Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1921
Page 1 of 226
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 226 of the 1921 volume:
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This absolutely authentic Fashion Book brings to you a veritable picture gallery of all that is new- est and smartest in Spring Fash- ions. 25c PER COPY BY MAIL 35c The Embroidery Catalog No. 22 TΒ HIS is the latest edition of this in- valuable book, contain- ing all the newest em- broidery designs and stitches. Not alone are these designs illus- trated, but detailed in- structions are given so that you may be able to work out any that please you. Hundreds and hundreds of new ideas in embroidery for household linens and lingerie, and many clever suggestions for beautifying the baby ' s belongings, besides all the swagger new ini- tials and monograms. Ideal for use in making pretty gifts. 25c per copy By mail 35c PIPTHRI AI RFVIFW America ' s Leading Woman ' s Magazine 25 Cents a Copy I 1 V l l Li rVJ-i V IL VV Gver 2,000,000 Circulation $3.00 Per Year ' PHE greatest publication of its kind ever printed. A complete novel in every four issues. Short stories that eminent critics select as masterpieces. Brilliant pictures for framing. Articles that create international comment. And a superb fashion department added to its literary excellence. Copyright, 1920, by Marjorie Cecille Marks Arranged and Printed by THE SCHILLING PP ESS. INC.. NEW YORK Oortor board 1921 van bAriiArd (olleoa (olunbw University o Gulielma Tell fllsop welteclatt of 1921 aHeclionalely dedicate i oar ilorlar board. PACE Acknowledgments 197 Advertisements 198-215 Alumnae Association 38 Athletic Association 79-87 Officers 80 Basketball 81-82 Baseball 83 Swimming 84-85 Field Day 86 Snapshots 87 Barnard Symphony Orchestra 52 Class of 1920 42-43 Class of 1921 44-45 Class of 1922 46-47 Class of 1923 48-49 Classic Drama, A 98 Clubs 62-78 Classical 64 Cubs 69 Dance 70-72 Debating 67-68 Deutscher Kreis 63 Glee 65 I. C. S. A. 76 Math 66 Newman 77 Political and Social Discussion 78 Press 78 R. S. 0. 73 Silver Bay 75 Societe Francaise 62 Y. W. C. A. 74 PAGE College Evenis 101-103 Copyright 4 De Profundis 88 Dedication 6-7 Directory of Students 182-1% Dormitories 50 Broadview Brooks Hall Flying Fame Drama 89-97 Wigs and Cues 90-93 Board and Members 90-91 Programs 92-93 1920 Junior Show 94 1922 Soph Show 95 Mysteries 96 1921 Junior Show Miracle Plays 97 English 7, 8 Plays Faculty 15-36 To the Faculty 17 Faculty Portraits 18-20 Faculty Histories 21-25 Officers of Instruction 26 University Officers 27 Officers of Administration 28 Faculty Knocks 31-36 Greek Games 105-120 Appreciation 107 Freshman Year 108-111 page Sophomore Year 112-115 To Miss Larson 116 Snapshots 117 Songs 118 Junior Bali. 100 Junior Ball-ad, A 101 Nineteen Nineteen Section 122-136 To 1919 123 Senior Week 124-129 Phi Beta Kappa 126 Songs 130-131 W hat They ' re Doing 132-135 When We Were Freshmen 136 Offering of Mortarboard 11 Our History 139-178 The Young Stewdunt 139-148 Class Picture Bet 148-149 Individual Variations 150 Class Snapshots 151-154 Class Portraits 155-180 Honorary Members 181 Prize Letter 60 Publications 54-59 Bear 54-56 Bulletin 56-57 Mortarboard 58-59 Self Analyses 137 Trustees 13 Undergraduate Association 40-41 [9] offer you oar florlur toard in Inc l)ope thai you may il a pleasanlaocl lasting record of our college years. i [121 Chairman John G. Milburn Vice-Chairman Mrs. A. A. Anderson Clerk Frederic B. Jennings Treasurer George A. Plimpton ' m 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 P.. Spence Howard Townsend John G. Milburn Miss Charlotte S. Baker Pierre Jay Mrs. Charles Cary Rumsey Mrs. Ogden Mills Reid Mrs. Caroline B. Crocker Miss Mabel Choate George W. Wickersham James R. Sheffield Mrs. Alfred F. Hess (Alumnae Trustee, 1919-1923) [13] [14] [15] [ 16] To The Faculty Earnest we came to you, eager, expectant, Children in love with life, though without knowing Aught of its beauty, its wonder, its horror, Asking to learn to live, fully and truly. Straightway you answered us, steadily led us Forzvard to knowledge, and wisdom, and tolerance ; Taught us the laws of the earth and its dwellers; Taught us of men and their dreads and desires; Taught us of life and its wide opportunities ; Taught us to seek for truth all the world over; Gave us your youth that our search might be bolder; Gave us your strength that our hearts might be braver Gave us your faith that our aim might be truer; Gave us your wisdom that zve might be gentler. May zve live thoroughly all you have taught us, Live to be women, true-hearted and faithful, Giving the zvorld of the zvisdom you ' ve given us, With hearts full of gratitude for your glad service. President NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER A.B., Columbia, 1882; A.M., 1883; Ph.D., 1884; LL.U., Syracuse, 1898; Tulane. 1901; Johns Hopkins, Prince- ton, Yale, and University of Pennsylvania, 1902; Chicago. 1903: Manchester and St. Andrews, 1905; Cam- bridge, 1907 ; Williams, ' 1908; Harvard and Dartmouth, 1909; Brown, 1914; 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; Grand officer ot the Order of the Saviour (Greece), 1918; 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 (American Branch); 18S5, 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 Education; 1890, Dean of Faculty of Philosophy; 1900 and 1901, Director of Summer Session; 1902, Presi- dent of the University. VIRGINIA CROCHERON GILDERSLKEVE Dean and Professor of English A. 15., 1899; A.M., Columbia, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia. 1908; LL.D., Rutgers 1916; Assistant, Barnard College, 1900-1903; Tutor, 1903-1907; Lecturer, 1908-191(1; Assistant Professor, 1910-1911; Dean and Professor, 191 1-. Phi Beta Kappa. [19] WILLIAM TENNEY 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. [20] EDWARD DELAVAN PERRY Jay Professor of Greek A. B., Columbia, 1875; Ph.D., Tubingen, 1875; LL.D., Columbia, 1904; Columbia, Tutor in Greek and Sanskrit, 1880-1883; Tutor in Greek and Instructor in Sanskrit, 1883-1891; Professor of Sanskrit, 1891-1895; Jay Professor of Greek, 1895- ; Phi Beta Kappa. FRANKLIN H. GIDDINGS Professor of Sociology and the History of Civilization A.B., Union College, 1877; LL.D., Oberlin College, 1900; Bryn Mawr, 1888-1894; Columbia, 1894; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. HAROLD JACOBY Rutherfurd Professor of Astronomy A.B., Columbia, 1885; Ph.D., 1896; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi; Tan Beta Pi. FRANK NELSON COLE Professor of Mathematics A.B., Harvard, 1882; Ph.D., Harvard, 1886; Lecturer in Mathematics, Harvard, 1885-1887; Instructor and As- sistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Michigan, 1888 1895; Professor of Mathematics, Columbia, 1895-. CALVIN THOMAS Gebhard Professor of Germanic Languages and literatures A.B., University of Michigan, 1874; A.M., 1877; LL.D., 1904; University of Michigan, 1886-1896; Columbia, 1896. WILLIAM P. TRENT Professor of English Literature A.M., University of Virginia, 1884; LL.D., Lake Forest College, 1889; D.L., University of the South, 1905; Uni- versity of the South, 1888-19()0; Columbia, 1900; Acting Provost of Barnard College, 1911-1912. HERBERT G. LORD Professor of Philosophy A.B., Amherst, 1871; A.M., causa honoris, 1900; Univer- sity of Buffalo, 1895-1898; Columbia, 1900- ; Phi Beta Kappa. NELSON GLENN McCREA Anthon Professor of the Latin Language and Literature A.B., Columbia University, 1885: A.M., 1886; Ph.D., 1888; University Fcllozv in Classical Philology, 1885-1888; ' Tutorial Fellow in Latin, 1885-1889; Tutor, 1889-1895; In- structor, 1895-1900; Adjunct Professor, 1900-1903; Profes- sor, 1903; Anthon Professor of the Latin Language and IJterature, 1911- ; Phi Beta Kappa. HENRY E. CRAMPTON Professor of Zoology A.B., Columbia University, 1893; Ph.D., Columbia Uni- versity, 1899; Columbia University, 1893-1895; Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, 1895-1896; Marine Biological Laboratory, ] r oods Hole, 1895-1903; Biological Laboratory Cold Sp ring Harbor, 1904-1906; Columbia University, 1896- ; Associate of Carnegie Institute, 1903- ; Curator of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural His- tory, 1909- ; Acting-Provost, 1918-1919; Sigma Xi; Phi Beta Kappa. Deceased. [21] CHARLES KNAPP Professor of Greek and Latin A.B., Columbia University, 1887; A.M., 1888; Ph.D., 1890; Prise Fellow in Classics. Columbia. 1887-1890; Tu- torial Fellow in Classics. Columbia. 1889-1890; Barnard, Instructor. 1891-1902; Adjunct Professor. 1902-1906; Pro- fessor, 1906- ; Phi Beta Kappa. HENRY L. MOORE Professor of Political Economy A.B., Randolph-Macon. 1892; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1896; Barnard, Professor of Political Economy, 1912-. HERBERT M. RICHARDS Professor of Botany S.B., Harvard, 1891; Sc.D.. Harvard. 1895; Assistant. Harvard, and Instructor, Radcliffe, 1891-1895; Parker Fel- hw. 1895-1896; Tutor, Barnard. 1896-1898; Instructor, Harvard. 1897-1898; Instructor, Barnard, 1898-1902; Ad- junct Professor, Barnard, 1902-1906; Professor, Barnard, 1906-. MARGARET E. MALTBY Associate Professor of Physics A.B., Oberlin. 1882; S.B.. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1891; A.M., Oberlin. 1891; Ph.D. Gocttingen University, 1895; Physikalisch-Technische Reichanstalt 1898-1899; Clark University, 1899-1900; Physics Depart- ment. Wellesley College, 1889-1903 and 1896-1897; Lake Erie College, 1897-1898; Barnard College, Depart- ment of Chemistry. Instructor. 1900-1903; Department of Physics, Adjunct ' Professor. 1903-1910; Assistant Profes- sor, 1910; Associate Professor, 1913-. LOUIS A. LOISEAUX Associate Professor of the Romance Languages and Literatures Certificat d ' Etudes Primaires Superieures, Academic de Dijon. 1887; Brevet d ' l nstituteur, 1887; B.es. sc., 1894; Cornell University , 1891-1892; Columbia, Tutor in French, 1892-1893; Tutor in the Romance Languages and Litera- tures. 1893-1900; Instructor. 1900-1904 ; ' Adjunct Professor, 1904-1910; Assistant Profe ssor. 1910-1914; Associate Pro- fessor. 1913-. JAMES T. SHOTWELL Professor of History A B.. Toronto. 1898; Ph.D.. Columbia. 1903; Columbia University Scholar in European History. 1898-1899; Fel- loe in European History. 1899-1900; Assistant, 1900-1901; Lecturer. 1901-1903; Instructor. 1903-1905; Adjunct Pro- fessor. 1905-1908; Professor, 1908-. EDWARD KASNER Professor of Mathematics B.S., College of the City of New York, 1896; A.M., Co- lumbia University, 1897; Ph.D., 1899; Barnard, 1900- ; Phi Beta Kappa; National Academy of Sciences. 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, 1910-. GRACE A. HUBBARD Associate Professor of English A.B.. Smith College, 1887; A.M., Cornell, 1892; Smith College. 1892-1902; Graduate Student, Sorbonne, 1903- 1904; Graduate Student. Columbia. 1904-1906; Barnard Lecturer. 1905; Associate Professor, 1906- : Phi Beta Kappa. [22] MARIE REIMER Associate Professor of Chemistry A.B.. Vassar, 1897; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr, 1904; Vassar Col- lege, Graduate Scholar. 1897-1898; Assistant. 1898-1899; Fellozv at Bryn Mawr, 1899-1902; Student at University of Berlin. 1902-1903; Barnard. Lecturer. 1903-1904; Instructor, 1904-1909; Adjunct Professor, 1909-1910; Associate Profes- sor, 1910- ; Phi Beta Kappa. ADAM LEROY JONES Director 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; Precep- tor in Philosophy. Princeton University, 1905-1909; Asso- ciate Professor of Philosophy and Director of University Admissions, 1909-. RAYMOND WEEKS Professor of Romance Philology A.B., Harvard, 1890; A.M., 1901; Ph.D., 1897; University of Michigan. 1891-1893; Traveling Fellozv of Harvard Uni- versity, 1893-1895 (Universities of Paris and Berlin); Uni- versity of Missouri, 1895-1898; Student at University of Paris, 1904-1905; University of Illinois. 1908-1909; Colum- bia and Barnard, 1909- ; American Field Ambulance in France, 1917-1918; Chevalier de la Ligion d ' Honneur, 1918. WILHELM ALFRED BRAUN Associate Professor of Germanic Languages and Litera- tures A.B., Toronto University, 1895; Ph.D.. Columbia, 1903; Fellow in German, Chicago University, 1898-1899; Fellow in German, Columbia University, 1899-1900; Barnard. As- sistant, 1900-1901; Tutor. 1901-1906; Instructor, 1906-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910-1911; Associate Professor, 1911-. Director of Columbia House. TRACY ELLIOT HAZEN Assistant Professor of Botany A.B., University of Vermont, 1897; A.M., Columbia Uni- versity, 1899; Ph.D., 1900; Director Fairbanks Museum of Natural Science, St. Johnsbury, l ' t., 1901-1902; Assistant at Columbia, 1902; Tutor at Barnard, 1903-1907; Instructor, 1907-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910- ; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. JOHN LAWRENCE GERIG Associate Professor of Celtic A.B., 1898 ; A.M., 1899; University of Missouri; Ph.D., 1902, University of Nebraska; Instructor in Romance Lan- guages, Sanskrit and Comparative Philology, University of Nebraska, 1899-1903; Instructor in Romance Languages, Williams College, 1905-1906; Lecturer (1906), Instructor (1909), and Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, 1910; Associate Professor, 1912-, Columbia University; Phi Beta Kappa. LA RUE VAN HOOK Associate Professor of Greek and Latin A.B., University of Michigan, 1899; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1904; Member of the American School of Classi- cal Studies. Athens, Greece, 1901-1902; Acting Professor of Greek, University of Colorado, 1902-1903; Instructor, Washington University, St. Louis, 1904; Preceptor, Prince- ton University, 1905-1910; Associate Professor, Columbia University, 1910-. CHARLES SEARS BALDWIN Professor of Rhetoric and English Composition A.B., Columbia, 1888; A.M., 1889; Ph.D., 1894; Fellozv in English. Columbia, 1888-1891; Tutor in Rhetoric, 1891-1894; Instructor, 1894-1895; Instructor in Rhetoric, Yale, 1895- 1898; Assistant Professor, 1898-1908; Professor, 1909-1911; Professor of Rhetoric, 191 1-. ROBERT E. CHADDOCK Associate Professor of Statistics A.B., Wooster, 1900; A.M., Columbia. 1906; Ph.D., 1908; Instructor, Wooster, 1900-1905; University Fellozv and Honorary Fellozv in Sociology, Columbia. 1906-1907; 1907- 1908; Instructor, University ' of Pennsylvania. 1909-1911; Assistant Professor and Director of Statistical Laboratory, Columbia. 1911-1912; Associate Professor, 1912-. [23] DAVID S. MUZZEY 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 His- tory Department, Ethical Culture School, 1911-1912; Bar- nard-. GERTRUDE M. HIRST Assistant Professor of Greek and Latin Cambridge Classical Tripos (Part I), 1890; A.M., Co- lumbia University, 1900; Ph.D., 1902; Barnard, Assistant, 1901-1903; Tutor, 1903-1905; Instructor, 1905-1912; Assis- tant Professor, 1912- ; Phi Beta Kappa. IDA H. OGILVIE Associate Professor of Geology A.B., Bryn Mawr, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903; Barnard, Lecturer, 1903-1905; Instructor, 1905-1912; Assistant Pro- fessor, 1912-1916; Associate Professor, 1916-. HENRI F. MULLER Assistant Professor of French B.es.L., Paris, 1897 ; Ph.D., Columbia, 1912 ; Tutor, Bar- nard College, 1905-1909; Instructor, 1909-1914; Assistant Professor, 1914-. HARRY I. HOLLINGWORTH Associate Professor of Psychology A.B., Nebraska, 1906; Ph.D., Columbia, 1909; Assistant, Tutor, Instructor, Assistant Professor, Columbia, 1909- 1916; Associate Professor, 1916- ; Phi Beta Kappa; Sig- ma Xi. LOUISE HOYT GREGORY Assistant Professor of Zoology A. B., Vassar, 1903; A.M., Columbia, 1907; Ph.D., Co- lumbia, 1909. MAUDE ALINE HUTTMAN Assistant Professor of History B. S., Columbia University, 1904; A.B., 1905; Ph.D., 1914. ELEANOR KELLER Assistant Professor of Chemistry A.B., Columbia, 1900; A.M., Columbia, 1905. WILLIAM HALLER Assistant Professor of English A.B., Amherst, 1908; A.M., Columbia, 1911; Ph.D., Co- lumbia, 1917; Instructor in English in Amherst College, 1908-1909; Assistant and Instructor in English in Barnard College, 1909-1919; Assistant Professor of English, 1919- ; Phi Beta Kappa. [24] CLARE M. HOWARD Assistant Professor of English A.B., Columbia University, 1903; A.M., 1904; Ph.D., 1914; Instructor in Wellesley College, 1904-1908; Scholar of the Society of American Women Students in London, 1908- 1910; Student at Oxford University, 1908-1910; Advisor to Women Students in Journalism, Columbia University , 1916- ; President of the Associate Alumnae of Barnard Col- lege, 1915-1917; Member of the Central Committee on Women ' s War Work of Columbia University, 1917; Bar- nard Alumna Representative on Women ' s Committee for the First Liberty Loan, 1917; Organizer of Barnard Speak- ers for the Red Cross, 1917. EMILIE J. HUTCHINSON Assistant Professor of Economics A.B., Columbia University, 1905; A.M., Columbia Univer- sity, 1908; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1919; Instructor in Economics in Mt. Holy ok e College, 1907-1910; Wellesley College, 1910-1911, 1912-1913; Barnard College, 1913-1919; Assistant Professor at Barnard College, 1919-. WILLIAM FIELDING OGBURN Professor of Sociology B.S., Mercer College, 1905; A.M., Columbia University, 1909; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1912; Instructor in Eco- nomics, History and Politics, Princeton University, 1911- 1912; Professor of Sociology and Economics, Reed Col- lege, 1912-1917; Professor of Economics, Summer Session, University of California, 1915; Professor of Sociology, University of Washington, 1917-1918; Examiner National Labor Board, 1918; Special Agent U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 1919; Professor of Sociology, Barnard College, 1919-. BIRD LARSON Assistant Professor of Physical Education Graduated St. Cloud Normal College, 1906; B.S., Teach- ers ' College, 1914; Physical Education, Emporia Nor- mal School, Summer, 1914; Professor Physical Educa- tion, Elmira College, 1914-1915; Supervisor City Recrea- tion, Elmira, 1914-1915; Instructor Physical Education, Barnard College, 1916-1919; Assistant Professor, 1919-. AGNES R. WAYMAN Assistant Professor of Physical Education A.B., University of Chicago, 1903; Instructor in Physical Education, University of Chicago, 1903-1906; Instructor and Student, Yale Summer School, 1905 and 1906; Physi- cal Director State Model School, Trenton, N. J., and As- sistant in Normal School, Trenton, N. J., 1906-1910 ; Di- rector of Athletics, University of Chicago, 1910-1916; In- structor in Athletics, Normal School of Physical Education, Battle Creek, Mich., Summer 1915; Physical Director Win- throp Industrial and Normal College, Rock Hill, S. C, 1916- 1917; Teacher Wadleigh High School, New York City, 1917- 1918; Instructor Barnard College, 1918-1919; Assis- tant Professor Barnard College, 1919-. GEORGE WALKER MULLINS Assistant Professor of Mathematics B.A., University of Arkansas, 1904; M.A., Columbia Uni- versity, 1913; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1917; Professor of Mathematics, Simmons College (Texas), 1905-1912; In- structor in Mathematics, Barnard College, 1913-1919; As- sistant Professor of Mathematics, Barnard College, 1919-. MABEL FOOTE WEEKS Associate in English A.B., Radcliffe, 1894; Dr. Sachs ' School for Girls; Bar- nard. Adjunct Professor, 1907-1910; Associate, 1910- ; Mis- tress of Brook ' s Hall, 1908-. [25] OTHER OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION Emily James Putnam, A.B., Associate in History. John Douglas Adams, D.D., Associate in Religion. Grace Langford, S.B., Instructor in Physics. Luther Herbert Alexander, Ph.D., Instructor in the Romance Languages and Literatures. Ethel Sturtevant, A.M., Instructor in English. Minor W. Latham, A.M., Instructor in English. Florence de Loiselle Lowther, A.M., Instructor in Zoology. Charles C. Mook, Ph.D., Instructor in Geology. Alma de L. Le Due, Ph.D., Instructor in the Romance Languages and Literatures. Grace H. Goodale, A.M., Instructor in Greek and Latin. Kenneth W. Lamson, Ph.D ., Instructor in Mathematics. Helen H. Parkhurst, Ph.D., Instructor in Philosophy. Hester M. Rusk, A.M., Instructor in Botany. Estelle H. Davis, Instructor in English. Grace Potter Rice, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry. Katherine M. Cooper, B.S., Instructor in Physical Education. C. Evangeline Farnham, A.M., Instructor in Spanish. Elizabeth Faulkner Baker, A.M.. Instructor in Economics. Gertrude Ware, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry. Lelia M. Finan, Instructor in Physical Education. Helene Bieler. Instructor in the Romance Languages and Literatures. Marion E. Richards, A.M., Lecturer in Botany. Hugh Wiley Puckett, Ph.D., Lecturer in the Germanic Languages and Literatures. Blanche Prenez, Lecturer in the Romance Languages and Literatures. Florrie Holzwasser, A.M., Lecturer in Geology. Edna Henry Bennett, A.B., Lecturer in Zoology. Sally P. Hughes, A.B., Lecturer in Zoology. Eleanor Doty, Lecturer in Physical Education. Mary W. Coutant, A.M., Lecturer in Botany. Georgina I. Stickland, Ph.D., Ass istant in Psychology. Maurice Picard, Ph.D., Assistant in Philosophy. Hedwig A. Koenig, A.B., Assistant in Chemistry. Cornelia L. Carey, Assistant in Botany. Mary R. M. Griffiths, A.B., Assistant in History. Amy L. Burt. A.M., Assistant in History. Grace Hays Johnson, A.B., Assistant in Zoology. Vivian Tappan, A.B., Assistant in Zoology. Gordon Dewey, A.M., Assistant in Government. Frances Orr. A.B., Assistant in Physics. OFFICERS OF THE UNIVERSITY WHO GIVE INSTRUCTION IN BARNARD COLLEGE Franz Boas, Ph.D., LL.D., Sc.D., Professor of Anthropology. Franklin Thomas Baker, Litt.D., Professor of the English Language and Literature. Gonzalez Lodge, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Latin and Greek. Clarence H. Young, Ph.D., Professor of Greek and Archaeology. W illiam Robert Shepherd, Ph.D., L.H.D., Professor of History. Algernon de V. Tassin, A.M., Assistant Professor of English. George Philip Krapp, Ph.D., Professor of English. Willystine Goodsell, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Education. Wendell T. Bush, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Philosophy. Dino Bigongiari, A.B., Assistant Professor of Italian. Ernest H. Wright, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English. Mary Theodora Whitley, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology. Dixon R. Fox, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of History. William W. Rankin, Jr., A. M., Instructor in Mathematics. Arthur Whittier MacMahon, A.M., Instructor in Politics. Wallace E. Caldwell, Ph.D., Instructor in History, Edward H. Reisner, Ph.D., Lecturer in Education. Officers of Administration N. W. Liggett, A.B., Bursar. Anna E. H. Meyer, A.B. Registrar. Katharine S. Doty, A.M., Secretary. Bertha L. Rockwell, Librarian of Barnard College. Mabel Foote Weeks, A.B., Mistress of Brooks Hall. Lucy R. Powell, A.M., Secretary of Brooks Hall. Virginia Tucker Boyd, A.B., Secretary of Students Hall. Katharine W. Scudder, B.S., Director of Religious and Social Work. Gulielma F. Alsop, M.D., College Physician. Fanny Aurill Bishop, A.M., Secretary to the Dean. Lilian Egleston, A.M., Assistant to the Dean. Emily Gordon Lambert, A.B., Assistant to the Bursar. L. Margaret Giddings, A.B., Assistant to the Registrar. Hope Newcombe, Secretary to the Provost. Charlotte H. Peters, Assistant to the Secretary. Martha H. Miller, A.B., Assistant to the Secretary. William H. Carpenter, Ph.D., Acting Librarian of the University. Frederick A. Goetze, M.Sc, Comptroller. Rev. Raymond C. Knox, S.T.D., Chaplain of the University. William H. McCastline, M.D., University Medical Officer. [29] WE, the members of the 1921 Mortarboard, in order to add a bit of humor, pronounce judgment, injure academic tran- quillity, give nochance for defense, provoke the general welfare, and record the weaknesses of the Fac- ulty for ourselves and our pos- terity, do hereby inscribe and illustrate these knocks, for the delight of the students of Barnard. If I Were Ever a Ph.D.β For public functions occasionally I ' d don my gown With a delicate frown, For a mortarboard isn ' t particularly Becoming to me. On a golden chain would I wear my key β Of course β my key β And in talking to strangers of lesser degree I could not resist it β I ' d turn it and twist it Nonchalantly. And if ever a Senior should try to be Familiar with me Particularly Before underclassmen, I ' d fill her with fear By a terrible sneer, For the students must learn the proper degree Of respect to be shown to the Faculty. IF I were ever a Ph.D. ! But first, ah me ! ' Tis necessaree To acquire that fleeting A.B., A.B. Oh, can the Undergraduate Learn clearly to enunciate With dignity officiate? Oh, can that ever be? Though negatively you opine, Your sad conclusion ' s out of line. For Barnard ' s class of ' 99 Produced our V. C. G. T weep for you, the Provost said ' J deeply sympathize. And with a yawn, he sorted out Those themes of largest size, Holding the shell-rimmed spectacles Before his twinkling eyes. Prof. C. S. B. ( Authoritee, On matters Chaucerian, Wears a goatee, Neat as can be. In manner Shakespearian. Special Clipping from the N. Y. Philoso- phers ' Daily : Professor Montague, of Barnard College, upon arising late for breakfast and being obliged to boil his own egg, was discovered, egg in hand, waiting for his watch to boil. [32] There ' s a Bustle And a Hustle β Goodness, gracious, me! So efficient And omniscient β 1 hat is Kate Dotee. Oh may we make so bold As to bid him have a care In tipping back so awfully far On the back legs of his chair? Elle est tine. De bonne mine Kile est intelligente. With qualities Such as these. Is there more you could want? Gertrude M. Hirstque cano, England ' s quae prima ab oris Americam, profuga Cambridgeo Collegio, venit. Drammer. Act I. Scene β Students ' Hall (.Enter Protagonist, M.A. greatly preoccu- pied) Pro. Have you seen her? Act II. Scene β Fisk Hall (Enter Deutragonist, M.D., much flurried.) Deut. Have you seen her? Act III. Scene β Tennis Court (Freshman and Wise One passing by on boardwalk.) Fresh. What are they doing? Wise One. Oh, that ' s just a little love game. Each living creature that we see He scrutinizes carefully Examines its ontogeny, And likewise its phylogeny β I wonder where this one ' s can be.. Hedwig, Millie and Vivian T. Are all as dignified as can be, (As if they really were faculty,) Hedwig, Millie and Vivian T. [34] To Rags Thou very least of all the gods that be, Who struttest through our stately columned ways Thy shaggy fur with crimson bow bedight .... Some day, O Rags, wilt thou deign notice me? ' Twas I, one day, who took the liberty Of kneeling at thy side, caressed thy mane. But I was scorned, squelched, sat upon and pushed. Some day, O Rags, wilt thou deign notice me ? Gilt-edged dog-biscuit will I offer thee, The like of which thou couldst not gnaw in Maine, In hope that I will win thy love again And some day, Rags, that thou may ' st notice me. IN PHIL. 61-62 Oh, isn ' t it wonderful To be a Philosopher And deeply to ruminate ' Meditate, cogitate, ( )n why things are not as they were. And whether they ever will be. And what they ' ll become if they will And if things exist that we see, Or whether all matter is nil. Oh, yes ! It ' s just wonderful To fathom the infinite blue, To learn of sensations, Equations, relations. In Phil. 61-62. If you ' re taking Baby Zoo, Go slow ! For you need a lot of patience When you ' re dealing with Crustaceans. If you ' re taking Baby Zoo, Go slow ! I ' m not taking Baby Zoo, Oh, no! I detest such heartless habits β Cutting up those darling rabbits. Do you think I ' d pass that Zoo? Oh. no! Although my pen is wavering Rheumatical and quavering, I must keep on a-slavering To write a daily theme. I ' ve tried to be satirical, Dramatical and lyrical, In manner quite empirical. I cannot write a theme. I feel apologetical For waxing thus poetical. This effort is pathetical. It is my daily theme. [36] FIRST AID EXAM. 1. Gas is escaping from all the burners in the stove. You walk into the kitchen with a lighted match. What will you do ? 2. You hear screams coming from a building on 117th Street. You call a policeman and enter, and discover many girls playing basketball. What will you do ? 3. You swallow your friend ' s ten-dollar gold-piece. What will you do if you are broke? 4. You hear a childish laugh from upstairs. You run up and find that little Willie has devoured the five pounds of Maillard ' s that were sent to you the night before. What will you do? O do not feel superior Un-knocked, unpictured Professor, Because you ' ve been left out. What keeps you out, despite your hope. Is lack of space ; we ' ve lots of dope To write a knock about. 3 K i so. v Β 3 w ggg tbe- I ggg x.ay gjg xΒ 5 β V .eV gsjgg = XΒ«?Β«3 BOARD OF Mrs. C. S. Baldwin, ' 95 Miss Alice Chase, ' 96 Mrs. George Endicott, ' 00 Mrs. Martin Le Boutillier, ' 17 Miss Mabel Parsons, ' 95 Mrs. Charles Kervan, ' 99, First J ' ice-Prcsidcnt Mrs. Ely Kahn, ' 10 Mrs. J. L. Laidlaw, ' 02 Mjss Amy Loveman, ' 01 Miss Myra McLean, ' 09 DIRECTORS .Mrs. George McAneny, ' 99 Mrs. Alfred Hess, ' 00 Miss Eleanor Osborne, ' 98 ftliss Estelle O ' Brien, ' 16 Second Vice-President Mrs. Frazier Peters. ' 19 Miss Eleanor Wallace, ' 16 Mrs. Paul Achilles, ' 14 President Miss Sara Butler, ' 14 ALUMNAE COUNCIL Mrs. George Endicott, ' 00, Chairman Mrs. Henry W. Miller, ' 99 Mrs. Frederick Vanderwater, ' 09 Mrs. Alfred Compton, ' 01 Mrs. Charles Kervan, ' 99 Miss Virginia Newcomb, ' 00 STANDING COMMITTEES Nominating β Mrs. Thomas Donohue, ' 01, Chairman Community Recreation β Amy Loveman, ' 01, Chairman Employment Committee β Agnes Dickson, ' 99, Chairmon Reunion Committee β Estelle O ' Brien, ' 16, Chairman Publicity β Sophie Woodman, ' 07, Chairman Students ' Aid β Mabel Parsons, ' 95, Chairman SUB-COMMITTEES Co-operative Dormitory β Mabel Parsons, ' 95, Chairman Membership and Statistics- Theodora Baldwin, ' 00, Chairman Finance Committee β Mrs. Charles Kervan, ' 99, Chairman By-Laws and Legislation β Dorothy Herod, ' 14, Chairman Treasurer β Myra McLean, ' 09 Executive Secretary β Anna Reiley, ' 05 [39] G. Schoedler E. One J. Byers K. Coffey E. Curry A. Jennings A. Barrington H. Jones L. Eyre D. Robb ! 401 Undergraduate Association OFFICERS Amy S. Jennings, 1920 - -- -- -- - President Alice L. Barrington, 1920 - - - - - - - Vice-President Gertrud Schoedler, 1921 - -- -- -- - Treasurer Evelyn Orne, 1922 - -- -- -- -- Secretary Louise Rissland, 1922 - - - ' - - Assistant to Treasurer Louisa Eyre, 1920 ------- Executive Chairman STUDENT COUNCIL Amy S. Jennings, 1920 - -- -- -- - Chairman Eleanor Curry. 1920 Helen B. Jones, 1921 Louisa Eyre, 1920 Gertrud Schoedler, 1921 Dorothy Rohb, 1920 Katherine Coffey, 1922 Alice Barrington, 1920 Evelyn Orne, 1922 Judith Byers, 1923 Class of 1920 Dorothy Robb - - - - - - - - . , - - President Felice Jarecky - -- -- -- -- Vice-President Evelyn Baldwin - - - - - - - - - Secretary Marion Tvndall - -- -- -- -- Treasurer Mary Opdvcke - Corresponding Secretary and Historian Motto Colors Mascot Flower Alev aptffxeuetv {Ever to excel) Buff and Blue Dragon Tea Rose YELL Dragon, rah-rah ! ' 20 Hurrah 1-9-2-0β Barnard! Class of 1921 Helen B. Jones ------ President Gertrude Bendheim - Vice-President Alice Johnson - -- -- -- -- - Secretary Edyth Ahrens - - - - - - - - - .- Treasurer Leonora Andrews - -- -- -- -- Historian Gertrude Dana - -- -- -- -- Song Leader Motto - ' Β£ty.oq npoq oj;j.co (Shoulder to Shoulder) Colors - Green and White Mascot - - - Bulldog Flower - White Carnation YELL Woof, woof! Yip, yip ! G-r-r-r-r-r-r ! Twentv-one ! Class of 1922 Katherine Coffey President Eve Jacoby Moreen Lahiff - Vice-President Eleanore Starke Secretary Treasurer Hope Sattertiiwaite Historian Motto - Nix,Tjv vtxav (To win the victory) Mascot - Lion YELL Roar ! Lion ! Roar ! Roar More and More ! 1-9-2-2 Roar ! Roar ! Roar ! Colors Brown and gold Flower Sunset rose Class of 1923 Judith Bvers ---------- President Alice Williams --------- Vice-President Hanna Mann - - - - - .- - - - - Secretary Frances Boas - -- -- -- -- - Treasurer Marie Lee Slaughter - -- -- -- - Historian Motto Colors β’ Mascot Flower - β yvxOXouvTeg {Working together ) Red and white - Indian ]?cd and ivhitc carnation YELL Whew Boom β Ah ! OO-OO-OO-OO-OO Indian ! [49] OFFICERS OF BROOKS HALL President - - Eleanor Curry Vice-President ......... Ruth Jones Secretary and Treasurer ------- Janet Wallace Social Chairman - Minnie May Flemming Fire Captain ---------- Helen Hicks Librarian - Margaret Benz OFFICERS OF BROADVIEW DORMITORY President . - - Agnes Piel Vice-President - - - - Juliet Clark Secretary Elizabeth MacArthur Treasurer - - Margaret Myers House Member - Lila North OFFICERS OF FLYING FAME DORMITORY President - -- -- -- -- - Susanne Payton Secretary Alma Spencer [51 1 V Barnard College Symphony Orchestra A. S. JENNINGS, Conductor Program for 1919-1920 Unfinished Symphony The new cut system Sonata Appassionata in A. A. I. Legato II. Staccato III. Manifesto Humoresque The Provost L ' Oracolo The Dean Melody in F Posted Lists Coq d ' Or The Junior League Suite, C Minor English 25 Romance, Sextette Marion Bacr Klcban, Madeliene Neumann. Ruth Kneiper, Adclc Stickney, Agatha Gilbert, Lillian Faivcctt Morning Mood Nine o ' clock classes Gotterdaemmerung The Committee on Instruction Consolation A in Physical Ed. Group of Selections from Operas. 1. Swear in This Hour Soph Gym 2. Ah, I Have Sighed to Rest Mf. The morning after Junior Ball 3. Some Day He ' ll Come Professor Montague Less Classical Songs. 1. A Long, Long Trail The lunchroom 2. Dear Old Pal of Mine Rags Group for Children. 1. Little Studies for Beginners: History A. Hygiene. Math. A-l. 2. The Merry Farmer Raphael [52] 153] BULLETIN STAFF Upper Row: K. Brosnan, M. Metcalf, A. jYlacMahon, C. Shea, L. Rissland, M. Trusler, I. Rathborne, A. Jones, M. Gerdau, R. Clendenin Lower Row : R. Koehler, F. Marlatt, B. Whyte, D. Butler, R. Jones, M. Marks, L. Andrews [54] The Barnard Bulletin BOARD OF EDITORS Editor-in-Chief Dorothy Butler, ' 20 News Editor Bertha Wallerstein, ' 20 Associate Editors Marjorie C. Marks, ' 21 Aline MacMahon, ' 20 Leonora Andrews, ' 21 Katherine Brosnan, ' 20 Frances Marlatt, ' 21 Dorothy McGrayne, ' 22 Assistant Editors Beatrice Whyte, ' 20 Helen Prince, ' 22 Elizabeth Brooks, ' 22 Margaret Trusler, ' 23 Isabel Rathborne, ' 22 Marguerite Gerdau, ' 22 A. A. Editor Aldine Carter Under the Clock Ruth Clendenin, ' 21 Business Manager Ruth R. Jones, ' 21 Assistants Madeleine Metcalf, ' 22 Aldwith Jones, ' 20 Louise Rissland, ' 22 Cora Shea, ' 23 Margaret Costello, ' 20 Ruth Koehler, ' 22 BEAR STAFF I. Rathborne, E. Shearn, E. Delafield, J. Robb, M. Jennings, R. A. Ehrich, M. Marks A. MacMahon, L. Byrne, M. Opdycke, B. Becker, E. de la Fontaine 156] The Barnard Bear Mary Ellis Opdycke, ' 20 Editor-in-Chief Louise Byrne, ' 21 ----- - Business Manager Emily Delafield, ' 22 ----- - Assistant Beatrice L. Becker, ' 20 Alary A. Jennings. ' 21 Elise de la Eontaine, ' 20 Aline MacMahon, ' 20 Ruth A. Ehrich. ' 21 Marjorie C. Marks. ' 21 Isabel E. Rathborne, ' 22 Janet H. Robb, ' 20 Edith P. Shearn, ' 22 [581 The 1921 Mortarboard Editor-in-Chief β Marjorie C. Marks Assistant Editor-in-Chief β Gertrude Bendheim ASSISTANT EDITORS Leonora Andrews Gertrude Dana Ruth Clendenin Antonia Schwab Ex-ofrieio β Helen Jones ART EDITOR Olive Riley ASSISTANTS Helen Muhlfeld Virginia Stewart BUSINESS MANAGER Mary L. Granger ASSISTANTS Mary Jennings Evelyn Shrifte Ruth Lazar Ruth W ard Prize Letter [Editor ' s Note: In reply to our much-advertised Why I am Not a Grind contest, the Editors of Mortarboard have received letters in competition from all parts of the country. Judging a contest is at all times difficult. The great number of competitors and the poignancy of the subject under discussion ren- dered this judgment peculiarly arduous. It was only after deep consideration that the Editors chose the fol- lowing letter as representative of the proper feelings. Special mention should be made of the letters received from members of Brooks, Furnald, The Broadview, and Flying Fame Dormitories, and especially from those of our classmates who deign to dwell with their families. Mortarboard takes great pleasure in presenting the author of the following with a season ticket to the New York Public Library, and sincerest congratulations, in the hope that she will not be extravagant with either.] Editor of Mortarboard, Barnard College. Dear Sir: The reasons which I am about to submit may be divided into three classes: (1) those due to heredity, (2) those due to environment, (3) those due to neither. In the first group I may mention my parents briefly, and pass on. In the second group, I shall endeavor to be more specific. My greatest objection is library books. If I tried to take a bonk out of the library, it would probab ' .y either be reserved or have to be back by 7.30. If I brought it back by 7.30, I would have to eat my dinner very quickly, and then I would get indigestion (my immunity is weak). Even so there would be a great danger that I would lose it on the way, and I might not be able to replace it because of a Printers ' Strike. Or if I didn ' t lose it I might bring it in late and have to pay a fine. This would be an economic waste. Of course, I would not use the book, during the daytime, for that would deprive somebody else. As for papers: I never hand them in on time because I hate to hurt the feelings of these who hand them in late, and I never hand them in late for fear of overworking the Professors. I never study from text-books or from my notes, because then I could not truthfully say before each exam, that I don ' t know a thing. 1 always say this: people would be hurt if I didn ' t, and besides the Dean says that everyone should say this. I like C as a mark. In school all my papers used to be marked C for correct, and I have a sentimental attach- ment for the letter. I have so many reasons above that I don ' t think it is necessary to write the third group. Yours for the suppression of Phi Beta Kappas, 1921 P. S. β I got A in Freshman Debate. 1601 [61] do socictc roAncAis President ----- - Rosalind Zoglin, ' 21 Secretary-Treasurer - - - Gladys Van Brunt, ' 21 Publicity Agent - -- -- -- - Rachel Souhami, ' 21 MEMBERS Bay, Theodosia Laf Loofy, Naigla Silver, Edith Bien, Esther Lehmann, Germaine Soley, Marie Blauvelt, Anna Lehmann, Madeleine Souhami, Rachel Boyd, Nancy Maas, Agnes Spotz, Margaret Brooks, Elizabeth Meixel l, Granville Starke, Eleanore Brown, Jean Mack, Enid Strang, Isabel Calm, Edith Meylan, Juliette Strauss, Ruth Cox, Louise More, Paule H. Strong, Lois Denham, Beatrice Newton, Leone Taylor, Pauline Drachman, Mathilde Orne, Evelyn Thirlwall, Katherine Ehrich, Ruth J. Pirazzini, Mabelle Van Brunt, Gladys Glorieux, Lucienne Porter, Edna Lewis Van Buskirk, Dorothy Guercken, Valentine Pless, Helen Walser, Violet Harpootlian, Satining Rissland, Louise Weiss, Clara Hegeler, Louise Rodriguez, Conchita Williamson, Frances Himmelberger, Kathryn Romain, Dorothy Wise, Ethel Jaros, Natalie Russell, Olivia Wohl, Rose Kaplan, Deborah Schwab, Antonia Wood, Elizabeth Klein, Elizabeth Scott, Mary Zoglin, Rosalind 621 President --------- Beatrice Mack, ' 20 Vice-President Margaret Myers, ' 20 Secretary -------- Beatrice Wormser, ' 21 Treasurer -------- Margaret Wilkens, ' 20 MEMBERS Boas, Frances Dockstader, Dorothy Hoffman, Hannah Keehn, Harriet Kossman, Ethel Mack, Beatrice Mack, Helen Meissner, Elsa Meixall, Granville Mitchell, Ethel Myers, Margaret Piel, Agnes Prince, Helen Ressmeyer, Gertrude Rothschild, Louise Ruperti, Wilhelmina Stickel, Elizabeth Uhrbrock, Marie Wilkens, Margaret W ormser, Beatrice [63 1 CLASSICAL CLUB OFFICERS President - - - ... Ruth Paterson Secretary-Treasurer - Ruth Helene Kneiper HONORARY MEMBERS Charles Sears Baldwin Nelson Glenn McCrea Dino Bigongiari Edward Delavan Perry Anatole Le Braz Caroline Sheldon Gonzalez Lodge Clarence H. Young ACTIVE MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Grace Harriet Goodale Gertrude M. Hirst Charles Knapp La Rue Van Hook GRADUATE MEMBER Margaret Stewart UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS Balder, Helen Black, Mildred Boyd, Nancy Carbonara, Teresa Chalmers, Ruth De Graff, Thelma Fawcett, Lillian Frost, Leslev Haig, Phyllis Herring, Virginia Hoff, Amanda Hoff, Rhoda I I ughey, Virginia Kneiper, Ruth .McDonald, Agnes Manger, Isabel Meehan, Isabel Moore, Loretta W, Morehouse, Effie Paterson, Ruth Rabe, Elizabeth Rissland, Louise Sinnigen, Grace Strong, Lois Thompson, Frances Wahlers. Mabel W eeks, Mary Wood, Elizabeth President Business Manager Secretary - Treasurer Mary Ellis Opdycke, ' 20 Ruth Hall, ' 20 Edith Baird, ' 22 - Marion Marshall, ' 22 EXECUTIVE C( )MMITTEE Winifred Bostwick, ' 20 Agnes Bennet, ' 22 Baird, Edith B. Balder, Helen Barton, Helen Bien, Esther Bowman, Irene Bowtell, Margaret Bradway, Elizabeth Brower, Lillian Brown, Jean Crook, Alice Davis, Helen M. Dockstader. Dorothy Gaarder, Helga Hall, Ruth MEMBERS Henry, Adele H immelberger, Kathryn Janeway, Eleanor Johnston, Anne Kammerer. Ethel Kennard, Elaine Maas, Agnes Mabie. Mildred Marshall, Marion Meixall, Granville Near, Arcadia Raniage, Ethel Reynolds, Ethel Rudd, Frances Schroeder, Dorothea Schwab, Antonia Seymour, Katharine Sheehan, Edythe Silver, Edith Smith, Genevieve Spear, Olive Sternberg. Lillian Strauss, Ruth Svvarts. Veeva Tonks, Nina Van Horn, Cora Vincent. Marion White, Mildred Williams, Alice P. I 65 I HATH CLUB President - - - Evelyn Baldwin, ' 20 Vice-President - Catherine Piersall, ' 20 Secretary - - Louise Cox, ' 20 Treasurer ----- - Marion Haskell, ' 21 Executive Committee Member - - - Beatrice Whyte, ' 20 Honorary President Professor Mullins MEMBERS Abrahams, Estelle Ammermuller, Gertrude Baldwin, Evelyn Bassler, Katherine Bay, Theodosia Beith, Mae Belle Byrne, Louise Cannon, Edris Castle, Eleanor Clarke, Helen Cox, Louise Edwards, Gladys Eyre, Louisa Fine, Estelle Garfunkel, Elsie Gibson, Edna Greene, Grace Groehl, Marion Hall, Mary B. Haskell, Marion Jentz, Veronica Johnson, Alice Kafka, Beatrice Kennard, Elaine Koehler, Ruth Kydd, Marjorie Lind, Dorothy Nason, Celeste Neale, Emma Neuman, Hortense Piersall, Catherine Rafter, Lucy Reynolds, Christine Robb, Dorothy Roe, Winifred Rosenthal, Gladys Sadler, Katherine Schaffer, Klorence Stahl, Ruth Talley, Margaret Uhrbrock, Marie Uhrbrock, Mildred Whyte, Beatrice [66] qEMMG club President --------- Frances Marlatt, ' 21 Vice-President - Margaret Myers, ' 20 Recording Secretary - - Margaret Wing, ' 22 Corresponding Secretary - β - - Elizabeth Brooks, ' 22 Treasurer _______ Gladys G. Van Brunt, ' 21 Chairman of Material Committee ----- Clarissa White, ' 20 MEMBERS Benz, Margaret Brooks, Elizabeth Butler, Dorothy Camponaro, Rose Costello, Margaret De la Fontaine, Elise Falk, Dorothy Geissler, Rosina Lynn Guercken, Valentine Harris, Dorothy Hessburg, Rhoda Holden, Orilla Kaplan, Deborah Kopold, Sylvia Krieger, Lillian Levi, Marion Lewton, Lucy McElroy, Katherine Wormser, Mann, Hanna Marlatt, Frances Mayer, Elizabeth Myers, Margaret Prince, Ruth Rathborne, Isabel Ruperti, Wilhelmina Santelli, Catherine Schlichting, Louise Schellhase, Elizabeth Anne Stuart, Mary Trusler, Margaret Van Brunt, Gladys Wallerstein, Bertha Weiner, Natalie White, Clarissa Williamson, Frances Wing, Margaret Beatrice [67] Debate, March, 1919 Resolved, that the policy of Universal Free Trade be adopted by the League of Nations. BARNARD VERSUS SMITH (At Barnard) Affirmative Frances Marlatt Sylvia Kopald Bertha Wallerstein Alternates Louisa Eyre Elizabeth Brooks Blanche Stroock BARNARD VERSUS RADCLJFFE (At Radcliffe) Negative Vivian Tappan Margaret Wing Marian Levi Alternates Esther Schwartz Erna Gunther Isabel Rathborne Unanimous Victory for Barnard on both sides [681 Cub: Secretary Leonora Andrews, ' 21 MEMBERS Andrews, L. L. Beard, M. Bendheim, G. Denton, M. de la Fontaine, E. Dockstader, D. Granger, M. Hooper, G. Jennings, A. Jennings, M. Kohn, E. McGrayne, D. illiamson, Marks, M. Mayer, E. Meixall, G. Mosher, M. Prince, H. Rathborne, I. Riley, O. Satterthwaite, H. Shearn, E. Stewart, V. Strang, I. Van Brunt, G F. 16V I [70] Dance Club OFFICERS President Vice-President Chairman of Recital Chairman of Staging Chairman of Costumes Chairman of Business Chairman of Membership Secretary-Treasurer Phoebe Guthrie, ' 20 Esther Schwartz, ' 20 Juliette Meylan, ' 20 Katherine Brosnan, ' 20 Ruth A. Ehrich, ' 21 Clara Weiss, ' 21 Natalie Weiner, ' 21 Anne Schmidt, ' 21 MEMBERS Ahrens, Edyth Barrington, Alice Bendheim, Gertrude Brosnan. Katherine Ehrich, Ruth A. Guthrie, Phoebe Haskell. Marion Jennings, Amy Jennings, Mary A. Jones, Helen Kaplan, Deborah Lazar, Ruth Marlatt, Frances Marks, Marjorie Marsh, Agnes Marsh, Lucile MacMahon, Aline Mayer, Marie Neumann, Madeleine Schenck, Claire Schmidt, Anne Schoedler, Gertrud Schwartz, Esther Shire, Helen Stewart, Virginia Sternberg, Lillian Ward, Ruth Weiner, Natalie Weiss, Clara A. Williamson, Frances ALUMNAE MEMBERS Ballot, Jeanne Birdseye, Dorothy Curnow, Eleanor Harris, Natalie Heimerdinger, Lucile Klopman, Vera . Kohnstamm, Myra Lott, Marietta Monjo, Marguerite Newburger, Bessie Ogden, Armitage Willman, Lens, Lucile Simons, Bessie Smith, Leolyn Tappan, Vivian Terry, Muriel Thomas, Pamela Toledano, Ruth Torek, Gretchen Townsend, Marion Warren, Marion Weil, Anna Edith Dance Club Recital Spring, 1919 PART I. 1. Prelude from Arlesienne, ' ' Bizet Orchestra 2. Diana Chorus, from Iphigenia, ' ' Gluck Dance Club Tphigenia Phoebe Guthrie Glee Club 3. Dance Sketches Dance Club Kite Dance Pamela Thomas The Shepherd Boy Marion Warren Juggleress Jeanne Ballot Vanity Vera Klopman 4. Athletes of Greece Dance Club 5. a. Song of the Shepherd, Lehl, Rimsky-Korsakoff . ' . Glee Club b. Come Unto These Yellow Sands, ' ' Emily Dowling Glee Club 6. Pierrot Katherine Brosnan 7. Andante Cantabile, ' Tschaikowsky Orchestra Dance by Vera Klopman and Marion Townsend PART II. 1. a. Barcarolle, ' ' Tschaikowsky Orchestra b. Waltz from The Sleeping Beauty, ' ' Tschaikowsky Orchestra 2. Balloons, Grieg Dance Club 3. a. Farewell to Minka, Russian Folk Song Glee Club b. Little Dutch Lullaby, Patty Stair Glee Club 4. Huntress Dance Gretchen Torek 5. Musette, ' ' Gluck Esther Schwartz 6. Baccanale, ' ' Saint-Saens Dance Club Orchestra THE COMMITTEE I 72] Y. W. C. A. President - Margaret Rawson, ' 20 V ' ice-President - - - Edyth Ahrens, ' 21 Secretary - Amy Raynor, ' 20 Treasurer - - -- - - -- -- - Marie Uhrbrock, ' 20 Annual Member - - Orilla H olden, ' 22 I. C S. A. Secretary-Treasurer Natalie E. Weiner Undergraduate Elector ... Aline BuchmaN Auerbach Newman Club President ------- Josephine MacDonald, ' 20 Vice-President ------ Gertrude Am merm uixer, ' 21 Secretary - -- -- -- -- Helen Muhlfeld, ' 21 Treasurer - -- -- -- - Edvthe Sheeiian, ' 23 Young Women ' s Christian Association MEMBERS Ahrens, Edyth Baird, Edith Ball. Helen Barten, Hortense Bassler, Katherine Beith, Mae Belle Bennet, Agnes Benton, Pauline Berry, Dorothy Black, Mildred Bliss, Margaret Borden, Alice Joyce Boyd, Nancy Brooks, Elizabeth Brown, Jean Breining, Melva Brubaker, Ruth Bull, Muriel Butler, Lorilla Byers, Judith Byrnes, Marion Calhoun, Helen Carhart, Grace Chalmers, Ruth Clarke, Helen Cocke, Frances Colucci, Edna Comstock, Mary Copenhaven, Jean Crabtree, Ruth Curry, Eleanor DanchakofT, Vera Davey, Dorothy Edwards, Gladys Ellis, Mary Ettling, Irma Everson, Ida Fisk, Madeleine Friedman, Lillian Gaarder, Helga Gait, Emily Ganner, Mary Gay, Constance Gorton, Katherine Gorton, Winifred Grafflin, Ruth Grey, Helen Guerdan, Elsie Hall, Ruth Hallock, Lucy Haskell, Marion Henry, Adele Hicks, Helen Hobe, Elizabeth Holden, Orilla Houghton, Dorothy Hume, Jessie Hutchison, Eva Janeway, Eleanor Jentz, Veronica Johnson, Alice Johnson, Ethel Kassner, Mildred Kellogg, Portia Kennard, Flaine Kidd, Frances Kingman, Elizabeth Kydd, Marjorie Laf Loofy, Na Gla Lane, Julia Lane, Winifred Lemcke, Dorothy Lindsay, Gladys Lockhart, Marjorie Mabie, Mildred Mack, Enid Mackemer, Marion Marlatt, Frances McGrayne, Dorothy McKenzie, Janet Metcalf, Madeline Meylan, Juliette Miller, Margaret Mills, Katherine Moreau, Edna Murden, Leah Nance, Margaret Nason, Celeste Near, Arcadia Newton, Leone North, Lila Ogden, A. Routh Orne, Evelyn Pattenden, Helen Peters, Mabel Peters, Marion Peterson, Mildred Pickhardt, Phyllis Piersall, Catherine Pratt, Helen Rabe, Elizabeth Rathborne, Isabel Rawson, Margaret Raynor, Amy Ressmeyer, Gertrude Rhoades, Dorothy Robb, Dorothy Ross, Effie Schaffer, Florence Schmalz, Lillian Schroeder, Dorothy Seymour, Katherine S ' innigen, Grace Slaughter, Mary Slayton, Alice Smith, Kathryn Spear, Olive Stauffer, Elizabeth Stickney, Adele Stuart, Mary Sullivan, Harriet Sutton, Mary Tonks, Nina Turman, Helen Tye, Ethel Uhrbrock, Marie Uhrbrock, Mildred Vernon, Lucille Wahlquist, Ebba Wallberg, Marta Werner, Helen White, Clarissa Wilder, Dorothy Wilkins, Margaret Wood, Elizabeth Wood, Lois Wood, Mabel Ahrens, Edyth Barton, Hortense Brockway, Dorothy Decker, Katherine Everson, Ida Garner, Mary Holden, Orrilla Johnson, Alice Kennard, Elaine Kydd, Frances Kydd, Margery Silver Bay MEMBERS Lemcke, Dorothy McKenzie, Janet Meneely, Janet Miller, Margery Muhlfeld, Helen Muhlfeld, Marie Omeis, Florida Orne, Evelyn Piersall, Kate Rawson, Margaret Robb, Dorothy Schaffer, Florence Smith, Kathryn Uhrbrock, Marie Verity, Grace Wegener, Hattie White, Clarissa Wilkens, Margaret Young, Emily Weldon, Etta Scudder, Katherine [75] I. C. S. A. MEMBERS Allen, Sylvia Bull, Helen Bates. Leah Bendheim, Gertrude Benton. Pauline Bien, Esther Blauvelt, Anna Boeker, Eloise Brady, Alice Brink. Frances Browen, Lillian Brown, Garda Cahill, Gertrude Cahn, Edith Chase, Jane Clark. Leah Crandall, Lola Davidson, Miriam Davis, Neva Kern Davis, Helen M. Dodd, M. Maude F.hrich, Ruth A. Ehrich. Ruth J. Eyre, Louisa Foote, Marion Gerdau, Marguerite Gies, Ortrud Gleichman, Leah Goldstone, Helen Hersfeld, Lucile Hessburg, Rhoda Heymann, Edith Hoffman, Hannah Holmen, Aline Houghton, Dorothy Hughey, Virginia Jareckey. Felice H. Johns, Alice Jones, Aldvvyth C. Jones, Roselind S. Kahn, Laena Kaslofsky. Anna Kaufmann, Marion S. Kidd. Frances Kimball, Nan Kingsley, Ruth Kohn, Elinor Kohnstamm, Dorothy Korn, Wilhelmina Kossman, Ethel Kreigsman, Helen Lesser, Julia Levi, Marion Liehauer, Donah McElroy, Katherine McCarthv. Sarah McNab, M. Helen Maas, Agnes Mack. Beatrice Mack, Helen Mackemer, Marian Myers, Margaret Payton, Susanne Ranson, Virginia Rarnson, Margaret Raynor, Amy Reitmann, Margaret Rissland, Louise Rosenberg, Marion Rothschild. Louise Russell, Olivia Schaeffer, Kathryn Schmidt, Anne Schroeder, Dorothea Schwartz, Esther Shanley. Bernadette Shaw, Ruth Smith, Genevieve Smith, Kathryn Soley, Marie Starke. Eleanore Sternberg, Lillian Strauss. Ruth Sullivan, Harriet Swarts, Veeva Taff, Marie Veit, Edith Wahlquist, Ebba Wallerstein, Bertha Ware, Rosalind Wethey, Gladys Werner, Helen W hite, Clarissa Wilkens, Margaret Wormser, Beatrice Newman Club MEMBERS Ammermuller, Gertrude Becker, Grace Byrne, Louise Cahill, Gertrude Camponara, Rose Case, Theresa Coleman, Agnes Cooke, Gertrude Cottigio, Rose Dowd, Helen Dwyer, Dorothy Fox, Edna Glynn, Agnes Hall, Mary B. Hankinson, Katherine Hoctor, Eloise Hoffman, Elizabeth Hughes, Anita Kneiper, Ruth Lahiff, Noreen Loftus, Claire Macdonald, Agnes Macdonald, Lauretta Macdonald, Josephine McCarthy, Gertrude McGuire, Elizabeth Maloney, Dorothy Meehan, Helen Moore, Baula Moore, Loretta Muhlfeld, Helen Nance, Margaret Nolan, Margaret Ratchford, Anne Riley, Olive Schwab, Antonia Shea, Katherine Sheehan, Edythe Sheehan, Helen Spatz, Margaret Taff, Marie Vail, Mary Warren, Helen [77] Press Club Felice Jarecky - President Katherine Brosnan ------- Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS Brosnan, Katherine, ' 20 ------ Nezv York American Ehrich, Ruth A., ' 21 - Sun Friedman, Lillian, ' 20 ------- Brooklyn Eagle Jarecky, Felice, ' 20 - -- -- -- -- - Times Mayer, Marie, ' 2 --------- - Spectator Neumann, Madeleine, ' 21 -------- - Globe Schellhase, Elizabeth, ' 20 - - - - World Sexton, Caroline, ' 20 ---------- Tribune Wallerstein, Bertha, ' 20 -------- - Mail Social and Political Discussion Club FACULTY ADVISERS Professor William F. Ogburn Professor Maude Aline Huttman Professor Emelie J. Hutchinson Professor David Saville Muzzey Mrs. E. F. Baker Miss Mary R. M. Griffiths Miss Amy L. Burt OFFICERS Chairman Dorothy Butlf.r Scc ' y-Treas Helen M. Shire Armstrong, Elizabeth Auerbach, Aline B. Ball, Josephine Barrington, Alice Brosnan, Katherine Burne, Dorothy Dana, Gertrude Davey, Dorothy Eyre, Louisa Fisher, Maude Granger, Mary MEMBERS Hessburg, Rhoda Hughey, Virginia Hoffman, G. Jennings, Amy Jones, Aldwith Kopald, Sylvia Leding, Aline Mack, Beatrice Magoon, K. Mendel, Edith Meyers, Margaret Robb, Janet Rothschild, Louise Schellhase, Elizabeth Schumm, Elsie Thomas, Dorothy Vernon, Lucile Wallerstein, Bertha Weiner, Natalie VVormser, Beatrice Athletic Association [791 Athletic Association OFFICERS President ------ Dorothy Burne Vice-President - -- -- -- -- Aldine Carter Secretary ---------- Juliet Clark Treasurer - -- -- -- -- - Eve Jacoby MANAGERS OF SPORTS Alice Barrington ------ Basketball Alice Brady ------- Swimming Eleanor Tiemann ------ Baseball Louisa Eyre ------- - Tennis Interclass Basketball 1918-1919 First place ------------ 1919 Second place - ______ 1921 Third place ------------ 1922 1919 TEAM G. Stanbrough, M. Wesendonck. Forwards H. Wegener, Guard A. Barrington, Captain M. Carmody, Side Center V. Tappan, Center 1919 G. Stanbrough M. Wesendonck M. Barrington H. Wegener M. Carmody V. Tappan G. Stanbrough WINNERS OF NUMERALS 1920 1921 I. Everson A. Schmidt H. Borst M. Marks H. Hall H. Jones F. Tye R. Ward D. Burne G. Dana L. Cox VARSITY BASKETBALL, 1918-1919 VARSITY SQUAD Forwards M. Marks L. von Eltz L. Eyre G. Dana 1922 M. Lehmann K. Mackay R. Ogden L. Emerson O. Holden H. Dayton A. Schmidt Guards H. Wegener E. Wagner L. Emerson R. Ogden Side Center M. Carmody, Captain Cen tcr V. Tappan VARSITY GAMES Barnard vs. Teachers College β Won by Teachers College Barnard vs. Teachers College β Won by Barnard - Barnard vs. Teachers College β Won by Teachers College Barnard vs. Intercollegiate Alumnae β Won by Barnard - WINNERS OF THE B G. Stanbrough G. Dana A. Schmidt R. Ogden M. Marks V. Tappan M. Carmody 13-15 9-5 13-12 23-13 RESULTS OF INTER-CLASS BASEBALL First Place - .......... 1921 Second Place - : 1919 Third Place - 1920 WINNERS OF THE B 1919 Marie Carmody Hattie Wegener Georgia Stanbrough 1920 Katherine Decker 1921 Ruth Crabtree Anne Schmidt Eleanor Tiemann 1919 M. Carmody G. Stanbrough H. Wegener M. Barrington M. Wesendonck M. Miller WINNERS OF NUMERALS 1920 1921 L. Eyre K. Decker M. Garner J. MacDonald M. Wilkins M. Kydd D. Reichhard H. Mauch R. Crabtree R. Hessberg L. Frost E. Tiemann 1922 H. Mack M. Fezandie G. Lehmann L. Pott A. Osterhaut [82] Varsity Baseball, 1918-1919 TEAM Marie Carmody Georgia Stanbrough Hattie Wegener Katherine Decker Aldine Carter Anne Schmidt Ruth Crabtree Lesley Frost Margaret Fezandie Louisa Eyre Myrrha Wesendonck Eleanor Tiemann SUBSTITUTES Rhoda Hessberg Helen Mack VARSITY GAMES Barnard vs. Teachers College - - Teachers College, 26-23 Barnard vs. Teachers College - Barnard, 29-17 Barnard vs. Teachers College - -- -- -- -- - Swimming BARNARD VS. TEACHERS COLLEGE TEAMS 1919 1920 1921 1922 M. Wesendonck J. Meylan R. Jeremiah H. Fezandie V. Tappan C. Gruggel H. Jones G. Lehmann L. Peters D. Burne A. Brady E. Jacoby B. Siegbert A. Hoff P. LaPorte H. Wilkins E. Boeker L. North M. Barringtoii F. Brown L. Pott L. Eyre N. Weiner R. Dunbacher A. MacMahon M. Groehl M. Lehmann L. Andrews E. Wetterer K. Sadler P. Kerkow SCORES 1919 1920 1921 1922 39 57 43 Teachers College 32 28 14 INTERCLASS MEETS Clark, ' 21; Meylan, 20; Fezandie, ' 22 10 Plunge - - Jones, ' 21 ; Jacoby, ' 22 ; Burne, ' 20 Plick Race - Stanbrough, ' 19; Hoff, ' 21 ; Maas, ' 20 Crawl - Peters, 19; Jeremiah, ' 21; LaPorte, ' 22 40- Yard Dash - Wilkins, ' 20; Marlatt, ' 21; Miller, ' 19 Relayβ 1920 1921 Gruggel Eyre Clark Hoff Hall Barrington Weiner Jeremiah MacMahon Siegbert Marlatt Boeker Wilkins Burne Groehl Brady 1919β20 Points FINAL SCORE 1920β21 Points 1921β25 Points INDIVIDUAL SCORE Jacoby, ' 22 ; Dunbacker, ' 22 ; Jones, ' 21 Meylan, ' 20; Stanbrough, ' 19; Brady, ' 21 - Burne, 20; North, ' 22; Peters, ' 19 - Peters, ' 19; Orne, ' 22; Jones, ' 21 1922 LaPorte Wetterer Lehman, M. Lehmann, G. Pott Dunbacher Orne Jacoby 1922β24 Points Lucretia Peters First Place [85] Field Day, Spring, 1919 Chairman 1919 Chairman Myrrha Wesendonck Marjory Barrington 1922 Chairman - - - 1920 Chairman - 1921 Chairman - Louisa Emerson Score- 1919 1920 Won by 1921 26 1 1921 1922 RESULTS OF THE EVENTS Katherine Decker Eleanor Tiemann 27 9 FALL, 1919 40-Yard Dash- First Place β M. Carmody 1919 Second Placeβ L. Frost 1921 Third Placeβ O. Holden 1922 Time, 5 1-5 seconds High Jump β First Place β G. Stanbrough 1919 Second Placeβ D. Reichhard 1921 Third Placeβ E. Wetterer 1922 Height, 4 ft. 3 in. Discus β First Place β G. Stanbrough 1919 Second Place β H. Jones 1921 Third Placeβ T. Clark 1921 Distance, 82.9 ft. FIELD DAY, Basket Ball Throw- First Place β G. Stanbrough 1919 Second Place β H. Tones 1921 Third Placeβ A. Schmidt 1921 Distance, 80.6 ft. Baseball Throw β First Placeβ L. von Eltz 1921 Second Place β M. Carmody 1919 Third Placeβ L. Frost 1921 Distance, 1 ft. 46-Yard β Hurdles β First Place β E. Tiemann 1921 Second Place β E. Jacoby 1922 Third Placeβ H. Dayton 1922 Time, 7 4-5 seconds 160- Yard Relay β First Place 1921 Second Place 1922 Third Place 1920 Total 1921 27 points 1919 26 points 1922 9 points 1920 1 point Winner of Gold Medal for highest individual score, Georgia Stanbrough, 1919, with 15 points. Winner of Silver Medal for second highest individual score, Marie Carmody, 1919, with 1 1 points. Winner of Bronze Medals for first place in any event, Luenna von Eltz, 1921, for baseball throw; Eleanor Tiemann, 1921, in 45-yard hurdles. Chairman - 1920 Chairman 1923 FIELD DAY, Dorothe Reichhard Helen Borst Chairman - FALL 1919 1921 Chairman - 1922 Chairman - Eleanor DeLa mater Score β 1920 1921 2054 Won by 1922 RESULTS OF EVENTS 1922 1923 20-Yard Dash- First Placeβ Frost 1921 Second Place β Eyre 1920 Third Placeβ Dunbacher 1922 Time, 3 2-5 seconds 40-Yard Dash- First Placeβ Frost 1921 Second Place β Boas 1923 Third Place β Kriegsman 1920 Time. 5 3-5 seconds Baseball Throw β First Place β Dunbacher 1922 Second Placeβ Wilkins 1920 Basket Ball Throw- First Place β Orne 1922 Second Place β DeLamater 1923 Third Place β Boas 1923 Distance, 68 ft. 8 1-2 in. Hurdles- First Place β Boas 1923 Second Place β Wetterer 1922 Time, 6 4-5 seconds High Jump β First Placeβ E. Johnson 1922 Second Place β Kriegsman 1920 Third Placeβ Wetterer 1922 Height, 4 ft. 3 3-4 in. Eleanor Tiemann Margaret Fezandie 2754 1354 Javelin Throw β β First Placeβ Frost 1921 Second Place β Wetterer 1922 Third Placeβ R. Johnson 1922 Distance, 68 ft. 10 1-2 in. Uelay, Interclass β First Place 1921 Second Place 1922 Third Place 1923 Total Points. 1922, 27 1-4; 1921, 20 1-4, 1923. 13 1-4, 1920, 10 1-4 Individual Points β Lesley Frost, 15; Frances Boas, 9. Odd-Even Events β Odds, 30; Evens, 18. 1920 β Louisa Eyre TENNIS, 1919, FALL TOURNAMENT CLASS CHAMPIONS 1922β Iris Wilder 1923β Deborah Weil Marjorie Marks 1921β Marjorie Marks College Champion [86] De Profundis Cry of anguish: Soothing voice: Help me find it, Help me find it ; Help me find my locker key. Never mind it, Never mind it ; Take this one from me. Cry of anguish: Pray relate now, Pray relate now ; Where your locker can be. . . . Soothing voice: Well, it ' s like this : You know the aisle that you would walk down if you kept walking the way you were when you came? Well, it isn ' t that one; it ' s the one next to that. You know. Mine ' s the locker next to the steam pipe before you come to the wall. I don ' t remember the number, but it had an eight in it. You ' ll find it. . . . Moan of anguish: Er β you ' re great now, But I ' m late now. . . . What ' s a gym cut to me? [88] [89] Wigs and Cues Fall Semester, 1919 Chairman - - -------- Elizabeth H. Armstrong Chairman of Stage Management - - Katherine Brosnan Secretary - - - Rhoda Hessberg Chairman of Program - - - - Mary A. Jennings Chairman of Finance - - Marion Kaufmann Chairman of Costumes - - Helen Muhlfeld Chairman of Choice of Play - .... Marion Travis Dorothy Burne Anne Hopkins [901 BOARD OF DIRECTORS String Semester, 1919 Chairman - - - - -- -- -- Elizabeth H. Armstrong Chairman of Program - - - -- -- -- - Adele Alfke Chairman of Costumes - - - - - -- -- Dorothy Burne Chairman of Stage Management ------- Elicea Fryer Carr Secretary - -- -- -- Marion Kaufmann Chairman of Finance Pamela Thomas Chairman of Choice of Play - - ------ Marion Warren MEMBERS Andrews, L. Armstrong, E. Barrington, A. Bennet, A. Becker, G. Benton, P. Benz, M. Bowtell, M. Bowman, I. Breaker, H. Brooks, E. Brosnan, K. Brower, L. Brown, F. Brown, G. Burne, D. Butler, D. Byrnes, M. Cahn, E. Calhoun, H. Callan, R. Callopt, R. Campanaro, R. Clendenin, R. Cocke, F. Coffin, A. Craven, D. Daniels, E. Dean, N. Denton, M. Drachman, M. Emerson, M. Fisher, M. Foxin, M. Freudenthal, E. Frost, L. (ierdau, M. Goldstone, H. Gottheil, E. Granger, M. Guercken, V. Harden, M. Heath, E. Henry, A. Hessberg, R. Hoctor, E. Hoff, R. Hopkins, A. Houghton, D. Hutchinson, E. Jacoby, E. Jarecky, F. Jennings, M. Johnson, E. Johnson, E. Johnston, A. Kassner, M. Kaufmann, M. Koehler, R. Korn, W. Kornfeld, M. Kydd, M. Lane, W. Laporte, M. Lemcke, D. Lithauer, D. Loud, M. Lustader, R. Lvmon, K. M ' ack. H. AlacMahon, A. Mann, H. Manning, D. Marks, M. Marples, E. Mayer, E. Mayer, M. McCarthy, G. .McCarty, S. McElroy McGrayne, D. Melnick, R. Metcalf, M. Mideltait, A. Muhlfeld, H. Murray, J. Nason, C. Nolan, M. Opdycke, M. Orne, E. Osterhaut, A. Perry, K. Prince, H. Prince, R. Raid, A. Ramage, E. Ran son, V. Rathborne, I. Ressmeyer, G. Reynolds, E. Rice, E. Riley, O. Rissland, L. Rivkin, H. Russell, O. Schaeffer, K. Schlichting, L. Schmidt, A. Schoeder, D. Scott, M. Seeley, J. Shire, H. Siegbert, B. Simpson, G. Sims, R. Slaughter, M. Slayton, A. Spear, O. Steinfeld, V. Steimle, M. Sternberg, L. Stewart, V. Strang, I. Strauss, R. Thirlwall. K. Travis, M. Van Horn, G. Veit, E. Wachman, P. Wallberg, M. Warren, N. Weeks, M. Weiner, N. Wetterer, E. White, M. Williams, A. Wing, M. Wormser, B. THE BLUE AND GREEN MAT OF ABDUL HASSAN By Constance Wilcox TRIFLES By Susan Glaspell ROSALIND By J. M. Barrie Presented in Brinckerhoff Theatre, April 25 and 26, 1919, for the henefit of the Fund for Relief in the Near East. The Blue and Green Mat of Abdul Hassan Nasca ----------- E. Rosenthal, 1919 Zulecka - H. Shire, 1921 Abbas - E. Armstrong, 1920 El Askar L. Sternberg, 1920 Abdul Hassan - - M. Benz, 1921 Ali Barkuk - - D. Butler, 1920 Urchin --------- - R. Rasmussen, 1922 Dancing girls, street-venders, etc. Place : The street of an Arabian town. Trifles County Attorney ----- - L. Schlichting, 1922 Sheriff - - M. Travis, 1920 Hale - E. Jacoby, 1922 Mrs. Peters - M. Opdycke, 1920 Mrs. Hale - R. Woodbridge, 1919 Place : A farmhouse. Time : The present. Rosalind Dame Quickly -------- - E. Cannon, 1922 Mrs. Page - - A. MacMahon, 1920 Charles Roche - - - J. Wallace, 1922 Place : An English cottage. Time : The present. Coached by Miss Helen Ford, Director of Educational Dramatic League. What Every Woman Knows by J. M. Barrie December 12th, 1919, at 8 p. m. December 13th, at 2:15 p. m. and 8 p. m. in Brinckerhoff Theatre THE CAST (In Order of Their Appearance) David Wylie - -- -- -- - Margaret Benz, 1921 Alick Wylie - - - - - Elizabeth Brooks, 1922 James Wylie ----- - Dorothy Butler, 1920 Maggie Wylie Aline MacMahon, 1920 John Shand ------- - Helen Kriegsman, 1920 Lady Sybil - -- -- -- - Virginia Stewart, 1921 Comtcssc de la Bricrc ------ Mary Opdycke, 1920 Mr. V enables _______ Louise Schlichting, 1922 ACT I. β At the house of the Wylie ' s, who are the proprietors of a granite quarry in Scotland. ACT II. β Shand ' s committee room, Glasgow, six years later. ACT III. β Mr. Shand ' s house in London. (During Act III the curtain will fall for a moment to indicate the passing of some hours.) ACT IV.β The Comtesse ' s Country Cottage. Coached by Miss Grace Henry 1920 Junior Show Friday Afternoon and Evening, April 4, 1919 I. ROMANCE A pantomime with music by Beatrice Becker Prologue Aline MacMahon Phyllis Katherine Brosnan Columbine Phoebe Guthrie Clitander Alice Barrington Harlequin Amy Jennings The Time : June The Scene : A Meadow II. LEAVE IT TO ME An original Musical Comedy in one act by Beatrice Becker Characters Angeline Margaret Borden Ala j or Cragge Dorothy Butler Mr. Grey (her father) Helen Krigsman Coralie Mary Opdycke Aunt Letty Esther Bien Bill Jones Marion Tyndall Lulu Mary Lou Garritson Wallingjord Sykes Ethel Kossman Chorus Girls Helen Calhoun Marion Kaufmann Jean Pope Louise Rothschild Frances Thompson Dummies Evelyn Baldwin Juliet Meylan Amy Raynor Margaret Rawson Genevieve Smith Songs The Sam Browne Belt Chorus Wait a While Lulu and Chorus It Can ' t Be Done Aunt Letty Wait a While Lulu, Bill and Chorus Love Is Not Always Blind Major and Lulu That ' s Why They Call Me Angeline Angeline They ' re Coming Back Major and Chorus Love Is Not Always Blind Angeline You Know Coralie, Mr. Grey and Chorus Produced under the direction of Lucile Marsh All songs copyrighted by Beatrice Becker Beatrice Becker at the Piano Violin accompaniment by Clarissa White Committee Lucile Marsh Chairman Alice Barrington Phoebe Guthrie Beatrice Becker Dorothy Butler Helen Barton Felice Jarecky Agnes Marsh Adele Alfke, ' 19. ex-officio Adele Stickney, ' 21, ex-officio [94] 1922 Sophomore Show THE MEMORY BOOK E. P. Shearn By E. Mendel TIMEβ 1969 I. Strang INTRODUCTION K. Coffey E. Mendel E. Orne I. Rathborne O. Holden A. Bennett CHAPTER I Milbank Hall, Registration Week First Proctor Second Proctor Third Proctor Fourth Proctor Fifth Proctor Miss 1922 Her Mother D. Craven - G. Lindsay A. Henry N. Lahiff E. Freudenthal D. McGrayne - R. Koehler English Al Economics Al History Al Philosophy Chemistry Classics Miss 1922 Her Escort First Soph. Her Escort Second Soph. Her Escort CHAPTER II R.S.O. Dance D. McGrayne M. Gerdau L. North M. La Porte E. Heyman L. Rissland Third Soph. Her Escort College Girl The Lion Brothers CHAPTER III Lunch SHORT-HAIRED GIRLS OF 1922 AND OTHERS CHAPTER IV E. Cahn E. Janeway H. Warren E. Heyman A. Peterson H. Prince M. Walton H. Prince L. Schlichting M. Lehmann ( E. Starke i E. Viet Affirmative. D. Craven E. Janeway M. Wing H. Meehan Illustrations L. Josephson M. Lehman E. Cahn Negative. H. Warren G. Lindsay M. Walton E. Starke D. McGrayne E. Viet CHAPTER V Box and Cox, by J. M. Morton Soph. Show Mr. Box Mr. Cox Mrs. Bouncer L. Rissland L. Schlichting M. Cannon COMMITTEE Chairman of Soph. Show - Edna Wetterer Eve Jacoby Dixie Sims [95] Mysteries Given by the Class of 1922 Friday, December 14, 1919 Mysteries Program Supper at 7 in the lunch-room. Cabaret Show. The Judgment of Pharaoh, written by Frances Myers and Isabel Rathborne. Mysteries Line. Mysteries Dance. Presentation of Mysteries Book. Committee Isabel Rathborne Chairman Eva Hutchison ) Eleanor Janeway β’ .. .General Committee Evelyn Orne ) Madeline Lehman Dance Chairmen Minnie Mae Fleming Supper Chairman Edith Veit } β ... β r TT , j r rubheuy Committee Helen Warren J J 1921 Junior Show MINUS THE HIGHNESS or LOVE IS KING Presented by the Class of 1921β March 26, 1920 CAST Arizona Gertrud Schoedler Heliotrope Gladys Van Brunt The Prince of IVhalcs H. B. Jones Sir Reginald, his confidant E. Ramage The Butler D. Kaplan The Maid k. Granger Monkeys, Zuzus, Bootblacks, and Inmates of fested island, which we recognize immediately as New Psychopathia. Zuland. Thence, following the cast on its travels, we The scenes vary considerably. When the curtain find ourselves successively in a Bootblack Emporium rises we find ourselves on a mountainous, monkey-in- in New York, and finally in a Psychopathic Ward. The 1921 Junior Show, given for the Barnard Endowment Fund Drive β Leonora Andrews, Chairman. Miracle Plays Five Miracle Plays presented by the students of Miss Latham ' s course, English 25, in Room 414 in Milbank Hall, on Friday, December 5. Three rival plays were given, the winning play being: Adam and Eve ------- By Louise Emerson, ' 22 The other plays were : Naaman, the Leper ------- By Louise Pott, ' 22 David and Goliath - By Gertrude Mannhardt, ' 21 Caleb -------- By Dorothy Thomas, ' 22 Jephthah ' s Daughter ------- By Hertha Fink, ' 22 English 7 Plays Two plays presented by the students of Professor Baldwin ' s course, English 7. under the auspices of Wigs and Cues, Tuesday, January 13, in Brinckerhoff Theatre. The plays were : Childless Fathers ------- By Sylvia Kopald, ' 20 The Way Out ------- By Aline MacMahon, ' 20 [971 A Classic Drama Time: Any Noon. President (shouting loudly): The meeting will please come to order. (She pounds heavily on desk and hubbub dies dozun somezvhat.) Sarah: May I make an announcement? Well, the Anthro- pology Club is going to have a play on Friday night, and if any of you would be willing to lend us your grandparents just for that evening we will be very grateful. We ' d take good care of them, and . . . President: Is that all? Very well, then. Is the Secretary here ? Secretary: Yes; I ' m here. President: Er β do you think you ' d be able to read the minutes of the last meeting? Secretary (frantically scattering pages of loose leaf note book) : Oh, I ' m so sorry. I haven ' t last meeting ' s but I have the one before last, if that will do any good. President: I think we should dispense with the minutes if there is no objection. The business of the meetingβ Helen (rising aggressively) : Madam President, I think it is wrong to dispense with the minutes at a regular meeting. The constitution says β President: We haven ' t the minutes of last meeting. Helen: Then read those from the time before. It ' s better than nothing. President (desperately) . Well, how does the class feel about that? Frances: I move that we put that in the form of a motion. Jane: Second it. President: It has been moved and seconded that we put that in the form of a motion. Is there any discussion? Scene : Any Class. Helen (disengaging herself from private conversation): What is to be put in the form of a motion? President: That we read the minutes of the meeting before last. Helen (giggling): Oh! President: Any more discussion? Are you ready for the question? All those in favor β Jane (sweetly) : I move that we have a closed ballot. President: There ' s a motion already before the house. Jane: Then I suggest it. Helen: I second the suggestion. President (helplessly): Any discussion? Chorus of Yes and No. President (to Jane): Do you withdraw your motion? Jane: Uh-huh. President: The question is now whether we make a motion that we move β Frances: I moved that we put it in the form of a motion. President: All right. Will those in favor please raise their right hands ? Edith: Madam Chairman, do you think it ' s fair to ask the left-handed girls to raise their right hands? President: It has been suggested that all left-handed girls raise any hands. Will they please do so? (They do.) Seven. Maude: It isn ' t voting as a class if we all don ' t raise the same hand. Now, wouldn ' t it be much better to appoint a com- mittee β (The bell rings.) President: I ' m afraid that ' s all we can do today. Please be thinking β (Her voice is drowned by general exodus.) Will someone please move the meeting be adjourned? (She is alone in the room.) [981 Junior Ball Held at the Hotel Biltmore on the evening of April 16 COMMITTEES Chairman Central Committee Gertrude Bendheim Frances Swan Brown Virginia Littauer Frances Marlatt Olive Riley Frances Williamson Helen B. Jones, ex-officio Fitiancial Committee Eloise Boeker Marion Groehl Gladys G. Van Brunt Hotel Committee Lillian Horn Dorothy Falk Favors Committee Juliet Clark Eleanor Tiemann Dance Committee Rachel Souhami [99] A Junior Ball-ad Matilda bought a brand- New dress in early fall, And it was very grand, Of course for Junior Ball. The dress was made of vel- Vet and was trimmed with fur, And silver lace as well. And it excited her. And ev ' ry day at lunch, Full three months in advance, She ' d fixed up with the bunch The order of her dance. But little germs of flu All thoughts of prom disperse. Whatever should she do? Whatever could be worse? Her escort goes away In March to Hindustan. Alack and well-a-way ! She cannot get a man. Matilda ' s in despair. Her tears are trickle-ing. However can she wear A velvet dress in Spring? [ 100] College Events [101] University Convocations On October 7, 1919, the degree of LL.D. was conferred on Cardinal Mercier. On October 25, 1919, the degree of LL.D. was conferred on King Albert of Belgium. Barnard Events On Tuesday afternoon, December 9, 1919, Lord and Lady Dunsany were entertained at Barnard at a tea given by Dean Gildersleeve. Mr. John Drinkwater, the playwright, addressed the Alumnae Association on the afternoon of Thursday, February 12. Barnard College Assemblies The custom of holding college assemblies was inaugurated in the fall of 1919. The speakers at Barnard ' s assemblies have been: Miss Virginia C. Gildersleeve ) September 30 Miss Amy S. Jennings j Mrs. Douglas Robinson October 28 Professor Dino Bigongiari ) - November 1 1 Professor Henri Muller ) Miss Virginia C. Gildersleeve December 2 Mr. Max Olgin December 16 Dr. Howard Bliss January 20 Greek Gam [105] Greek Games OUR Barnard Greek Games are, we like to think, one of the most beautiful of college festi- vals. They are a purely spontaneous, local growth, developing gradually and naturally among the Barnard undergraduates. They originated in the Spring of 1903, when a few energetic members of the Class of 1905, then Sophomores, thought it would be amusing to challenge the Fresh- men to an informal and private athletic contest, with a suggestion of the ancient Greek festivals about it, and including a competition in poetry. The event proved such very good fun that the students continued it as an annual festival for the Sophomore and Freshman classes. From a simple, sketchy and crude beginning, it has developed from year to year to its present elaborate structure of costum- ing, setting, poetry, music, dan ce and athletics. The fact that this festival of ours, like so many of those of classic Hellas, is a contest, is of great importance. It makes the occasion far more alive and thrilling than any mere pageant, however beautiful, could be. The spirit of striving and competition for the glory of the class keeps every stu- dent alert and on tip-toe with interest and enthusiasm. It forces the students, moreover, to invent and develop their work for themselves. Archaeologically, intellectually, poetically, and aesthetically, our Games are quite worthy of a college environment and are a peculiarly appropriate form of diversion for college students. They undoubtedly contribute towards keeping alive in Barnard the study and the love of Greek literature. For one afternoon, at least, they lead some four hundred girls back into what seems a little like that bright and beautiful world of ancient Hellas, where, as we feel, bodies were all young and lithe and active, costume and setting blended in lovely and balanced beauty; the atmosphere was clear and untroubled, and the spirit of the world fresh and strong. It is as worth while, perhaps, as many a formal college course, to enable the students to taste the joy of physical effort, of enthusiasm, and of beauty in sound, in words, in form, in color, and in motion. Spectators of older years forget the inevi- table crudities of the picture and are strangely touched by the spirit of youth which permeates the Games. It is good for us all to live for a few hours in that atmosphere of striving and enthusiasm, of beauty and youth. [107] 1920 Amy Sidney Jennings Ada Vorhaus Helen Barton Mary Ellis Opdycke Winifred Bostwick Louisa Eyre Marion Levi - Committees, Freshman Year [ 108 Chairman - Chairman of Dance - Chairman of Costumes - Chairman of Music - - Chairman of Lyrics - Chairman of Athletics Chairman of Finance CENTRAL COMMITTEE 1921 Mary Lois Granger Mary Jennings - Helen Muhlfeld Gertrude Dana Winthrop Bushnell Adele Stickney Grace Greene 1920 1921 Amy Sidney Jennings, Chairman Elizabeth Armstrong Lucile Marsh Mabel Gutmann Aline MacMahon, cx-officio Supervisor, Miss Bird Larson Mary Lois Granger Leonora Andrews Gertrud Schoedler Dorothy Lind Frances Swan Brown, ex-officio JUDGES Dance Miss Ruth Doing Miss Elizabeth Duncan Miss Ethel Wenck Costumes Professor Florence M. Bennett Professor Gertrude M. Hirst Mr. Ian B. Stoughton Holborn Music Mr. George Harris Mr. David Mannes Professor Cornelius Rybner Lyrics Professor Franklin Thomas Baker Mr. Robert Underwood Johnson Mr. Charles Rann Kennedy Athletics Gertrude K. Colby Carol Weiss King Pauline Steinberg Lillian Schoedler Bernadine Yunck 1920 63 Points 1921 37 Points Story of the Entrance The city has been besieged by a Persian tyrant. The people, starved and war weary, are on the point of surrender when word comes that the enemy will make peace if, among other demands, the daughter of the Greek king is given their leader to wed. To save her people Aglaia consents to the marriage. On the day of the wedding she goes to the temple of Prometheus, god of self-sacrifice, and prays for courage to do her duty to the state. He strengthens her faltering spirit, and she rises uplifted, inspired. The grateful people gather about her to say farewell, but they are driven aside by Persian soldiers β Make way β make way! Proudly the tyra nt comes, and proudly the maiden steps down to meet him. The Greek Maiden Helen Shire Aglaia has died, alone in a foreign land, but her shade has wandered back to Greece, and come down to the River Styx. There, on the dim strand, she is terrified by the ghosts of the unburied dead. But Prometheus has not forgotten the maiden, nor the sacrifice for her people. His flame spirits break into the darkness of the underworld and bear her in triumph to the land of the blessed. 1921β8 5 12 points 1920β14 7 12 points Story of the Dance 1921β15 2 3 points 1920β22 1 3 points f: o P- i Athletics 1920 ------- 2y 2 Points 1921 ------ 2y 2 Points Archery - Dorothy Burne, ' 20 Elaine Kennard, ' 20 Vera Binzen, ' 21 Hurdling for Form - Luenna von Eltz, ' 21 - - - Alice Johnson, ' 21 Helen Borst, ' 20 Discus Throning First place ----- Helen Jones, ' 21 Second place - - - Helen Kriegsman, ' 20 Third place ----- Juliet Clark, ' 21 Chariot Race for Form Horses: Won by 1921 Marjorie Marks Edyth Ahrens Charioteer Won by Ruth Austin, ' 20 Edith Lindeman Maude Fisher Helen Kriegsman Torch Race Won by 1920 Mary Sutton Clarissa White Lyrics PROMETHEUS β PROPH ET By Frances Swan Brown, 1921 Pandora wept β Gods, I am mad with the stench of the pestilence, and the smell of the dead ! All of the night must I watch how the fun ' ral pyres spot the darkness with red ? All of the day must I listen to children cry, and the noises of death ? Only a moment of blindness, of deafened ears, and a poisonless breath ! ' Gift of the gods ' β it is 1 who am plague and rot, and the maker of fright ; I who have shriveled the flowers, who have spoiled the crop with the foulness of blight; I who have tortured β I who have slain β ! Only the moonlight is fair as it was before, and the stars in their sky ; Only the sunlight is warm as it used to be β and that, too, mav die! Pandora wept. Then from his tortured height There came the answer of Prometheus β A breath of prophecy across the night : I would have raised them to gods, but my dream was lost, and my vision in vain. Eager, untiring the hands that I Idled with fire β now they ' re crippled in pain. All for the ' will of the gods. ' By their brand of hate men were blinded to grope, Beaten to earth. But I fling in the face of despair β ' still Prometheus will hope! ' Children of men are lamenting. Pandora weeps, I will choke down my cry. Then only see a to-morrow that ' s sick with woe, I see hope in the sky. Out of the sorrow, the warring, the wreck of peace, there may raise them at last Kindlier men than the men I was wont to love, in the free golden past. Yea β they may fight a long fight and in some far day, when they ' ve trod down their odds, Rise to be nobler than even I dreamed for them β to be greater than gods. PROMETHEUS By Frances C. Cocke, 1921 Throughout the days he stands ; his bound hands sigh Their supplication to the gods, whose ears, Grown dull long since by the slow drip of tears, No longer heed the burden of his cry: Oh, ye immortal gods who rest ye soft On high Olympus where the asphodels Fling forth glad tidings on their chiming bells Of laughter and of love; oh, ye aloft, Is there no meed of pity in your eyes? I hese many years I suffer for the sake Of giving man that which he could not take Himself, and which, despite your jealousies, Ye well could share: and still your wrath belies The grace men say is yours. For still at break Of dawn the vulture comes, his thirst to slake, And still my screams rend the long centuries. . . . The gods are deaf with hate, their hearts are stone- Ah, happy gulls that wend your purple way Across the sea beyond the rim of day. Ye little know your foam-wrought wings alone Are all a god would wish for, that his breast (The cursed shackles broken) might be cast Against the sunset ' s fire β so. at last. That gift, full long his doom, to bring him rest. The light fails fast, e ' en now the day is blind. The vulture, sated, climbs the darkened sky. Night bends above, and listening with a sigh, Hears but a long, low sobbing on the wind. [1111 Committees, Sophomore Year 1921 Frances Swan Brown Anne Schmidt - Olive Riley Gertrude Bendheim - Frances Cocke Juliet Clark Edyth Ahrens - Chairman Chairman of Dance - Chairman of Costumes - Chairman of Music Chairman of Lyrics - Chairman of Athletics - Chairman of Finance - Supervisor : Miss Bird Larson 1922 Katherine Coffey Madeleine Lehmann - Bertha Kraus - Isobel Strang - Edith Shearn Helen Mack - Eleanor Stark JUDGES Costumes Professor Grace McCurdy Mrs. Emily Putnam Mrs. Theodore Leslie Shear Dance Mr. Adolph Bohm Miss Gertrude Colby Miss Marguerite Heaton Music Mr. David Bispham Mr. Tertius Noble Mr. John Dyneley Prince Lyrics Professor Paul Elmer More Professor Harrison R. Steeves Mr. Louis Untermeyer Reading of Lyrics Miss Henrietta Prentice Mr. Franklin H. Sergeant Athletics Eleanor Goss Isabel Greenbaum Rosemary Lawrence Gladys Pearson Florence Stuart Bernadine Yunck 1921β59 11 12 points 1922β40 1 12 points f 112] Story of the Entrance IT IS the day of Pan ' s festival. The villagers come to the shrine of the god on the hillside. The young people run ahead with songs and laughter, but soon shouts herald the approach of the procession, and the merriment is hushed. Maidens, bearing gifts of flowers and fruit, approach the shrine, and .ay their gifts on the altar, then pass on to hold their games in honor of the god. AFTER the village folk have left the grove, a Wood-Sprite comes to the shrine, playing at hide and seek with his fellow nymphs. But he soon grows tired, and flings himself down to rest from his play. The nymphs leave him, all but one who stays to watch him in his sleep. Suddenly some huntresses, returning from the chase, break into the sacred grove. They see the sleeping sprite, and exult in their find. But a rival band of huntresses enter, and the two groups battle for the possession of the sprite. He, feeling the presence of humans profaning the shrine by their strife, awakes. With a superhuman effort, he wrests himself away from the grasp of the huntresses and in terror prays to Pan for help. In the distance the Pipes of Pan call an answer to his prayer. The huntresses, in fear, slink away. The Wood Sprite, happy once more, calls back his nymphs. They play together for an instant, then go on their way. 1921β12 points 1922β11 points Story of the Dance 1921β14 5 6 points 1922β23 1 6 points [113] Athletics Discus . . , Elsbeth Freudenthal ' 22 c ,fSt P a i Tuliet Clark, ' 21 Second place (tied) - - - - J Helen Jones 21 HURDL1NC FOR FORM . , - Aldine Carter, ' 21 F ,rst P lac f Edna Wetterer, ' 22 Second place - Alice Johnson, ' 21 Third place - -- -- - HOOP-ROLLING FOR SPEED Won by 1921 Leonora Andrews Lesley Frost Mae Belle Beith Dorothy Lind Chariot for Form Horses : Won by 1921 Alice Brady Maude Fisher Gwendolin Evans Dorothe Reichhart Charioteer: Ruth Ward Torch Race Won by 1921 Lesley Frost Elinor Kohn Dorothy Lind 1921 - 20] 2 Points 1922 - -- -- -- - W2 Points [114 1 Lyrics PAN AT DUSK By Frances C. Cocke, 1921 All day long have my strong feet sped up the mountains, Leapt the chasms that mocked with their flowers beneath me, Dared the ultimate heights and laughed from their summits β Now I am weary. All day long has Zephyrus ceased from his crooning, Stilling his lyre to hark when my reed was piping Songs far sweeter than any the stars might fashion, Singing together. Once as I thrilled the heart of the flushing laurel, So that her cheeks grew pallid (I saw her tremble) Came from the copse a maiden with eyes of wonder, Eyes of enchantment. Wrought from the untold flowers of countless springtimes, Moulded from all the laughter and tears of the ages, Builded from out the dreams that men dream of Helen, Ah, how I loved her! One swift glance as I silenced my reed to marvel, One swift glance at the poor goat ' s feet that have made me Almost a god β and with one little cry she has fled me β Now I am weary. Gone the desire to race with the wind on the hilltops, Feel on my lips the insatiate kiss of the morning, Follow a beckoning dream till I stumble on Evening Lying in ambush. Ah, to be only a man ! and when Day has departed, (Smiling a golden smile for thought of the morrow) Wearily turn toward the windows that shine in the twilight Bidding me welcome; Slowly to trudge down the lane with a quickening heart-beat β (Hush! in the darkness a child ' s clear, radiant laughter:) Then to the lilt of a lullaby ' s crooned insistence, Softly to enter. That were the lot of a man β (cold, cold by the river β ) Mine, to go hungry, a-chill, down the long generations, Cursed, for the face cf fair Death Immortality bars me Ever beholding. All of my strength would I give, and all of my power β My power to woo from the earth the shaft of the crocus, Whisper bright courage to daffodil hearts that would falter Fearful of winter; All of the love that these hearts have given into my keeping (Always the flowers have loved me!) and all of the fearful Thrill of my pipe β all these would I gladly surrender, But to be human. Vain the desire β Mine ever the lot of the half-god: All of man ' s longing and none of a god ' s contentment β Zeus, who art merciful, keep me this night from remembering Eyes of enchantment. 1921β11 points Reading Helen Shire, ' 21β1 Louise Rissland, ' 22 PAN By Frances Swan Brown, 1921 There ' s darkness on Olympus now. And on the peaks that Iris trod The ghosts of old immortals nod And shiver, and along the brow Of cliffs once radiant, looms the grief Of ruins, crumbling in the clouds. All smothered in their dreary shrouds, The cobwebs of men ' s unbelief. It was so long ago! Why should we weep Because the gods are dead? They lived too highl Perhaps the stars were grieved to watch them die; Men hardly noticed when they sank to sleep. They shared too little all our common joys. But Pan β he was a lover of the earth! Of mellow fields, and flocks, and wind-blown mirth, Of all the rustic fun of shepherd boys. How could he die, while youth still dances on Along the road light-footed laughter goes, While grass is soft, and dawns the same warm rose? How could the sunshine live, and he be gone? ' Twas so we dreamed of Pan one golden day When spring had made a laughing stock of death, And life eternal sparkled in each breath. Ah, surely he will answer us! we ' d say, And tossed our laughter and a song to May. That spring-song passed away along with light. The warm, blue dusk, like incense on the hills, Was filled with silence, and we bent our wills In vain to catch his piping β And the night Was emptiness to us! For now we know The shadows of oblivion had passed Across the sunshine of Pan ' s soul at last. As they had blotted out Olympus too. And yet, as we turned homeward through the mist Of evening, with the moonlight in our eyes. Through shadow lands, a-quiver with the sighs Of dreaming things, our weary hearts kept tryst With some great power that smiled behind the dark, With some kind presence that we felt and knew In secret tree-tops, and the cool white dew, Our joy sprang upward like a sudden spark! The silence spoke an answer to our song: Although his pipes β his dancing, went the way Of other gods β immortal for a day, The Soul of Pan lived on, eternal β strong. Our hearts were rich with springtime joy again, And close about us in the dark, it seemed Another heart throbbed back! Our dreams of Pan ' s eternity in vain! 1922β0 points of Lyrics f 1 1 S 1 7 12 points. 1 11J ' β 1 5 12 points. We had not dreamed You ' ve helped us so, Miss Larson, And now we thank you for it. When we ' ve lacked inspiration You ' ve helped us to restore it. You have our admiration For everything you ' ve done. We are your humble servants. Sincerely, Twenty-one. [117] Songs Tune: Put Your Head Down, Fritzie Boy. Pull your horns in, Mr. Pan ; Pull your horns in, Mr. Pan. Come out, please, From behind those trees ; We see you, we see you. We bring offerings to your shrine β Flowers, cakes and wine, And we ' re going to make a coat Out of Twenty-two ' s goat, For you to dance in, Mr. Pan. Tune : The Farmer in the Dell Professors Young and Perry, Professors Young and Perry, You ' ve changed us all, Both great and small, To Grecian statuary. Professors Young and Perry, Professors Young and Perry, We ' d like to speak Our thanks in Greek β Oh, very, very, very. Tune: Good-by, Girls; I ' m Through. Good-by, games ; we ' re through. We say good-by to you. Each costume that we dyed Seemed just like suicide. We ' ll have no more inspections, Or Perry ' s Greek objections. To the Classics, adieu. Good-by, games ; good-by, games ; Good-by, games ; we ' re through ! I 120] Questionnaire Issued by Statistics 13. I. Do you wear rubbers? 1. In rain. 2. In snow. 3. If not, when ? II. Why do you wear them? 1. For hygienic reasons. 2. Because of family pressure, habit or the like. 3. From intellectual curiosity, restlessness, or the desire for a fuller life, etc. 4. For any other reason. III. Which rubber lasts the longer? 1. Right. 2. Left. 3. Both. 4. Neither. IV. Has college changed your point of view concern- ing rubbers? Give reasons for your answer. Answer the above questions as briefly as possible. Place a check next to the questions you are answering, a circle next to the one you do not answer, and an anchor next to those it is impossible for you to answer. You need not sign your name unless you wish. It would make it easier for the committee if you did give your name, together with the size of the last pair of rubbers you purchased. If your feet have not stopped growing, you need not answer the questions. [122] To 1919 Slender, erect, and strong, you stood an instant on the shore, Laughing to feel the wind stir in your hair, Eager to pit your glorious strength against the rushing waves Exulting in your youth, that made you lord Of all the sea and sky. An instant thus you stood β Then, flinging back your head in proud defiance, Gladly you leapt into the surging waters Breasting the walls of foam, that hurled themselves against you Swimming with steady, fearless stroke Onward through storm and sunshine to the far horizon. Program of Senior Week SENIOR PLAY, Friday and Saturday, May 30 and 31, Brinkerhoff Theatre, 8:15 P. M. BACCALAUREATE SERVICE, Sunday, June 1, Columbia Gymnasium, 4 P. M. Speaker : President E. E. Braithwaite, Western University, London, Canada. SENIOR DANCE, Monday, June 2, at 8:30 P. M., Gymnasium, Students ' Hall. Chairman : Marion Townsend. CLASS DAY, Tuesday, June 3, at 2:30 P. M., Gymnasium, Students ' Hall. PROGRAM Processional. Class Song β Ship ' ip _______ Adele Alfke Salutatory - -- -- -- -- - Bertha Mann Class Day Poem - -- -- -- - Lenore Guinzburg History of 1919 - -- -- -- -- Gertrude Geer Song from Sing Song (Tune: Carryin ' On) - Lenore Guinzburg Knocks - -- -- -- - .-. Adele Alfke Presentation of 1919 ' s Gift to Barnard - Armitage Ogden Announcement of Phi Beta Kappa Elections Miss Harriet Seibert Announcement of the Von Wahl Prize - - - - Dean Gildersleeve Valedictory - -- -- -- -- Dorothy Brockway Sunset Song - -- -- -- -- Lillian Closson, ' 09 Recessional. COMMITTEE Armitage Ogden, Chairman Eleanor Curnow Elizabeth Herod Adele Alfke Erna Gunther Rose Le Vino Bertha Mann, ex officio COMMENCEMENT, Wednesday, June 4, at 10:30 A. M., Columbia Gymnasium. TRUSTEES ' LUNCHEON, Wednesday, June 4, at 1 P. M., Lunchroom, Stu- dents ' Hall. IVY CEREMONY. Thursday, June 5, at 6:30 P. M., Students ' Hall, South Rose Le Vino, Orator. SENIOR BANQUET, Thursday, June 5, at 7 P. M., Lunchroom, Students ' Hall. SENIOR WEEK COMMITTEE Armitage Ogden, Chairman Myra Kohnstamm Marion Townsend Catherine Cooksey Vivian Tappan Bertha Mann, ex officio Gertrude Geer Pamela Thomas Adele Alfke, ex officio One Hundred and Sixty-Fifth Annual Commencement JUNE 4, 1919 Caroline Duror Fellowship Elizabeth Gatewood, 1919 Gerard Medal Lucile Heimerdinger, 1919 Hermann Prize Dorothy Potter, 1919 Kohn Prize Lucy Hayner, 1919 Reed Prize Hortense Barton, 1920 Speranza Prize Theresa Tusa, 1919 Tatlock Prize Laura McDaniel, 1919 Von Wahl Prize Dorothy Brockway, 1919 DEPARTMENTAL HONORS Chemistry Elizabeth Stuart Gatewood, Final Honors Lucy Carter Lee, Third Year Honors Mimosa Hortense Pfaltz, Third Year Honors English Bertha Halle Mann, Final Honors Ruth Evelyn Henderson, Third Year Honors French Constance Lambert, Final Honors Jeanne Elise Ballot, Third Year Honors Latin Laura Frances McDaniel, Final Honors Ruth Alexandra Morrison, Final Honors Elinore Wright Taylor, Final Honors Theresa Tusa, Third Year Honors Mathematics Dorothy Brockway, Final Honors Helen Elizabeth Fredrickson, Final Honors Janet Duncan Meneely, Third Year Honors Eudora Isabel Smith, Third Year Ho nors Mimosa Hortense Pfaltz, Second Year Honors Jessy Emilie Young, Second Year Honors Physics Lucy Julia Hayner, Third Year Honors Psychology Dorothy Goldsmith, Third Year Honors Dorothy Ruth Morgenthau, Third Year Honors Zoology Vivian Tappan, Third Year Honors MAGNA CUM LAUDE Marion Josephine Benedict Laura Frances McDaniel Lucy Julia Hayner Elizabeth Stuart Gatewood CUM LAUDE Mabel Gutman Ruth Alexandra Morrison Vivian Tappan Jessy Emilie Young Constance Lambert Cornelia Lee Carey Theresa Tusa Hortense Mimosa Pfaltz [125] New York Delta (Columbia University) Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity BARNARD SECTION OFFICERS Juliana Haskell (Mrs. H. S.). 1904 ------ President Mary Voyse, 1913 - -- -- -- - Vice-President Harriet Seibert, 1913 - -- -- -- -- Secretary Beatrice Lowndes Earle (Mrs. E. M.), 1917 ----- Treasurer CHART Louise Stabler Parker (Mrs. G. H.), 1893 Ella Fitzgerald Bryson (Mrs. F. G.), 1894 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 Wheelock, 1897 Jessie Wallace Hughan, 1898 MEMBERS Helen St. Clair Mullan (Mrs. G. V.), 1898 Susan Isabelle Myers, 1898 Martha Ornstein Brenner (Mrs. J. B.), 1899 Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve, 1899 Grace Harriet Goodale, 1899 Elsie Mabel Kupfer, 1899 Ellinor Reiley Endicott (Mrs. G.), 1900 Jeanette Bliss Gillespy, 1900 HONORARY MEMBERS Laura Drake Gill - Elected 1901 Gertrude M. Hirst - Elected 1911 CLASS OF 1919 Marion Josephine Benedict Dorothy Brock way Cornelia Lee Carey Verena Deuel Elizabeth Stuart Gatewood Dorothy Goldsmith Mabel Gutmann Lucy Julia Hayner Lucile Wolf Heimerdinger Ruth Evelyn Henderson Vera Viva Klopman Constance Lambert Lucy Carter Lee Laura Frances McDaniel Bertha Halle Mann Ruth Alexandra Morrison Mimosa Hortense Pfaltz Frances Daniel Rule Vivian Tappan Theresa Tusa Jessy Emilie Young Deceased t 126| Senior Banquet THE LEAGUE OF NOTIONS THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1919 High Moguls Georgia Stanbrough Edith Rosenthal Vera Klopman Chairman - Prophet - Purveyor of Domestic Notions WAITRESSES FROM 1921 Leonora Andrews Ruth A. Ehrich Ruth Jeremiah Helen Muhlfeld Frances Swan Brown Gwendolyn Evans Helen Jones Madeleine Neumann Aldine Carter Maude Fisher Dorothy Lind Anne Schmidt Ruth Clendeniu Mary Granger Marjorie Marks Gertrud Schoedler Gertrude Dana Mary Jennings Marie Mayer Luenna Von Eltz COMMITTEE Pamela Thomas _________ Chairman Edith Rosenthal Dorothy Goldsmith Alarjory Barrington Lenore Guinzburg Georgia Stanbrough Elicea F. Carr Armitage Ogden, ex-officio [ 27] Senior Play Quality Street By Sir James M. Barrie Presented by the Class of 1919, May 30 and 31, 1919 Dramatis Personae Miss Susan Throssel Miss Henrietta Turnbull Miss Willoughby Miss Fanny IVilloughby Miss Phoebe Throssel Patty Recruiting Sergeant Valentine Brown Georgy - Arthur - William Smith Blades ... First Girl Second Girl Third Girl - Fourth Girl Spicer - Old Soldier - Major Budd - Major Linkwater Children - M. Armitage Ogden Theodora Skinner Lucretia Peters Marion Warren Gretchen Torek Dorothy Birdseye Gertrude Geer Vera Klopman Anna Weil Bessie Simons Frances Rule Helene Fox Katherine Magaw Pamela Thomas Esther Brittian Adele Alfke Blanche Stroock Bertha Mann Dorothy Brockway Georgia Stanbrough ( Lucy Lee ( Ernestine Lind COMMITTEE Vivian Tappan Chairman Marjory Barringtcn Helene Wallace Elizabeth Gatewood Marion Warren Alice Goebel Bertha Mann, ex-officio Gertrude Miller Armitage Ogden, ex-officio [129] Studying On (Tune: Carrying On ) Our non-college sisters take life at their ease, They skip off to dances, they wander to teas, They ' ve hours to shop for the clothes that they wear, And time in the morning to brush out their hair ; But tho ' Barnard is built on the wicked White Way, Tis the mood of Olympus with us that holds sway. If each girl goes studying on (studying on) She ' ll be wise as King Solomon (King Solomon), And when her sisters frivol Or rattle off their drivel She ' ll sneer and mention Xenophon, Or Plato, and go studying on ! The world that ' s outside plays a rollicking game β The stakes are a husband, a fortune, or fame. Its actors sip sodas at Hegeman stands, And never are seen having ink on their hands. We know that they rouglvhouse, we know that they roister, We hear them sometimes through the walls of our cloister. But we all go studying on (studying on), We ' ll cut them out anon (out anon), A busy, brilliant band We ' ll march from Barnard, and The whole wide world impress it upon β And that ' s why we go studying on ! Songs To 1919 Tune : One, Two, Three, Four One nine, one nine, We think that you ' re pretty fine. Our hig sisters always seem to shine ; And in Barnard, who ' s at the head of the line We guess you ' ve guessed Who beats the rest β One nine, one nine. Tune: Mush, Mush Oh, the bulldog is strong for the Injun, His loyalty never will fail ; And always he sits by the wigwam, Complacently wagging his tail. Soβ Bow, wow, wow, wow for the Injun And bow, wow, wow, wow for Nineteen ; May the pup ever wear a red collar And the Chief wear a blanket of green. Tune: Camp Song It ' s great to have a pal Like the class One nine, one nine ; We ' re singing to you, and to you we ' ll be true ; We ' ve always loved you and we always shall, O class One nine, one nine, All the Juniors think you ' re mighty fine; Please send your affection In our direction, O class One nine, one nine. 1919 Makes Its Mark in the World Adams, Eileen, 314 West 114th Street. Working in the For- eign Department and Library of the National City Bank. Alfke, A dele, 24 West 95th Street. Studying at Columbia for M.A. degree. Anthony, Marion, 140 Main Street, Gouverneur, N. Y. Studying at the Federal School of Commercial Design. Archibald. Mary, Wissimoning Hall, Pennsylvania Institute for the Deaf. Teaching lip reading. Ballot, Jeanne, 913 President Street, Brooklyn. Studying stenography and typewriting. Benedict, Marion, Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Teaching English at Mt. Kisco High School. Also completing work for M.A. degree in the School of Education in Teachers ' College. Birdseye, Dorothy, 5219 Morris Street, Germantown, Pa. Teaching Literature and Art at Shady Hill School. Also coaching plays. Boas, Gertrude, Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society, Cot- tage 7, Pleasantville. Cottage Mother in orphan asy- lum of the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society. Brand, Edna, 120 East 95th Street. Secretary for the Hebrew Charities Vocational Guidance Committee. Also inspector of Politics class and correspondent for R. H. Macy and Co. Brittain, Esther, 41 Ross Street, Batavia, N. Y. Teaching at Batavia High School. Brockway, Dorothy, 752 West End Avenue. Employed in the Department of Development and Research of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. Bunger, Gertrude, Campbell Hall, Montgomery, N. Y. Teach- ing in Montgomery High School. Campbell, Mary, 417 West 120th Street. Studying for M.A degree at Columbia. Cary, Cornelia, Furnald Hall. Assistant in Botany Depart- ment at Barnard. Cooksey, Catherine, Social Secretary and Recreative Leader at the central branch of the Young Women ' s Christian Association. Curnow, Eleanor. Doing mathematical computing for engi- neers in the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. Curtiss, Leah, Grove Street, Tarrytown, N. Y. Studying Psychology and Philosophy at Columbia. Deuel, Verena, 130 Claremont Avenue. Secretary to the Vocational and Employment Director of the central branch of the Young Women ' s Christian Association. Foley, Helen, Box 361, Jeffersonville, N. Y. (Sullivan County). Teaching school in Jeffersonville. Garber, Rose, 5010 Samtell, Cleveland, Ohio. Employment and Service Manager in a knitting factory of the Fried- man, Blaufarber Company, Cleveland. Gatewood, Elizabeth, 16 Louisburg Square, Boston. Mass. Doing graduate work in Chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Geer, Gertrude. Teaching English at Bryn Mawr. Goldsmith, Dorothy, 10 West 93rd Street. Psychologist for the Guardian Life Insurance Company of America. Also studying for M.A. degree in Psychology at Columbia. Gower, Susan, Box 185, Goucher College, Baltimore, Md. Assistant in Chemistry Department at Goucher. [132] Gross, Selma. Working with the Federal Board for Voca- tional Education. Guggenheim. Beatrice, 55 West 110th Street. Known in the musical world as Beatrice Constance. ' ' Will make debut on the concert stage in April. Meanwhile is taking les- sons of Madame Lisette Jasty Hammond in opera scores. To make debut in opera next season. Guinzburg, Lenore (Mrs. James Marshall), 131 West 74th Street. Keeping house. Also writing book reviews for Boni and Liveright, Publishers. Hall, Dorothy, Willomere, Winchester, Mass. Doing social work for the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Havner, Lucy. Studying for M.A. degree in Physics at Co- lumbia. Heimerdinger, Lucile, 5 West 69th Street. Studying at the New School for Social Research and also studying nurs- ing at Teachers College. Henderson, Ruth, Hancock, N. Y. Teaching English in Hancock High School. Henessy, Helen, Roslyn, L. I. Working with the Guaranty Trust Company. Herod, Elizabeth. Working with the Guaranty Trust Com- pany. Herrmann, Gretchen. 1005 East 40th Sltreet, Brooklyn. Studying at Columbia for M.A. degree in History and German. Jacobs, Estelle, 201 West 112th Street. Statistician for George L. Beel (Industrial Relations). Jarvis, Ruth, Central Park, N. Y. Teaching school in Hicks- ville High School. Johnson, Catherine, 3121 Charlotte Street, Kansas City, Mo. Assistant in the employment department of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. Johnson, Edith, Westerly, X. Y. Working for the War Camp Community Service. Judson, Alice, Ardsley-on-the-Hudson, N. Y. Studying Egyptology in the University of Chicago. Kam merer, Mildred, 433 Bement Avenue, New Brighton, Staten Island. Employment and Personnel work with the Western Electric Company. Klopman, Vera, 32 Eldorado Place, Weehawken, N. J. Sec- retarial Assistant in the advertising department of the Review. Kohnstamm, Myra, 611 West 114th Street. Assistant in the Vocational Guidance Department of the Jewish Big Sisters. Konnovitz, Leah, 749 Jennings Street, Bronx. Social Direc- tor of the Central Jewish Institute. Koster, Lucetta, 123 West 57th Street. Teaching English History and Civics in Newtown High School, Newtown, Conn. Lahiff, Aileen. Teaching English and Latin In school at Eastport, L. I. Lambert, Constance, 225 Rich Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Secretary in the Battery Park National Bank. Lee, Lucy, 137 East 21st Street. Laboratory Technician in the Rockefeller Institute. Leu ey, Ruth, 40 East 83rd Street. Doing research work in Psychology, and public health with the American Red Cross Institute. Will be married to Frederick Guinzburg, a sculptor. [133] Lichtenstein, Julia. Studying medicine at the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Lind, Ernestine, 71 East 96th Street. Taking a secretarial course. Lowenstein, Edith (Mrs. Lawrence B. Rossbach). Editor of The Club Worker, published by and in the interests of the National League of Women Workers. Mann, Bertha, 32 Winfield Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Will marry Gilbert Schulman in March. Also doing Volun- teer Work in Americanizing Foreigners. Martin, Ramona. Teaching French and Spanish at Roxbuiy High School, Succasunna. N. J. Medigovich, Melica, P. O. BoLx 1016, Bisbee, Arizona. Study- ing French and Russian art Radcliffe. Meneely, Janet, 271 Union Street, Hackensack, N. J. Work- ing at the Community Service National Headquarters. Miller, Gertrude. In the shopping department of Vogue. Miller, Helen, 285 Summit Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Studying at the Conklin Secretarial School. Moore, Olive, 710 Maple Avenue, Pasadena. California. Teach- ing Romance Languages in the Vermillion High School, Vermillion, S. Dak. Morgan, Grace, 266 South First Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Reference Librarian in the Guaranty Trust Company. Mdrgenthau, Dorothy, 102 Femray Street, Bosto.n, Mass. Psychologist at the Judge Baker Foundation in connec- tion with the Juvenile Court. Has a fellowship. Morrison, Ruth. Secretary to the Vice-President of the Chemical National Bank, N. Y. C. Munstock, Grace. Assistant in the Research Engineering De- partment of the Fifth Avenue Coach Company. Neuville, Edna, 8 Fifth Street, Schenectady, N. Y. Teaching English in Cooperstown High School, Cooperstown, N. Y. Newburger, Bessie, 220 West 87th Street. Studying Public Administration in the Bureau of Municipal Research. Ogden, Armitage, 136 West 104th Street. Tutored all summer. Peters, Lucretia, 26 East 58th Street. Studying singing with Madame Niessen-Stone. Also tutoring. Pfaltz, Mimosa, 142 West 119th Street. Graduate Fellow and assistant in Chemistry at Mt. Holyoke. Potter, Dorothy, 391 Summit Avenue, Hackensack, N. J. Laboratory Technician and doing research work on cotton for the Lhiited States Rubber Company. Puerschner, Ottilie, Cranbury, N. J. Teaching Mathematics and Physics in the Collegiate Institute, Paterson, N. J. Rosenberg. Sarah (Mrs. Louis Durin), 522 West Ninth Street, Chester, Pa. Rosenthal, Edith, 151 West 86th Street. Studying medicine at New York University and Bellevue Medical College. Rule, Frances, 40 Dearborn Street, Chicago, 111. Chemica ' Technician in Cornell Medical Clinic, Bellevue Hospital, New York. [134] Sakamoto, Kei. Bookkeeper in the Chemical Exporting De- partment of Sankyo Company, Ltd., New York City. Schaaf, Georgie, 1051 Clay Avenue, New York City. Statisti- cal Worker for the Public Service Commission. Schuster, Merle, 558 West 164th Street. Correspondent and assistant in the Schmeizer Importers, Inc. Slocum, Helen, Valatie, N. Y. Teaching History, English and French in the Valatie High School. Smith, Leolyn, 630 West 141st Street. Studying Household Arts at the Young Women ' s Christian Association. Smith, Eudora, 418 West 118th Street. Computer for the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. Stanbrough, Georgia. Executive Secretary for the Travel Club of America. Stewart, Catherine, Box 127, Hillsdale, N. J. Editorial Worker in the United States Naval Reserve Force. Civil- ian Employee of the United States Navy. Tappan, Vivian. Assistant in Zoology at Barnard. Thomas, Pamela, 420 West 119th Street. Teaching in the elementary grades of the Packer Collegiate Institute, Brooklyn. Townsend, Marion. Secretary to Professor R. D. Currier, President of the New Jersey Law School, Newark, N. J. Publicity Manager of a girls ' camp in Vermont. Tusa, Theresa, Central Avenue, Brooklyn. Teaching English in the Bushwick High School, Brooklyn. Van Wort, Edna, Machias, N. Y. Teaching Mathematics and Chemistry at the Machias High School. Wallace, Helene, 777 West End Avenue. Assistant to the Membership Secretary in the Central Branch of the Young Women ' s Christian Association. Warren, Marion, 289 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Research Worker for the Interchurch World Movement, on the Religious and Social Survey. Weary, Erica. St. Mary ' s College, Dallas, Texas. Teaching English in St. Mary ' s College. Wegener, Hattie, 610 West 116th Street. Secretary to the head of the Vocational Testing Extension Rooms for Commercial and Industrial Workers. Weil, Anna, 736 West End Avenue. Will marry Jesse de Sola Mendes. Taught English at Wadleigh High School. Welzmiller, Grace. Mathematics Assistant in the Mathe- matical Research Department of the Western Electric Company. Wesendonck, Myrrha, 115 West 84th Street. Secretary at the Cornell University Medical School. Wh ipple, Isabel, Box 203, Cherry Valley, N. Y. Teaching English, French and Civics in the Cherry Valley High School. Willman, Edith. 352 West 117th Street. Instructor in the Kansas State Agricultural College, Manhattan, Kansas. Woodbridge, Ruth, 540 West 124th Street. Clerk in the Co- lumbia University war records. Young, Emilie, Newhope, Pa. Teaching Mathematics. Chem- istry and Ancient History in the Newhope School. Also studying modeling. [135] Tempus Fugit When we were Freshmen, Paris green, With eyes of awe we watched Nineteen ; Their poise, their grace, their savoir faire. The grown-up way they did their hair ; In worried groups we ' d sit and stew, Oh, can we ever be like you ? The years have passed, and here are we Protecting little Twenty-three. We know the ropes, we ' ve gained finesse, We feel years older, we confess ; But still in worried groups we fuss, O can they ever be like us? L TT a.T j cVvaorTi yow Set, Of S -a.v ( 5 Jys V. JC ' rcv always r eady W V rewLavVs β’ Was t oVV t o e oY V -5. ()e ' e r ojott 7a ' -n y W e- We s er Wr e. WkΒ«.rΒ«. For vVea r ' T . SP - KoncSl ThΒ«y cau.se we Wws a. x i. WVA r)x A V ove you. o ave, -VKe Sa 1 We a t y -ao Carrie. , C .tCS WiU r Β«cr Ao rrj j.c,V fo-x WeVe e-Vev kaoi. a AaVe- - you. V rvov Vkvs LoVe, tTyy iawcy or y ru.T s } ov sooVW , To y a.cYs β T-VsaY _ rr-) y corvVa ' wx Da V of S . o So- Vi ' vc VruAk β IjouTi Vr u_ y } x e w, artjΒ« T) S IT) mny Y a.rr) e. X reeoUecY VW -tmje. -y Β .r s svrvcexeAy , Vo fee. a ar _ A. STr)Aey β’ esY vAsYes β When. Y torrjes Vo poeAry I a Ways on -We oVs, X a.m 6 X I y I 1 cX los tw y c . rut ;V yrr, Wo X o e. Vo vv ear RoYVj TieaV arxc) n Av CLVeVVjes. I o7e Vo VaV VoTacvxVVy Or) U)ed rvt cVay a Ver v oot s aV Vaa. Vo -V j 11 a.-Β«vT- I Kot β¬l VV ey eVt -Vo -Va. -Vo rrje as Nsrx VV-, aoixV VW VΒ Tnje X vjeVer vX -ry- o ' T Ve ' u. Vow t . so av; Ijoa v Β«Ver see Trje vtj a. V) vry- Xy you. w u. i Vovtc Β Undergrad tea, Undergrad tea, The weekly taste of society! I stagger from out of the laboratoree, Bespattered with drops of NaC03, And haste me to Students as fast as can be, Eat cakes and converse with a few Facult Oh, Wednesdays are the days for me, With Undergrad tea, Undergrad tea. Foreword The 1921 Mortarboard guarantees that the following unfinished chronicle is the unaided work of a child of three years, who learned the facts of this history from her sister at Barnard. It has all the simplicity of childhood and a directness of style that many older authors might do well to copy. Let anyone who doubts the authenticity of the history consider the utter impossibility of imitating so skillfully a child ' s psychology. The original MS. in an old, brown notebook is now on file in Mortarboard office, where doubters may read. (Signed) The 1921 Mortarboard. [140] The Young Stewdunt CHAPTER 1 Preparashun Molossa was a blasay girl of 18 with stilash close and hair just up so that the hairpins fell out and ratled on the street. Molossa dear her father said to her one day collidge begins tomoroe and you must not forget to go. I wont said she and went out to buy some new hairpins the kind that dont fall out becaus they have humps in the midle. CHAPTE R 2 Her First Day What a nice day it is Molossa remarcked to the lady with specktickles who took her yeloe card behind a desk. Get your bill at the windoe she ansered in a snapy tone which Molossa did. Then she found a big room with tables and professers and other misselanius furnichure. One of them said to her er what have you planed to take. O filoserfy and sike and eck and mewsick. I look forwood to being a lawya or else a trajedy actres you see. Yes I see said the prof and rote down kern and math and lattin and ing and do you want french or germun she inkwired. French said Molossa rappedly thinking of the resunt atrossufies. That done she triped off well pleased with her first taist of real collidge life. CHAPTER 3 Socierty Molossas first week at collidge was a gay whearl of teas and partys. She learned how to hold a tea cup and cake in one hand shaking hands with the other which made her feel very sofistickated indeed. One class was nice to her and her other felloe classmates. It was the Juniors and they were her sister class. The sofermores were not nice at all. They treted them like mear infunt with seluloyd tags for ten sents and not collidge wimen making them role pennys with their nose and other childish sports. Even if we are freshmun said Molossa indignuntly you should not trete us so ignerminiously as to give us one anermul cracker for refreshmunts. CHAPTER 4 A Stilash Call What a bewterfull manshun Molossa exclamed claping her litle hands in eckstusie of delite. It was indeed. Room upon room in stewdunts hall was deckerated with harmonius curtins and dark brown chares and tables. How spashus she cried and o look here is a lettre. My name is here it is a lettre from the dean how thortfull of her to rite. It was an invitashun to call at her erlist conveniunse. O dear what shall I ware Molossa thought I gess my patunt lethers which she did. Going up to the forth flore she wated for a long time outside the deans door nocking as perlitely as poserble. x fter a vane intervle where is the dean she asked a sofermore who laft and ansered you are a freshmun. Yes how did you know Molossa ejackulated in a suprized way. CHAPTER 5 Misteries Sh Sh she was told when she asked what they were. It was indeed. Clad in childish bloomers Molossa and her class ate a hapy supper overshadoed becaus it mite be there last. The sofermores sang unplesunt songs but not so the Juniors who acted in a sisterly way. 2 THE YOUNG STEWDUNT Molossa and her class also sang and returned the baner which they had spiruted away trimed with green ribon for the ockashun especshully Frances Brown whom they had eleckted temperery charemun of them. Afterwoods the freshmun went between a line on the tenis cort of girls who tried to ore them very mutch after which they were entertayned by the dragon in four coils the sofermores show and then by an interprutive dance simbolick too and a misteries book given with instruckshuns and misteries was over. CHAPTER 6 Eleckshuns Great ecksitemunt pruvaled among Molassas class for eleckshuns were on the verge. They turned out to be : Presidunt - - - - - - Frances Brown Vice - -- -- -- Ruth A. Ehrich Recording secretary ------ Ruth Jones Corresponding - - - - - - Dorothy Falk Treshurer - Gertrud Schoedler Historiun ------ Leonora Andrews Song Leder ------- Gertrude Dana CHAPTER 7 Mid Years Freshmun Class Offussers What are mid years Molossa asked in an inturested way. O you will find out soon enuf she was told which she did. CHAPTER 8 Champyons Molossas team of baskut ball players won the champyonship and everyone was so glad that they ran around steping on their feet in snake formashun. The girls on the team were presentud with plyable felt numeruls which was a very great oner. They were : Adele Stickney, Captun Aldine Carter Dorothy Falk Beatrice Kafka Marjorie Marks Marion Peters Ruth Ward Freshmun Baskutball Team THE YOUNG STEWDUNT 3 CHAPTER 9 Sing Song Molossa class enjoid hearing all the other classes sing but lost coming out third. Never- theless the Juniors won and so they were happy the skore being Juniors 9 seniors 6 1 3 Freshmun 5 1 3 sofermores 3 1 3. CHAPTER 10 A Classicul Competishun Preperashuns over and curtins hung the day arived. There was mutch ecksitemunt on both sides and Molassas in pertickelyar for they wanted to win greatly. Clad in a short Greshun costoom with very cold arms before a grate croud she was in the mob after which she sat on a mat. The God was promethyus but unforchunutly Molossas class didnt win duspite there aplawded dance espeshully the flames and Mary Granger the efishunt charemun and all her comities that died and so on. We didnt win but theres next year Molossas consoled her class and they assented congratchewlating the sofermores. CHAPTER 11 Spring Athleticks Spring has come ecksklamed Molossa and so doning there everedy bloomers she went on a hike. It was in the Palusades and hardened her Dorothe Reichhard being charemun. Then feeling very athletick indeed she partisupated in field day which was fun and a nice day. The sofermores won but she was not as glad as they were coming out last. But trying hard they were seckund in baseball. See said Molossa hortilly. Freshmun Baseball Teme CHAPTER 12 A Plesunt Repast Ecksamunashuns over Molossas class put on there best dress and ate together in the lorfty lunch room. It was a lunchun and they had invitud Miss Lathum onerarulie which she did. Anne Schmidt being Charemun. I wander what is in the misterie book remarcked Molossa as perlitely as poserble becaus of Miss Lathum. It was read after the rest 4 THE YOUNG STEWDUNT of the mele. It is clever isnt it she said but looked ahead to next year and the vakashun was on. Her new leders were : Presidunt ------- Gertrud Schoedler - Helen Muhlfeld Ruth Lazaf Helen Jones Aldine Carter Vice Corusponding Seckruterie Reckording Treasurer - - - Historiun ------- Leonora Andrews Song Leders - Adele Stickney Gertrude Dana JClass Offussers Sofer- more Year CHAPTER 13 Misteries How Diferunt This is from another point of vue she raved haperlie seeing them in bloomers at there mersy so remembering Porsha she did not strain it and fed them first and performed enjoiable tricks allah cabaray. The sofermores grashusly dismist the other classes which made Molossa feel soupearior remembering last year. Alone at last she gloted and roled up her sieves figyuratively and like an inkwisishun. How great was her delite when they were condemmed into the misteries line grewsom and dark as it was. The gim was dark but not grewsom becaus of the essthetick runing track lites. A dance the book and all was over. I came I saw my duty and I did it clasickully kwoted Molossa congratchewlating Gladys Van Brunt, charemun. CHAPTER 14 Dramma It was a war bennerfit and so it could be twice. Oh Im so glad egsulted Molossa and cut sike to boroe a fur coat for the north pole. It was a sucksess and of course pateriotick. Each act vied with its predusesser ecksepting the first a fizzicul imposserbillutie. Hm Molossa tryumfed an omun for greek games and skwoze cold cream on her face to remove the eskumo. The program and the sucksessfull comitie were: Nothing Doing (War Benefit) PROLOGUE Scene : Main entrance in Students ' Hall. Time: Present. Gertie Gloom Characters trances M ary Helen Marjorie Phillips Gertrud Schoedler Evelyn Shrifte Alice Brady THE YOUNG STEWDUNT Edna ------- Gertrude Dana Dorothy - - - Madeleine Neumann Sailor R utn Jeremiah If at first you don ' t succeed TRY! A NIGHT AT THE CANTEEN Scene: Main room in Barnard Canteen. Time: Present. Circumstance: Dress rehearsal. Characters Billy - - - - - Ruth Clendenin A Stolid Soldier - Adele Stickney Melissa - - - - - - - - Ruth Jones Louise -------- Louise Byrne Leonora - - Helen Shire Miss Ware ... Mary Jennings Cyril -------- Helen Jones A Red-haired Sailor Margaret Benz A French Sailor - Gladys Van Brunt Soldier ------- Elizabeth Mayer TRY!! DANSES INTERPRETIVES Circumstance: Dress rehearsal. 1. Sleep Triumphant, Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning Helen Shire, Louise Byrne, Marion Haskell 2. Bacchic Dance - Bevo! Bevo! Anne Schmidt 3. A Greek Sea Idyl - By the Sea! By the Sea! Virginia Stewart, Ruth A. Ehrich 4. Pro Patria - Patriotic Rally Mary Jennings, Madeleine Neumann, Gertrud Schoedler AGAIN!!! ZERO OR THE MAID OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN Written by Gertrude Bendheim and Marjorie Marks Scene I β The home of Chief Googoo at the North Po ' e. Time: Present. Circumstance: Dress rehearsal. Scene 2 β Same place and circumstances ten days later. Characters Zero (Soprano) - Frances Brown Googoo, her father (Baritone 1 - Helen Jones Igloo, her lover (Bass) - - Luenna Von Eltz The Stranger (Tenor) - Clara Weiss 6 THE YOUNG STEWDUNT The Maid (Contralto) - Antonia Schwab The Messenger (?) - Natalie Weiner Premiere Danseuse ----- Anne Schmidt Chorus: Elizabeth Mayer, Rachael Souhami, Bertha Tomp- kins, Evelyn Shrifte, Mae Belle Beith, Frances Williamson. Chairman of Sophomore Show - - Maude Fisher Central Committee Marjorie Marks Ruth A. Ehrich Gertrude Bendheim Gertrude Dana Leonora Andrews Gertrud Schoedler, ex-ofhcio Chairman of Costume Olive Riley Stage Managers Mary Granger Frances Marlatt CHAPTER 15 Redempshun Altho sad at defeet in baskut ball and singsong Molossa swam the epitermy of deter- minashun a victory tho almost not and her teeth chatred marking time like casternets and the glory was repeted in baseball. The wining temes were : SWIMING VICKTERS Swiming Alice Brady, Cap R. Jeremiah L. Andrews H. Jones F. Brown J. Clark E. Boeker N. Weiner A. Hoff Aldine Carter R. Crabtree D. Falk L. Frost R. Jeremiah BASEBALL CHAMPYONS Baseball Cap R. Hessburf; E. Tiemann H. Mauch D. Reichhard A. Schmidt O. Riley THE YOUNG STEWDUNT 7 CHAPTER 16 Odd Evun Ing The poaster said this so not under standing Molossa went. It was coffie first ending with soup a strange mele feeling kweer tho I dont see why soup on top should hurt she medertated. She enjoid the games all backwoods and rejoised at being odd. For evuns are not so fast she kwoted from the song. CHAPTER 17 Pan What a kweer name thought Molossa so domestick for a god but it was diferunt in greese I gess. You see he was the god about whom the games revolved about. Let us hang together they were urged and they did bringing vicktrie in there trane altho at the begining the end appered dowtfull and Molossa shiverd fritefully. She could not but admyer the growtesk dance of the freshmun fawns which justly but sadly won. How Molossa jubilated at the liricks won. They turned the tables tord twenty one and the athleticks also provoked her hilarritie. If Pan only new Molossa said to herself in an altruistick way and lingered in her costoom so as to prehaps meet a judge cashualy espeshully if famus. But no as prof Nap took good care of them. But spiruts returning she bort a peenut butter sandwitch at the delickertesen and ate it on riverside in comperny with her feloe classmates with moonlite remantick all to no end. Dulce est she kwoted (it was on her entruns egzam so she new) pro patria mori. CHAPTER 18 Sterling Silvur I wish there werent so many nice parties with delishus cakes said Molossa full of them becaus I must trane to win Field day. Becaus they were so assetick tryumf was theres. When we are seniors she refleckted screwtunizing George and Marie the soul athletes for the seniors I hope two of us can win so many points and think of all the others in adishun. What a strange conexiun it was to be strung together like a funerul reath. (But it pade Poetry s How prettie the cup was (And the pink lemernade. CHAPTER 19 Very Stilash Indeed The lunchun was at the Biltmore where it simply overwealmed her with its silk gowns and elervater starters. Molossa felt rarther inside out in the elervater but thought it best to conseal it as otherwise they mite noe she was not a native. Marion Baer had engaged a sumpchewus sweet with red velvit. How sublime murmered Molossa taking in the souper- sil ' ius waiter. But she took him down a peg by pointing out pensul spots on the table cloth nearly hiddun by the flat silvur. See she said but he said yes will you have coffie miss. The mewsick soothed all those presunt while they consoomed delickusies. Molossa felt her hart sinking becaus she was doomd to make a speach. No lunchun past her trembuling lips becaus of the coining ordele. And it looks so tastifull too she thought. But she made it luckilie before the icecreme. How Molossa laft when Dr. Alsop the onered gest made a umerus orashun on rekwest of Frances Brown the wittie tost mistres. Dancing broke up the afternoon. 8 THE YOUNG STEWDUNT CHAPTER 20 Seniors Adoo It began long before they went to wit at a fuchurist party where they all drest up that way. How amewsing it would be to be a bally dancer I wonder if they reely will Molossa won- derd. And what nice stunts and a play called cabbagus. Qualutie Street was ther reel beginning of senior week festiverties and was kwaint indeed. Molossa drank it in with eger ears forshadoing the rest of the weak. Next came class day hot and tearfull where everyones white dress stuck to there chares and they laft at the nocks. How wonderfull it must be to be a senior and have a bankwit Molossa side wistfullie altho it is a fare well one and you are lost if ingaged. Just think she added sadlie we are now the only odds I wish they didnt have to go. CHAPTER 21 Grone Up At Last Where are the lists of freshmun sisters Molossa inkwired frantickully realising that was the way to get them. She got a nice one but older than she how parrudocksickul. They gave them a party and proteckshun against the sofermores. At field day Molossa lost to bad. Morterbord ingrost her the bord being so enerjetick and the coming prom Gladys Van Brunt Chairmun. And the junior show Leonora Andrews head. Her new offussers were reagul indeed. CHAPTER 22 Lanvwa That is all I can rite now. The remnunt of Molossas historie is at presunt a thing of the fuchure The rest will apere as is said in currint magerzines in an erly ishu. 1921 Songs Tune β Yale Bulldog Song Bulldog, bulldog, bow wow wow. Twenty-one Bulldog, bulldog, bow wow wow, Show them the way it ' s done. Tf you think we ' ll ever yield them a point, Wait till the games are won. Bulldog, bulldog, bow wow wow, Twenty-one. Tune β Princeton Song Twenty-one, forward march to victory, Twenty-one, lead the way. Twenty-one, forward march to victory, This is the Juniors ' day, ray ! Twenty-one, show them how it ' s done, Fight with brain and brawn. We ' ll leave the others trailing in the dust As we go marching on. Any kind of girl can be in 1922, Any kind of girl can be in Twenty, Any kind of girl can be an Even, don ' t you see, Where there ' s no discrimination, there ' s a plenl We pity those that follow both the dragon and the Ho They ' re not our class, you see. It takes a doggone, honest Injun sport To be in Twenty-one or Twenty-three. Individual Variations of the Class of 1921 Best-all-around - -- -- -- -- Marjorie Marks Best Sport - - - - - - - - Gladys Van Brunt Best Athlete - -- -- -- -- - Lesley Frost Best Actress - -- -- -- -- - Margaret Benz Most Terpsichorean - -- -- -- - Anne Schmidt Most Dignified - -- -- -- -- - Helen Jones Most Sympathetic - -- -- -- - Gertrude Bendheim Most Effervescent - -- -- -- - Gladys Van Brunt Cleverest - -- -- -- -- - Marjorie Marks Biggest Bluffer - -- -- -- -- - Clara Weiss Most Attractive - -- -- -- - Gertrud Schoedler Most Up-in-thc-clouds - -- -- -- - Helen Shire Most Down-to-earth - -- -- -- - Mary Granger Most Blase - -- -- -- -- -- Clara Weiss Most Naive --------- - Beatrice Kafka Most Encyclopedic - -- -- -- -- Mary Jennings [151] [152 1 r 153 1 [1541 Turn this page rite over And on its back yule see Molassas feloe classmates As planely as can be. ESTELLE LOUISE ABRAHAMS Oh, higher Math ' s her major, In which she is proficient; But even on a wager She ' s late β miff said, sufficient. HELEN FRANCES ANDREWS If you ' re looking for her she ' ll Be somewhere with her friend Lucile. EDYTH AHRENS She ' s usually found, you know, Inhabiting the R. S. O.; In fact, in Barnard there are few So faithful to Y. W. LEONORA LOUISE ANDREWS She poked her head around the door, And lightly skipped across the floor β Then blushing deep and blushing red, That Act for Junior Show? she said. GERTRUDE AMMERMULLER She eats at Biacake each day, Preferring dainty messes; She dresses in a flurry way, And always effervesces. LUCILE ARKINS Lucile, we ' ve heard, is fairly happy When her courses all are snappy, But she ' s happiest, perhaps, [156] When her courses all are snaps. HELEN ELIZABETH BALL Her smile, as golden bright as May- day, June-day, or perchance as pay-day, Makes us think of Sunny Jim, Though she scarce resembles him. MARGARETE ADA BENEY When we looked for flaws in Ada Only compliments were paid her. For a knock in vain we ' re fumin ' β Isn ' t Ada Beney human? THEODOSIA C. BAY Every thought is wrapped up wholly In a certain Marie Soley. GERTRUDE BENDHEIM There are not many girls in Barnard as Proficient in the art of writing jazz; A very sympathetic nature is Another virtue Gertrude Bendheim has. MARGARET BENZ All my energy I use ter Write my themes for Billy Brewster, But it ' s hard to write a story When you ' re in a dormitory. MAE BELLE BEITH Though she thought those days were ended She ' s a child, is Mae Belle Beith, For at rolling hoops she ' s splendid- Witness one Greek laurel wreath. [157] VERA L. BINZEN With her praises we ' re almost full, We can ' t roast or even parch her; Of her talents we are boastful β She won glory as an archer. HELEN BORRfi She ' s not as dainty as she looks, She ' s majoring in Chem β Gadzooks ELOISE MARY BOEKER A lovely girl in many ways But getting far too many A ' sl ALICE BRADY We know how trying it must be, No matter where you are. To have to say so frequently, I ' m not the movie star. DOROTHY BOOTH We sent a sleuth To find the truth About our classmate, Dorothy Booth. We found that she Works quietly, But is efficient as can be. [158] MELVA BREINING Melva ' s grave (at least one hears so), Ever fixed in solemn dream β Things aren ' t often what they seem β Is she grave? She just appears so! LOUISE MARIE BYRNE An interesting combination Of social whirl and Math equation. FRANCES SWAN BROWN We wondered why it was that she Wrote poetry β But now we look at her left hand And understand. EDRIS CANNON When her ship comes in (as it will some day), The cargo which it reveals, From deep in its hold (or so we ' re told), Will be ice-cream and high French heels ! MARION BURROUGHS Marion must like to study; For, whate ' er the Profs demand, her Explanation ' s never muddy β Gaze upon the marks they hand her! GRACE MERLE CARHART Not over-pacifistic ' ly, She argues syllogistic ' ly ; And, turning sleuth, She searches Truth As highbrows do β statistic ' ly. LOVILLA BUTLER The forward has no chance at all When she plays guard in basketball. She turns the trick l!y being quick, And long of arm and very tall. [ 159 ] ALDINE CARTER Although Aldine With smile serene Socratic slush sublimely spurns, She has a real And high ideal, Which burns and burns and burns and burns. RUTH CLENDENIN No one ' s quite so good at pennin ' Little rhymes as Ruth Clendenin, And if only we had let her Write this one, it would be better. ELEANOR CASTLE After four long years of college, Where she has been seeking knowl- edge, She is going to the altar With a man whose name is Walter. FRANCES C. COCKE Oh, Frances Cocke, We cannot knock Your intellect divine, For we ' d be proud Were we allowed A brow as high as thine. JULIET CLARK Here ' s Julie, who floats on, serene, Through Philosophy, Chem, Mathe- matics β Her wave is unruly: you ' ve seen She ' s a shark β when it comes to aquatics ! [ 160 GERTRUDE COOKE Carefully you ' ll have to look If you hunt for Gertrude Cooke β You ' ll remain to stay around her When at last you find you ' ve found her. RUTH FOSTER CRABTREE The professional call was insistent β And in cases where Flu was per- sistent. No patient could tussle With baseball-trained muscle β She ' s the docto r ' s most able assist- ant. FELICE DAVIS Felice is very tall and slender And many people recommend her As being bright in Fields of writin ' β We ' re surely glad the West could lend her. GERTRUDE VAN RENSSELAER DANA β Fm awfully sorry that I ' m late, β Fve come from Forty-second Street. -I hope you didn ' t have to wait β β I haven ' t had a bite to eat! T HELM A B. DFGRAFFE We wish that we knew half As much as T. De Graffe; In Greek she gets A plus β Quis possit melius? 161 MARY ETHEL DONOVAN Ethel D. is so elusive β One sees her flitting through the hall; That she studies hard ' s conclusive, Unless β she studies not at all! RUTH A. EHRICH That she ' s aesthetic one soon guesses From her dresses β The fields of dancing, art and drama Also claim her. MATHILDE MADELINE DRACHMAN At writing short stories Mattie ' s a shark; Why does she keep it So in the dark? RUTH J. EHRICH Ruth J. wins her greatest fame in What has proved to be her forte, ' Tis none other than that game in Which they roughly term her short. GLADYS EDWARDS Gladys E., whene ' er she dances, All her little friends entrances; Is it strange she lures them thither When she knows the latest slither? ANNA JOSEPHINE EISENMAN She ' s good in Math and other sciences, And complicated Chem appliances; 1 9 j Exceeding rare such self-reliance is. LILLIAN MARGARET FAWCETT What can she be thinking of When, in an abstracted fashion, She removes her brown kid glove And sets a diamond ring a-flashin ' ! MADELEINE FISKE We a secret would disclose, Madeleine has many beaux; She is often in despair, Planning out which dress to wear. ESTELLE FINE Up towards fame she hews her path Along the careful lines of Math, And, to prove it all some day, She takes snapshots on the way. LESLEY FROST Though problems deep her Prof, is solving, She scarce heeds his lengthy proem β Spends her lecture hours evolving Some delightful poem. [163] EDNA WILEY GIBSON When Gibby was a farmerette You should have seen the meals she et ! But in the Winter we ' re surprised To find she ' s very civilized. WINIFRED VAN P. GORTON She would simply have conniptions Were we herewith to disclose, That upon her little nose Freckles are, of all descriptions! AGATHA GILBERT Twenty-one will ever laud her β She high-jumps, wins glory thusly; But we grin while we applaud her, For she jumps so curtsey-ously ! RUTH SUMMERFIFLD GRAFFLIN She only comes to study, And then she slips away; Her thoughts are never muddy, Alack and wel-a-day! LEONA HAMMERSLEY GOLDSMITH There never was a girl so very Flexible and agile As Lee at climbing trees of cherry, Though she seems so fragile. MARY LOIS GRANGER She manages you and manages me And Mortarboard, too, most admir- [ 164 ] ablyβ A manager born is Mary G. LOIS A DELE GURNEE A soft and pleasing voice she owns β - Oh, such! Perhaps that ' s why she telephones So much! GRACE HELOISE GREEN In her presence best be wary, Have your P ' s and Q ' s down pat; She would be a missionary β Why does everyone think that? MARY BRADT HALL When we first knew Mary Hall We thought she didn ' t talk at all; It ' s really quite a paradox To find she ' s such a chatterbox. MARION RUTH GROEHL I.ate! (The Prof ' s a perfect grif- finβ) Lunched with Adelaide at Tiffin β Swam in meet at T. C. (Mess!) β Dance β wore jade-green evening dress. LUCY J. HALLOCK Lucy ' s smile ' s a smile resplendent, Lucy ' s calm is enervating; But who ' d not be independent With a wave so undulating? ELSIE MARY GUERDAN E ' er marks were posted, fearfully She scorned to look, nor made a fuss; But when they were! All tearfully She said she ' d made A, not A plus! [ 165 ] MARION HASKELL We ' re afraid M. Haskell, If we write of her as pretty, Always sunny, ever witty. Will declare a rascal The writer of this ditty. LILLIAN HORN Lillian ' s sager Nature ' s chronic; But her major Is Teutonic. RHODA H. HESSBURG It wouldn ' t take much to induce her To act in the role of Medusa; Her make-up is there In the strands of her hair, And she is a staunch Wigs-and- Cueser. EDITH HUTTON An M. D. she Aspires to be, With pills for ills Of you and me. AMANDA HOFF As the sugar Is to candy, So is Lilli- An to Mandy. MARY A. JENNINGS Her little friends she fusses And their childish fancy shatters, When with gusto she discusses 166] Very deep religious matters. RUTH RUSSELL JONES Within her cloister, i. e., Brooks, You ' ll find her buried in her books; Alas! The vol. that grips her most Is called the Saturday Evening Post. RUTH A. JEREMIAH She ' s trig and trim and debonnaire. And wears a net upon her hair, And has a quaint, old-fashioned air. BEATRICE ETHEL KAFKA Bee, with artlessness that ' s rare, Is the original questionnaire. ALICE JOHNSON Johnny, please don ' t be enraged β We were e ' er in search of Truth: so Tell us, how can one so aged Keep her youth so? LAENA ROSENBAUM KAHN In her southern drawl we slam her β Ah ' m from Selma, Alabama. HELEN BROWN JONES Here is Helen Jones. The President of us all; And let us make no bones β She ' s square as she i? tall. [167] DEBORAH KAPLAN She ' s one of the few, sincere in their way, Who say what they mean, and mean what they say. RUTH HELENE KXEIPER If you think you must be aged To be engaged, Change your mind, for Ruth, ' tis said, Soon will wed. PORTIA KELLOGG Which, we ask, her favorite name- sake β Shakespeare ' s character, or corn- flake ? ELEANOR KOHN She, each classmate understands. The most loyal girl we ' ve seen, For the ink upon her hands is A ' ways green. SARAH KITAY She throws herself right into The spirit of a thing, And no one can begin to Surpass her fiddle-ing. DOROTHY KOHN ST AM M We remember Greek Games supper Long ago, And we ' re sorry Dotty Kohnstamm 168 ] Had to go. LILLIAN MILDRED LUHRMAN Lillian ' s bent on emphasizing Every kind of calamity. This is really not surprising β She commutes from Jersey City. RUTH LAZAR A lot of compliments there are That we could give to Ruth Lazar. To write them in we do not dare. ' Twould make her rise to see them there. DOROTHY ALINE LIND Here ' s mathematical ability Combined with running track ability. You ' d have to search through all creation To find a better combination. MILDRED MABIE Is there anything sublimer (Here the argument grows hot) Than Chem. 5-6 a la Reimer? Maybe so and maybe not. VIRGINIA LITTAUER Jinny, with your shortened tress, Smile, and fairy lissome-ness; Penchant, too, for Pekin blue β You ' re the perfect ingenue. GERTRUDE MANNHARDT Once so young and blameless, she β Modest as a maid should be β (Weep, ye β for the tale divinely sad is!) Now she corrugates her locks! Buys La Dorine β by the box! Why? ' Tis very plain. She lives with Gladys. [ 169] GERTRUDE ELIZABETH MANNIS With pains and care She draws her hair From off her brow of alabaster; The author fears ' Twould take her years, Such skill in dressing hair to master. HELEN MAUCH We ' re convinced that in her place, man Couldn t make a better baseman. One thing more we ' ll say and that ' s β You should see her when she bats! MARJOR1E CECILE MARKS Very neat and systematic? Yes, she is! And at all this clever writing she ' s a wiz. You can see the childish glee shine from her phiz When she scatters Greek quotations through a quiz. ISABEL MARGUERITE M AUGER She considers you an ogre If perchance you call her Mauger. Moral: If you ' d not enrage her, Call her Mauger. HELEN MUHLFELD Her nature ' s very gentle, And slightly temperamental. In class she sits And sketches bits Of pictures ornamental. MARIE ROSE MAYER A combination, so they say, Of the naive, and the blase. EMMA THOMSON NEALE She ' s very, very quiet And has never raised a riot. And nobody in Barnard College Ever would deny it. MARGARET MONTGOMERY We never saw a girl so calm, So very; Or dignified as Margaret Montgom- Ery. HORTENSE NEUMAN The point is this β she ' s very squart. (Though not a Cubist schooler) ; Her line is Math., her talent ' s rare At diagrams circular. LORETTA MOORE If you have a grief or woe To Loretta you must go; She will soothe your woe or grief And provide a quick relief. [171 ] RUTH PATERSON To heights unthinkable she ' s stepped; Ambitious she, and college-y, For Patty ' s very special dept. Is Classical Philology. MILDRED CLAIRE PETERSON In gym. class Mildred climbs the ropes, Like her anthropoidal fathers. About her marks, she vaguely hopes, But, then, she really never bothers. SUZANNE A. PAYTON She studies Woman in the Home, And subjects equally entrancin ' . To gym. she tears, and doubtless wears That precious woolen scarf to dance in. [ 172] MARION EMILY PETERS Says Marion Peters While dropping a tear, Life ' s not so complete as When Sticky was here. ETHEL RAMAGE Ethel Ramage, Ethel Ramage, Do your Southern-ness no damage; Your warm Southern heart you ' ve lost To a girl whose name is Frost. CKRTRUDE MARJOR1E PHILLTPS When Marjorie P. is seen in tears She ' s not as sad as she appears, For you will know, if you are wise, ' Tis laughter makes her wipe her eyes. DOROTHfi REICHHARD She tackles little things like track And Field Day last November; For Dorothe of old A. A. Is quite the staunchest member. PHYLLIS MARIE PICKHARDT With a lunge, she tries a plunge, Nothing seems to drown her. She can do a jack-knife, too, With a hair-net crown her. IRMA REYNOLDS Though confining be the task, She ' ll do anything you ask; Makes no fuss or false palaver β Twenty-One ' s in luck to have her. MAGDALENA LEHMAN PINDAR Behold Magdalena Of proper demeanor; We ' re sorry to say it is Seldom we ' ve seen her. DOROTHY RITA RHOADES My poise is of that perfect sort That cannot be denied; For though I wear my dresses short, I ' m always dignified. EFFIE ROSS In a test-tube we will toast her, For indeed we cannot roast her. OLIVE RILEY She gaily hums a little air (No matter if it ' s off the key), And nonchalantly pats her hair (That is arranged so perfectly) ; Her skill in drawing ' s really rare (As from this book you plainly see.) E. FRANCES RUDD There ' s a far away look in her eyes of brown, That gaze at you distantly, up and down. HELEN RIVKIN For her powers of quick forgetion, Crown her with a wreath of laurels ; Four whole times in swift succession She forgot to take her orals. [174] CATHERINE RAFFAELA SANTELLI Dear! How does a person spell a Middle name like Rarfaela? ANTONIA SCHWAB Poetic fancy I adore, Rut Economics β what a bon AXXE ELIZABETH SCHMIDT Undoubtedly It ' s true that she Is prettyish. ' Twould better fit To say Anne Schmidt Is Schmittyish. GERTRUD SCHOEDLER Says Tutsie, At This thing or that I ' m poor and unreliable. This isn ' t true, Although she ' s u- Sually infalliable. JEANETTE SEELEY She is so self-effacing, Publicity non-chasing, You ' d scarcely guess Such politesse Our college halls is gracing. ELSIE SCHUMM When a great bacteriologist She ' s become, We ' ll acclaim a Barnard Collegist Elsie Schumm. BERNADETTE SHANLEY A Western girl is Bernadette, From mountainous Montana; She should be wild and wooly, yet She has a gentle manner. [ 175 HELEN MARGARET SHIRE Although she seems afloat in dreams, She ' s not so dreamy as she seems; In Kc. and Sociology, She ' s wide-awake as she can be. KATHERINE SMALL Diminutive K., As you may know, can play The piano and plays passing well o. But picture our plight. When we found that in spite Of her height she has mastered the ' cello. EVELYN SHRIFTE Evelyn Shrifte Has a gift Of tresses that are Titian. If we said They were red, She ' d wish us in Perdition. MARIE LOUISE SOLEY When her dark eyes dance, they say, She ' s with Theodosia Bay. X GRACE JULIA SINNIGEN Here ' s a maid of great discretion, Boasting only one obsession β Classic she, unto completion. Save her nose, which isn ' t Grecian. [176] RACHEL SOUHAMI She discusses subjects soaring, ' Spite of, My, I ' m not a higl brow ! Till we find ourselves imploring. Just how high is thy brow? MARY STUART Accent of the sunny South From out your mouth Makes us love to hear you do Mary Stuart. VIRGINIA STEWART My dear, I ' m simply dead, you know ; I didn ' t get to bed till four. This New York life does wear one so, And lecture hours are such a bore! ELEANOR M. TIEMANN She ' s one of that select small group That runs affairs athletic; She ' s modest and retiring and She ' s always sympathetic. ADELE STICKNEY Last year she dreamed in all her courses While thinking of new tricks for horses, Hut now her dreams have other sources! BERTHA CUMMINGS TOMPKINS A coasting party β all our bunch was there β the fellows looked a sight. Oh, oh, I think I ' ll sleep a while β I ' m going out again tonight. SARAH STRIER It is our desire To be like Sarah Strier, Who always works And never shirks, But vainly we aspire. [ 177 ] LETHEA TUR.MAN Lethea goes To teas and to shows, To parties and also to dances. From her retrousse nose To the tips of her toes She possesses a charm that entrances. GLADYS VAN BRUNT Glad can write a theme or so And a song for Junior Show While befuddling you and me With amazing repartee. LOIS ADELAIDE TUTTLE Lois Tuttle ' s very pat in Classic things, especially Latin. THERESA VOGEL Her Aspiration ' s running high; It ' s social work she ' s going to try. MARY ELIZABETH VAIL Mary ' s new with us this year; We are mighty glad we ' ve met her. Pity we so often hear, My, I wish I knew her better. FLORENCE VON DEESTEN About the town Hoboken It ' s really very lame For us to start a-jokin ' β 178] Flo lives there just the same. ADELAIDE VON HOLTEN My dear, and then he said to me β We didn ' t get out home till one β Yes, Chemistry ' s my favorite course. Of course it is; ask Marion. NATALIE EVA VVEINER Here ' s Natalie, Who studies in the library So chattily; Begowned, behatted, and befurred So nattily, Who ' s had an economic bee Just latterly. CLARA ALEXANDER WEISS She always has something to say On every conceivable matter; Etfusive and glib in her way, She ' ll chatter and chatter and chatter. FANNIE R. WAGENHEIM Little Fay; oh, little Fay, We bethought the other day, If we were as small as you, We could have a fur coat too. RUTH D. WARD Things political I thrive on; I play baseball, too, you know; And have you seen Tuts or Olive, ' Cause I really ought to go. SARA GATEWOOD WEST It ' s strange that Sara has That latter appellation; For she ' s as Southern as A sugar-cane plantation. [ 179 HELEN FRANCES WILLIAMSON With joy and elation And great animation She plunges right into An argumentation. BEATRICE E. WORMSER Smith was great, but just the same. Barnard ' s nearer home, you see. Here ' s a transfer, we acclaim, Well versed in diplomacy. BERTHA WITTLINGER I want to have a small white house. All trimmed with chintz and cre- tonne. I want a pleasant husband and A stool to rest my feet on. ROSALIND A. ZOGLIN Rosalind with ease can drench You or me with streams of French. We should like to sing her praise P In a paean of Franchise. t Honorary Members of the Class of 1921 Leonie Adams Martha Bode Ethel Cobban Ruth Colony Luenna von Eltz Gwendolyn Evans Sallie Faxon Alice Gott Dorothy Henrieques Elaine Huggard Marian Baer Kleban Elizabeth Ea Boyteaux Edith Lindeman Katherine MacGregor Virginia Otto Winthrop Bushnell Palmer Catherine Suydam Elizabeth Waterbury [181] Directory of Students 1920 Name Address Telephone No. Armstrong. E. H 32 E. 61st St. Plaza 679 Ashley, H 346 Lexington Ave. Murray Hill 6214 Anerbach, A. Buchman..51 W. 81st St. Schuyler 9571 Baldwin. E., 20 Bridge St., Hackensack, N. J. Barrington, A 3089 Broadway Barren, H. M 1678 First Ave. Barton, H. C 431 W. 121st St. Becker, B 145 W. 78th St. Benton, P 440 Riverside Drive Bien, E 243 W. 98th St. Borden, A. J 182 W. 58th St. Borst, H., Broadz ' iezv, 91 Maurice Ave., Elmhurst, L. I. Bostwick, W 612 W. 115th St. Boucher, M., Brooks, 165 Madison St., Brooklyn Brace, E 116 E. 58th St. Breaker, H., Furnald, 570 First St., Brooklyn Brosnan. K 501 W. 169th St. Brown, J 307 W. 98th St. Brubaker, R Mountain View, N. J. Burne, D., 547 Riverside Drive, Huntington, L. 1. Butler, D 14 Locust Hill, Yonkers C C alhoun, H., 247 Division Place, Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Carbonara, T., 169a Utica Ave., Decatur 5405 Brooklyn. N. Y. Chalmers, R. D 2654 Marion Ave. Fordham 206 Chase, J., Brooks, Morningside 7508 Spring Brook, Wis. Hackensack 371 Morningside 9740 Lenox 7189 Morningside 3388 Schuyler 7500 Morningside 8152 Riverside 5074 Circle 4972 Morningside 1475 Morningside 4710 Morningside 7508 Plaza 2282 Morningside 1400 South 1941 Wads worth 5330 Riverside 6100 Little Falls 12S-F4 Morningside 3753 Huntington 12 Yonkers 2131 Name Address Clark, H 416 West 118th St. 52 Larch Ave., Bogota, N. J. Clarke, H., Brooks 3346 Gilham Road, Kansas City Collucci, E 512 Classon Ave., B ' klvn Costello, M., Bahrens Place, Irving-on-the-Hudson Cox, L., 36 Grove St., Cranford, N. J. Crandall, L 519 W. 123rd St. Cupp, L., Furnald, Junction City, Ark. Curry, E., Brooks, 115 Prospect St.. Staunton, Va. Crowley, M 512 W. 122nd St. D Davey, D 167 W. 231st St. Douglas, J., Brooks, 21 E. 8th St., Atlanta, Ga. Everson, I., 259 St. Marks Place. New Brighton, Staten Island Eyre, L 138 E. 36th St. Telephone No. Morningside 3502 Morningside 7508 Prospect 4660 Irvington 1363 Cranford 180-M Morningside 1400 Morningside 7508 Morningside 3593 Kingsbridge 343 Morningside 7508 Tompkins 546-R Murray Hill 4164 South 6026 Circle 4670 Morningside 3108 Fox, E 504 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn Fishberg, E 170 W. 59th St. de la Fontaine, E 431 Riverside Drive Versailles, France Friedman, L., 172 Sterling Place, Brooklyn Prospect 3378-M Garfiel, E 20 E. 90th St. Garner, M., Brooks, Wantagh, N. Y. Lenox 1273 Morningside 7508 Wantagh 1286 [182] Name slddrcss Garritson, M. L., Brooks, 24(H) Broadway, Logansport, Ind. Goforth, W 412 W. 115th St. Gotheil, E 148 W. 75th St. Gruggel, C, 29th St., 16th Ave., Whitestone, N. Y. Guthrie, P 232 E. 11th St. H Hall. R 150 W. 92nd St. Harris, A., Brooks, Putnam, Conn. Harris, E 416 West 122nd St. Hicks. H., Brooks, 168 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. Himmelberger, K., 60 Linden Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Hobe, E., Brooks, 508 Oakwood St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Hopkins, A 1014 Madison Ave. Houghton, R., 453 Boulevard. Long Island City J Jareckv, F 138 W. 86th St. Jennings. A. S 44 E. 80th St. Jentz, V., 92 Sherman Place, Jersev City Johnston, A.. 501 West 121st St., 1719 Fifth Ave., Council Bluffs, Iowa. K Kaufinann. M ..316 W. 101st St. Keehan, H., 41 St. Nicholas Terrace 14 North York St., Paterson, N. J. Kennard. E 430 W. 118th St. Kidd, F 455 Fort Washington Ave. Koerner. S 601 W. 137th St. Kopald. S., 629 Gates Ave., Brooklyn Kossman, E 220 Cathedral Parkway Kriegsman, H 272 W. 90th St. Kydd, M 61 E. 70th St. L Landauer, T., Brooks, 62 W. State St., Albion, N. Y. Telephone No. Morningside 7508 Cathedral 7152 Columbus 1103 Flushing 2030-W Orchard 7818 Riverside 4787 Morningside 7508 Morningside 4475 Morningside 7508 Bergen 5012 Morningside 7508 Rhinelander 6478 Astoria 641 Schuyler 8736 Lenox 3219 Webster 4274-M Morningside 4886 Riverside 2572 Morningside 3880 Wadsworth 8812 Audubon 1600 Bedford 4250 Academy 1667 Riverside 3298 Rhinelander 3578 Morningside 7508 Name A ddress Telephone No. Lane, M 320 W. 96th St. Riverside 305 34 Revere St., Springfield, Mass. Leding, A., 59 Union St., Ridgewood, N. J. Ridgewood 1092 Lemcke, D 14 Van Ness Place Chelsea 6885 Leslie, A 503 W. 121st St. Morningside 5010 Lesser, J 795 St. Nicholas Ave. Audubon 9759 Levi, M 18 W. 88th St. Schuyler 5327 Liebeskind, H., 577 Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn Bedford 3204 Lockhart, M. L 209 Claremont Ave. M MacDonald, J 169 W. 76th St. Schuyler 1572 AlacAlahon, A 70 Morningside Drive Morningside 590 Maas. A 130 E. 72nd St. Rhinelander 9366 Mack, B 318 W. 100th St. Riverside 129 Mahneke, P., 30 North Washington PI., Astoria 2628 Astoria, N. Y. Magoon, A 2120 Harrison Ave. Fordham 2510 Marsh, A 414 W. 118th St. Morningside 3502 Marsh, L 414 W. 118th St. Morningside 3502 McKenzie, J., Broadviezv, Morningside 1475 1127 West St., Utica, N. Y. McFehell, E., Brooks, Morningside 7508 682 Second Ave.. Williamsford. Pa. Meissner, E. M.. 315 Oak St., West Hoboken, N. J. Meixell, G 540 W. 122nd St. Morningside 4880 Meylan, J 468 W. 141st St. Audubon 5764 Mochrie, M., 21 Ash St., Flushing, L. I. Flushing 926- M__ Mvers, M. G.. Broadview, Morningside 1475 183 North Parkway, East Orange. N. J. East Orange 3856-M N Nance, M.... 2161 Ludlow Ave. Westchester 796 Nicholson, M., Flying Fame, Morningside 4173 Iradell. N. J. Nolan, M 204 W. 78th St. Schuyler 3454 O O ' Brien, M.. 191 Brighton Ave., Perth Amboy, N. J. Perth Amboy 699-J Oldenbusch, C, 72 Marlborough Road, Brooklvn Flatbush 2608 [183] Name Address Omeis, F., 2884 Valentine Ave.. Bedford Park, T . Y. C. Opdycke. M. E 117 E. 69th St. P Piel, A., Broadview, Hewlett, Long Island Piersall, C, 109 South Third St., Mt. Vernon Pope, R., Brooks, 20 Crane St.. Caldwell. N. J. Porter, E 220 W. 111th St. R Rahe. E., 348 East 23rd St.. Flatbush Rafter, L Port Washington, N. Y. Rawson, M., Brooks, Box 214, R. F. D. 1, Asbury Park N. J. Raynor, A., Brooks, I slip, L. L, N. Y. Ressmeyer, G 348 W. 122nd St. Robb, D. A. ..482 Greene Ave.. Brooklyn Robb. J. H ..35 E. 64th St. 326 B. President St., Brooklyn Rogers, H. M., 326-B, President St., Brooklyn Rosenberg, M 57 E. 77th St. Reynolds, L., Brooks, A.t Cel Cl 1 3. I I Rothschild, L. V.... 823 West End Ave. Russell, 501 W. 121st St. S Scancarello, C, 104K Amity St., Flushing Schaeffer, K 419 W. 118th St. Schaeffer, F. L., 146 Hutton St., Jersey City Schellhase, E 141 W. 76th St. Schenck. C 2114 Daly Ave., Bronx Schwartz, E 151 Central Park West Scott, M 52 E. 54th St. Scott, M. E 100 Morningside Drive Seigbert, B 137 Riverside Drive Telephone No. Fordham 6132 Rhinelander 4308 Morningside 1475 Mt. Vernon 168 Morningside 7508 Cathedral 6224 Flatbush 8974 Port Wash. 414-J Morningside 7508 Morningside 5393 Bed ford_ 6386- W Plaza 6515 Hamilton 2437 Henry 2437 Rhinelander 188 Morningside 7508 Riverside 5786 Morningside 4886 Morningside 6946 Webster 3202 Fordham 5693-W Schuyler 7380 Morningside 6272 Schuvler 6263 Name Address Seidman, H. M., Brooks, 580 High St., Newark, N. J. Sexton, C, Brooks, 172 Cleveland St., Orange, N. J. Silbert, D., Brooks, 755 West 7th St., Plainfield, N. J. Silver, E., Fixing Fame, 149 Prospect Park, S. W., Brooklyn Simons, B. R 350 W. 88th St. Small, D 618 W. 113th St. Smith, K 546 W. 147th St. Smith, G. M., Brooks, 277 Canistro St., Hornell, N. Y. Sternberg, L 13 E. 94th St. Sutton, M., 149 Clinton Ave., Jersey City T Taff, M 320 W. 107th St. Tewes, M. C, 511 Broadway, Astoria, L. I. Thomas, G. E., Brooks, 5800 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Thompson, F., Brooks, Travis. M 29 W. 12th St. Tye, E., Brooks, 740 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. Tyndall, M.. Broadvieii ' , 201 So. Clinton St., East Orange, N. J. U Uhrbrach, M., 379 Sterling Place, Brooklyn V Vernon. L 104 E. 36th St. Bonham, Texas W Wallerstein, B., 334 Highland Ave., Mt. Vernon Walser, V. E., 296 Sterling Place, Brooklyn Weil, D 736 West End Ave. Wethey, O, Brooks, Port Washington, N. Y. Telephone No. Morningside 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside 4173 South 1054 Schuyler 3050 Cathedral 7268 Audubon 3400 Morningside 7508 Lenox 312 Market 8960 Academy 1379 Astoria 14 Morningside 7508 Morningside 7508 Chelsea 7574 Morningside 7508 .Morningside 1475 Prospect 8267-W Pennsylvania 185 Mt. Vernon 3132-J Prospect 8838-J River 3260 Morningside 7508 I 184] Name Address Telephone No. White. C 750 Carroll St., Brooklyn Whyte, B.. South 8588- W 114 Benedict Ave., Tarrytown, N. Y. Tarrytown 273 Widrevitz. L 2151 Walton Ave. Fordham 554 Name Address Telephone No. Wilkens, M. H., 284 Alexander Ave., N. Y. C. Melrose 261 Wood, L. M., 478 State St., Brooklyn Flushing 761 -J Wood, M. T.. 2 So. Broadway, Tarrytown, N. Y. 1921 Name Address A Abrahams, E 107 E. 70th St. Ahrens, F., 1547 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn Ammermuller, G 420 W. 130th St. Andrews. H 420 W. 116th St. Andrews. L 220 W. 107th St. Arkins, L 610 Riverside Drive Arnold, M., 2099 Valentine Ave., Portland, Ore. B Ball, H., Brooks, 73 Boyden Ave., So. Orange, N. J. Barton, M. E., Brooks, Marion, Ark. Bay, T.. 43 Burnett St., Maplewood, N. T. Beith. M., 437 Washington Ave., Pelham Wood, N. Y. Bell, J Gerard Hotel, 44th St. Bendheim, G., 333 Central Park West Beney, M. A 68 W. 95th St. Benz, M., Brooks, 85 E. Fourth St., Oswego, K. Y. Binzen, V., 251 East Kingsbridge Road. N. Y. C. Boeker, E 55 E. 86th St. Borre, H 175 Worth St. Brady. A 310 W. 93rd St. Breining. M., 29 E. 4th St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Brown, F. S 431 Riverside Drive Telephone No. Lenox 4097 Kenmore 2347-W Morningside 8500 Cathedral 7100 Academy 4794 Audubon 4786 Fordham 2241 Morningside 7508 Morningside 7508 Pelham 1332-R Bryant 1847 Riverside 3521 Riverside 9124 Morningside 7508 Fordham 689 Lenox 6804 Worth 2138 Riverside 1910 Morningside 3108 Name A ddress Burr, D 320 W. 107th St. 814 N. Prairie St., Bloomington, 111. Burroughs, M., Broadview, 65 Darvall St., Corona, L. I. Bush, M., 440 Homestead Ave.. Mt. Vernon Butler, L 106 Morningside Drive Byrne, L 167 W. 76th St. C Cannon. E., 362 East 30th St., Paterson, N. J. Carroll, H., Broadview, c o E. A. Shurman, Elkhorn, Neb. Carhart, G., Brooks, 1112 Main St., Peekskill, N. Y. Carter, A 2 E. 127th St. Castle, E., Brooks, 634 Webster Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Catoggio, R., 921 Hudson St., Hoboken Clark, J., Broadview, Northport, L. I. Clendenin, R., Flying Fame, 120 Vista Place, Mt. Vernon Cocke, F., Brooks, Warrenton, Va. Cooke, G 523 Lorimer St., Brooklyn Cossow, A 609 W. 191st St. Cottrell, L. B 777 West End Ave. Crabtree. R.. Flying Fame. Montgomery, N. Y. Telephone No. Academy 1379 Morningside 1475 Mt. Vernon 967-M Morningside 8905 Schuyler 5385 Morningside 1473 Morningside 1475 Morningside 7508 1852 Harlem Morningside 7508 Morningside 1473 Morningside 1475 Mt.Vernon 3158-W Morningside 7508 Stagg 4239-W Wadsworth 3470 Riverside 3076 Morningside 4173 Dai D G 501 W. 121st St. Morningside 7508 [185] Name Address Davidson, M., Brooks, 56 East 15th St., Brooklyn Davis, E., Flying Fame, Davis, M. F., Hotel Hargrave, West 72nd St. DeGraff, T. B 141 W. 104th St. Donovan, M. E Kingston, N. Y. Von Deesten, F., 618 Garden St., Hoboken Drachman, M 128 W. 121st St. E Edwards, G., Brooks, 422 Oakwood Ave., E. Aurora, N. Y. Ehrich, R. A 393 West End Ave. Ehrich, R. J 1 W. 72nd St. Eisenman, A. J 414 W. 118th St. 468 Brewster St., Bridgeport, Conn. Ellis, M., 400 West 124th St., Ridgebury, N. Y. F Falconer, H. M 604 W. 115th St. Falk, D 601 W. 141st St. Fawcett, L 57 E. 73rd St. Plainfield, N. J. Felter, B, Flyinq Fame, Ridgefield Park, N. J. Fine, E 200 W. 111th St. Fisher, M 67 W. 50th St. Fiske, M, 207 Bedford Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Frost, L., Brooks, Franconia, N. , H. G Gibson, E 525 W. 141st St. Gilbert, A., 911 W. 7th St., Plainfield, N. J. Goldsmith, L 33 Bank St., N. Y. C. Gorton, W., 4 Lenox Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Grafflin, R. S., 115 Mamaroneck Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Granger, M 612 W. 112th St. 1004 Estill Ave., Savannah, Ga. Granger, R 31 W. 94th St. Telephone No. Morningside 7508 Flatbush 2468 Morningside 4173 Columbus 4800 Academy 471 Kingston 83-W Hoboken 2581 Morningside 3240 Morningside 7508 Schuyler 8412 Columbus 1573 Morningside 3502 i Morningside 6225-W Morningside 6740 Audubon 8478 Rhinelander 2581 Morningside 9027 Cathedral 8908 Circle 2651 Mt. Vernon 548-R Morningside 7508 Audubon 18 77 Plainfield 2109 Chelsea 6265 W. Plains 1977-W W. Plains 91S-W Cathedral 6462 Riverside 3744 Name Address Telephone No. Green. G., Broadview, Morningside 1475 73 Paterson St., Paterson, N. J. Groehl, M....527 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn Williamsburg 4374 Guerdan, E., 138 Highpoint Ave., Weehawken Heights, X. J. Union 5323 Gurnee, L., Broadviciv, 168 Diamond Bridge Ave., Hawthorne, N. J. Paterson 1982-J H Hall, M. B 311 W. 94th St. Riverside 5015 Hallock, L 2244 Bronx Blvd., N. Y. Olinville 889 Harris. E 416 W. 122nd St. Morningside 4475 Haskell, M., 153 S. Third Ave., Mt. Vernon. X. Y. Mt. Vernon 2694-M Hessberg, R 255 W. 84th St. Schuvler 2831 Hoff, A 38 E. 72nd St. Rhinelander 9378 Hoffman, E., Williams Place, Queens. X. Y. Hollyer, M. J 259 Broad St Xewark, M 1 . Horn, L 324 E. 67th St. Rhinelander 3703 Hubbard, M 825 W. 178th St. St. Nicholas 9937 Hughy, V., Broadviezv. Morningside 1475 Eau Claire, Columbia, S. C. Hume, J.. Brooks Warsaw, X. Y. Morningside 7508 Hutton, E., 134 Allen Place. I Xew Brighton. S. I.. X. Y. T ' pkinsville 890-M J Jennings, M. A 44 E. 80th St. Lenox 3219 Jeremiah, R 202 W. 74th St. Columbus 3948 Johnson, A., 29 E. 4th St., Mt. Vernon, X. Y. Jones, H. B 357 W. 121st St. Morningside 6994 Jones, R., Brooks, Morningside 7508 3013 Stanton Ave., Cincinnati, O. K Kafka, B 1337 Madison Ave. Lenox 1684 Kahn, L, Brooks, Morningside 7508 503 Selma Ave., Selma, Ala. Kaplan, D 1620 Union St., Brooklyn Decatur 4349 Kellogg, P 527 W. 121st St. Morningside 5271 I 186] Name Address Telephone No. Kitay, S _. 115 E. 95th St. Lenox 5261 376 Broadway, Paterson, N. J. Kneiper, R 242 W. 109th St. Academy 820 Kohn, E 107 W. 120th St. Morningside 2222 Kohnstamm, D 611 W. 114th St. .Morningside 7359 L Lazar, R 701 W. 177th St. Wadsworth 8866 Lind, D 71 E. 96th St. Lenox 365 Littauer, V 227 E. 116th St. Harlem 3011 Luchenbacher, N., Graystone, Yonkers.N.Y. Luhrman, L..71 Crescent Ave., Jersey City Bergen 219 M Mabie, M., Flying fame, ' Morningside 4173 Bergenfield, N. J. Mannhardt, G 2340 University Ave. Eordham 1410 Marks, M 322 W. 100th St. Riverside 7018 Mannis, G., Brooks, Morningside 7508 Ft. Edward, N. Y. Marlatt, F., 104 Cottage Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Mt. Vernon 141-M Mauch, H .....357 W. 118th St. iMorningside 7190 Manger, I., 161 W. Passaic Ave., Rutherford, N.J. Rutherford 811-W Mayer, E 601 V. 149th St. Audubon 4380 Mayer, M 509 W. 110th St. Cathedral 3850 McCullock 2099 Valentine Ave. Eordham 2241 1150 E. Yamhill St., Portland, Ore. McXab, M., Brooks, Morningside 7508 2119 McKinney Ave., Dallas, Texas Milbank, V., Broadview, Morningside 1475 The Rectory. Freehold, N. Y. Montgomery, M 177 W. 95th St. Riverside 5121 Moore, L...195 12th St., Long Island City More, P 834 Sterling PI., Brooklvn Muhlfeld, H 960 Grand Concourse Melrose 4797 N Neale, E 620 W. 116th St. Morningside 3596 Neuman, 1 1 144 W. 120th St. Morningside 3546 Neumann, M 235 E. 86th St. Lenox 5268 P Partridge. M. L 528 Riverside Dr. Morningside 1776 Paterson, R 438 W. 116th St. Cathedral 7550 Name Address Payton, S., Flying Fame, 1241 N. Kings Highway, St. Louis, Mo. Penn, K., Brooks, 228 Central Ave., Humboldt, Tenn. Peterson, M 564 56th St., Brooklyn Phillips, M 35 Riverside Drive Peters, M., Brooks, 1158 56th St., Brooklyn Pickhardt, P., 43 6th St., North Pelham, N. Y. Pindar, M 510 W. 123rd St. R Rabb, M., 200 Chatterton Parkway, White Plains, N. Y. Ramage, E., Brooks, 528 S. McLean Blvd., Memphis, Tenn. Reichhard, D...14 King St., Jamaica, L. 1. Reynolds, I., 182 Scarsdale Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. Rhoades, D., 27 N. 15th St., Flushing, N. Y. Riley, 414 W. 120th St. Rivkin, H 305 V. 114th St. Ross, E., Brooks, U. S. Hospital, Ransville, N. Y. Rudd, E 542 Monroe St., Brooklyn S Santelli, C, 223 Astoria Ave., Long Island City Schmidt, A 740 Riverside Drive Schoedler, G 249 W. 107th St. Schumm, E 422 V. 44th St. Schwab, A 549 W. 113th St. Scott, M. W., Flying Fame, Seeley, J.. 247 Lafayette Ave., Grantwood, N. J. Shanley, B., Furnald, 201 W. Granite St., Butte, Mont. Shire, H Woodmere, L. I. Shrifte, E., 435 Ft. Washington Ave., N. Y. C. Sinnigen. G., Brooks, Small. K 301 E. 207th St. Telephone No. Morningside 4173 Morningside 7508 Sunset 4019-J Columbus 6078 Morningside 7508 Boro Pk. 4399-J Pelham 1568-W Morningside 9030 W. Plains 751-R Morningside 7508 Jamaica 2433 Tuckahoe 34 Flushing 1825 Morningside 8760 Morningside 7508 Bedford 9398 Audubon 4570 Academy 714 Longacre 1467 Cathedral 7890 Morningside 4173 Morningside 1400 Woodmere 3475 Wadsworth 9432 Morningside 7508 [187 1 Name Address Soley, M 429 W. 214th St. Souhami, R ......617 W. 143rd St. Spencer, A., Flying ' Fame, 201 Park Ave., Raleigh, N. C. Stuart, M., Brooks, 860 Charlierlavne Ave., Richmond, Va. Stewart, V 48 W. 72nd St. 2235 Putnam St., Toledo, O. Strier, S., 419 Jersey St., New Brighton, S. I. Stickney, A., Brooks, 450 Westminster Ave., Elizabeth. X. J. T Thomas, G. E., Brooks, 5800 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Tiemann, E 382 Wadsworth Ave. Tompkins, B., 13 East View Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Travers, A Great Neck, L. I. Turman, L., Broadview, Heckston Hall, Atlanta, Ga. Turtle, L., Broadview, 338 Madison St.. Brooklyn V Vail, M., 9 Petersville Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. Telephone No. Wadsworth 3310 Audubon 4286 Morningside 4173 Morningside 7508 Columbus 2178 Tompkinsville 2337 Morningside 7508 Morningside 7508 Wadsworth 3136 White Plains 294-J Great Neck 46-R Morningsid ' e 1475 Bedford 3454 New Rochelle 2986 Name Address Telephone No. Van Brunt, G 2340 University Ave. Fordham 1410 816 Putnam Ave.. Brooklyn Bushwick 1943 Vogel, T., 130 Washington Ave., Suffern, N. Y. Yon Holten, A.. 270 Franklin St., Brooklyn Greenpoint 4358 W W ' agenheim. F.. Brooks, Morningside 7508 117 Guy Park Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. Ward, oΒ£H m ,Β°β’ c 6 ' Morningside 4102 Ward R. 835 W 179th St. Wadsworth 2170 Werner N 375 West End Ave. Schuy]er 8558 eiss ' C 1 w 81 Schuyler 7329 West - S 431 West 121 st St - Morningside 3388 Whelpley, E Halsted Place. Rye, N. Y. R ye 553 Williamson, F., 559 Willoughby Ave., Brooklyn W ' msburg 4260-W Wittlinger, B Pocantico Hills, N. Y. Tarrytown 204-J Wormser. B 210 Riverside Drive Riverside 5684 Wurkstader, B., Flying Fame, Morningside 4173 Jefferson, Texas Z Zoglin, R 127 W. 82nd St. Schuyler 6958 1922 Name Address B Baird, E. B., 733 South St., Elizabeth, N. Y. Ball, J. M 400 W. 118th St. Bassler, K. R., Brooks. 6115 Navarre PI., Cincinnati, O. Bates, S. L., Flying Fame, Franklinville, N. Y. Beard. M. L 140 W. 69th St. Bell, F., Broadvieiv, 504 Whitney Ave., New Haven, Conn. Beers, J. A... 1990 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn Telephone No. 4769 Morningside 7508 Morningside 4173 Morningside 3996 Columbus 1475 Morrineside Name Address Telephone No. Bennet, A., Brooks, 7508 Morningside 238 E. Main St., Port Jervis, N. Y. Berry, D. J.. Brooks 7508 Morningside Booth, D., Brooks, 7508 Morningside Marbledale. Conn. Bower, M. D 510 W. 123rd St. Brooks, J. E., Parnassus Club. W. 115th St. 3673 Morningside 35 Woodland Ave., New Rochelle Brower, L., Brooks, 7508 Morningside Nolensville Ave., Nashville. Tenn. BuelL B, W 131 East 66th St. 140 Rhinclander 221 Fourth St.. Marietta. Ohio [ 188] No . Id dress Bull. M. D 430 W. 116th St. Bush, M., 440 Homestead Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Cahn, E., Furnald, Seneca St., Far Rockaway, L. I. Callan, R 2287 University Ave. Cannon, M. S 6 West 87th St. 400 E. Church St., Gainersville, Fla. Caskey, D. M., 29 Ridgeview Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Clark, R 342 50th St., Brooklyn Coffey, K. F 968 St. Nicholas Ave. Coffin. A. C, Broadview, 116 N. 9th St., Newark, N. J. Coleman, A. L 213 E. 51st St. Comstock, M 313 W. 86th St. Conover, A. E Riverside, Conn. Corse. E., Brooks, 2301 First Ave. So., Minneapolis, Minn. Covert, A. D., The Drive, Richmond Hill, N. Y. Craven, D., 296 Woodworth Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. D Daniels, E., 87-30 108th St.. Richmond Hill, L. I. Dayton, H. D 4717 6th Ave., Brooklyn Davis, J., Flying Fame, 5450 Clemens Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Davis, N. K., Fixing Fame, 875 Exeter Ave., West Pittston, Pa. Denton. M. F 519 West 121st St. 951 Madison Ave., Paterson, N. J. Delafield. E 20 W. 58th St. Dewey. J. M., Brooks, Huntington, L. I Dewey, A. F., Broadview Spencerport, N. Y. Dodd, M. M., 7 Wallace Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Donnellan, S. P., Brooks, 556 Summer Ave., Newark, N. J. Telephone No. 7214 Cathedral Mt. Vernon 967 -M 1400 Morningside 842 Fordham 4032 Schuyler 2532 White Plains 9459 Sunset 6071 Audubon 1475 Morningside 6019 Schuyler 7085 Morningside 862-J Richm ' d Hill 2914 Yonkers 678 Richmond Hill 3486 Sunset 9072 Morningside 4173 Morningside 8790 Morningside 5090 Paterson 2394 Plaza 7508 Morningside 1475 Morningside 541 Mt. Vernon 7508 Morningside Name .Address Telephone No. Donovan, M 620 W. 122nd St. Dowd, H 564 W. 182nd St. 2932 Wadsworth Dunbacher, R 628 W. 151st St. 7801 Audubon Durgin, M.. Broadview, 1475 Morningside Franklin, N. H Dwyer, D 456 W. 153rd St. 305 Audubon E Echert, M. L., 46 Depuyster St., N. Tarrytown, N. Y. Elwood, L., Brooks, 7508 Morningside Menominee, Mich. Emerson, 1 125 Riverside Drive 5990 Schuyler Emerson, M 125 Riverside Drive 5990 Schuyler F Eezandie, M 165 E. 66th St. 2411 Rhinelander Fink, H 420 Riverside Drive 7481 Morningside Eoote, N., Broadviezv 147; Morningside Frankenstein, H. L....472 West End Ave. 8979 Schuyler Freudenthal, E 59 East 75th St. - Rhinelander G Gaarder, H. A.... 17 Sterling PI., Brooklyn Garfunkel, E 145 W. 119th St. 387 Morningside Gerdau, M 146 W. 75 St. 412 Columbus Gerlach, E., 3 Park Terrace, White Plains, N. Y. 4-R White Plains Giordano, M 2922 Grand Concourse 1912 Fordham Gibson, E.. Furnald, 1400 Morningside Newman, Ga. Glynn. A., Broadview, 1475 Morningside South Broadway, Nyack, N. Y. Gorton, N. S., 4 Lenox Ave., White Plains, N. Y. 1977-W White PI. Goulet, A. L., Brooks, 7508 Morningside 12 E. 95th St. Greenman, M. H., Broadvieiv, 1475 Morningside 27 N. Church St., Cortland, N. Y. Guercken, V 1 W. 93rd St 3521 Riverside H Hackmann 401 W. 118th St. 198 Morningside Hall, R. S 150 W. 92nd St. 4787 Riverside [189] Name Address Harlow, E 325 W. 86th St. Harpootlian, S., Broadview, 69 Jewel St., Faust Hill, L. I. Harrison, B. W Whitestone, L. I. Heath, E. H., 8535 102d St., Richmond Hill, L. I. Henry, A., 125 S. 30th St., Flushing, L. I. Heyinan, E. H 440 West End Ave. Hoffman, H. G., Brooks, 130 Davenport Ave., New Haven, Conn. Holden, 0....122 MacLean Ave., Yonkers Hooper, G 130 W. 74th St. Hutchison, E., 174 Hawthorne Ave., Yonkers J Jacoby, E 39 Claremont Ave. Janeway, F ....131 E. 60th St. Johnson, E. M., Broadview, Bay Port, N. Y. Johnson, E. R., Furnald, 115 Union Place, Lynbrook, N. Y. Johnson, R. M., Flying Fame, East Orange, N. J. Jones, A. C, Brooks, 146 Tennyson Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Joscphson, L 2132 Daly Ave. K Kaslofsky, A 328 Henry St., N. Y. Kammerer, E. Ktllner, N 2 W. 89th St. Kimball, 100 West 115th St., Waco, Texas Kingsley, R. S., Broadview, 512 N. George St.. Rome, N. Y. Koehler, R 815 W. 180th St. Kornfeld, M 114 E. 71st St. Kraft, K. M., 8650 105th St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. Kraus, B 2345 Broadway L Lahiff. N 201 W. 106th St. Laporte, M. C 129 E. 91st St. Lehmann. M 600 W. 116th St. Telephone No. 6356 Schuyler 1475 Morningside 213-W Flushing 886-M Richm ' d H. 1144-J Flushing 4300 Schuyler 7508 Morningside 687 Yonkers 3273 Columbus 3167-R Yonkers 6480 Morningside 1205 Plaza 1475 Morningside 1400 Morningside 1040-W Lynbrook 4173 Morningside 7508 Morningside 5872 Fordham 8247 Riverside 1475 Morningside 9930 Wadsworth 782 Rhinelander 2139 Richmond H. 7840 Schuyler 8670 Lenox 8606 Morningside Name Address Leof, M.. Furnald, 5700 N. Franklin St., Philadelphia, Pa. Levin, H., 1433 Cornaga Ave., Far Rockaway, L. I. Lewton, L., Who Torrok Cottage, King St, Port Chester, N. Y. Lindsay, G 225 E. 35th St. Lithauer, D 215 W. 98th St. Lowe, J, Broadview, 153 Johnson Ave, Tottenville, N. Y. Ludlam, E, 44 W. 37th St, Bayonne, N. Y. M MacArthur, E, Broadviezv MacKechnie, G. H 101 W. 96th St. McCarty, S. A, Brooks, 1727 19th St. N. W, Washington, D. C. McConangby, F, Brooks, 123 W. 4th Ave, Holdrege, Neb. Mack, E, Broadview, 141 Heller Parkway, Newark, N. J. Mack, H 318 W. 100th St. Marshall, M, Brooks, Rloomfield, Ind. Martin, A. G, Brooks, , Portchester, N. Y. Meehan, H β 537 W. 152nd St. Melnick, R. D 606 West 116th St. Sidney, N. Y. Mendel, E 160 W. 86th St. Metcalf. M, 435 Van Courtland Park Ave, Yonkers Meyer, F 600 W. 113th St. Meyers, F. C 599 W. 178th St. Mills, K, Fur)iald, 572 Van Courtland Park Ave, Yonkers Mosher, M, Furnald, 1925 7th Ave. N Nason, C 157 W. 105th St. North, L, Broadview, 178 Summit Ave, Upper Montclair, N. J. O Ogdcn. A. R 383 Park Ave. Telephone No. 1400 Morningside 1805 Far Rockw ' y. 855-M Pt. Chester 3542 Murray Hill 9035 Riverside 1475 Morningside 1475 Morningside 7314 Riverside 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside 1475 Morningside 129 Riverside 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside 8779 Audubon 1473 Morningside 8606 Schuyler 3968 Cathedral 2840 Wadsworth 1400 Morningside 1400 Morningside 1466 Academy 1475 Morningside 2284-M Montclair 4087 Plaza [ 190 ] Name Address Orne. E 18 Clyde St., Jamaica, N. Y. Osterhout, 74 W. 103d St., Leanington, Ont., Canada P Parker, X 106 Morningside Drive Peterson, A., 248 Fillmore St., New Brighton, S. I. Pott, L 304 W. 99th St. Prince, H. C, Brooks, Wildcliff, New Rochelle R Ranson, V., Furnald, 2950 Staunton Rd., Huntington, W. Va. Rasmussen, R 434 W. 120th St. Ratchford, A., Broadview, 52 State St., Danbury, Conn. Rathbone, 1 476 W. 143d St. Reynard. E., 610 W. 116th St., Pall River, Mass. Reynolds, C, 137 Carteret Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Rice, D, Motel St. Andrew, 72d St. and B ' way Rissinger, M. W., 600 W. 116th St., 175 N. Laurel St., Hazleton, Pa. Rissland, L., Brooks, 86 Gainsboro St., Boston, Mass. Roe, W 545 W. 158th St. Rosenthal, G 530 West End Ave. Ruhl, J. B 395 E. 154th St. S Sack, V. 1 395 Ft. Washington Ave. Sadler, K. S 449 W. 153d St. Satterthwaite. II 62 W. 85th St. Schaefer, K. C 327 W. 108th St. Schlichting, L., 803 Washington St., Hoboken, N. J. Shearn, E 308 W. 78th St. Sheehan, II., Brooks, 27 Gould Ave., Newark, N. J. Sholes, E., 304 Union Ave., Cranford, N. J. Sicular, A 466 W. 151st St. Sims, R 153 W. 80th St. Stahl, R 1929 Andrews Ave., N. Y. 1 elephone No. 3370 Academy 8905 Morningside 102-W Tompknsv. 5976 Riverside 7508 Morningside 1400 Morningside 8440 Morningside 1475 Morningside 5636 Audubon 3040 Morningside 653 Bergen 4080 Columbus 8606 Morningside 7508 Morningside 5830 Audubon 6092 Schuyler 7739 Melrose 7216 Audubon 4593 Schuyler 1164 Academy 402-W Hoboken 4232 Schuyler 7508 Morningside 144-W Cranford 6237 Audubon Name Address Staum, E 308 W. 78th St. Starke, E., Brooks, Oscawana-on- Hudson Steinle, M 174 W. 93d St. Stein feld, V 70 W. 55th St. Stickel, E 230 E. 35th St. Strang, 1 256 W. 100th St. Sworts, V 508 W. 114th St. T Talliaferro, M 145 E. 49th St. Talley, M., 224 Hamilton St.. Rahway, N. J. Taylor, P 130 Claremont Ave. Thirwall, K., 90 Mamaroneck Ave., White Plains Thomas, D., Broadview, 29 S. Sticker St., Baltimore, Md. Thorn, M. B.. 38 Ridgewood Ave.. White Plains, N. Y. Tonks. N 87 Hamilton Place, N. Y. U Qhrbrock, M..379 Sterling Place, Brooklyn V Veit, E., Furnald, Far Rockawav. X. Y. Vincent. M 225 W. 86th St. Van Horn. R., Brooks, Harrison, N. Y. W Wachman. R 889 St. Nicholas Ave. Wahlquist, E., Brooks, Minneapolis, Minn. Wallace, J., Brooks, 124 Mulberry St.. Springfield, Mass. Wallberg, M 35 Claremont Ave. Walsh. A. L...19 Grant St., Newark. N. J. Ware. R.. 52 Elivor Place, Yonkers, X. Y. Warren, H., Shore Acres, Mamaroneck. X. Y. Wetterer, E 1124 Jackson Ave.. X. Y. Whelpley. E. A...Halstead Place, Rve. X. Y. Wilder, D 601 W. 113th St. Wilder, 1 288 E. 10th St. Wing, M 524 Lafavette Ave., Brooklvn Wohl, R. R 1845 Seventh Ave. Telephone No. 7508 Morningside 447 Riverside 290 Circle 1052 Riverside 7650 Cathedral 6643 Plaza 291 Morningside 613 White Plains 1475 Morningside 236-R White PI. 1200 Audubon 8267-W Prospect 1400 Morningside 10400 Schuyler 7508 Morningside 830-R Park 3050 Audubon 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside 5372 Morningside 3283 Yonker s 587 Mamaroneck 4205 Intervale 563 Rye 7143 Cathedral 687 Orchard 8814 Cathedral [191] 1923 Name. Address. A Allen, L. B 506 W. 113th St. Adler, R., Brooks, 434 Guy Park Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. Autenrieth, O. M., 1411 Crotona Ave.. N. Y. C. B Baker, D., 3 Prospect Terrace, Yonkers, N. Y. Balder. H. F., 127 Ridgewood Ave., B ' lyn Barta, D 208 Macon St., Brooklyn Batterhain, E. A 143 Waverly Place 82 Church St., Asheville, N. C. Becker. G 322 W. 85th St. Benjamin, C. C 154 West 88th St. Biber, S. B...1014 East 10th St., Brooklyn Black, M., 158 Montross Ave.. Rutherford, N. Y. Blauvelt, A. M., Brooks. West Nyack, N. Y. Bliss, M., 2226 Loring Place, University Heights Boas, A. F., 230 Franklin Ave., Grantwood, N. Y Bowman, I. F 452 77th St., Brooklyn Bowtell, M. E.. Brooks. Fort Edward, N. Y. Boyd, M. E....778 Lincoln Place, Brooklyn Bradway, E. A., Brooks. llaverford, Pa. Brandt, M. V.. Brooks, Greensboro, Va. Brink, F. M., Brooks. Lake Katrine Brown, G., 527 W. 121st St., 39 Edgewood Pk., New Rochelle, N. Y. Byers, J. E., Brooks, Iron River, Mich Byrnes, M. T.. .42 State St., Flushing, L. I. C Cah ill, G. L., Brooks, New Dorp, Staten Island. N. Y. Telephone No. 7925 Cathedral 7508 Morningside 3314-W Tremont 3001 Yonkers 3048 Cypress 1128 Schuyler 4237 Schuyler 2664 Midvale 223-R Rutherford 7508 Morningside 1208 Fordham 60 Cliffside 4607 Bay Ridge 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside 5271 Morningside 3869 New Rochelle 7508 Morningside 1477 Flushing 7508 Morningside Name Address Cainpanaro, R., Furnald, Oyster Bav St. Case, E. M 68 E. 86th St. Case. T. K.. Brooks, Hammondspont, N. Y. Casey, M. E., 28 Clinton PL, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Coleman. A. L 213 E. 51st St. Copenhauer, J 130 Claremont Ave. Corse, E., Brooks, 2301 First Ave., South Minneapolis Coxe, D. 1 455 Ft. Washington Ave. Crook, A. R., Brooks, Champlain, N. Y. D Danchakoff. V 644 W. 173d St. Davis, E. B 620 W. 116th St. Dean, H 169 W. 228th St. De Botton, G 10 Manhattan Ave. De Lamatre, E. P., 150 Claremont Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Denham, B. V., Laureate Hall, Amsterdam Ave. and 119th St. Denton, M. F 519 W. 121st St. Dockstader, D. M., Brooks,. . Fonda, N. Y. Dunbrach, W. J., 172 Arlington Ave., Jersey City Elsaser, E. K 2132 Grand Ave. Boonville, N. Y. Elting, D., Brooks, 706 Koenig St., Grand Island. Neb. Fahs, V. G., Brooks, Selden, Gloucester Co., Va. Fergerson, E. F 147 W. 55th St. Foxell, M. E., Furnald, 271 Pawling Ave., Troy Frankel, D 94 Hamilton Place Fredrick, W. M Tuckahoe, N. Y. Varysburg, Wyo. Fulladosa, O. P 535 W. 151st St. Telephone No. 1400 Morningside 6165 Lenox 7508 Morningside 291 Morningside 7508 Morningside 8812 St. Nicholas 7508 Morningside 4140 St. Nicholas 3596 Morningside 4845 Riverside 2446- J Mt. Vernon 1800 Mnrningside 8790 Morningside 7508 Morningside 2252-M Bergen 1879 Fordham 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside 240 Circle 1400 Morningside 1150 Audubon 1642 Audubon [ 192 1 Name Address G Gait. E. H., Brooks. 679 Eighth St., Bowling Green, Ky. Gies, O. E 249 E. 86th St. Gleichman, 1 207 Dyckman St. Glorieux, 1 3811 Sedgwick Ave. Goldstone, 11 601 W. 113th St. Grav, H., 175 Main St., Ridgefield Park, N. J. H Haig, P. V., Brooks, 1 1 aigville, Neb. Hall, M. E., 30 E. 127 St.. Monroe, N. Y. H aigville, Neb. llankinson, K 529 W. 111th St. Harden, IL A., Brooks, 14 Browson St., Oswego, N. Y. Harris, D. G 980 Prospect Ave., Bronx Hattorfif, E. M 30 Van Corlear Place Hegeler, L. S 969 Park Ave., N. Y. Hemstreet, M. R 117 W. 129th St. Herring, V. de 1 ' 126 Claremont Ave. Hoctor. E 322 W. 57th St. Hoff, R 38 E. 72d St. Hoffman, G 1 51 Hamilton Place Hohmen. A. H 605 W. 115th St. Houghton, 1) Kenyon, Minn. 453 Boulevard. Long Island City Hughes, A. F., Broadview, 269 Berkley Ave., Bloomfield, X. J. I Issertell, E 26 Highland Ave., Yonkers J . Janicke. V 412 1-ourth Ave., Brooklyn Jaros, N 277 State St., Flushing, N. Y. Jennings, E., Broadview, Paterson, N. J. Jones, A. 11., Furnald, Charleston, Mo. Johnson, R. M.. Fixing Fame, 12 S. Maple Ave., East Orange, N. J. Jones, R. S., Broadview, East Aurora, N. Y. K Kassner, M. L., 201 Hillside Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. Telephone No. 7508 Morningside 6710 Lenox 2230 St. Nicholas 112 Kingsbridge 7749 Cathedral 1319-J Hackensack 7508 Morningside 3015 Harlem 6290 Cathedral 7508 Morningside 1261 Intervale 738-R Marble 6640 Morningside 4412 Columbus 3978 Rhinelander 1410 Audubon 641 Astoria 1475 Morningside 843 Yonkers 2070 Flushing 1475 Morningside 1400 Morningside 4173 Morningside 1475 Morningside 2385 Jamaica Name Address Kingman, E. B., Brooks, 165 Highland Ave., Kingston, N. Y. Klein, E 137 W. 119th St. Roller, H. W 681 Madison Ave. Korn, W. M 411 West End Ave. Krieger, L. A 1474 56th St., Brooklyn L Laf Loofy, N., 1131 Ruby St., Woodhaven, L. [. Lane, W., Broadview, South Road, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Langton. M. E 501 West 121st St. 4215 Westminster PI.. St. Louis, Mo. Lehmann, G 600 W. 116th St. Lewis, 1 517 Masson St., Brooklyn Lincoln, A.... 379 Sterling Place, Brooklyn 1303 N. Dearborn Ave., Chicago, 111. Lincoln. A. E., Brooks. Minneapolis, Minn. Loftus, C. L 415 W. 120th St. London, M. M 275 East Broadwav Loud, M 104 E. 40th St. Lustbader, R 163 E. 82d St. M McCarthv, G. V 601 W. 140th St. McDonald, L. E., Brooks. 72 W. Fifth St., Oswego, N. Y. McElroy, K. S.. Brooks. Princeton, N. J. McGuire, E., Broadview, 40 E. State St.. Monson, Mass. McNamara. C 601 W. 174th St. MacDonald, A 169 W. 76th St. MacPherson, P. W., Flying Fame, 480 Madison Ave., Scranton, Pa. Malonev, D 83 Riverside Drive Mann, H., 32 Winfield Ave., Mt. Vernon. N. Y. Manning, D. L..15 Lamartine Ter., Yonkers Marples, E...87 N. 80th St., Flushing. L. I. Martens, E. M., Broadview, Shrub Oak. N. Y. Marx, E 222 Riverside Drive Midelfart. A. L.. Brooks. 343 Gilbert Ave., Eau Claire. Wis. Telephone No. 7508 Morningside 6041 Moringside 287 Plaza 9361 Schuyler 6581 Borough Pk. 1475 Morningside 4886 Morningside 8606 Morningside 5363- J Bedford 8267 W. Prospect 7508 Morningside 9792 Orchard 1638 Murrav Hill 1319 Lenox 1140 Audubon 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside 1475 Morningside 4040 Wads worth 1572 Schuyler 4173 Morningside 8734 Schuyler 2900 Mt. Vernon 1141-M Yonkers 1268-W Flushing 1475 Morningside 9647 Riverside 7508 Morningside [193] NaΒ ie Address Miller M....2592 Creston Ave., New York Moen, Y 337 West 70th St. Moffatt, E 437 W. 117th St. Moore, A. L 380 Riverside Dr. Moreau, E 541 Lexington Ave. Morehouse, E., 1974 University Ave., Little Falls, N. Y. Muhlfeld, E 960 Grand Concourse Murden, L. C, 4 Irving PI., White Plains Murray, J 67 75th St., Brooklyn N Naulty, M. K., 144 Ralston Ave., South Orange, N. J. Near, A., Brooks, 246 Juniper St., Atlanta, Ga. Newton, L. K........492 9th St, Brooklyn Nickson, M. E, ' Flying Fame, 464 Riverside Drive, N. Y. O O ' Brien, K. V Pawling, N. Y. O ' Malley, E. R. .587 Riverside Dr., N. Y. C. P Pattenden, H. F 83 St. Nicholas Place Perry, K. I, Broadview, East Aurora, N. Y. Peters, M. 1 1517 Lurking Ave, Bronx Petri, E Irvington, N. Y. Phelps, C. V, Brooks, 5 W. Millers St, Newark, N. J. Pirazzini, M. E.40 Bedford P ' k Blvd.N.Y.C. Pless, H 789 West End Ave. Pratt, H. E 21 W. 106th St. Prince, R 601 W. 110th St. R Raia, A 607 Third Ave. Raphael, E 911 Fox St. Reynolds, E. A, 155 Spring St, Ossining, N. Y. Ricciardi, F Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Rice, E 243 W. 99th St, N. Y. C. Rietmann, M, 419 34th St, Woodcliff. N. Y. Rodriguez, C 49 Claremont Ave. Telephone No. 4358 Fordham 8661 Columbus 4173 Morningside 7840 Cathedral 8521 Plaza 5589-W Fordham 4797 M elrose 764-M White PI. 9829 Bay Ridge 7508 Morningside 936-R South 1475 Morningside 4690 Audubon 1475 Morningside 1595 Irvington 7508 Morningside 1996 Fordham 9151 Riverside 2222 Academy 7070 Cathedral 7299 Vanderbilt 825 Ossining 40-M Dobbs Ferry 3508 Riverside 1173 Union 7070 Morningside Name Address Roman. D 43 W. 110th St. Ross, B. E 604 W. 115th St. Ruperti, W 140 E. 71st St. S Schmalz, L. W, Flying Fame, 9 Bonn PI, Weehawken, N. J. Scholze, D. E 283 Alexander Aye. Schreiter, E. A 790 Riverside Drive Schroeder, D, 36 South Ave, Corona, I, I. Seymour, K. L, 470 S. Belmont Ave, Newark, N. J. Shatz, D. L 205 Maple St, Brooklyn Shaw, R. G, Broadviciv, Northheld, Vt. Shea, K. H, Brooks 58 Elm St, Charlestown, Mass. Sheehan, E. M 203 W. 117th St. Shrader, V. E 320 West 107th St. 801 N. Highland Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa. Simpson, G, Hollywood Ave, Crestwood, N. Y. Sinclair, N, 45 Coleridge St, Manhattan Beach, N. Y. Slaughter, M. L, Broadview, 16 S. Prado, Atlanta, Ga. Slavton, A 162 Bush St. Smith. A. T 534 76th St, Brooklyn Spear, 2720 Creston Ave. Spotz. M 499 W. 135th St. Stauffer, E. N, Brooks, Silver Springs, Pa. Stoddard, H. G 587 Riverside Drive Strauss, R.217 Stanton Ave, Detroit, Mich. Strong, L. F, Flying Fame, 333 Central Park West Tow-on, C, Brooks, Nitro, W. Va. Trusler, M.. Brooks, 651 E. 23d St, Indianapolis, Ind. V VanBuskirk, D 21 W. 123d St. Telephone No. 6540 University 6740 Morningside 4508 Rhinelander 4173 Morningside 5486 Melrose 5400 Audubon 2883-R Newton 8155 Waverly 1720 Flatbush 1475 Morningside 7508 Morningside 3930 Morningside 3053 Coney Island 1475 Morningside 1063 Fordham 5371 Fordham 2960 Morningside 7508 Morningside 3409 Morningside 3521 Riverside 4173 Morningside 7508 Morningside 7508 Morningside [ 194] Nc Address Van Horn, C. L., 230 Freemont St., Peekskill, N. Y. W Wahlers, M. H...602 Decatur St., Brooklyn Weaver, M., Brooks, Rugby Road, University, Pa. Telephone No. 5942 Bushwick 7508 Morningside Name Address Weeks, AI. R 615 W. 162d St. Weil, D. Z Box 328. Cedarhurst, L. I. Werner, H. M..57 W. 2nd St.. Mt. Vernon White, M 461 W. 43d St. Williams, A. P 110 W. 128th St. Wise, E. H 550 Park Ave. Wood, E. R., 171 Lincoln Ave., Newark, N. J. Telephone No. 5140 Wadsworth 2173 Far Rock ' way 3334 Mt. Vernon 1154 Longacre 132 Morningside 5819 Plaza 8588 Branchbrook [195] Matriculated Specials B Bancroft, A. W 201 W. 101st St. 6 Glen Road, Winchester, Mass. C Carson, K 18 St. Nicholas Place Chandron, M. B 130 Claremont Ave. Cherry, C. V 523 W. 121 St. Christy, R. L 605 W. 156 St. D Davis, E. B 620 West 116th St. Davis, H. M. Spencer Arms, Broadway and 69 St. F Field, A. L., Furnald 1171 N. Cedar Ave., Galesburg, 111. Franck, H..48 Berwick St., Orange, N. J. N. Trilravus 30, Copenhagen, Denmark Fraser, F. H 423 W. 118 St. G Gay, C. M 17 E. 11 St. Gibb, A. S 42 W. 75 St. H Haley, E. C, 126 Fort G reene PI., Brooklyn Haupt, L. C 86 Pierpont St., Brooklyn Hodenpyl, M 37 E. 63 St. J Jonas, S. S 611 W. 127 St. Jordan, M 130 Claremont Ave. M McLean, E. C 445 W. 21 St. Mac Donald, I. A. 586 Summer Ave., Newark, N. J. Mack, E 326 W. 113 St. Mohring, A. A 515 W 122 St. N Nichols, L. F 42 W. 11 St. P Pockman, G. B 138 E. 38 St. Pollak, β 135 W. 87 St. Preston, E. W 903 Park Ave. S Sage, M. L 564 Park Ave Saith, B 446 West End Ave de Schivenitz, L 519 W. 121 St. Sister Carmela Mary, 292 Washington Ave., Brooklyn T Tretan, D 343 E. 191 St. Tail, M. E 9 Petersville Road W Warren, M.. Brooks, 44()8 North Ave., San Diego, Cal. Wonderlich, E. E 546 W. 124 St. Randolph, N. Y. Non-Matriculated Specials Aborn, M. 650 Park Ave., East Orange, N. J. C Cahen. S., Whittier Hall, 10 rue Euryale, Dehaynin, Paris E Elliot, B 537 W. 123 St. Clinton, N. Y. F Fletcher, M 112 E. 22 St. G Galbraith, D. G., Three Arts Club, 340 W. 85th St. Mineral Wells, Texas Gould, H. S. 53 E. 53d St., Portchester, N. Y. H Haight, A. A 22 E. 69 St. Hopman, Hausen, B. C, F. F. Bakmorne Holte, Denmark Hayvvard, J. A. White Plains Road, Bronxville, N. Y. Hersfeld, L. M Hotel Majestic Lagemann, A. E 1 W. 72 St. Linker, M. E., Furnald, Ware, Mass. Lowe, B. H., Ill W. 94th St. 112 Cabel St.. Lynchburg, Va. M Mackener, M., Furnald, 1415 Knoxville Ave., Peoria, 111. Marble, D. W., 490 Riverside Drive Bedford, New York Satterlee, M. M 37 E. 36 St. Saxon, C 507 W. 113 St. Sturges, S. M 116 E. 31 St. Townsend, A 15 E. 86 St. Turmann, H., Broadview Hexagon Hall, South Atlanta, Ga. V Van Pelt. R. C 501 W. 124 St. 1714 Lakeview Ave., Pensacola, Fla. I 196 ] Acknowledgments The Mortarboard wishes to thank : Miss Gildersleeve for her friendly counsel and her appreciation of Greek Games. Bertha Mann, ' 19, and Alice Barrington, ' 20, for editorial advice. Miss Doty, Miss Boyd and Miss Bishop for their interested helpfulness. Mr. W. Schilling and Mr. Foley for their invaluable cooperation. Beatrice Kafka, ' 21, Rosina Geissler, ' 21, Estelle Fine, ' 21, Helen Ball, ' 21, Eleanor Curry, ' 20, Ruth Jones, ' 21, Marion Peters, ' 20, Lillian Sternberg, ' 20, Lillian Horn, ' 21, and Olive Spear, ' 23, for photographs. Elizabeth Armstrong, ' 20, for advertisements. Index to Advertisers PAGE PAGE B. ALTMAN CO. , . . . .204 MILLER SCHOOL 205 ANNETTE 211 NASON MANUFACTURING CO. . . 209 ARCH SALES CO 212 NEW YORK SCHOOL OF FINE AND BELLAK SYSTEM OF HOTELS . . .206 APPLIED ART . . ... .209 BERGDORF GOODMAN 203 PAPADEM 211 OSCAR F. BERNNER 210 PICTORIAL REVIEW 3 PUBLISHERS ' PHOTO-ENGRAVING CO. . 212 BEST CO .202 QUEEN QUALITY BOOT SHOP . . .202 WILLIAM BRADLEY STUDIOS . . .209 Β«aβ’ T a CT β’-7 RAPHAEL 207 BROOKS BROS 203 RENARD 208 CHARLES CHRISDIE CO 209 ROBINSON ' S 204 CHRISTIAN 211 ANNA RYAN .207 CLARK WILKINS 210 SCHILLING PRESS 213 COLUMBIA PRESS BOOK STORE . . .205 SEILER-COLLEGE BOOK STORE . . .208 COLLEGE DRUG STORE . . . .210 A. G. SPALDING BROS. . . . .211 MAISON FICHL . . . . . .211 SPERLING SPERLING 210 CHARLES FRIEDGEN 211 STOCKTON TEA ROOM . . . .208 EDWARD F. FOLEY 214 TAMS MUSIC LIBRARY 211 JACK ' S FOUNTAIN . . ' . . . . 207 TIFFANY 1 JELLO-GENESlEE PURE FOOD CO. . . 215 TIFFIN . 211 KEEN-KUTTER SIMMONS HARDWARE CO. 201 UNITED STATES SCHOOL OF MARIEBEE 207 SECRETARIES 206 MEYER CAMERA AND INSTRUMENT CO. 210 UTOPIA YARNS 208 [198] Complimentary ,[ 200 ] [201] of the college semester COLLEGE GIRLS will find us equipped with the smartest clothes of the season. POLO COATS. NEW SPORTS CLOTHES AND SWEATERS. HATS. SCARFS AND SHOES TO MATCH At the lowest prices consistent with quality Have you been in lately ? I est $c Co. Fifth Avenue at 35th Street Established 1879 Fashion ' s Footprints on the social sands of life at college A SORORITY DANCE one night, basketball the next- one afternoon at a matinee, an- other day with β HIM! The madding whirl of social func- tions makes college a world in itself β a world where people keep step with Fashion ! And keeping step β step out well shod ! Queen Quality ' s bid for the patronage of the discriminating is its traditional policy of selling select leathers and expert workmanship at prices within the reach of those who must make an allowance go far. II Lisses street and dance costumes of a more exclusive type than is usually provided for younq yjomert GOWNS -SUITS -WRAPS -FURS IBehgdorf uOODMAN 616 FIFTH AVENUE ESTABLISHED 1818 Ueraen ' s JFurntsljitti} Β§00 0, MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Telephone Murray Hill SSoo m i ! BROOKS BROTHERS ' New Building, convenient to Grand Central, Subway, and to many of the lead- ing Hotels and Clubs OF INTEREST TO WOMEN While we do not sell women ' s clothing, it is our experience that theie is, on the part of many wo- men, especial ly those interested in sport, a growing tendency to purchase from us for their own use Motor Coats, Sweaters, Wool Caps, Waistcoats, Gloves, Mufflers, Boots, Leggings, Puttees, etc., liking these articles all the more apparently be- cause, as distinct from being mannish. they are the very things that are worn by men. Send for Illustrated Catalogue BOSTON Tremontcor. Boylston NEWPORT 220 Bellevue Avenue [203 ] H. Altman Gin. MADISON AVENUE -FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK THIRTY-FOURTH STREET THIRTY-FIFTH STREET FASHIONABLE COLLEGE CLOTHES featuring Correct Modes for the Classroom, for the Street, for Formal Occasions, and for Sports Wear. The Mail Shopping Bureau is at the disposal of out-of-town patrons Dobinsons jfV 25-27 West 42- Street NY. Correct Wearing Apparel for Women and Misses Moderately Priced [ 204 ] BOOKS FOR STUDY AND LEISURE HOURS Columbia University Press Book Store (ON THE CAMPUS β JOURNALISM BUILDING β 2960 B ' WAY) STATIONERY SOUVENIRS KEEP SAKES LEXINGTON AVE. AT 23 - ST. FOR MORE THAN AQUARTEROFA ' ' CENTURY WE HAVE . ,c5 -X BEEN PREPARING c ACCOUNTANTS, fllP SECRETARIES, CASHIERS, STENOGRAPHERS , TYPISTS, I .-SALES CLERKS.AND OFFICE WORKERS. A DISTINCTLY SPECIAL SCHOOL HIGH SCHOOL AND COLLEGE GRADES CATALOGUE FREE [ 205 BELLAK S Y ST E M OF ELECT HOTELS zSpecial Rates Nowz ONVENIENT 81st St., L Entrance 1, 2 and 3 Rooms, Bath $60 monthly up per Room and Bath :: :: H-Oβ T-Eβ L :: :: O L O N I A L COLUMBUS AVENUE AT 81st STREET Very large attractive rooms, well furnished and exceptional closet space N OTED FOR SUNSHINE Two and three rooms and bath. Newly and beautifully furnished and decorated. 9 to I 4 windows. [-JQTEL O B L E T O N ONE-TWENTY-SIX WEST SEVENTY-THIRD STREET $125 monthly, $35 weekly. Restaurant a la carte. Near all Cars, Express Sub , L Bus lines A MAGNIFICENT VIEW of CENTRAL PARK Newly decorated and furnished. 1, 2, 3 rooms and bath, $50 per room up. :: :: Hβ Oβ T β Eβ L :: S H T O N MADISON AVENUE AT 93rd STREET Surface cars at door, convenient to bus and sub- way. We cater to a discriminate clientele only. LARGE, LIGHT OUTSIDE ROOMS R ESIDENCE FOR WOMEN Room and meals, $18 weekly up. Room with bath and meals, $25 weekly up. :: Hβ Oβ Tβ Eβ L :: :: U T L E D G E LEXINGTON AVENUE AT 30th STREET Also desirable accommodations of rooms without meals, $1.50 day up. MODERN β H OMELIKE β ACCESSIBLE All Above Accessible to All Cars Express Sub and L and Bus Restaurant Service A la Carte and Table d ' hote. THE UNITED STATES SCHOOL β OF: SECRETARIES (Originators of Secretarial Training in America) 542-544 FIFTH AVENUE New York City The oldest and pre-eminently the most successful school of its kind in the coun- try. Conducted by College Professors and Practical Business Men, prepares for and obtains excellent Secretarial Posi- tions. THE U. S. SECRETARIAL SCHOOL IS NOT AN ELEMEN- TARY BUSINESS SCHOOL HAV- ING A SECRETARIAL DEPART- MENT. It is interested in efficiency training and higher education only, and is an exclusive school for refined and ambitious students, who desire to be- come self-supporting. It is the only school that devotes its entire time and efforts to the training of desirable appli- cants for Secretarial positions. Day and Evening Courses. Write for catalogue. Telephone Vanderbilt 2474 [ 206] LUXURIO Just imagine a big piece of fresh cake, the best of Ice Cream, and Oodles of Hot Chocolate Fudge put together in the daintiest fashion and topped off with whipped cream. You will then begin to realize the possibilities of our new creation β Luxurio. Try it. JACK ' S FOUNTAIN Bauer ' s Drug Store Broadway and 114th St. HAIRDRESSING SHAMPOOING MASSAGE MANICURING CHIROPODY CURLS POMPADOURS SWITCHES TRANSFORMATIONS WIGS (Formerly with L. SHAW of Fifth Ave.) HUMAN HAIR GOODS AND TOILET PREPARATIONS 2896 BROADWAY - NEW YORK CITY {Near 1 1 ilh Street) TELEPHONE CA T-H E D R A L 715b O UR chapeaux display individuality and charm at a moderate price. Marie bee 2901 BROADWAY, Corner 113th Si. RAPHAEL ' S BROADWAY fcf 110th STREET Now Featuring Exquisite Assortments in the Season ' s Most Fashionable Models in Capes, Wraps, Coats, Suits Dresses For Women As Well as Misses [ 207 ] lA ken IZenord Hots [fleet there is that recognizable charm which never passes unnoticed. FAfUtl HA Cuisine of Quality Luncheon A fternoon Tea Dinner 306 W. 109th Street Bet. Broadway and Riverside Drive Telephone: Academy 4990 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 St. UTOPIA YARNS give the best results in knitting and crocheting. The excellence is in the softness, elasticity and evenness of thread. Brilliant colors. Shet- land Floss, Scotch Knitting and Heathers, Germantown and Saxony. The UTOPIA Yarn Book of instruc- tions has many novelties in sweaters. lillllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllll HENRY E. FRANKENBERG CO. Importers, Manufacturers Commission Merchants 215-219 FOURTH AVENUE :: :: NEW YORK [208 ] CHARLES CHRISDIE CO. ESTABLISHED 1872 THEATRICAL COSTUMERS m ANNOUNCE A COMPLETE VARIETY OF LOSI UMbs rOK THE BALL MASQUE J| THEATRICALS (L Special Costumes Made to Order 7 k For Hire or For Sale 562 SEVENTH AVENUE AT 40th STREET NEW YORK CITY $ Telephone BRYANT 2449 WE SPECIALIZE IN SUPPLIES and EQUIPMENT For Steam, Hydraulic, Gas, Refrigerating and Sanitary We are Manufacturers of and Headquarters for Steam Traps, Separators, Feed Water Heaters, Boiler Feeders, Damper Regu- lators, Injectors, Pressure Regulators, Balance Valves, Throttle Valves, Blow- Off Valves, Pop Safety and Relief Valves, etc. Our Stock of Iron and Brass Pipe, Valves and Fittings is one of the largest and most complete in the city. NASON MFG. CO. 71 Fulton Street New York Teachers and Professional Workers Send for our new Summer Circular New York School of Fine and Applied Art Frank Alvah Parsons, President Begins July 6th Landscape Architecture; Interior Deco- ration; Poster Advertising; Costume De- sign; Industrial and Textile Design; Life and Illustration, etc. Susan F. Bissell, Secy. 2239 Broadway, New York The William Bradley Studios PROPERTIES FURNITURE, ANTIQUES, ORNAMENTS Properties and Stage Settings Supplied to Moving Picture Manufacturers 318-322 West 43rd St., New York Phone, Bryant 8173 [209 ] HARTW LL A. WILKINS, Pres. Treas. rS T Β Β° ' ' Β«S ' - ' rD 1870 . ELLWOOD C LA R a , Secy. HARTWELL H. WILKINS, Vice-Pres. DEALERS IN 51 1 WEST THIRTY-FOURTH STREET AND Foot of East 128th Street, New York. we deal in wood exclusively and deliver at residences in any part of the city; putting away in cellars without extra charge; cargoes furnished of virginia pine, oak an hickory. Telephones: Longacre 51 5 51 6 Harlem 16 566 DRY HICKORY FOR OPEN FIRES. VIRGINIA PINE KNOTS. SELECTED OAK OR HARDWOOD. LIGNUM VITAE. NEW BEDFORD DRIFTWOOD. MORTH CAROLINA PITCH PINE. VIRGINIA PINE and OAK KINDLING WOOD. Sperling Sperling Coats and Suits FOR Ladies -Misses - Juniors - Flappers - Children 151-163 WEST 2 6TH STREET - NEW YORK Meyer Camera Instrument Co., Inc. MAX MEYER. Pretidmt Laboratory Apparatus and Scientific Instruments Chemical Glassware : Chemicals Cameras : Lenses 31-33 East 27th St. Photographic Specialties New York 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 W. 47th St., bet. Broadway and 6th Ave., NEW YORK College Drug Store Cut Rates 2939 BROADWAY 1210] MAISON FICHL DAINTIEST OF CAKES EXQUISITE LUNCHEONS PATISSERIE FRANCA1SE 1225 AMSTERDAM AVENUE :: NEW YORK W e serve the best people because we serve the people best ( 1521 Tel. Morningside 8069 ( 8606 J. G. PAPADEM CO. Florists 2953 BROADWAY bΒ«. ustta and 116th sΒ«. NEW YORK [51 f 1f51[ ir51 li===i| fa1[CΒ£J CHRISTIAN 260 WeST 125tm ST., NEW YORK QUICK PRINTING Bfinth 777 t ss t 226th Strttt (Wlllluntbrldf ) If When you want the real thing in Athletic Equipment look for this trade mark β it represents that which is best and guarantees satisfaction and service. Catalogue en Request A. G. SPALDING BROS. 523 FIFTH AVE. 124 NASSAU ST. NEW YORK CITY Candies of Dis- ft M tinctive Quality for sale at Tiffin Shops and Agencies. Telephone. Bryant 7590-7591-542? Cable Address, Tamsart: New York Correspondents in London, Paris and Milan Arthur W. Tarns Music Library, Inc. Music Circulating Library. The largest and only complete Music Library in the world. Music of every description on Rental. Orchestrations for large or small Orchestras. Costumes, Theatrical and Modern, for Hire. Wigs, Make up Materials, Make up People, Professional Coaches (Musical and Dramatic). 1600 BROADWAY Bet 48th 49th Sts. NEW YORK CITY ANNETTE Swart Millinery 14 EAST 48th STREET MURRAY HILL t 2 6 6 CHARLES FRIEDGEN Apothecary IN BUSINESS FOR YOUR HEALTH Two Stores Whittier Hall; Opp. Livingston Hail [211] LADY DAINTY VANITY BOX Every Woman of Refinement should have one of these Vanity Boxes in her bag. A delightful powder in cake form, so neat and convenient to use β a pretty little puff β an at- tractive box β with a mirror in the cover. Complete 50c. ARCH SALES CO. 60 ARCH STREET BOSTON. MASS Complimentary Specialists on School and College Work Fine Half-Tone Photo-Engravings at Moderate Prices The Engravings in this book were made by us β¦β¦β¦β¦β¦β¦ Publishers ' Photo-Engraving Co., Inc. 77 Lexington Avenue, New York City [212] The Schilling Press INCORPORATED 137-139 EAST TWENTY-FIFTH STREET, NEW YORK ecialists on High-Class Booklets, Color MV ork and Magazines : : PRINTERS OF THIS BOOK AND MANY OTHER COLLEGE ANNUALS OF THE SEASON fTT OUR SCHOOL AND COLLEGE DEPARTMENT MAKES AVAILABLE THE BEST SKILLED MECHANICS AND MODERN METHODS, ASSURING YOU j] THE PRODUCTION OF THE HIGHEST CLASS OF COLLEGE ANNUALS TO 1921 MORTARBOARD COMPLIMENTS OF EDWARD F. FOLEY ART PHOTOGRAPHER 383 Fifth Avenue at 36th Street, New York PHONE 1783 MURRAY HILL Where Jell-O Helps It was a wise writer in the Chicago Tribune who said : A girl who has to hold in after life solemn communion with stewpans and gridirons had better learn in advance how to use them. And a girl who can evolve from this sol- emn communion delectable things to eat and at the same time make the figures come out on the right side in the account book every month must be adjudged a treasure. THE GENESEE PURE FOOD COMPANY Le Roy, N. Y., and Bridgeburg, Ont. [215]
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