Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1919
Page 1 of 204
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 204 of the 1919 volume:
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Kleinert Rubber Co., 719-727 Broadway, New York Canadian Office: 84 Wellington Street West, Toronto Makers of Dress Shields, Rubber Sheeting, Baby Pants, Bathing Caps, etc. Copyright, 1918 Bertha Halle Mann m mm tolled [6] Acknowledgments 170 Advertisements 1,2,3,177 Alumnae Association 25 Athletics (i9-81 A. A. Officers 70 Snapshots 71 Varsity Basketball Team 72 Varsity Swimming Team 73 Varsity Baseball Team 74 1919 Basketball Team 75 Tennis Tournament 7(i Captainball 7(i Tennis Snapshots 77 Field Day 78 Field Dav Snapshots 79 A. A. Members 80-81 Beak Editors 66-67 Brooks Hall 40-41 Bulletin Editoks 04-65 Class of 1918 30-32 Class of 1919 125-169 Class of 1920 33-36 Class of 1921 37-39 Clubs 43-62 La Societe Francaise 44 Deutscher Kreis 45 English Club 46 Mathematics Club 47 Classical Club 48 Glee Club 49 Botany Club 50 Geology Club Dance Club Italian Club Outdoor Club Press Club Journalism Club Socialist Club Debating Club R. P. O. Young Women ' s Christian Community Service Ass ' n Newman Club Silver Bay Club Athletic Association Wigs and Cues Convocation Copyright Cottage Dormitory Dedication Directory of Students Dramatics Wigs and Cues Members Wigs and Cues Directors The Rising of the Moon David Garrick Home-made Plays Faculty Faculty Snapshots Farm Finger Prints Greek Games l ' AGE page 51 Freshman Year 94-97 52 Sophomore Year 98-100 53 Lyrics 101 53 Leaf from Miss Barnard ' s Note- 54 book 68 54 Mortarboard Editors 10-11 55 Mysteries 103 55 Odes to Olympus 1 12-113 58 Officers of Administration 24 Vss ' n 59 ( Officers of the University 23 60 Our History 125-169 61 Freshman Year 126-128 62 Sophomore Year 129-134 69-81 Junior Year 135 83-91 Cubist Poems 136-137 106-107 Snapshots 138-139 4 Class Picture 140-141 40-41 8-9 Press Comments 142 Phi Kappa Beta 143 Class Portraits 145-169 171-176 Plaintive Poems 82 83-91 Phi Beta Kappa 124 84 85-87 86 88-90 Rime of the Deluded Soph ' more 63 Senior Week 115-124 Student ' s Hai.i. 6, 110-111 91 Sing Song 104 13-21 They ' ll None of Them hi: Missed 42 1 RUSTEES 12 26-27 Undergraduate Association 28-29 108-109 Views of the College 105 114 War Relief 56-57 93-102 With the College Wits 92 [7] TO MISS BIRD LARSON IN SINCERE APPRECIATION OF HER INTEREST IN 1919 WE DEDICATE THIS OUR CLASS BOOK. [10] U U L) 1 The Board of Mortarboard Bertha H. Manx β Editor-in-Chief Adele L. Ai.fke β Assistant Editor-in-Chief Lenore K. Guinzburg Vera V. Klopman Rose Le Vino ASSOCIATE EDITORS M. Pamela Thomas Constant Lambert β ex-officio Vivian Tappan β ex-officio Ruth L. Lewv ART EDITORS Dorothy C. Birdseve BUSINESS BOARD M. Armitage Ogden β Business Manager ASSISTANTS Eleanor Curnow Ruth Marshal] Marie V. Muhlfeld Silas B. Browned, LL.D. Mrs. Joseph H. Choate Mrs. Alfred Meyer George A. Plimpton Mrs. James Talcott Mrs. Henry Fairfield Osborn Mrs. A. A. Anderson Edward W. Sheldon Frederic B. Jennings Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D.. Jur.D.. LL.D. (Cantab.), D. Litt. (Oxon.). Albert G. Milbank Miss Clara B. Spenee Howard Townscnd Mrs. (iino C. Speranza John G. Milburn Miss Charlotte S. Baker Pierre Jay Mrs. Charles Cary Rumsey Mrs. Ogden Mills Reid Mrs. Caroline B. Crocker Mrs. George McAneny Alumnae Trustee, 1915-1919.] [ 12] The Faculty President NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER A.B., Columbia, 1882; A.M., 1883; Ph.D., 1884; LL.D., Syracuse, 1898; Tulane, 1901; Johns Hopkins, Princeton, Yale, and University of Pennsylvania, 1902; Chicago, 1903; Manchester and St. Andrews, 1905; Cambridge, 1907; William ' s, 1908; Harvard and Dartmouth, 1909; Brown, 191 1; Toronto, 1915; Wesleyan, 1916; J.U.D., Breslau, 1911; D. Litt, Oxford, 1905; Officer de la Legion D ' Honneur, 1906 ; Commandeur, 1912; Commander of the Red Eagle (Prussia), 1910; Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, 1911; Trustee of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; President of the Association for International Conciliation (Ameri- can Branch); 1885, Assistant in Philosophy; 1887, Tutor; 1888, also Lecturer on History and Institutes of Education; 1889, Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, Ethics and Psychology; 1890, Professor of same, also Lecturer on Education; 1895, Professor of Philosophy and Educa- tion; 1890, Dean of Faculty of Philosophy; 1900 and 1901, Director of Summer Session; 1902, President of the University. A man he was, to all the country dear. VIRGINIA C ' ROCIIERON GILDERSLEEVE Dean and Professor of English A.B., 1899; A.M., Columbia, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia, 1908; LL.D., Rutgers, 1916; Assistant, Barnard College, 1900-1903; Tutor, 1903-1907; Lecturer, 1908-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910-1911; Dean and Professor, 1911-. Phi Beta Kappa. We needs must love the highest when we see it. [ I ] WILLI AM TEN X EY BREWSTER Provost and Professor of English A.B., Harvard College, 1892; A.M., Harvard University, 1893; Assistant, Harvard College and Radcliffe College, 1893-1894; Tutor, Columbia College and Barnard College, 1894-1900; Instructor, 1900-1902; Adjunct Professor, Barnard, 1902-1906; Professor, 1906; Acting Dean, 1907-1910; Provost, 1910-. Phi Beta Kappa. Provost: The deaths ye died I have watched beside. Professor of English: . fellow if infinite jest, of excellent fancy. [15] EDWARD DELAVEN PERRY Jay Professor of Greek A.B., Columbia, 1875; Ph.D., Tubingen, 1879; LL.D.. Columbia, 1904; Columbia, Tutor in Greek and Sanskrit, iXS0-188. ; Tutor in Creek and Instructor in Sanskrit, 1883-1891; Professor of Sanskrit, 1891- 1895; Jay Professor of Greek, 1895-. Phi Beta Kappa. Don ' t you just dote on the Greeks? FRANK NELSON COLE Professor of Mathematics A.B., Harvard, 1882; Ph.D., Harvard, 1886; Lecturer in Mathematics, Harvard, 1885-1887; Instructor and Assistant Pro- fessor of Mathematics, University of Michi- gan, 1888-1895; Professor of Mathematics, Columbia, 1895-. In mathematics he was greater Than Tyco Brahe or Erra Pater. FRANKLIN H. GIDDINGS Professor of Sociology and the His- tory of Civilization A.B., Union College, 1877; LL.D., Ober- lin College, 1900; Bryn Mawr, 1888-1894; Columbia, 1894-; Phi Beta Kappa. Sigma Xi. A man of mark to know nest time you saw. JAMES II. ROBINSON Professor of History A.B., Harvard, 1887; Post-Graduate courses at Harvard and in Germany; Ph.D.. Freiburg, 1S90; Lecturer in European History, University of Pennsylvania, 1891: Associate Professor, 1892-1895; Professor of History, Columbia University, 1895; Acting Dean of Barnard College, 1900- 1901. 1 can teach you with a quip if I ' ve a mind. I can trick you into learning with laugh. HAROLD JACOBY Rutherford Professor of Astronomy A.B., Columbia, 1885; Ph.D., 1896; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi; Tan Beta Pi. Let my lamp t midnight hour. Be seen in some high lonely tozver Where I may oft outwatch the bear. CALVIN THOMAS Gebhard Professor of Germanic Lanf naf es and Literatures A.B., University of Michigan, 1874; A.M.. 1877; LL.D., 1904; University of Michigan, 1886-1896; Columbia, 1896. Full of force and choler And firm upon his feet. [36] WILLIAM P. TRENT Professor of English Literal tire A.M., University of Virginia, 1884; LL.D.. Lake Forest College, 1889; D.L., University of the South, 1905; University of the South, 1888-1900; Columbia, 1900; Acting Provost of Barnard College, 1911- 1912. Milton, thou shouldst be living at this hour ' HERBERT G. I. OKI) Professor of Philosophy A.B., Amherst, 1871; A.M., causa honoris, 1900; U niversity of Buffalo, 1895- 1898; Columbia, 1900-. Phi Beta Kappa. Be mine a philosopher ' s life in the quiet woodland ways. NELSON GLENN McCRE Anthon Professor of tin Lai in Language and Literature A.I!., Columbia University, 1885: A.M., 1886; Ph.D., 1888; University Fellow in Classical Philology, 1885-1888; Tutorial Fellow in Latin, 1888-1889; Tutor, 1SS9- 1895; Instructor, 1895-1900; Adjunct Pro- fessor, 1900-1903; Professor, 1903-; Anthon Professor of the Latin Language and Lit- erature, 1911-. Phi Beta Kappa. Latin was to him no more difficile Than to a blackbird ' tis to whistle. HENRY E. CRAMPTON Professor of Zoology A.B., Columbia University, 1893; Ph.D.. Columbia University, 1899; Columbia Uni- versity, 1893-1895; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1895-1896; Marine Bio- logical Laboratory, Woods Hole, 1895- 1903; Biological Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, 1904-1906; Columbia University, 1896- ; Associate of Carnegie Institute. 1903-; Curator of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, 1909-. Sigma Xi. Phi Beta Kappa. And thus he bore without abuse The grand old name of gentleman . ' CHARLES KNAPP Professor of Classical Philology A.B.. Columbia University, 1887; A.M., 1888; Ph.D., 1890; Prize Fellow in Clas- sics, Columbia. 1887-1890; Tutorial Fellow in Classic, Columbia, 1889-1890; Barnard. Instructor, 1891-1902; Adjunct Professor, 1902-1906; Professor, 1906-. Phi Beta Kappa. Push on β keep moving. HERBERT M. RICHARDS Professor of Tiotany S.B., Harvard, 1891; Sc.D., Harvard, 1895; Assistant, Harvard, and Instructor, Radcliffe, 1891-1895; Parker Fellow, 1895- 1896; Tutor, Barnard, 1896-1898; Instruc- tor, Harvard, 1897-1898; Instructor, Bar- nard, 1898-1902; Adjunct Professor, Bar- nard, 1902-1906; Professor, Barnard, 1906-. A man of good repute. [17] MARGARET E. MALTBY Associate Professor of Physics A.B., Oberlin, 1882; S.B., Massacliusetts Institute of Technology, 1891; A.M., Ober- lin, 1891; Ph.D., Goettingen University, 1895; Physikalisch-Technis che Reichsan- stalt, 1898-1899; Clark University, 1899- 1900; 1 ' hysics Department, Wellesley Col- lege, 1889-1903 and 1896-1897; Lake Erie College, 1897-1898; Barnard College, De- partment of Chemistry, Instructor, 1900- 1903; Department of Physics, Adjunct Professor, 1903-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910; Associate Professor, 1913-. I value science, none could prize it more. LOUIS A. LOISEAUX Associate Professor of the Romance Languages and Literatures I ' ertiiical d ' Etudcs 1 ' iiniaires Supcrieures. Vcademie ile Dijon, 1887; Brevet d ' lnsti- tuteur, 1887; B.es. Sc., 1894; Cornell Uni- versity, 1891-1892; Columbia, Tutor in French, 1892-1893; Tutor in the Romance Languages and Literatures, 1893-1900; In- structor, 1900-1904; Adjunct Professor. 1904-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910-1914; Associate Professor, 1913-. Too true to flatter and too kind to sneer. And only just when seemingly severe. JAMES T. SHOTWELL Professor of History A.B., Toronto, 1898; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903; Columbia University Scholar in Eu- ropean History, 1898-1899; Fellow in Eu- ropean History, 1899-1900; Assistant, 1900- 1901; Lecturer, 1901-1903; Instructor, 1903- 1905; Adjunct Professor, 1905-1908; Pro- fessor 1908-. They shall not pass! ' ' EDWAKI) KASNER Professor of Mathematics B.S., College of the Citv of New York, 1896; A.M., Columbia University, 1897; Ph.D., 1899; Barnard, 1900- ; Phi Beta Kappa. Oh do not shun the naughty surd! WILLIAM P. MONTAGUE Associate Professor of Philosophy A.B., Harvard, 1896; A.M., 1897; Ph.D., 1898; Harvard, 1898-1899; University of California, 1899-1903; Columbia, Lecturer, 1903-1904; Tutor, 1904-1905; Instructor, 1905-1907; Adjunct Professor, 1907-1910; Associate Professor, 1 9 10-. IVell versed in the science of forgcttery. GRACE A. HUBBARD Associate Professor of English A.B., Smith College, 1887; A.M., Cor- nell, 1892; Smith College, 1892-1904; Bar- nard, Lecturer, 1905-1910; Associate Pro- fessor, 1910-; Phi Beta Kappa. She loved a good story better than candy. [ 18 ] MARIE REIMER .Associate Professor of Chemistry A.B., Vassar, 1897; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr, 1904; Vassar College, Graduate Scholar, 1897-1898; Assistant, 1898-1899; Fellow at Bryn Mawr, 1899-1902; Student at Uni- versity of Berlin, 1902-1903; Barnard, Lecturer, 1903-1904; Instructor, 1904-1909; Adjunct l ' rofessor, 1909-1910; Associate Professor, 1910-. Phi Beta Kappa. The devious paths throuah which I lead Only the few may follow. WILHELM ALFRED BRAUN Associate l ' rofessor of Germanic Languages and Literatures A.H., Toronto University, 1895; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903; Fellow in German, Chi- cago University, 1898-1899; Fellow in Ger- man. Columbia University, 1899-1900; Bar- nard, Assistant, 1900-1901; Tutor, 1901- 1906; Instructor, 1906-1910; Assistant Pro- fessor, 1910-1911; Associate Professor, 191 1 - ; Director of the Deutsches Haus, 1914-. We praise his cheer , his genial warmth of heart. ADAM LEROY JONES hirer or of University Admissions A.B., 1895, Williams College; Ph.D., 1898, Columbia University; Assistant in Philosophy, Columbia University, 1898- 1901; Lecturer, 1901-1902; Tutor, 1902- 1905; Preceptor in Philosophy, Princeton University 1905-1909; Associate Profes- sor of Philosophy and Director of Univer- sity Admissions, 1909-. The Silent Partner. TRACY ELIOT HA ZEN Assistant l ' rofessor of Jio ami .B., University of Vermont, 1897; A.M., Columbia University, 1899; Ph.D., 1900; Director Fairbanks Museum of Nat- ural Science, St. Johnsbury, Vt., 1901-1902; Assistant at Columbia, 1902; Tutor at liainard. 1903-1907; Instructor, 1907-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910-; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. Gentle of speech, beneficent of, mind. RAYMOND WEEKS l ' rofessor of Romance Languages and Literature A.B., Harvard, 1890; A.M., 1901; Ph.D., 1897; University of Michigan, 1891- 1893; Traveling Fellow of Harvard Uni- versity, 189 3-1895 (Universities of Paris and Berlin) ; University of Missouri, 1895- 1898; Student at University of Paris, 1904-1905; University of Illinois, 1908- 1909; Columbia and Barnard, 1909-. And Frcnche he spak, fulfaire and fetysly. JOHN LAWRENCE GERIG Associate Professor of Celtic A.B., 1898; A.M., 1899; University of Missouri; Ph.D., 1902 University of Ne- braska; Instructor in Romance Languages, Sanskrit and Comparative Philology; Uni- versity of Nebraska, 1899-1903; Instructor in Romance Languages, Williams College, 1905-1906; Lecturer (1906), Instructor (1909), and Assistant Professor of Ro- mance Languages, 1910, Associate Profes- sor, 1912, Columbia University. Phi Beta Kappa. The glass of fashion and the mould of form. [ 19] LA RUE VAN HOOK CHARLES SEARS BALDWIN Associate Professor of Classical Philology A. It.. University of Michigan, 1899; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1904; Mem- ber of the American School of Classical Studies, Athens. Greece, 1901-1902; Acting Professor of Greek, University of Colo- rado, 1902-190.5; Instructor, Washington University, St. Louis, 1904; Preceptor, Princeton University, 1905-1910; Associate Professor, Columbia University, 1 9 10-. Ever gentle and so gracious with all liis learning. DAVID S. MLZZEY Associate Professor of History A.B., Harvard, 1893; B.D., New York University, 1897; Ph.D., Columbia, 1907; Teacher in Mathematics, Roberts College, Constantinople, 1893-1894; Teacher of Classics and History, Ethical Culture School, 1899-1905; Head of History Depart- ment. Ethical Culture School, 1911-1912; Barnard-. The kindliest man I ever knew. Professor of Rhetoric and English Composition A.B., Columbia, 1888; A.M., 1889; Ph.D., 1894; Fellow in English, Colum- bia, 1888-1891; Tutor in Rhetoric, 1891- 1894; Instructor. 1894-1895; Instructor in Rhetoric. Yale, 1895-18UK; Assistant Pro- fessor, 1898-1908; Professor, 1909-1911; Professor of Rhetoric, 1911-. He loved cliivalrye, Trouthe and honour, fredoni and curteisye. GERTRUDE M. HIRST Assistant Professor of 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- 1912; Assistant Professor, 1912-. Phi Beta Kappa. , . , And still they gazed and still then wonder grew, That one small head could carry all sin- knew. ROBERT E. CHADDOCK Associate Professor of Statistics A.B., Wooster, 1900; A.M., Columbia, 1906; Ph.D., 1908; Instructor, Wooster, 1900-1905; University Fellow and Hon- orary Fellow in Sociology, Columbia, 1906- 1907; 1907-1908; Instructor, University of Pennsylvania, 1909-1910; Assistant Profes- sor and Director of Statistical Laboratory, Columbia, 1911-1912; Associate Professor, 1912-. , , β A gentleman and a scholar. IDA H. OGILVIE . ssoc iate Professor of Geology A B., Bryn Mawr, 1900; Ph.D., Colum- bia 1903; Barnard, Lecturer, 1903-190.1 ; Instructor, 1905-1912; Assistant Profes- sor, 1912-1916; Associate Professor, 1916-. Endurance, foresight, strength and skill. ' [20] HENRI F. MULLER Assistant Professor of the Romance Languages and Literature B.es.L., Paris, 1897; Ph.D., Columbia, 1912; Tutor, Barnard College, 1905-1909: Instructor, 1909-1914; Assistant Professor, 1914-. A strong man, For where he fi.v ' t his heart lie set his hand To do the thing he willed, and bore it through. HARRY I. HOLLING WORTH Associate Professor of Psychology A. It., Nebraska, 1906; Ph.D., Columbia. 1909; Assistant, Tutor, Instructor, Assistant Professor. Columbia, 1909-1916; Associate Professor, 1916-. Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. A downright honest man. MABEL FOOTE WEEKS Associate in English A.B., Radcliffe, 1894; Dr. Sachs ' School lor (iirls; Barnard, Adjunct Professor, 1907-1910; Associate, 1910- ; Mistress of Brook ' s Hall, 1 908-. So sweetly ' iluble in her discourse. ' ' LOUISE HOYT GREGORY Assistant Professor of Zoology A.B., Vassar, 1903; A.M., Columbia, 1907; Columbia, 1909. A true friend in time of need. ELEANOR KELLER Assistant Professor of Chemistry A.B., Columbia, 1900; A.M., Columbia, 1905. JAMES R IGNALL WHEELER Professor of Greek Archeology and Art A.B., Vermont, 1880; LL.D., 1909; A.M., Ph.D., Harvard, 1885; Professor of Curk. Columbia University, 1895-1912; Professor of Greek Archeology and Art, Columbia University, 1912-; LL.D., Uni- versity of Colorado, 1914. HENRY L. MOORE Professor of Political Economy A.B., Randolph-Macon, 1892; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1896; Barnard, Professor of Political Economy, 191 2-. MAUDE ALINE HUTTMANN Assistant Professor of History B.S., Columbia University, 1904; A.B.. 1905; Ph.D., 1914. GERTRUDE DUDLEY Associate in Physical Education 1896, Assistant in Physical Education- Chautauqua; 1894-96, Anderson Normal School; 1896-98, Director of Physical Edu- cation and Teacher of Physiology, Miss Mackie ' s Private School; 1898-1909, In- structor and Director of Physical Educa- tion for Women, University of Chicago; 1906-07 (summers), Dean of Women and Lecturer, Yale Summer School; 1909-16, Assistant Professor and Director, Uni- versity of Chicago; 1916-17, Associate Pro- fessor and Director, University of Chicago; 1917, Associate Professor and Director of Physical Education for Women at Barnard ( ' ollege. [21] Other Officers of Instruction Emily James Putnam, A.B., Associate in History. John Douglas Adam, D.D., Associate in Religion. Stuart L. Tyson, M.A. (Oxon), Associate i ' n Religion. Grace Lanhfoud, Instructor in Physics. Julianna S. Haskell, Ph.D., Instructor in the Germanic Languages and Literatures. William Haller, Ph.D., Instructor in English. William S. Messer, A.M.. Instructor in Classical Philology. Luther Hebert Alexander. Ph.D., Instructor in the Romance Languages and Literatures. Clare M. Howard, Ph.D., Instructor in English. George Walker Mullins, Ph.D., Instructor in .Mathematics. Ethel Sturtevant, A.M., Instructor in English. Harry Todd Costello. Ph.D.. Instructor in Philosophy. Minor W. Latham, A.M., Instructor in English. Elorence de Loiselle Lovvther, A.M.. Instructor in Zoology. Charles C. Mook, Ph.D., Instructor in Geology. Alma De L. Le Due, Ph.D.. Instructor in the Romance I anguages and Literatures. Grace H. Goodale, A.M., Instructor in Classical Philology. Kenneth W. Lamson, A.B., Instructor in Mathematics. Bird Larson, Instructor in Physical Education. Dorothy Stiles. Instructor in Physical Education. Marion E. Richards, A.M., Lecturer in Botany. Emilie J. Hutchinson, A.M.. Lecturer in Economics. Estelle H. Davis, Lecturer in English. Mary Stewart Coutant, A.M., Lecturer in Botany. Hugh Wiley Pickett, Ph.D., Lecturer in the Germanic Languages and Literatures. Laura C. Brant, A.M., Lecturer in Physics. Lucy Gregory, A.M., Lecturer in the Germanic Languages and Literatures. Lucia Smith, A.B., Lecturer in Chemistry. Blanche Prenez, Lecturer in the Romance Languages and Literatures. Henry E. Grady. A.M., Lecturer in Economics. Margaret Burns, Lecturer in Physical Education. Bernice W. Lyle, A.M.. Lecturer in Zoology. Margaret Wickiiam Watson, A.M., Lecturer in the Germanic Languages and Literatures. Alice Page Nelson Waller, A.B., Assistant in History. Edna Henry Bennett, A.B., Assistant in Zoology. Hester M. Rusk, A.B., Assistant in Botany. Helen Rupert Downes, A.B., Assistant in Chemistry. Elorrie Holzwasser, A.B., Assistant in Geology. Alma G. Ruhl, A.B., Assistant in History. Ethel Anderson Prince, A.B., Assistant in Psychology. Helen H. Parkhurst, Ph.D., Assistant in Philosophy. Officers of the University Who Give Instruction Barnard College Franz Boas, Ph.D., LL.D., Sc. I).. Professor of Anthropology. Franklin Thomas Baker, Litt.D., Professor of the English Language and Literature. Clarence H. Young, Ph.D.. Professor of Greek. Henry Rogers Seager, Ph.D., Professor of Political Economy. William Robert Shepherd, Ph.D.. Professor of History. Vladimir G. Simkhovitch, Ph.D.. Professor of Economic History. Algeron de V. Tassin, A.M.. Assistant Professor of English. George Philip Krapp, Ph.D., Professor of English. Robert L. Schuyler, Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of History. Willystine Goodsell, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Education. Wendell T. Bush, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Philosophy. Howard L. McBain, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Municipal Science and Administration. Ernest H. Wright, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of English. Mary Theodora Whitley, Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology. Benjamin B. Kenorick, Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of History. Louis Imbeht, A.M., Instruction in Spanish. Charles A. Fisher, Ph.D.. Instructor in Mathematics. Philip M. Hayden, A.M., Instructor in Spanish. Herbert N. Shenton, A.M., Instructor in Sociology. Gerald T. Wilkinson, A.M.. Instructor in the Romance Language and Literature. Ralph H. Boots, Ph.D., Instructor in Politics. Edward H. Reisner, Ph.D.. Lecturer in Education. Harry Elmer Barnes. A.M.. Lecturer in History. Officers of Administration N. W. Liggett, A.B., Bursar. Anna E. H. Meyer, A.B.. Registrar. Katherine S. Doty, A.M.. Secretary. Bertha L. Rockwell, Librarian of Barnard College. Mabel Foote Weeks, A.B., Mistress of Brooks Hall. Lilian Kgleston, Secretary of Brooks Hall. Virginia Tucker Boyd, A.B., Secretary of Students Hall. Mary A. Patchin, A.M., Director of Religious and Philanthropic Work. Guliema F. Alsop, M.D., College Physician. Fanny Aurill Bishop, A.M., Secretary to the Dean. Winifred Boegeiiold, A.B., Secretary to the Provost. Emily Gordon Lambert, A.B., Assistant to the Bursar. [mogene B. Ireland, A.B., Assistant to the Registrar. William H. Carpenter, Ph.D.. Acting Librarian of the University. Frederick A. Goetze. M.Sc, Comptroller. Rev. Raymond C. Knox. B.D., Chaplain of the University. William H. McCastline, University Medical Officer. Alumnae Association Founded January 125, 1895. Incorporated December 13. 1901. OFFICERS Eleanor F. Osborne - President Amy Loveman - - First Vice-President Ex-officio Chairman of Finance Committee Estelle O ' Brian - - Second Vice-President Ex-officio Chairman of Reunion Committee. Mary Budds Skinner (Mrs. J. O. ) - - - Secretary Kathkrine Van Horne - Executive Secretary Carol Lorenz Hier (Mrs. F. P.. Jr.) - - - Treasurer Dorothea Eltzner - - - Auditor Florence Gorden - - - Clerk F. Theodora Baldwin ----- Assistant Treasurer Ex-officio Chairman of Membership and Statistics Committee. Majohie Jacobie McAneny (Mrs. G.) - - Alumna Trustee Committee Chairmen Mabel Parsons - - - S tudent ' s Aid Florence de L. Lowther (Mrs. Hugh S.) - - Cooperative Dormitory Aline C. Stratford - Publicity Agnes L. Dickson - Employment Emily G. Lambert - By-Laws, Legislation, and Printing Elizabeth Allen - - Barnard Representative, I. B. O. Eva Vom Baur Hausl (Mrs. R.) Barnard Representative, I. B. O. Katherine Van Horne - - Barnard Councillor, Ass. of Collegiate Alumnae [26] [27] [28 ] The Undergraduate Association OFFICERS Mary R. M. Griffiths, 1918 President Marion Ailkman, 1918 - - Vice-President Dorothy Brockway. - Treasurer S us ann e Payton, 1920 - - Secretary Wendela Liander, 1918 - - Executive Chairman STUDENT COUNCIL Mary H. M. Griffiths, 1918 Chairman Marion Alleman. 191 S Wendela Liander. 19 IS Dorothy Brockway. 1919 Aline MacMahon, 1920 Isahel Greenhaum. 1918 Susanne Payton. 1920 Constance Lambert, 1919 Frances Brown. 1921 [30] Class of 1918 OFFICERS Isabel Greenbaum Elsa Grimm Hedwig Koenig Ruth Btvington Margaret Giddings President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary Corresponding Secretary and Historian Motto - Me ieti] to jtdv {Nothing is impossible to a willing mind) Colors - Brown and Gold Mascot - - Lion Flower - Sunset iiose [31] Class of 1918 Accurso, Catherine Adams, Eileen Adler, Stella Allernan, Marion Amson, Sophia Archer, Edith Barber, Florence Barber, Mary Barrett, Florence Bartlett, Luise Baumann, Edith Bensel, Mary Bergstrom, Gertrude Bernholz, Marie T. M. Blout, Mildred Brown, Helen R. Buch, Elsa Buckbee, Joyce Bunzel, Ruth Burns, Charlotte Burns, Mary Elizabeth Buvington, Ruth Cabana, Edmere Campbell, Mary E. Cauldwell, Olivia Cobanks, Alvina Conner, Dorothy Coryell, Eleanore Cripps, Gladys Cutler, Catherine Cuttrell, Florence Darrow, Margaret Dawbarn, Ethel Dickson, Charlotte Dirkes, Dorothy Drake, Mildred Ehrlich, Bessie Ferguson, Margaret Fischel, Bertha Fischel, Rose Fouts, Janet Franklin, Adele Gerloff, Martha Gibb, Alice Giddings, Margaret Goldstein, Esther Goldstein, Helen Gower, Susan Graffe, Dorothy Graham, Elaine Grant, Fannie Folger Greenbaum, Isabel Griffiths, Mary Grimm, Elsa Grimsliaw, Carolyn Gross, Anna Gross, Edith Grossman, Pauline Harris, Carolyn Harris, Natalie Harrison, Margaret Hart, Lucile Havnes, Frances Hennessy, Helen Heuterkers, Louise Heacock, Memo Higgins, Helen Hines, Ruth H o ff m a n . E lizabeth Hoffman, Jessie Holbrook, Helen Holbrook, H. Shelby Holloway, Louise Irby, Louise Jacobs. Dorotliv Jennings, Hazel Joseplison, Anna Kahn, Dora Keck, Dorothy Keeler, Lueile Kenyon, Frieda Klenke, Emma Kliatshco, Lydia Kline, Margaret Koenig, Hedwig Leavenworth, Mrs. I. F Lennon, Florence Lent, Ellen Levison, May Levy, Marian I.iander, Wendela Liccione, Irma Longaker, Adelina McCabe, Helen Maclachlan, Helen McCaffrey, Marion McDonald, Dorothy McLean, Ethel Mackey, Margaret Markey. Ruth Mayer, Theresa Miller, Martha Milliken, Rhoda Mook, Edith Mott, Ethel Murphy, Mary Murtland, Isabelle Newburger, Bessie Nichols, Marjorie Oak, Dorotliv Oberle. Louise Oschrin, Elsie Pearlman, Mrs. F. B. Pierce. Helen Pott, Katherine Purdy, Helen Radcliff, Clara Randell, Dora Reinke, Eva Retz, Grace Robbins, Jeannette Rogers, Esther Rothschild, Margaret Rowell, Marjorie Rubinstein, F. Sanborn, Aline Sayford, Margaret Schiff, Esther Schlauch, Margaret Schulman, Sophia Schuman, Elizabeth Sherline, Bertha Shine, Helena Sluth, Elizabeth Smith, Clarice Snyder, Margaret Stevens, Helen Stewart, Catherine Stewart, Elizabeth Sutton. Edith Terriberry, Elizabeth Toledano, Ruth Van Nostrand. Harriet Wachenheimer, Ruth Welleck, Mary Weygandt, Lillian Whipple, Carolyn White, Harriette Williams, Helen Williams, Viola Williams, Virginia Zagat. Ruth [32] OFFICERS Aline MacMaiion - - President Eleanor Curry - - Vice-President Katherine Schafer Secretary Virginia Thompson - - Treasurer Ada Vorhaus - Corresponding Secretary and Historian Motto -odev ugioreveiv {Ever to Excel) Colors - - Buff and Blue Mascot - -Dragon Flower - Tea Rose [34] Class of 1920 Alexander. Marion Armstrong. Elizabeth Ashley, Helen Austin, Ruth Baldwin, Evelyn Barrington, Alice Barten, Hortense Barton, Helen Beach, Bessie Becker, Beatrice L. Benton, Pauline Bien, Esther Borst, Helen Bostwick, Winifred Brill, Bessie Brosnan, Katherine Brown, Jean Bruhaker, Ruth Burke, Margaret Burne, Dorothy Butler, Dorothy Calhoun, Helen Chalmers, Ruth Chase, Jane Clarke, Helen Coates, Eleanor Colucci, Edna Cox, Louisa Crookall, Mary M. Curry, Eleanor Davey, Dorothy Decker, Katherine Esterbrook, Gladys Eyre, Louisa Everson, Ida Ewan. Ruth Fair, Virginia Finkler, Martha Fishberg, Ella Fischer, Hildegard Fox. Anna Fox, Edna Fricke, Gertrude Friedkin, Emily Friedman, Lillian Garriel, Evelyn Garner, Mary Gilke, Caroline de Goenage, Concepion Gruggel, Christine Guthrie, Phoebe Gutman, Mabel Hall, Ruth Harris, Amy Herterich, Maude Hicks, Helen Hildred, Laura Hobe, Elizabeth Hopkins, Anne Houghton, Ruth Jackson, Addie Jarecky, Felice Jennings, Amy Jentz, Veronica Judson, Alice Kaufman, Marion Keehn, Harriet Kennard, Elaine Kidd, Frances L. Kopald, Sylvia Kossman, Ethel Kriegsman, Helen Kydd, Marjorie Landauer, Tekla Lane, Maud Leding, Aline Leet, Phedora Lemcke, Dorothy Lesser, Julia Levi. Marion Liebeskind, Hedwig Lockhart, Marjorie London, Ruth Lynn, Rosin a MacDon ald, Josephine MacMahon, Aline M Gregor, Katherine M Kenzie, Janet Maas, Agnes Mack, Beatrice Mankiewicz. Erna Marsh, Agnes Marsh, Lucile Marsh, Marguerite Meyer, Marie C. Meylan, L. J. Mochrie, Margaret Minster, Mildred Myers, Margaret Nance, Margaret Nolan, Margaret O ' Brien, Marion Oldenbusch, Carrie Omeis, Florida Opdycke, Mary E. Parker, Lockie Pay ton, Susanne Peltz, Rose Piel, Agnes Piersall, Catherine Pope, Regina Rabe, Elizabeth Rafter, Lucy Rawson, Margaret P. Raynor, Amy T. Ressmeyer, Gertrude Robb, Dorothy Robb, Janet Rosenbaum, Aline W. Rosenberg, Marion Y. Rothschild, Louise T. Sartorius, Bertha Scancarella, Concettina Schaeffer, Florence Schellnas, Elizabeth Schencke, Claire A. Schwartz. Esther Seidman, Helen Shafer, Katherine Sexton, Carol Siegbert, Beryl M. Smith, Genevieve Silbert, Dorothy Silver. Edith Small, Delphine Sternberg, Lillian Sutton. Mary E. Taylor. Lilyan Travis, Marion Tewes, Mathilde Thompson, F ' rances W. Thompson, Virginia Uhrbrock, Marie Vorhaus. Ada Vernon, Lucile Wallerstein, Bertha Walser, Violet Ward, Cecile Weil, Dorothy Wethey, Gladys White, Clarissa Whyte, Beatrice Wickham. Elizabeth Widrevitz, Laura Wilcox, Helen Wilkins, Margaret Willyoung, Dorothy Wood, Mabel T. [35] Sophomore Show, 1920 ' The Tail of the Dragon in Four Coils. November 27, 1917 BrinckerhofT Theatre COIL 1 By Beatrice Becker Scene β Court of Chundra Ghum, a very odd monarch Chundra Ghum ------ D. Butler Court Magician ------ E. Armstrong Herald - -- -- -- - M. Finkler Empress of Arabia (College Spirit) - - - A. Marsh Courtiers: M. Kaufman, F. Thompson, R. Houghton, H. Clarke, E. Coates, A. Rosenbaum, D. Silbert, E. Silver Slaves: E. Baldwin, L. Rothschild, C. White, L. Friedman Captain Ball Players: P. Rawson, V. Thompson, G. Fricke, R. Pope, H. Barton, R. Evans ENTR ' ACT By Beatrice Becker Scene β Somewhere in New York Chundra Ghum, Court Magician Sandwich man - -- -- -- M. Tewes COIL 2 By Various Collaborators Scene β Moving Picture House Zena Serpentine as Sheesa Horror - - A. MacMahon Clyde Demerest as Desperate Desmond - - L. Eyre Sweetie Darling as Nellie - - - - A. Vorhaus Napoleon Flatbush as Willie - - - - B. Becker Butler - -- -- -- -- D. Burne Flash In -------- X. Travis ENTR ' ACT By Beatrice Becker Scene β Columbia Campus Chundra Ghum, Court Magician A. Radical ------- - R. Peltz Radical chorus: K. Brosnan, C. Schencke, H. Calhoun, D. Lemcke, W. Bostwick COIL 3 By Amy Jennings Sceneβ The College Efficient β Milbank Hall, the front steps Miss Boyd ------ H. Barton Mrs. Liggett - - - - - A. Raynor A. Trustee ------ J. Brown Pierre Point Vise ------ A. Jennings Horace - -- -- -- - M. Levy Plumber - - - - - - - - M. Gutman Red Cross Enthusiast ----- E. Curry Workmen ----- D. Robb, E. Kossman Sophs: L. Sternberg, A. Hopkins, S. Payton, M. Tewes Freshmen: E. Schwartz, F. Kidd, A. Harris Seniors: B. Mack, P. Leet Pierre Point Vise ' s Class: R. Brubaker, B. Satorious, T. Landauer ENTR ' ACT By Beatrice Becker Sceneβ In front of Milbank Hall Chundra Ghum, Court Magician, Empress of Arabia A Freshman ------ B. Siegbert COIL 4 By Beatrice Becker Scene β Soph Study Soph Cheer Leader ----- F. Jarecky The Dragon ------- J. Meylan Chundra Ghum College Spirit ------- A. Marsh Sophs: A. Mass, F. Omeis, A. Leding, M. Sutton, M. Uhr- brock, H. Liebeskind Freshmen: K. Brosnan, C. Schencke. H. Calhoun, D. Lemcke, W. Bostwick COMMITTEE Amce Babrington, Chairman Helen Barton Ruth Austin Beatrice Becker Dorothy Burne Agnes Marsh Lucille Marsh Margaret Rawson Music and Songs by Beatrice Becker and Margaret Nolan Assistance in Properties β M. Travis, J. Lesser, H. Kriegsman, M. Barrington, ' 19 [36] [37] OFFICERS Frances Brown - President Ruth Ehrich - Vice-President Ruth Jones - Secretary Gertrude Schoedler - Treasurer Dorothy Falk - - Corresponding Secretary and Historian Motto - T Q|iog Jtoog (0|iCO {Shoulder to Shoulder) Colors ----- Green and White Mascot - - - -Bull Dog Flower - - - White Carnation [38] Class of 1921 Adams, Leonie F. Ahrensj Edyth M. Ammermiiller, Gertrude Andrews, Leonora Arkins, Lucille Baer, Marian M. Ball. Helen E. Bendheim, Gertrude Beney, Margarete Binzen, Vera Bode, Martha A. Borre, Helen Brown, Frances Burroughs, Marion Byrne, Louise M. Carhart, Grace M. Carter, Aldine Cannon, Edris E. Castle, Eleanor S. Clark, Juliet E. Clark, Laura Clendenin, Ruth Cottan, Ethel S. Coeke, Francis Colony, Ruth Cooke, Gertrude Cossow, Alice Crahtree, Ruth Dana, Gertrude Davidson, Miriam von Deesten, Florence M. Dixon-Welch, Mary D. Donovan, Mary E. Drachman, Mathilde M. Dwight, Elizabeth Edwards, Gladys E. Ehrich, Ruth A. Eisaman, Anna J. von Eltz, Luenna Evans, Gertrude Falk, Dorothy Fawcett, Lillian Faxon, Sallie K. Fine, Estelle Fisher, Maude B. Fisk, Madeleine Gibson, Edna W. Gilbert, Agatha Gorton, Winifred V. P. Gott, Alice S. Granger, Mary L. Green, Grace H. Groehl, Marion R. Guerdan, Elsie M. Gurnee, Lois J. Hall, Mary B. Hallock, Lucy J. Haskell, Marion E. Henriques, Dorothy Henry, Marcella Hessburg, Rhoda Hodenpyl, Marion Hoff, Amanda Horn, Lillian Hutton, Edith Huggard, Elaine Jennings, Mary Jeremiah, Ruth Johnson, Alice M. Jones, Helen B. Jones, Ruth R. Kafka, Beatrice Kahn, Laura R. Kitay, Sarah Kneiper, Ruth H. Kohn, Elinor Kohnstamm, Dorothy Lazar, Ruth J. La Boyteaux, Elizabeth Lind, Dorothy Lindeman, Edith Littaur, Virginia Luhrman. Lillian Mabie. Mildred Mannis, Gertrude E. Marks, Marjorie Marlatt, Frances M. Mauch, Helen Mauger, Isabelle M. Mayer, Elizabeth B. Mayer, Marie R. Montgomery, Margaret Moore, Lorctta W. Murray, Sarah Muhlfeld, Helen Otto, Virginia Paterson, Ruth Peters, Marion E. Pickhardt, Phyllis Pindar, Magdalena L. Reynolds, Irma Rhoades, Dorothy Riley, Olive Rivkin, Helen Ross, Effie C. Sage, M. Lowrie Santelli, Catherine R. Schmidt, Anne E. Schoedler, Gertrud Schwab, Antonia Shire, Helen M. Schrifte, Evelyn Seeley, Jeanette Sicular, Adele Sinnigen, Grace J. Small, Kathryn Soley, Marie Stickney, Adele Souhami, Rachel Stewart, Virginia Suydam, Catherine B. Stuart, Mary Taylor, Eleanor A. Tompkins, Bertha Tuttle. Lois A. Van Brunt, Gladys G. Vogel. Theresa L. Volk, Rae Von Holten, Adelaide F. Wagenheim, Fannie R. Ward, Ruth D. Waterbury, Elizabeth Weiner, Natalie E. Weinstein, Margaretta Whelpley, Edith West, Sara G. Williamson, Helen F. Wittlinger, Bertha Woodard, Helen Q. Zingali, Anna Zoglin, Rosalind [39] Brooks Hall 607 West 116th Street He lex Brown Helen Higgins Elizabeth Gatewood Helen Henessey Dohothv Potter - President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Librarian Fire-Captain Cottage Dormitory 99 Claremont Avenue Susan Gouer Frances Haynes Helen Borst President Vice-President and Treasurer Secretary Alice P. N. Waller, Faculty Member in Charge [11 ] THEY ' LL NONE OF THEM BE MISSED Oli, I ' ve got a little list, my friends, I ' ve got a little list, Of some people round this college that I ' m sure won ' t be missed. They plague us, and they bore us, and they make us very ill β And they think they ' ll go on doing it β but I don ' t think they will ! Some day the whole sweet crowd of them is going to disappear, And the reason why I will not state β but well β I won ' t be here ! There ' s the little group of girls who lounge outside Miss Meyer ' s door. They never study but they chat, and crack fool jokes, and roar. And though Miss Bishop chases them, each day they come for more, Oh, I don ' t think they ' d be missed, no, not at all ! There ' s the girl who ' s always talking of the hero of her dreams, Of how tired she is each morning β goes to dances by the reams. When your Last Hope has gone France-ward, and your nights you spend on themes, Oh, I don ' t think she ' d be missed, no, not at all ! There ' s the maid who ' s studied French for just one year and that is all. But who passed with ease the Oral β is marked P upon the wall. While you who ' ve studied seven years have flunked it every Fall, Oil, I don ' t think she ' d be missed, no, not at all! Then there ' s a class in Barnard ' s hall who thinks it owns the place. Its number ' s Nineteen Twenty and it ' s pert in every case; And the way it flaunts its victories is really a disgrace ! Oh, I don ' t think ' twould be missed, no, not at all ! And lastly but not leastly, there ' s a little group quite staid, That is drawn from out the Faculty, and coolly here arrayed. There ' s the Prof who in the classroom ' s very cordial to us all, But who gives us the cold shoulder when he meets us in the hall. There ' s the Prof who though he ' s charming, and clever in the extreme, Who ' s been known to yawn disgracefully while reading someone ' s theme. And the pretty young instructress with the merry eyes and curls Who just waits to be surrounded by a crowd of crush v girls ! Some day the whole sweet crowd of them I state will disappear β Whose fault ' twill be I shall not say β but well β I won ' t be here ! [42] NAME THΒ£ ' HEADING [13] ,. ,.i Β . V 7βΒ« J i- ' fJC J i ' T . - i Ruth Toledano Jeanne Ballot Ruth Buvington - Margaret Sayford . v ' MEMBERS 1918 β . . . v atnerine rVccurso Ruth Buvington Mary Murphy Alary Barber Bessie Ehrlich Margaret oaytord Edith Baumann Bertha Fischel Clarice Smith Gertrude Bergstrom Carol Grimshaw Ruth Toledano Mary Burns Irma Liccione Lillian Weygandt Theresa Mayer 1919 Jeanne Ballot Alice Goebell Victorine Mayer Dorothy Birdseye Marjorie Herrmann Marguerite Monjo Aline Buehman Constance Lambert Edna Neuville Margaret Gillespie Ruth Lewy Bessie Simons 1920 Jean Brown Mary Opdycke Beryl Siegbert Virginia Fair Rose Peltz Edith Silver Marion Levi Aline Rosenbaum Violet Walser Agnes Maas Marion Rosenberg Laura Widrevitz Juliette Meylan C. J. Scancarello Helen Wilcox 1921 Marion Baer Cirace Green Rachel Souhami Helen Borre Marion Hodenpyl Eleanor Taylor Frances Brown Mary Jennings Gladvs Van Brunt Winthrop Bushnell Antonia Schwab Rae Volk Gwendolyn Evans Jeanette Seeley Luenna von Eltz Edna Gibson Evelyn Shrift Natalie Wiener Winifred Gorton Marie Solev H. Frances Williamson President Vice-President Secretary . β’ ' S ' . ' -fi ' Treasurer i β’ :β’ ' .β’ ' β’ ' β’ ' V-V: lili [ 44 ] - β’ β β’ ' j Β β 7v ' -l K : ; β’ β’β’ β’ i v - .vΒ£ ' i ' β’ β r , .v ' ' . ' - : . v ' W . i ; Theresa Mayer - Gretchen Torek Elsie Oschrin Gertrud Boas MEMBERS 1918 President Vice-President Treasurer - Secretary Sophia Amson Martha Gerloff Mary Murphy Edith Baumann Helen Goldstein Elsie Oschrin Gertrude Bergstrom Louise Heuterkes Eva Reinke Elsa Buch Julia Lichtenstein Elizabeth Sluth Mary Burns Theresa Mayer Harriete White 1919 Gertrud Boas Victorine Mayer Gretchen Torek Elsie Dochternian Grace Munstock Marion Townsend Elsa Koch M ' Liss Partridge Verna Veit Ernestine Lind Sarah Rosenberg Juliette Witte 1920 Elizabeth Armstrong Mabel Gutmann Ruth London Hortense Barton Veronica Jentz Beatrice Mack Ruth Brubaker Harriet Keehn Gertrude Ressmeyer Ruth Chalmers Dorothy Lemke Ma ry Sutton Edna Colucci Hed vii - Liebeskind Mathilde Tewes Martha Finkler Ada Vorhaus 1921 Winthrop Bushnell Laena Kahn Florence von Deesten Lillian Horn Antonia Schwab Bertha Wittlinger [ L5 ] FACULTY MEMBERS Dean Virginia Gildersleeve Miss Grace Hubbard Professor Charles Baldwin Miss Mabel Weeks Marion Alleman Mary Barber Gladys Cripps 1918 Isabel Greenbaum Dorothy Graffe Mary R. Griffiths Natalie P. Harris Rhoda Milliken Margaret Rothschild Margaret Schlauch 1919 Emily Dowling Gertrude Geer Vivian Tappan Lenore Guinzburg Special Phyllis McVickar Dr. Mullins - Honorary President Ellen Lent - President Mary Welleck Secretary Sophie Schulman Treasurer MEMBERS 1918 Joyce Buckbee Florence I.cnnon Fannie Rubenstein Charlotte Dickson Ellen Lent Sophie Schulman Helen Goldstein May Levison Ruth Wachenheimer Elsa Grimm Dora Randell Mary Welleck Dorothy Jacobs Grace Retz Viola Williams 1919 Dorothy Brock way Elsa Koch Georgia Schaaf Eleanor Curnow Sophie Koerner Edna Siems Elsie Dochterman Ruth Lewy Annette Sweeney Selma Gross Pauline Mahneke Gretchen Torek Estelle Jacobs Janet Meneely Edna Van Wart 1920 Evelyn Baldwin Catherine Piersall Marie Uhrbock Veronica Jentz Beatrice Whyte 1921 Juliet Clarke Marion Haskell Lillian Luhrman Ruth Colony Gladys Edwards Edith Whelpley Virginia Littauer [47] GLEE CLUB 5. Florence Bakuer - Catherine Houghton Janet Meneei.y Ri ' th Houghton Leader Business Manager Secretary Treasurer MEMBERS 1918 Catherine Accurso Hutli Buvington Bessie Ehrlich Clarice Smith Florence Barber Dor othy Conner Ellen Lent Ruth Toledano Kathryn Cutler Margaret Sayford 1919 Dorothy Brockway Emily Dowling Janet Meneely E. Isabel Smith Catherine Cooksey Alice Cioebell Grace Morgan Miriam Smith Eleanor Curnow Mildred Kammerer Marie Muhlfeld Blanche Strook Verena Deuel Myra Kohnstamm Berenice Ruff Edna Van Wart 1 920 Hortense Barten Hildegard Fischer Marjorie Lockhart Catherine Piersall Helen Barton Ruth Hall Agnes Maas Gertrude Ressmeyer Winifred Bostwick Ruth Houghton Margaret Nolan Elizabeth Schellhase Dorothy Davey Dorothy Lemcke Florida Omeis Lucile Vernon 1921 Marion Baer Mary Jennings Virginia Otto Eleanor Taylor Frances Brown Mildred Mabie Gertrud SchoedleT Florence Von Deesten Gertrude Dana Margaret Montgomery Evelyn Shrifte Natalie Weiner Estellc Fine Helen Muhlfeld Rachel Soiihami Specials Laura Clark Elizabeth Wickham [48] Charlotte DrcKSON Ritth Morrison President Secretary-Treasurer HONORAR Y IN I E . I B E R S Charles Sears Baldwin Mrs. M. L. Earle Grace Goodale Gertrud Hirst Harwood Hoadley Charles Knapp Lillie Laurence Nelson Glen McCrea Edward D. Perry Leslie Shear Clarence Young La Rue Van Hook Mr. Stuart Messer UNDERGRADUATE MEM B ERS Charlotte Dickson Nell Farrar Teresa Carbonara Verena Deuel Ruth Houghton 1918 Margaret Kline 1919 Emily Dowling Laura McDaniel 1920 Addie Jackson Alice Judson Katherine Pot t Margaret Schlauch Ruth Morrison Theresa Tusa Frances Thompson [ 19] Dr Herbert M. Richards - Honorary President Florence Middleton - President Dr. Tracey E. Hazen - First Vice-President Elsie M. Kupfer - - Second Vice-President Rhoda Benham - - Treasurer Hester M. Rusk - - Secretary BOARD OF DIRECTORS The Officers and Marion Struss Mrs. Henry S. Gibson Aurelia K. Goodlatte Mary L. Mann Hazel Jennings Dorothy Keck HONORARY MEMBERS Elizabeth O. Abbott Mrs. N. L. Britton Laura Drake Gill Prof. F. E. Lloyd Dr. D. T. MacDougal Elizabeth Billings Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve Dr. R. A. Harper Mrs. G. H. Putnam Mrs. C. H. Adams Fanny R. Ansorge Mrs. G. W. Beach Mrs. V. Bennett Rhoda Benham Dorothy Blondel Gertrud Boas Helene M. Boas Mrs. G. A. Bole Mrs. J. N. Boyle Mary M. Brackett Dr. Jean Broadhurst Cornelia L. Carey Mrs. Edward Crabbe Mrs. A. F. Contant Leah K. Curtiss Bertha Dow Mrs. W. S. Dinmii Ruth B. Edmondson Mrs. Cary Eggleston Harriet Elder Ella Fishberg Mrs. Sydney Fisher Anita Frenzel Emilie Fries Bertha M. Furman Mrs. H. S. Gibson Elise Gignoux Aurelia R. Goodlatte Mrs. Walter Granger Mrs. Margaret Greet Dr. T. E. Hazen Mrs. A. B. Hepburn Laura Hildred ACTIVE MEMBERS Elizabeth M. Hoffman Jessie A. M. Hoffman Hazel Jennings Balbina Johnson Frieda C. Jud Lucy E. Karr Dorothy Keek Lydia G. Klkatshco Alice A. Knox Mrs. Joseph Kuh Elsie M. Kupfer Mrs. G. W. Lee Mrs. B. H. Lewis Wendela Liander Emily O. Long Mary L. Mann Florence Middleton Ethel A. Mott Mrs. R. H. Nevins Dorothy Oak Carrie Oldenbuseh Ellen Peters Mrs. W. C. Popper Helen A. Purdy Mrs. Carroll Ragan Mrs. H. M. Richards Dr. H. M. Richards Hester M. Rusk Helen Saunders Lily Schlang Frances Siegel Miriam Siff Marion Staats Maude J. Staber Caroline E. Stackpole Marion Struss Mrs. Thomas Styles Agnes M. Surgeoner Elise Tobin Mrs. H. M. Thomas Elizabeth I. Thompson Elizabeth Thomson Mrs. Howard Trueblood Lueia B. Tunis Annie G. Turnbull Helen Walther Florence Weinstein Jsabelle C. Williams Mary D. Wolmack Mrs. Robert Yerkes [50] Professor Ida H. Ogilvie - - Honorary President Mary Welleck - President Harriet Van Nostrand Vice-President Lydia Kliatshco - - Secretary Edith M. Mook - - Treasurer Honorary Member, Dean Gilder sleeve FACULTY MEMBERS Miss Holzwasser Professor Knapp Dr. Mook ALUMNAE MEMBERS Miss Frieda Judd Miss Agnes Hall Mrs. Helen Kahrs Kronenbitter Miss Lillian Schaeffer UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS Edmere Cabana Adele Franklin Martha Gerloff Helen Goldstein Rutli Jarvis Laura Hildred 1918 Lydia Kliatshco Dorothy Oak Dora Randell Esther Rogers 1919 1920 Bertha Sherline Helen Stevens Harriet Van Nostrand Ruth Wachenheimer Ruth Lewy Marie Uhrbrock 1921 Ruth Colony Mathilde Drachman Marion Peters [51 ] Dorothy Carroll Birdseye Gretchen Torek Marian Townsend Vera Klopman - Betty Allen Smith Eleanor Curnow Carol Grimshaw Jeanne Ballot D. Carroll Birdseye Eleanor Curnow Emily Dowling Vera Klopman Marguerite Monjo President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Chairman of Choice of Production Chairman of Stage and Costume Chairman of Membership Faculty Member, Miss Bird Larson MEMBERS 1918 Natalie P. Harris Bessie Newberger 1919 M. Armitage Ogden Lucille Sens Bessie Simon Betty Smith Leolvn Smith Rutli Toledano Vivian Tappan Pamela Thomas Gretchen Torek Marian Townsend Marion Warren Lucille Wolf This club has recently been organized to encourage the interest in dancing as a form of dramatic art and to cooperate with other clubs of the college to this end. Its aim is for unified effort on the part of Seniors and Juniors in various forms of dancing and for the further development of original work. Italian Club Ikma LlCClONE President Catherink Accurso - Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS 1918 Catherine Accurso Irina Liccione Lillian Weygandt 1919 Theresa Carbonara Theresa Tusa 1920 Conettina J. Scancarello 1921 Helen Borre Outdoor Club H. Shelby Holbrook Elicia F. Carr - President Secretary-Treasurer Katheryn Cutler Nell Farrar Margaret Giddings Marjorie Barrington Marion Alexander Beatrice Becker Elinore Kohn V r era Benzon Gertrude Bendheim MEMBERS 1918 Elsa Grimm H. Shelby Holbrook Wendela Liander 1919 Elecia F. Carr 1920 Lucille Marsh Juliet Meylan Susanne Payton Amy Raynor 1921 Ethel Cottan Gertrude Mannis Effie Ross Dorothy Oak Helena Shine Ruth Wachenheimer Mildred Kammerer Aline Rosenbaum Genevieve Smith Marie Lhrhrock Virginia Stewart Helen G. W oodward Press Club Wendela Liander Dorothy Goldsmith Correspondent Hedwig Koenig, 18 Wendela Liander, ' 18 Ruth Waehenheimer, ' 18 Adele Alike, ' 19 Edna Brand, ' 19 Gertrude Geer, ' 19 Dorothy Goldsmith, ' 19 Mildred Kammerer, ' 19 Merle Shuster, ' 19 Katherine Brosnan, ' 20 Journalism Helene Fox 1919 Helen Baranoff Margaret Bernard Helene Fox Marjorie Herrmann 1920 Margaret Burk Gladys Esterbrook Ruth Ewan Emily Friedkin Natalie Hunkemeyer 1921 Catherine Falk Sallie Faxon Lois Gurnee President Secretary -Treasurer Paper Brooklyn Eagle New York Tribune New York Times New York American Evening Mail The Sun New York Herald Brooklyn Daily Eagle Morning World Columbia Spectator Club Chairman Marjorie Leve Lillian Turoff Helen McAndrew Merle Shuster Amy Jennings Caroline Gilkey Sylvia Kopold Mildred Minster Katherine McGregor Janet Robb Antonia Schwab Bertha Tompkins Elizabeth Wickham Barnard Chapter of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society To arouse an intelligent interest in Socialism among college students Adele Franklin - President May Hoffman - - Secretary-Treasurer FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. Harry T. Costello Dr. Helen Parkhurst Prof. William T. Montague Miss Margaret Watson Alumnae Member, Miss Elinor Franklin UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS Sophia Amson Florence Cuttrell Janet Fouts Adele Franklin Helene Fox Charlotte Green Lenore Guinzburg Bessie Brill Mabel Gutman Marjorie Kidd Mary Griffiths Lydia Kliatschco Marion Levy Rhoda Milliken May Hoffman Rose Le Vino Amy Harris Harriet Keehn Elinor Kohn 1918 Dora Randell Jeanette Robbins Margaret Schlauch Sophie Schulman 1919 Julia Lichtenstein Edith Lowenstein 1920 Sylvia Kopald Margaret Myers 1921 Helen Rivkin Debating Club Elsie Oschrin Dorothy Butler Sophia Amson Dorothy Birdseye Helene Fox Alice Goebell Dorothy Butler Louisa Eyre Ella Fischberg Ruth Ehrich Mary R. M. Griffiths Dorothy Hall Grace Kerr Emily Friedkin Evelyn Garfiel Amy Jennings Dorothv Falk 1921 Frances Marlatt Bertha Sherline Elizabeth Sluth Viola Williams Merle Sinister Lillian Touroff Anne Valentine Agnes Piek Lilyan Taylor Bertha Wallerstein President Secretarv-Treasurer MEMBERS 1918 Pauline Grossman 1919 Constance Lambert Rose LeVino 1920 Sylvia Kopald Marion Levi Hedwig Liebeskind Elsie Oschrin Bertha Mann Josephine Powell Myrrha Wesendonck Rosina Lynn Margaret Myer Juliet Mylan Bertha Wallerstein Marie Soley Gladys Van Brunt [55] Barnard War Relief WAR RELIEF COMMITTEE CENTRAL WAR RELIEF COMMITTEE (Organized in January, 1918) (September, 1917, to January, 1918) . vl1 . v 1 .Marion Alleman, 18. Chairman Marion Alleman, ' 18. Chairman Ruth Amberg, ' 19, Secretary Theodora Skinner, ' 19. Vice-Chairman Jane Chase, ' 20, Treasurer Elizabetli Herod, ' 19, Secretary Theodora Skinner, ' 19, Chairman of Emergency Work T Ch se ' 9 Treasurer Marcella Henry, ' 21, Chairman of Publicity Adele Franklin, ' 18, Chairman of Social Service Mildred Blout, ' 18, Chairman of Red Cross Alice Judson, ' 20, Chairman of Boathouse Canteen Lucile Wolf, ' 19, Chairman of Entertainment Constance Lambert, ' 19, Chairman of Registration Edith Lowenstein, ' 19, Chairman of Publicity Isabelle Murtland, ' 18, Chairman of W. S. S. Elizabeth Armstrong, ' 20, Chairman of Benefit Shop Dr. Braun [ Faculty Members Provost Brewster ' β’ The War has called us and we have respond, d. Barnard is doing her part in the big splendid work of War Relief. We have knitted, we have sewed, we have cooked β we have even sung for War Relief! The achievements of Red Cross Auxiliary No. 203 have been an important item in the work; you will find more about them on the opposite page. Some of the other accomplishments of the War Relief Committee have been: β One hundred and forty hours of clerical work for the University Committee on Women ' s War Work; two hundred hours of Campaigning for the Second Liberty Loan; twenty hours ' work at local Exemption Board No. 231; one hundred hours ' work at Hero Land; six boxes of knitted articles sent to Fort Hancock, Sandy Hook; seventeen Christmas boxes sent through the Y.M.C.A. to our soldiers in France; thirty-seven Christmas boxes sent to soldiers in the Army and Navy Ward of Bellevue Hospital; books, cigarettes and candy to the same ward; two Christmas boxes to soldiers at Camp Merritt; Christmas dinner for five sick soldiers; three comfort boxes sent to allied prisoners in foreign camps; three large bundles of clothing to the American Girls ' Fund for the French. Probably the greatest achievement of all was the thrilling, inspiring, reckless contest in generosity β the event of the fall semester, and second only to Greek Games in the excitement which it caused β our campaign for the Y.M.C.A. Student Friendship Fund. We were all bankrupt at the end of that week! Thanks to Dr. Braun, Isabelle Murtland and our speedy mascots, not forgetting the Dark Horse, we far exceeded our $5,000 goal. At the end of the campaign the figures were: 1918 ----------- $987.75 1919 1,662.60 1920 -------- -- - 2,197.10 1921 - - 922.00 Dark Horse --------- 2,261.00 Total --------- $8,033.45 Over four hundred dollars additional has been collected for the Fund since that time. [56] AUXILIARY NO. 203 NEW YORK .M I LDRED BlOUT, ' 1 S Red Cross Auxiliary No. 203 started its work in real earnest on the first day of last October. For a few weeks Headquarters were located in one of the Zoology laboratories. During October, five thousand seven hun- dred and eighty surgical dressings and thirteen knitted garments were made. In November, after the work had been moved downstairs to the reception room, the produc- tion rose to seven thousand three hundred and ninety- seven dressings and one hundred and eighteen knitted garments. In December β a short college month β four thousand two hundred and fifty-seven dressings and one hundred and eighty-seven garments were turned out. In the ten-day period between the holidays and mid- years, one thousand nine hundred and twenty dressings, and one hundred and twenty-six garments were made. The total production of the Auxiliary for the fall semester was nineteen thousand three hundred and fifty- four surgical dressings and four hundred and forty-four knitted garments. Besides these results from the workroom, the Aux- iliary cooperated with the New York County Chapter in sending volunteers to the Red Cross exhibit at the Elec- AMERICAN RED CROSS COUNTY CHAPTER Chairman trieal Show, to the tea-room at Hero-Land, and to the Red Cross mass-meeting at the Hippodrome on December twelfth. Barnard also had charge of one booth during the Red Cross membership drive. Nearly nine hundred dollars was expended by the Auxiliary during the fall term, for the necessary sup plies β chiefly for wool and gauze. Practically all the wool in the four hundred and forty-four knitted garments was given out to the students, tree. The amount of money in the treasury at the end of January was one hundred and thirty-five dollars and thirty-eight cents. The sources of financial support for the work have been numerous. About four hundred and twenty-one dollars and thirty-five cents was received in student pledges and contributions during the first four months. Three hun- dred dollars and seventy-one cents came in as the pro- ceeds of the Wigs and Cues performance of David Garrick and several smaller War Relief benefits. The rest of the money was contributed by the classes, some of the clubs, generous alumnae, and other friends in need. Religious and Philanthropic Organizations Miss Scudder - Director YOUNG WOMEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Harriette White, ' 18 - President Florence Barber, 18 - Vice-President Anne Hopkins, ' 20 Secretary Helen Brown, ' 18 - - Treasurer Dorothy Robb, ' 20 Annual Member COMMUNITY SERVICE ASSOCIATION Adele Franklin, ' 18 - President Dorothy Goldsmith, ' 19 - - Secretary-Treasurer NEWMAN CLUB Marie Bernholz, ' 18 - President Julia Treacy, ' 19 - Vice-President Marie Carmody, ' 19 Secretary H. Shelby Holbrook, ' 18 - Treasurer FACULTY COMMITTEE Dean Gildersleeve Dr. Margaret Maltby Dr. Herbert G. Lord Dr. Wilhelm Braun [58] Young Women ' s Christian Association MEMBERS litis Marion Alleman Florence Barber Mary Barber Gertrude Bergstrom Helen Brown Ruth Buvington A. Edmere Cabana Margaret Darrow Mildred Drake Martha Gerloff Alice Gil l Elsa Griimn Edith Gross Frances Haynes Meme Heacock Cora Hollo way Hazel Jennings Dorothy Keck Hedwig Koenig Ethel McLean Elizabeth Man Martha Miller Isabelle Murtland Dorothy Oak Louise Oberle Katherine Pott Helen Purdy Eva Reinke Aline Sanborn Margaret Sayford Helen Stevens Elizabeth Stewart Esther Sutton Harriet Van Nostrand Mary Welleck Carolyn Whipple Harriette White litli) Adele Alfke M. Leone Archibald Marion Benedict Joyce Borden Dorothy Brockway Gertrude Bunger Alma Chamberlain Catherine Cooksey Eleanor Curnow Verena Deuel Elsie Dochterman Helen Frederickson Erna Gunther Dorothy Hall Lucy Hayner Elizabeth Herod Margaret Herod Ruth Jarvis Edith Johnson Elsa Koch Lucetta Koster Constance Lambert Janet Meneely Marjorie Miller Grace Morgan Armitage Ogden Josephine Powell Georgie Schaaf Lucille Sens Helen Slocum Marian Townsend Edna Van War! Helene Wallace Edith Willmann Juliette Witte 1920 Ruth Austin Hortense Barten Beatrice Becker Pauline Benton Ruth Brubaker Dorothv Burne Edna Colluci Gladys Esterbrook Louisa Eyre Martha Finkler Gertrude Fricke Lillian Friedman Mary Garner Helen Hicks Laura Hildred Elizabeth Hobe Anne Hopkins Ruth Houghton Veronica Jentz Alice Judson Elaine Kennard Frances Kidd Aline Leding Phedora Leet Dorothy Lemcke Agnes Marsh Catherine Piersall Regina Pope Margaret Rawson Amy Raynor Gertrude Ressmever Dorothy Robb Katherine Sehafer Mathilde Tewes Virginia Thompson Marie Uhrbrock Clarissa White Helen Wilcox 1921 Gertrude Ammermullei Helen Borre Grace Carhart Ethel Cobban Frances Cocke Maude Fisher Madeleine Fiske Edna Gibson Alice Gott Marcella Henrv Edith Hutton Hutb Jeremiah Alice Johnson Frances Marlatt Helen Mauch Grace Sinnigen Marie Soley Adele Sticknev [59] Community Service Association (Formerly College Settlements Association) Facult ) Margaret P. Maltby Tracy D. Hazen MEMBERS 1918 Edith Baumann Mildred Blout Florence Cuttrell Adele P ' ranklin Helen Goldstein Natalie Harris Ethel McLean Elizabeth Man Katherine Pott Virginia Williams Grace Potter Elizabeth Sluth Viola Williams 1919 Adele Alike Helen Baranoff Dorothy Birdseye Gertrud Boas Aline Buchman Mary Craig Gertrude Geer Dorothy Goldsmith Marjorie Herrmann Mvra Kohnstamm Rose Le Vino Editli Lowenstein Bertha Mann Ruth Marshall Dorothy Morgenthau Armitage Ogden Berenice Ruff Tlieodora Skinner Pamela Thomas Erica Weary Mvrrha Wesendonek 1920 Dorothy Butler Hel en Calhoun Martha Finkler Caroline Gilkey Felice Jarecky Marion Kaufman Ada Vorhaus Julia Lesser Marion Levi Hedwi ' Liebeskind Margaret Myers Susanne Payton Edith Silver Leonore Andrews Marion Baer Winthrop Bushnell Alice Cossow Ruth Ehrich Maude Fisher Marion Hodenpyl Dorothy Kohmstamm Marjorie Marks Loretta Moore Lowrie Sage Rae Volk Natalie Weiner Elizabeth Wickham [60] Newman Club MEMBERS 1918 Marie Bernholz Gladys Cripps Elorence Eennon Mary Burns Margaret Darrow Mary Murphy H. Shelby Holbrook Corinne Barry Marie Carmody Eleeia Carr Edith Conway 1919 Emily Dowling Ramona Martin Marie Muhlfeld Helen Saunders Helen Shanley Genevieve Smith Julia Treacy Katherine Brosnan Margaret Burke Mary Crookall Anna Fox 1920 Edna Eox Margaret Gillespie Concepcion deGoenaga Helen Higgins Josephine MacDonald Marion MeCafferey Margaret Nance Margaret Nolan Cecile Ward Gertrude Ammermuller Louise Byrne Gertrude Cook Mary Donovan 1921 Anna Eisenman Elaine Huggard Ruth Kneiper Eoretta Moore Helen Muhlfeld Margaret O ' Neil Olive Riley Catherine Santelli Antonia Schwab Silver Bay Club (The Silver Bay Club is an informal organization composed of all t he girls in Barnard who have attended the Young Women ' s Christian Association Conferences at Silver Bay on Lake George. The purpose in forming the club was not only to bring the Silver Bay girls together socially, but also to form a group who could effectively bring something of the conference back to college.) Helen R. Brown, ' 18 - - Chairman Faculty Members Mrs. Juliana Haskell Miss Aurill Bishop MEMBERS 1917 Miss Mary Patchin Marian Harden Florence Barber Marv Barber Marion Benedict Dorothy Brockway Gladys Kennard Sally Origgi 1918 Elsa Grimm Helen Stevens 1919 Gertrude Bunger Eleanor Curnow Marion Struss Elizabeth Stewart Mary Wei leek Harriette White Charlotte Green Ruth Jarvis Elizabeth Schmidt Eleanor Lee Geacola Mandijano 1920 Elaine Kennard Adopted into Delegation xchile at Silver Bay Pomona College South America The Rime of a Deluded Sophomore Oh, how I hate that gibbering crew That led us all astray ! They told us ' twas a cinch to do, And we would all get A. That drama course, they said in glee Why all you need is sense ; They lied. And lied again to me About that course in English 13. All young and lightsome Freshmen, we, Without intelligence. For plays were here and plays were there And plays were all around. We read, and howled and roared and growled Like noises in a swound. We dabbled here, we dabbled there β And cheerlessly we read. And dates and plays were everywhere Except inside our head. Hut lo! the final qui , was here And we did nothing know. And to our boots, our hearts like lend Did slow but surely go. Oh! we had done a fearsome thing And it would work us woe; For we had quite forgol the plays That we had ought to know . And all the dates and notes we took, Were melted like the snow. Five times fifteen living girls (I heard nor sigh nor groan) With heavy thump, a lifeless lump, They flunked it, one by one. F ' s, F ' s β all F ' s, these were. F ' s for them all but me. Yea, I had passed from out that class With a hard earned D. Oh, D β thou art a gentle thing Beloved from pole to pole ! To M. W. L. the praise be given, She sent the gentle D from heaven That slid into my soul. Fare well β farewell. But now I tell A moral here today. She passeth well who knoweth well Both note and date and play. She passeth best who knoweth best All plays both great and small; For M. W. E. who teacheth us She knows and asketh all. [64] HOARD OF EDITORS Rhoda Milliken, ' 18 Rose Le Vino, ' 19 - Editor-in-Chief Assistant Editor-in-Chief ASSOCIATE EDITORS Sophia Amson, ' 1 S Elecia Carr, ' 19 Gladys Cripps, ' 18 Dorothy Goldsmith, H. Shelbv Holbrook, 19 ' 18 Felice Jareeky, ' 20 Mildred Kammerer. ' 19 Gertrude Miller, ' 19 Elsie Osehrin, ' 18 Lillian Touroff, ' 19 Kathleen Fisher, ' 17 Edith Lowexsteix. 19 Marion Levy. 18 BUSINESS BOARD - Business Manager Advertising Manager ASSISTANTS Edith Baumann, ' 18 Marguerite Bernard. 19 Mary Crookal. ' 20 Ethel Mott, ' 18 Lockie Parker. ' 20 Lucile Wolf, ' 19 Emilie Young, ' 19 [65] (The College Literary Publication. Issued Monthly. Founded in 1905.) BOARD OF EDITORS Mary Barber, ' 18- - Editor-in-Chief Edith Lowenstein, ' 19 - - - Business Manager Beatrice Becker, ' 20 Gertrude Geer, ' 19 Elecia Carr, ' 19 Lenore Guinzburg. ' 19 Emily Dowling, ' 19 Amy Jennings, ' 20 Katherine Peters, ' 18 s y co 10 y j Z COO ii iM- e yev V Athletic Association Georgia Stanbrough. ' 19 Ruth Wac henheimeh, IS Marjorie Barrington, 1! ' Dorothy Keck, ' 18 - Luenna Von Eltz, ' 21 President Vice-President - - - - Secretary - Treasurer Fifth Member of the Executive Council This year the Barnard Athletic Association and Barnard atldetics are forming an integral part of college activities. Heretofore, due to the fact that we have had to use the Teachers College gymnasium, we have to a certain extent been set apart from Barnard life. But now with the opening of our own gymnasium and with the earnest cooperation of the Physical Education Department, at hletics are being- brought closer to each student. Although we have lost our hockey field, we have gained many new sports. Some of them have not at yet been given recognition as interclass or varsity sports, merely because we are waiting to see the support given them by the classes. The sports played this year include basketball, baseball, swimming (varsity and class sports), tennis, indoor and outdoor (class sport), captain ball, water polo, and track sports (class sport). [70] [71 ] Varsity Basket Ball Team 1916-1917 Ruth Wachenheimer (Sub. C.) Hattie Wegener (Sub. G.) Vivian Tappan (C.) Georgia Stanbrough (F.) Harriet Van Nostrand (S. C.) Louise Irby (G.) Dorothy Keck (G.) Aline Pollitzer (F.) Rosemary Lawrence (G.) Aline Pollitzkh. ' 17 - - Captain Vivian Tapi ' an. ' 19 - - Chairman of Ba sket Ball, ' 16- ' 17 Myrrha Wesendonck, ' 19 - - Chairman of Basket Ball, ' 17- ' 18 BASKET BALL RECORD, 1916-1917 Barnard Varsity vs. Intercollegiate Alumna? - - Barnard Varsity, 27-25 Barnard Varsity vs. Horace Mann - Barnard Varsity, 24-22 Barnard Varsity vs. Teachers College Varsity - Barnard Varsity, 20-13 Barnard Varsity vs. Teachers College Varsity - Barnard Varsity, 25-11 As a result of varsity ' s victories over Teachers College, Barnard became the first possessor of the Basket Ball Cup. WEARERS OF THE B, BASKET BALL 1918 Isabel Greenbaum Louise Irby Dorothy Keck Harriet Van Nostrand 1919 Georgia Stanbrough Vivian Tappan Varsity Swimming Team 1916-1917 Dorothy Burne Hazel Jennings Aline Sanborn Dorothy Keck Georgia Stanbrough Harriet White Georoia Stanbrough - Captain June Dixon Smith - - Chairman of Swimming, ' 16- ' 17 Hazel Jennings - Chairman of Swimming. ' 17- ' IS SWIMMING RECORD, 1916-1917 Barnard Varsity vs. Teachers College Varsity Teachers College Varsity, 33-26 1. Relayβ Won by T.C. 2. Breast Stroke for Form β 1st. Levi; 2nd. Rau; 3rd. Jane, T.C. 8. Back Stroke for Form β 1st, Prene. T.C; 2nd. Stanbrough; 3rd, Sheer. T.C. k Underarm Side Stroke for Form β 1st. O ' Donnell, T.C; 2nd. Drake and Elliot, T.C. 5. Diving for Form β 1st, Terry: 2nd. Keck; 3rd. Fuller. T.C. 6. Trudgeon for Form β 1st, La Salla. T.C: 2nd, Lester, T.C; 3rd, Sallis, T.C. 7. 20-Yard Dashβ 1st, Jennings; 2nd. Hewey, T.C: 3rd, Hillas. T.C. WEARERS OF THE B. SWIMMING 1918 Mildred Drake Hazel Jennings Dorothy Keck Elsa Grimm Aline Sanborn 1919 Georgia Stanbrough [73] Varsity Baseball Team 1916-1917 Helene Fox (C. F.) Helen Kriegsinarj (R. F.) Ruth Wachenheime r (C.) Myrrha Wesendonck (IB.) Georgia Stanbrough (P.) Grace Welzmiller (S. S.) Hattie Wegener (2B.) Edna Brand (L. F.) Alice Barrington (3B.) Georgia Stanbrough, ' 19 - Captain Ruth Wachenheimer, 18 Chairman of Baseball, ' 16- ' 17 Marie Carmody, ' 19 - - Chairman of Baseball. ' 1 7- ' 1 8 BASEBALL RECORD, 191(5-1917 Barnard Varsity vs. Teachers College Varsity Teachers College Varsity, 15-13 Barnard Varsity vs. Teachers College Varsity Barnard College Varsity, 20-1 6 Barnard Varsity vs. Teachers College Varsity Barnard College Varsity, 22-14 Barnard Varsity vs. Faculty Team Faculty Team, 6-4 Class Basket Ball Team 1916-1917 Marjorie Miller (G) Louise Irby (G.) Myrrha Wesendonck (F.) Georgia Stanbrough (! ' .) Vivian Tappan (C.) Hattie Wegener (F.) -Marjorie Barrington (G. ) Mary Craig (S. C.) Vivian Tappan - - - Captain CLASS BASKET BALL RECORD. 1916-1917 FIRST SERIES 1919 vs. 1917 1919 (By Default) 1919 vs. 1918 - - 1919 1919 vs. 1920 1919 SECOND SERIES 1919 vs. 1917 - - 1919 1919 vs. 1918 1919 1919 vs. 1920 - - 1919 RESULTS OF INTERCLASS BASKET BALL. 191(5-1917 1919 - First Place 1917 - i 1918 - ... Tie [75] Tennis Tournament SEASON OF 1917 College Champion β Louisa Eyre, 1920 CLASS CHAMPIONS 1918 β Isabel Greenbaum 1920 β Louisa Eyre 1919 β Georgia Stanbrough 1921 β Luenna VonEltz CAPTAIN BALL With our new gymnasium has come in a new sport, captain ball. Although it lias not as yet been classified as an authorized interclass game, an interclass tour- nament was held, in which 1919 was victorious. 1918 vs. 1920 - 1920. 22-10 1919 vs. 1921 - 1919. 28-15 1919 vs. 1920 - 1919. 33-24 ODD-EVEN GAME Odds vs. Evens - - Evens. 26-25 INTERCLASS SWIMMING MEET 1917 - Third Place 1918 - First Place 1919 - - Second Place r [76] [77] Field Day Spring 1917 COMMITTEE Ereda Wobbf.r, ' 17 Hilda Rau, ' 17 Hazel Jennings, ' 18 Chai Catherine Cooksey, ' 19 Margaret Wilkens, ' 20 70- YARD HURDLES 1. Harriet Van Nostrand, ' 18 2. Eugenie llausle, ' 17 3. Marietta Lott, ' 17 BASEBALL THROW 1. Georgia Stanbrough, ' 19 2. Dorothy Bauer, ' 17 3. Helen Kriegsman, ' 20 DISCUS 1. Helen Kriegsman, 20 2. Ruth Wachenheimer, ' 18 3. Theresa Mayer, ' IS 200-YARD RELAY 1. 1918 2. 1917 3. 1919 HIGH JUMP 1. Georgia Stanbrough, ' 19 2. Harriet Van Nostrand, ' 18 3. Dorothy Davey, Ida Everson, ' 20 SHOT PUT 1. Helen Kriegsman, ' 20 2. Grace Welzmiller, ' 19 3. Ruth Wachenheimer, ' 18 50-YARD DASH 1. Dorothy Keek, ' 18 2. Harriet Van Nostrand, 18 3. Eugenie Hausle, ' 17 ARCHERY 1. Margaret Nance, ' 20 2. Grace Welzmiller, ' 19 :i. Anna Hermann, ' 18 BASKET BALL THROW 1. Georgia Stanbrough, 19 2. Dorothy Keck, ' 18 3. Dorothy Bauer, 17 ENTRANCE 1920. 3 points for Ingenuity 1917. 3 points for Singing EINAL SCORE 1917β22 points l!)l,s β 13 points 1919β 38 points 1920β 20 points First place in individual score, Georgia Stanbrough, ' 19 Harriet Van Nostrand, ' 18 Second Place in individual score Helen Kriegsman, ' 20 [78] [79] Members 1918 Su j tli it -Vinson Margaret Dari ' ow Helen Higgins Susanna Peirce Catherine Accurso Ethel Dawbarn Shelby Holbrook Helen Peirce IVl i rion . Ylleman Rose Fischel Louise Irby Ivatherine Pott Louise B art let t Adele Franklin Dorothy Jacobs Helen Purdv Edith Bauman Martha Gerloff Hazel Jennings Jeannette Robbins Marv Bensel I Β 1 Β I I Β !Β ' t t r -L OIOlll JVC 1 Is. Aline Sanborn Gertrude Bergstrom Margaret Giddings Lucile Keeler Esther Schiff Marie Bernholz Helen Goldstein Frieda Kenyon Elizabeth Sluth Mildred Blout Dorothy Graft ' e Hedwig Koenig June Dixon Smith H e 1 e 11 1 r i iw n Elaine Graham .Tnli:i T ten terwtei n ( MM.I Β± j iv imi i ni 1 Ml J-A i ' 1 i 1 | ll eveTl FK-Β Biifh Jjj ln t J)in it T inliel ( I reeiil j i i iiii 1 ' ! 1 β I 1 1 1 ( ' 1 1 1 j 1 1 Ml I 11 Β Β 1 (l V 1 β 1 1 M 1 . 1 1 1 Father Sntfnn .Tn 7 ' p l iehr liee Elsa Grimm M ;i Hon TVTeP.n ffprv . ' 1 (I I 1 7 11 ' H _ (UK i y T-Ta7M iei A nn ncfrar 1 1 - I 1 I 1 1 (111 il UiJll β’ β I ( )I i v i ;i (-iiiiiI we 1 1 V 1 1 V 1(1 β H 11 1VI V I. 11 Carolyn Grinishaw The res a Ala ver 1{ nth W, T a ehe? l hei mer 1 l U L 1 1 TV (IV 11V M M 1 1 M H [ Tit wi it li ' ( nimrir J_ I ' ' L 1 1 V U1111U1 Carolvn Harris Martha Miller 1 111(1 i ' l 111V 1 1 4 a ri ' iette Wh i te 1 1C1 1 1 ICLlv IT 1 1 1 1 i f -11 l fl V W f ' T i l iM V VHdUl V_ I Β± 1 ' J ' IVIargaret Harrison I 1 telle M 1 β ! ti l i iiuiTiir i i i i i i . i i 1 1 i 7 1 el en Wf 1 1 i ' i ii w I ;i tJii ' ri tic f n t let 1 I UH 1 111 ' V 11 I IV 1 Frances Havnes 1 e k i e e w 1 i i i r o ' e r 1 7 V. O 1V_ 1 1 C IT PHI I tjv 1 iol a A T i 1 1 i ;i 1 1171(1 V 1 M I I Ml T III 11 SI ' ( til) I ' ll 1 1 .1 111 r 7 7V I 1 V iforniJi W i 1 1 1 β 1 1 1 1 β -. ' β 1 ' I ' - 1 M M 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 ' 1919 Adele Alfke Alice Goebell Katherine Alagaw Helen Sa unders Ruth Amberg Dorothy Goldsmith Pauline Mahneke Theodora Skinner Marion Anthony Selma Gross Bertha Mann (Georgia Stanbrough Marjorie Barrington Beatrice ( ruggenheim A ' ictorine Mayer Blanche Strook Marion Benedict Lenorc Guinzburg Gertrude Miller Vivian Tappan Dorothy Birttseye Erna Gunther Marjorie Miller Pamela Thomas Gertrud Boas Dorothy Hall Dorothy Morgenthau (Iretehen Torek Edna Brand Dorothy Harris Marie Muhlfeld Marion Townsend Aline Buchman Elizabeth Herod Grace Munstock Edna Van Wart Gertrude Bunger Margaret Herod Armitage Ogden Verna Veit Marie Carmody Marjorie Herrmann Lucretia Peters Helene Wallace Elecia Carr Estelle Jacobs Dorothy Potter Hattie Wegener Marjorie Clark Ruth Jarvis Josephine Powell Grace Welzmiller Mary Craig Mildred Kammerer Edith Reid Alyrrha Wesendonck Leah Curtiss Myra Kohnstamm Phyllis Reid Betty Williams Verena Deuel Constance Lambert Sarah Rosenberg Edith Willmann Lucy Dewey Ruth Lewy Edith Rosenthal Juliette Witte Helen Frederickson [80] [920 Marion Alexander Elizabeth Armstrong Ruth Austin Alice Barrington Helen Barton Beatrice Becker Esther Bien Helen Borst Winifred Bostwick Jean Brown Dorothy Burne 1 [elen Calhoun Helen Clarke Mary Crookall Eleanor Curry Dorothy Davey Catherine Decker Louisa Eyre Ida Everson Ruth Evan Edythe Ahrens Gertrude Ammermuller Marion Baer Gertrude Bendheim Vera Bin en Frances Brown Marion Burroughs Winthrop Bushnell Louise Byrne Grace Carhart Aldinc Carter Eleanor Castle Juliette Clark Ethel Cobban Francis Cocke Ruth Colony Gertrude Cooke Alice Cossow Gertrude Dana Miriam Davidson Gladys Edwards Ruth Ehrich Martha Finkler Ella Fishberg Gertrude Fricke Lilian Friedman Mary Garner Mabel Gutman Helen Hicks Anne I iopkins Felice .la reeky Alice Judson Marion Kaufman Elaine Kennard Ethel Kossman Marjorie Kydd Phedora Leel Julia Lesser Marion Levi Rosina Lynn Josephine MacDonald Aline MacMahon Dorothy Fa lk Lucy Fawcett Sally Faxon Estelle Fine Maud Fisher Madeleine Fiske Agatha Gilbert Winifred Gorton Mary Groehl Elsie Guerdin Mary Hall Marion Haskell Dorothy Henriques Rhoda Hessburg Lillian Horn Elaine Huggard Edith Hutton Mary Jennings Ruth Jeremiah Alice Johnson Ruth Jones Agnes Maas Beatrice Mack Agnes Marsh Lucille Marsh Marguerite Marsh Juliette Meylan Mildred Minster Margaret Mochrie Margaret Myers Carrie ( Udenbusch Lockic Parker Susanne Payton Regina Pope Lucy Rafter Margaret Rawson Amy Raynor Dorothy Robb Marion Rosenberg Louise Rothschild Bertha Sartorius 1021 Beatrice Kafka Laena Kahn Eleanor Kohn Dorothy Kohnstamm Elizabeth La Boyteaux Ruth Lazar Edith Lindeman Virginia Littauer Marjorie Marks Frances Marlatt Marie Mayer Margaret Montgomery Lauretta Moore Helen Muhlfeld Virginia Otto Ruth Patterson Marion Peters Phyllis Pickhardt Dorothe Reickhard Helen Ritkin Effie Ross Esther Schwartz Helen Scidman Beryl Siegberl Dorothy Silberl Delphina Small Lilian Sternberg Marj Sutton Tilla Tewes Marion Tra is Maiic Uhrbrock da Vorhaus Lucille Vernon Violet Walser Gladys Wcthey Clarissa White Beatrice Whyte I. .una Widrevitz Margaret Wilkins Mabel Wood Anna Schmidt Gertrud Schoedler Jeanette Seely Helen Shire Evelyn Shrifte Adele Sicular Grace Sinnigen Rachel Souhami Virginia Stewart Adele Stiekney Bertha Tompkins Rae Volk Luenna Von Eltz Adelaide Van Holten Ruth Ward Elizabeth Waterbury Carolyn Whipple Natalie Wiener Edith Whelply 1 [elen Woodard Anna Zingali Plaintive Poems TO THE ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITTANICA Upon your worth I stake my trust, Brittanica, Brittanica, But for your aid I ' d bite the dust, Brittanica, Brittanica, You give me book reviews with ease. My English bibliographies, And strange old-world philosophies, Brittanica, Brittanica. Long be it e ' re your sun is set. Brittanica, Brittanica, The student ' s aid, the teacher ' s pet. Brittanica, Brittanica, Biographies you ' ve taught to me, Mart Luther ' s Life is short to me, Because of you, work ' s naught to me, Brittanica. Brittanica. SONG OF YE GRIND My teachers say I shouldn ' t fool β I don ' t. Nor waste the precious hours of school β I don ' t. To movie shows I must not go, Nor yet to any Broadway show, To vaudeville or circus, so I don ' t. In class they say I shouldn ' t knit β I don ' t. Nor in the back row talk and sit β I don ' t. They tell me I should hard work love, My marks are B plus or above, But do I have much fun, by Jove β I don ' t! A PLAINT I wish that I lived in Brooks, I do ; I wish that I lived in Brooks ; It ' s a terrible thing to go home one day. To find that the maids have gone away. And that you have to take their place sans pay When you ought to be reading your books. It ' s a very sad thing to hear Mother say, oh yes. it is sad but true. You must wash the dishes, don ' t stand and talk. And take young brother out for a walk Till we get some help, it won ' t pay to balk. And dust up the parlor, too. So I ' m tired to death; yes, tired to death, and I ' m sick of this job of the cook ' s, For my homely trials are o ' erwhelming me, I ' m a working woman from dawn till tea, And my highest marks will be C or D, Oh, I wish that I lived in Brooks! [82] ! 83 ] MEMBERS 1918 Stella Adler Marion Alleman Mary Bensel Marie Bernholz Mildred Blout Gladys Cripps Florence Cuttrell Etliel Dawbarn Dorothy Graffe Isabel Greenbanm H. Shelby Holbrook P ' rieda Kenyon Hedwig Koenig Marion Levy Therese Mayer Natalie P. Harris Margaret Rothschild Helena Shine Ruth Wachenheimer Adele Alfke Dorothy Brockway Elecia Carr Eleanor Curnow Emily Dowling Gertrude Geer 1919 Dorothy Goldsmith Vera Klopman Constance Lambert Rose Le Vino Bertha Mann Armitage Ogden Gertrude Miller Frances Rule Theodora Skinner Betty A. Smith Vivian Tappan Emilie Young Gertrude Fricke Helen Hicks 1920 Felice Jarecky Marian Kaufman Aline MacMahon Lillian Sternberg Ada Vorhaus Board of Directors FEBRUARY, 1917 Gekaldine Krause - - - Chairman Minna Lederman, Stage Management Hedwig Koenig. Finance Vivian Tappan, Costumes Theresa Mayer. Program Natalie P. Harris, Choice of Play Gladys Palmer, Membership Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve Honorary Faculty Member Professor Charles Sears Baldwin Miss Minor W. Latham The Rising of the Moon By Lady Gregory Presented in Brinckerhoff Theatre, April 27th and 28th. 1917 Cast of Characters .1 ragged man The Sergeant Policeman X. Policeman B. Gladys Cripps, ' 18 Lneille Marsh, ' 20 Dorothy Burne, ' 20 Vera Klopman, ' 19 Coached by Ray Levi Weiss, ' 15 The moon rose on a dark night and this was all we could see of the actors. hi the Spring of 1917, the country ' s call for volunteer workers de- prived Barnard of many of her best actresses, and Wigs and Cues was obliged to depart from its usual policy of giving a whole evening ' s per- formance. Green Stockings, ' after a week ' s rehearsal, was therefore abandoned for a shorter play. [86] Board of Directors OCTOBER. 191 Dorothy Graffe - Vivian Tappan, Stage Management Marion Levy, Costumes Mildred Blout, Choice of Flay Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve Professor Charles Sears Baldwin - - - - Chairman Helena Shine, Finance Natalie P. Harris, Program Hedwig Koenig, Membership Honorary Faculty Member Miss Minor W. Latham [87] David Garrick By T. W. Robertson Presented in Brinckerhoff Theatre, December 7th and 8th, 1917, for the benefit of Red Cross Auxiliary 203. CAST OF CHARACTERS Sunon Ine ot Theresa Mayer, ' 18 Ida Ingot Ada Vorhaus, ' 20 David Garrick - Vera Klopman, ' 19 Squire Chivy Aline MacMahon, ' 20 Thomas, Ingot ' s butler Ruth Waehenheimer, 18 Mrs. Smith Carol Grimshaw. ' 18 Mr. Smith Anna Schmidt, ' 21 Mr. Brown - - Ethel Dawbarn, ' 18 Araminta Brown Frances Brown, ' 21 Mr. Jones - Mary Jennings. ' 21 George, Garrick ' s hnfle β’ - Leonora Andrews. ' 21 Coached by Ray Levi Weiss, ' 15 V. Klopman, A. Vorhaus ] David Garrick [89] David Garrick [90] Home Made Plays Since the Fall of 1 91f5, Barnard has seen a number of plays written and pro- duced by Barnard undergraduates. Most of tliese were produced in the workshop conducted by the class in English . ' i, under Professor Baldwin, and some were repeated for the War Benefit performances. By the Spring of 1918 Wigs and Cues plans to give home made plays under her auspices, as part of the dramatic program of the year. The following plays were given during 1916 and 1917: The Stranger Man - - by Katherine Harrower, ' 17 Cesare Borgia - by Hildegarde Diechmann, ' 17 The Cost of Living - - by Cornelia Throop Geer. ' 17 Know Ye By Tlir.se Presents - - by Edith Morgan. ' 17 The Squealer - by Mary F. Barber, ' 18 The Open Door - - - by Isabel Greenbaum. ' 1 8 Wolf --------- - by Dorothy Graffe, ' 18 The White Wolf - by Ruth Zagat, ' 18 The Broken Chimney - - - by Marguerite Bernard, ' 19 With the College Wits Miss Doty: Now .Miss Rosenthal, in considera- tion of the fact that your sister has scarlet fever, vou must go right home. See, too, that you don ' t speak to a human being as you go out. Edith A ' .: It ' ll be perfectly all right for me to go in and speak to Professor Brewster, though, won ' t it? Freshman (looking at the Posted list): I won- der what the word ' Provost ' means. Brilliant Junior: Business, my child, business. Miss Latham (to doting Mamma who has been bothering her for hours about Daughter ' s regi- stration): You don ' t care to register, do you? Mr. Grady (discussing marginal purchasing) : Well, Miss Tappan, what would you do if the price of soap went up ? Vivian T.: It wouldn ' t make any difference to me. Professor Trent had his portrait painted with three rare volumes of De Foe on the table near him. When the picture was finished the artist asked for any criticisms. Professor Trent examined the paint- ing closely and then: That second volume is a little too thick. PROFESSOR MONTAGUE ' S OWN POEM Little Miss Muffet Sat on a tuffet. Studying Hume for exam ; She said, I can ' t see, If ideas are me, Just where the rest of me am. Profesor Boas: Among the Chukchee Indians, if the children of females are females they are always brothers and sisters. Edith Reid (looking for the Barnard History Class at the Museum of Art, to guard): Could vou tell me where the Barnard girls are? Guard: No ' m, I don ' t know where they ' re kept. UNFORTUNATE JUXTAPOSITIONS Prom English 1 As my uncle approached lie yelped louder and louder. The mother seized the child and with an offended look drew him on her lap. The cow trotted along with her thi n legged calves. She had vermilion lips and was devouring a book. I took long walks with my dog and the red, al- most angry, sunset. SLIPS OF SIMKHOVITCH I made a be3 hive for the door. She was a very good looking straw widow. Earnest Worker: What ' s the lesson in Ethics to- day. Edith? Edith Lowenstein: Lord knows, I don ' t! Miss Rockwell announces that the following ref- erence books are now ready for use : Voices of the Night, Astronomy 1 The Inferno, Chemistry 5-6 Lives of the Hunted, English 1-2 The Glory of the Conquered. English B5-B6 Inland Voyage. Hygiene A [92] Greek Games [ 93 ] Greek Games FRESHMAN YEAR 1918 - 7 Points 1919 - 39 Points EVENTS Entrance of Classes 1918 It Points 1919 8 Points Chorus and Dance ] )18 - It Points 1919 19 Points Lyrics 1918 17 Points 1919 Points First place Leila Taylor. ' 18 Second place - Hildegard Diechmann. ' J 8 [94] Athletics 1918 - 22 Points 1919 12 Points Hurdling for Form First place Dorothy Keck, ' 18 Second place Harriet Van Nostrand, ' 18 Third place - Myrrha Wesendonck, ' 19 First place Second place Third place - Discus Hurling I )orothy Potter. ' ! !) Lucy Dewey, ' 19 Georgia Stanbrough, ' 19 Helen Brown Torch Race Won by 1918 Dorothy Jacobs Elizabeth Sluth Ethel Dawbarn Dorothy Connor Relay Race Won by 1918 Dorothy Keck Harriet Van Nostrand Chariot Race Won by 1918 Frieda Kenyon Hedwig Koenig Charioteer, Sophie Amson Piith Wachenheimer Marion Levy [95] Edna Bkand 1918 Dorothy Graffe Natalie Plough - Ethel Dawbarn Theresa .Mayer - Mary Barber - Dorothy Keek Wendela Liander COMMITTEES Chairman Chairman of Dance Chairman of Costumes Chairman of Music - Chairman of Lyrics - Chairman of Athletics Chairman of Finance CENTRAL COMMITTEE 1919 Chairman 1919 - Edna Brand Vera Klopman Ruth Lewy - Emily Dowling Rose Le Vino Georgia Stanbrough Edith Rosenthal 1918 Dorothy Graffe, Chairm Alice Gibb Isabel Greenbaum Rhoda Milliken Mary Griffiths, ex-officio 1919 Edna Brand Constance Lambert Bertha Mann Josephine Powell Gertrude Geer, ex-officio Supervisor. Mary Porter Beegle JUDGES Dance Professor Margaret Maltby Miss Elizabeth Palmer Costumes Miss G. M. A. Richter Mrs. T. Leslie Shear Music Mr. Alger Gildersleeve Mr. Cornelius Rubner Lyrics Professor Charles Sears Baldwin Professor John Erskine Mr. Robert Underwood Johnson Athletics Miss Elizabeth Duncan Dr. Edward Robinson Mr. Frank Damrosch Mr. Frank Fisher Miss Lilian Schoedler Miss Bernadine Yunck Miss Marjorie Hillas Miss Marguerite Smith Miss Marv Wegener Miss ELsa Kish Miss Isabel Totten [97] Greek Games SOPHOMORE YEAR 1919 - - 5iy 2 Points 1920 481 2 Points EVENTS Entrance of Classes 1919 - 11 Points 1920 - 12 Points Chorus and Dance 1919 - - 12 Points 1920 ------- 26 Points Lyrics 1919 - 5 Points 1920 - 9 Points First place - Beatrice Becker, ' 20 Second place - Marion Warren, ' 19 Athletics Marie Carmody Adele Alfke 1919 1920 First place Second place First place Second place Third Place Jessie Smith 231 2 Points iy 2 Points Hurdling for Form Marjorie Clark Myrrha Wesendonck, ' 19 j Jessie Smith, ' 19 I Helen Borst, ' 20 Discus Hurling Vivian Tappan, ' 19 Dorothy Potter, ' 19 Margaret Rawson, ' 20 Relay Race Won by 1919 Georgia Stanbrough Chariot Race Won by 1919 Helen Frederickson Grace Welzmiller Theodora Skinner Marie Carmody Charioteer, Ruth Lewy Torch Race Won by 1919 Georgia Stanbrough Grace Welzmiller mmmmmmmmmmmmmmBmm Constance Lambert 1919 Chairman COMMITTEES 1919 Constance Lambert Betty Allen Smitli - Lucy Dewey Miriam Smith Lenore Guinzburg Vivian Tappan Bertha Mann 1920 Aline MacMahon - Edythe Auty Lillian Sternberg Margaret Nolan Katharine Shafer Dorothy Burne - Ethel Kossman Chairman Chairman of Dance Chairman of Costumes Chairman of Music Chairman of Lyrics Chairman of Athletics Chairman of Finance CENTRAL COMMITTEE 1919 1920 Constance Lambert, Chairman Helen Barton Ruth Amberg Winifred Bostwick Eleanor Curnow Aline MacMahon Elizabeth Gatewood Ada Vorhaus Dorothy Brockway, ex-officio Susanne Payton, ex-officio Supervisor. Miss Bird Larson JUDGES Dance Mrs. Diana Watts Miss Florence Flemming Noyes Miss Gertrude Colby Costumes Mrs. John W. Alexander Mr. Robert Edmond Jones Professor James Rignall Wheeler Music Mr. Eduardo Petri Mr. Walter Bogert Professor Walter Henry Hall Lyrics Professor Grace A. Hubbard Mr. Brian Hooker Athleiics Mr. Frank Fisher Miss Marjorie Hillas Miss Margaret King Miss Gladys Pearson Mrs. Douglas Robinson [ 100 ] Miss Helen Jones Miss Lilian Schoedler Miss Bernadine Yunck Greek Games Lyric β Sophomore Year To Eos, the Eternal By Beatrice Lamberton Becker, 1920 By Marion Boyd Warren, 1919 Against the dreadful panoply of stars I stand and feel the dawn-wind in my face. There is an ominous silence on the earth And hushed attention far through starry Space. The brooding hills upheave their shadowy girth As if to catch some faint portentous sound; And now from the white shuddering stars that bound Night ' s sinister domain in the wide East, A sudden tremor passes swifty round The glittering constellations ' high array, A signal of dismay Then suddenly I know the night has ceased. The eastern hills are black against the grey, And lo, across the waiting world I hear Wistful and clear The thin and silver trumpets of the day And thou art come, clad in thy radiance, Shimmering Eos, and art momently Striding in splendor with a bright advance Along the mystic bastions of the dawn . Yet as I call thy twilight eyes are gone, Thy slender ankles glint on misty hills Far in the muffled West. A waking bird Flutes a soft note like an old poignant word Over and over, and abruptly stills His call. Soon now the lambent sun in glory Will redly stare from the horizon ' s rim Eos, thou art so fleet and transitory, Too fragile and mysterious and dim To be immortal β and the gods are dead And half forgotten, save in ancient story. Hast thou too passed for many a year gone by, And wcrt some delicate phantom in the sky? A sudden splendor flashing down the night? Nay, thou art more than goddess, more than light. Thou the eternal, the miraculous ! Man still to thee lifts up his blinded head And marvels at thy sudden call, thy white Incredible feet upon the utmost shoals Of troubled darkness. Yea, the gods are gone That once had sovereignty of mortal souls Yet thou, the old and evanescent dawn Shalt far outlive this wistful tribe of men, And when the earth is free of them again Still shalt thou herald to dim icy seas A strange red sun like a remembered pain. And through the infinite night Still shout of brighter, lovelier dawns than these. Naught is forever, save the birth of light. Eos! The altar Maine dies low. Where stars have spent their blue-eyed wane, High builded, first to sight thy glow, The pillared silence of thy fane Enshadowed waits. Night ' s slipping grasp dissolves its shades Of Death. Starlight unbidden, fades. Over the gossamer purpled hills Softly the mist that the nightfall wills Sifts from thy gates. Kos, the wounded poppies Night has wreathed Fade lifelessly, and Sleep has stirred and waits But thy awakening. Pale Phosphor breathed The silent hymn of peace. I ' nbar thy gates! Lift thou the ocean ' s purpled cloak away, Fash thou with playing winds its whitening spray, The opalled line of sea and heaven reclaim With herald torch, thy peneilings of flame. Fos, the wind is blowing cool. Colorless stirring, whitened and wan The light is born, And clear as the gaze of startled fawn, The blue of a summer sky-filled pool Gives birth to morn. Sunder Apollo ' s gates and fling them wide! Pour forth thy flowered wealth that he may ride, The Conqueror, through the arch of flaming sky. Eos, Beloved of Mortal, while I cry. The petaled rose that blossoms on thy way. Blooms full, gleams rich, the golden heart of day. From ivied gleaming pillars incense wings The praise of newborn loveliness of things. [101] [ 102] November 27, 1917 PROGRAM Cabaret Supper in tin Lunch Room, Students ' Hall. Cap and Gown Procession to Brinekerhoff Theatre ( hiss Singing. College Singing. Sophomore Show. Mysteries Show β Mystery Time. Mysteries Dance led by Agnes Marsh. Presentation of Mystery Book to Freshmen by Sophomore President. Acceptance of Book by Freshmen President in behalf of Class of 1921. Helen Hicks, 1920 - Helen Higgins Gertrude Geer Dorothy Davey Ann - Jennings COMMITTEE 1918 1919 1920 - - - Chairman Isabel Greenbaum (ex-officio) Constance Lambert (ex-officio) Gertrude Fricke Katherine Shafer Aline MacMahon (ex-officio). [ 103 ] MARCH 1, 1918 WON BY 1919 SERIOUS SONG Barnard Taps β From College Song Book NON-SERIOUS SONG We Are the Undergraduates β From College Song Book Won by 1918 1919 JUDGES Lillian Schoedler, ' 11 Chrystine Straiton, ' 12 Helen Dana, ' 13 Edna Henry Bennett, ' 15 Dorothy Blondel, ' 16 CLASS SONG LEADERS 1921 β Gertrude Dana 1920 β Mary Opdycke 1919 β Georgia Stanbrough 1918 β Dorothy Keek (Marie Bernholz, ' 18 College (Ada Vorhaus, ' 20 FINAL POINTS 1921 β 5-1 2 1920 β 3-1 3 1919 β 9 1918 β 6 [ 104 ] [ 105 ] [ 106 ] University Convocation THURSDAY, MAY 10TH, 1917, AT I P. M. PROGRAM by the Chaplain of tlie University by tlie Chairman of tlie Trusters by tlie President of the University I. Invocation _____ II. Tlie Star-Spangled Banner III. Introduction - IV. Address ------ V. La Marseillaise VI. Conferring the degree of Doctor of Laws, honoris causa Monsieur Rene Yiviani, Ministre de la Justice. Ancien President du Conseil Le Marechal J off re Rt. Hon. Baron Cunliffe of Headley, Governor of the Bank of England Rt. Hon. Arthur James Balfour, O.M., His Majesty ' s Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs VII. Rule Britannia ' VIII. Address IX. America New York Military Band M. Viviani [ 107] [ 108 ] The B ' s at Bedford Hills Sean this page and you will see How useful Barnardites can be How they spend vacation hours Pulling weeds and growing flowers, Driving horses, painting doors, Haying, raking, doing chores. Autumn calls them back to college, There to tread the paths of knowledge ; Still thej ' long to spend their days In the rural country ways. Grads and undergrade unite In week-ends past description, quite. [ 109 ] Students Hall After our waiting many days Greatest of all surprises, After a thousand small delays The Students Building rises ! Oh, wide it is and broad and fat, But red and wondrous fair β Just what we have been aiming at, So big and on the square. November twelfth the college goes To enter its new halls The scent of plaster hits our nose Enthusiasm palls. They told us it was finished quite, But as we climb the stair Against the beams the hammers smite We note the walls are bare. The elevators please us most, They ' re large with lots of space β We wish they ' d two big mirrors boast So we could see our face. We trip into the studies then, The best our rival draws, I guess Fate laughed out loudly when She picked those Sophomores; The gym is very fine to see, Of air there is aplenty; We hope the course will lengthened be, Beginning Nineteen Twenty. Friend Annie lends the lunchroom dash Which huge is, truly fine; Each day she dishes out the hash To a long wavering line. The Library ' s a lofty room, Quite handsome as to looks. One thing there casts a heavy gloom β Those rows of reference books Down in the depths the blue-green pool Next greets our wondering eyes, So clean it is, so clear and cool ' Tis quite the best surprise. Upon the ground floor then Miss Boyd Our roaming gaze now views, In times of woe the rest room ' s great She tells us in a friendly woid But oh, it ' s hard, hard, hard! Before we e ' er can to it go, We have to si rn a card. To mind our P ' s and Q ' s, And by her sits her faithful hmmd Rags, with his mien so wise, With silver hair; he makes no sound Just looks with doggish eyes. Oh, we could rave without abuse From morning until night About this hall; but what ' s the use? This H is finished quite! I HO ] [Ill] Odes to Olympus The Brothers Philosophical, The Brothers Philosophical, I write of; there are two, The pleasant Dr. Hollingworth. The merry Montague. The first one very honest is, He ' ll never swear lie ' s right, He says I think this thing is so, I can ' t be sure, quite. The second one ' s a famous wit. But lateness is his crime. We all were tardy marked, the day He came to class on time. But still they make a charming pair. We like them much, we do, The pleasant Dr. Hollingworth, The merry Montague. TO THE DEAN Oh, V. C. G. ! Oh, V. C. G. ! Hark to our plaint we beg of thee, A poem we would write to thee, A paean of praise indite to thee β But all we ' d say is trite to thee, Oh, V. C. G.! Oh, V. C. G. ! It really would be most absoyd. If anyone had never hoyd. Of our great Virginia Boyd. All Barnard waits upon her woyd, Without her life would be a voyd, And college could not be enjoyd, We ' d be a mixed-up wandering hoyd, Always in trouble or annoyd, β Oh, leave us ne ' er, Virginia Boyd There is a young instructor in Economics A. His name is Mr. Grady, and oft we ' ve heard him say β Er-yes, perhaps that view is true, but in the broad and large. That attitude is of the mind and somewhat in the marg- in of the corporation. But I didn ' t realize That to give such information to young ladies was deemed wise. Still, they give it to your brothers over in Columb-i-a, And I know you Barnard maidens equal them in every way β And on he rambles in this wise which really is quite rare, We ' d like to tell you more of him β but truly, we don ' t dare ! Odes to Olympus LYRIC TO BILLY STROPHE Who runs to help me when I flunk? Why β Billy ! Who tells me that mv themes are punk ? Why β Billy ! Who says Young ladies, you may knit When in my English class you sit, I reallv do not mind a bit. Why β Billy ! ANTISTROPHE It was a bright day in October. Slowly I approached the Provost ' s office, To have my first conference with His August High- ness. I clutched the door-knob feverishly, And entered. Mr. Brewster yawned. (He always yawns when lie sees me.) Be seated, lie said. I sat. He picked up six of my closely typed themes And opened his mouth to speak. I waited for the jewels of wisdom to fall from his lips. And then lie said, You use a typewriter. I marveled at his discernment. CATASTROPHE Who scrawls on all mv themes, Rewrite ? Why β Billy ! Who keeps me working dav and night ? Why β Billy ! Who says, Emotions you must quell. Don ' t let your angry passions swell. But who ' s the one best bet, prav tell? Why β Billy ! DEAR DOCTOR C. A very fine man is our dear Doctor C. He tells us the story of fish and of flea, But though he ' s polite β And his manners delight, Yet several terrible customs has he ! He lectures in words that have syllables ' steen. We stupidly sit there and guess what they mean, Like homogeneity, With, for variety, Heterogeneous thrown in between He thinks, too, his course is a sua]), and we hear That he ' s striving to make it more fatal each year, For those who ' re to come, Oli, the outlook is glum. And for their young sanity greatly we fear ! But if now his words had but syllables three, On one thing I ' m sure we all should agree, That never, oh never, Was human so clever, So liked, so admired as famed Doctor C. [113] 3 V 1 ! 4 II Would. taVe. VVve. Q-OpVoAo - Of Wwov end viAAeOr cnruec. |o become. n e. perpfcTra-ror our ln vV = now uncovev j Β ouVs up on pencx a_ i V You VH03 GdJiLTY OF WHICH TflTtT!! ... [114] Toward realms of Yesterday vou glide True guide you ' ve been, and truer friend On Time ' s relentless flow, And as you past us sail. And Alma Mater softly weeps We greet you. Sisters, fondly proud β β To see you go. β Farewell β and Hail ! f 115] Program of Senior Week CLASS DAY EXERCISES TUESDAY, JUNE FIFTH Processional - -- -- -- -- -- Class Song Salutatory - - - - Cornelia Geer j Ruth Jensen Knocks ' Sylvia Hecht Class Day Poem - - - - Babette Deutsch History of 1917 and Presentation of Its Gift to Barnard - - Elsie Oakley Announcement of Phi Beta Kappa Elections - Miss Harriet Seibert Announcement of Von JVahl Prize ----- Dean Gildersleeve V aledictory - - - - Beatrice Lowndes Sunset Song by Lillian Closson, ' 09 - - - Recessional IVY CEREMONY On Milbank Quadrangle immediately after the Class Day Exercises, followed by a reception on the campus Oration ----- Dorothea Curnow COMMITTEE Dorothy Leet ---------- - Chairman Helen Callan Dorothea Curnow Cornelia Geer (ex-officio) Lucy Karr Marjorie Hallett Anita Frenzel (ex-officio) One Hundred and Sixty-third Annual Commencement JUNE 6, 1917 Earle Prize in Classics Sylvia Sara Rosalind Hecht Gerard Medal Alma Gladys Ruhl Kohn Prise Theresa Hiebel Frances Krasnow Speranza Prize Katherine Quackenbos Eon fVahl Prize Beatrice Lowndes Caroline Duror Fellowship Gulli Lindh DEPARTMENTAL HONORS errman Prize Ruth Balthurst Edmondson Reed Prize Gladys Louise Palmer Tattock Prize Ruth Jensen Classical Philology (Greek) Sylvia Sara R. Heeht, Second Year Honors Ruth Jensen, Final Honors Grace Richardson Merritt, Third Year Honors English Cornelia Throop Geer, Final Honors II istory Helene Clara Bausch, Third Year Honors Alma Gladys Ruhl, Final Honors Elinor Alexander Sachs, Third Year Honors Italian Katherine Quackenbos, Second Year Honors Mathematics Helene Clara Bausch, Third Year Honors Evelyn Mani Davis, Final Honors Eugenie Caroline Hausle, Final Honors Frances Krasnow, Final Honors Charlotte Martens, Final Honors Physics Edith Crary Haley, Second Year Honors Eugenie Caroline Hausle, First Year Honors Frances Krasnow, First Year Honors Gulli Lindh. First Year Honors Psychology Gulli Lindh, Second Year Honors Georgina Ida Stickland, Third Year Honors Zoology Balbina Antoinette Johnson, Third Year Honors Marv Lilian Ely Helen Clara Bausch Evelyn Mani Davis Cornelia Geer Edith Crary Haley MAGNA CUM LAUDE Ruth Jensen Frances Krasnow CUM LAUDE Eugenie Caroline Hausle Sylvia Sara R. Heeht Therese Hiebel Anna Jablonower Alma Frances Ruhl Gulli Lindh Grace Richardson Merritt Elinor Alexander Sachs Georgina Ida Stickland [117] Baccalaureate Service SUNDAY, JUNE THIRD, 1917 1 P. M. Baccalaureate Service, Columbia Gymnasium Speaker: The .Reverend William Arnold Shanklin, President of Wesleyan University Senior Dance MONDAY. JUNE FOURTH, 1917 COMMITTEE Lucille Taylor - -- -- -- -- - Chairman Evelyn Davis Wilma Sours Cornelia Geer (ex-offieio) Irma Meyer Marion Strauch Dorothy Leet (ex-officio) Senior Banquet THURSDAY, JUNE SEVENTH, 1917 COMMITTEE Irma Hahn ----------- Chairman Dorothy Bryan Lenore Gunzendorfer Cornelia Geer (ex-officio) Grace Diercks Ruth Jennings Dorothy Leet (ex-officio) Helen Leet Class Prophet, Eleanor Wilkens Toast Mistress, Cornelia Geer Romantic History, Elizabeth Wright [118] WAITRESSES FROM 1919 Adele Alfke Edna Brand Dorothy Brockway Elecia Carr Catherine Cooksev Eleanor Curnow Gertrude Geer Lenore Guinzburg Constance Lambert Lucv Lee Bertha Mann Ruth Marshall Janet Meneely Armitage Ogden Josephine Powell Frances Rule Theodora Skinner Georgia Stanbrough Pamela Thomas Marian Townsend Emilie Young [119] Prunella LOVE IN A DUTCH GARDEN By Lawrence Housman and Granville Barker Presented by the Class of 1917, June 1 and 2, 1917, for the benefit of the Columbia Ambulance Prunella - - - - Pierrot - Boy First Gardener - Second Gardener Third Gardener - Scaramel, Pierrot ' s servant Tenor, a hired singer Love, a statue Prim Prude t Prunella ' s Aunts Privacy J Queer Quaint servants Agnes Surgeoner Katherine Harrower Sabina Rogers Pauline Hattorff Marjorie Hallett Katherine Wainwright Elizabeth Wright Lucille Taylor Dorothy Bauer Jane Staples Helen Callan Katherine Quackenbos Dorothy Bryan Ruth Jensen MUMMERS awk β Anna Hermann Kennel β Lenore Mayer Callow β Irma Meyer Mouth β Carol Arkins Doll β Georgina Stickland Romp β Lily Schlang Tawdry β Mary Talmage Coquette β Sarah Bennett MUMMER ' S DANCE Helene Bausch Rosemary Lawrence Marietta Lott Genevieve Hartmann Helen Leet Catherine Madigan Sylvia Hecht Sadie Lewin Edna Pritchard CHORUS Marion Strauch Muriel Terry Frida Wobber G. Adelstein, A. Bunker, L. Burgi, E. Cahen, H. Callan, E. Davis, G. Dear- den, G. Diercks, A. Hall, P. Hattdorf, E. Hausle, M. Heacock, S. Hildenbrand, R. Jensen, K. Kahn, H. Kahrs, R. Lawrence, K. Lenard, G. Merritt, E. Munter, S. Origgi, K. Quackenbos, E. Sachs, J. Staples, L. Taylor, B. Walker, E. Wilkens, O. Williams, F. Weinstein. Produced under the management of Mrs. Ray Levi Weiss Agnes Surgeoner - Helen Callan Katherine Harrower Geraldine Krause COMMITTEE Lily Schlang Dorothy Stern Katherine Wainwright Chairman Marietta Lott Cornelia Geer (ex-officio) Dorothy Leet (ex-officio) From Left to Right: (Back row) G. Hartmann, M. Terry. L. Schlang, M. Talmadge. L. Mayer, G. Strickland. S. Bennett, C. Arkins, M. Strauch. H. Leet, M. Hallett, S. Rogers, K. Wainwright, D. Bryan. (Front row) K. Harrower, M. Lott, A. Surgeoner [121] The World and 1917 Dorothy Bauer β Mathematical computer in Ameri- can Telephone and Telegraph Co. Helene Bausch β Mathematical computer in American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Elsa Becker β Clerk in New York Trust Co. Ruth Benjamin β Translating for American Gov- ernment Service. Sara Bennett β Translating and decoding in the United States Navy β a yeoman. Marjorie Braine β Assistant in Chemistry and Physics at Wilson College. Eleanor Bremer β Private secretary. Lena Brodsky β Educational director, Headgear Workers Institute. Dorothy Bryan β M.A. in English at Columbia. Lucie Burgie β Teaching at Goodground. Long Island. Beatrice Burrows β Policy clerk in Home Insur- ance Company. Evelyn Cahen β Psychology Department at Apple- ton ' s Publishing House. Helen Callan β Computer in American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Marie Chaband Styles β At home. Selma Cohen β Organization and propaganda for Zionist Movement. Helen Collins β Teaching in Higli School at Rock- land, V ermont. Minnie Cook β Teaching in Scudder School, New York City. Etta Cover β Curlian Relief. Red Cross, Washing- ton, D. C. Dorothea Curnow β Studying medicine at P. and S. Evelyn Davis β Mathematical computer in American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Gertrude Dearden β Graduate work. Catherine Derivan β Filing clerk with Guaranty Securities Co. Grace Diercks β Teaching at Caldwell, New Jersey. Mary Dwyer β Columbia, business course. Ruth Edmondson β Bacteriological work at the Post-Graduate Hospital. Anita Frenzel β Clerk in Edison Illuminating Co. Cornelia Geer β Instructor in English at Bryn Mawr. Elizabeth Gilbert β Teaching at Port Jefferson, Long Island. Ethel Grey β Teaching at Glen Cove, Long Island. Edith Haley β Laboratory work in physics for the Western Electric Co. Amelia Hall β Teaching in Hudson High School. Paulin Hattorff β Mathematical computer in American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Eugenie Hausle β Teaching mathematics in Girls ' High School and M.A. in Mathematics at Col- umbia. Anna Hermann β Mathematical computer in Ameri- can Telephone and Telegraph Co. Theresa Hieble β Actuarial department of the Pru- dential Insurance Co. Anna Jablonower β Learning drafting at the New York Central Co. Ruth Jennings β Vocational guidance work, Henry Street Settlement. Balbina Johnson β Assistant in research work at P. and S. Kathryn Kahn β Studying stenography and type- writing. Ruth Kannofsky β Miss Conklin ' s Secretarial School. Lucy Karr β Laboratory Assistant, Barrington High School, Newark. Helen Kent β Teacher-in-training, Mathematics Department, Evander Childs High School. Helen Ketcham β Assistant in order department, Nestle ' s Food Company. Ida Klausner β Mathematical computer in American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Agnes Kloss β Mathematical computer in American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Marie Koch β New York Trust Company. Helen Kahrs Kronenbitter β At home. Marion La Fountain β Teaching Spanish and Eng- lish, Higli School, Ridgeway, Pa. [ 122] The World and 1917 (Continued) Rosemary Lawrence β Mathematical computer in American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Dorothy Leet β Clerical work in Secretary ' s office, Barnard College. Babette Deutsch β Secretary and Editorial As- sistant of the Political Science Quarterly. Helen Leet β Teacher of English and Latin, and Coach of Athletics at Mrs. Marshall ' s School, Briarcliff Manor. Margaret Lennon β Chemical laboratory work at College of Physicians and Surgeons. Catherine Leonard β Translating and decoding in the United States Navy β a yeoman. Theresa Levy β Assistant in Physiological Chem- istry at Cornell Medical College, and studying for M.D.. Sadie Lewin β Mail-order department of banking and brokerage house. Gullie Lindh β Studying medicine at P. and S., Col- umbia University. Marietta Lott β M.A. in Physical Education at Teachers College. Beatrice Lowndes β M.A. in History at Columbia; Assistant Director at Furnald Hall. Dorothy Lydecker β Business on Official Classifica- tion Committee. Catherine Madigan β Mathematical computer at American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Charlotte Martens β Teaching Mathematics. Oak- side High School. Peekskillj New York. Dorothea Noice β Seaboard National Bank. Sally Origgi β Secretary to the librarian of the His- panic Society of America. Gladys Palmer β Graduate work in Economics at Bryn Mawr. Claire Patterson β Assisting with club work at Hudson Terminal. Katherine Harrower Peters β At home. Eleanor Parker Phillips β Industrial statistics for the Government. Edna Pritchard β Analytical chemist with Natural Oil Products Co. Annet Pritchartt β Teaching in the High School at Natchez, Miss. Katherine Quackenbos β Translating for the American Government Service. Ada Reid β Clerical Pathologist at the New York Infirmary, and Medical College courses at Cornell Medical College. Alma Ruhl β Assistant in History at Barnard. Elinor Sachs β Industrial research work for the Committee on Aid of the Council of Jewish Women. Evelyn Salzman β Business. Agnes Saul β New York Trust Co. Lillian Schaeffer β New York Trust Co. Lily Schlang β Chemist in Commercial Research Co. Wilma Sours β Secretarial course at Miss Conklin ' s Secretarial School. Marion Stevens β Executive Secretary for Relief of the Fatherless Children of France. Georgina Stickland β Assistant in Psychology in Columbia; studying at Columbia. Helen Stourbridge β Chemist in an industrial firm in Watertown, Mass. Solvig Stromsoe β Bacteriologist and Pathologist in Crocker Research for Cancer. Marian Struss β Assistant in the Employment De- partment of the Remington Typewriting Co. Agnes Surgeoner β Analytical Chemist with the In- dustrial Research Co. Mary Talmadge β Mathematical computer in Ameri- can Telephone and Telegraph Co. Viola Teepe β Teaching Mathematics in Caldwell High School. Muriel Terry β M.A. in Physical Education at Teachers College. Edith VanWagner β Teaching in Junior High School. Grantwood. New Jersey. Beatrice Walker β Mathematical computer in American Telegraph and Telephone Co. Florence Weinstein β Laboratory Assistant with the City Health Department. Ruth Wheeler β University Printing Office. Eleanor Wilkens β Teacher-in-training in English in Evander Childs High School. Olive Williams β Policy clerk of Home Insurance Company. Frida Wobber β At home. Elizabeth Wright β Studying Medicine at P. and S. [ 123 1 New York Delta (Columbia University) Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity BARNARD SECTION OFFICERS Imogene Belle Ireland, 1913 Juliana Haskell (Mrs. H. S.), 1901 Harriet Seibert, 1913 - Elsa Sauter Mehler, 1912 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer CHARTER MEMBERS Louise Stabler Parker (Mrs. G. H.), 1893 Ella Fitzgerald Bryson (Mrs. F. G.), 1891 Caroline Brombacher Stacy (Mrs. S. G.), 1895 Anna Cole Mellick. 1896 Gertrude Wolff Oppenheimer (Mrs. E.), 1896 Elsie Clews Parsons (Mrs. H.), 1896 Louise Brisbin Dunn, 1897 Adaline Caswell Wbeelock, 1897 Jessie Wallace Hughan. 1898 Helen St. Clair Mullan (Mrs. G. V.), 1898 Susan Isabelle Myers, 1898 Martha Ornstein Brenner (Mrs. J. B.), 1899 Virginia Crocberon Gildersleeve, 1899 Grace Harriet Goodale, 1899 Elsie Mabel Kupf ' er, 1899 Ellinor Reiley Endicott (Mrs. G.), 1900 Jeanette Bliss Gillespy, 1900 Laur Drake Gill Gertrude M. Hirst HONORARY MEMBERS elected 1901 elected 1911 CLASS OF 1917 Helene Clara Bausch Sarali Isabel Bennett Evelyn Marie Davis Mary Lillian Ely Cornelia Throop Geer Edith Crary Haley Eugenie Caroline Hausle Sylvia Sara Rosalind Hecht Tberese Hiebel Anna Jablonower Georgina Ida Stickland Ruth Jensen Balbina Antoinette Johnson Frances Krasnow Gulli Lindh Beatrice Lowndes Grace Richardson Merritt Edith Percy Morgan Gladys Louise Palmer Alma Gladys Ruhl Elinor Alexander Sachs Deceased [ 124] PROLOGUE All the whole wide world ' s a stage, as Mr. Shakespeare ' d say And college life (and other life) is nothing but a play. Our sayings and our writings, and everything we do, Are a swift unfolding drama β an historical review. Our thinkings and our actings, and everything we know, We ' ve recorded and entitled 1919 ' s Passing Show. And though reluctant we may face the years that intervene We ma} ' open up these pages and find acted, scene by scene, The many joyous happenings, the pleasures and the strife. The work and play of every day that was our college life β Then with its former brightness our love of it will glow, And we ' ll applaud forever 1919 ' s Passing Show. Skit the First The Tender Freshman ACTORS Gertrude Geer - Josephine Powell - Dorothy Brockway - Bertha Mann Eleanor Curnow The Class - - - Heroine Vice-President - - - Treasurer Secretary Corresponding Secretary and Historian - - - Chorus Gertrude Geer Josephine Powell The curtain rises on a scene Composed of freshmen (color green). Who yet have sense enough to vote For Gertie Geer to steer their boat. Her shoulders broad they see can bear Responsibilities and care, And so they make her prima donna And heap a lot of honor on ' er. [ 126 ] A Midnight Frolic (10:30 P. M.) MYSTERIES Supper with a cabaret, Mystic dancing and a play, β Who said Barnard isn ' t gay? Enter Freshmen, scared and cowed. Enter all the college crowd, Threat ' ning, awful, very proud. They relent, tho ' , at our groans, Which would melt the hardest stones, β Exit Us with ice-cream cones ! Our Own Musical Show (Fortunately a musical COMEDY.) Scene: Sing Song Characters: 1919 (and others) Orchestra leader: G. Stanbrough The singing swells, β superb, sublime, sonorous, Jts lofty strains might make the gods rejoice, For Georgie leads a very perfect chorus. And 1919 ' s showing off her voice. (At which exhibition, too, 19 ' s making her debut.) The judges sit bewitched in spell-bound wonder. The other classes slowly drop behind. And yet, although we steal their older thunder. We really cannot see why they should mind ; (Of course the prize, it is our capture. Still, they have the list ' ners ' rapture.) Greek Games (A Classical Drama) In costumes made of cheese-cloth. With music, dance and verse, We worshipped Lord Poseidon β It might have been much worse. Freshman Luncheon Hilda Wulp - Bertha Mann Dorothv Hall Theodora Skinner You do not need these explanations To understand that celebrations Are really more than jubilations, Especially when mixed with rations (The Astor ' s very best creations), When one has passed examinations, And talks of nothing but vacations ; A day of joyful cachinations, The curtain falls on exclamations. Chairman Toastmistress 21 Skit the Second THE BANTAM SOPHOMORE Dorothy Brockway j Leading Lady ' Manager SUPPORTING CAST Frances Rule - Marion Townsend Marion Warren Pamela Thomas Vice-President Treasurer Secretary Corresponding Secretary and Historian Dorothy Brockway Frances Rule After summer ' s intermission (With the faculty ' s permission). We resumed the second act as sophomores. Full of wise sophistication, We looked on with great elation, While Dotty undertook to pull the oars. [ 129] You cannot, may not, shall not haze ! This is a law oft heard, But there are many little ways To camouflage the word. We scared each little freshman kid, We acted as we ' d please, And got away with what we did, Calling it Mysteries. Belasco was a broken man Shubert was no longer in it. When we Sophomores produced Drama fashioned to the minute, The Pow-Wow that we Injuns had, Even we though t not half bad! In skating time, this is our rink, Fine Winter Garden β don ' t you think? [ 130 ] Pow-wowed by the Class 1919 Prologue POW THE FIRST Button, Button, Who ' s Got the Button? By Emily Howling Scene 1 β Miss Roonem ' s Peach Factory Scene 2 β Soph Prance Miss Roonem - -- -- -- D. Potter The Great Unknown ----- E. Dowling Demon Chaperone ----- D. Broekway Flappers: J. Ballot, A. Buchman, E. Carr, E. Curnow, H. Fox, D. Hall, I. Smith, M. Smith, G. Torek Chappies: H. Frederickson, S. Gross, M. Herrman, C. Lam- bert, M. Monjo, T. Skinner, L. Smith, V. Veit Lucy Carter Lee WOW Rummy and Julie (As Shakespeare should have written it) Perpetrators - - - - L. Guinzburg and B. Mann Scene 1 β Veni, Vidi, Vici β Julie ' s home Scene 2 β Pretty Baby β The orchard Scene 3 β Love, honor and obev β Friar Lawerence ' s cell Scene 4 β When you ' re married your trouble begins β On street, Julie ' s home Scene 5 β Nearer My God to Thee β Friar Lawerence ' s cell Julie ------- - L. Guinzburg Rummy - -- -- -- - B. Mann Nurse to Julie - -- -- -- E. Carr Friar Lawerence - M. Kammerer Paris - -- -- -- - p. Thomas Tybalt - -- -- -- R. Morrison Mother to Julie - B. Guggenheim Sophomore Show, 1919 Soph Pow-Wow November 10, 1916 Brinckerhoff Theatre Marion Anthony Father to Julie ------ E. Huerwitz Leader to Orchestra ----- E. Dowling Page to Paris ------ R. Amberg Orchestra, relatives, quests, mob: E. Curnow, E. Gunther, O. Moore, J. Smith, E. Taylor, M. Townsend, H. Wal- lace, M. Warren, M. Wesendonck Pow J utiior H. Piatt, B. Stroock Chief Billibee Spangetaha Nineteen - Chief Math-on-t he-Brain ' The Eternal Triangle WOW! WOW! Lookanbaba By A. Alfke and M. Anthony Scene: Camp Barnardokee G. Geer V. Tappan A. Alfke M. Townsend - M. Herod Pony Ballet E. Brittain, G. Boas, D. Goldsmith, E. Gunther ----- V. Klopman L. Wolf E Herod, J. Powell F. Rule Esther Palmitate Ethel Stearate ----- Research Theme - - - - Columbia Soph - Stronq, Weak and Irreqular Verbs J. Ballot, A. Indians - - H. Fox, B. Mayer, G. The Masked Marvel - - - - Ogden, E. Willman Munstock, L. Turoff - B. Smith A dele Alfke Lucv Dewev COMMITTEE Marion Anthony, Chairman EX OFFICIO Dorothv Brockwav Emily Dowling Bertha Mann Frances Rule [131] Sophomore Dance SOPH DANCE COMMITTEE Vera Kxopman ----- Chairman Aline Buchman Elizabeth Gatewood M. Armitage Ogden Theodora Skinner Dorothy Brockway (ej-officio) Then Sing Song came around again. But all our efforts were in vain. We didn ' t fuss at being second, For Seventeen as first was reckoned. [ 132] Greek Games When you ' ve worked for a show till you ' re indigo blue. When you ' re sure that it ' s doomed to fall flat, And the erities then give it a glowing review. Oh. what can he finer than that! We gave Connie ' s Nightmare β ' twas awful to see, And we hoped it would even he worse, To show just the sort of Weak Games there would be If the east did not come to rehearse. We print here the tyric, that posterity May view the dread product of Weak energy. TO EOS Pretty little Eos, Goddess fair and free, Harken while I honor Your whole big familee ! Adventures you had many Different ones each day With mortal or immortal, You should worry, eh? Your children β they were frisky, Conventions were their curse But then, with you as mother They might have been much worse. But you ! β I can ' t do justice In poems poor, prosaic. You need vers libre verses, More oenomatopaic. Your hand is grand. Your hair is fair, Your glance doth entrance, Your feet are sweet, And the corners of your languid mo Droop amorously South. Since you are thus transcendental. What language incidental. Be it drastically dramatic. Or frigidly phlegmatic. Or consummately clever, It never, never, never, Could exhibit all your greatness, Your beauty and sedateness, Your wisdom, will, and wit β So quite quickly I shall quit. Sophomore Luncheon Emilie Young ----- Chair M. Armitage Ogden Gertrude Miller Eleanor Curnow Adele Alike. Toastmistress, We came, we talked, we laughed, we dined, Our dinner was the common kind, The food was food, the jokes were jokes, The talk was that of clever folks. In song and speech we did recall We needed no fine praise at all, Of fame we have a mighty fund Our glory is not moribund. Constance Lambf.rt Skit the Third THE FRISKY JUNIOR Constance Lambert - SCENE SHIFTERS Star Vivian Tappan - Eleanor Curnow - Marion Townsend Adele Alfke Vice-Preside nt Treasurer Secretary Corresponding Secretary and Historian Vivian Tapfan Junior Year at length is here, Really, it is very queer. Heatless days we ' ve had galore Wheatless days are still in store. Answering to our country ' s call We abolished Junior Ball. Oh, we ' ve had just one long maze Of daneeless, beauless, play less days ! Still there ' s one tiling cheers each lass, ' Tis that peppy freshman class. So we ' ve managed to survive, Yes, we ' re very much alive ! [ 135 ] Cubist Poems (AFTER GERTRUDE STEIN) Dorothy Brockway and Constance Lambert Smile smile and grin grin The world is right, the world always was right, the world will always be right. Everybody ' s nice, everybody ' s clever, everybody ' s pretty and college is great. Avoirdupois ! Avoirdupois ! Vera Klopman Airy fairy and fairy airy Graceful circles and curving motions Hidden meanings in Art and Nature β Dew drops on the morning glories and trumpet flowers with pallid eyes Little birds winging homeward and drooping lilies with limp bruised stamens. Ethereal motion, light light and airy airy. Dance ! Dance ! Dance ! Fly ! Fly ! Fly ! You can ' t catch me ! you can ' t catch me ! Vivian Tappan Heavy -heavy -heavy- Ultra highbrow and mighty cranium. A book is a book is a book is a book. Work work and study study, brilliant reason and mighty science. Think think and mental gymnastics Chlorides, Daily Themes, zoology, Beauty and Truth Work ! work ! work ! Peggy Herod A line is a line is a line β I am a line, a long slim line, lines are beautiful, beautiful beautiful. I mix my belts with my bracelets at times, slim slim and skinny skinny, stringed beans and golden bananas. Essence of Broadway and Fifth Avenue. Proud proud and fair fair. A line β is β a line β is β a line. More Cubist Poems Gertrude Geer Tall tall and straight straight. Swing .swing, I walk so straight that at times I go backward, a foolish mistake, foolish foolish. Conservatism, let us woo the shy maid Conservatism, lovely grey-eyed Con- servatism with her black-topped boots, and cloaked shoulders, sitting by her own fireside. Sweet sweet sweet but stubborn stubborn, You ' re wrong and I ' m right and we will NOT argue! Sweet ! Sweet ! Sweet ! Rertha Mans I am ! I am ! I am ! Hurrah for Barnard, hurrah for the new building, hurrah for Miss Latham, hurrah for ' 19, hurrah hurrah! Enthusiasm, enthusiasm, beautiful pink enthusiasm with rosy borders. Essence of Kaiserism faintly tinged with Democracy, a Democratic Kaiser, An Absolute Democrat. Hurrah ! Hurrah ! Hurrah ! I am I am I am β Adele Alfke Ha ha ha ha ha ! rfjt Flighty, fatless and feminine, laughter, lyrics and lunch. jf β _ Long long, slim slim, and romantic oil so romantic! H Romance beautiful purple Romance, alternating between cave men and gold plumed j L knights with translucent eyes and trailing mustachios. And Sarcasm, flaming anarchistical Sarcasm, its red tail spotted with green, its twitching tongue tipped with caustic wit. Eyes Eyes Eyes And far be it from me to talk about anyone BUT β [ 187 ] Stars at Home and Abroad What art- you reading, my pretty maid? The brilliant Barnard Bear, she said. What are they looking at? Nothing in view; They posed in this manner, They thought it was new. I J Β« Ml -fc ,.y. f i FJH. 1 L _ . - β’ vr; - 1 Kind reader, lest you lift your brows in horror At our frivolous, light-minded, giddy class, We bid you gaze again in thoughtful rapture, Here s poise and grace and dignity en masse. Ready for the Convocation Stand we, waiting for a chance Just to get a peek at .Toff re And to shout loud, Vive la France. I have a hunch This is a bunch Eating lunch Hear ' em crunch? [ 138 ] Beside the waters of the Hudson Our Towney stooped to get a drink, And her head met a little school- mate ' s β She leaned too far across the brink ! Would you think that girls could be As sadly solemn as we three? More Stars I see on the campus before me, Standing so primly there, Tall Betty and laughing Estella, And Beatrice with raven hair. London Bridge is tailing down, Fayre Ladye. My All a-squinting at the sun, Caps tip-tilted, everyone. ' 19 sits with bored look While she has her picture took. Lest this give a false impression, Turn β and see her real expression. Four little maids from Brooks are we. Perched ' mongst the branches of this tree, High in the world sit we rightfully, Our marks are always A or B. [ 139] The En [ 140 ] re Cast Press Comments of the Chorus [ Most Naive 1 Most Sophisticated Most Radical ( Most Conservative Most Versatile Best Sport Wittiest ( Most Conscientious I Happy-go-luckiest Biggest Highbrow ( Peppiest i Laziest | Most Optimistic Most Pessimistic Most Efficient I Class Magpie ( Class Clam - - - ( Most Romantic | Most Unromantic Most Temperamental Most Incidental ( Most Famous in the Future ) Most Infamous in the Past Elsie Dochtermann Klieia Carr Bertha Mann - Frances Reder (First place) Anne Valentine (Second place) Gertrude Geer Emily Howling Georgia Stanbrough (First place) Dorothy Brockway (Second place) Adele Alfke Marion Benedict (First place) Vivian Tappan (Second place) Marie Mulilf ' eld (First place) Elecia Carr (Second place) Vivian Tappan - Bertha Mann Lucille Sens (First place) Lucy Dewey (Second place) - Dorothy Brockway Rose Le Vino (First place) Vivian Tappan (Second place) Bertha Mann Catherine Cooksey - Helen Slocum Eleanor Curnow - Jean Macfarlane Emily Howling - M ' Liss Partridge 1919 - 1920 J KB fADELE Al.FKE Rose Le Vino - Gertrude Miller Edith Rosenthal Ruth Marshall Marie Muhlfeld Our Very Own Chapter of Phi Kappa Beta Fraternity Motto: Wisdom is not woman ' s greatest charm. JUNIOR CLASS SECTION OEFICERS - Chief-Idler - - - - - Expert-Time-Killer ----- Chief-Loiterer-in-the-Hall Chairman of the We Should Worry Committee Chairman of the Ragged Edge Committee Chairman of the Me-for-a-Good-Time Committee Marion Anthony Edna Brand Eleanor Curnow Helene Fox ' Dorothy Goldsmith Helen Frederickson Vera Klopman CHARTER MEMBERS Gertrude Geer Lenore Guinzburg Ruth Lewy Marjorie Herrmann Josephine Powell WAITING LIST Constance Lambert Bertha Mann HONORARY MEMBERS Georgia Stanbrougli Blanche Stroock Pamela Thomas Gretchen Torek Julia Treacv M. Armitage Ogden Lillian Touroff All those who visit the Provost and the Registrar at Mid-Years HOPELESSLY INELIGIBLE Marion Benedict Dorothy Brockway Verena Deuel Emily Dowling Elizabeth Gatewood Dorothy Hall Ruth Henderson Lucetta Koster Aline Buehman Laura McDaniel Edna Neuville Frances Rule Vivian Tappan Emilie Young t Retired. Departed this life for more studious ways. The program ends here as you know β And on to Heaven goes Nineteen, And only pictures of the east, Remain in separate to be seen. But just before we finish quite β Some brief reviews we must advance About our critics who for years Have criticized us β how ' s our chance On our uΒ Β ,i -HtavtK | Wittiest Best Sport Most Efficient Most Radical Most Conservative Most Intellectual Most Conscientious Happy-go -luckiest Best Looking Most Unenthusiastic Most Enthusiastic Professor Brewster Professor Braun Professor Crampton Professor Simkhovitch j Dr. Haller ( Miss Hirst Miss Hubbard Dr. Costello Miss Lucy Gregory Professor Montague Professor Gerig Professor Brewster Miss Latham 144 ] MA K Y LEONE ADELE L. ALFKE (!reat wits are oft to madness close allied And thin partitions do their hounds divide. ARCHIBALD I love to help the down and out And tend the sick and lame, In fact I ' m really keen about This Social Uplift game. RUTH AUGUSTA AMBERG My patriotic zeal is line, My style of dressing masculine. JEANNE ELISE BALLOT I am Jeanne E. Ballot de Paris, de Paris, I am called par les hommes, tres jolie, tres jolie, I trip the light fantascic In a manner i|uite gymnastic. And I travel everv morn to N. V. ( ' .. N. Y. C. MARION ' ERWIN HELEN BARANOFF ANTHONY β , β . . , t Above the vulgar night of common Sweet and slow, sweet and slow. souls. [ β is ] MAILT OR IE LIVINGSTON BARRINGTON M A RGUER1 T E BERNARD She ne ' er recalled from day to day The silly things she learnt at The play ' s the thing. school, But liked to jump and run and play Like any healthy an-i-mule. ' CORINNE BARRY Smiled pleasantly β and passed on. DOROTHY CARROLL BIR DSEYE Let us fly aloft On the wings of thought β Tweet! tweet! GERTRUD MARIANNE MARION JOSEPHINE BENEDICT Willing she is, and eager to please, Not by looks or by demeanor W[)at other virtlIes are bett er than Can you tell me from Verena. these? [146] ALICE JOYCE BORDEN She that hath light within her own clear breast May sit in the centre and enjoy bright day. ALINE S. BUCHMAN Lord, how wise yon are! GERTRUDE BUNGER EDNA ROSE BRAND One of the little crowd at Brooks .β , , ,, Who burn the midnight oil o ' er Frankness was her Keynote. , . books. TERESA ADELAIDE DOROTHY BROCK WAY CARBONARA ' She smiled at all the world, and all To disappear each day she ' s wont, the world smiled back. We ' d like to know her, but we don ' t. [147] MARIE R. CARMODY Hang sorrow, care will kill a cat. And therefore let ' s be merry! M ARJORIE LOUISE CLARK ' And when she laughed high C. she hit MARY CRAIG Modesty ' s a quality that Woman- kind adorns. LEAH CURTISS Leah comes and goes in manner quiet, She thrives upon an Economic diet. LOLA MARION CRANDALL All her bearing gracious. VERENA DEUEL From the back of my head No one can descry β Whether I ' m Bennie β Or whether I ' m I! ELEA C N URNOW ILLE LUCY ALICE DEWEY She walks as if tomorrow would And oli, the breaks she makes . f ., . . do for the next step. ould give your soul the quakes! [ 149 ] HELEN ELIZABETH FREDERICKSON ALICE GERALDINE There ' s one thing perplexes us sorely, OOEBLLI To asli you ' s the only thing to do. How under the sun can anyone eat twenty-five sandwiches a day β And still look as stylish as you do? Which we think must have been clever, for we couldn ' t understand it. ELIZABETH ST l ART DOROTHY BELLE GATEWOOD GOLDSMITH She, while her companions slept, And she will talk, great Gods how Was toiling upward in the night. s j )e w ;jj talk 1 GERTRUDE MARSHALL GEER When the grown up ladies β Act like babies β We ' ve got to love ' em, that ' s all. CHARLOTTE GREENE I can speak on any topic That is labelled Philanthropic. Rl ' TH HENDERSON Seen but not heard. GRETCHEN HERMANN I never grin and I never smile, And I never larf nor play. ELIZABETH NOLA HEROD MARJORIE HERRMANN I ' m slow in getting ready, Even Solomon in all Ms glory wa And I ' m sweet but rather shyβ ,β,t arrayed like one of tliese. MARGARET NOLA HEROD β That on line dress I lay much MAY HOFFMAN stress, I can ' t and shan ' t deny! AH things here are out of joint. ' [ 133 ] EDITH FLORENCE ESTELLE HUREWITZ JOHNSON A dear old lady in the guise of a - , , . . ,, I do the things I ought to do And speak when I am spoken to. ESTELLE JACOBS A nice girl, but a math shark. MILDRED K A T H E R I N E KAMMERER Oh, to be wafted away From this black aceldama of sorrow ! Where the earth of a dusty today Is the dust of an earthy to- morrow. ' RL ' TI I J A R VIS Never broke a regulation, never told a Iie - GRACE MAYFRED KERR Never want to have vacation, when 1 don ' t know why. For all my curly hair I ' m a radical Always love to go to sections, love deep-dyed. to go to bed, Never nibble sweet confections when I am not fed. [ 154 ] VERA VIVA KLOPMAN An airy lady, witty and ingenious. MYRA ESTHER K OH N ST A MM My daily work I count as naught - I ' d rather shine on tennis court. ELS A KOCH On Fancy ' s wing I never roam, LUCETTA KOSTER In everything I ' m practical; My thoughts stray never far fioni My life is one dem ' d horrid home β grind. I ' m most matter-of-factical ! SOPHIE KOERNER I am very well acquainted with matters mathematical, I understand equations, both the simple and quadratical. MARGUERITE BERTHA KRANTZ Life is real, life is earnest. AILEEN LAHIFF MARGERY LEVE ' A willing heart and a helping . - . , , β J hat infantine fresh air of hers, hand. ROSE H. LE VINO CONSTANCE LAMBERT If she will, she will, you may tie I never saw her cross or heard her pend on it, scold. And if she won ' t, she won ' t, ant there ' s an end on it. LUCY CARTER LEE RUTH LEWV She amputates her ' r ' s Her drawings really make us blink And she ranks with all the stars. She certainly can sling the ink. [ 156 ] ERNESTINE MIRIAM LIND I have six honest serving men Who greet me everywhere, Their names are how and which and when, And what and why and where. JEAN KNOX MacFARLANE The more I see of men the better I like horses. EDITH LOWENSTEIX A lady of fashion with multiple airs, And burdened with college and so- cial affairs. KATHEKINE MAG AW K. Magaw hails from the West, California she loves best. LAURA McDANIEL I ' m sure I ' ll flunk, you hear her say, But her final mark is always A. PAULINE CLARA MATHILDA MAHNEKE For she by geometric scale Could take the size of pots of ale; And wisely tell the hour of day, The clock doth strike by algebra. [ 15; BERTHA HALLE MANN VICTORINE KOPS MAYER You shall never take her without World-wise, and most awfully her answer unless you take her with- grown up. out her tongue. RUTH MARSHALL JANET DUNCAN MENEELY Your nature, my dear, argues much versatility, l cannot check my girlish bins For you ' re looking for fun while My color comes and goes, you ' ve business ability. 1 redden to my finger tips And sometimes to my nose. RAMON A MARTIN A real funny gel. GERTRUDE ALLAN MILLER Who never took a single note. But only nonsense poems wrote. [ 158 ] HELEN MARJORIE MILLER My kingdom for a cat! DOROTHY MORGENT1 1 A I She ' s writing a book full of sad, stern realities, failed Practical Dorothy ' s Imprac- ticalities. RUTH ALEXANDRA MARGUERITE EULALIE MORRISON MON.TO Ruth Morrison ' s, we beg to s ' ate, _ T , T . i The Latin teacher ' s pet; Never alone I m known to go β . ., T , β , T t 11 t ' eh means as sure as sure Β£ Always I m seen with leanne Ballot. rate, She ' ll wear Phi Beta yet. GRACE BELL AH MORGAN MARIE MUHLFELD She was an excellent person in Life ' s a jest and all things show it, every way and won the respect of I thought so once and now I know even Mrs. Grundy. [ 159 1 EDITH ROSENTHAL ' Work is for those not clever enough to avoid it. HELEN SAUNDERS t ruffles I dream, and flounces and frocks, And fancy new ways to twine my long locks. 15 E R ENICE CHARLOTTE RIFF ' Fain would her yellow hair hang down her hack. GEORGIE SCHAAF Very nice to talk to, for she never interrupted. FRANCES DANIEL RULE A free and frank young Yankee maiden. LUCILLE MARIE SENS Time-taking questions are my forte, I quibble over all I ' m taught. [ 162] MERLE HUNTER SHUSTER I ' m always quite delighted When the students cut up capers For it gives me opportunities To write them for the papers. THEODORA BOOTH SKINNER ' The music fairly lost itself to listen to her feet. EDNA REGINA SIEMS She liked whate ' er she looked on. HELEN LOUISE SLOCUM Too mild, too mild, I pray thee, swear. BESSIE RUTH SIMONS College is an awful bore β I don ' t know what I come here for. BETTY ALLEN SMITH ' Like chiselled marble, coldly fair. ' [ 1G3 ] EUDORA ISABEL SMITH GEORGIA L. Morals of pure unexceptionability, STANBROUGH Manners well formed and of GeQrge jt strictest gentility. ' LEOLYN CLARK SMITH AUGUSTA EMILY HAZELTON STANTON Now Leo is a flapper. She is dainty, she is dapper. And oh, she had a baby stare ! MIRIAM LOUISE SMITH BLANCHE MARIANNE ' Iter views on hydrostatics are per- SIR()()( K haps a trifle queer, , . 1 , . , Compared to me a rope or string She doesn t care for chemistry, but T ., , , ., β Is really quite a husky thing. oh, she has an ear. [ 164 ] ANNETTE SWEENEY PAMELA THOMAS Periphrastic methods spurning, To my readers all discerning Her voice was deliciously soft, I admit my show of learning Southern and slurry. Is the fruit of steady cram. VIVIAN TAPPAN I yearn for the truth, I am earnest, I yearn, to face facts without blink- ing, Of all of my yearns quite the yearnest, Is my yearn to be thorough in thinking. GR ETC HEX IRMA TOREK It ' s the hair, I do declare, it is the hair; Philosophers have said, It all depends upon the head, But they ' re wrong, for I declare, it is the hair! ELINOR E WRIGHT TAYLOR LILLIAN ELEANOR Bangs for the belle of Toledo, TOUROFF But not for a college girl sweet, So I brush my hair off of my fore- Romantic-minded, unpretentious, head, Fond of day-dreams, conscientious. And strive to look simple and neat . [ 165 ] MARIAN DILLER TOWNSEND And her disposition was sunny. EDNA VAN WART I am very very, happy for I know that I am good. JULIA MARY PATRICIA TREACY And she was very sweet, though proud., She said ' You mustn ' t shout so loud ' . VERNA VEIT Tis better to have bluffed and passed than never to have passed at all. THERESA TL ' SA HELENE RUTH WALLACE One of our little group of serious Who speaks the moder n lan- thinkers guages, and plays bridge like an old hand. [ 166 ] MARION BOYD WARREN ANNA PIZA WEIL And if an artist painted her, I have no other than a woman ' He ' d paint Iier unaware, reason, With a halo round her hair. I think it so because I think it so. ' ERICA WEARY Silence is wisdom, I am silent then. GRACE REED WELZMILLER After the war is over, Tilings for Grace won ' t be slow β for she writes to seven soldiers now Or more β for all we know. IIATTIE LOUISE Β« VT ββ 4 , WFf ' FVFU MYRRHA A. WEGENER WESENDONCK ' With ability but ' umble, far too ' umble Rich in saving common sense. [ 167 ] RAY WESTON She walked right in and turned around and walked right out again. EDITH SCHEERER WILLMANN Sweet tempered she, and free from care, She also loves to crimp her hair. HELEN MY RICK WHITE JULIETTE WITTE ' As proper a girl as one would meet on a summer ' s morning. Genteel in personage. CHARLOTTE ELIZABETH LUCILE WOLF WILLIAMS What a very difficult thing it must Her good nature vies with her he height. To shine both in school and society! [ 168 ] WITHOUT FACE OR FORTUNE Dorothy Harris Marian Thomson Elizabeth Toth Anne Valentine HONORARY MEMBERS Esther Brittain Olive Moore Catherine Parks Jessie Smith Blanche Taylor Helene Platt Ulin Charlotte Sutcliffe Veazie Isabel Emerson Watlington Miriam Werner Hilda Wulp [ lfi ) ] Acknowledgments The 1919 Mortarboard wishes to thank: Dean Gildersleeve, for her friendly counsel. Isabel Greenbaum, IS. for editorial advice. Miss Boyd, Miss Doty. Mrs. Bennett, ' 15, Anita Frenzel, ' 17, Helen Goldstein, ' 18, for tbeir interested and invaluable cooperation. Mr. Guinzburg, for his generous assistance in securing advertisements. Mr. Willard and Mr. White for their unfailing courtesy and helpfulness. Erna Gunther, ' 19, and Helene Shine, ' 18, for general helpfulness. Lillian Sternberg, ' 20, for her poster. Those members of the class who aided in obtaining subscriptions. Those members of the class who contributed verses. Those members of the class who contributed snap-shots. FOR DRAWINGS Marion Anthony, Jeanne Ballot, Anna Weil FOR ADVERTISEMENTS Gertrude Miller. M ' Liss Partridge FOR SNAP-SHOTS Susan Minor, ' 11, Margaret Giddings, ' 18, Frances Haynes, ' 18, Jane Chase, ' 20, Marion Levi, ' 20, Lillian Sternberg, ' 20 A Accurso, ( ' 149 E. 116th St. Adams, E 314 W. 114th St. Adler, S Gil W. 141st St. Alleman, M., Brooks McDougall, N. Y. Ainsoii, S 2694 Valentine Ave. Archer, E., Brooks, 135 Prospect Pk. W., Brooklyn B Barber, F 633 W. 152nd St. Barber, M., Brooks. .East Mauch Chunk, Pa. Barret, F 640 West End Ave. Bartlett, E. L., (iis Hudson PL, Hoboken, N. J. Bauman, E 77 E. 89th St. Bensel, M 460 Riverside Dr. Bergstrom, G..46 Park Ave., Passaic, X. J. Bernholz, M 170 W. 81st St. Blout, M 680 West End Ave. Brown, H. H., Brooks Camden, Del. Buch, E 320 Central Park West Buckbee, J., Metuchen, X. J., Lake George, N. Y. Bunzel, R 300 Central Park W. Burns, C 68 St. Nicholas Ave. limns, M. E 446 W. 164th St. Buvington, R 312 W. 75th St. C Cabana, E., Brooks, 28 Penfield St., Buffalo, N. Y. Cauldwell, ( Harts Lake, N. Y. Cobanks, A 1479 50th St., Brooklyn Coffin, A.. 519 West End Ave.β 77 Carleton St., Portland, Me. Connor, D., 2 Winthrop Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Coryell, E 1414 Vyse Ave. Cripps, G., Brooks, 34 Lincoln St., Charleston, Mass. Cutler, K 1250 Stebbins Ave. Cuttrell, F 1522 54th St., Brooklyn D Darrow, M 35 Clareniont Ave. Dawborn, E 105 W. 74th St. Dickson, C 348 Whiton St., Jersev City Dirkes, D 176 S. 9th St., Brooklyn Drake, M., Brooks, 244 Deems Ave., W. New Brighton E Ehrlich, B., Furnald Swainesboro, Ga. F Farrow, X., Brooks Hillsboro, Tenn. Directory of Students 1918 Ferguson, M., 9 N. Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J. Fischel, B 118 E. 93rd St. Fischel, R 118 E. 93rd St. Flora, M., 99 Claremont Ave. ... Bangor, Pa. Fonts, J 57 Hillerest Ave., Yonkers Franklin, A 32 Kenmore PL, Brooklyn Gerloff, M Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Gibb, A 42 W. 75th St. Giddings, M 314 W. 103rd St. Goldstein, E 124 W. 114th St. Gower, S., 99 Claremont Ave. β 230 Perry Ave., Greenwich, S. C. Graffe, D ' 503 W. 124th St. Graham, E 276 Riverside Drive Grant, F 293 Henry St., Brooklyn Grav, R 246 14th St., Brooklyn Greenbaum, 1 44 W. 77th St. Griffith, M 312 Haven Ave. Grimm, E 557 W. 148th St. Grimshaw, C Roosevelt Hospital Gross, A 150 Manhattan Ave. Gross, E. . Washington Sq., Arlington, N. J. Grossman, P 1347 Lexington Ave. II Harris, C, 51 Church St., White Plains, N. Y. Harris, N. P 254 W. 103rd St. Harrison, M 138 W. 104th St. Hart, L., 415 W. 120 ; St., 45 Main St., Springfield, Mass. Haynes, F., 99 Claremont Ave. β 1726 Hampton, Ave., Columbia, S. C. Heacock, M 173 W. 85th St. Hennessy, H., Brooks Roslyn, N. Y. Heuterkes, I.., 100 Booraem Ave., Jersey City Higgins, H., Brooks, 409 Franklin St., Bloomfield, N. J. Hildred, L., Brooks Ripley, X. Y. Hines, K 870 S. 15th St., Newark, X. J. Hoch, S 100 Morningside Drive Hoffman, E., 505 W. Ulst St.β 192 Winslow Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Hoffman, J., 505 W. Wist St.β 192 Winslow Ave., Buffalo, X. Y. Holbrook, H 824 St. Xieholas Ave. Holbrook, H. S., Brooks, 253 State St., Mobile, Ala. Hollowav, 1 403 W. 148th St. Irbv, I.., Whittier, 313 South Pauline St., Memphis, Tenn. Jacobs, D 364 W. 119th St. Jennings, H., 413 Hillside Ave., Jamaica, N. Y Josephson, A 2132 Daly Ave. Kahn, D 1967 62nd St., Brooklyn Keck, D 30 X. 26th St., Flushing, N. Y. Keeler, L 106 Morningside Drive Kenvon, F 322 W. 100th St. Klenke, E. I.., 5 Faneuil PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. Kliatshco, 1 232 Henry St. Kline, M 16 Marion St., Nyack, X. Y. Koenig, H., 105 K. 19th St., 155 E. 7th St., Brooklyn L Leavenworth, I. F Ill E. 84th St. Lennon, F., 75 S. Broadway, Hastings-on-Hudson, X. Y. Lent, M. E., 199 X. Broadway, Yonkers. Levison, M 980 Fox St. Levy, M. 1335 Madison Ave. Liander, W 154 W. 84th St. Liceioni, I., 101 Mt. Vernon Ave., Ml. Vernon Longaker, A., Brooks. 188 X. Grove St., East Aurora, X. Y. M MeCabe, H., Brooks Salamanca, X. Y. McCaffrey, M 106 Morningside Drive McDonald, D 550 Seventh Ave. McLean, E 445 W. 21st St. Mackev, M., 99 Claremont Ave. β Hunter, X. Y. Man, E., 245 Church St., Richmond Hill, X. Y. Markey, R 534 W. 124th St. Mayer, T 162 E. 80th St. Miller, M 82 W. 174th St. Milliken, R., 620 W. 122m St., 1730 Corcoran St., Washington D. C. Mook, E..219 Amboy Ave., Metuchen. X. .1. Mott, E ' . 75 E. 1 20th St. Murphev, M R. F. D. 1., Elizabeth, X.J. Murtlan ' d, 1 40 E. 81st St. X Xewburger, B 220 W. 87th St. Nichols, M..5 Park Ave., Mt. Vernon, X. Y. O Oak, D 146 W. 119th St. Oberle, L. .39 Burnett St., Maplewood, N. .1. Oschrin, E 130 Ogden Ave. Jersey City [ 171 ] p Pierce, H., 315 W. 9Uh St.β 25 (Hover Ave., Yonkers Pierce, S., Furnald, 2722 Jackson St., Sioux Citv, Ind. Pott, K 304 W. 99th St. Potter, C!., Armour Villa Park, Bronxville, N. Y. Purdy, II., 418 W. 188th St.β Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. R Radeliff, ( ' 54 Post St., Yonkers Randell, I). . 265 W. 129th St. Raynor, C, Brooks, 04 Hawthorne PI., Montclair, X. J. Heinke, E 635 W. 1 Tilth St. Retz, G., Whittier, 84 Delaware St., Walton, N. Y. Robhins, J 849 St. Nicholas Ave. Rogers, E., Brooks. 1075 West Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Rothschild, M 145 W. 85th St. Powell, M., 160 Claremontβ Miller Place, N. Y. Rubenstein, F. . . .183 Hooper St., Brooklyn S Sanborn, A 468 Riverside Drive Savford, M 353 W. 117th St. Schiff, E 41 W. 83rd St. Schlauch, M., Hasbrouck Heights, Jersey City Schuhnan, S 213 Penn St., Brooklyn Schumann, E., Brooks Hunter, N. Y. Sherline, B 100 W. 121st St. Shine, H 523 W. 123rd St. Sluth, E 577 E. 8th St., Brooklyn Smith, C. A. . .87 Mahar Ave., Clifton, N. J. Smith, J. D., 415 W. 118 St.β 36 Martense St., Brooklyn Snyder, M 99 Claremont Ave. Stevens, H 2091 Fifth Ave. Stewart, C, 57 Winant Ave., Ridgefield Park, N. J. Stewart, E .530 W. 123rd St. Sutton, E., 99 Claremont Ave. β R. F. D. L, Donesville, N. Y. T Teall, D . . .93 High St., Glenridge, N. J. Terriberrv, E 502 W. 113th St. Toledano, R 419 W. 129th St. V Van Nostrand, II., 418 W. 1 ls A St.β Little Neck, N. Y. W Wachenheimer, R 502 W. 113th St. Welleck, M 8729 20th Ave., Brooklyn Weygandt, L 154 Hester St. Whipple, C 470 2nd St., Brooklyn White, H 750 Carroll St., Brooklyn Williams, H 110 W. 128th St. Williams, Viola 150 Sixth St., Brooklyn Williams, Virginia, 1356 Pacific St., Brooklyn Z Zagat, R., Manchester, 108th St. and Broadway A Alike, A 24 W. 95th St. Amberg, 1!., Brooks, 743 Main St., Niagara, N. Y. Anthony, M., Brooks, 140 Main St., Gouverneur, N. Y. Archibald, L., Whittier Margaretville, N. Y. B Ballot, J 913 President St., Brooklyn Baranoff, H 535 W. 162nd St. Barrington, M 3089 Broadway Barry, C 109 Franklin St., Jersey City Benedict, M., Brooks. 279 N. Washington, Tarrytown, N. Y. Bernard, M ...Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Birdseye, D 56 Seamans Ave. Boas, G, 230 Franklin Ave., Grantwood, N. J. Borden, A 13 W. 54th St. Brand, E 120 E. 95th St. Brockway, D., 752 West End Ave.β Contoocook, N. H. Buchman, A 39 W. 85th St. Bunger, G., Brooks Ferndale, N. Y. C Carbonara, T....169a Utica Ave., Brooklyn Carmody, M.212 Primrose Ave., Ml. Vernon Carr, E. 831 Carroll St., Brooklyn Chamberlain, A 400 Riverside Drive Clark, M., 836 Annuel, Ave.. Edge-water, A T . ) T . β New City, N. Y. 1919 Conway, E., Whittier, 205 Oak St., Holyoke, Mass. Cooksey, C, 224 W. Lincoln Ave., ML Vernon Craig, M., 420 W. 2 st St.β Graham, Texas Crandall, L., 519 W. 23rd St.β Fulton, N.Y. Curnow, E 342 Fourth St., Brooklyn Curtiss, L., Brooks. 116 Grove St., Tarrytown, N. Y. D Deuel, V., Brooks. 147 W. Market St., Corning, N. Y. Dewey, L 2880 Broadway Diehl, V 512 Jersey Ave., Jersey City Dochterman, E ...916 Eighth Ave. Dowling, E 150 W. 105th St. Doyle, H., 460 Riverside Driveβ Port Richmond, N. Y. F Foley, H 338 E. 52nd St. Fox, H 581 W. 161st St. Frederickson, H 601 W. 160th St. G Gatewood, E., Brooks, 327 52nd St., Newport News, Va. Geer, G 204 W. 86th St. Goebel, A., Furnald Summit, N. J. Goldsmith, D 300 Central Park W. Greene, C 544 W. 114th St. Gross, S 254 Bedford Ave., ML Vernon Guggenheim, B 63 Cathedral Parkway Guinzberg, L 115 W. 86th St. Gunther, E 198 DeKalb Ave., Brooklyn H Hall, D 60 W. 76th St. Harris, D., 130 W. 57 i St.β ..Arden, N. C. Hayner, L., 273 E. 176 ) St.β R. F. D. 1, Troy, N. Y. Henderson, R., 101 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn Herrman, G 1005 E. 40th St., Brooklyn Herrmann, M 21 E. 92nd St. Herod, E 126 Claremont Ave. Herod, M. .-. 126 Claremont Ave. Heyman, F., 430 IF. lis ; ,S7.β 121 Montgomery St., Newburgh, N. Y. Hoffman, M ' . 485 W. 135th St. Hurewitz, E 2 W. 88th St. J Jacobs, E 201 W. 112th St. Jarvis, R., Brooks Central Park, N. Y. Johnson, E., 514 W. 134 ; St.β Westbury, N. Y. K Kammerer, M., 526 W. 126 ; St.β 433 Bemont Ave., W. New Brighton Kerr, G 418 W. 118th St. Klopman, V., Brooks. 34 Duer PL, Weehawken, N. J. [ 172] Koch, E 229 Fifth Ave., Brooklyn Koener, S 601 V. 137th St. Kohnstamm, M 611 W. 114th St. Koster, L 6 W. 66th St. Krantz, M 183 Argyle Rd., Brooklyn L Lahiff, A 201 W. 106th St. Lambert, C 225 Rich Ave., Ml. Vernon Lee, L., Brooks. .635 College St., Macon, Ga. Leve, M 490 West End Ave. LeVino 519 W. 143rd St. Lewv, R 40 E. 83rd St. Lind, E 71 E. 96th St. Lowenstein, E 46 W. 73rd St. M MeDaniel, L., 552 Ocean Ave., Patchogue, N. Y. MacFarlane, J Salem Center, X. Y. Magaw, K 620 W. 122nd St. Mahneke, P., 33 X. Washington PL, Astoria, X. Y. Mann, B., Brooks, 32 Winfield Ave, Mt. Vernon Marshall, R 47 E. 73rd St. Martin, R., Brooks, 100 Main St., New Britain, Conn. Mayer, V 1356 Madison Ave. Meneely, J., 25 Fail-mount Ave., Hackensaek, X. J. Miller, G., 2279 Andrews Ave., University Heights Miller, M....283 Summit Ave., Mt. Vernon Monjo, M 519 Lincoln PL, Brooklyn Morgan, G...266 S. First Ave., Mt. Vernon Morgenthau, D., Sherman Square Hotel, 71st St. and B ' way. Morrison, R 6063 Broadway, Yonkers Muhlfeld, M 960 Grand ' Concourse Munstock, G 353 W. 118th St. X Xeuville, E., Whittier, 8 Fifth St., Schenectady, X. Y. O Ogden, M. A 136 W. 104th St. P Partridge, M 162 S. 54th St. Peters, 1 227 W. 99th St. Potter, I)., Brooks. Table Rock Farms, Sterlington, X. Y. Powell, J 349 West End Ave. Puerschner, ()., 1986 Madison Ave., Cranbury, X. J. R Reder, F 564 Fox St. Reid, E 44 X. 10th Ave., Mt. Vernon Reid, P...107 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn Rosenberg, S 75 Fort Washington Ave. Rosenthal, E 151 W. 86th St. Huff, B 25 Bell St., Belleville, X. J. Rule, F., Brooks, 40 X. Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. S Saunders, H 251 W. 122nd St. Schaaf, G 1051 Clay Ave. Sens, L 635 Riverside Drive Sinister, M 438 W. 164th St. Siems, E 64 W. 4th St., Mt. Vernon Simons, B 302 W. 87th St. Skinner, T., Brooks Guilford, Conn. Slocum, IL, Brooks. 159 E. 4th St., Oswego, X. Y. Smith, B. A., 16 Columbus Ave., Northampton, Mass. Smith, I., 99 Claremont Ave. β Box 114, Bayport, X. Y. Smith, L.348 Passaic St., Hackensaek, X. J. Smith, M.135 Phelps Ave., Englewood, X. J. Stanhrough, G 306 W. 103rd St. Stanton, Brooks. .Greal Neck Station, X. Y. Strook, B 88 Central Park W. Sweeny, A 233 Union St., Brooklyn T Tappan, V., Brooks, Hudson Ave., Englewood, N. .1. Taylor, E., Whittu r, 15 Bronson PL, Toledo, Ohio Thomas, P 420 W. 119th St. Torek, G 1021 Madison Ave. Touroff, L 1828 Topping Ave. Townsend, M., 2515 Clarendon Rd., Brookl] n Treacy, J. . . I 13th St. and Morningside Ave. Tusa, T 73 Central Park W. V Valentine, A., 225 W. 14 - St.β 80S W. Franklin St., Richmond, Va. Van Wart, E., Brooks, 176 S. Lexington Ave., White Plains, X. Y. Veit, V 515 W. 110th St. W Wallace, H 777 West End Ave. Warren, M..289 Warburton Ave., Yonkers Weary, E., 420 W. 121 St.β 619 Wood St., Tevaskana, Tex. Wegener, H 610 W. 116th St. Weil, A 736 West End Ave. Welzmiller, G 1453 Bryant Ave. Wesendonck, M 311 W. 103rd St. Weston, R., Furnald, 3147 Oakwood Terrace, Washington, D. C. White, II., 190 Vreeland Ave., Paterson, X. J. Williams, E., 17 Lincoln Ave., Roselle Park, X. J. Willman, E 352 W. 117th St. Wolf, L 5 W. 69th St. Y Young, E 350 Senator St., Brooklyn A Armstrong, E 32 E. 61st St. Ashley, H 346 Lexington Ave. Austin, R., 414 W. WSth St.β 43 Greene St., Catskill, X. Y. B Baldwin, E.20 Bridge St., Hackensaek, X. J. Barrington, A 3089 Broadway Barren, Hortense 1678 First Ave. Barton, Helen 431 W. 121st St. Benton, P., Brooks, 28 University PL, Burlington, Vt. Beach, B., Whittier Frankfort, X. Y. Becker, B 145 W. 78th St. Bien, E 243 W. 98th St. 1920 Burst, H., 99 Claremont Ave., 91 Maurice Ave., Elmhurst, X. Y. Bostwick, W 612 W. 115th St. Brice, B 418 Central Park W. Brosnan, K 501 W. 169th St. Brown, J 223 W. 106th St. Brubaker, R Mountain View, X. J. Burke, M., 415 W. 120th St.β 20 Franklin St., Morristown, X. J. Burne, D., 50 Morningside Ave., Huntington, L.I., X.Y. Butler, D 14 Locust Hill Ave., Yonkers C Calhoun, H., 247 Division Ave., Hasbrouck He ights, X. J. Chalmers, R 2654 Marion Ave. Chase, J., Brooks Spring Brook, Wis. Clark, H 52 Larch Ave., Bogota, X. J. Coates, E 209 W. 107th St. Colucci, E 512 Classon Ave., Brooklyn Cox, L 36 Grove St., Cranford, X. ' j. Crookall, M 155 81st St., Brooklyn Curn , E., Brooks, 115 Prospect St., Staunton, Ya. D Davev, D 404 E. 141st St. Decker, K 1939 Washington Ave. E Esterbrook, G., Brooks. 63 Walnut St., X., East Orange, X. J. Evans, R., Brooks, 1603 Boardwalk, Atlantic City, X. J. Everson, I., 259 St. Mark ' s PL, Xew Brighton, X. Y. [173] Fair, V 17 Horatio St. Finkler, M 749 Elmore PL, Brooklyn Fischer. H..310 Marlborough Rd., Brooklyn Fishberg, E 57 E. 93rd St. Fricke, G., Brooks, 405 E. 5th St., Brooklyn Friedkin, E 183 Hooper St., Brooklyn G Garfiel, E 20 E. 90th St. Garner, M., Brooks Wantagh, N. Y. Gilken, C, 620 W 122nd St.β 1878 E. 93rd St., Cleveland, O. Gillespie, M 584 Broome St. Gruggel, C, Kith Ave. and 29th St., Whitestone, N. Y. Guthrie, P 232 E. 11th St. Gutman, M 2 W. 89th St. H Hall, R 8 W. 95th St. Harris, A., Brooks Monte Cristo, R. I. Herterieh, M Tappan, N. Y. Hicks, H., Brooks, 22 Summit Ave., Caldwell, N. J. Hopkins, A., Brooks. E. Gaston St., Savannah, Ga. Houghton, R., 78 Bergen Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. J Jackson, A., 136 Ocean Side Rd., RocKville Center, N. Y. Jarecky, F 138 W. 8(ith St. Jennings, A 44 E. 80th St. Jentz, V 92 Sherman PL, Jersey City K Kaufman, M 316 W. 101st St. Keehn, H 11 N. York St., Paterson, N. J. Kennard, E., 40 Benedict Ave., Tarrytown, N. Y. Kidd, F 455 Fort Washington Ave. Kopald, S 437 Throop Ave., Brooklyn Kossman, E 220 Cathedral Parkway Kriegsman, H 272 W. 90th St. Kydd, M 435 W. 118th St. Lockhart, M 81 Oak St., Jersey City London, R 100 W. 8()th St. Lynn, R 25 W. 35th St. M McAndrew, H....2758 Kingsbridge Terrace McKenzie, J., Whittier, 1127 West St., Utica, N. Y. Maas, A 130 E. 73rd St. MacDonald, J., Brooks, 70 Orchard PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. MacMahon, A 70 Morningside Drive Mack, B 318 E. 100th St. Mankiewiez, E 1842 Seventh Ave. Marsh, A., 414 W. 118th St.β 844 Colorado Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Marsh, L., 414 W. 118th St.β 844 Colorado Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Meyer, M., Prospect Terrace, Park Hill, Yonkers Meylan, L. J 468 W. 141st St. Minster, M. D., Brooks, 1511 Park Road, Washington, D. C. Mochrie, M 21 Ash St., Flushing, N. Y. Myers, M., 99 Claremont Ave. β 277 Main St., South Orange, N. J. N Nance, M 2161 Ludlow Ave. Nolan, M 204 W. 78th St. O O ' Brian, M., 191 Brighton Ave., Berth Amboy, N. Y. Oldenbusch, C, 72 Marlborough Rd., Brooklyn Omies, F., 2958 Briggs Ave., Bedford Park, N. Y. Opdycke, M 117 E. 69th St. Parker, L., 99 Claremont Ave. β Madisonville, Ky. Payton, S., Brooks, 5055 Page Ave., St. Louis, 111. Peltz, R 1369 48th St., Brooklyn Piel, A 245 W. 72nd St. Piersall, C 4059 Lowerre PL Pope, R., Brooks. 2 Crane St., Caldwell, N.Y. I! Landauer, T., Brooks, 62 W. State St., Albion, N. Y. Lane, M., 220 W. ISSth St.β Babe, E 348 E. 23rd St., Flatbush 34 Revere St., Springfield, Mass. Rafter, I Port Washington Leding, A.. 59 LTnion St., Ridgewood, N. J. R aWSOn, M., Brooks, Leet, P., 461 Fort Washington Ave.β 1!. F. I). 1, Asbury Park, N. J. 157 E. Main St., Fredonia, N. Y. Raynor. A., Brooks . .Islip, N. Y. Lesser, J 316 W. 97th St. Ressmeyer, CI 348 W. 122nd St. Levi, M 18 W. 88th St. Robb, C Fairview Pk., Tuckahoe, N. Y. Liebeskind, H.577 Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn Robb, D 482 Greene Ave., Brooklyn Robb, J 35 E. 64th St. Rosenbaum, A., Brooks, 1416 Bull St., Savannah, Ga. Bosenberg, M 57 E. 77th St. Rothschild, 1 306 W. 99th St. S Sartorius, B 2 W. 86th St. Scancarello, C, 1041-2 Amity St., Flushing, N. Y. Schaeffer, F...146 Hudson PL, Jersey City Schenck, C 2114 Daly Ave., Hiilcour ' t Schwartz, E 151 Central Park W. Seidman, H., Furnald. 580 High St., Newark Sexton, C, Brooks, 172 Cleveland St., Orange, N. J. Shafer, K 790 Riverside Drive Siegbert, B 137 Riverside Drive Silbert, D., Brooks, 426 W. Front St., Plainfield, N. J. Silver, E., 119 Prospect Pk., S. W., Brooklyn Small, D., 99 Claremont Ave β R. F. D. (i, Dayton, O. Smith, G., Furnald, 277 Canister St., Hornell, N. Y. Sternberg, L 13 E. 94th St. Sutton, M..278 Claremont Ave., Jersey City T Taylor, L 130 Claremont Ave. Tewes, M 511 Broadway, Astoria, N. Y. Thompson, F ! 135 W. 58th St. Thompson, V 43 W. 72nd St. Toth, E 218 Lenox Ave. Travis, M 29 W. 12th St. U Unbiock, M 320 Park PL, Brooklyn V Vorhaus, A. . . : 160 E. 80th St. W Wallerstein, B 35 E. 29th St. Walser, V 296 Sterling PL, Brooklyn Ward, C 537 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn Weil, D 736 West End Ave. Wethey, G., Brooks Port Washington White, ' C 750 Carroll St., Brooklyn Whyte, B., 14 Benedict Ave., Tarrytown, N. Y. Widrewitz, 1 2151 Walton Ave. Wilcox, H 601 W. 190th St. Wilkens, M 284 Alexander Ave. Willyoung, D., 129 S. Irving PL, Ridgewood, N. J. Wood, 1 478 State St., Brooklyn Wood, M. .2 S. Broadway, Tarrytown, N. Y. [174] 1921 A Adams, I.., 99 Vlareniont Ave. β 366 Halsey St., Brooklyn Ahrens, E... .1547 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn Ammermuller, G ' .420 W. 130th St. Andrews, I . .220 W. 107th St. Arkins, L 612 W. 115th St. B Baer, M..223 Westchester Ave., Mt Vernon Ball, H., Brooks. 73 Borden Ave., So. Orange, N. J. Bay. T...42 Burnett St., Maplewood, N. J. Bendeim, G 333 Central Park W. Beney, M 476 E. 187th St. Binzen, V 251 East Kingsbridge Rd. Bode, M. . .9 Hudson St., Hackensack, N. J. Borse, H 2107 Bedford Ave. Brown, F., Brooks 507 Madison Ave. Burroughs, M., 99 Claremont Ave. β 93 Havemever St., Corona, N. Y. Bushnell, W ' . 145 W. 58th St. Byrne, 1 167 W. 76th St. C Campbell, M. E 503 W. 121st St. Cannon, E..362 E. 30th St., Paterson, N. J. Carhart, G., Brooks, 1112 Main St., Peekskill, N. Y. Carter, A 2 E. 127th St. Castle, E., Brooks, 634 Webster Ave., New Roehelle, N. Y. Clarke, J., 448 Riverside Drive, Northport, L. I. Glendening, R..120 Vester PL, Mt. Vernon Cobban, E 222 E. 239th St. Coeke, F., Brooks Warrenton, Va. Colony, R., Armour Villa Pk., Bronxville, N. Y. Cooke, G 523 Lorimer St., Brooklyn Cossow, A 609 W. 191st St. D Dana, G Tarrytown, N. Y. Davidson, M 406 Westminster Rd. von Deeston, F....618 Garain St., Hoboken Dixon-Welsh, M., Brooks. . .Columbia, Conn. Donovan, M., Furnald 53 Spring St. Drachman, M 128 W. 121st St. E Edwards, G., Brooks, 213 Orleans St., East Aurora, N. Y. Eisenman, A., 414 W. 118f i St.β Brester St., Bridgeport, Conn. Ehrieh, R 393 West End Ave. von Eltz, 1 171 W. 81st St. Ewans, G., Fwrnald, 759 Westfield Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Eyre, L 15 W. 67th St. F Falk, D 601 W. 141st St. Fawcett, I.., 53 Washington St., S. β 105 Rock view Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Fox, A 509 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn Fox, E 509 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn Faxon, S., Brooks, 7200 Brooklyn Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Fine, E 200 W. 111th St. Fisher, M 67 W. 50th St. Fisk, M 341 Garden Ave., Mt. Vernon G Gibson, E 87 Hamilton PI. Gilbert, A.. 911 W. 7th St., Plainfield, N. J. Gorton, W....4 Lenox Ave., White Plains Gott, A., Brooks. 5 South St., Goshen, N. Y. Granger, M., Brooks, 1004 Estitt Ave., Savannah, Ga. Green, G. . .73 Paterson St., Paterson, N. J. Groehl, M 527 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn Guesdan, E., 216 Highpoint Ave., Weehawken, N T . J. Gurnee, P., 1827 7th Ave β 168 Diamond Ridge Ave., Hawthorne, N.J. H Hall, M 90 Morningside Drive Halloek, L 2244 Bronx Park, E. Hankemeyer, N., Fwrnald, 55 Village St., Hartford, Conn. Haskell, M., 14 Monroe St., Mt Vernonβ 75 Constable St., Malone, N. Y. Henrequies, D 829 West End Ave. Henry, M., Brooks, 374 W. 1st St., Davton, Ohio Hessberg, R 255 W. 84th St. Hodenpvl, M 37 E. 63rd St. Hoflf, A ' 38 E. 72nd St. Horn, 1 324 E. 67th St. Huggard, E., 104 Union Ave., Lvnbrook, N. Y. Hutton, E., 134 Allen PL, New Brighton, N. Y. .T Jennings, M 44 E. 80th St. Jeremiah, R 202 W. 74th St. Johnson, A.... 87 Vernon Ave., Mt Vernon Jones, H 357 W. 121st St. Jones, R., Brooks 3013 Stanton Ave. K Kafka, B 1337 Madison Ave. Kahn, I.., Brooks Selma, Ala. 376 Broadway, Paterson, N. J. Kitav, S., 43 IF. 70th St.β Kneiper, M L084 Amsterdam Ave. Kohn, E 107 W. 120th St. Kohnstamm, D 611 W. 114th St La Bovteaux, F, 320 Park Ave. Lazar, R 721 Beck St. Lemeke, I. D It Van Nest PI. Lind, D 71 E. 96th St. Lindermann, E., Brooks, 1822 Park Ave., Richmond, Va. Littauer, V 227 E. 116th St. Luhrman, 1 115 Maple St., Jersey City M McGregor, K 435 W. 123rd St. Mabie, M Bergenfield, N. J. Mannis, G., Brooks, 50 E. South St., Fort Edward, N. Y. Marks, M 541 W. 124th St. Marlatt, F...104 Cottage Ave., Mt. Vernon Marsh, M., Brooks. 311 Sientig Flats, Mankato, Minn. Maneh, H 582 Eighth Ave. Manger, I., 161 W. Passaic Ave., Rutherford, N. J. Mayer, E 600 W. 176th St. Mayer, M 509 W. 110th St. Medigovich, M., Furnald Bisbee, Ariz. Montgomery, M., 177 II ' . 95 ,S7.β 401 Graves St., Syracuse, N. V. Moore, 1 195 12th St., Long Island City Muhlfeld, H 960 Grand Concourse () Otto, V., Brooks Sayville, N. Y. P Patterson, K 438 W. 116th St. Peters, M 1158 56th St., Brooklyn Pickhardt, P 43 6th St., Pelham, N. Y. Pindar, M 110 Morningside Drive R Reichhard, D 480 Central Pari W. Reynolds, I., 182 Scarsdale Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. Rhoades, D..27 N. 15th St., Flushing, N. Y. Riley, 414 W. 120th St. Rivkin, H., 308 IF. 114 t St.β 137 W. 54th St., Bayonne, N. J. Ross, E., Brooks, Bloomingdale, White Plains, N. Y. Sakamoto, K., 524 W. 121 St.β 1609 Yestervvay, Seattle, Wash. [ 175 1 Santelli, C . .676 2nd Ave., Long Island City Schellhase, E., 322 E. 15th St.β 409 S. Fruit St., Wheeling, W. Va. Schmidt, A 740 Riverside Drive Sehoedler, G 247 W. 107th St. Schwab, A 549 W. 113th St. Seeley, J., 247 Lafayette Ave., Grantwood, N. J. Shire, H. . . .Woodmere, Long Island, N. Y. Shrift, E 19.50 Washington Ave. Sicular, A 466 W. 151st St. Sinnigen, G. . .599 Braintridge St., Brooklyn Small, K 301 E. 207th St. Soley, M 428 W. 204th St. Souhami, R 617 W. 143rd St. Stewart, V., Brooks, 2238 Putnam Ave., Toledo, Ohio Stickney, A., Brooks, 450 Westminster Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Stuart, M., 431 W. I21s St.β 800 Chamberlain Ave., Richmond, Va. Suydam, C, 110 Grove St., Tarrytown, N. Y. T Thomson, M., Brooks, 345 Wyoming Ave., Scranton, Pa. Thompkins, B., 13 East View Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Townsend, E., Furnald, 1404 Sevmour Ave., Utica, N. Y. Tuttle, L., 99 Claremont Ave.β 9 Lincoln Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. A ' Van Brunt, G..816 Putnam Ave., Brooklyn Vernon, L., 334 Fifth Ave.β 604 E. 12th St., Bonham, Tex. Vogel, T Suffern, N. Y. Yolk, R 31 W. 94th St. Von Holten, A . .270 Franklin St., Brooklyn Matriculated Specials w Wagenheim, F., Furnald, 117 Guy Pk. Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. Ward, R 717 W. 177th St. Waterbury, E., Furnald, 159 Philadelphia St., Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Weiner, N 250 W. 82nd St. West, S 431 W. 121st St. Whelpley, E Halsted PL, Rye, N. Y. Wickham, E., 215 Manhattan Ave. β 113 15th St., Wheeling, W. Va. Williamson, H., 559 Willoughbv Ave., Brooklvn Witte, J., Furnald, 204 E. 18th St., Brooklvn Wittlinger, B Pocantico Hills, N. Y. Woodward, H., 620 W. 116th St.β Scarsdale, N. Y. Z Zoglin, R 127 W. 82nd St. A K Sheets, G., Furnald, , i β’β’ ,oΒ« nr,i ct, -I- ] Tii xt tr ir i t i mi t β β’; 71 β’ 298 Woodland Ave, Columbus, O. Adee, G., 129 E. 35th St. β I uxedo Pk., N . Y Keasbey, L., 152 Riverside Drive β β. , J.β’ ' a . β r , A .. m Strooek, M 19 W. 76th St. inshalla, Austin, lex. ' C Koriovitz, L 749 Jennings St. T Cathin, H 106 Morningside Drive p Taylor, E 147 W. 105th St. Childs, E., 430 W. 119th St.β Perlman F 297 E 4th St Thompson, E 21 First PL, Brooklvn Bernardsville, N. J. ' - Tice g. C 450 W. 147th St. Clark, L 137 E. 57th St. U W p Root, E. W 151 W. 105th St. Robinson, M., Whit tier, Werner, M 742 St. Nicholas Ave. Fisher, K 1978 Crotona Ave. 177 pj]- e Clarksbureh W Va Wiess, L...161 Llovd Rd., Montclair, N. Y. b Willrich, E 3129 Broadway J S Johnson, R 435 W. 199th St. Sage, L 131 E. 71st St. Z Judson, A., Brooks 20 Fifth Ave. Shan ley. II.. Furnald Rudyard, Mont. Zingali, A 233 W. 109th St. Non-Matriculated Specials B H M Brush, N 375 Park Ave. H(jb(% E Furna ld, McVickar, P. B., Brooks, C 7940 Tacoma St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Milla Rd -Β Morristown, N. J. Carey, C.Luddington Rd., W. Orange, N. J. K McPherson, H., D 507 13 ; St.β Cheesman, C, 17 W. 69th St.β College Pk., Long Island, N. Y. Garrison-on-Hudson, N. Y. Keuth, E 719 W. 180th St. O D Kirkman, C, Furnald Benicia, Cal. Q ' Neill, M., Whittier, de Goenaga, C 195 Claremont Ave. Kung, Fa maid, ' 34 pleasant St., Amherst, Mass. 2415 20th St., Washington, D. C. c E s Emerson, C, 529 W. 111th St. L Schmidt, N Spring Valley, N. Y. Emerson, E 956 E. 18th St., Brooklyn Lagemann, A Hotel Ansonia, X. Y. Stanton, J. ..54 S. Portland Ave., Brooklyn [ 176] [ 177] KAFFEE HAG CAFFEINE-FREE COFFEE NOT A SUBSTITUTE I didn ' t sleep well last night, is a common expression. If coffee disturbs your sleep, why don ' t you try Kaffee Hag? It looks like coffee, tastes like coffee, smells like coffee β it is coffee, coffee of the highest grade and unexcelled flavor, but without the sleep-disturbing drug caffeine. KAFFEE HAG CORPORATION 225 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY INDEX TO ADVERTISERS Page Page ADVANCE SALES CO. . . 186 KAFFEE HAG . 178 ALEXANDRE BURNET . 182 KEEN KUTTER .... o ALTMAN . 182 KLEINERT i AUERBACH, LOUIS . 18!) KRESEL YOUNG .... . 186 BERNER . . . . . 186 LEWIS CO 188 BEST CO. . . . 181 MALKAN ' S . . 182 BROOKS BROS . 179 MILLER SCHOOL .... . 181 CHRISTIAN . 185 NASON MFG. CO . 186 CLARK WILKIN S .... . 184 REEVES AND REEVES 190 COMMUNAL PRINTING CO. . 185 SAKS . 179 COX SONS VINING . . 185 SCHERMERHORN .... . 186 DRUBIN TIRE CO . 180 SEILER . 185 G. W. FABER, INC . 185 SPALDING . 185 FLYING FAME .... . 190 SCHWARZ FORGER . 184 FRIEDGEN .... . 185 TIFFANY 1 HEARN . 189 WHITE . 183 HUYLER . 180 UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE . 185 .TELLO . . . . . .191 WILLARD CO. .... . 187 [ 178 ] ESTABLISHED 1818 MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Telephone Murray Hill 8800 BROOKS BROTHERS ' New Building, convenient to Grand Central, Sub- way, and to many of the leading Hotels and Clubs 100TH ANNIVERSARY April, 1918 Coats and Rugs for Motor, Train or Boat Special designs in Trunks, Bags, Travelling Kits Imported Sweaters, Caps, Gloves and Mufflers of Shetland or Angora Wool Send for Illustrated Catalogue Uniforms and Useful Articles of Personal Equipment for Officers in the Service of the United States in Camp, Afield or Afloat BOSTON SALES- OFFICES NEWPORT SALES-OFFICES Themontcor. Boylston Street 220 Bellevue Avenue aks Qtmtt|tmttf Broadway at 34th Street New York ' s Foremost Apparel House for Women Misses and Girls Whatever your requirements may be in smart apparel for college or general wear, you will always find it here, very reason- ably priced. New Blouses, Modish Coats and Frocks, Stunning Suits, and Charm- ing Trimmed Hats, featuring early Spring Fashion Notes now await your choosing. The Broadway Subway is directly in front of the Saks Building. [ 179 ] Huyler ' s have received the following letter from Mr. Hoover United States Food Administration; washington. dc. Novenber 19, 1917 My dear Mr, Huyler: I would indeed be glad if you would undertake systematic work In the substitution of corn syrup, molasses, maple, honey and other oweets In candy manufacture, and if you would give prefer- ence to chocolate and other materials in confection- ery which require less cane and beet sugar. We do not wish to deprive the public of their sweet meats but we of course must reduce the consumption of cane and beet sugar. Very truly yours, v4 Ly V In response to this suggestion from Mr. Hoover HUYLER ' S are now featuring HUY- LER ' S War Candies, in 1 lb. and 2 lb. boxes, at $1.00 a pound. All the candies and chocolates are of our regular manufacture, but selected for this package because they are made from ma- terials of natural sweetness, or are flavored with syrup, molasses, honey or maple. The value is in the candy. The box is inci- dental. The sugar saving is substantial. WE sell Kelly-Springfield Tires, with a guarantee of 6,000 miles. This doesn ' t mean that you ' ll get only that much mileage ; it means that you won ' t get any less, and that in all probability you will get very much more. We will make all tire repairs free of charge, and any tires that have not given full service, will be replaced pro-rata the list price on a 6,000- mile basis. In other words, if your Kelly- Springfield tire has run only 3,000 miles, and cannot be repaired without charge, we will replace it with a new tire at half the list price. Let us put one Kelly on your car; you ' ll come in and buy the other three of your own accord. At your service DRUBIN TIRE CO. 1941 Seventh Avenue, New York [ 180] Private Secretaryship Accounting Stenography and Typewriting Any or all of these courses are WAR EMERGENCY COURSES, as well as courses for permanent betterment. If you would make money, take either of the above. Turn knowledge into earning power. Begin now. Open all summer. Day and Night Sessions. Circulars Upon Request. MILLER SCHOOL Lexington Avenue at Twenty-third Street Pest Sc Co. Fifth Ave. at 35th St. New York IN gymnasium or camp what you wear is important in bringing joy in what you do. The Camp Department furnishes expert advice in the selection of the complete outfit for athletic wear. Standardized dress for your class adds to class spirit. Best Co. furnish exclusive designs. MIDDIES BLOOMERS TIES SNEAKERS For three years the Orpic snea er has been sold exclusively by Best Co. to Barnard girls. The trim high cut, the slightly raised arch and its excellent wear account for its popularity [181 ] S. Altman (JIa FIFTH AVENUE-MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK THIRTY-FOURTH STREET THIRTY-FIFTH STREET Misses ' Fashionable Outfits for School and College Indoor and Outdoor Garments, Travel and Sports Clothes Alexandre Burnet MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE TELEPHONE 8720 RECTOR 7 WALL STREET NEW YORK MALKAN ' S NEW YORK ' S LARGEST BOOK STORE 42 Broadway and 55 New Street New York City Inspection Invited BROAD 3900 [ 182 ] Sum 1548 BROADWAY (Executive Office) 557 Fifth Avenue New York Photographers to This Book and many other Colleges for the Season The School and College Department makes available the best skilled artists and modern methods, and also assures promptness and accuracy in completion of work Northampton, Mass. Princeton, N. f. Cornwall, N. Y. Ann Arbor, Mich. Studios also in South Hadley, Mass. Lawrenceville, N. J. Hanover, N. H. Lafayette, Ind. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. West Point, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. WHEN YOU WISH YOUR CLOTHES CLEANED WELL AND QUICKLYβ ' PHONE JCtfWytRZ FORGE ft CLEANERS AND DYERS 619 Fifth Avenue, near 50th Street Phone, 3266 Plaza 425 Fifth Avenue, entrance 1 East 38th Street Phone, 5376 Murray Hill 2145 B ' way, between 75th 76th Streets (Astor Apts.) Phone, 2119 Columbus 905 Seventh Avenue, between 57th and 58th Streets Phone, 2441 Circle 641 Madison Avenue, between 59th and 60th Streets Phone, 4329 Plaza 922 Madison Avenue, between 73d and 74th Streets Phone, 5462 Rhinelander 125th Street and Morningside Avenue Phone, 3210 Morningside Newport Store, 158 Bellevue Avenue, Newport, R. I. Phone, 776 Newport Works: 4-6-8-10-12 Manhattan Street Phone, 3210 Morningside Out-of-town orders carefully and promptly filled HARTWELL A. WILKINS, Pres. . Treas. ESTABLISHED 1870 . E LLWOOD CLARK, Secy. HARTWELL H. WILKINS, Vice-Pres. DEALERS IN THIRTY-FOURTH STREET AND ELEVENTH AVENUE, 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. Telephones : Greeley 138 139 Harlem 16 S66 DRY HICKORY FOR OPEN FIRES . VIRGINIA PINE KNOTS. SELECTED OAK OR HARDWOOD. LIGNUM VITAE. NEW BEDFORD DRIFTWOOD. NORTH CAROLINA PITCH PINE. VIRGINIA PINE AND OAK KINDLING WOOD. [ 184 ] Compli?nents of G. W. FABER, Inc. COMMUNAL PRINTING CO. 215 SEVENTH AVENUE, NEW YORK A unique Shop managed by and employing worthy deaf-mutes. W e ask your patronage on a competi- tive basis only. WON ' T YOU GIVE US A TRIAL? Phone, Chelsea 8544 Cox Sons Vining 72 Madison Avenue, New York CAPS and GOWNS Best Qualities Prompt Service Moderate Prices Compliments of Columbia University Press Bookstore (LEMCKE BUECHNER) On the Campus Journalism Building 2960 BROADWAY Bnt.r B. Su . Thi SΒ« 3[!i i]|5][ =KmSΒ§ CHRISTIAN 260 WEST 125th ST., NEW YORK QUICK PRINTING Engraving, Rubber Stamps T ' M.rβ.nβ,.J, 411) THE COLLEGE BOOK STORE A. G. SEILER, Prop. New and Second-Hand Books, Stationery and College Novelties Students ' Discounts Allowed Our Prices the Lowest 1224 Amsterdam Avenue, near 120th Street CHAS. FRIEDGEN DRUGGIST N. W. Corner Amsterdam Avenue and 120th Street N. E. Corner Amsterdam Avenue and 114th Street When you want the real thing in athletic equipment look for this trade mark; it represents that which is best and assures you of satisfaction and service. Catalogue on request A. G. SPALDING BROS. 523 Fifth Avenue 126 Nassau Street New York City [ 185 ] C omplimen tary KRESEL YOUNG 28 WEST 38TH STREET Come in to see us for your SUMMER FURS and at the same time see what we are doing for Fall and Winter SCHERMERHORN TEACHERS ' AGENCY 353 Fifth Avenue New York Charles W. Mulford, Proprietor A superior agency for superior people Defe rred Registration for 1918 Barnard graduates 306 So. Wabash Avenue Chicago Norman Plass, Manager Oscar F. Bernner Theatrical and Street Wig Maker Manufacturer and dealer in Grease Paints, Powders, Rouges, etc. Wigs and Beards to hire. Amateur Performance Tableaux Made Up. 105 West 47th Street, bet. Broadway and 6th Ave., New York Mr. Duplicating Machine User: We can save you 50% on your inks and stencils for either your Mimeograph, Underwood or Neo- style Duplicating Machines. Let us serve you to our mutual profit. ADVANCE SALES COMPANY, 54 West 23rd Street. Class and Individuality are represented In our Show Room Exhibit of Vitreous China and Enameled Ware. The Only Way to secure individuality in your Sanitary Fixtures is to select them where this feature is Specialized Our Kitchen and Laundry ware will appeal particularly to the builders of the modern home, and we make a specialty of fixtures for institutions β Col- leges, Hospitals, Sanitariums, etc. Nason Manufacturing Company 71 Fulton Street New York [ 186] The Chas. L. Willard Co. ENGRAVERS AND PRINTERS OF COLLEGE ANNUALS New York 286 Fifth Avenue At Thirtieth Street Printers and Binders of This Book Also Plate Makers BOOKBINDING IN ALL STYLES AND IN ANY QUANTITY EUGENE C. LEWIS CO. Raymond E. Baylis, President Printing Crafts Building, 8th Avenue, 33d and 34th Streets New York Telephone, Greeley 4051 WE BIND THIS AND MANY OTHER COLLEGE AND SCHOOL BOOKS [ 188 ] nuii Fourteenth Street West of Fifth Avenue For the Spring when woman ' s fancy turns to thoughts of clothes, we have gathered for her choosing, modes and materials that bloom with loveliness, like a garden. All that is gay, fresh and fascinating is expressed in our Suits and Frocks that silhouette smartly, our Hats that enhance the face, our Coats that enfold with distinction as well as warmth, and a score of other things femininely dear, ' which to be appreciated must first he seen; then owned; then worn. 50UDSILK SCARVES SWEATERS SPORT COATS LOUIS AUERBACH 842, 844, 846 Broadway, New York City [ 189] LUNCH 11:30 A. M. - 2:30 P. M. DINNER 5:30 - 7:30 P. M. FLYING FAME Reminds You to Partake of Its PALATABLE PREPARATIONS [ 190] The egg-beater is performing stunts nowadays that were never even dreamed of a short time ago β not with eggs or cream, but with Jell-O. With an egg-beater and a package of Jell-O the college girl is equipped to make something new β any one of fifty good things to eat that will be en- joyed as a welcome change from the monotony of fudge and kindred fixings. Plain Jell-O dishes are fine, as everybody knows, but the whipped forms, as easy as the other, are even finer. Following is a recipe for whipping Jell-O. It is much easier than it sounds : To Whip Jell-O Dissolve a package of Jell-O in a pint of boiling water and let it cool. Begin to whip the jelly while it is still liquid β cold but not yet congealing β and whip until it is of the consistency of thick whipped cream. Use a Dover egg-beater and keep the Jell-O cold while whipping by setting the dish in cracked ice, ice water or very cold water. A tin or aluminum quart measure is an ideal utensil for the purpose. Its depth prevents spattering, and tin and aluminum admit quickly the chill of the ice or cold water. Add cream or whatever else goes into the dessert, if anything does, after β not before β whipping the Jell-O. The whipping process more than doubles the quantity of plain Jell-O, so that when whipped one package of Jell-O serves twelve persons instead of six. There are six pure fruit flavors of Jell-O : Strawberry, Raspberry, Lemon, Orange, Cherry, Chocolate. Each 10 cents at any grocer ' s. Take time, please, to send us your name and address, so we can send you a new Jell-O Book that will tell you how to make delicious things that are too good to miss. THE GENESEE PURE FOOD COMPANY, Le Roy, N. Y., and Bridgeburg, Ont. [191 1 [ 192 ]
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