp Hardest to Bluff Miss M. Huttmann Easiest to Bluff Dr. Kasner Perfect Gentleman Mr. Muller Perfect Lady Miss M. Weeks Most Learned Miss Hirst „ , , „, , Dr. Mussey Hardest Marker j Misg Hirst Easiest to Fuss Mr. A. Otto Bechert Most Interesting Lecturer Dr. Shotvvell  r . r? Prof. Brewster Most Fun - tt-. j Dr. Mussey Best Looking Mr. Muller Prettiest Miss Calhoun Most Immaculate Miss Reimer Sweetest Tempered Miss Rockwell [ 177 1 Class of 1912 [ 179 ] Gertrude S. Borchardt Bessie Bunzel Hazel Burkholder 352 E. 124th Street, New York 300 Central Park West, New York 99 Macon St., Brooklyn, N. Y. [180] Georgia A. Cerow 503 W. 175th Street, New York Rosemary Clarke Lake Mahopac, N. Y. Lena Cohen 73 W. 3()th Street, Bayonne, N. J. A simple child The rising blushes which her cheeks o ' erspread Careful and troubled about many things. That lightly draws its breath. Were opening roses in a lily ' s bed. Molly B. T. Coyle Gertrude C. Cusack Cornelia H. Dakin 457 V. 123d Street, New York Oil Putnam Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 93 Harrison Ave., Port Richmond, New York Whose sober looks her wisdom well IIow merrily it goes! implied. ' Twill murmur on a thousand years, And flow as now it flows. Much study is a weariness of the flesh [181] Mary V. Diehl West New York, N. J. Eleanor M. Doty 553 W. 14ist Street, New York Martha Emmons 25 W. 73d Street, New York The love of learning, the sequestered nooks, And all the sweet serenity of books. She will long be remembered by us, as much for her private virtues as for the commanding authority of her genius. Here is great deal of good matter lost for lack of telling. Alice B. Evans 176 W. 143d Street, New York Grace M. Fischer 138 E. 150th Street, New York Rebecca Fischel 118 E. 93d Street, New York What a spendthrift she is of her tongue! I would I were endowed with Mr. Telfer ' s flow of eloquence! The Queen of Tragedy. [182] M. Louise Fitz Peconic, Long Island. X. Y. Henri ne B. Fitzcerald Middletown, N. Y. Elinor Franklin 1G35 E. 9th Street, Brooklyn, X. Y. It ' s wiser being good than bad, It ' s safer being meek than fierce, It ' s fitter being sane than mad. Irene L. Frear 270 W. 93d Street, New York With none disposed to disagree I like them best who best like me. Weary, weary of my weight, Let me, let me drop my freight And leave the world behind! Shirley Gleason 1215 Glenwood Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. Uncertain, coy, and hard to please. And wisely teli what hour o ' day The clock doth strike, by algebra. L. Irene Glenn 365 Edgecombe Ave., New York Her pencil was striking, resistless, and grand ; Her manners were gentle, complying, and bland ; Still born to improve us in every part, Her pencil, our faces — her manner, our heart. [183] Elizabeth P. Gray 409 Fourth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. This nymph, to the destruction of man- kind. Nourished two locks, which graceful fell behind In equal curls. Genevieve Van V. Greene 403 W. 115th Street, New York Must I work? Oh, what a waste of time! Kathleen F. Gray 48 W. 167th Street, New York A little pot that soon boils over. May S. Green wold 33 Wall Street, New York Her hair was thick, with many a curl That clustered ' round her head. Grace B. Green Louisville, Kentucky And danced away with down upon your feet. A. Dorothy Griffin 372 Manhattan Ave., New York Her golden locks she roundly did uptie. [184] Harriet F. Hale 4ST Halsey Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. A voice that in the distance far away Wakens the slumbering ages. Edith F. Hardy 153 E. 150th Street, New York Anna C. Hallock 36 E. G5th Street, New York Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul. Mildred V. Hamburger 151 W. 140th Street, New York A little rosebud set with wilful thorns. Florence L. Hazel Marion Heilprin 10 Terrace Ave., White Plains, N. Y. 4 7 W. 120th Street, New York [185] I 186] Ernestine C. Isabel Broadway and 113th St., New York With modest eyes downcast. She comes — she ' s here — she ' s passed. Frieda C. Jud 119 Franklin St., Jersey City, N. J. One who would peep and botanize. Irene G. Johnson 10 S. 14th Ave, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Upon this weary laden world. How soft the seal of silence falls. Bertha A. Junghans 871 St. Nicholas Ave., New York With goodly grace and comely personage. Elizabeth T. Jones 1 Midland Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Who loved simple truth and steadfast honesty. Caroline Kahn 303 Dean St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Beautiful eyes — she had such beautiful eyes ! [ 187 ] Irene D. Keenan 70 Third Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Virginia K. King 28 Chestnut Lane, New Rochelle, X. Y. Isabel G. Koss 628 West End Ave., New York A certain tender gloom o ' erspread her face A cat may look at a King. Stiff in opinions, always in t lie wrong. Pensive, not sad; in thought involved, not dark. Margaret Kutner Olga V. Lacey Paula C. Lambert 714 W. 180th Street, New York 214 E. 51st Street, New York 606 W. 135th Street, New York Liberty, equality, and fraternity. Principle is ever my motto, nut expediency. A mighty huntress, and her prey was .man [188] Lucy E. Landru 365 Park Ave., Paterson, N. J. Frances R. Latzke 501 W. 111th Street, New York Esther Lewontin 458 Third Avenue, New York Everything by starts, anil nothing long. Any kind of villainy came natural to me. Diligence is the mother of good luck. [189] 5.Ni; Lillian MacDonald Summer Ave., Newark, Jennie MacKay X. J. Prescott Ave., Inwood-on-Hudson, New York Alice C. Martin 43 Astor Place, Jersey City, N. J. Wee sleekit eoweri tim ' rous beastie. You ' re very funny off, but on the stage you are enough to make a cat weep! Rich in saving common sense. [190] Alma I. Misch 923 Trinity Ave., New York LUC1LE Q. MORDECA] 119 W. L05th Street, New York Edith M. Morris 1477 Webster Ave., New York Who never did a foolish thins, Nor ever said a wise one. I never dare to write as funny as I can. At least we ' ll die with harness on our backs. Isabelle Morrison 309 V. 86th Stree t, New Yorl Mary Mulqueen 888 Park Ave., New York Eleanore Myers 411 W. 115th Street, New Yorl 3f m E ' en the light harebell raised its head, Elastic from her airy tread. We love thee for thy beauty, but ' tis not Correct old time and regulate the sun. for that alone. [191] Margaret J. Naumburg 137 W. 74th Street, New York So many worlds, so much to do, So little done, such things to be. Louise Nyitray 983 Lexington Ave., New York For all I did. I did but as I ought. All Eleanor E. Neu 137 Lynch Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. To beguile many and be beguiled by one. Marjorie O ' Connell 506 W. 179th Street, New York the world ' s queer save thee and me, friend, and thee ' s a bit queer. ISABELLE F. NOYES 324 Westchester Ave., Portchester, New York. Nowhere so busy a girl as she there was, Nowhere so busy a girl as she there nas. Paula F. Oellrich 48 Cambridge St., East Orange, N. J. 1 never knew so young a body with so old a head. [ 192 1 Margaret O ' Rourke 19 Lake Street, White Plains, N. V. Grace M. Pearson Home Park, New Rochelle, X. Y. Helen E. Phillips 1 East 100th Street, New York Silence is deep as Eternity, Speech is as shallow as Time. Helen C. Plummer Cranford, X. J. 1 scarcely understand my own intent. But silkworm like, so long within have vi ought That 1 am lost in my own web of thought. Let us do it legitimately — with dignity. Pamela Poor 9 West 9th Street, New York To all her works virtue was ever guide. Retiring from the popular noise, I seek this unfrequented place to find some Emma L. Rapelve 75 Forest Parkway, Forest Park, New York Let high birth triumph! What can be more great ? [193] Elizabeth P. Ready Elizabeth Reardon Florence du B. Rees 43 Kensington Ave., Jersey City 316 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 611 W. 110th Street, New York City warrant her heart-whole. No, say nothing without compelled to. And ' tis my faith that every flower Enjoys the air it hreathes! Vera M. Rees Westernville, X. Y. C. Hildegarde Reese 478 W. 145th St., New York City Ethel S. Richardson 620 W. 115th Street, New York City Some listened, pi rnaps, at all. but never talked My life is one demned horrid grind. Holds the eel of science by the tail. [194] Frances E. Rogers Babylon, Lursj Island Grace J. Rogers 1337 Clinton Ave, New York City Hester M. Rusk St. Joseph, .Missouri [195] Abbie Smith Virginia Smith Margaret Southerton 114 S. 7th Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 527 Riverside Drive, New York City 327 Sterling P. ace, Brooklyn We only know she came and went. Oh, she was so utterly utter Tho I am not splenitive and rash, She couldn ' t eat plain bread and butter, yet have I something in me dangerous. But a nibble she ' d take At a wafer of cake, And the wing of a quail for her supper. [196] - Dorothy A. Spear Elizabeth M. Stack Beatrice C. Stegman 850 Tinton Ave., New York City 324 Mary Street, Utica, N. Y. 1041 Bloomfield St., Hoboken, N. J. Lillie E. Stein Beatrice E. Stenbuck Chrystene Straiton 12 W. 90th St., New York City 205 Franklin Ave., Brooklyn 435 W. 123d St., New York City You ' re a warm-hearted woman, Lillie, but Why dart those sparks of fury from thine Our chestnut burr, prickly without, but you ' re a sieve. eyes? sweet and true within. [197] Florence Van Vranken 54 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn Dorothea von Doenhoff 167 E. 95th St., New York City Henriette von Tobel Lewistown, Montana You have deserved high commendation, true applause and love. She is just a little child, very badly spoiled. A wise physician skilled our wounds to heal. Is more than armies to the common weal. [198] Constance W. von Wahl 22 E. 120th St.. New York City Come on, come on, this rock shall fly from its firm base as soon as I. Margaret W. Watson 258 W. 93d St., New York City Give me worship and quietness. I like it better than a dangerous honor. Alva F. Walla nder 168 Park Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. The door sprung open and emitted one long-drawn girl. Amy Weaver 25 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn There are just two sorts of things I never worry about — the things I can ' t help and those I can. Catharine M. Walther 201 X. High St., Mt. Vernon, N. Music in my heart I bore. Lucille Weil 303 W. 100th St., New York A lazy, lolling sort. [199 | Eleanor E. Wigand Anne S. Wilson Monroe Ave., Arrochar, Staten Island 107 Spruce St., Newark, N. J. Margaret E. M. Wood 162 Cleveland St., Brooklyn x n athlete, would you believe it? Never elated when one man ' s oppressed, Never dejected while another ' s blest. Her eyes are stars of twilight fair; Like twilight ' s, too. her dusky hair. J. Estelle Woodruff 344 Gregory Ave., Passaic, N. J. Elsa P. Wunderlich Tarrytown, N. Y. Edna E. Ziegler 37 Maple St., Richmond Hill, L. I. h, the vanity of these men! If they did not commend us, we were not handsome! For well she means, but little can say. Her lively looks a sprightly mind disclose, Quick as her eyes. Mildred Weiner 250 W. 91st Street, New York [ 200 ] S3s octate Jlemkr ' Tis better to have come and left, than never to have come at all Helen Black Maude M. Brennan Hazel Bristol Lyon 49 Wyckoff Ave., Richmond Hill, 630 East 13th St., Flatbush, N. Y. 440 Riverside Drive, New Yorl Long Island Susan Leerburger 468 Riverside Drive New York Mary D. Stine 2394 Jerome Avenue New York Mary Wegener 546 West 113th Street New York Pearl Ralph Andover, Mass. r IN M EMORI AM Clfrtba oeber [ 201 ] fe toho, as strangers, entereb in our gate, 1 o bieto totth us our toonbrous College £anb,— |9e toho, our toaps anb secrets, Small anb great, Wit ) spmpathp fjabe Sought to unberstanb,— tKo us, as noto our merrp journep enbs, §9e are no more as strangers, but as frtenbs. ffour footsteps toe babe leb totth eager care, Sllong the paths toe trabel bap bp bap, through all our little countrp, bright anb fair,— m lanb of l outh anb notolebge, — toorfe anb plap; !Unb noto toe senb pou fortb toith glabbeneb heart, — Put, frienbs, one boon toe crabe before toe part. 3m that great toorlb tottfjout tobere noto pe go, !Hll, toe, as Strangers, soon must take our place, !Hnb all its turns anb bp toaps tobich pe fenoto, perhaps for us toil! bear no frtenblp face. ikfytn, as toe leb pou here, toitb fetnblp hanb, H boto us tbe toonbers of that 0uttv Hanb. §e dragon tnbbetf) pe Stranger Jfaretoell W hen the Mortarboard at last is out of press, More or less, And the College fairly chortles in its glee, Just to see All the puns and witticisms that are stored In its Board, Then will come a grisly tragedy I hate To relate ! Those Ingredients that labored day and night, ( With a fight Over everything and nothing all the time ! ) With sublime Resignation deep imprinted on each face, You will trace In a plight almost too fearful, gruesome, for Me to draw ( r ) . Then behold this thing of horror — unjust fate Of the great! See the Editors, a persecuted troop, In the soup ! [ 204 1 ZElje 1912 jWortartoarb admotolebgment£ The Board of Editors wishes to express its extreme gratitude to the following, for kind and intelligent assistance: For constributions toward illustrating the book : Florence Rees, Elizabeth Gray, Margaret Watson, Susan Leerburger, Constance von Wahl, Genevieve Greene, Edna Booth, Gretchen Walther, Dorothea von Doenhoff ; The Art Editor feels especially grateful. For co-operation in obtaining advertisements : Edna Booth, Dorothea von Doenhoff, Har- riet Hale, Carolyn Kahn, Isabel MacDon- ald, Alary Mulqueen, May Scully, Virginia Smith, Florence Van Vranken, Constance von Wahl, Lillie Stein; the Business Man- ager acknowledges with thanks. For Snap-Shots : Harriet Hale, Kutner. Bessie Bunzel, Margaret Moreover : The Editor-in-Chief heartily thanks Lillie E. Stein for her careful and laborious read- ing of the proof sheets, and for her con- stant encouragement in moments of black despair. Also: The Grind Editor (Dorothy Spear) thanks the Misses Anonymous for slams on their friends and enemies. Also : Pauline Calm wishes to express her grati- tude for the extreme efficiency and promp- titude of Mr. Foley, 1912 ' s offeecial pho- tographer. Also : The Whole Board heartily thanks the fol- lowing for advice, generously given and rarely accepted : Mrs. Myers, Mrs. Morris, Mrs. Glenn, Mrs. Mordecai, Mrs. Dakin, Mrs. Spear, Mrs. Straiton, Mrs. Cahn, Mrs. Naumburg, Mrs. Thees, Mrs. Doty, and the Misses Kate Doty, Harriet Fox and Kate Tie- mann. Also: Special thanks are extended to Elsie Plant, 1910, for advice concerning the distribu- tion of Miss Gildersleeve material through- out the book. Readers arc requested to notice that the 1912 Mortarboard was compiled entirely — with the exception of superfluous advice — by the Class of 11)12. T H A V O O How doth the busy rushing bee? Sometimes it stings. ESTABLISHED 1818 Polo Ulsters, English Blazers, Angora 1wfa( rFMf and Shet l an d Knitted Garments, Travel- ntlpmnia yurnisi ijii ing Rugs, Motor Clothing, Liveries, BROADWAY COR. TWENTY- SECOND 5T NE.W YORK. Trunks, Bags. Novelties from the West End London Shops. Clothing, Furnish- ings, Hats and Shoes for Men and Boys. Send for Illustrated Catalogue EIMER AND AMEND MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS OF (Elje mtrala ano (Eljemtral Apparatus 205-207-209 and 211 THIRD AVENUE, NEW YORK Corner 18th Street ESTABLISHED 1851 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. [ 206 ] ALL OF THE ENGRAVINGS IN THIS BOOK as well as those in the 1911 Columbian are productions of the Hagoptatt 6ngxatimg Company 39 tot tEtoenttetf) Street, J2eto §orfe Cttp Illustrators and Engravers for College Annuals [ 207 1 $1i700 rAcT ° RY J Full Equipment Highest Proven ° Quality DETROIT-CADILLAC MOTOR CAR CO 1819-21 BROADWAY ISJ . V. CITY . . INCLIS M.UPPERCU NEWARK. N.J. pro.ocnt BROOKLYN, N.V. 23Z MAL5EY ST. _ 136 UVINOSTON ST. DESIGNERS MAKERS THOMPSON WIGG 546 Fifth Avenue New York COLLEGE, CLASS AND SOCIETY EMBLEMS, FRATERNITY JEWELS, MEDALS, CUPS, TROPHIES, RINGS, DESIGNED AND EXECUTED. STATIONERY AND ENGRAVING, INVITATIONS, BOOKLETS AND DANCE PROGRAMMES, ETC. WHAT WE MAKE IS WELL MADE JEWELERS STATIONERS Artists ' Materials WINSOR NEWTON What a GOOD BRUSH Means The more you work with it the more you like it. You can do better work and it lasts longer than a poor one — twenty times longer. We make only the best and they cost no more. So see that Winsor Newton ' s name is on Your Brushes. Artists ' Oil and Water Colors— The World ' s Standard and Ours OIL COLORS CANVAS OF ALL KINDS WATER COLORS OIL COLOR BRUSHES WATER COLOR BRUSHES Books on Jtrt by Mail 30 cents each Illustration and Monochrome Boards 20x30, 22x30, 30x40, thick and thin. Three New Oil and Water Colors ( RED Brilliancy SPECTRUM YELLOW Is Their ( VIOLET Birthright ICHNEUMON HAIR BRUSHES for OIL and WATER Workers New catalogue nmv out— prices cents WINSOR NEWTON, 298 Broadway, N.Y. Telephone, 2588 Murray Hill GEORGETTE HATS FOR COLLEGE GIRLS MLLE. BUTLER Smporteb JtltUmerp 47 WEST 37th STREET Near Fifth Avenue TAILORED HATS, $5 to $15. HATS REMODELED [ 208 ] Here ' s a Good Name to Remember- CHOCOLATES They are making a reputation for purity and delicious flavor second to none. $1.00 - 80c - 60c Per Pound At All the Better Stores The PIRIKA CHOCOLATE CO. 972 Dean St. - Brooklyn, N. Y. The Aristocrats of the Candy World The Allendale 808 West End Avenue Northeast corner 99th Street The Acme of Apartment House Construction Absolutely Fireproof 1 2 Stories 9-10-11 Rooms with 3 and 4 Baths Superior Service Apply to Renting Agent on Premises [20 F. W. DEVOE CO. ' S ARTISTS ' TUBE COLORS Canvas Academy Boards, Fine Brushes for Oil and Water-Color Painting, 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 TEACHERS COLLEGE Columbia University NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER President JAMES E. RUSSELL Dean Teachers College represents an investment of five million dollars for the study of education and the training of teachers. There are fifty departments, with one hundred and fifty officers of instruction; two schools of observation and practice, with seventy-five instructors and 1 300 pupils; an educational library surpassed only by those of Leipzig and Paris; along with the facilities of all other parts of the university. Descriptive circular will be sent upon application [210] ffl I deal II Fountain Pen Endorsed by the Millions Now using them the world over It is the perfect pocket necessity of every free and able thinker. For the rapid and continuous transmission of thought into writ- ing. Never misses a mark and will serve for a lifetime —ask any cvnerof one. The best dealers everywhere sell them. 6 SCHOOL ST., BOSTON 209 STATE ST. , CHICAGO 13fe ST JAMES ST., MONTREAL 1AZ MARKET ST , SAN FRANCl SCO 12 GOLDEN LANE , LONDON, EC Greeting to 19U Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume CHARTERED IN 1902 Makers of CAPS, GOWNS AND HOODS to the American Colleges and Universities; to Barnard, Columbia, Normal College, Princeton, Bryn Mawr, Wellesley, Mt. Holyoke, Harvard, Yale, University of Chicago, Leland Stanford and the others. Illustrated bulletin, samples, etc., upon request RICH GOWNS FOR PULPIT AND BENCH COTRELL LEONARD ALBANY, N. Y. PETER THOMSON Naval and Merchant Tailor Boys ' and Misses ' Sailor Suits a Specialty Ladies ' Tailor Made Suits Riding Habits. Boys ' and Young Men ' s Norfolk, Sack and Tuxedo Suits. MEN ' S DEP ' T, 2nd FLOOR M A.DE-TO-ORDER ONLY NO AGENCIES 1118 Walnut St. PHILADELPHIA 14-16 W. 33rd St. NEW YORK [ 211 1 WARNING! ALL 44 Rain Coats HAVE THIS REGIST ERED RADE MARK STAMPED ON THE INSIDE A N I) T H I S SILK LABLE IS SEWED A ' : THE COLLAI OR ELSE WHERE None genuine without them They Contain no Rubber will not overheat or cause perspiration; have no disagreeable odor. They are a thorough protection from Wind, Rain, Snow, Fog or Dampness of any kind. For sale by Reliable Dealers in Men ' s, Women ' s and Children ' s Clothing. Telephone 946 Murray Hill Miss A. E. Rock 23 West 38th Street Near Fifth Avenue New York City Evening and Afternoon Gowns, Tailor Suits [Ready-to-wear] Wraps, Motor Coats, Negligees, and Waists for Ladies and Misses Cotton Dresses from $12.50 up TURNEY Milliners and Importers 9 EAvST 35th STREET, Near 5th Avneue 18 WEST 33d STREET, Opposite Waldorf NEW YORK Distinctive Styles in Hats FOR EVERY OCCASION FROM $10 UP A Cordial invitation is extended to the College Girls and their Relatives C OU8IN8 Style and Workman- ship Are Vital Points $ 4 and $ 5 There is much footwear for women offered at or near the price we ask. Yet, unless you get styles, leathers and workmanship such as we offer, you may fall short of fullest satisfaction and comf( irt. That you see our footwear and compare it is all we ask, and all you will need to be convinced. COUSINS Bond St. Corner BROOKLYN 498 Fulton St. [ 212 ] MME. NACE Importer of Millinery is a specialist in Young Ladies ' Hats, suitable for garden parties and commencement times at $15.00. Also Tailored or the light pretty hats for lingerie frocks. TELEPHONE, BRYANT 3354 15 WEST 45th STREET NEW YORK CITY Girls, Try K )t Cosep for Luncheon and Tea. Everything home - made and dainty. Justthe place to get cake, salads and sand- wiches for the col- lege girls ' spreads. 19 East GHjtrt0-Il?trii g t. Npiu f nrk Phone, Madison Square, 2442 Home-Made Cake a Specialty Alma B. Conrey ' JZT u.f ' Z J Z A SAYING OF A SHARK I never saw a little D — In fact I never met one — And of this much I ' m very sure, I ' d rather see than get one. HOTEL MAJESTIC West 72nd Street at Central Park Superior Facilities for Balls, Banquets and all Social Functions [213] HYGEIA The Standard for over a quarter of a century. The purest water in the world. HYGEIA DISTILLED WATER CO. 349-359 West 12th Street NEW YORK Telephone, 101 Chelsea. A. G. SPALDING BROS. The Spalding Trade-Mark is known throughout the world as a Guarantee of Quality 126-128 NASSAU STREET are the Largest Manufacturers in the World of Official Equipment For all Athletic Sports and Pastimes IF YOU are interested in Athletic Sport you should have a copy of the Spalding Catalogue. It ' s a complete encyclopedia of What ' s New in Sport and is sent free on request. A. G. SPALDING BROS. 29-33 NEW YORK WEST 42nd STREET [214] Dr. Lyon ' s PERFECT Tooth Powder for clean, white, beautiful teeth and a pure and fragrant breath. Used by people of refinement in every part of the world where the use of a tooth brush is known for nearly half a century atlte Sip Ian Winkle Sea g ljnp 17 Wt8t 37tf) Street tE e peasant Sitcfjen M bit of 0lb«orlb quamtnesfsi close to 5tf) gtoenue iUaulr b ' Bfutt ICuudtmn 50 rente alsn iCmtrimnt a la (Uartr H w (Urtmulrt 511 (ErntH Saul? ii ' ntr ltnn r T5 (Ernta special ates; for College Huncfjeons; A NEW TOILET SOAP For the Toilet or Bath CLEANS QUICKLY RINSES EASILY GRETA CREME POWDERED TOILET SOAP PRICE 15 CENTS FIVE CENT, TRIAL SIZE, Sent on receipt of four cents to cover Postage. FOR SALE AT ALL DRUGGISTS An assortment of Heart Shaped Deliciously Flavored 1 Sweets 30 cents per Box SWEET HEARTS On Sale Everywhere The solid satisfaction of guaranteeing gloves is one of the strong links that binds our customers to us. Our glove department courts investiga- tion. It is the department for close buyers. Cenlemcri Gloves are leaders with us because time and tests have proven them to be the most depend- able uf all gloves. Our as- sortment includes the newest styles and shades, as well as the staple black and white. Don ' t miss visiting the glove counter the next time you come in. [215] E. F. Foley ' s Fifth Avenue Studio OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS 164 FIFTH AVENUE Between 21st 22nd Streets Tel. Gramercy 5995 NEW YORK S. Trimmer Sons BEST GRADES OF COAL Pockets and Alain Office 138th Street and Harlem River [ Decorate your Ceilings and Walls FOX ' S Any Shade Desired Makes Beautiful Water Color Effects Artistic, Sanitary, Durable, Inexpensive Known to All Painters Used in many of the Ceilings and Walls of Columbia University, St. Agatha ' s School, Union Theological Seminary, Apthorpe Apartments, Ritz Carlton Hotel. M. EWING FOX CO. Manufacturers Calcimines and Water Paints HORT ON ' S ICE CREAM DEPOTS: 142 WEST 125th ST. 110 EAST 125th ST. NEW YORK ] jBtattonal CatJjetiral Jjcfjool FOR GIRLS Jfflount t. Lilian, IStafjington, B. C. Standing within the Cathedral Close of St. Peter and St. Paul I A 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 Schermerhorn Teachers ' Agency 353 Fifth Avenue New York Charles W. Mulford, Prop. A superior agency for superior people. ' Free registration to Barnard College graduates. American anb jforetgn Teachers ' Agency Supplies Colleges, Schools, and Families with Professors, Teachers, Tutors and Govern- esses, resident or visiting, American or Foreign. Parents aided in choice of schools. : : Mrs. M. J. Young-Fulton 23 Union Square, New York Alcuin Preparatory School Kindergarten through High School llh West Eighty-sixth Street New York City Annex the World to Your Home with the AIROPLANE Stereopticon Complete with Schwan Light $30.00 Entitles you to interchangeable rental service of 250 sets of Travelogue Slides with manuscripts. The new Schwan IAglit will fit any stereopticon and is attach- able to any incandescent electric light socket. It is furnished from 250 to 1,000 candle power. It needs no manipulation. Send for catalog. CHAS. BESELER CO. 110 East 23rd Street New York City [217] THE ARTEMISIA Most exclusive and daintiest Tea Room in New York, welcomes its patrons at 3 West 38th Street SPECIAL LUNCHEON DISHES AFTERNO ON CLUB TEA, 50 CENTS Phone, 2674 Murray Hill AHTISTIC FLORAL DECORATIONS I ). J. PAPPAS 2751 BROADWAY Near 106th St. Telephone 1364: Riverside NEW YORK ON A PLANE OF ITS OWN FREE DEVELOPING OF KODAK FILMS WHEN WE HAVE ORDERS FOR THE PRINTING Mail Orders Promptly Attended to College Pennants with Emblems in Colors 50, 100, 150 mailed postpaid Curtiss Photographic Supply Co. 235-237 Lexington Ave., s. E. Cor. 34th St. New York TRADE MASK -Onyx Hosiery AT ALL SHOPS Lord Taylor WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS OSCAR F. BERNNER Theatrical and Street Wig Maker Manufacturer and Dealer in GREASE PAINTS, POWDERS, ROUGES, ETC. 105 West 47th Street Bet. Broadway and Sixth Ave. NEW YORK Telephone 2631 Bryant Wigs and Beards to Hire. Amateur Performance. Tableaux Make Up Telephone. 315 Murray Him. Coyle Deutschmann 119 West 37th Street, near Broadway NEW YORK Wigs, Toupees, Face Paints, Etc. Amateurs Made Up for Entertainments CARL A. WUSTL Costumer Costumes for Theatricals, Old Folks Concerts Tableaux, Dickens Parties, Etc. 40 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK Between 16th and 17th Streets TELEPHONE, STUYVESANT 1623 Estahlished 1889 Telephone 4919 Bryant WILLIAM C. TODT PRACTICAL, Wig Maker and Make - up Artist Please take notice of my Specialty STREET WIGS AND TOUPEES ALL HAIR WORK NEATLY DONE 100 West 40th Street, New York City CORNER SIXTH AVENUE ALL ORDERS PERSONALLY ATTENDED TO [ 18 ] AN EXTRA-CURRICULAR COURSE Mortarboard 19-12. First Semester — Advanced Eng- lish Composition, Prof. Myers; Applied Art, Dr. Glenn; Psychology of Advertising, Prof. Morris. Monday and Friday at 2. Outside reading ad libitum, frequent discussions and reports. 2 points. Second Semester — Economics of Distribution, Prof. Morris and Assistants. Time — All the time, One point — to get the money. DITSON Wonder Book No. 3 . N eighty page volume printed and distributed in the in- terest of all lovers of Mandolins, Mandolas. Band- urrias. Guitars and Banjos. It is beautifully illustrated with col- ored plates and describes Ditson Empire Mandolins. Ditson Empire Guitars and Cole Banjos, The most perfect instrument of their class manufactured today. MAILED FREE ON REQUEST CHARLES H. DITSON CO. SPECIALTIES FROM MAISON FEMINA Nine East Thirty-third Street Half Block East of Waldorf Gowns for Debutantes (Afternoon and Evening Wear). . .$40.00 and up Waists (Lingerie and Chiffon) 5.00 and up Lingerie Combinations 3.50 and up Silk Hosiery, all colors and sizes at 1 .45 Negligees 5.00 and up Silk Undervests 2.00 and up Breakfast Caps (No two alike) 3.00 to $15 Hat Pins 50 to $3 NOVELTIES The Surgical Assistant (second edition) BY WALTER M. BRICKNER, B.S..M.D. Asst. Adjunct Surgeon, Mount Sinai Hospital; Surgeon to Mount Sinai Hospital Dispensary, New York The Best Work Published for THOSE INTERESTED IN NURSING The only book that is devoted to the methods and duties of those who assist the surgeon It is replete with definite instructions, useful hints and valuable wrinkles not elsewhere set down in print. It details: The General Conduct of the Assistant; the Interne; Assistance at Dressings. Fracture Reductions, etc. Preparation of an Operating Room. The Technic of Asepsis in all its Practical Hearings. Preparation of the Patient. The Anesthetist. Preservation and Sterilization of Instruments and Accessories. Formulas and Methods of Surgical Sterilization. How to Hand Instruments. Technics of Assistance in the Various Operative Manipulations. Immediate Afrer-Care of the Patient. All the important Operations, Step by Step, from the Assistant ' s Standpoint. Fo rmulae of Solutions, etc. Instruments and Accessories (and their preparation) for each operation, etc. Bound in Cloth, 363 Pages. Price, $2.00 Postpaid 123 Original Illustrations INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SURGERY CO. Medical Publishers 100 William Street New York, U. S. A. HOODS ALL DEGREES COX SONS VINING 262 Fourth Ave., New York BUYING OF TAYLOR means meritorious merchandise, agreeable service, satisfaction ONLY THE BEST athletic supplies since 1897 — that ' s our record Makers of MIDDY BLOUSES ALEX TAYLOR CO. ATHLETIC SPECIALISTS 16 E. 42d Street, Opp. Hotel Manhattan [219] I wonder why the Mortarboard Was such an awful bore — To such ambitious heights it soared. I wonder why the Mortar bored Each reader less or more — All said the Mortarboard board bored, I wonder why the Mortarboard Was such an awful bore. College Hoofe istore A. G. SEILER, Prop. New and Second - Hand Books, Stationery and College Novelties Students ' Discounts Allowed Our Prices the Lowest 1224 gmgterbam iHbenue, Jg. §. C. Near 120th Street DRAWING INKS ETERNAL WRITING INKS ENCROSSINC INK TAURINE MUCILAGE PHOTO MOUNTER PASTE DRAWING BOARD PASTE LIQUID PASTE OFFICE PASTE VEGETABLE CLUE, ETC. ARE the FINEST and BEST GOODS of THEIR Emancipate yourself from the use of corrosive and ill-smelling inks and adhesives and adopt the Higginx Inks and Adheslves. They will be a revelation to you; they are so sweet, clean and well put up, and withal so efficient. AT DEALERS GENERALLY CHAS. M. HIGGINS CO. Mfrs. BRANCHES: Chicago, London. 271 Ninth St.. BROOKLYN, N. Y. •New lurk ■Parts Jflme. Jlennett iHUUnrrn ADstrtcIj EDIumeB Curlings, Cleaning ano sDprinij a Sperialtp 211 m. I02nb Street, (finr. Uroafnuaij WM. H. CHRISTIAN QUICK PRINTING Rubber S tamp£, Cngratring 260 WEST 125th ST. Telephone 4113 Morningside THE BUSINESS OF The Columbia University Press Bookstore EXTENDS FROM FRANCE TO JAPAN Mail Orders Filled Promptly Libraries and Reading Clubs Supplied LEMCKE BUECHNER West Hall Broadway, near 1 1 7th Street [ 220] CHARLES FRIEDGEN AT YOUR SERVICE! Cf)emi£t antr ®rugst£t MORNINGSIDE 630 1220 Amsterdam Avenue Dodge ' s Quality Laundry Corner l Uth btreet uiy Cleaning, oiearn Launuci ing aiiu 1101 Amsterdam Avenue Fancy Dyeing Corner 114th Street 1234 Amsterdam Avenue, New York NEW YORK Our Wagons Now Cover West Side, Washing- ton Heights to 42nd Street THE COLLEGE Hairdressing and Manicuring Shop 1235 AMSTERDAM AVENUE Southeast Corner 121st Street NEW YORK Hairdressing, 50 cts. Scalp Treatment, 50 cts. Shampooing, 50 cts. Facial Massage, 50 cts. Manicuring, 25 cts. HAIR DYEING, BLEACHING, SINGEING BY EXPERTS. Complimentary FIRE LIGHTNING TO BUYERS OF FIRE INSURANCE If you purchase a bond, take a mortgage, or accept a note, you investigate the amount as well as the quality of the security back of it. An Insurance Policy is a promise to pay. Back of a policy of THE HOME INSURANCE COMPANY are total Assets of over twenty-seven million dollars and a surplus to policv holders of over fifteen millions. THE HOME has (January 1st, 1910 Statement) over $2.29 assets for each $1.00 of its liabilities and obligations, — furnishing an unexcelled margin of safety. Is not that the sort of security you want— especially when it costs no more ? MAKE ASSURANCE DOUBLY SURE. TOURISTS AUTOMOBILE GEORGE M. CLARK Established 1870 HARTWELL A. WILKINS CLARK WILKINS DEALERS IN KINDLING WOOD ELEVENTH AVENUE, COR. WEST 24th STREET and FOOT OF EAST 128th STREET New York We deal in Wood exclusively and deliver at residences in any part of the City; putting away in Cellars without extra charge. Cargoes furnished of Virginia pine, oak and hickory. 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. [232] You are advised to re-read this entire Mortarboard, Jrom cover to cover including the advertising section, notic- ing details. [ 223 ]
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